Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 39, Number 39, Jasper, Dubois County, 4 June 1897 — Page 1
3aspcr
'Wrcklu GTnufref
VOL. 31.
I CIM.IfHKD KVKKY Kit I DAY, A T .1 A I pr.K, DoeoiscooxTT, imdiama, by CLEMENT DOAXE. OFFICE . I m Coubim Builoiso s Wkst Six i n Stkkkt. PRICE OK SÜBKCRU"TION. p,.r year. S3 Harnten, Postpaid, $1.80 i ,rt,.r ti in proportion. KAT ES l APVKKTISI NG. 'or ISfel adveathSBBSBtS leiral rate; mi line 11.00 for tirst Insertion ; SOe. ,.; ii mbseqaent lasertioa. h ,r veiirlv ailvertiHeiiient 1 i -ral eon-
JASPER. INDIANA. FRIDAY, JUNE 4, 1897.
NO. 39.
W. C. T. U. COLUMN
CONDUCTED V Mils. M. L
FARMERS AND SUGAR BEET PROFITS.
PASTOR SEES A FIGHT.
Republican party is hostile t tin
spirit of existing pnrty management on th liquor I taue la without doubt ;
nouns. ,htit evil were tin class a it-n !- I
majority, it oould not to any in-i-t
uhii Will IMIWN THI SALOON? upon it-con vi tion- without so Ui-
, rupt i ng the party that its power for organic usetulneas to our cause Hon. Henry B. Mettslf. the l.arjre Manu- M (. , yoQ( ,,. , facturer, and Until I. ate a Prominent recovery. Republican Leader in New England. It wa- all in vain tli.it I laniel
Answers the Ouestion. I Webster sought to save himself and! appreciate the ralue of beet culture, the preacher should le to drive WW
, i . i. i ii . i i .. Lis rrtv Kv iirintir rf nrinninlftlfn I RS 7 the total nroihietion of I t devii out of BOCietV. And
ab an oiu-ume riepuoucan i ion i . -v i i - .- . - . , . . ., , C' " a tn the ,vi,n t i -on demand of in arrogant minority, auger in thii country was onlv 2.x '"d he must invade the enemy .- many yean clung to in. expeus i ., Kk f- .1... ; iaon u .. in nm Icmintrv. And. if New York is not
tion tnat 11 IV Old party would again I,". " " , V, 7 . 1 . .. , .. , " T .1... ,i.... i....;. Ü totally unlit those who take nart in
1 hp ( iii iu lu hp I iiti ti in vi' ( I " o " " p n l, - - . - - .
trouper incentive to plant beets o new 1 orn.
l our limes Larger than W heat. nr. peiCrs at the Ringside A New New York 1'rioe Curreut, . , r ... ork Preacher. I he prOUUCt lOQ ot heet sugar UP! on an extensive scale ii an impor-l Madiaon ('. IVters attended the tant development In the sgricultumllla'oCoy-O'Brieu fight Wednesday and industrial world, which may h'niprht, and has this to say concernanticipated within the next few'i'igit;
preacher at a pri.e tight :
vearH m the 1 mteu Mates, amen
can farmers art just beginning to
Whv not?
The great purpose of
dedure for principle, and ju-
iii'
tijv man and the party. The protest of
... 1 . I - I I . . . " . .. t I... .......... ..'.I-- r. . . . , , I . I. ft
tract wtu oe maoa w regular ttasal; declaration by its wanare upon " rK" ..... ... iiwrH. the liouor oliflarchv. It was notwveraal ol party polloy nor an at-
i.nl .. ....,,.,. tlw.,.rv iciii i iiierciu, iuh hi n ucw
nun hi' 1111 hi ii 111. .in . "i .... .-. j . ... ,, .
ence were young men between 21 and 40, and many of them clerks and mechanics, w ho seemed to think that to view such an exhehition was a thing to be sought as eagerly as the most valuable prize of life. "This sporting craze in one form or another is the cause, the indirect caUM, of three-fifths of our forger ie-, smbesalementl and the fearful catalogue of financial dishonor and
crime. e spend more money on
ll 1 . 1 X il J t
to that a" K"ius 01 spuria man we uo ior
food and clothes. And, worst of all, the major part of these sports
than ever before, for, whereas, Cuba ' ' Wednesday night's fight between
them for the active work of life.
