Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 262, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 4 November 1915 — Page 4 Advertisements Column 4 [ADVERTISEMENT]
The Choral Club meets this evening and the membership will then be clo*ed for the season. Born, Wednesday, Nov. 3, to Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Yeoman, on Frent street, a boy and their third child, the two older being girls. Mrs. H. E. Hartley left this morning for a visit of two or three weeks with her daughter, Mrs. G. D. Strong, at Ann Arbor, Mich. Those who miss the Old Colonial Band Friday evening will miss a musical treat. Will Clark was brought home from Chicago a few days ago and continues quite poorly at the home of his mother, Mrs. Lucy Clark. Sheriff McColly, armed with a warrant, has gone to an adjoining state to make an arrest of a person alleged to have committed a crime in this county. The details can not be given out until after the arrest is made. This is the second market day and not a very large crowd was here either day. However, there were a number of the buying kind and the business for the two days will total a good amount. i. _____________ The Matinee Musicale, the branch society of the Ladies Literary Club, will hold its first regular meeting Friday afternoon, Nov. 12th, at 2:30 o’clock at the Christian churach. The program will be published later. Will R. Wood, of Lafayette, who on Dec. Ist will take his seat in congress as the representative of the 10th Indiana district, has just returned from a visit at the exposition and other points of interest in California and the west. Mrs. Wood accompaned him.
We have a complete stock of all kinds of hard and soft coal.—D. E. Grow. Charles B. Crouch, who has lived in Rensselaer for three or four years and who has worked for the past year and a half in Fate’s College Inn, severed his connection with that restaurant and left Wednesday for his home in McMinnville, Tenn. Mrs. J. C. Gwin is taking treatment at the Wabash Sanitarium on the soldiers’ home drive near Lafayette, where she was taken last Sunday by Mr. Gwin. She has been in failing health for some time and it is hoped the treatment will do her much good. Mr. and Mrs. Earle Reynolds and daughter have arrived home from New York City. The Republican was unable to find Mr. Reynolds to learn the cause of the termination of the show in which himself, wife and daughter, were working at the Winter Garden theatre in New York City. There was a little rain, or perhaps it was more of a sprinkle, Wednesday evening, the first precipitation for quite a while. Today a few clouds are in the sky but the day is again ideal. The weatherman, however, is dickering with the coal dealers and colder weather is forecasted.
