Jasper County Democrat, Volume 11, Number 17, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 27 June 1908 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 2 [ADVERTISEMENT]
Mm. w. H. Beam and Mrs. W. F. Smith visited Chicago Wednesday. Min Fannie Porter is visiting friends at DeKalb, HL, for a short time. " 4 Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Perry of Hoopeston, 111., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Oren Parker here this week. j\Mrs. N. H. Warner is visiting Be? sister and family, Mrs. W. C. Milliron, at Denver for a short, time. MMrs. Lucius Strong is visiting her qaughter and family, Mrs. D. M. Yeoman, of Ambia, for a few days. Mrs. J. C. Paxton and daughter Virginia are here from South Bend for a visit with her father Wm. E. Moore. Miss Grace Warren has returned from Julia, Kans., after an absence of eleven weeks, which time was spent visiting there.
Xißay Wood and Arthur Daugherty Idft Wednesday for Nanton, Alberti, Canada, where Ray has a land claim which he is looking after. |\Miss Pearl Crisswell, a relative c|f Arthur Trussel and C. F. Stackhouse, has returned to Monon after a short visit here with relatives. Miss Sadie Infield and F. F. Helix, an instructor at Purdue, came over from Lafayette in an auto Wednesday morning. They will visit her parents a short time. Fred Love, late of Remington, who has been running a hqtel at Stratford, Tex., for a land company, instructs us to change the address of his Democrat to Lawrence, Kan. He doesn’t state what he is doing now. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Leek have traded to the Rensselaer Garage their old Buick auto for a fine new machine of the same make and it was driven through from Chicago Tuesday. It is a two-seater, with top, glass front, etc., the same as the one used by the Garage for livery hire. W. N. Pence, who was superintendent of the old Nelson Morris ranch in northern Jasper, and is now serving in the same capacity on a ranch in Texas owned by the same parties, is here on a visit for a short time. He has been visiting a ranch in South Dakota, owned by Morris, for about three weeks.
si Misses Grace Worland, Hazel Fwvker and Clara Brusnahan returned Wednesday from attending normal at Terre Haute. Miss Clare Jessen, who has also been attending normal there went to Lebanon to visit relatives until Monday, when with her two cousins, the Misses Jackson, she will also return home for the summer, and the latter will visit here for a week. J John Barlow of Wilsonville, Neb., Win. Bartow of Paoli, Frank Barlow of Edinburg and George Barlow and Mrs. Mollie Long of Shelbyville, are here at the bedside of their mother, Mrs. Mary Bartow, who was stricken with paralysis Monday. She remains in about the same condition, but little or no hopes are entertained of her recovery, as she is 82 years of age. J Coroner Wright took his little «6q, Willis Jennings, to the Presbyterian Hospital, Chicago, Wednesday to be treated for a stubborn case of constipation, from which the little fellow has suffered since birth. This ailment has assumed a serious aspect of late and the report from the hospital is not as favorable as anticipated it would be, but later reports may be more favorable.
We praise her doughnuts and her pies, her biscuit and her cake, but where’s the man that sighs for pants that mother used to make? She used to take a pair of pa’s when they were worn and frayed, and decorate them with a patch of some contrasting shade. And cut them off about the knees and take the waist in, too, and say that they for every day were just the thing for you. And then she sent you off to school and when you didn’t go, she wondered what got into boys that they played truant so. Yes, still we praise her jam, her “jell,” her coffee and her steak, but where’s the man that sighs for pants like mother used to make?—Ex. Joseph C. Butler, a Cincinnati millionaire who was one of the chief rooters at the republican national convention in Chicago last week, is lying at the point of death at Colorado Springs, Colo., as a result of his over-doing himself in shouting, and there is no hope of his recovery. ''Kjames Keister of Jordan tp. came jerV near having his big barn burned on Thursday of last week. As it was a cattle shed 12x18 standing only about 20 feet away was completely destroyed but hard work saved the barn. It is supposed that the fire was started by a young son of Mr. Keister’s learning to smoke.