"The sporting tendency is indeed
before the break of the insurrection, MH'y and O'Brien, taken as a our national sin. The history of
1 .iff 1
1 '.11 ii.
WOKK v ,' ' J nra.nn brganiiation. This is aimply a exported upward of 1,(XX,000 tons whole was the most sickening sight! us w.m u,e spon .K
- :, , .VV. w ndu'tvfcollecled h-onof experience, a demonstra- of sugar, her aurplua product ell have ever seen m my lite, ZJVJ
, deal o,vl,a. , ned to ,e 00 of effect following Cause, A last year toleSS than a tenth of that IUMN rounds ,t was a continuous . - ? " '
ievlence ,hl the old nar.v woiil I Party may gain a temporary advan- amount Mud, the greater part, re -t.ononour hoasted c.y, izat.on. -
. f ..r.. I . I.., .. i t . ,r . 1 1 v ..vi It v t i ii ill v ,r nnii'iilv nt (he 1 (Mill ( H )! I tons ' linen had Hot lieen I'hllllg !l m usmu m "imumd mimtm
f. rc
COMMERCIAL AND JOB
Of all Kiada Promptly and Neatly
cated at uasaAL cum sa.
ItVs invite Inapection and businei
. . . . i . . 1 1 . . .
be likely once more I aa ine army r ................. ; ; . !n inch to a man's life. Stronir
io re".uii 'n l'. i .iiiiiii re. linen v ine n.n iniin.i' mun m. n . . w .... . .
. .i...t it haal I nit.., I Sutai will .lii. imr Out n,vi aiiLirv hlow from Mct'ov's nowerful rms, stout lungs, muscles of steel,
he DO06. 11' iirrs oi wmjuroni anu pvriVvl iiv-
a thereafter, have to be furnished not bled profusely. It was the first are aaawoaw m una ugnramg-
blood of the fight, It seemed to be iooreu mueieenu ceniury. n we . . . . i i .i : l.i
i i f. i.... : 1 .1 : ...I... wl.nt iivini. n ho ..n iil..,ot in., iiiiu laKen inure e.ercise we nuuiu
a I .1 I . lU'ltr IlllkCtHll ' i . t i T. TIE h I ' II) II : I I I I I I I I t I I " I III! I ' I " III VIIV ll'l"'lv I I . I I I ' l Vit- ill' II (.(. ill
.IAHPKK, IND., aencereierreo w,ana . io-u.i vmnm ;,..,.....' ,,, ii.!f.rmAM .wu , .nl i had bsendonaina for. and thev an- be taking fewer lulls.
lit in-t I , tnv cone u-ioiis at tin ' ' " ........... -T- rr . i , A . m.,,, ;!.
.II iinii'ti', in ..v. . . . .. . :. itinei. I i-anitot return to it- l'.veii it I tiha should 1 iresentl V he- I'eareu io exuil. I licv seemed io
I lit lliin ll.'K 'II ' ' 1 - - r .1 . 1 i
have the o peuBd.
PROFESSIONAL CARDS.
... ........ ...... - j r ii , .... t..r i,.,.,.it,. t.. it... I.V. confidence t tin
M MI1HCKV. - K..M . i-u iviiii . iui i";ii. '"
'. 1 !. ....
of reform, and I thereon contended 11 F
.... t :. . . 1 . :....lf .... I...... I. .....I ......tl.. ntij ri irht IimiiiI ill, -it on the HAM
OlUl.leiJ, il mill, ll.-eii IIO lUIl. I I llirill. IIIOIIIO- .ii... 101 .-oinv .-.ii.- " -- mmmm -
the best mean
inav secure
tllLBl'Kli' & WKKUBIiLr. '..... i; master thereof. It
- ine Hiriuiinn i i in' ii'i.i'.i ........ . - , . . . f I a a m T a . . . iiirl Iui,' I . ..I i ti, .'Mil,1 Ii... 1 1 v .1 still Iiv tl... - : : ' i r I'.' 111.. 1 .1 1 1 t 1 1 . ' I i.'l t r. n . f '
all" jf 7 i nave i.ueiv ic-tA..u.u.. ........ . , , , . nn .i, whnt m.mv of tho men iihoiit me had taken more exercise we
time
.,11. miiiii t '.. unties
nLv-OKf 14 K .lltek MM St.. i.p.olta Ml
li.it. l Coimtj lli.nl Doe. a, -vrj.
