Evening Republican, Volume 22, Number 293, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 December 1919 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Fern Gilmore went to Chicago this morning. Mrs. Mary D. Eger and Ora Duvall went to Valparaiso for a visit with Mr. and Mrs. Jaimes Griswold. Laban Wilcox and Russell Clarke, who are attending Purdue university, tarhe this morning to spend the week-end with their parents. Helen Johnson left this morning for her home in Madison after a visit here with Mrs. Helen Thompson and other friends. , Charles Kessinger was called to Wabash today on account of the illness of his brother, Willis, who has an attack of typhoid fever. Kolchak moves from Omsk to Tomsk, which, freely translated, probably means from bad to worse. —Chicago Post. One might remark that the unorganized housewife has no delusions about what constitutes a day’s work. —Chicago Daily News. Miss Staley Guinn and niece,, Margaret Bemslager, returned today to their home in Lafayette after a visit with the Hoeferlin -brothers, of Moody. Miss Mary and W. 1 Yates and family have as their guests their three aunts, Mrs. L. K. Yeoman, Mrs. R. E. Prather, of Rossville, Hl., and Mrs. J. S. Ross, of Kirkland, Oregon. Harvey Davisson, Mrs. Denna Hays and Mrs. Ura Gwin left on the early morning train for McAllen, Tex. Mrs. Hays will remain m McAllen fbr two or three months with her son, Harry Hays/ and wife. In an article on the railway strike here, the Temps says that the pro-b----lem really comes to this: “Should a worker be paid according to toe good which he does, or, toe evil which he might be capable <rf do-ing?”—-London Times.