Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 40, Number 44, Jasper, Dubois County, 8 July 1898 — Page 8
Skin Diseases. Smmm
For the speedy and permanent cnre of t tter, wit r1 cuiii and ecaema. Chain -l rlain F e and Skin Ointment in without ar . qual. It IlMiTM. the itchI (r "ml marting almost instantly ami in continued me effects a permanent cire It also cures Itch, ban ser's Itch, ! Hil head, sore nipples, itching piles. . "pped hands, chnml" eore eye and granulated lids.
Ir. tody Conditio. Powder for horse's are the best tonic , blood pnrifier ami vermifuge. Price. 25 cents. Sold by
iMsville, Evansvillle & St. Loois Consolidated R. B.
"THE AIR LINE.
TKIt'KS OF THIEVING. OUR DEBT TO bumblebees.
I
MOW SHOPLIFTERS PILFER IN MEW YORK'S BIG STORES.
Wuiiirn Ml... 0aj ( Irtrr hildrru Trained to it . II.ib.ii, - Aide lu Thrlr rfrloua CMswMfJ II.. Hum Watch of th More Itrtrrtlt-a.
53 Miles the Shortest 53 Between Louisville & St. LoiiIm Only Ltue between Louisville and Evauaville.
TIMKCAKI) IN KKKKt'T. .lime I. 18K MUS I.I M K. st Bound, iaal it. ..in. i KxSna iu. im. Da. Da an No !. No. .1. No. I. No- 1 No. 4. No Ii.
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7.SI in.ift I.v litsper Ar, '..V) .1 ' s.Oft 7. 10.40 Ar. H l.urK I.v. y.ini lM BUD .. s.iii II. On " Lincoln " ..'.' 2.V7 1 107 S.43 11.41 " Boonvillc " Ml IM M V.40 li.lti " Kvnusville" 7.40 I.M 6.1.' No. 2ft leaves Jasper daily at 4.40, I'. M ai rives at HiintiiiKlxirK at ft 00, No JH leaves lluntrtitflMira dally, except .sun.l.iy sl 10 a. 111 arrive-- .laSfM t al ' No. A leaves tluntiualur dail t '.'.OS.ar rives in Ja.pcr attfjl a. m No. 6 conies to Jasper only on Mi inlays, am No. 'it does u..t leave .Jmp.-r Sundays. KOCKPOttT and CANSKl.ToN IMVISION.
Kxcept Sunday. So. 45. No. 41. Noftl
P. M A M A M A
s.4'J II M I.v. Lincoln Ar. . ft. V ;i 11 Jb Ar KiK-kport s 44 1I.S0 s.,4.1 I.v. Lincoln Ar 7..V. UM lift Mi at Tell City I.v. ; 7 V 40 l.'JO . -1 " I'aniielton " T.ia)
Kxrept Saatar. No 41. No 14 No. 11
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I i.v est rat.-- to II Kantern and West, in (...nits. Kol. Utk, rates, and general iufor :.atiun will Im- furnisurd upon application to V. K (.'LATCHM H, Au't. Imp-r K. I STRATTAK, Trav Pass sgt , Mt Vernon, Ii: U. A. t'AMi'BKl.l . lieli'l PasH. Aei. , Mt l-oins Mo.
Hall Townahip HusincMH. Notice is hereby given that the umlei BignHl, Trustee of Hall township, will attend to township business on each Saturday of the year, at my office, and persons having township business to tran ; sact are required to prevent it to him on : Saturdays. The township library will also be found nf in ntriiiA nL.sp Hi vss ti . n .1 and tri i t
9m V 11J J 1 ll IVtyaNIUVflitf tl'l UM isena are invited to call there for library books. The Indiana Series of School book? may be had at my office, and at John J Meschede'!, in Oelestine. Levi L. Jacobs, Trustee Hall township. Ang. 6, 1897, y
The sympathetic tenderness of a lov- j ing husband is everything to an expectant mother, especially during her first ordeal. George Layton, Esq., a prominent druggist of Dayton, O., gives the following case : A customer of mine, whose wife has used four bottles of 'Mother's Friend" before con finerarnt, says, after seeing the effects of the remedy, that if she hsd tu go through the ordeal gain, and there were but four bottles on the market, and the cost waa flüO per buttle, shej would have them. " Mother's Friend " is s scientifically j compounded liniment which affords cer-, tain relief in the various ailments prectding childbirth, and assures proper elasticity to the cords and muscles involved in the final ordeal. "Mother's Friend" is sold by druggists, or expres4rd on receipt of one dollar. Valuable book, "Before Baby is Born," mailed free on application. THE BRA0FIEL0 REGULATOR CO.. Atlanta. Ca
Boone Township Trust''' Notice. The uiiilersigneil. Trustee t I! ...in township, Pulsus county, hereby give notice that he will attend to all bnilneM pertaining to the ollice of Trustee at his residence, about .me mile west of Pop. torsviliC, on l'.irtersvi lie ami Ireland road, on Saturdays of each week, ami re.iiet all persons having toMnship business to present it on Saturday, t'iti lens desiring books from the Township Library, are notified that the Library is kept by Win. M Harris, in Porta ItVule. N. B. Co f k m a N , Trustee. Aug 7, 1S-.17 -y. Columbia Townsliip TrtiHteeH Xotitre. The uu.lersigneil, Trustee of Columbia Tp., Dttbow county, Ind., vtillatteml to Townahip business at his residence on every Saturday, and persons having township business to transact are requested to present it on that day of the week. The Township Library is kept at the othce of the Trustee, where those entitled can obtain hooks. K. I. Smith, Trustee. Aug. lBth, 18N7 y.
