Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 37, Number 49, Jasper, Dubois County, 16 August 1895 — Page 1
"WeehhJ Gemittet
JASPER. INDIANA. FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1895. NO. 49 VOL. (Loy
rt'III.lsili: HVKUV Kill DAY, AT JASim:ii. prnoisroL'.NTY, i.viua.va, hy ('LISMBNT DOANB.
OFFICE. In Couhiku Huii.dino, i)r
ov Wi'r Sixth ötukkt. i.i.w.I' rl CM T llUfM T It'lMMV !
Year, f'-' MimDers, I'ohijwki, i,ou
IßENTMSTJlY lEducational Column. W. C. T. U. COLUMN
CONDUCTEI) V OKO. Ii. Wilson CO. si'lT' CONDUCTED BY MKS. M. L. IIOBBS.
Political Issue of 9B
n. A. AiOSHY, U. S. History. Moders U. J
ri:j . rÄ .:. Tho first Joint Hiirh Commission' To nie London is a pes house oi
lCIUCni ,lts..mili,ioli urn.,litl,rtnn 07 infamy, of terrible immorality in iU
i7i ir,. ii, f,iii:,.., , worse sense. I cannot coa liun-
Jill 1 . 41J4 L1IU I 1 1 1 1 I II 171 UllllllL: Lilli "
- i 1 ' c
". . . . ... ... ..Ii i.. i i;n- ...l. i ...l .lrivl vnril in nnv dllWition VVltllOllL
shortoi tum' in piojmrtion. ..miihk uy work m tin iriitai i""'.'! (i Th coinniiion wis com- seeing a pubic house where large FVPrVDOC ....n.-.w.i' in -im.'imüivc prom bfH to iv. it h.n cloM.t uttontioii. iioiift. i nc ioinniibiou u.th torn o i i . -i.., HOI IIV"I If AT KS OK AD hin IMMi. i,.,.. i.,.Vi.- w,u.,.iuiiv (.!i,.it..ii. ami u .........1 r i:i:,.t 1 : nl:if .-inl toll vou that 4t Cream cm - I
1 .1 ...1. 1:. .......... t ., ....,.... k irk wurm itoil. Ai)r. 11. tr.. 1 . . - -.1.1 ..1 nn I ma
'Of ll'IKll luivoiuni.imui.-3 ivyiu .. .,Bm,n Thn .mmiiiu-e imnre nn IS fcOlU UllCilli ..1111111. uuiomsit.
"MONEY TO LIVE DM."
ly Wants it!
10 lines 91.ÜO for mn uiMuiion ; tw. (;u'li siibcoqueut iiiHortion. For yearly ailvortiseinentH llheral con-' tracts will be made to regular advertisers.
m n 1 n 1 ill 1
.v,.., - .i. I'. - j 11.: 1 ia..i hi -.i
ncu fan ßnnnQi:be,,,i,f of JreaL 1ritain wure the ? üozen or -5 1 dooq r es uuuu ndPcs ntW rALL UUUO.arldeGrav.SirStaff &
Sir Kdward Thornton, Sir John oi our puuue auum mu i
LATEST - STYLES AT
nnllll.M(flll A VII WTIl?!.' I
Of all Kind Promptly and Neatly ex-j JJ PS C. Hochaesana's. :
edited at i.iiikkal i-imcks.
I.f.rn!irl tiPSV.
On the iiart of the United States, Take a turn in the Strand or in .. ' . . . . . ' I'll.. -.4 l 1A
Hamilton Fish, Robert C. Schenck. nccauiiiy ai o ur hi v. .... Samuel Nelson, E. Kockwood Hoar, do you find there? Look c
and Geo. H. Williams. The result ""eves' quarters:
The
Who;
at vour
horrors
M..W. Ai M.l. St-. .Ip-r. Ind. of their deliberations was the treaty and abominations of London would.
it.; ! i:.... .....1 1..
