Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 40, Number 10, Jasper, Dubois County, 12 November 1897 — Page 8
The local advertisers in The Coi kikr are presenting the finest spectacular play ever j rmluced in their line.
Mu- fair whip "Michael what i i tff U that?" i rUgtff " The one beyant tht tu tl hi u in?" ' Vi1.- ; that large tree." ' Wid the little green one to tht it; i Hing that a shad--lit i k vn Life.
GETTING READY Every expectant mother a try lag ordeal to face. If ehe does
THE NEW APHRODITE.
get ready for It, there is bo telling what may happen. Child birth is full
of uncertainties if Nature is not given proper assistance. Mother's Friend is the best help you can use at this time. It is a liniment, and when regularly applied several months before baby comes, It makes the advent easy and nearly painless. It relieves and prevents ' ' morning sickness." relaxes the overstrained muscles, relieves the distended feeling, shortens labor, makes recovery rapid and certain without any dangerous after -affects. Mother's Friead is good for only one purpose, via.: to relieve motherhood of danger and pain. Om dollar par bottle st all arua stores, or seat by i press on receipt 1 prtoa Pass Boobs, contain in valuable Informs Una far wessen, will t tent to aar address apea application to
TUB BRA DPI ELD RBOVLATtNt CO-
At
INSURE WITH
Wm. A. Wilson's Etnl fflSÜRANCE Apt! JASPER, IND. Represents old line companies. Life, Accident, Fire, Tornado. Live Stock and Plate Glas Insurance. Prompt payments guaran teed. Also, .Etna Life money t loan on farm property. Keb. 12, iw:. y.
GEORC
EP,
mm
aasrr Acrcaaa or-
WAGONS ai CARBI AGE ST
-And Dealer In-
Agricultural Implements and Fertilizer.
!
(Hit of the dwp m atream. Into tbe Itajht and thv air, Kuar Ilka a trre.-i.-u drvaiu Vmua, tb fair
How much of tm and rue, How much of a and peace, Hiwhmk that dar from tb- blue Watt-re ot Grwv! Oh, from a CMat'fl rrrgo Or awlft galley ' irtw to have aaoa Her, Iba world'e wonder. . m. rga, Vnltol tn the ahm-n Of her glortoaa ere dripping Iura, Bum) ant of limb and aa bright A the aulf atar that Inula out the flocks Of the altephcrdeaa Night! Hut what avails It to algh For a gl) in paa of that day withdrawn? Hot for long In the ky Miji the fair dawn. Oura Uta nobler lot , " Under the broad noontide, Uaslng, to falter not. Till from tbe wide Ocean of life we behold. Suing in aplendor and might 'urrr than Venue of old. Uslmer than Night. Purer than In or the blue Depths of ether untrod. Nature, the only, the true Daughter of Uod. -W. P. Trent in Dial
HI LOST THE MATC H. ENOS WAS GREAT, BUT THE OTHER MAN MAD A TRICK THAT BEAT MIM.
WITH THREADS OF METAL.
Ttneal Fakrlra and the More Coatly Bracadre of Uold aad Stiver. Tinsel fabrics are tbe lower priced of the cloths into which gold or silver threads have been woven. In tinsel fabrics the gold threads are of brass or copper, gilded, and the silver threads arc of white metaL These threads of metal, originally fine wire, are rolled flat and burnished, and they g listen in the fabric wherever the pattern brings them to the surface. Tinsel fabrics are made about three-fourths of a yard in width, and they sell at 75 cents to $2.50 a yard. They come in various colors, and many of them an beautiful and artistic in design. Some are copies of old Venetian tapestries. Tinsel fabrics are used for church and for theatrical purposes and sometimes for gowns and for decorative purposes. The costlier fabrics, with interwoven metal threads, are called gold and silver brocades. In these the gold threads are of silver, gold plated, and the silver threads are of pure silver ; the body of the fabric is of silk. The brocades are all beautiful, and many of them are exceedingly so. These fabrics are made
about five-eighths of a yard in width, and they sell at various prices up to $25 and sometimes as high as $50 a yard. The costliest of these fabrics are very rarely imported into this country, brocades at $10 and $12 a yard being about the highest priced used here. If more elaborate fabrics are required, they are usually imported to order. The finer fabrics, with metal threads, are made in France, the commoner kinds in Germany. Gold and silver brocades are here used almost exclusively for church purposes and chiefly for vestment a They are imported in red, violet and green and also in black with silver threads, the black and silver being for mourning. Gold and silver brocades are also used to a limited extent for decorative purposes Such fabrics and gold embroidery, often of the costliest description, are fsr more commonly used in Europe than here, both for church and for military purposes. New York Sun.