Harbison Trustee's Notice. Notice ie hereby given that the undersigned, Tniatee of Harbison township, will ait -nd to townahip business on each Saturday of the year, at my office, ami persons having township business to trmsact are required to present it to him on Saturdays. The township library will be kept at my home in Haytville. ' KOKOR NlX, Aug. at, 1897-y. Trastee.
We'll Stir ThingsUp pretty lively this winter and we have prepared to keep things hot all the time in the shoe business. Shoes for all kinds of weather Shoes for all kinds of work. Shoes for Sunday and party wear . Shoes for school and play.
The shoes we'll offer are the sort that make your feet glad. And we wish to tell you right now, that although they come from the best makers we can save you money on
all your shoe purchases.
ti
"Selz 'ostheSole f the shoes that row so.
Selz Shoes ike your feet glid.
Schools for shoplifters an- not adver ti-. l. but they thrive. Female Kngiu are no lunger regarded as phenomenal criminals they are ooiisnlenil well estnblisJnd em-mica to the police. Vigilance versos shoplifuvrs, though, is a oolites! in which the store thieves ure invariably brought to grief. As avvomtin h ading a little girl passed from counter to counter in a Sixth avenue store one day last week auother woman closely followed and never took her eyes off her. The woman with the little girl walked ami talkeal rapidly. They askeil for nothing; tlndr eyes aought mucdv Their stvpe at various counters ftchlom lasted more than a sc. oiid. When they had reached the jewelry department, their pace slackened. As they passisl a counter where a sale of gold mounted combs was in progress the woman ' s arm flew out from beneath a black cupe and tut. k again. With the arm ou its return trip had gone one of the must htuidstaue and expensive combs. Ou the woman and the little girl passisl until they came opposite a tray of earrings. The clerk waa about to return the tray to its case. "What pretty stones, mamma !" exclaimed the child. "Yes, my dear," responded the worn- ! an, "hut we won't look at them today. " "Oh, MM. Let's stop. Yon know you promised to buy me somo earrings for my birthday. " "I know, but your birthday is still far away." "Why, mamma, you know that it is next Tuesduy. " "My goodness! Tho child tells the ' truth. How time does fly ! Well, we'll
look at them, but I'll not promisu you to buy them today." Then begins the examination of children's earrings. Mother and daughter look at them critically they admire most of them. This goes on for several minutes, the mother protesting to the child that the purchase should not be made today. Diamond earrings of all siz.es are in the tray. A customer steps up to make an inquiry. The clerk turns her eyes for an instant toward her questioner. One of the largest of the diamond earrings gives a flash and is gone. The little girl comes between her mother and the en unter. When the customer is gone, the little girl has two small earrings in her hand und says: "Won't you get mamma to buy me this pair?" While the clerk smiles and the mother is saying they will call agnin in a day or two the large diaimmd earring is being fastened inside the cape. The mother thanks tho clerk, then they hurry from the store. They are scarcely out on the sidewalk before a command is whispered in the woman's ear: "Return that stolen property." The girl takes to her heels. A man folh iws and catches her. The woman calls it an outrage. She protests; says she'll make them pay for the insult. She grows hysterical. They lead the two back to a side door. They
take them into the sean her s room. Th. n the woman detective carefully examines all their clothing. The child cries. The woman becomee silent. Shu sees it's all up. What's the use of going to the trouble of making am th r scene? The child is 12 yearn old and has been hut a week under instruction. Being arrested is new to her. A society takes the child. Her teacher in crime, the woman who posed as her mother, is held for trial. This is but a sample case. Ia the same MMN last week there were IS arrulu fri. uln .T .1 1 f f i tl CP Trw tU4 , ,f tVll, til u
flflMBS nri.,, Iii,,1 ..i i ,.r I....... in Mii.di aill.
scrapes before were released. This jairt M illar store tries to avoid the courts as much as piMMlM ( MM woman who was arrested wore a shoplifter's skirt. This skirt consists chiefly of pockets. There are pock ts of all widths and depths. This skirt is usually worn as an nnderskirt. An ois ning is provide in the overskirt.
