Jasper County Democrat, Volume 14, Number 93, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 2 March 1912 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Feb. 16, to Mr. and Mrs. Ray Collins, a daughter. The two little children of Earl Ellis are suffering with tonsilitis. ¥ f . i Nat Scott has been suffering considerably this week with stomach trouble. ~ . —— - Mrs. Kenneth Rhoades has returned to Morocco after a several days visit here. About 15 new r members w r ill be baptized at the M. E. church at the morning service. Sunday. Rev. A. S. Cross will, preach at the Baptist church morning and evening Sunday, All are invited. The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Timmons of near Gifford, is sick w'ith an attack of bronchitis. Len Overly, step-son of Douglas Smith, living near the depot, is quite sick this week with pneumonia. Mrs. Chas. Stultz of McCoysburg continues to improve steadily and it is now thought she will fully recover. • Mrs. E. D. Rhoades has returned from a week’s visit with her daughter, Mrs. C. A. Rad cl iff, at Louisville, Ky Peter VapLear is still receiving treatment for a complication of stomach and liver disorders at a Chicago hospital. ■ Tomorrow, Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Tobjn will'celebrate the 25th anniversary of their wedding, at their home in Jordan tp. C. W Rhoades and family returned from Goodland Tuesday where they attended the funeral of her mother, Mrs. Wm. Townsend. Mrs. Ida Newels of Pueblo, Colo., has been visitng here a few days, the guest of rMs. John Nowels and Mrs. Joe Luers and other relatives. Mr. and Mrs. ■ John Donnelly came last wefek from Colorado and will reside on a part of his father’s, Alf Donnelly’s, farm north of town.
George Scott, who was recently operated on for gallstones, is getting along nicely now and improving from the effects of the operation. Mrs. Harley Shields, who has been confined to her home with sickness, is now greatly improved and will start for Canada next week to join her husband. Harry Grady of Detroit, Mich , who has been visiting relatives here for the past two months, left this week for Knox where he will begin work as traveling salesman. George Ketchum was brought home from Chicago Tuesday, where he has ben taking treatment in a hospital. He is said to be somewhat improved, but is still under the care of a trained nurse. Fearing an epidemic of mad dogs, Gary police have orders to 'kill every unmuzzled dog in the city, and more than two hundred canines have bit the dust as a result. Two dogs afflicted with rabeis had bitten about twenty other dogs, hence the police order. . __ Tho six-month-old daughter of Mr and Mis. T. M. Callahan, who had been suffering from tubercular meningitis, died jj,t 11:30 Tuesday night. The funeral Was held Thursday at the Catholic church and interment made in Mt. Calvary cemetery south of town. Benjamin Day, a wealthy farmer of near Akron, Fulton county, committed suicide Wednesday night by hanging, his daughter finding his frody. Despondency over ill health is given as the cause. Ray bay, who a few years ago clerked in the dry goods department of the Chicago Bargain Store, was a son of Mr. Day. The new Red Men lodge is coming on fine. They' started out with some 51 members and now have 17 applications for membership on hand. ■ , They h 4 ave ordered about $250 worth of regalia and paraphernalia, and at their last meeting a band of 14 pieces was organized fiom among the members, nearly all of— whom are old players. Charles C. Spencer left this morning for Chicago, where he becomes one of a party of sixteen who have chartered a Pullman car for a trip through the western states. They will go south over the Santa Fe, up through California, Oregon and and home by the North,e:n Pacific. Mr. Spencer has been planning, this trip for fully, sixteen years.—-Monticello Journal.
