Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 36, Number 33, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 April 1894 — Page 1

Weehty GTmtf tef VOL. hQ. JASPER, INDIANA, FRIDAY, APRIL 27, 1894. NO. 33.

rEU, DIMIOI.S COUNTY, INDIANA, V CLEMENT DOANE.

niMCK OF SUBSCRIPTION. T, , relation of alcoholisn to

Year ö- N"hers, Postpaid, $1.60. insanity is shown bv the statement

rates ;

shorter tiiiio " juuj-"'"" ' nvTES OF ADVERTISING

.... lulveitiHeinentH legal

10 lines fl.00 for liret insertion ; 50e.

ich tiuhM'qiient lnsuniuu.

arlv advertisements liberal con-

will be made to regular auver-

of u specialist K rafft Ebing that

all forms of insanity, from melan

No. of

pupils.

fan

For y

trai'W

tiserri. "cüMMKKCIAL AND JO WORK

nr 11 Kinds Promptly and Neatly ex- mg.

ccnteil at M'ikua nets. Wo inVite iuHpection ami bumnera. Vit. BRANNOCK,

Physician and Surgeon,

kvkky KitiuAY, at jäh- ki r T U HO L U M N J Ed ucationa I Hnliimn Grave Robbers.

,' " ' t : ; I There has been n great deal of excoNnucrKi) hy Mits. m. i.. mums. coNt'tcTKi) hy oko. a. wiiaosjx mcit cjtement at Rockport, Spencer ., . " Vonniv. nmiupil liv n rminrl thnt tlm

OFFICE. In Couhikk Builpinu jj porniH of Insanity in Al-j Y. P. R. C 'grave "of James Lowery had been A Wbst Sixth Stukkt. . coliol. The rojorts so far received show' robbed. At first there wus not ' " "" I Ii... f.. II ! 1 . " .1 w '...iw.l s.sxmI. .Inns.. li.rw "

iiiu luuowing incmucrsnip m me i . "t umuuum-t i".-" v-

1'. K. t;. in Dubois eountv. port, mit laier developments sur-

No. or book stantiated the report. Mrs. Low

ery, mother of the deceased, went !to the grave and found the shirt in ! which her son had been buried. The authorities took the matter in hand and made an investigation by opening the grave. They found the gravo empty. By whom and whither taken no one knows. Lowery died about three weeks ago, was about twenty-five years old, and had always been a robust, healthy young man up to about two months prior to his death, when he took quick consumption. There is I no medical college nearer than one (hundred miles of this city, and it is believed that the body-snatchers aro inear by. It is believed that other I graves have been robbed and nn

.investigation will will be made.

atchers are now kept at the ceme

tery everv night.

NlllIlB of Teucuer.

Columbia Tp

i r - -V

cholio to imbecility, are found in'. . , , 1 i alcoholism. It is "artificial. It be-:tmme Harbison o gins with a slight maniacal excita-'e,ponI&"nwns tion, thoughts How lucidly, the San,uel hl ,ri 40 c , rrwl J UAKRISON 11'

Willst tr,VJlV 4WMMtV(VUi7i WIW

est bold. There is need of muscu-

John J. Himsel

Boo.NR Tl

Estella Brittain

lar action. The emotions are man ifnc In luttirliitiir uinnintf imil lme

Now the jesthetical ideas and i .

moral impulses are lost control of, ,.. "niuun the weak side of the individual is j;011 ",ie.v manifested, his secrets are revealed.' vu 1 er. Ho imWmntin priiol. rvnienl. dan- .lonwr U "eiliger

"O 1 J 1 irerous. He insists that he is not

drunk, iust as the insane insists on

. his sanitv. Then his mind be-

OFFICK At Model Pnig Mom, a d fe , a conK.iougne?s dim BrfKk'Moe on Jackson Street, opposite ... . .' stanmer, t ' Llnuni Hotel, Janper Indiana. ( illusions ari.e. lie siammtns, i fills attended in town or eonntry gers, and, like a paralytic, his

ugbt orday. Nov. .t-iy

U 5 15 18 10 18

(5. Crandall 21

Madison Ti

Grace McSwaine 13

Eifa Dillon 19

Thw

rotttl.

