Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 136, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 9 June 1915 — Page 1 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Born, Tuesday, June 8, to Mr. and Mrs. David Peer, a son. Mrs. A. L. Clark went to Lafayette today to visit until tomorrow. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Bott drove over to Winamac and Star City today. Mrs. C. M. Stanley went to Lafayette today to see her daughter, Mrs. Ray Doblebauer and her granddaughter, Maudie Leek, who graduates today from the township school. Mrs. Fannie Parks, Mrs. Ed Sutherland and Mrs. Yem Balcom, of Remington, autoed to Rensselaer this morning and are spendig the day with the families of Lyman Zea and Matt Worden. Mrs. Joe Leach and baby, accompanied by her mother, Mrs. Nathan Eldridge, went to Kramer today, where Mrs. Leach will take treatment for rheumatism. Her home has been near Geddes, S.‘ Dak., for several years. Carl D. Cleaver left this momnig for his home in Anderson. He has been the manual training teacher for the past two years and a good one, too. He is looking for a job with more money and may not return to Rensselaer this fall. Mr. and Mrs. L. B. Elmore arrived here this morning and were met by his father and taken to Remington. They have been living in Denver, Colo., for several months and he is the distributing agent for the state of Colorado for the H. & D. Shock absorbers. Twenty-one took part in a family reunion at the home of Kenton Blankenship Suday. Among those from out of town were Mrs. John Slaughter and Mr, and Mrs. Ira Hoffman, of Lafayette, Mrs. Bert Dow, of Wolcott, and Homer and Charles Slaughter and families near Rensselaer. A very pleasant day was spent. Auditor Hammond received a letter today from Mrs. Hammond, who has been at the home of his daughter, Mrs. Leo Colvert, at Joliet, for several days. It stated that Mrs. Colvert was very much improved and now out of danger. Mr. Hammond plans to auto over to Joliet Saturday and Mrs. Hammond will return home with him Sunday.
H. R. Grow this morning ordered his Evening Republican discontinued and paid up to the minute. While no questions were asked and no reasons offered we inferred from Mr. Grow’s tone that he was peeved and we have an idea that he is opposed to our support of the subsidy tax. Knowing Mr. Grow as a man of kind discposition and always interested in the welfare of the city and its environs we are sorry that a man of his importance in a community should decline his support to a project so certain to accomplish all that is meant by a “Greater Rensselaer.” It used to be the idea of -the class of men who stop a newspaper because it disagrees with them that they were aJniost stopping the predication, but Mr. Grow, we are pleased to say, is not that kind of a man, and we hope that during the time he is not taking our paper he will see it sufficiently to feel assured that it is still being printed. Fresh Fish Every Day at Osborne’s, 7- v Phone 439. ' ‘ '
