Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 175, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 26 July 1915 — NEWLAND. [ARTICLE]
NEWLAND.
Louis Eisner went to Gary Thursday. * A. H. Wilson went to Chicago Wednesday. Julius Levi, of Chicago, was in town Thursday. Mrs. Martha Ellis went to Hammond Friday. L. B. Springer came out from Chicago Friday. Mrs. Oscar Faber went to Hammond Friday. Irving Ahrens returned to Milwaukee, Wis., last week. Mrs. E. A. Reif and children went to Chicago Thursday for a visit. Mr. Hart, of Horicon, Wis., was here Wednesday noting results of the high water. Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Whited’s baby daughter was buried at Wheatfield Thursday. Mrs. J. H. Phillips and Henry and Helen Phillips went to Chicago last Thursday to visit relatives. Mrs. Ed Wolfe and son went to Grant Park, 111., Thursday to join her husband, who is working there. Mrs. John Olszwske and children went to Chicago Wednesday on account of the illness of one of the children. \
Bom, Sunday, July 25th, to Mr. and Mrs. Sam Kittering, of Union township, a son. And the same day to Mr. and Mrs. John Zimmer, of Newton township, a daughter. - Mts. C. L. Ham and daughter, of French Lick, were here a short time this morning on their way home after a visit of one week with M. B. Carpenter and family and Dr. Triplett and family, of Morocco. -Mr. and Mrs. Everet Hoffman and baby, of Kankakee, 111., were here over Sunday, visiting relatives and today left for Artesian, S. Dak., and will visit Ray Kenton and family and other former Jasper county people. Mr. and Mrs. Rex Warner and Mrs. E. T. Harris and daughter, Miss Muriel, made an auto trip Sunday to Tab, Warren county, to see Mr. and Mrs. Dal Yeoman. They had not returned home yet at noon today. Ross Hufford is acquainted with two girls from Rossville, who were in the Eastland catastrophe. They were at first reported among the missing but a call from Rossville yesterday stated that word had been received there and both were safe. L. E. Barber and his uncle, James Barber, who had been yisiting him, were in Chicago Sunday and visited the scene of the Eastlarfd disaster or as near there as they could get. They reported that 919 bodies had been taken from the river. ' Mrs. Witham received a letter today from her brother, Vem Nowels, written at Tacoma, Wash., and stating that they would start from thye today for Yellowstone Park and would spend five days there and then start home, probably reaching here the first of next week.