"l""vm ,m""" "" ' The public are invited to call nnd'of Washington, concluded on the not De to.eratcu even m uuro lor u lKOKKSSK)NAL OAKHS. inspect ,ny new goods, of all kinds. Sth, of .May 1871. t0M" dlju anil learn my anee of the lour questions at issue uictuous in u.i.iaiiiimri.ir.uii. i mui. . T T CAT P: YVT Tli Viwlmvl'rlm' , between tl e two countries and pro- we .-tyle .ins that we s-anction-j J. P. SAJUSS-i IT!. U. Lou lius. vid,d for .settlement of each. The around us. When I see ?tron- j okk.ck N'i iiKsinnNcn on käst sixth 1 or o vorytli i iijT. My stock of staple Aa, , j to beadiusted measures taken m Kngland to pro- j
Hn!,"',n itiniiwi grocent. nnu (try goo.is is a.ways b a coininission t0 neet at Cenovn hib.t the sale of iwisons m the tonn JASPER. " INDIANA. up with the best. Switzerland' 'til other claim for of spirits of all sorbs, then I shall bec r- iim 7 . o a. m. w , i p. m , ( ,ÜN y ,.,()! UC1C WA NTKH ,oss or dam; TJof :mv kind beuvetm lieve in the new British reformation. Particular attention Riven Mo surgery;,,. mnrko. price .j jmd b g;lbjects of Great It is to nie in our present state the and obHtetncH. Dec. -J, IL. , nTTnP.llorfiBa.TllP.ltrinm.nr ..it'. nf tbn I7nitd most monstrous uniwsition and
a .... t ton I
PRANK FINK,
JUSTICE OF TIIK TILVCI
JASPER, INDIANA.
Special attention given to collec
tions, and prompt returns. Coinmission expires Nov. 17 1S0S. Jfojy-Onion at Iii 0iirn IItur. PecT'K
UNITED sims HOTEL;
MILL STREET. JASPKR. AUGUST KAE6IN,
TtiriiTmiT Ti i it rmn iiiiiit
t VIHI MA 1TBV IJ V irll mJ I I
States were to be adjusted bv a humbug to preach aoroaü wnai we JlflArjblÄJJ fAJM0 fUül .....nmiuinn in moot in W.n-lnnt'- dare not carry out at home. Gen-
ton; tho San Juan question was to end Wolseley in a Letter to J T. cauw
be referred for settlement to the oiau, cuuur ib m iv-
unperor of Germany: and the dis- views.
,pute in regard to the fisheries was. What is Needed.
to be settled by a commission to y0 intelligent obser-er can fail
meei ai iiamax, .uvu swim. to see ti,at lhe ,quor traric acts as The second Joint High Commis- ,ronf.i,ornnnnil tromondnns barrier
I'ROPRIKTOIt
The traveling public
YTUG1L K. Gin5EXT2f
, this bouse well fu
1 i ..f ..M....1J. .. . ..
nml iKllolnliiK l'.h ui Juu-nLiuu iv
will
sion; more properly named, and to vxospQnty and a terrible incubus? generally known as the hlectoml nn n1i iWl!1if u nntn.rio A wbolp-
fiiKl Commission, provided that, where- competition is the most effect-
iirnished and the congress could not, in case of -ve moljve IK,w.er jor awakenin ;iven to the wants tho (loubl? returns from several enterprise, and enterprise is th
CI'SHCl SCHOOL
Is teaching the 3Iasses THE TRUTH Get It ! Study It !
Ol
the
I
w,m... cueot.on. promptly to,uie,i t. of guo,ts. Furniture and beds all "j1" ! A J " . Ue-Wooü, bone ana smew oi aii actitomtttaMcewiH xnoii -.is i-oiieoteii. 0 . . , ... ou ol counting tiiein, an euctorai com ,ve and successful business, but the now in spuyaiiuiuiinc. komii xi.io ofiM.i.. new, and table supplied with the ,ission should be created, to whom tievitalizin an-Tene of this poison 'w
"t" N'(,:,r ' ,l -"best the market affords. Terms the whole matter should be referred nr
The
Heasonable
KKItlt Tl AYI.OK. II.. IMIII.ll'PS. TItAYLOIl S: TirrLlIM'S, ATTOTIXKVS AT LAW,
.TASI'Klt, TNII V , Will prartli-o In imlioln mill ndjnlniii poiuitlcx. Spi-olHl uttontlun Klvc u to t-olloo- ai.hKHTM R0IINKÜT tliinn
OlllcAovor l'OMtOllli'C.SniUli Hlilifor Pnltllc Sipmre. S. pt. 2S, HI.