50 30 1 70 5 G 8 30 29 24 35 24

Doctor J. P- Salb,

OrriCKOS KAKT SIXTH HTUKET.

JASPER, INDIANA.

movements are uncertain. The nrincinal character of these

mental disturbances consists in a moral and intellectual weakness.' Ideas become lax as to honor and

üffi'w hin professional sen-ices to oiti- decorum. There is a disregard

tensol umtoiH Kuuiiijr. jimui.u..w.-0j Ine yuues oi iamuy

Don given to surgery a . u " citizenship. IrriUlbility is a d calls answered us l.Vr (concomiti!nt. The slightest thing . causes suspicion and anger which is iM.Mii.in us. m. a. sweenkv. uncontrollable. There is a weak- ... t-.t m. uuri.v!iii.v iiossof will to carrv out irood rcso-

lutiong nml a consciousness of this ain l. rarRs Attorney S at LaW, leads some to request to be placed Mili??" JASPKR, IND., 'in an asylum, for they are morally K. -t. c B ion

onrtillTl itl (lll-lllf' IM II Illl'V I'MIIIMII Si

C. J. Evrard 9 E. S. Horton 4 Rettie Utz 5 CJraeo Greene 7 Marv Uurlingame 1

B.MNBItUHiK

W. W. Gullett Lizzie Hretz

and A- J;- Jran,I.)Crt

r . niessiugei Mary IL Smith Maggie A. Wilson Josie E. Smith Mahion

3S 19 15 4 14 7 1

Tp

t 9 IS 2G 19 1Ü 22 "Tp.

H 11 practice In tins Courts of I)ulol and tljom.iik' ountU'S. I'urtlculuruttfntfoiiKlv-eatuculUi-tlous. ... ..... jrOKMCK-Oth 8t,. et door to Alle. Xc y, vi.

W. E. COX,

Attorney at Liw,

JASPER, INDIANA, ProefutInif Attorney for tlio 11th Judlclul

Cixcult.and will can-fully attend to any civil tonne mtrutvd to him lu uny couuty of fc circuit.

fOltic over tlie rot urace. Vre y, V2-ly

Hall

Henrv A. Sutton

P. S. Hessemer

John Kenney

Thos. J.'Xolan

14 15 12 5 Tp. 28 1 28 35

;.l UUCTZ.

J. E. MCFALt..

C. 1IUKT7-,

BRETZ, McFALL t BRETZ,

Attorneys at Law

JA8FER, INDIANA, Wilt nMI In ih.. f!mirta of DuIkiU und

dJolniuifcifuntlfH, and Rive Httentlon til III- i.llylllliuu Ml tit 111 I to tlimil.

iroitlci-on Cth Streut, onu wjuare Kant of

Court liotiao. ec. v, vj-i)

resist temntation. Thus one has

been known to have his daughter

carrv his watres home, as he could

C3 ' . not nass a saloon on the way with-

with him. Now it is a weakness oi :"",.,. Tp memory, a difficulty in the chain of Cn U

in lniouuiniy is leuwcu. Trti, ntna oo

1 Iiere Illliy UU uuiuiuoiiv.m ... n

brain circulation, causing restless

sleep, anxious dreams, confusion,'

dizziness, headache. Such circula-

ory uisturuanccs m mo fccuS - v,.

to hallucinations.,"" "'" ,

1J. ij. rvaiiurjuiiii

on

W. A. Traylo. . W. 8. HanUr. TRAYLOR & HUNTER, Attorneys at Law, JASPER, INDIANA,

Will liruc-ticn In tlio Courtü of IMiboii and

ujainniKt'ouutien. l'urticuiar imi-nii tD t.l iitlfi.l.kfi.

li-Oltlce on Vlfth Street, bet. Main and

J4ckK.ii. April ri, VI.

imns can cive rise

'PI...., ia .1 r..il.lifirr in linnHs. filf'P.I

i. .1 i i unt ti.nm Zinnia Wils

lips auu lunyue. Jin suvFiv "iviv Jif t

a graauai n em auu E. F. Hildebn

erat.

