Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 167, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 17 July 1914 — The “Bunch” Bad Fine Time At Weekly Slumber Party. [ARTICLE]
The “Bunch” Bad Fine Time At Weekly Slumber Party.
7 Following the weekly lawn picnic and slumber party one oi the girls of the “buncH” contributed the following report for The Republican: Thursday evening the “bunch", consisting of Misses Vera West, Jane Pafklson, Lucille Luers, Virginia Winn, Leona Kolhoff, Agnes Howe Marie Hamilton, Wilda Littlefield, Ruth Wood, Jeanette Nowels, Margaret Babeock and Meta Ogelsby Had their weekly picnic and slumber party at the home of Vera Healey on South Cullen street. The picnic was a la cafeteria and was abundant in every particular. After band concert, which was attended by? the “bunch” en masse, the young ladies and their gentlemen friends enjoyed a little dance. Some time after midnight they went to their beds, which extended across the full lenth at the large sleeping porch. Short naps werer indulged in-between 4 and 7:36' a. m., and by that time all were prepared for a real sleep, but Dr. Kresler and Charley Warner decided to even up tor the noise of the night and turned the hose on the “bunch.” After too much breakfast and not enough excitement the “bunch” accompanied Miss Lucille Luers home to spend the day at the beautiful Luers home south of town.
Mrs. Bdvo Lockwood, once candidate tor president of the United States, and the first woman admitted to the bar of the United States supreme court, was ejected Tuesday by older of the court from the home in whteh he has lived fifty years at herself superintended the moving of her* belongings to the little back hall room which is all she can now afford.. ■ . Nils Norblad, 51, a painter and a Swede by birth, was killed by a Lake Shore train near Oseeola«km| day. The body was seen by the erew of a passing train and railway officials notified. Norblad left his home in Mishawaka two days before without stating where he was going. It is not known whether his death was accidental or a suicide. A kit of painter’s tools was scattered along the track.