To every subscriber of the Jasper Courier
ho will pay a year in advance we
now permeates and in-'will give or send by mail, post paid,
tionwas composed of live justices of its enormous drain and injury de-i vi . .
- m m m m m m - h im m m
OR The Tale of Two Nations.
for final decision.
comims
A TT - me aujiiciiiü iuuh, i presses enterprise, producm
JTJkMKa AAttUfiJlu. ana uvc represenuuives. my urh. r:bie i,unien 0f j05c criminal ten
t o lor-1
Mnrch io.j:i of the commission was carried on dencies and a wide-spread insecurity
IUI luo uavs i.ru Ktugorauu. j,, aj, business relations. I)wakj a noiiM'iiT day, when a decision was reached The direful results of this nefar-
by a vote of eight to seven that the ioU5 business of liquor selling, therevotes of the doubtful tatCS SllOUld tnrn ,ncnulnnl-..liiir.nnfI trontorT
M.mnuv m hwkkvkv. PmpriMor. crib, be given to President Hayes, thus ag a condition which can onlv 1 I' ;.:;. . ,wnr, Y IIPFR IINinN millR PII I S I KJ;11'1- h,1,n, ,hy Sy, voUtii t0 104 for met withtlie most radical and stringNILIMIKJ WI,II1, JAoN-tl UniUH MUUn miUo I Tllu(jn and UendncI. ent measures for its destruction.
These .Mills are now kept in the bot - UA r ,, We must have a moral cvclone of
BOHNERT BROS.,
Attorneys at aw
The mi JtetifM.
I do not want to hear anvbodv talk
about religion as though it were a funeral. I do not want anvbodv to
whine in the prayer-meeting about
11 . 1 - 1 r r- .3 t .1 .
1 ii'a iintA o mii 1 r, tin nr i T I M tim 1111111 in it, mi. i ii,ihil- nuiiL
... i - --. (if I 1. ' ' I II V llJUCb llllll. U IJiVi .41 V iilUUU 14 1 ...w " -
r , .....I .......i!...! ,..:n. ...,.... v' . -i . .1 11 ... t.:
uiuvi, .win c,..!!..! 4i.i m.,i... , ti... ,.,,. nvumsj uns ucierminca cnercv 10 overcome am iua iu iun uw msctra, s
nie iMitims nuuij oim.i.i'., - . ü ,, . . , , ,
Holls.
i oi iir'i 1 1 1 nn- -nn v.- ..I .... .1.-. 1,'ai V mihi sr ! Hiii r !irt not iLlloliiir. roiiHt.os. l'artlciil.ii attintlonv- 1 '"'' ,u,u f 1 ".' 1 - Ol t. en to coiioi-tioiiM. excelled lor their grades in the world.
f.om"over the water-' which, dur- apamy anu secure practical morai-
ins Hi'- centurv, have crept into ium, iw ui .-savuua
the Knglislt language, we are in-
' . ........... . - Ca .......... I
W",."":"."r".""" ' " UV. u..Ii,.it I... ..Mutni.inf l.ir,n..rc ,,.1
I'oi.i.i. ' OHIII.V ihiiiw. "v. 4-v,..w. ...v, ..... i : 4j .ll.ri,..,n i.vnrf5ion !.. .ua. will be reiidv at all tiniea to excbnni:e bJn led, is the Aintrit.in txprtssion
Hour for wheat at the iiiirhcet inurkel t). K. Mai g ami ean'iesr j
feature of this revolution.
me in that wav the evidence of his
sanctity. I am yet to find one of these canting, lugubrious and sancti-
We must have an integrity of pur- monious professors of religion whom
.1 II t IT 1.1 A . ...I l HH
i-1 ,i i- -i i i..,., .... nosi mat will overcome all oosiacies? 1 wouiu irusi mm u luii-ueiu intu..