I

BRUNO BUETTNER,

Attorney at Iaw,

And Notary Public, TASPER, INDIANA,

tin. noilrta nf llllbolH lUid

"ry vouiitleM, Iliilliuia.

dentistry:

Dr. 13. ,. MOSBY,

Resident Dentist.

HUNTINGJJURG, IND. TuilllTS llU lirofi.uwllllllll HITVlci'H td llll

5"itn any work in tin: dental line, and ffoiiimux to K've It IiIh elotteiit attention. W I Muti) work Hpcelally nolleited, and all

arnilllfll. .ir. i;', aj.

NEW BRICK YARD

Brick for Sals I

f if uiulersiKned wislieH to inform tin

R,Wii? thnt he hau opened up his ltriek f'l. at the north side of JasiHjr, and Hl make more brick thiH year than In

V previoiiH one. lie will intike lavor

ÜIÜ IlTlIIU II,, 11,.t..r..

uii iiuil.iu i uut;i tin.

Pf W, Vi.

JOHN OKI KR, .IH.

farmers Home t

("ii Mill treet, Jimper, Ind.) I'HlUl KA8TNKK. Propr

1 ''1" 'llimiliilli.li. I......I 1... !...,.. tliorollull

id i. r ,HU,-,l. d retltted ihiw tliroiiKliout tit i.i , m,!!l'l'n f,,r Ibllc enti rtalnmeiit Stir ' WlU "'" ay" bo found well supplied

a kM ;.r Pr'?"v"

Whaley 25 Jackson Tr

Sallie Crandal

Patoka

14 Ti

ll 9 12 10 19 Tp.

Worse Than War, Famine,

and Pestilence. It luis been said that greater ca

lamitiesgreater because more con-

inuous have been inflicted on

mankind by intemperance than by it historic scources of

war, famine and pestilence combined. That is true and it is the measure of our discredit a.id disgrace. Gladstone.

What can we do with the 500.000

nconle who would be thrown out of

employment bv destroying the liq-

uor tratlicY" is a question uiai sun

mzzle8 a great many eople. i ne SiKW.OOO.OOO annual drink bill

turnnd into the lecitimate channels

of trade would cive immediate em

nlovmentto these 5UU,UW people

and a irrcat many more, the cco-

u ,

nimiii! nrmimcnt is one oi me

strongest on the side of prohibition, nndKhould make a Prohibitionist

of every working man.

Eckert

ind

Cass

Anna Werremeyer 12 J. II . Kamman 0 C. H. Mevcr 10 II. W. A 'Hemmer 22 II. M. Kean 30 Christian W. Land 3 II. II. Hildebrand 37 FKrdinand Tp. Anthony Lange 10

Wm. Wirzberger 3

Jaspkh.

T. K. Dougherty 4

Mrs. A. K. Greene 19

M. A. Gutgsell 18

IJlltDSKYE.

Wm. H. Bonner 22

Lettie M. Dillon 41 Maude Farver 22 H u nt i no n vug. F. S. Morgauthaler 4 R. W. Armstrong 43 Louis II. Katter 92 A. M. Blunk 49 Willa Bretz GO Lottie Cato 39

Total numtor of circles Total number of readers

Total number of books read

9 IS 415 ,2G 2S 22 14 15 12 10 4G 1 48 52 38 15 34 49 25 14 15 22 15 20 19 13 G 11 140 33 3 10G 12 5

52 49

57 91 44

Talk up Your Town. If you live in town you should

believe in it. If you don't believe

your own town or city is a little better in most respects than any of its neighbors, you should move out.

Like other places, it has advantages

that others have not, and your modesty should not prevent you from making that fact known whenever the opportunity presents itself. At home or abroad, whether pursuing pleasure or engaged in business, do not neglect to give those with whom you come in contact to understand

that you live in a live town, popu-

ated bv enterprising, go atieau,

progressive people, and ono that is

advancing instead of retrograding.

.IIIIII in ' Courier Reifer, Des This Fit Yon? (Petersburg Democrat.) A man wants his home paper,

but cannot pay at once. 1 he publisher is obliging. Ho wants tO swell his subscription listi Ho be

lieves the man is honest, worthy and perfectly able to pay n year's subscription, so he gladly sends

So far, so good.

