Rensselaer Semi-Weekly Republican, Volume 41, Number 111, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 October 1909 — Page 3 Advertisements Column 1 [ADVERTISEMENT]

’n j ■, FRIDAY. W. H. Miller returned thia morning frnrn a short visit in Lafayette. Mn, Floyd thta morning from » visit of several day. in Chicago. Miss Nellie Mt. Ayr. took the train here this morning for a visit with relatives at Claypool. Miss Ruby Davis, of Kniman, who has been visiting here, went to Parr this morning to attend the fall festival. - .'.l'Ti . Mrs. Oscar McClure and daughter returned home this morning from a week's visit with relatives and friends in Hammond. ■ ; Mr. and Mrs. Marsh Warner and son James went to Delphi this morning to attend' the street fair and visit Livingston Ross has entered the Wisconsin University- at Madison. He was one of the 1909 graduating class from the Rensselaer high school. About a dozen went from here to, Parr this morning to attend the opening day of the fall festival. More will probably go tomorrow; Mrs. R. Lowe returned this morning to Clifton, Hl.i after a week’s visit with herjather, Ephrain Hughes, and family, east of town.

Newt Pumphrey went to Lafayette today to attend a big Duroc Jersey hog sale being held by H. E. Jones & Son, near that city. Mrs. J. J. Hunt and son, John Wasson Hunt, left this afternoon for a visit with her sister, Mrs. Jesse E. Wilson, and Secretary Wilson, in Washington, D. C. - Stephen Eldridge and wife came over from Francesville yesterday for a short visit with their niece, Mrs. Frank King, and his brother, Nathan Eldridge, of Barkley township. s Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTO RIA “Uncle” Joe Parkinson and wife arrived here yesterday afternoon from Bucklin, Kans., to visit their daughters, Mrs. W. V. Porter and Mrs. Alfred Collins. The father of Chas. Dean died at Coats and was buried Tuesday. A fuller account of the death will be given upon the return of Mr. Dean, who went there a few days before his father died. The Swisher divorce case which was to have been tried this morning, was dismissed, the court holding that it had no jurisdiction as the parties had not lived in this county for six months.

A. S. Keen, of Wheatfield, will be an exhibitor at the horse show next week. He has a fine imported Percheron stallion that he regards as the best moving draft horse ever brought to Jasper county. A. S. Keen came down from Wheatfield with his son, Willie, the deaf boy, and this afternoon he and Harold Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Clark, went to Indianapolis to enter the state school for'the deaf. "Uncle” Wallace Murray is one of our quite rugged octogenarians. He will be 82 years of age the 4th of next February, and while he is not in the best of health, he is able to be up on the main street about every day. r Mrs. Frank Keqton has returned from a visit of two months with relatives in and near Mitchell, S. Dak. She was accompanied home by Miss Alpha Kenton, daughter of Mason Kenton, who will remain for some time. Fenton O. Churchill left this morning for a two weeks’ trip, which he started at Parr, going thence to Chicago, and then probably west, although he had not determined exactly where he would go when he left here. M. L. Hemphill returned this morning front Indianapolis, where he had gone to erect a set ot horsa stocks at the Maywood stock farm. He continues to sell a number of stocke, having had four or five sales within the past two months. Mt fin KM Yw Hsu Always Bsgtt