. , .i .. mi i i .if 'i ill'iliil ?4'il 'iiiil imr.'l v cnllili tin iThe men and women of God whom I
titiee. translated these leiters as "un Kor- v " ...... ....... ... , - . . ItlSINCS US YOUR WHKAT, and we " .,.1 it i iti-nbir to note ture, like the liquor tnithc, and we .happen to know, for the most part
AttomeV at LaWfW J0" i,,l,,,t! ,"i,,k,', w,u how nearlv correct tl.Ls free rondi- only succeed in proportion .as hnd religion a great joy . It ;is exlnlAUOiiicjf ' low. . . . . we .ihere to the inexorable decrees laration to the body. It isinyigora-
JASPRR, imiJiAr. urn 4.M.-4Ai. a.wnys on nan,. 10 sc. w.. ; - .'V-" "'-f immi, ;m,:Mi in u n,-!tion to the mind. It is ranture to
iiiomiuur in i iv iiri-o.iiii ii si, w ' ........ - - i
follows r-More than a centurv ago business relations. This, is espe- the soul It u j balni for all wounds; the best tobacco and the best rum cially true where we can make mliu- it is flight for all darkness "hart ..... n .i nce and action most ehective at borfrom all storms. And though God
trialand we will try to lenso vo,.. ; ) - v i ; " ' Ue ballot know.s that some of them have trouble
.MlllS Uli U1U iMirill BHIUUl .1.1.-1 IV I, Uli w. j ,. , , . , .lr..,V. ll.m- n. na lvcwwill.La
designated as Aux Caves,' or U. K. mis jusi auu .u-ai .irguuiuuv -.., v,.w
In the Jackson campaign every lie against the lawless nature of this ney are on trie way to ine congraiu that could be invented was invented legalized oppression, the liquor la ions eternal. I stopped one night i ..i trailin. is to be the insniration for fall, years ago, at Freiberg, Switzer
lo uiiiUKi;.. i.iu j:i.-iii:i.ii s uii.it.iviui , - l
INI3I A IV A, CORN M HA L ahvnys on hand to cell lion
,i...,n,,il., Vtli.mi.vfor tllo Utll Jtlillcllll Ol' eXCllllIlge.
irfiilt.iuiil will eiirefi'illv uitoinl to any civil C1.X..U..T liiiliii-l-. oiitnirttcil to 1 1 1 in In any rnunty of 15lail Jllld nllipstlltl t'.Viir.VV.l.tun..i..eyi.iiiiliiiiir on 1'iiiillu Snnnr at the lowewt market iirice. Ciive us a
Dir. si, .-iv
j. i iinr.TK.
BRETZ & McFAll, Attorneys at Law JASPER, IIS DIA Will practice In th; Cour nt Dulmls aiul mlJoinlinrooiiiitli'H, anilglv close nttiüitlon to any IiiihIih'hh i-iitriiMteil tf tin-in. i'Oillci! on nth Street, onu nqimro Kust of Court hoiiHv. I . 1. "J-ly
j. i:. Mor.u.t,. Kith anil Mill streets.
ItollNKKT ltltl Til i:ic-i. Jasper, April 13, ".M-y
W. A. Truyl..'. W S. lluiiltr. TRAYLOR & HUNTER, Attorneys at Law, JASPER, INDIANA, Will vnirtlcn In the ConrtH of Dnbolr ami Hiljoliilniivonntle. n , ä'OIIIci. over Dubois County Slate llnnk. April 22. V2. BRUNO BUETTNKK, Attorney at Law, And Notarj- Public, TASPER, INDIANA, Will jirnctleo In tho Court of bubol ami IVrry eountli'M, Iiiillunu. .Im. V, IWI. FINK FARM FOR 8AL.K! In Madison Township. One of the best farm in Madison towiihhip ia now for sale by the undervigned, to-wit: 111."... neres in .See. 80, I own One South, Kange ö Went, for"H'rly belonging to John llnrge, deceased. It will be sold at a reasonable price, und on partial payinentH if deHired. If von want a poöd farm, in a Rood locality, near the thriving town of Ireland, thiH is your onjortunitv. For particulars, call on Ct.KMK.KT DOANK For Fin Job Printing the Jaspr Courier offic is th plact to go to gt it.
fTn
Poor Health
means so much more than
trnii iirifi rrinn cprinii: and 1
j W 44 4111 . ww. .-..m ' fatal diseases result froivn
trifling ailments neglected, j Don't play with Nature's i
f greatest gift health.
