Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 193, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 14 August 1913 — REMINGTON. [ARTICLE]
REMINGTON.
Miss Bidwell, of Wolcott, spent Sunday with relatives. Mrs. Yepinan was on the sick list last week. Mrs* Jas. Greene is slowly recovering from her illness which began in June. Friends here have received word from Prof, and Mrs. Fred J Breeze and son, Joe, who are enjoying a visit among the lakes of Vermont, the Greene Mountains, and a trip into Miami, returning to New York by steamer. Mrs. Zinc and children are visiting in Indianapolis. Mrs.-Walter Johnston and family accompanied by his sister, Margaret, started Saturday a. m. on an auto trip to Mammoth Cave. At Crawfordsville they were joined by a car of relatives from near Bloomington, 111. Several points of interest are on their itinerary which covers a period of ten days or more. ’ Mrs. Grace Hand Milligan and sons of Daytonia, Fla., arrived Sunday to spend several weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. G. Hand. Miss Esther Barnes accompanied her parents home from Ohio and will spend the month with them. Miss Josephine Schwerdman, of' Logansport, and Mrs. Fred Doscher and daughter Hazel, of Charleston, S. C., spent Friday with their niece, Mrs. Edgar Tribby. Mrs. Carrie Traugh spent Sunday in Monticello, leaving Tuesday morning for her home in Bloomington, 111., after a month’s visit with Mr. and Mrs. Peter Mann. Mrs. Pearl Currans expects to spend the last weeks of August in Gary, Mr. Folsom Gibson, of Chicago Heights, is a guest of tils uncle, Dan Besser. z Rev. J. B. McNary and family left for a two weeks’ vacation and will visit relatives and friends in Delaware and Hamilton counties. Miss DeVore, of was, a recent-guest of her cousin, Miss Stella Locke. ~ The M. E. Missionary Society met Tuesday with Mrs. Fanny -Parks. Mr. Frank Peck and family were accompanied by Mr. Jas. Washburn on a week-end trip to Lowell. They spent Sunday evening'" at Tipton,attending a Chautauqua In progress, and hearing the famous Inn is Band, which is to be kt Fountain Park the first Thursday. Their coneerts deserve the highest praise. As to their instruments—a hayrack piled high was used to haul them to the station. The sixth and last of the series of open-air services in the .Town Park was enjoyed by a vast and reverent gathering of citizens Sabbath evening. Rev. Wickham delivering a strong» argument in favor of Christian unity. Weather conditions have made each of these services possible and many attended who would have made no such effort for an indoor service in summer.
Rev. Wickham and vise left Monday for Grand Rapids, Mich. Mrs. Ed. Maxwell and daughter. Mary, were mid-week guests of Mrs. Pearl Currans, coming from Watseka and Sheldon on the return to their home at Markle, Ind. Mrs. Wm. Beal, who has been an invalid for several years, died at her home Tuesday afternoon, Aug. 12th. The funeral service was held in the M. E. church Thursday afternoon. A party of lassies—the Misses Leone, Lucile and Mildred Harper, Nina Washburn, Lottie Porter, Irene Howard -and Lola Skinnerstarts on a trip this week to West Va., via Cincinnati, where a cousin of the Harper sisters joins the party, and they will all be guests of an uncle of the sisters, forming a house party. Longing glances followed the dozen or more autoes filled with Van Rensselaer picnickers who whirled through our streets last Friday on their way to Hazelden.