VW ai wäjj
attorney at Law, iAMPKK. INDIANA.! m .... .....
I'r....riitiiii: Vtt..ri...y i.t in.. .....
it was collected, a general guid
i
e I
record of the past. It is tine that the honor-of early work for prohibition are pretty evenly divided between the Democratic and Republican parties, but this was followed by an open and formal declaration of Democratic hostility to all laws
The Postoffioe inspector just arrived in Washington from a three months' trip through the south was narrating ajOUM f his experience--, aays the Washington star.
W S. Hunt or.
V. A. Trayl...
rtUYLOK & HUNTER,
Attorneys at Law,
.i mm: it.
INDIANA,
ran party, which for year- continued t i give enough indication of actual sympathv with the sentiment of prohibition to justify an expectation that it would move form aid. The d resent organic purpose and
-aj----w . . . it.
- . .,.... , . t t , . I i . I . I ' I . I f - ' I 1 I I I! I I' f V t , i
... .. . 1 ...... f III IOI4 Ulli I'l.lll Ill' IH MII'll, III! 1 . V
V ill tiriU'tK' III lit1' imi " - , .
;:;::;:r';,iii.i r.v tun-num..
Last night's tight simply deter-
come a producer of sugar on a large take a fiendish delight in the sight mined which was the stronger brute, scale thi re would -till be an am- of the blood. Blood always attracts brawn and brain, muscle and manple market tor our native oommodi- 'ruh- hood, strength and character, blendty. owing to the rate at which our "From that time until the end oi od, main a strong man. McCoy demand for BUgar i- increasing. the cruel encounter hlood was spat- "1 O'Brien are only one-sided dein the last twenty years the 000 t red over the bodies of the two velopments, monstrosities, strength sumption of sugar has increased in lighten, in a revolting, sickening ntthout character. A powerful
At the la-t election in a state England, 90 per cent. : in Germany mass, and the more blood they saw pnysujue u not imrequenuy united
which I shall not make it dangerous 159 ner cent and in the United the more these several thousand of aut a leetne mind. . ... 1 ' ....... ..v ...... 1 u.i 1 : ..... . ... .. A
l' till' . ,l " U" on , 1 e I 1 1 1 1 l ill u 11 u . 1 . . .. ...i. .
wi re 1 'rant were great in spirit, nut not -.th. in body. Kenan sarcastically call-
... . . . . 1 .....I .... , . ..... ,, .
20,1 mm I farmer- in various parts of b-tic clul s arena W ednesday night, bo i am me ugiy nine jew, uu
the United States with sugar beet countenancing and manifestilv en- m conscience, mind, heart, soul and seeds for experiments aa to aoil, joying this exhibition. will Paul was the strongest man .. ,......,...,t..t;,... f-J - The .0111 whos,. tn:iirni,.(.nt nhv-that ever walked the earth since the
cilities ana other facts haarincf un- sioue was made for better thinsts Almighty sent it circling
. , o mr 1 .
hi I he ouestion as to the m ctions of staggered to hi- corner 111 a C0II1-
1 1 . .w. ....... i; ,,. ... .... ,1 c 11 .1 r .ir. . ..in' 11 1 ''i' .....r.. iv ...... ..... 1 1 , 1, 1 m,. ri-iii aim 111 wie 1 linen i. 1...... .w. .......... ÄtiÄÄ unfriendly to the l,.,um trai n - for ,() n ,,v .,.;, ,mng m men seemed to enjoy to enjo t8tit- o. rubil Squaw thi8 ,:,n?,m,,l'M, i- ., Sill 11 Pub,ir print." he was aaying to Within the past few years the de-fight. Yet officenof the law reD 11 u v "f th" S 1 ! il 8up of listeners, "1 beard a fun- artraent of agriculture has supplied stationed all about the Palace ,,,m i,..r i- .. ii.'li l,,r i'i.'ir. I'lintin I'll ... . . . . ... ... ... ... .
nv kind of an examination at tin
polls. One of the very greenest country jakes I think I ever saw came up ami wanted t" vote. It was hi 'irst vote and the judges
held him up.
around
,. the sun.