he inspiration for fall, years ago, at Freiberg, sition, the basis of a land, to hear the organ of wo
Brown's Iron Bitters
. i .1 0 II- I A I. II. . AS . . I . . . I
and an indorsement that he had our iwiiiicaiopposiiion, meoasisoia u, mu
made. "This is 0. K." rmeaninir oetermineu ioiuicai war on uhs.uh , , . j,.. m uw
If you tt feellnp out of sorts, weak and Kcnerilly ex haustcd, nervous, have no appetite and can't work,
bCRin atoncetait' Im the most relia
ble streiiRllieninR
meciicine.wnicni! Brown's Iron Bit
ters. A few hot- J tics cure-benefit " comes from the J very first close it'
xven't j4i yer 1
ttttk, ami it's" pleasant tu take. J
the bc.-Q was taken bv Seba Smith, concentrated essence of wrong and
and declared by him to be but an injury. lJemorest. abbreviation of the general's custo-j Drikcrs Read Tki. marv indorcsment of papers "orl' ' korrect." The Democrats took up Dr. A. O. Painter reminds us that this statement and fastened the alcohol is in origin an excretion of nivstie letters upon their b urners, the yeast animal that causes ferThe meaning "all correct" stuck to mentation, and that the yeast cells the letters, and since then theyhave themselves are killed when their been used in the two meanings of excrement reaches the proportion "the best" and '"all right." of 15 per cent. This is why wines J. W., Youk. seldom contain more than 15 per cent alcohol, but in distilled liquors More than 1 ,000 people earn a the percentage may be increased to living in Paris by fortune-telling, 50 per cent. Alcohol is death to and their total earnings aie esti- other animals as well as to those mated at 100,000. that produce it, and even in diluted The whole of the land on the Motion excercises irritant or cor-. globe above water level, if shoveled vc cccf . A.,.half ou"f .n!: into the Pacific ocean, would oniv of pure alcohol will promptly kill fill one-seventh of it. he tronSl an- .U n takcn n beverages, it inav take 20 years to
Tho most easterly point of land kill, and the 'killillg,,, corroding, in the United States is West Quoddy deadening effects areno less certain, t- Head, in Lubec, Me, four miles though less intense.
It Cures Dyspepsia, Kidney and Liver Neuralgia, Troubles, 1 Constipation, Bad Blood
Malaria, Nervous ailments 4
Women's complaints.
Get only the Kenunic-lthai crossed red i linen on the wrapper. All othets ate sub-1 Olli!.. flu tfiff int of lu'ii si" t.iiim we i
wilt r.end fct of leu Beautiful World's!
Fair VUws and bookltee. IKOWN CHEMICAL CO. BALTIMORE, M0.
di4ant from the village, and reached Health Monthly. bv teams? I
(.leneoe, in Scotland, where, ae- It won't do any good to confess cordtna to local legends, when it is your sins unless you are willing to
not raining it is snowing, the an- forsake them.
illttl 1111114111 ir 1-1 4IIUII . Ul 1 .... I n lo.ud, a Süfcfl. in Al.i4n. i K !lre m' ho never
I
All the ac-
for
in
expect to get what they ask
A raft containing over 7,000,000 prayer meeting. ffl if Inmlicr mimlK wlillo iimii "" -
;a nn .1 irv iWn ihn f icciMiunl' The devil has more sense than to
to .St. Louis. It is believed to be undertake to make a drunkard out the biggest raft ever floated down li mnnthe river. Carried by rail, the lum-' ,
mdes of car-loads. m!a
cessories were favorable. There was only one light in all the cathedral, and that a taint taper on the altar. I looked up into the venerable arches, and saw the shadows of centuries,
and when the organ awoke, the cathedral awoke, and all the arches
seemed to lift and quiver as the music came under them. That instru
ment did not seem to be made out of
wood and metal, but of human hearts, so wonderfully did it pulsate with eveiy motion; now laughing like a child, now sobbing like a tem
pest At one moment the music
would die awav until vou could hear
the cricket chirp outside the wall.
