Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 255, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 25 October 1920 — LOCAL AND PERSONAL [ARTICLE]
LOCAL AND PERSONAL
Alva Jay went to Ft Wayne today. r J. D. Booth waa in Lafayette today. Grant Lutes went to Chicago this morning. A. P.' Moore went to Chicago this morning. Herby Hammond lyas a caller at our office today. \ Meri Hemphill left for Hutchinson, Kans., today. Mra. X H. Riley went to Chicago today for a visit with friends. Arthur Hartman of Remington went to Chicago from here today. Mrs. Edward Longstreth, .son Louis and daughter, Martha, of Parr were here Saturday. Mrs. Benjamin King and son, Walter, of Union township were in Rensselaer Saturday. Trustee B. F. LaFevre of Gillam attended the Fall Festival and Stock Show here Saturday. Mrs. Lewis Wasson of Fair Oaks was shopping in Rensselaer Saturday. Marie Madlung, bookkeeper for the firm of Kuboske and Walter, spent Sunday with her parents in Monon. Mr. and Mrs. George Kimberlin of Chicago were the week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. X L. Jones and family. C. E. Zoll, who had visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Zoll, returned Sunday eventing to his home in Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. G. J. Rang, who had been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Boyd Porter, have returned to their home in Chicago. Alice Wells of Newman, HL, who had visited with Mrs. C. B. Wells and Mrs. Charles Elder, returned today to her home. Louis Leopold of Chicago wks the guest Sunday of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Abraham Leopold of' South Front street. Mrs.- H. F. McCracken returned today to her home in Gary after a visit here with her sister, Mrs. E. N. Loy, and family. ; Luella Harmon and Helen Kiplinger, who are attending a Gary business school, were week-end guests of their parents. Roy Stephenson, who had joined his wife in a visit here with her mother and other relatives, returned Monday to Toledo, Ohio. J. M. Bell, of Frankfort, who had visited here with his daughter, Mrs. 'W. L. Myer, and family, returned to his home this forenoon. Frances and Mildred McCurtain, who had been guqgts of Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McCurtaiji, returned Saturday to their home m Parr.' A Hallowe’en Social at Mount Ayr School October 29. A 5-act vaudeville and everything. Admission, masked, 15c; unmasked, 25c. Mrs. R. E. Hocker of Indianapolis came Saturday for a visit with A. D. Swain and family, who live near Morocco. | • Hazel Jones, who had attended the state teachers’ association in Indianapolis last week, returned this morning to her school in Fair Oaks. Mary Messman and Lawrence Kelley of Chicago were guests Sunday of the former’s parents, Mr. and, Mra. Herman Messman and family. Clarence P. Fate, that dynamic person from Crown Point, was a week-end visitor in our city, and an interested spectator at the Jive stock Show. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Sanders, who live in Gillam township, were weekend guests of her sisters, Mesdames Allen Osman and Emmett Lewis and families. John Nichols, Jr., returned to Lowell this morning after a visit here with his mother, Mrs. Jack Cooper. John is employed on a farm near Lowell. Mrs. Harry Wiltshire and granddaughter, , Martha, went to Chicago this forenoon for a few days’ visit with her daughter, Mra. Harry Jinkerson and family. The carnival company which ran here during the three days of the liye stock show, pulled stakes Sunday fqr Morocco, where they are showing this week. Mrs. Elizur Sage and son, Kermit, returned today to their home in Rochester, after a visit here with the families of C. W. Rhoades and Jay W. Stockton. ' Harold Halleck, who is a freshman at Indiana university, spent the week-end with his parents, Attorney and Mrs. Abraham Halleck of East Washington street. . John Subin and Benjamin Gorman of Indiana Harbor, who had attended the Knights of Columbus initiation here Sunday, returned to their homes this morning. J. J. Jeffreys, who had spent the week-end here with his wife, returned today to South Bend where he is the foreman in the cylinder department in the Studebaker plant. Mr. and Mrs. John Price and daughter, Thehna, were week-end guests of relatives and friends here. They were formerly residents of this city but now reside in Otterbein. _ Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Crowder returned Sunday evening to their home in Lafayette after a week’s visit with his parents, Mr. and Mra. M. M. Crowder, of southeast Marion township. Charles Liston and family, who had resided near Cedar Lake, have become residents of this cxty: Mr. Liston returned to Cedar Lake .this morning where he is employed in a saw mill. WjHl Platt received the <5.00 in groceries at the Haas-Newby Go., given to the purchaser of the largest amount of groceries during the live stock show. His orders amounted to $25.97. Many others foHowed closely. - j • Mr. and Mik Alvie Simpson,,who reside near Sheridan, are visiting here. They will-return to this city and again make this their ‘ home if they can buy or rent a * V.. < y > ’ At-.- - e
■ ' morning to her school in Dyer. Miss Kahler has been a teacher in this school for a nuttfter of - years. ’ *lbe. Velum and daughterß Virginia and Marie returned today to thejr homes in Seymour after a visit here with Mis. Charles Tobias. Rosabelle Daugherty left today for Upland, where she will enter Taylor university. • Ray Adams of Faunadale, Abu, left today for his feme after » visit here since Friday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Marion X Adams and other relatives. He was delighted to find his sister, Mrs. Harry Bell, convalescent after her very serious illness. Percy Abbott has retired from the employment of the Kubbske & Walter’s garage. Mr. Abbott has been with this firm for a number of years. Many friends will miss Percy’s smiling face. He and Richard DeLong left today on a business trip to Michigan City. They expect to be gone a few days. Mr. and Mrs. Vern Robinson left this Monday afternoon for their home ip Divide, Ore., after a three months’ visit spent with the former’s mother, Mra. G. M. Robinson, here and with Mrs. Robinson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Melvin McFarland, at Royal Center. Mr. Robinson is working in a lumber camp near Divide. Elbert M. Antrim of Chicago spent the week-end here with friends. Mr. Antrim is now the traffic manager for the Chicago Tribune and The Ontario Paper Co. This is a most excellent position and the many friends of this native Jasper county boy will 'be pteased to know of his remarkable degree of success. Mr. Antrim was graduated from the Rensselaer schools, taught one term of school in the Hershman district in Walker township. His father and grandfather both served as recorder of Jasper county. James Babcock, son of J-. L. Babcock, of Parr, and fullback on the Independent football team of this city, is in the hospital, the result of a broken blood vessel in his right arm, suffered in Sunday’s game. His arm was badly swollen after the game, but it was thought that it was only a bruise. The injury became so painful, however, that a physician was called and the real trouible learned. It is probable that Jimmy will be out of the line-up for the remainder of the season, and his loss to the squad will be a severe blow.
