Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 189, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 6 August 1920 — PERSONAL MENTION [ARTICLE]

PERSONAL MENTION

Lesta Crider went to Indianapolis today. Mrs. Joseph Jeffries went to Chicago today. Clifford Hendricks returned from Monticello this forenoon. Mip. Omar Wilcox and children went to Parr this morning. Mrs. Benjamin Knapp of Wheatfield was in ■ Rensselaer today. William Traub and daughter, Wilhelmine, went to Chicago today. Ruth Gorham and her friend, Myrtle Gerth spent the day in Parr. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Brenner Of Valparaiso were in Rensselaer Thursday. Mr and Mrs. Ralph i O’Riley and son were* in Lafayette this afternoon. Dr. and Mrs. I. M. Washburn and daughter, Mary, went to Lafayette today. -- — Mr .and Mrs. Simeon Wells and children went to Hammond Thursday evening. Ross Moore returned today to LaSalle, 111., where he is employed in a drug store. Mrs. John Fairchild and daughter, of Monon, came today for a visit with Oka Pancoast. Mrs. John R. Gray returned to her home here today after a visit with relatives in Medaryville. Frank Roy and daughter, Ida, of Oklahoma City, were guests this week of John Bill and family. County School Superintendent M. L. Sterrett and son, Morgan, went to Indianapolis Thursday evening. Mrs. Charles G. Spitler returned from a visit with her daughter, Mrs. H. M. Clark at Wheatfield, Thursday. Mrs. Winifred Lynch, of Flagstaff, Ariz., is here for .a visit with her nephew, J. K. Braddock, and family. Nellie Winsor of Richland, Mo., came Thursday for a visit with her aunt, Mrs. Frank Welsh and other relatives.

Elvin Bussell of Hammond and Hazel Skleba of Chicago were the guests Thursday of Mrs. W. E. Jacks and family. - | Prof. R. p. Shaupp completed the removal today of his household I goods to Bloomington. He went to | Brookston this afternoon. j Carl Heinz of Hammond joined his wife and daughter here today in a visit with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ben D.. McColly. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Myers, Mr. find Mrs. John Braddock, Edwin, Edna and Ada Robinson will leave Sunday for northern Michigan. Frank T. Burns went to Monticello today to join his parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. M. Burns, .who moved i to that city from here last Tupsday , A. D. Babcock, Jr., Louise Mes- I sersmith and Catherine Basset of Goodland, were in Rensselaer today. The latter continued from here to Lafayette. Louise Bellows, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bellows of Remington, is the guest of her grandmother, Mrs. A., J. Bellows of North Cullen street. ■ Nellie Eck, who had been visiting relatives here and in Carpenter township, left today for Blaisdell, N. D., where she is a teacher in the public schools. Mrs. Anna Threlkald of Fredonia, Ky., who had been the guest of her brother, John Bill and family, has gone to Salisbury to visit relatives and from there will continue to her home. - Charles Randle returned Thursday from Kokomo where he had been employed. He will not return to Kokomo and says that a large number of laborers are being thrown out of employment there. Orpha Grant returned to Gary this afternoon. The steel plaht in which he had been employed has laid off a number of men. If they do not put him back to work, Orpha will go to North Dakota next week. Mrs. Will Timmons and daughter, Phyrel, who had been visiting her mother, Mrs. Mary Parker and daughter, Blanche, for the past month, returned to their home in Jackson, Tenn., Friday.—Francesville Tribune. Mrs. H. E. Parkison reports the following yields of wheat on her three farms: The farm occupied by Ezra Wolfe, 23% bushels per acre, the one occupied by Jerry Branson, 23 bushels, and the one farmed by Francis Schmitter, 20 bushels. Attorney Moses Leopold has received a supply of Warren G. Harding pictures, which are suitable for window display from the Republican State Central Committee. You may get one by calling at his office in the Farmers Bank building. Sam Cook went to Chicago today where he may buy a load of cattle. He reports that his wheat yielded twenty bushels but that his oats were only fair and made but thirty bushels to the acre. He says that Walter Jordan’s oats made sixtyfive bushels to the acre.

See the A. B. C. and Thor washers working. H. A. Lee.