Evening Republican, Volume 23, Number 269, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 10 November 1920 — COME AND SEE ME. [ARTICLE+ILLUSTRATION]

COME AND SEE ME.

1 have Baldwin pianos and other makes. phonographs, several makes, including the Ampliphone. All makes of records. CHARLES B. STEWARD. South Side West Washington St

hlB message upon every community.** Mr. Fletcher comes with a reputation of being a dramatic orator. It is said that he dramatizes his message by an intensity of energy which holds his audiences from the very start. Writing of Mr. Fletcher to the committee In charge of the local course, the Redpath Bureau, through which Mr. Fletcher was secured, says: “It is difficult to write of Fletcher without using superlatives. He is one of the biggest men Redpath has ever had on tiie platform. His personality is such that, to put it tritely, he simply must be heard to be appreciated. No one can use the right word to describe Brooks Fletcher and his lecture. When you have told all about him you find that what you have said is Inadequate” Mr. Fletcher Is a newspaper editor. He lives In Marion, Ohio, and is editor «f the Marlon Tribune.

Mrs. Josephine Needham, who had visited with the following relatives, returned today to her home, in Dublin: John G. Hayes and family, William Florence and family, William Hayes and family. WhjUe here Mrs. Needham visited with Mrs. Harry Parker. Mrs. Parker and Mrs. Needham’s daughter, Jeanette, were very intimate friends' while the latter was a teacher in the Rensselaer schools. Mrs. Josephine Needham was a sister of the late Mrs. Frank Hayes, who for many years was a resident of Barkley township.

THOMAS BROOKS FLETCHER.