and then it seemed as if the surge of
the sea and the crash of anavalanch
had struck the organ pipes at the
same moment. At one time that
night it seemed as if a squadron ofj
spirits sweeping up from earth, had
met a squadron of descending angels
whose glory beat back the woe. I
said to mvself : "That organ pipe is
the point at which the harmonies of earth meet the hallelujahs of Heav
en. As 1 stood there and looked at
the dim tatter at the altar of the ca
thedral, I said: "How much like
many aChnstuuvs life!1' shadows
hover and sometimes his hope is
Inn and faint and tlickenng, like a
taper on the altar. But at what time
Oo I wills, the heavens break: forth
with music on his soul, and the air becomes resonant as the ansrels of
'God beat it with their shining scep
ters. ur. lairaage.
Jasper people say that thev are aoiac
to have water works. The Lord have mercy on them if they do and drink Pa:oka water. Ohio nver ia bad enough
w has been shown in the mortality at Evansville darisg the past year, but ompaml with Patoka that river is as a
Sire mountain stream to a hog wallow, at maybe the people there are only tanning: about it. Huntingbarg Argus.
Funning nothing! They are go
ing to have Patoka water if they have to import forty more doctors to wait
yn the typhoid and malanal fever patients made sick by it. But doctors, generally, are a desirable class of citizens, and by the intelligence and geniality of their families and
themselves, relieve much of the ennui of life in communities, besides, they add to the population. But then the citizen of Jasper are not likely to drink Patoka water but will use it like the citizens of
fiuntingburg do their mud hole
water to make the streets and
lawns stink with it. Hurra for the water-works; the water will put out fires any way.
Belt, MMUwa, A Gi Exm1c for
Jasper. Our former townsman. Mr Cam.
Bretz, now a resident of Belt, Mon
tana, sends the following clipping
from the Belt Valley Times to the
Courier, that his acquaintances here may know what kind of a place
he is located in. It the people of
Jasper would show the pluck in getting manufacturing establish
ments located here that Belt has shown, the population of Jasper
would double in the next year.
What is needed is not paupers and beggars, who are willing to sell
their souls for f 50 subscriptions.
but men who have shown an ability to improve their opportunities, and
have accumulated something with
which to pay labor. Jasper has a
good coal for cokeing, and a splendid clay for brick making, which are now comparatively dormant.
"Thexaxd Now." A little over a )ear and a half ago the now prosperous camp of Belt was very little known outside of Cascade county. Today it is known all over the west, and in the eastern coal and coke regions it is looked upon as a formidable rival in the coke market. Eighteen months ago the town was nothing more than c staye station, with a general store, postöffice, hotel, livery stable, saloon, and no pay roll. At that time P. J. Shields
was working night and day endeavoring to demonstrate the quantity and quality of the coal which lay hidden in the hills in this vicinity. Nor was this all. As soon as he was satisfied of the quantity and quality ot the coal he determined to test its cokeingqualities. Although he met no encouragement he never faltered. With that push and untiring zeal, born of years of prospecting in the westj he continued his efforts, without capital or anything but his belief and faith to encourage him. He built a rough coke oven and tested the coal in all states. He discovered that with the proper facilities for cleaning and burning that it would produce an
excellent quality of coke. He realized the fact that it required some
thing more than he possessed to
open up the new field; it required capital and a market for the product.
He therefore induced the Anaconda
Mining and Smelting company to
take hold of the property. It was
not long until the latter company
was satisfied that the coal was iust
what they required. The force of men increased and the property developed as rapidly as possible. A
coal washing plant and 100 coke ovens were at once erected. These,
with other improvements, shows an outlay of over a half million of dol
lars, and the improvements are just beginning. OveroOO men are employed the pay roll running from
40,000 to 150,000 per month. The output of coal amounts to
about 1,400 tons per day 1,000 tons of lump and 400 of slack. The former is shipped to the smelter at
Anaconda and the latter is run through the washer and converted into coke. The town, which at the beginning
of the year had but a handful of peo-
pie, today bas a population of over 2,000 and still growing. Like all other mining camps, Belt has had its trials. No sooner did it recover from one set-back than another sprung up. These necessarily retarded tho progress of the town somewhat. People feared to invest, preferring to wait uatil the clouds had passed away. The sky is now clear aud we believe oar future prosperity is assured,
