Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 37, Number 48, Jasper, Dubois County, 9 August 1895 — Page 1

WeeKUi QTnuf tef J ASF Kit, INDIANA. FRIDAY. AUGUST 9, 1895. NO. 48 vol-.

PI'HI.ISIIKI KVKHV FltlDAV, AT JASI'KIt, Ill'IIOISCOUNTV, INDIANA, UY CIJiMKNT DOAXIC. OI'KICK. In Couuikh Huii.hinc ox Vi:st Sixth Sthkkt. I'MOK OF SUHHCUHTION. lVr Year, ß'J Numbers, Postpaid, f 1 .(. Shorter time in proportion. KATKS OF ADVHKTISINU. For l'i:al ailvertineinents lenl rales; 10 line $1.00 for flrt insertion; JiOc.

iU'h HIlMHlMjufiii iiiMrriiuii,

W.C.T. U.CDLUMN

eo.vnucTHi) nv Müs. m. i.. nouns. Evils of Wine. Wine takes away reason, engender.s insanity, load's to thousands oi crimes, and imposes an ei.ormous expense on nations. Pliny. All inhabitants of light wine conntri s arc quanelsoine. Sir Edward Rulwer Lvtton

ni : i. ,vli..t-

eat'll Hlllr-Uf 111 IIITITI liwil, 1 lie WIM! fill) l'.DIIÜ'U, IM .1 Jdl.-

For vearlv mlvertiscinenta liberal con- ieal Jitin nphero ol malaria and :

trai'ts will he nuulu to roguliir mlver- moral pestilence of envy and von-

tisers. gounco, ine men oi crime auu revolu

tion. Charles Dicken-. The sluices of the gmg-shop are fed from the wine glass in (he parlor. K. II. Cl.apin. Cheap wine is not the euro for intemperance. The people here (Switzerland) are just as intemperate as they are in America. J. (J. Holland. You often hear the remark that

"there is n harm in a glass of wine!

COMMKKCIAL AND .101! WOKK Of all KimM'roniptly and Neatly exeClltt'll at 1.IIIKKAI. IMMCKH. We invite inspection and litisinesH. PliOFISSSIONAl, CAKDS. J. P. SALB, M. D. OKFICK AND It KS 10 K.ST K ON MA .ST SIXTH HTItKKT. JASPER. - INDIANA. f riet lloi'M : 7 to 9 A M, 12 tu 1 :3 I M Parlieulur attention ,'iven to snrcery and obstetrics. Dee. 2:5, 'IC.

Educational Column

OXOHCTKI) II V 1KO. 11. WII.MO.V CO. HUKI

It is estimated that SO per cent. f the iron manufactured by Tennessee is sold outside the Southern States. It is said to be the favorite iron with pipe, plow and stovemakers in the East and North.

so great in sought re

in I i:i:5 the cold was Europe that wild fowls

fiiL'e in the cities. The wild deer

came down U. the villages in search of food, and packs of wolves made travel unsafe in many parts of the continent.

From that the

Iceland long cold

the

news

has

comes

uhl'lhii 'A iril'im

0 v.'... .....

place to a warm summer. The

whale fishing

rich. At a small whaling station

leara.

Destroy the Hesslia Fly. Democratic Dectrlae. State Tlx

Prof. W. C. Latta Of Purdue Uni- Albany Public Pres. lnilUiipolgSeutlnel. versity sends out the following bul- Since tho birth of the Democratic The board is considering an equalletin that is of interest to wheat organization until the present day, ization of the assessment of real grow ts. Owing to tho prevalence silver has been n tenet of the party, estate throughout tho state excluand dos'tructiveness of the Hessian nrm" old-timo democrats are still sivo of improvements. The board Uy this year, concerted effortsshould proud of the ring and jingle of tho believes that a restoration of the be put forth to prevent tho recur- white metal. lvalues, since the recent panic, has ronco of its rnvnees unon the next For the past twenty years and taken place, and feels that an ap-

wlient eron In order to nrevont a mort , democratic newspapers, poh-praismont on the basis of 1891 will

serious attach of "the fly" the fol-.tieinns and stump speakers have, Inwintr hniilfl be iwlnntml without exception, bitterly con-