General Repairing Horse Shoeing o North Mail Street. JASPER, - - INDIANA. Madison Townahlp Tni8t? Notice. Notice is given that hereafter the Trus tee of Madison township will be at th store room of Mr. John P. Norman, ir Ireland, on every Saturday, for the pur Kse of attending to township business, ind all persons having business with tht township are expected to confine it U those days. The township library is kept at Isaat Alexander's in Ireland, where all may obtain the books. The Indiana School Inxiks will bi found at Norman A Gray's store at ali tiuiaa John K. Norman.
Aug. 1, 'Vtt-jr Trustee Madison Tp.
Pullman C
As a railroad train was swinging
around a sharp curve a passenger in the
sleeping car was thrown against the in
side window of the stateroom so violently that his elbow went through the
glass. The Pullman conductor came
promptly to the rescue, asking if he
hurt. No. I'm not." answered the passen-
er od naturedly, "but the Pullman
company's dividends will be cut down
this year by the price of one pane. I
suppose the stockholders can stand it, though."
"The Pullman stockholders won't
have to, ' ' said the conductor. ' ' It comes
out of the X. , Y. and Z. Railroad com
pany, to whose train we are attached.
I shall make out a damage slip, the
train conductor will certify it, the re
pairs will be made at the end of the route, and the railroad company will foot the bill. There's mighty little, I
tell you, except ordinary wear and tear,
that the railroad company doesn't pay
for. If there is a scratch on the side of
this car at the end of a run, the X. , Y.
and Z. pays for it, not the Pullman
company. New York Tribune.
House aad Lot lor Sale. A good residence on Mill street ii Jasper, for sale cheap, ard on reasonable terms. The lot has on it a good drill well csting nearly $100, furnishing ai unfailing supply of good water. Fo: priie snd terms applv Co 0, Doavs.
i..eeUlte1
C areata, and Trade-Marks obtained, snd all faa ant butiaeaa conducted for Meet ears Fees. Owe 0rr.ee is OeeastTt U. a. PaTtwr Omct
aad we can eemre patent in leas urn
Meant from Washing loa. f Sand model, drawing: or paeto.. with
Minn. H e adriea, if patentable or not, free of
fCkarrf. Our lee not cue tin patent is eocareo.
A' .MMitT "How tnOhtain Talent. Hl
tries
c' si vm,f in I.. a Iii S. and furetga
e'il ticc A-., re-
C A. ShOW A. CO
HfSqbacribe for the Coutiu.
A Coatee! Beteeea Hura Pley re of Kltal Showa That Wae WUaeeaed by the Cltl-
aeaa For Milee Around aad t tuplrvd by the Mayor at the Tew a. "I suppose," said the old circus man.
