Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 108, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 May 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
MOTHERS’ DAY Christian Church Bible School I Special Program Come out and pay tribute to your mother. She will be pleased with your coming in her honor 9:30 a. m.
Ed Van Arsdel made a trip to Monon today. Miss Katie Tressmer returned this moring from a week’s visit with her parents at Tefft. Mrs. Jesse E. Wilson came. from Hammond this morning to attend the funeral of Taylor Boicourt. Mrs. J. M. Bell, of Frankfort, came this morning to visit her daughter, Mrs. W. L. Myer and family. See Hamilton & Kellner for buggies and carriages. Lake county has a population of 100,000 people and a good many of them are out of a job. Leo Kolhoff has moved to the Battleday house on Clark road, west of the John Bruner residence. Congressman Will R. Wood, of Lafayette, will tieliver the Memorial address in Monticello this year. Misses Elizabeth Cowden and Martha Hall, of Delphi, came this morning to visit Miss Ivah Healey.
The Junior League of the M. E. church will hold a social on the parsonage lawn Saturday afternoon at 3 o’clock.
Mayor Spitler has purchased a new electric starter for his Ford automobile and has had it installed. The starters cost $75 and work perfectly.
Listen to the warnings of the weatherman. For the fifth or sixth time since May Ist he has issued a frost warning. • Beans, corn and tor mato plants are in danger.
Every Wednesday we make a shipment of Panama and fine felt hats to be cleaned and reblocked. Bring yours to “Thte Home of Good Clothes.” — Wm. Traub.
Mrs. J. W. Childers and two little granddaughters, the children of Mrs. Carl Harsha, are spending today at the hospital in Lafayette whei*e Mrs. Harsa was operated upon last week. She is not yet able to sit up.
About an inch of rain fell last night again. There has been no excess in the neighborhood of Rensselaer and farmers are said to have been in the fields this morning. Garden sass is growing like mushrooms. Speaking of mushrooms, Monticello citizens have been devoting their spare time to harvesting this variety of fungus the past week and they are said to be very plentiful along the Tippecanoe.
O. A. Jordan and family, who now live in Lake county, not far from Hebron, were here this week. He is the defendant in a suit instituted in the Jasper circuit court. The case was postponed until the next term of court and Mr. Jordan returned home yesterday afternoon. Mrs. Jordan remained to aid in the care of her aged foster mother, Mrs. Anna Dillavou, who suffered a stroke of paralysis about two weeks ago. Mr. and Mrs. Dillavou are past the age of 80 years and live in the house on Division street with Miss Hannah Davisson.
Judge Kopelke, of Porter county, is sitting as special judge in the Jasper circuit court today, trying a case in which a land transaction that occurred four or five years ago at Roselawn is being inquired into. The land belonged’ to a minor heir and was sold at a price said to be somewhat less than its worth. Ray Cummings, who at that time was the guardian of the heir, was removed and Judge Darroch appointed. Several attorneys are here to try the case, including Whinnery and Sprate, of Hammond, and Darroch and Cummings, of Kentland.
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