107 43 150 58 G4 39 GG 1,342 2,117

Aaether Flyiaf MachiM, John Carrol, Jr., of 125 Kilgour street, after four years of hard work, has completed an invention which

i he hopes will make him famous.

Mr. Carrol conceived the idea that he could make a machine which

'could be propelled in the air. He is a mechanic of unusual ability. His model was completed and tried a few days ago, and it worked successfully. The machine, which is a neat

'piece of mechanism, weighs about

40 pounds and is made of sheet iron. It is capable of carrying

al)out 250 pounds weight. Mr. Carrol tried the machine and worked it very easily and rode through

the air at a heieht of about 50 feet

'for quite a distance. He was a bit 'bashful in attempting the trial in

davheht, so he did it after nightfall

The inventor has an idea that

with some alteration he can contrivfi a machine which will be ca-

.,..1.1., j . f 4HnifnKnf nl 1innl Q f mitno

puuie ui iiuuiiii .it uu iiiiivo an hour, and that he will also bo

able to continue this rate of speed even against a strong wind. Some

dav shortly he intends to cive a

public exhibition of his new ma

'. chine, and Cincinnatians will then

be afforded the novel sight of Dee

mg a man Hying through the air like a bird. Mr. Carrol's machine is boxlike in form and is propelled

by means of rotary shuttles. Lin cinnati Tribune.

As for the tariff bill now before

the Senate, nobody cares whether

it passes or not, because bv the

time the Senate gets through with

it it will not be distinguishable so

far as genuine tariff reform is con

cerned from the McKinley tariff.

What a tremendous opportunity

Senator Voorhees has lost in not

standing pat upon the Wilson bill

as it came from the House and

forcing the Democratic majority of

the Senate to toe the mark or ac knowledge their treason. Evans ville Courier.

IIIIII IIIU imi'Ul. u mi. bv.vv.., -c e u. t . I; i

.1 ,f ll, Vnnr flu. fl.."" "B- lut "lu pSK Ul lllc UUK-

- I n 1-1. limn lull in Ihn carta. Thid

A MID

eena-

don't want his d d paper." Of V"n?."k"c I"" i' course that is a pleasant task toThymhn-'

the postmaster. He knows nine,

times out of ten a man who will do Hon. Jason B. Brown is confined

15UI at me enu oi ine year uiu iei- j t" -ai-ii n. nn.low refuses to take the paper from' ?rc b.in the senate. Thi the postoffice, and tells the post-J9 "t any rate m proof of the 8en. master to tell the publisher that q ors sagacity m retreating to cow

p fid

"table for farinera' liomcH, and

Ith tliecbolceiit

polite attention ul-

1'HILIP KAHTMKK.

fc'"11,1''. well supplied w ! niUU ul,lr"' VOM 1 ? neu call.

It was rum knocked out John L.

Sullivan. Give it the belt. It is

tlm world's champion slugger.

restrictive law that is not permissive

that is a slice of bread Prolnbi-

tinnfatit will not reiect. The old

party leaders would be very glad to carry out prohibition, but they

want to carry it out on a sireicner.

Protection of the grogshop and tree

trade in immortal souls between

earth and hell by way of the saloon

-that is a bigger question than the

duty on wool and cotton goods.

To ask the public to destroy the

saloon and then to build up ttic public revenue on the profits of the saloon, as a step toward its des

truction, is as wildly insane as it would be to place a man on the very limb you were trying to induce

him to saw oil.

The real " cranks" and "imprac

ttablos" arc thoso men who talk

about saving drunkards, while at

the same time they vote to continue

tlie saloons to make drunkards.