"that the greatest bass horn player that! ever lived was Km Stulkinton He played the bass horn in our band. There have been men with a better knowledge of music, perhaps, and some with a mure finished style, but none that could j touch him in producing thunder. His playing came to be one of the features of the show. He was a star attraction where he was known, but to most people he came as a surprise, something more: than they had expected, and th. y en j joyed him all the more on that account. For instance, at every performance, i before the actual beginning of the show, i we used to give a band concert, and Mr. Stulkinton would begin to get in his fine work there. As the people listened to his first thunderous 'oomphahsV they were amazed. But when they heard the canvas of the great tent flap in unison with the blasts of his horn they all laughed, and thereafter throughout the performance they all paid close attention when Enos raised the instrument "We tried, of course, always to make a route for the show that wouldn't conflict with anybody else, for there were plenty of towns that wouldn't stand but one show at a time. Two would lose money in them, however good they might be. Rut sometime we ran against some stubborn man that wouldn't give way, and then there was nothing to do but to show and beat him if we could "Once, when we struck a town with another show, we learned somehow that they had a great lt.- horn player in their band, and of course we challenged 'em for a contest. Aud they took up the challenge very promptly. There wasn't much time to prepare for it, but we billed the town in an hour and got permission to put up a stand on the public square, because it was to be a free exhibition, and that attracted attention. "The contest was at noon, and of course the two bands played as accompanists of the horn players. And that made a big hand concert, and the crowd was something enormous. The terms were that each man was to play ouce, and then a v te of the people was to be taken. The man defeated in that round had a right to (11 for another. If the man defeated in the first round won the ; second, the man who won the first : round had a right to call for a third round. But the winner of two rouuds by the vote of the people was to be declared the winner of the contest. "Well, the men in our show bet ; every dollar they oould rake and scrape on Enos. and some of the more gentle , hearted of them thought they were just , robbing the men in the other Bhow. Our old man not only bet all his money, but , he bet the idol of his heart, the famous
old giraffe of our show, against the other show's moth eaten buffalo, and he was so dead sure that he threw in a cinnamon bear to boot. "Our side had the first inning, and our band showed 'em how to play, and then Enos stood up for his solo. And how he did make the thunder! It was 'oomphah, oomphah, oomphah!' as it had never been heard be'ire, and he fairly earned the people off their feet "Then the other band played a tune, and their man got up. And there's no use talking, he raised more thunder
'id and set the people
CT Im a
m '.I 1 1 -.1 ' !T"Tvej
Km
ÄWfff table Preparation for As -simUattng the Food and Regula ling the Sioaachs and Bowels of
Promotes Dieslion.Chcerfulnrs and Rest Con tains neither Om.Morphine ax Mineral. Not Narcotic.
SEE THAT THE
FAC-S1M1LE
SIGNATURE
UM, Evanstie & Si. Luis
Consolidated R. r.
ttfauitSAMaimvmt
Smd-
Awae JWaf
A nerfec t Remedy for Constipa
tion. Sour Slomach.Diarrhoea.
Worms .Convulsions. revensnness and Loss or Sleep. Tac Simile Signature of NEW YORK.
OF
v(, 5. so r.M. I' M yy BejeejesJ j,,) u.,) eTnX self.! j 6
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laji u as t : V. 1'i 10
AM
I exact copy or wrapper.
r er
IS ON THE WRAPPER OF EVEBY BOTTLE OF
CASTORIA
Oattorls It pnt as la eas-shw bottles only. It
is not told la balk. Don't allow anyone to tell 70s anything alas oa the plea or promise that it It "Jut as rood" aad "will auwer sverr pur pose." & that rei get O-A-8-I-O-E-I A.
Tkttu-
1 tBjimJrTJLU
' VTHBar.
"THE AIR LINE
53 Miles the Shortest 5) Between Louisville & St. Laajf, Only Line between LoulMe and KvatiNvllle.
TIMIOABDIH irra'GT, hpl. i main line. Wret Houml. Kaal Bossl Ki sun Iu. Ie Ia. Iu Kt ',
S. go, I. No. a Ho ( v A.M. I'.M AM v v
r ,vw a t w m v i t r i , . . - JO New Alltany & 3ft
t ors doa JVt. 4.M k'litfltHh i ( lluntinltirt( t.OA Wlnalow '27 Oakland Oily J W l'rluoetou I .