1. Thoroughly burn all Hy-in-jdemned the republican party for

fested wheat stubble in which there e crime uy wmcn suver money is not a stand of young clover or, was demonetized in an unfair and

unuernnnueu manner. Democrats who desire to be honest and consistent, and who have stood

grass. 2. Prepare very early a border one or two rods wide, around each

' I . . l . i

field of wheat, and sow the same to upon anu uoienueu me party piaiwhoat in August. forms in times past, utterly refuse 8. Turn this border very late, to change their opinions that a few Inwincr u-itb mllnrldesicmimr politicians be kept in

and harrow, and then sow the en- power. Let us look back a few

tire field. ' (years and see what our platforms

I) . . i. .!.. .!.: .. ........ f linun until n uili'nr rilinutinn

lui-s been nniimi'illv ") uullllB 11,13 uuurau ninny ui," w.. .,.., ...

...... - - ' ' j i - ... ..i.. I . " . 1 11. .. e -Ii

mil whaling station"113 , ,cn .T 1,0 u,u, re W1"

there have already been caught sev- "u ,uu,.,u" "1V '" r TV .1 ft ? rtv ... border is turned under, and the late

per se. rer se means uy useu. Certainly, there is no harm in a glass of wine by itself. Place a glass of wine on a shelf and let it remain there, and it is per se, and will harm no one. Hut if you take it from the shelf and turn it inside of a man, then it is no longer per se. lien. W. Bain. Who hath woo? who hath sorrow? who hath contentions? who hath babbling? who hath wounds

FRANK FINK, JUSTICE OF THE PEACE, JASPER. INDIANA. Special attention given to collections, and prompt returns. Commission expires Nov.. 17 1S0S. jQy- itllcfwttliv O pern tlmi. Ore 701 VIRGIL It. GREENE, ATTOKNBY AT LAW. W II practice In Duliolx unit ikIJoIiiIiik ciniiitlfM. CulU-rtloiirt promptly iittciulrd to. IIi'iuittMiiiTH :mxooi at rul lifted. oitlcfin Spayil HullilliiK'. Hiiitli.xili(iri'ullic U in-. S,.ptVS'lM. KKUIt TUAYI.OK. 11. i. I'llII.Il'I'S. TRAX()R & PIIILTl'PS, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, .1 SIKI1, 1NH1 S.

wm nr.irti1' in Dubois mill ikijuIuIiik Journal of Ilvuiene

... .1... I.. I ... ....II..... - w

tiilillli'f.. rM'riii nii.'iiiii.i. " ' tlollN. OHIr('ovT 1'oht HI'i',Soltli Hldo of I'ulillc S(uur. Si-pt. 'is, "it.

enty whales, each worth 'J,0(W to,

l,(KJ0 crowns.

sowing ot the general crop will

earlier attacks of any

avoid the

remaining "fly."

Whether women shall practice as j lf these precautions are carefully surgeons and phvsicians in Austria and genially observed by the far-: is a 'question now under consider- meva the Hessian fly will not ation bv the goverment, in conse seriously damage the next wheat pience of a petition to be allowed croP- United effort is necessary to to practi.e, presented by Baroness ,, effective. l'üssauer. Prussia litis just decided Xo games allowed iu saloons to throw open medical studies and un(ler lhe xicliolson law. Instead degrees to women. 0f casting dice for drinks, an easiet

way has been found. Any number

INDIANA DKMOCKATIC PLATFORM '78.

