Evening Republican, Volume 18, Number 305, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 December 1914 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

A. F. McCormick went to Kokomo today to spend Christmas at I home. Go to the Lowman sale on Jan. 5 it you want a good cow, heifer or steer. ‘ Bernice Plummer, of Hammond, is visiting her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Zea. Willie Thompson, of Delevan, Wiis., is visiting his mother, Mrs. J. J. O’Brien and family. John A. Thomas, of Chicago, is here to spend Christmas with Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Holden. Mrs. Frank Hamilton and little son, of Winamac, came yesterday to visit her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Bott. Miss Pearl Babcock, of Franklin college, is home to spend the holidays with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. Frank Babcock. The w'eather tor today is much warmer With indications of rain, but the weather forecast is for a cold wave in the next 24 hours. Editor Healey is in the grip of the grippe today and has been unable to get down town and the paper is kind of editing itself this isisue. Mrs. J. W. Pierce and daughter, Gladys, of Greencastle, came Wednesday evening to spend the holidays with relatives and friends here. Harold L, Clark, in company with Willie Keen, of Wheatfield, went to Indianapolis today, to attend the Christmas festivities at the institution for the deaf. Mr.: arid Mrs. Jesse Nichols entertained about fifteen members of the card eluib last evening at the county farm. The guests were taken there and back in a bobsled. A branch board of trade office of A W. Graham, of Lafayette, has been upstairs in the Murray building. It is in charge of R. 8. Shearer, of Remington, and A F. McCormick, of Kokomo. # Mr. and Mrs. Lyman Hall and son, of Indianapolis, came Wednesday to visit his mother, Mrs. Mary A. Hall, at Fair Oaks, and her brother, Fred Schultz, and other relatives of Union township. Mrs. Anna Mills, who has been with her son, Ed Mills and family, near Hamilton, Mont., since May, 1913, came Wednesday ocompanied by her son. It is his first visit here since he located there six years ago. Those nice, brown cakes, made rom old fashioned buckwheat flour, hdt the spot—Your grocer, or the Mill, Phone 456.