Evening Republican, Volume 19, Number 272, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 16 November 1915 — ROSELAWN. [ARTICLE]
ROSELAWN.
Kankakee Valley Review. Miss Elsie Korth was a Rensselaer visitor Tuesday. Al Clark made a business trip to Morocco Monday. E. M Best made a business trip to Lowell Saturday. Mrs. C. C. Baker visited Mrs. Crooks at Rensselaer Saturday. ' Born, on Friday, Nov. sth, 1915, to Albert Roorda and wife, a boy. Camilla Weaver was able to begin her school work after a w eek’s illness. Wm. Korth is building a good, up-to-date bam 36x40 on his home place. H. H. Nelson and family and Lad Crooks drove to Rensselaer Sunday. D. K. Frye and family autoed Sunday to Rensselaer and visited relatives. Joe Roush is doing some art work with paint brush on the fixtures in the drug store. f The Mulder family and Mrs. C. C. Baker autoed Sunday to Wheatfield and North Judson. Boyer and son, of Whiting, have shipped suite a lot of apples from the farms amount here. Cleatus Gundy drove to Rensselaer in his car Tuesday evening with a party of friends. Mrs. Ben Smalley, Mrs. Ira Harris, Mrs. I. N. Best and daughter Pearl autoed to Rensselaer Saturday. Roscoe Bora is making some improvements and building an addition to his property occupied by Otis Phillips. George Dickey and children, of tShelby, Miss Glenn Cobb, Isaac Goldstein and others of Thayer were Sunday evening visitors. The Bushman boys have this week unloaded a car of limestone which they are spreading on the land at the Otis ranch. David Reed and wife, of West Lafayette, visited Friday with I. N. Best and family. Mr. Reed and Mr. Best were school boys together. A. Leach left here Monday morning for Missouri, where he expects to locate. Mr. Leach has been a resident of this vicinity for the past 25 years. Delaney Cossett and daughter Catherine and Miss Minnie Bruechet, of Wilmington, 111., visited C. C. Bruechet and family and Claud Griffin and •wife Sunday. Mrs. Roscoe Born, of Cook, Ind., was here Saturday visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Otis Phillips and the Mulder home. What ehreatened to be a big fire last Sunday evening on section 8, west of town, was checked by the neighbors. The land belongs, to Mr. Evans and the fire came within a few feet of the barn. About the last thrashing done in this locality was finished this week on section 32, Otis ranch, and instead of 250 to 300 the turnout was 500 bushels of grain. H. Barbour says if he had taken another guess he could have gotten nearer the mark.