The ratet Thea. Hub. Wi.rhers flay lu th o Mllaml ...1. of M...tb. Harney Hoskiu Stamlih writes an articl- hi "The Bumblebee" for St. Nicholas. Mr Standish says The work of the bumblebee in bringing about the cross fertilization of Howt-rs is as important as that f the houcvlec, and those two stund at the head of the list of insects Useful III this rcsjieot. Kach has its flowers which it alouu viaitM, but tin re are nuuiy Mowers ou neutral ground riOttkl by Kith. So we may auy of the bumblebee, us of the honey b.-e, the more buuihletaxw the more sels; the more s sls the more floweni esjsHially wild flowers, as the tall iM llfiower, touch me not, Solomon's seal, g 'Utiau, Dutchmen's bnss-hes and tur tic head. But probably the most impor taut woik this iuaect does for agricul tun is upon the fields of red clover. Thexs is abundant pru that this plant will not produce satsl without the cooperation of the bumblebee. It is impossible for the wind to bring about the fertilization of the seod, as it MM do in the case of Indian corn, grain and some forest trees. The tube of rod clover blossoms, too, is so long that other insects (including the honeybee) are not regular visitants Here is proof that this plant must have visits from the bumblebee. This insect is not a native of Australia, and red clover failed to produce seed there until tiuiiihlelaes were imported. As Sinai as they became numerous the plaut could be OMpended upon for seed. Agaiu, the blossoms of the fli..t crop of the Medium Red clover of our own country are just as perfect as thosu of the second crop, but there are too few bumblebees in the field, so early in tho season, to pn since fertilization, beuco little or no seisl in this crop. If bumble bees were sufficiently numerous thenis no reason why much larger yields of clover seed might not bo expected than at present. Here is what a well informed farmer says about it : "It was formerly thought that th world nstod on the shoulders of Atlas. I can prove that its prosperity rests ou the bumblebee. The world cannot pros per without the fanners' prsiuct. The farm will not Ive pnaluctive without clover We cannot mix- . lover without seed, and we cannot have clover mH without the bumblebee, because it is this insect that carries the pollen from flower to flower, securing its development and continuance. L- t us learn to know and to protect our friends,"
AN OPEN LETTER To MOTHERS. wr. AM AMI" I'll 1 IT IN Tin: rut ins ock JUCHT q TDK KXCI.LSIVK USE OK TRI WORD t ASIOKIA. " AM 1TTCHI K'S CASTOM A ' AS OCR TRADE MARK , DR. SAMUEL PITCHER, of Hyannis, Massachusetts, was the originator of "C ASTORIA," the same thai has borne and does now bear jf on every Hie far -simile signature of C&ffi&ZUc rapper. This is the original "CASTORIA" which has been used in the homes of the Mothers of America for over thirty years. LOOK CAREFULLY at the wrapper and see that it ,v the kind you have always bought J0f on tlw
w mm m u w- is
1 L i I. .. i . . 1'
unu nun inv signuiuru uj tfcayjr JcccJUU Wrap
per. No out has authority from me to use my name except The Ceniuur Company, of which Chas. H. Fletcher is President. ra.Z). Do Not Be Deceived. Do not endanger the life of your child by accepting1 a cheap substitute which some druggist may offer you (because he makes a few more pennies on it), the ingredients of which even he does not know. "The Kind You Have Always Bought" BEARS THE SIGNATURE OF
Insist on Having The Kind That Never Failed You.
THE JASPER CITY ROLLER Make the Celebrated
M E Ii
PATOKA LILY FLOUR.
The Best Shoes, of all kinds at all times.
Also, a nobby stock of HATS. And the beat makes of PUMPS, and SEWING MACHINES, at reasonable prices. WE INVITE INSPECTION, LEO SPAYD & CO..
SPAYD BLOCK. JASPER.
