Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 162, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 7 July 1920 — PERSONAL MENTION [ARTICLE]

PERSONAL MENTION

Henry Haag went to Kankakee, HL, today. Cecil Rutherford went to Chicago this morning. John O’Connor of Knirnan was in Rensselaer today. Sebe Overton returned from Chicago this forenoon. John Poole went to .Hopkins Park, 111., this morning. Dr. I. M. Washburn and Judson J. Hunt were in Lafayette today. Mary Beadenkoff of Chicago is the guest of George McCarthy and family. R. W. Burris, who had been in Minnesota, returned here this afternoon. ‘ Simon Fendig and William McNeil of Wheatfield were in Rensselaer today. Attorney W. W. Lowry of Indianapolis, came Tuesday to look after some legal matters here. Dr. and Mrs. R. G. Oosten left by automobile today for Illinois where they will visit with relatives. Mrs. Clara Hill of St. Louis, Mo., came Tuesday for a visit with her brother, George Seible and family. Leland Jessen of Spencer, lowa, came Tuesday for a visit with his mother, Mrs. John Jessen and family. « Thomas Brusnahan of Gordon, Wis., was here to attend the funeral of his sister, Mrs. -John Carlin, Tuesday. Vannes Harwood of Morocco went to Indianapolis from here today. He was accompanied to this city by his brother, Byron Harwood. Cecil Lee has sold his produce business in Knox and he and his wife are here. JJe may decide to locate in businss in this city.

Mrs. Myrtle Rawlings and daughters, Winifred and Ruth, of Fon Du Lac, Wis., came today for a visit with Mrs. Isaac Leopold. Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Knapp of W’heatfield and Mrs. Knapp’s brother, William Webb, of Coshocton, Ohio, were in Rensselaer today. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Gwin of Elkhart, were Fourth of July guests of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Gwin, of North College avenue. Mrs. M. Glenn and daughter, Catherine, returned Tuesday to their home in Springfield, HL, after a visit with J. W. Phares and family. Elizabeth King went to Ottawa, today to attend th# funeral of a former classmate, who was killed in an automobile accident the Fourth.

Attorney William Isham of Fowler came this morning and is one of the attorneys in the Oliver law suit being heard by Judge B. H. Carr of Monticello. ' Mrs. J. T. Wiseman went to Lafayette today to see her daughter, Zella, who underwent an operation at St. Elizabeth hospital in that city a few days ago. ' Mrs. Stella Ketchum returned from Dletrdit, Mich., today. She reports that A. G. Work has a bad attack of rheumatism and that Mrs. Work is not very well. Mr. and Mrs. George Manon and two daughters of Chicago Heights, 111., returned Tuesday afternoon to their home after a visit here with G. W. Marion and family. £>ud Myres of Parr left today for Marinetta, Fla., where he will assist in erecting a new dredge for the Wisconsin Dredge Co., of which Clyde Gunyon is manager. Miss Eleanor Stillman of Remington went to Chicago today to visit her sister, Mrs. Claude M. May, who is in a hospital in that city. Mr. May accompanied Miss Stillman to this city. , Mrs. L. J. Langlow and little niece of Detroit, Mich., left this afternoon for their homes after a visit here with relatives. Mrs. Langlow was before her marriage, Miss Ollie Pollard. Charlotte Wheeler, who had been the guest of Dorothy Spencer of Remington, took the train here Tuesday for her home in Crown

Point. Miss Spencer accompanied Miss Wheeler to this city. Mr. and Mrs. Ed Cull returned Tuesday afternoon to their home in Chicago Heights, 81., after attending the funeral of Mrs. John Carlin. They were for a number of years residents of Union township. -L. Mr. and Mrs. John Duvall enjoyed the Fourth at Cedar Lake with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. W.' Duvall, and in the evening accompanied them to this city, returning Tuesday evening to their Chicago home by* rail. . Floyd Robinson brought to us this morning two very fine large homegrown tomatoes, which had been raised from plants from the Holden Greenhouse. These plants are from a very special strain and the greenhouse will have a large humber ~of~them on sale next spring. I John Carmichael had as his guest, over the Fourth, his brother, D. V. Carmichael, of Kansas City, Mo. j He had not seen his brother for some twenty-nine years. The brother left here Tuesday morning for Toledo, 0., where he will visit with ( another brother, who is quite sick. ( Mrs. W. S. Gifford returned, Tuesday afternoon to her home in Kankakee, 111., after a visit here with her brother, Harry Gifford and family. Leighton Gifford, who _is employed in Kankakee, went with Mrs. Gifford. Margaret Gifford, ; daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry, Gifford, also accompanied Mrs. Gifford to her home in Kankakee. R. A. Parkinson, J. A. McFarland, Howard Green, Ira Hurley and Richard Seeber went to Chicago this morning. Mr. Seeber lives in Peoria . and he and Mr. Hurley had been working for the Larkins Co. there. They will be employed by the same company in Chicago for a month, after which they will return to Peoria. — Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Kirk and Mr. and Mrs. Edson Murray returned home Tuesday evening after an eight days’ automobile trip to the east. Their first stop was at Syracuse, N. Y., where they visited the Franklin factory.. From Syracuse they continued to Albany where they left their car and took a boat down the Hudson to New York City. They remained at the latter place for two and one-half days before starting on their return trip.