Jasper County Democrat, Volume 15, Number 53, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 5 October 1912 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 5 [ADVERTISEMENT]
I’~~ ‘ ‘ ~ j jNightwatch Critser and D. H. Yeo- , man autoed up to the Kankakee river Tuesday in the latter’s machine to try their luck fishing a few- days. j Buster Mauek, of the north part of the city, accompanied his uncle, Dutch Mauck, home Thursday eve- ! nin & a few days visit and to help grandpa Burns get a few' squirrels. ! . . Miss Martha Long is home from her college work at Western college, Oxford, Ohio, having been ill for the past few days with a slight attack of appendicitis. She is reported t., be better how, and expects !.• return to school «oon | —, j. Toni Callahan and wife, who is now practically recovered, and Miss Lera Ahlers drove over to Kentland the first of the week to attend the ; tuneral so Miss Minnie Burling, with ' whom Miss Abler made her home for several years. They took dinner , with relatives at Earl Park.
Omar Day, who has been employed by the M. Rumley Mfg. Co., at Laporte for the past several years, since his graduation from the mechanical engineering department of Purdue Uiversity, has resigned his berth there and with his family moved to Anderson, Ind., where he has secured a good position as mechanical draughtsman for the Reniy engine people. He had been promoted several times while with the Rumley people, but decided that a change was best. He is a son of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Day of this city.
A couple of Rensselaer young girls, so the story runs, decided to leave home a few days ago and tried to hire an automobile to take them to Remington where they were to take the train, but they were unable to hire anyone to take them over there, so they went to the barn loft of one of the girl’s parents determined to spend the night there. What their future plans were is unknown, but they got scared out by rats running over the floor and hurriedly left heir retreat and sneaked into the house while all the folks were out looking for them and went to bed. They were not discovered until next morning, after an any lorn a night spent by their reapectfve parents, and a little “moral suasion” was then used to convince them that “there’s no place like home.”
