Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 225, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 23 September 1914 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]
paries Criswell made a trip to Lafayette today. H. B. Brown was down from Kniman today. A. B. Randle made a trip to Lafayette today. Chalmers will give a horse dhow Friday and Saturday of this week. B. D. McColly returned this morning from a business trip to St. Louis. W. F. Sayler, of Galveston, Ind., was here this morning looking for a farm to rent. Mil. Otto Braun and daughter, Helen, went to Chicago today for a visit of several days. Philip Kistner came over from Dunn, Benton county, today, to look after his Jasper county farm. The Round Table-Club will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. L. H. Hamilton on Van Rensselaer street. Mrs. George A. Thomas, of Monticello, is spending the day with her Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Gwin. Mm John Werner took her little daughter, Margaret, to Indianapolis today to reenter the state school for the blind. Mrs. Elchester Lewis and baby, of Kirkpatrick, Ohio, came todays to visit her father, Ed Tanner and family, of Barkley township. ' Mrs Frank Yeager and Mrs. Riley Hickman, of Mt. Ayr, came to Rensselaer this morning with Mr. Yeager and went from here and Monon for the day. George Iliff, from south of town, ’while cranking his automobile Tuesday, suffered the fracture of the radius of his right arm just above the wrist. r Health Gwin, of Galveston, Texas, who spent the summer with his grandfather, J, C. Gwin, wli attend college at Huston, Tex., this winter, studying electrical engineering. Paul Wynegar, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Wynegar, while at play Tuesday afternoon near the light plant, ran a sharp board into his hand, inflicting a severe wound. Silas Toombs, of near Newland, has been peddling his own onions. He drove overland with two wagon loads to Lafayette and sold them out at 75 cents per bushel. Mrs. 8. E. Yeoman is slightly improved the past few days since the arrival of her daughter, Mm Spitler, from Oklahoma City, and of her < granddaughter, Miss Ora Yeoman, from Valparaiso. ! . fiarry Thaw la n«ow having a number of things coming his way. An order was Issued in the Pittsburg court Monday providing for the payment of $142,124 to him by the Fidelity Trust and Title 00. The money was left to him by his father’s will and the company had tried to resist payment Not long before the company had been required to pay him $160,780.