,r . .r, ' it ... i of persons from two up, instead of Herbert bpencer rem., ds his re 1- d h , I bark ers ot the or.g.n of the hn hrfi t fc , t , , l.iiitk..l.lit 1 1 til..kti Ii cii.u tli'ir . 1 l

without cause? who hath redness f eyes? they that tarry 1 mg at the wine: thev t'iat go to seek mixed

...:,. inu-erl h V- i i . ..... 10 lmt on tlic counter square lumps units roiri.-. huireateship when he says that f ' . . . f A man can not use what is called mmn ii10 Koohths in Africa there ?, , g , auoul. l,,c 8,zc ,0If aict' the best of wine dailv for Ion years! 7.? et of e lm?il '8 rJ,rCi,en.1(ld b' 0 and be free from disease. Whatever U!,; 0 ltS SLu 7 3 kr; Thß to Wf on a

is in the least harmful to the human , ;..:' o ..f i.n .. 1 U11I sugar puis me urniKS on

economy, when taken internally, lcUKKse to pnichase renown."

whether it irritates the nerves, or;

only renders them more sensitive to external impressions, or accelerates

A

the man renresontint' that nartic

ular lump and if there is any gamb

ling in that the flv is responsible.

Frei ch engineer has conceived f M,re"'i V lJ'tJri w" B?e8 mi.

the degeneration of cell-tissue, is in- the interesting idea of reprducing nc Bnm0 18 B,"ü turpentines ms

which Napoleon lived l"uJ' " ltT- . BU ,

comnatible with

and therefore its use is

lt. M. MIUIITKN. M. A. SWKKNKY. TiirniiK a swhhi:y, Attorneys mtLmw, .lAfaPER, UNI., Will iiractlpi" In tin- Court! of HuIkiIh nml HilJoiiiliiirCoiintW-H. l'iirlleiiliiriiUijntloiiKlvI'll tO tMllU'ftlOllH. l-r f'l'f If V -' St.. uiollf lht ItMl.i.l fMinty llBiik. I (. U.V2.

urhe Prohibitionists close'd a sini'le saloon."

boiiltbv fmwtli '.lwt Itoiicn in

I . .w....- ... . . . . . . . ... . . . , j. 1 . . , . .

nl.imn ' . c, TT.ili.iiii ,.u on ni t rm.im h,r. All SO8 OI tHCKS IU II 1 1 traÜCS Ollt

;'ing the exhibition of 11)00. The Jjj0 ll!niP scheme is the latest. 'Iwiiil'. tvitl Iit. tin rkvifl Pohl rf tlio UullC 1 TOSH.

surrounded by panoramic

resenting the natural

never.

original

N0

Politics

AND , ItOV

i ave

So we are

often told by Republicans. Well, ' " how many saloons have the Hepub- 1M,ulol,!?'

hcans closed t lhere is this uu- A Duel ..l..., .li.n-nnin 1. r.. ..!-. f . Iii.' 1 I. ..4

I'uii.ini uiuviwibb) uwiivibi . neo M.ir wits leiiiii' iiumcuii to y P" I Uepuhlicans have had power to cl se China anil .Japan a San Krancisco The Death I

me fiiMMin aim in; iiuiiiuiiiuin."i.- (limy jlmu iMiwaru ,. iiurjni , me have not. Give us that gun (lhe well" known journalist, to the land power) and see if we will not hoot 0f the Mikado a.s a special corresto kill tho saloon. pondont. The paper received some

few letters trom him alter his arrival

If anybody will take charge of all

in lit. if n.iiitilri' Kilt tin. lllllulwir nt

. .17-1 .. .... IWI....I.. .'......v. ...l.v.

WX ptOY l ie povenv anu crime wmcn resuiis , . 1141 E' COX, f drunkenness,the StiuthCongre- !,r:,ft;l f'1 "did o num-iunvn-w a T-crw. national Church, of which I have m' letters by ii good, large maI!y,,A tlie honor to be the minister, will,'?"1?-, "w .t,u' """"'B01". Uü" .IAPR. riNDIANA, alone take charge of all the rest f! that something must be done IT outline Atton-yfir tin-nth .liullrlul , llo,..,rfv. whirl, neeil "out door1 'I111 order to et more news fr his nrrult.uml will enrefttlly utl.ml t miyclvll ItlC poverty Hillen I1CCU Olli tioor . ,, i ... M1(, ivnene of ibotit Im.n.sK ..ntrmt.-.l to llltu In any county of rnHof in lb.. nUv nf M.lnn If I i;it I ,n(),U 3 lllc t M-"M 01 .100111

. . 1

A TALE f TWO RATIONS.