School Books Seid ia Datei CftNaty. For the vear beginning March,

1893, and ending March, 1894, the

following common school text-books nid to the pupils of Dubois

County :

First Readers 884 for

Second Readers 454 for

Third Readers 380 for

Fourth Readers 234 for Fifth Readers 1S7 for Elem. Arithmetics 2G5 for

Complete " 18U tor

Elem. Geograptnes zö; ior

Complete " lob tor Spelling Books 628 for r.. i .... i t

Klein, rnvsioiogics i--Complete" " 10G for

Interm. Grammar ior

Complete " 132 lor

Copy-Hooks io. i tvo ior Copv-Books No. 2 99G for Copv-Books No. 3 771 for

Copy-Hooks iso.i iiv ior Copv-Books No. 5 358 for

Copy-Hooks ro. o i io ior Histories 190 for tflmn. Grammar 2G9 for

Total 8,1GG books for $1,403.80

IS8.40 G8.10

95.00 70.20 74 .SO

92.75

81.00 8G.70

117.00 G2.80 43.20

G3.G0

44.40 52.80 39.G5

49.80

38.55

20.50 17.90 5.90 123.50

G7.25

Hon. J. T. Jarvls has been appointed and has accopted the Uni

ted State senatorship to succeed the

lato benator Vance, of North Caro

lina.

Tho aggregato capital stock of United States railways in $4,863,119,073, with bonded indebtedness

amounting to $1,000,000,000 more.

and more than half of both is puro

"water."

Evansville Bulletin: A woman,

black as the aco of spades, embarrassed a young clerk in a dry goods store the other day by asking him to show her some flesh colored hose.

He offered her some fast black and she ilew out of the place in a rage.

The Soldiers' Monument Com

mission awarded tho contract for the monument of George Rogers Clark to John Mahoney, of Indianapolis.

The monument is to be completed

within a year, and will cost $4.000.

The statue willTe of bronze and eight feet high. Senator Voorhees has apparently dropped out of tho leadership in

such a thing still owes for the paper to his homo at Seymour with canand also owes every merchant in'cer of the lips caused by nicotino town that will trust him for goods. 'poisoning from excessive smoking.

" , , He is under the care of a physician It seems that Col. Hardy had an(t i.;R rnn(i:t;nn p

quite an opposition for the nomina-He has been 8Uffering from the dis-

UUII. ouiue luui vuuumniwo -v..- jnr Beverm mpnthS. presented to the convention, amont? the most dangerous being Judge There is something vilely wrong

Gardiner, of this city. A delegate with society when wheat is at the . i . i hi. u...nni i.a.j 4 1.

m presenting ins name sam -ne iunenn;c c umueu iu mu (Gardiner) has promised to make a history of the country and at the thorough canvass of the district, if same time the largest number of nominated." This was somewhat' people ever known in America aie of a surprise to Hardy's friends, starving or living on chatty. So

On the first ballot Gardiner receiv-,much for the wisdom of political ed 40 votes and Hardy 65. Daviess economists.

eountv voted solidly for Hardy both .

ballots. The delegates from thisl -6.- v,...

county claimed that if Gardiner H Bu u compel nuiwava

wanted the nomination lie ought to i-- ..6 p.p. wvro...B. have asked for it, and that the day for The cunci1 of SheloyvUla

dark horses is past. The ring lead- " "."r 4u.r...B ,Wu

ers of this city did not attend, show- "K". r"

ing that they were not favorable to ODiecuona. ou was nrougm ana Hirdy. The Colonel is on top and will be earned to the Bupreme is one of the proudest men in the COUIf to teflt the constitutionality of Second district. It has always been ,tne law-

his ambition to run for Congress, Prendergast the assawin of Mayand a small boy with his first pair ,,,. nt nu;0rt 0;u :vna

of red top boots couki not feel bet- w e do not believe in hand nean in-

ter than the Colonel does over

success. Daviess Co. Democrat.

sane man, but believe the time baa

come when a good example should

t. . i ii be set for every "crank" who geta

reiersourg wemocrai jCranky enough to take a man.s ufe. meeting of democrats at Winslowlp tfa cnmk h to last Saturday for the purpose of .

