Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 188, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 11 August 1919 — Page 2 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Mr. and Mrs. William Rishling went to Chicago today. Xf ithey didn’t mean to jfet rid of Burleson, why did they raise our /hopes?—New York Call. i W V Pprter returned home Saturday after a visit with his daughter, Mrs. Vaughn Woodworth, in Wisconsin. | Mr. and Mrs. John W. Paxton and Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Pavey, of South Bend, were 'guests Sunday of Mrs. Paxton’s mother, Mrs. Katie Watson, and famlily. Mr. and Mrs. George Neal, of Pittsburg, Pa., and Dr. Wade Laßue are guests of Mr. Laßue’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Laßiie, of this •city. . . { In renewing her subscription, Mrs. Vernice Vanice, of Paris, Mo., writes:! “The wheat here is light, from nf-1 teen to twenty bushels per acre. Oats are fair and corn is not good. A storm damaged the oats very much.”
Court Reporter M. J. Wagoner spent Saturday with friends here and returned to Chicago this Monday morning. He will remain m Chicago for a weeik when he will continue to his former home to SheIboygan, Wis., where he will visit /with relatives, returning here for the September term of count. By the time he’s through with it, the president will doubtless feel pretty pleased if he can get even “half a league, half a league, half a league onward.”—New Yoric Call. “It’s a hard come down,” says Walter Pulitzer, “that the country that produced William of Grange should have to continue to harbor William the Lemon.” —New York Evening Mail. NEW STANDARD OIL MANAGER. I have succeeded Jean Tyner 1 representatives of the Standard Oil company for this vicinity and would appreciate the patronage of all the old customers and as many new ones as possible. Kindly let me serve yon.—RUSSELL MORTON, telephone 642-Green.