Anril Tl. "ri
KUNO BÜKTTNEU, Attorney at Law, And Notary Pablle,
Uve to the liquor power seem to me
to have been determined through the rise and fall of the Anti Saloon Republican movement. Having
been actively identified with that
organization and its progress, I know the absolute good faith of its leaders in an ff ut to array the Republican
1 Wain to vole'.'' a-ked one in a the coimti v wh-re I., et sii-'at is nio-t pietelv exhausted condition. Ith.nl "All had the gymnasium! It ... n. .11 '..... m i ...m ....... .1.., .1 ..I ..............
k m MP ! l INDIANA.
- - - - ... i :
.1... C.-urtHiif Hi.lM.i-. mi.l ""i 'oi.ii.iiiii. m auMguuuui
rrj
' ill nrii. t ii .' i
fnrrv ouuntlM. Iii.liinia
Jan.
F. E. WOODS, D. D. S, OPERATIVE DKNT1ST, JASPER, - IHOIAKA.
gCT OF TEETH.
i.i. . i i .1 ..
jine enure s.tioun s.v.em, mm uim 'therein it at lirt had the full svni-
pleaaant manner.
" ' What's that?' said the cant, trying to show courage, " 'What ticket?' " 'I dunno.' " 4 Are you a tb tnocrat?' " 4 1 dunno. M 4 Are you a republican.'
44 ' I dunno.' 4 4 4 How about being
apph-
i ,
SB.OO 1.1 NBM
pathvof many RepubHcana high in official position, who were not onlv willing but anxious to crowd their party into the desired attitude, of the accuracy of thi- statement I hold
tion?
a prohibi
as. oo
...... ..,.1 ir.,ttf.. w.,rk
..OKI. v."-" - - lull
BaaoUltf l.tt ni-tl."1 ' nninn nr. ... ... , , -., V r ...rk aaaraitaa Tna Ranabli OStet abundant evidence.
..verSlurm and L.-r-y1" Hirdaare .tore.
A.iiii U. MSS 1
5. STEWART,
J.
What's that un?' 44 'Cms of tlx- cold-water people.'
4 4 4 For waaMbin'T' 4 4 4 For drinking. '
" '( tosh to splinters, I ain't that,
I reckon. 4 4 4 Very well,' said the judge, giving it up as a bail job, 'as there i-n't anything elae, rou are i popu list.' ' ' iiiiit irli'im i tf 1 1. f il 1 1 iriti nu
power; and that as a party policy, (f mme fgrailiar Qatne had broken
Hut the party managers, under threat of the liqUO? fraternity, decided in the interest of vote getting that the party DlUSt have the favor and not the antagonism of the liuuor
RESIBENT DENTIST, South Hl.l- f hiblH S..iur... spuy.l llloek. JAHPKK. - - INDIANA OperstloBa fliat alaea as rseoasisaended
-all work guarimteed. Spe.-ialist Crown and Bridge work. Dm, i iaas If. DEXTISTR Y
on
I3r. 13. A. MOWHY, Resident Den ist. IIUNTINOUUH, IIMIJ. Tender hin profnlinal ncrvicewi Ml all aiMMIUM a..J -rll in Um .l.nt.il Una, and pmnilMt to Kiv- it 111 el.Mi-t utl.utn.ic ...Ii pint,' work HptM'Ully ollrllea, hihI ..II a,,rk WHlTtitit,.!. '4'lr a w
1 1 I."
ainbridge lovviiship
The und'rfi(rne,l, TriiHt,' lUmMdsa lowaahip, Dabois county, iii -lul to TowiihIiip busineHu on Sittiinly W every week, at Frank H t H ..ili.e m North Main ttttvet, between Kijrhtli and Ninth, in Janjr. The lWauditfi lahmry and I mliitim Sch. I llook Ht Mime place. William Nuclkk, Trunlee. Aug. 16, lf y.
