Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 253, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 October 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Baled straw and hay for sale by Hamilton A Kellner. J. J. Hunt went to Bloomington, 111., today, on a business trip. { All kinds of feeds for sale by Hamilton A Kellner. Bom, Saturday, Oct. 23, to Mr. and Mrs. Roscoe Nelson, a daughter. , ' The D. A. R. will meet Tuesday afternoon at 2:30 with Mrs. A. L Padgett. TWO-SEVENTY-THREE Phone this number for A-No.-l hard and soft coal. ! J. J. Montgomery went to Chicago I yesterday to? make his Christmas . candy purchases. 1 James Lyons, of Mt. Ayr, came to Rensselaer this morning and went to Chicago on the milk train. “Uncle” Bill Ervin enjoyed a very pleasant visit the past week with his niece, Miss Grace Ervin, of Lincoln, Neb. Gilf Jones and wife and son and two daughters, of Redkey, visited their daughter, Mrs. F. D. Burchard, over Sunday. Mrs. J. W. McConahey returned to Pullman today. She was called here by the sickness and death of her father, Henry Randle. - • L. J. Smith, wife and daughter, of Burlington, Wis., were Over Sunday guests of their grandson, Leonard Partee, at the college. Mrs. B. S. Dibble, of Canon Falls, Minn., who has been visiting Mrs. S. C. Irwin, has returned home, being accompanied as far as Chicago by Mrs. Irwin. Mr. and Mrs. A. DeKoker and children, of Thayer, spent Sunday visiting Fred Markin and family at Pleasant Grove and Mrs. Allie Potts, in Rensselaer. Mrs. J. J. Montgomery returned home last Friday from Rockford, 111., where she had spent almost three weeks with her parents. She left them feeling quite well. Edward Jenkins and family and John Hurley and wife recently made an auto trip to RossviLle to see Jacob Hdrley, Mrs. Jenkins’ grandfather, who is in quite feeble health. He is about 85 years of age.

Hammond was pleased with tee success of its second fall festival which was held last week and plans another celebration next year. Quite a number from Rensselaer and Jasper county were in attendance at the affair. Chas. D. L'akin recently purchased through the C. J. Dean agency the former G. K. Hollingsworth farm near the Rose Bud church, of John Taylor, of near Remington. The price was S9O per acre, which is sls more than Mr. Taylor paid a few years ago. The Chicago Tribune of last Saturday gave an extended write-up of the Gary schools. It is believed The Tribune is behind a movement to have William Wirt made the head of the Chicago schools when Ella Flagg Young retires. Judge Hanley returned to Kentland this morning to resume court. He suffered from neuralgia a great deal during the past two weeks and Judge Darroch, of Kentland, and Judge Berry, of Fowler, occupied tee bench for him a great deal of the time. He is feeling much better now. B. F. Louthain, president of the Logansport Pharos-Reporter and a newspaperman of ability and prominence over the state whose death was mentioned in The Republican last week, was a cousin of Mrs. J. F. Mitchell, of Rensselaer, but she had never seen him, although there had been occasional exchanges of a friendly nature between them. October is slipping. Today is tee 25th. Some months seem to go by jerks and bounds but October just slips along on an oiled track. The bright and beautiful days, the starry nights, the bracing air, the golden forest, the smooth roads, the blue skies, tee gentle breezes, all make October a month of charms that no other month possesses. But it is getting by so fast that we may not have noticed its charms. C. T. Prentice and brother, Hazzaxd, left today for Valparaiso and will soon go to Oklahoma, where they expect to locate. Mr. Prentice traded for the VanArsdel stock, but had never been engaged in the mercantile business and last week sold it to Chicago jobbers and it was shipped away. Mr. Prentice made a number of friends during his short stay here and they will wish him success wherever he locates.

CASTOR IA Bar ****** aod Ghfldraa. IkiKMYMlmiUnfttapl If it’s Electrical let Leo Mecklenburg doit. Phone R2I