.1... ........i.

m' t-ii run. , i , , otllci- In SpuydV lmlldliiK on lulll Siiur!,churcll

J. K. MCPAI.L.

J. n. iiuirrz.

BRETZ & McFAU, Attorneys at Law IA8PEH. IADIA Will iintctlci! In the Cour 8 of DulioU mid ailoiiiliiK'ountleM. niululv cIokis attention tu im v IiiihIiii'hh i.iitrilHti'il tr tlll'lll.

a billci; on Ctli Street, one wiuiirt Kiwt of

court iioiiHf. n'0. v, -vi-iy

W B. Himtrr.

W. ,. Trnyli...

Til AY LOR & HUNTER, Attorneys at Law, lAM'KR, INDIANA Will prnetloe In this Ctnirtu of IMHioIh ntul aaJoliiiiiKeoiintlfH. MMUecover Duliolx (!ounty Stute Hunk. April 22,1. HUÜX0 BÜKTTNKK, Attorney at Law, And Notary Public, APBR, INDIANA,

Wlllpriu-tlLM la the Courtno T) oiiiitl., IiKilunii.

of DiiIkiIn und

Jit ii., WM.

could satisfy its conscience

with us small work as that, it woultl certainly relieve its visiting forces and its treasure of a very considerate part o! the demands now made up n them. H.E.lhih , D.D. Rev. Talmage, the Brooklyn preacher, says that when he was u small hoy he remembers listening to his grand-father and a neighbor talking about tariff. That he believes; that the day the earth is destroyed

there will he three men standing on the court house steps; one a high tariff man, another in fnvor of a moderate measure and the third a free trader all angry and red in the face from discussing the tariff. The High License Mantrap. Give us a hundred low, dirlygroggeries, with their saw dust covereJ lloors, their harren walls and greasy tables, where the air is thick and foul with tobacco smoke, and where curses come thick and fast

from the lips of drunken loafers; ves, give us a thousand of those iow dens where every sight is re-

i . . -

Ipulsive to clean young men, in pre-

fo a wortl, lie sent this canle mes

sage to Murohv: "No stuff, no

money back : stuf!."

i i i i . i

Miirpny promptly oaoieu "Collect. No money, po

Three half-breed Chorokce Indians, man and wife and girl, walked into Kansas City last week, tho woman barefooted, dragging a

small huckster's cart on which was

"That we demand the restoration of the silver dollar of 412 1-2 grains, to the country and with a full legal tender quality, in payment of all debts, both public and private, and that the coinage thereof shall be unlimited, and upon the same terms as may be provided for the coinag of gold." INDIANA DEMOCRATS '90, '92, 94. Here is what we said in 1890: "Demands the free and unrestricted coinage of silver on the

basis existing prior'to 1S73." And here is what we believed in '92. "We believe there should be a

full and suflicient volume of money, consisting of gold, silver and legal tender paper currency at par with each other."

And only last August, the Demo

cratic State convention passed the

following resolutions by a unanimous vote : "We affirm our belief that both gold and silver should be used as the standard of money of .the country, and that both should be coined

without discrimination between

either metal, and without charge for

mintage.