N DCCASIDNAL
ADVERTISEMENT
AND AN OCCASION AI MEAL Arc Alike in that Neither Does Very Much Good. CONTINUOUS REGULARITY IS THE RULE FOR BOTH.
the liquor magnates must tirt m
sppeased, whatever mioht become of the temperance men although the hitter must thereafter be conciliated if possible. Appeal- for "loyalty to the party that supproased the rebellion" had so many times been honored by the temperanoe men, that such plea wa considered well nigh infallible by the party managers.
In this determination of
the Anti Saloon Republican
into the young i ; . r .
shop," in ms i ace. 4 4 4 1 dunno,' be n ly. ' llebbe I am ;
the biggest dein f. o! in cinota.' "
voter a perception,
ilied hesitatingiap NIVS I'm
four pre-
tnent was practically repudiated
One after another of the inlluentia friends of the movement were in
An old southwest Georgia negro, called to one ol the laborers in hia vineyard i
"Yu, John! Hit's ti meter feed policy dal mule Give hin couple er
move- ,ence r;ll
quick !
he
4He doean't eat fence rails, does J ' ii)fiiiit-..l i I . t-f ii ti. !.
1 1 1 ' j 1 1 1 1 a t a im "ttiipp i.
W tit a
.aWil Uh'ssViMI. Ves. sil l re
dueedtO withdraw their support; plied the obi niiin . Dst whets hi
pieigea oi nnanciai aiu were aisnonored, and the enterprise collapsed.
The experience represented I bat-
appetite. He u-rd to blons ter
one er des- omceaeekers, en he got so hongry standin1 hitched in de
tie between principh' and party ex- slm 'hatha Started On f
ence
rail-
fer a 1 1 i n ; en 0OW he won't tackl
lediency ; the umpire (i. e., tlx
I 1 i.i a .... k 1 9
machine leaaers oi ine party ) uav grrase tell hefs done sal up a string ing decided for expediency, the rank ,.r fence: dan be eats natu. ,r mat..
and file acquiesced, and the oppor- fer dessert. W'v sub," continued tunity of the party to resume ajthe old man, "he got loose de yuth--tan. lard of principle was deliberate er day en tool en MM np one whole I y rejected. The party, at that time, eahh-" . ml -r Eheneezer ohanel. en
came my near to an acceptance of iw'en we ran un on him he wu-
duty and principle, but it bai since j,,- a break fei de new- en de
then receded further and further pulpit Dey wouldn't been much fn un that pofition, until to-day ,.r rneetin' house left if erat it is clearly a matter of doubt he'd got ter de Inside er it. Uive whether the Republican or Demo-1 him dam farm raiu inhn . ilrt ...a
ratio organiiatton atands the high- l. aq n hsrd nloinrhin' dla
est in the eonfidenee of the liouor matvnin' I S In Ihm Ulanta
power. Both parties vie with Constitution.
each other in subserviency to that
power, with a kind ol alternation
in satisfactoriness of service of
I'lie heir, of ' i,l- oi I ' 1 1 ' . 1 1 , i i , -
Ol III" I,,,,... ,a...i .Ii : . . . i
.. ... ii....- in. .. -un in in,- v i.in nun
common master. .Neither party ,..,.,.. .,: r, . n
. . . I , "illlll 1 III Uli I HUI. in ll-Uni'l ill I has lor years enacted any law hurt- ikal f i....i;..i. ...i.;..i.
, . - . nun ("..in ... i i.iio-ii nun lie--rests of th.- master in ...,, ,lf,.,. i .,. di,..i-., Thi.
. , , aw . . , . . . . i , , i - IIIIII' I'llK II I , a 111
nuinoriiv, ami no nonei man can
illl'llll,.s si. nil' nt tin. (iiii.st rosi.
point to any evidence of probability aencefl in ,;. ,WM) ., . rafWi.
