Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 215, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 September 1915 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
L. H. Hamilton attended the Indianapoils fair yesterday. Mrs. Ed Fay went to Mt. Ayr this morning for a visit of several days. Cooney Kellner, Harry Newman and Leo Worland attended the Kankakee fair yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. A. Crockett went to Hoopeston, 111., today for a visit of a week or ten days with her brothers, Alfred and Biga Reed. Mrs. Charles Harmon returned to her home in Evansville this morning after a visit of five weeks with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Elijah Harp have had the following as their guests the past wqek: Mrs. L. K. Boynton and son, of Ruleville, Miss.; Mrs. Thos. Fowler, of Lafayette; and Mrs. I. F. Gans, of South Bend. Mrs. Bownton and son left for their home this morning. At the Chautauqua Thursday evening Mr. Hightower, the platform manager, suggested that the aid given by the band which each evening formed up town and marched to the Chautauqua tent, be given a hearty round of applause and this was done, the hand clapping continuing for some little time.
C. E. Prior and Chas Leavel made a trip to Chicago today Mr. Leavel recently established a cream buying station at Roselawn and went to the city to get supplies It will be in charge of Frank Gorham. Mr. Leavel has taken in a local partner in the person of Holley Ramey. Holley and Frank Gorham each took the cream testers’ examination at Lafayette recently and both made passing grades. Henry Arnold and wife, of Pamona, Cal., are visiting their brother, Eli Arnold and family and will remain for several days. Henry was a former resident of this county but moved to Wabash a number of years ago and
in 1907 went to California where he has since resided. He visited here five years ago but says Rensselaer has made so many changes in that time that he hardly knew it. He came here from Flint, Mich., where he had been visiting his brother, Charley, formerly of this county. Charley is doing well there and has three good farms. His son Chester is married and lives on one of the farms. His son Homer, the school teacher, is now teaching at Elkhart.
Dr. Gwin had his second auto accident within two weeks Thursday evening when a man from Monticello, driving a large car, ran into the doctor’s roadster at the corner of Washington and Van Rensselaer street, just a block from the place where H. F. Parker and he collided. The Monticello driver went to turn the corner just as the lights came on and not being used to such bright lights *in Monticello was slightly startled and lost control of his car for a second. Dr. Gwin’s car suffered a fractured wheel, and Pie Monticello man acknowledged that the fault was his and gave the doctor a check for sls and said if that was not sufficient he would make up the deficiency when notified. These Monticello fellows are as square as you get them. Scientists have figured that about 36,000,000 babies are bom each year, or at a rate of about seventy a minute.
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