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So. 2ft laavas Jnaprr ilaily at 4. et, I.
r vc BI llimiinKOUrK Hl 3 uu, No '26 leavea Huiilmliiirii daily, . i .;. laaday at 6 10 a. tu arrivt-am laap.T .ii ii No. ä) l.'uvri Huntlnsburif dally at üu', ar rlvas in I i-p. r .it '2.'. a. in No. 6 WW SS to JaHprronly OS weUatla N.. 2i ilo.a not lav- Jasper Sun.l
ar
tie jasp;b cm roller mills Make the Celebrated
PATOKA LILY FLOUR.
BEST GRADE IN THE STATE OF INDIANA
They also want your WHEAT-
And pay the Highest Market Price in Cash
Flour and Ship Stuff for Sale at all times.
than Enos shooting. "Thni the vote, as h d
releaaeea la Eaaerweacj. Dr. Weir Mitchell, lecturing to a
school of nurses lately upon the necessity of self control in emergencies, told
the following incident: "One of his patients, while in a low, nervous condi
tion, swallowed bj mistake a dose from the wrong bottle. She shrieked out that she was poisoned. One of tbe nurses screamed 'Aconite!' and began to cry hysterically. The other nurse, seeing that the patient was going into convulsions from terror, when relief would be impossible, saidooolly: 'Don't be frightened. Look here,' taking a mouthful of the dose herself. 8he then went outside to rid her mouth of it, procured an emrtic and sent for a doctor and a stomach pump. Her calmness saved the life of the patient"
Slng-lna; aa Mllklag. In Switzerland a milkmaid or milkman gets U'ttcr wages if gifted with a good voice, because it has been discovered that scow will yield one-fifth more milk if soothed during the milking by a pleasing melody. The Missouri supreme court declared that the law against opium smoking and opium joints is uncontitutional, because it interferes with the right of men to smoke whatever they choose.
Every seventh person in the United Kingdom u a Loudouer.
mayor got np to take the agreed to do, and he was
interested now as much as anybody. And the people voted for the oth-r man, as we expected they wonld. But we hsdn't any doubt about the tins', result, for we thought that Enos would unshackle now and break away and make the blow of his life. And he did. We, who had been hearing him for years, had never heard him approach what he did now. It was wonderful. He set the people wild, and we thought we had 'em sure. "But the other man' very first 'oomphah !' made us tremble, and as he went on we knew we were lost, money, giraffe, everything. We'd never heard anything like this before. It wasn't just simple peals of thuuder it was a thunder fa-try in full blast and working with a double fon-eof men. There could be only one verdict. "That afternoon the whole town went to the other show and left our big
tent empty. The other piople came over for the auiraalx they'd won before show time. They wanted to take Vm over and walk em around in their ring. The old man had 'em brought out. When the giraffe realized what had happened, he wound his neck around the center pole snd wouldn't budge. But the old man Anally persuaded him, and over he went to be made a show of iu the other circus. "Enos Stulkinton never blew a bass horn again. He'd had the opportunity of his life, had missed it and he hadn't j the heart After that he always blew a baritone. "For my own part, I always thought there was a trick in it. Don't you know,
there are things that look fair and square oa the face of them that you feel certain, all the same, are off, in some way. Well, I knew there was something wrong about that man's bass horn playing, and years afterward I heard what it waa Re had a bellows attached to the horn, with a hole in the side of the horn for the nozrle of the bellows, and the bellows inside his clothes out of sight, and a rod running down to a treadle under his foot. He re enforced
, his own blowing with blasts from this bellows, and, of course, the man didn't 1 live that could stand up against him. "We told Enos about this, but it was too late. Ha'd lost his ambition and was satisfied now to play second flddlo,
though he might still have been a champion. " Naw York Hun.
FELIX LAMPERT
Agent for the Empire Drill. Sucker State Drill.
Keystone Corn Husker c
Fodder Shredder.
Blounts' True Blue Pows.