Going back as far as 1884, here is the plank in the National Demo

cratic platform concerning silver,

and Cleveland was lirst elected on

the platform. "We believe in honest money

the gold and silver coinage of the

constitution, and a circulating medi

urn convertible into such money

without loss.

be fair. About half the counties

have reported the appraisements made this year, and compared with those of 1891, they are as, follows: 1891. 1H1.

county. AveraK per iter, Lake 2G 00 Lagrange 20 25 Newton 14 30 Benton 21 84 Adams 20 76 Laporte 18 12

DeKalb 24 Marshal 20 Fulton 19 Miami 25 Noble 24 Huntington 23 Jay 16 Madison 29 Hendricks 28 Favette 27

Clay 16

Brown 4

Jennings 9

Hamilton 33

Henry 30 72 Bush 34 24

Greene 12 Decatur 25

Jackson 11

Boone 27

Johnson 29

Franklin 15 Lawrence 9 Daviess 17 Dubois 8

Spencer 10 90 Ohio 12 56 Gibson 19 55 Harrison 8 55

Jefferson 12 08

79 69 12 81 67 35 28 34 25 00 64 02 23 32

20 15 13 45 58 42 99 35 06

Avorngv per aeie. 123 71 17 45 15 50 26 98 16 91 17 07 23 98 17 83 19 37 21 48 18 13 33 75 17 63 30 33 27 93 22 42 20 22 4 12 8 68 29 28 25 70

29 13 21 11

27 27 88 80

28 25 27 87 14 72 9 84 18 00 8 23 12 80 12 48 18 86 8 50 12 66

By the author of "Coin's Financial .School.'

'Oii'i of tho most HtrlkliiK iOtnot Mart.

Columbia TowiiHlilp TniH- ft1?"10 Hlc. ?"'0" w tee'H Notice. , high license, with its glitter and ,ri .' . , m , , , , beauty, its cut glass mirrors and tp?iXÄ SÄ ft ri ,P,n,i,n7 n'dT iT lhe -n '!f ' Township iNinintwH nt his rorfdewe on brilliantly decorated bur with its 'very Sntunliiy, ntul purfona having shining df canters and bright rows inwiHiip business to trnncact. an; re- 0f glasses, its great, soft plush covIIMl.ulii.l !. !.. .1 1 11... - .1 O 1 .1 .

' ii m wunHt.v uiuiu l ,1 rH W bero trot

week.

Tin. Township Library Is kept nt the men can rest."

;re tl

young

nose en-

'illlce of tin. Trustee, where

"neu fan obtain liooko. Nki)N Hauhih, Trustee. Tun 28th, 1888 y.

, The American people are going to school just now, and the Prohibition 'party is head school master. The

scholars are making progress, nevei

For Fin Job Printing 80 great not so great as we should tht Jaipr Courier liko but never so great, wo must Offic i tht plftOt rb our jiiiUoi tO go tO got it. ' HTSubscribe for the Couhikk.

piled a curious assortment of house- ji&W&i?

hold effects. The man said he was " ' ' ft 1,i,;l"r' ' V5 iL, " r.V.V'J"".''.;

Hill Smith, and that thov were iik-.itiietiiinkTwui nmu ikchimu it

..,l-;., I Iw.ii. .....if in Om T.wlm.. f'-' '"'" tliu feliool Irl will reit.!, making their nay to tue Indian i,.i.,iu, of tmovuntoi v. n u irnmt for.....

Territory to take un their abode in "luctlou which muy exceei miy o tliu tho Cherokee Nation. I hoy had imttp mimi. nourt-i und umotionK uiik!

walked all the way from Abbyvillo, ÄKW!,00,.v,wt ,u ,tH vmcil ufft'ctsVa., through West Virginia, Kentucky, Illinois and Missouri, a dis- The most tance of 1,100 miles, and were go- Interesting ami Instructive ing to enter tho nation by way of Novel Coffeeville, Kansas., a distance of

350 miles more. The woman, her Written since tho publication

husband said, had hauled the cart ot "Uncle Tours Cabin."

tho entire distance.

sealed tin case, which, on be

ing opened, win found to contain a) copy of Milton's "Paradise Lost,")

wtifi picked up in the lower part of tho I'enohscot river, Maine, a few!

davs ago. Inquiry disclosed the,

fact that in a small town up the river lives an old tinsmith of literary tastes and some odd ideas, and that it is his custom to inclose all sorts'

of excellent books in tin cans, tight

ly soldered, and so constructed as to lloat easily, and to set them adrift,'

mil hope that theywtll be picked up

It Will Impel Millions to Action.

