Jasper County Democrat, Volume 12, Number 72, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 22 December 1909 — Page 5 Advertisements Column 3 [ADVERTISEMENT]

Rex Warner was in Chicago yesterday. C. B. Steward made a business trip to Hammond yesterday. Elizur Sage went to Payne, Ohio, yesterday to look after his farm interests near there. Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Thompson left yesterday for Braidentown, Fla., where they will spend the winter. Mrs. Stephenson of Chicago came Thursday to spend the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Kirk. Miss Belle Laßue of DePauw University, Greencastle, came yesterday to spend the Christmas vacation with "her parents. 1 Chris Kopkey, section boss at this place, and family went to Francesville yesterday to spend the holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kopkey. Joe Nessius and son Anthony and wife went to Chicago yesterday to spent several days with relatives. They will visit relatives at Kankakee, 111., before returning home. Let the little ones see Santa Claus in all his glory at Princess Theatre. Tickets given to parents only for children under 10 years at the 99c Racket Store. Adults will be charged 6c. 'Vlsaac Saidla while working in his parnyard a few days ago with a posthole digger, jabbed his eye with the tool, but by prompt medical aid, it is reported that the sight of the yee is not harmed. Miss Mildred Clowry and Mrs. Walter Hicks of Remington, who had been here visiting with the latter’s sister, Mrs. Mat Worden, and faniily for the past few days, returned home Thursday. Harry Kurrie, who had been hpe with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. P. Thompson, assisting them in getting ready for their trip to Florida for the past few days, returned to her home in Chicago yesterday. A good sized brief and a 75-page booklet composition, coming in at the holiday rush, kept The Democrat’s linotype working over-time awhile the first of the week. However, such little matters, that would cause the proprietor of a hand-com-position office to go up in the air, hardly make a riffle in the serenity of an office equipped with an up-to-date linotype and all other modern ' machinery, like The Democrat now is.