, . ,. .! 1I1UC lb UllCCtlV IUI llllll W IUII e ectmg a central committee and a , We M t, CQUrt and l...:..,..n I nihil. nnTxJ IIWI . " . , .... ..

uiiuii... ..vi v..vi urv before which he was tried best of feeling prevailed and a mos more ftbout hig CRfe than Rny harmonious gathering together of . rQ .d outgide CQuld representative democrats took .place. Lj-fc1 Ne6w8

It was one oi tnose oiu-iasnioncu meetings similar to those held in this eountv many years ago when

r WW w

The commissioner of internal revnnnn narimatna lrir linnnt Tinmilsi-

democracy was triumphant, andau- tion of the jjnited SUtes at not less

millions, and esti-

The Tax Reform Association of

Indiana has been organized with

Prof. John R. Commons, of Bloom

incton, as president, and Mr. J.

Howard Spnnger. of Indianapolis,

secretary. It is announced that

the punose of the association shall

be "to ascertain and point out to

the people the injustice, inequalities, and imperfections of our present system of taxation, and to advocate

such changes in toe constitution and laws of the state of Indiana as

will allow the people of each county of the state the privilege of raising their portion of the public revenues, by taxing or exempting from taxa

tion such classes of property as they

may deem best, to the end that a

svstem of taxation may be found

which will impose the fewest bur

dens on the production of wealth,

and which will least hamper the prosperity, happiness and general

welfare of the people." The Rhode Island election is

very fine sample of the New Eng

land cerrvmander. remarks the

New York World. The Republi

cans poll 29,000 of tho 54,000 votes,

or 2,000 more than one half. The Legislature stands 102 Republicans

and 8 Democrats. Each Republican member represents 290 Repub

lican voters, while each Democratic member represents 2,876 Demo

cratic voters. In misrepresentation

this has never been equalled.

gurs well for the success of democ-tnan 8ixty-nve

racy this tall. It was the largest in tC8 the gegremitc wealth of the

point of numbers and enthusiasm Country at sixty-five thousand millcver held. The new chairman, j g or an average of $1,000 per

lion. iu. L.. neauiman, is auumi at) ta -,t an eaual distribution were

. . a .....

to the people all over the county as a man of sterling worth and executive ability.

made, and yet he estimates that the proposed tax on incomes of over $4,000 would reach only about

85,000 persons and corporations

(Union says, is a striking demonstra-

tramp came along and paid 8 cents . fc hand(j q coraparatively few. and tho bread was divided equallyi

The spirit of The Peoplo

Two men sat down by the road,ou' of mJ tha OOO.OOO inhabide to make a meal on bread and -u fa This, the Albany Times-L-.iter. Ono had five loaves of,..- : i u: -

side

water. Ono had

bread and the other

had

three.

between

the three. When the

divided the man with

upon

is

money was divided uro man n'tho question of Free Coinage ii the five loaves received cents, and making itsei( known n no unCer. the man with the three loaves, 1 tftin hase8 these dayg lt & paf(

cent.

ed?

Was the money justly divid

phases these days. It is flafo

to say that in every Iambcratic Congressional convention that will 1 1. .1 .1 11 t ...m1.,. in tl.r

The ImlmnaHI. New vor -l-- T"it Ü Z i the ,JTt pitol .iStaS'S "io"l Ja5? n.?i The hot i. that on the monev que9.

IIVL'U lit iVIIIUllUrt, BI1U U.IU v.l tvj - , . -,. rrt. nnln r1 ,.o.Ih to ignonlnce and religio. ! fL "aC

prejudice, and seeks to make its : . , vr Q;i ' A i i: l unanimous in favor of Free Silver

wav uy uiBSUimiiniiiii: iniBuuwvm . r....:n r...:. and forgeries, has the seeds of dis. Coinage.-Evansville Courier.

solution in itself."

in USCH. -KT--.

TlmOnlor of Odd Follows was' Easter will come three

nui.YtlialKwi in t in Tin Und States later next year, or to

VlltWVIIU.IV x mm aw W

seventv-five veaffl ago on the will come

2Gth of April, in the city

weeks

be exact, it

. t HI . 1 !l

on tho l-iin oi auoi.

of This is one of the favorite dates for

Baltimore. There are now 700,000 Easter, as 1895 will be the fourin ihn TTnitnrl SlAtoM and teonth time that that day hRfl hau

hv honornil the anniversary on Easter smco 1500.-West theswr

the 26th of the month.

Lcal News.