Evening Republican, Volume 17, Number 197, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 19 August 1913 — DAILY BUS TO REMINGTON. [ARTICLE]

DAILY BUS TO REMINGTON.

Beginning Saturday, August 16, I Will run an automobile bus daily |o Remington on the following Schedule: Leave Rensslaer at 6:30 a. m., from north side of court house Jquare,' returning to Rensselaer 0:00 a. m. Leave Rensselaer at 3:45 p. r> turning to Rensselaer 6:00 p. m. Fare eaeh way, 75 cents. During the meeting at Fountain Park, special trips will be made at the rate of SI.OO for round trip. ft L MORRELL.

Miss Ida Milliken left this morning for New York City to be absent for several weeks. During her visit in New York her niece, Mrs. H. A. Hochstrasser, formerly Miss Frances Andrews, a niece of Miss Milliken, will sail for her future home in Catania, Sicily. A good line of baskets specially bought, specially priced at the Home Grocery. ’

Mrs. Martha Washburn went to Chicago on business today and will probably return here for a visit of a few days with her son, Dr. I. M. Washburn. She returned recently with her daughter, Miss Mary, from Paris, France, where they had been for several months, and they have been with her other daughter, Mrs. Ernest Graham, at Paw Paw, West Virginia, where Miss Mary still is, and to which place Mrs. Washburn expects to return. ai 1 ..I, ■ Mrs. Florence Kellam, of Chicago, accompanied by three sons, came yesterday to visit Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wiltshire. Mrs. Kellam was formerly Mrs. Calvin Karsner, and her first husband was raised in Rensselaer and learned the printer’s trade here, later working in Chicago. He died several years ago. leaving a widow and four sons. Mrs. Karsner later married Mr. Kellam, who is also a printer, and has a little son by him. Her two older sons are 15 and 16 years of age and will come the last of the week for a short visit. '

“Sis Perkins” has the prettiest story ever told and the plot of the play is so easily understood. It’s not one of those silly things that no one can understahd and after its out you find yourself asking what it was all about. Sis Perkins tells a story of honesty, virtue, love and triendship. There are moments when you want to cry and some do; then again there are funny scenes when you laugh until you ache. It’s not a blood and thunder play. It’s devoid of horse play and dime novel heroes. It’s a good clean comedy, up to date for ladies, gentlemen and children. One night only at the Ellis Theatre, on Saturday night, Aug. 23.

Mrs. A. J. Thompson and little daughter, Ethel, of near Mechanicsburg, Ohio, arrived here this morning and drove over to Mt. Ayr to see her aged lather, Ephrain Sayers. Mrs. Thompson was reared in Benton <sounty, where she taught school tor some years prior to her marriage. Her husband’s health failed and he went to the southwest to try to recover it and lived for some time in Arkansas and Tulsa, Okla., and then returned to Indianapolis and Anally settled at Mechanicsburg, Ohio, where he is a prosperous farmer. Mrs. Thompson states that her husband last year had 30 acres of corn that averaged better than 100 bushels to the acre and that he sold much of it at $2 per bushel. The Wing brothers, probmost noted farmers in the middle west, live near the Thompson farm and Mr. Thompson keeps his seed corn in their large, seed barn. Order your Calling Cards at The Republican office