Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 34, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 31 July 1912 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Frank Messman. was in Monon on business Monday. ___ __■ »_, John Robinson spent Saturday nighl and Sunday in Chicago. Excursion to Chicago next Sunday. Only ia cents for the round trip. Leo Colvert, who has been spending the past week with relatives at Chicago, returned home Monday. The Domestic Science Club will meet Saturday afternoon at 2 o clock at the Library auditorium.

Advertised letters: Mrs. Clara Bickford, Miss Jennie Mcodonol, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Cheadle, T. G. McClellan. Orla Clouse returned home Friday from Dowagiac, Mich., where he has been spending his vacation the past week. Hugh Kirk went to Thayer and other points of Newton county Friday to assist John M. Knapp in placing R-C-H autos. Ernest Ramey and family, tvho had been spending the past week with Hammond relatives and friends, returned home Monday.

Wm. Hill returned to his home in Madison, Ind., Monday after a few days visit here with his brother Frank and other relatives. Miss Laura Harrod of Indianapolis, a niece of Mrs. George Fate, who had been visiting here for several days, returned home Saturday. Considerable more rain fell again Monday afternoon. Altogether too much rain in the north and east part of tihe county for the good of farm crops.

The republicans of Ohio have just received an awful jolt. Judge E. B. Dillon, recently nominated for governor by the regulars, has resigned from the ticket, and will, it is thought, cast his lot with the Bull Moosers. L. H. Hamilton spoke up at Lowell Saturday night at a Bull Moose meeting. Frank Maloy, formerly of Rensselaer but now the Monon agent at Lowell, is chairman of the Bull Moosers in the township in which Lowell is located.

Ellis and Geo. Jones, Dr. Robinson, Wm. Roadifer, B. F. Spencer and son Keith, Dr. Besser, Fred Berger, Dennis O’Reilly, W. T. Elmore, Ed Sutherland and Chas. Parker, all of Remington, were Rensselaer visitors Monday.

Mrs. Mattie Sharp left Monday for a few weeks visit at Yelverton and other points in Ohio. Her father, John Stively, 89 years of age, who went to Ohio the latter part of May, has been rather poorly ht the home of his daughter at Yelverton. He will return to Rensselaer with Mrs. 'i Mrs. Sharp, if able, when she comes ‘home.

H. N. Moulds and family autoed over from Eylar, 111., last Wednesday for a visit with old friends in Hanging Grove and with N. Osborn and family of Gillam tp. They returned home Mondays accompanied by Mfs. Osborn, who will make a week's visit with relatives and old friends in that vicinity, from which they moved ten years ago. This is Mrs. Osborn’s first trip back there since they moved away.