ioi cn.-mge in mat policy, in ine State when- I reside the present Hpecial party alliance of tint li.pior fraternity is unmistakably with the
republicans
lik..iv to l. am ..fid I v t.roilnced 1 ti a fiirht to a finish, such as has win cure the dyspepsia oi imnormw,
Already a number of factoiies are .been purged from New York before but away with the prize tight the in the process of erection, and it ia the present administration came in-lilst survival of the murders of the well known thai n.en with capital 10 power. 'rena-. Let public sentiment thrust -land ready to establish many more "The preacher sitting In his study ;H l'"ze . hghters and their and factories aa aoon aa experimenta and! looking at the world out of a dusty hackers in the patrol wagon and experience -ball determine what window i- in great danger of prov- ,,riI1K them up to the bar of jussections of the country are best big the wise proverb that "no knave tlceadapted for practical 1 t sugar pro-Jean do such damage M mistaken A clergyman who had traveled duction. In general, it may be saint." All the states of the union, mucn , 'the South told of Dr. -aid that any old soil that will pro-cither by legislative enactment or pas,j..i's r,.,.,.ption in a large negro duce Indian corn, wheat or potatoes, decisions of the court, have driven h .i, ,1. ti t 1 1
will under proper cultivation, pro-.prize fighting out of decent aocja, tor was prominent throughout the
duce a good crop of sugar beets. except Nevada and .ew 101k. wh()e churchi S) tno pauatöf thought The traffic manager of railroad I ho pulpit and the pros , the ere- was t).jng tne trut, wj,.n w m. having large mileage in Nebraska, ators and conservators of public (l,,m.,,( tu. stranger as followssays: opionion,jrith alnaoat one voice, de- "greddern and sisteta, I now hah " The coining cmp m eor section nounced Nevada for legalizing prize j,onnn, ,,, intrejuding to yoh de is augar beets. The soil proves fighting. We saw the mote in Ne ftebberend Doctor Dashiel, who an well adopted for them, and no oth- vada's eye, but did not see the beam (j0 sounjm hr-iss and de tinkling er crop that an be raised affords in our own eve. cvmbal ob de m.'thodist church." anything lik- the profit. Fanners "Prize lights between bullies who lHuffalo Express 1 - Al ml .1.. I .1.. 1:1... 1-. ...... .. i. : I w '
inane mree iinn-s me money p-r ngoi ne o: me oecoiniii .11acre on sugar beet- last year that' most nightly occurrences in (Ireater they made on wheat. There wasjNewYork there wen twelve adsome difficulty at first in handling! vertised lights in the city la-t balthe beets to advantage, but that has erda v night. The Palace athletic: n overcome. The lack of n-lin-club, with its 8,000 seats, was . m a . 1 . a
nes and tacihties tor marketing crowded last night. acre also a disadvantage for a time, "The brutal exhibition of last 1 ... 1 i:.r rr.i :t. !.... I a . .
o,u a, - neni- .cneinei, , ne M.gar ni ivmy ";,vr " - " support of that principle, and hold relmed from wet raised in Nebras- within the limits of the Horton law. . a.Z. u V... .
ka cannot b- told by ordinary peo- but if two men standing
I I-, .in (Ii,. .... t loino 1 1 . t 1 i- I fiirlititur ill. til Iwitlt 11 ro 1 , 1 1
l I "III HH Vtllli 1 1 fc. . 1 . X 11 iikmiML niiin ""io in. ' - 1 'a mihi 1.,, I ... 1 ... . . . r
.1 -i . v i L. .Vl 4L 1 1 ... u" ie -UUU1..U1 luny
icn uof (l-oie,i looeeis in .x inasK.l .,1 .0., i.nn me lo.-, i muhahi mil J anJ tttam maamntt aj Ika aaaaktnaa
, . -i.i 1 a I .211 II I T.l . .1,1, .. 1.1. ..-.in... in. . .mil.. I.this year will be much in excels of 1111I1I he vomits hlood it that is not . .ii i ,1.1, ,, .