A

Romance Hased on American Politics, and Replete with Historical Information.

NATIONAL PLATFORM OF '92.

"Wo hold to the use of both gold

and silver as the standard money of

the country, and to the coinage of

both gold and silver without

discriminating against either metal

or charge for mintage."

In 1878 the Pennsylvania Democ

racy declared :

"That the Democratic party as of

old favors a constitutional currency of gold and silver." In 1881 in State convention Pennsylvania democrats said : "Favors a constitutional currency

of both gold and silver."

Ohio Democrats in 1878 said : "Demanding the full restoration

of silver to its original place as a

money metal the same as gold." It is difficult to imagine how any true democrat can be wheedled into

supporting the doctrine of a single

gold standard, when the history of the party has opposed that policy

from the time of the foundation of

democracy.

The Stemch Yawn. Man, at this day, tends to fall into

the stomach ; man must be replaced in the heart, man must be replaced in the brain. The brain this is the bold sovereign that must be re

stored I The social question requires

to-day, more than ever, to be ex

amined on the side of human dignity. . : . There is something hevnrwl Kntisfvlnir nnn's mmetttn

j j '--a - "i i . - . The goal of man is not the goal of the animal. A moral lift is necessary. The life of nations, like the life of individuals, has its moments of depression ; these moments pass, certainly, but no trace of them ought

to remain. . . . To live is to have justice, truth, reason, devo

tion, probity, sincerity, common

right and duty welded

sense, right and duty welded to

by residents of the inanv islands at '200,000 copies sohl. The liter- the heart. To live is to know what tho mouth of the river, who are notary success of the age. You can 0,10 cun do ftn?. b0"1 do. Life is kent in close touch with culture, or i,nv 1,5 ,.nm,Hnn ti ..-"ru.-.. conscionco.N ictor Hugo.

else by sailors, tie thinks he pnancin School," your choice, peculiarity of the way m which the , , T '

Hw T Keep CmI.

I suppose you would like to

know how to keep cool these hot days," said a well-known newspaper man. "Well, I have an unfailing recipe which can be guaranteed to effect the desired result. I use it myself, and know the system is a specific for the woes which mankind suffers in such dog-days weath

er as we are now expenencine. It

is simple and easy don't eat meat till the sun goes down. I have made this an inviolable rule during hot weather, and as a consequence I am never bothered about or by

the condition of the atmosphere, no matter how high the theimoraeter may soar.

This morning for my breakfast I

ate a piece of strawberry shortcak? and drank a cup of coffee. For luncheon I partook of some lettuce

and tomatoe salad and a cup of tea.

L will go in to dinner in a few mom

ents and very probably will order a

thick, rare steak, and pay pretty generous attention to it. Then I will come out, and for an hour or two

will probably be uncomfortably warm for the first time during the

day. I was led to adopt this system from observing the immunity from the heat which the workmen in hot countries enjoy. This was

larticularly the case in Spain and

Italy, and when I inquired the rea

son, I was told that a Spanish or

Italian workman would rather eat

kerosene with a wick in it than meat

of any kind during the hot weather.

I am not a vegetanan in any sense of the word, but I have proven to my own satisfaction that a diet such as I have suggested during the summer will preserve any one who follows it from suffering in hot weath

er.

Judge Wilson of Cincinnati said while passing on an alimony case, "that any man who turned in all his salary to his wifo is a fool." The Milwaukee Journal remarks : That might be true of men who were unfortunate in marriage, ' but the married man who acts on that dictum will miss his figure nineteen times out of twenty. Women are, as a rule, more careful with money than men. They are better traders and more inclined to lay up something than men. A large proportion of deposits insavings banks are mado by women, many more than by mon. This tells the story.

Tho contract for the erection of public buildings at English will be

The annual M. E. conference let on the 6th day of September.

books reach tho renders helps to se- lm"in8 for tho Jasl)0r Couhikh meets at Indianapolis September Stick a pin here neighbor. English

cure for them a reading. one year in advance. 18th. News.

CS