Manufacturer of WACONS AND BUCCIE8. Repairing of all kinds.
Jasper. Indiana.
V
v k h, A 1 h, the lmprewMon o
utrenpth and of soundneHH. People at leant feel that those who keep their names hefore the public hy using Thk Coi rikr are solid and substantial.
4 aftaaflkat
Kol KI'OKT ami CASShl.ToN liv,,N
Kxcept SiiiiiIhV . No. 45. NO 41. So 51 I. M AM A M 4 2 1 1 JO It :4U 12 25 A r
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IJ'iontn Ar, 7 .' Ito.kport 7 15 I.IIK'iilli Ar T AA
105 .'25 Ar. TH1 City Lv 7 07 l 20 .10 " ranii. lt. in " 7 .)
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Loa eat rte to all Kuntcrn uikI M.-,t,.,, points r'ol.ler, rutr, an. I kvii.thI Infoi uiation will he fiirniaiiril upon applicat i to V. R. CLATCOMB, AR't JaKH-r CD StrattaN, Truv I'aaM Kt , Mt Vernon III R. A. I AMiBBi.L, Oeja'l I'aaa. A (et, St I..MI - Mi,
United States Hotel! Gutoski.l & Kress, Prop.
MILL STREBT,
.IASPKK INI
Tin liotH haa l-en throughly ivrrliaul-l, an. I 1 1 ill t I urn Itll liaalllllll, anil It in. a open (or puiii- nwtsvwiia at sat . Tin- tahi will alwaya lie found WtU auppln.1 aad prlrcx rftiHonalil)' llfadijuarttTa tor p-opl- uttpodiny eoort A K""J atulile for fariiicra' borai, aul chcup f !. A K"1 lar well upplufl with thseholceet liquor ami .Kara, anil polite attention ai,i . tiive in a Bali, Ap&.TC-y. tiutcaell KfwM,
Hall TownMhip BiiHineHM. Notice is hereby iven that tiie ttn.lei -higtifil, Trustee- of Hall township, will attend to township business on each Saturday of the year, at my office, and persons having township business to transact are required to present it to him on Saturdays. The township library will also be found at my office near Kosamond, and the r.tirens are invited to call there for library books, The Indiana Series of School bookj
may be had at my office, and at John J
Lavi L Jacobs, Trustee Hall township. Aug. . 185)7. y
Boone Towns hip TruRttH' Notice. The undersigned, Trustee of BoOB4 township, Dubois county, hereby givenotice that he will attend to all bll : pertaining to the office of Trustee, at hit residence, about one mile west of Pot tereville, on Portersville and Irelan.: nal, on Saturdays of each week, ant: requests all persons having townshij business to present it on Saturday. I'm zens desiring books from the Town-hi Library, are notified that the Ubrarv i kept by Wm. McIIarris, in Portersville N. B, CorrMAN, Trustee Aug 7, 1897 y. HarbUon Trusteed Notice Notice is hereby given that the under signed. Trustee of Harbison tnWRatllp will att nd to township business on earl Saturday of the year, at my office, an. persons having township business t trrnsact are required to present it to bin on Saturdays. The township library will be kept 1 my home in Haysville. Uboroi Nix, Aug. M, 1897 -j. Trustee.
Columbia Townahip Traf tee's Notice. The undersigned. Trustee of Ohm hia Tp., Dabowl oooatjr, tad., willattea to Tow nsliip lsisiness'at his residem o every Saturday, and persons havinn township business to transact are reipiested to present it on that dsy of thr week . The Township Library is kept at tri ottire of the Trustee, wtiere those 'tititled csn obts'n Isxiks. R. IV Smith, Tnisd Aug. HMa, 18117 -y.
PECULIAR RINTINO RACTICALLY REPARED AND
PROPERLY RESENTED RODUCES ROSPERITY WE CAN HELP YOU
Prepare PRODUCE and ft PRESENT IT THE COURIER Offics,