- ,, 1 1 al P.llll'.Y III 11.11 I 1 1 ' I I , 1111 .11. Il.l.-l ny previous year." prize lighting it is surely more than nerience The importance of the beet sugar "sparring f r points," and I want 1 1
industry to the OWttera of small to know w hat has become of the hie reason why all of us down farma is shown in the fact that in "reform administation" I helped in our hearts have unbounded re-
California one beet sugar factory put in power. spect for an old woman's cures, is gives work to 120 families. The. 44 The ruflians who fight on the that she never charges $3 a visit, iverage crop of beets to the acre is streets are carried away by the m- and hersympatny never soundslike from 12 to 1 I tons, and the farmer lice in a patrol wagon; the ruffians the clinking of coin. Atchison is paid -f I per ton. Hi revenue who fight in the ring an- greeted by Globe, will average 50 per acre, while the cheers and applause of assembled 1 1 '" coat of producing beets ia 125 perthoussnda under the eanctkm of the Oneof the notable; things in all acre, leaving him I net profit of 125 law. And the applause was loud- 1 ir,s J eountry is the ciystalhpei acre, I mud, larger lum than eat whan the blow was crudest. It z:ltlon ,,f ntunent that the remoneba can realise to the production of was a sickenning sight. Call prize ji.at.on of silver will be necessary to Wheat, corn and th- ordinary farm lighting 'fistic art' or 'the manlv "ni relief from the depression from products. art,' it la brutality, only thii and Shlch. suffering. The Deutache Zuckei Industrial Jnothing more. Dock tights and dog Kaveri ence u making Ita argument a German trade j umal devoted to tights ar under the ban of the law, l ",c Jry. Ind. Sentinel. the interests of th' German beet but tights between human beings are . .. . , ,
, . f ., , 1 .- I 111 1 live loiiuiy, uns mine, .101 1 .iimir linliisfri' 111 its issii....t .1 1 r, , ei'il le.l . ' . ...
'. estimates the coming BUgar out-l 44I believe there is enough comoil (. I I,., oiifp.mt inukH i .i folbn... loon il in MIA . . f I . f t 111 i . I lionrloc
nil i"i im t mi' in ' .ii in i"ipni i . iii'mi i' ' m' nit in iiii ' nr:-' . . r.i a 1 ... he mirti'iim ot I in hnn Inru T 1 1 1 L I
metroplii ol the American republic . . V . . , TT 1 . 111, -'.I tot Cb. k nrwtid IO,.
ii'lits qr- 1 ääämmn
Wuz no score, Reason's plain; Ground were wet, Coz' of rain. A party cannot play 44hide and
seek" with any great principle, cannot balance between antagonism and w.o.li.irt .if llnif 1 ir 1 it, 1 . .1 m (in. I I...1 I
ll,.rtoti l iw " ' ' "v ("""-r! -mrm ...... . . rTi the support of men who honor the J5 duties f citizenship. This is what coM-r.-d with t(. i,.,,ul)lican party haH tri,.(1 to
Suet married Miss Fatima Millard.
Each of the contracting parties, in
ie prize fights ar- ,J I'ala.e 'athletic'
The Perry county grand jury has returned an indictment against William Henning, of Cannelton, re
ceiver of the Cannelton water works,
properly, and tin- water WOrkl
"Pleasure and paiii do not ooom to man together, but if a penotJ
That the Individual sentiment of r,lns !,f,,,r '"' al"",s' InaviUblj
a large number of members of the
catches the oth. r too as if they wen
fastened together. Socrates.
Germany, is:,o)o metric ton
Prance. 70.000 tons : Belgium. 27.-! to warn off the
170 tons; Sweden, 10,200 tons; ranged for at tin
Austria, 94,060 tons; Russia, 70,- oIub. Let the public give our p-r-(HKI; Holland, 11.771 tons. Total jure' uthorittes even harder knocks 177, oiM) tons. than the -luggers do each other. Governor Blaok has signet! a bill ' The audience was nd a New .a. It 1 .a a a, a IS a
that provides lor a yearly oonus oil Tora audience, i eouid not s,.,. a t.;iiir4ril,K j,im wjth embezzlement
if'.,i i tone paid out to neet siiLr,ii score or men past oo years or age. manufacturers at a rate not exceed- Very few fun- looking men. It is jt ,.,.ms that many a man who IngOlM cent per pom d for every lb. not true that many of our best biisi- , ,ri.,.,i ,,ini for McKinley can DOW of '.mi percent, crystalized sugar pr.' ii' -s and professional IBM go to n, ni) wrk fu, himself. I'ostpared from beetl grown within the these bouts. 1 should say that the J . patch. stat- of New York, and for which men who occupied the $d and ." th I grower received not Ie-- than $5 seats were mostly toughs and gam- The simplest way to beat the inper ton, provided that the sugarjilers. s;(o. m keepers and politicians. heritBDOl tax is to spend your moninanufacturer is not the grower. I'erbaps three fourths of the audi- 0y while on earth. Chicago Record.