Mar. 25 :hn
TWO WAYS OF LOOKING. If All Haw Thliiarn Allkr. ThU Woald lie an I tili.tere. ting World. "It is a pity that inon- of us cannot cultivate the twofold way of looking at things, " w rites Edward W. Ih.k in Th. Ladies' Home Journal. "There would Is' less friction iu lift- if we did, and sweeter symithy, kinder understanding and broader ami fuller living The fact is that we never reach the dignity of true living unless we do leani this all important l.-sson. And that it may ls cultivated admits of no doubt It is simply a question of schooling ourselv uot to condemn gnerally what individually docs not happen to be to our taste. If. for example, we prefer hniwu as a color, then- is no reason on earth whv we should consk-mn the taste of
any one who prefemd to wear grceu. What the vast majority of us m-ed is to be a little inon- self jsiised, more judi- j cial, more willing to see good in the tuste.s .,f others, although they Ao mt please our own particular fancieH. It we all thought alike, read the same bookn, saw tbe sann- plays, won the same colors, this would le au exH-diugly uniu-ten-sting world. "We cannot ee all thiuga in the same way, but we can come near to ; justice and true resjs-ct by taking a twofQld view of thing while still r taming our strong individual view. Seeing a ' possible gsd or use for everything do,-
not uecessairly tnt iui a weak iudividn-
The most uncoinfortahle people
in the world are tha- who aasert their judgnieiits iu a hard, divisive and final manner, aa if tin y were courts of last resort. Oil the other hand, the brightest and lieat minds an- those that have moat respect for the opinions of others. "
BEST GRADE IN THE STATE OF INDIANA They also want your And pay the Highest Market Price in Casi Flour and Ship Stuff for Sale at all times
Krn.rnyl and I'nmpernlrkrl. "My first nutting with R'menyi, " anva H. J. Cleveland, "was over a liv-
through which the pocket filled akirt is , mMv iu ( lUIinl' Hiuffl, A
4 iiii ii is .(a) B ihiUferili' ' IS
asily accessible
In the concealed pockets of the woman mentioned were found two piws of embroidery, aeveral rolls of silk braid, six remnants of silk, several pieces of jewelry and a pair of MKMM Two of the store detectives, a man and a woman, hud watched the purloining of all the articles. It ia the rule of moat utorea that no shoplifters ure to la arrest! until they reach the street. Scenes caused by arrests niti very undesirable iu a place of business. Besides this, those placed under arrest in stores often make the defense that they did not intend to take the goiKhiaway they simply desin-d to examine tin 'in iu a gtssl light. One shoplifter, arrested last wink, and one on whom the stolen gixsls were found, had six children at home. The youngest was tl months old The woman's hu-biind has a gissl bnsiuesa He furnished bail for her. When the pnprietors of the ston leanmd that the woman had a i months-old child at homo they withdrew the complaint against her. The woman's hustiaud said he could mt understand why she should wish to sli ,il Store detectives deny that there is any such thing as kleptomania. "Kleptomania is a mistaken notion that some w omen have that stores am .isily n tii; ized, ' ' is the definition that the (leni tives give New York Tele rum. A b.ir i f lend co M to ! MM I!0 degrees Is b zero, according to mi ex periinelit of M. I'ietet, gives out when struck a pure uiusn ul t no.
concert
hall was then- and he was to play. A jackass in a stall beneath persistently i brayed. Kemenyi wouhl uot play I was on my way to Japan, or thought I was, and iutnsluci-d myself to him aftvr his audience had la-en dismissed. He b. g g. .I of me Ui find some puincrnickcl for him. I senrched 1'earl stn et resorts until I found some and took it to his room He ate w ith satisfaction and the u
played for me, played until, boy as 1 was, I erii-d. That was at 1 o'clock in the morning, and in a large hotel filled with people. We had the halls filled with pi oph- in their iughtr .i s before that private couccrt ended. His luv for MBmpeniickel wan no more strange than that of Jummschck for stale hour, and I have, got many a pint of that for her after a most thrilling depiction of Mary, imeeuof tjcota " Chicago Times-Herald. KcnslbU. "Who is that I aw yon feeding nearly every night iu the kitchen, Mollie?" "That's my intended, the policeman, ma'am. " "Well, if he's your intended, why
don't yon marry hitn?"
"I'm waitin till his appetite gnsv, down a bit, ma'am." Yonkers Statesman
FELIX LAMPEB Agent for the Empire Drill. Sucker State Drill.
Corn Husker cV
Fodder Shredder. Blount's True Blue Plows. Manufacturer of WAGONS AND BUGGIES. Repairing of all kinds.
Jasper. Indiana.
Atvfo.t I. I.
GEORCE P, WACNER
AsrrACTcaaiior
"WAO-ONS and, CAERIAGES,
-And Dealer In-
Agricnltnral Implements and Fertilizers.
('areata, and Tradr.Marks obtained and all Pal
ent business conducted for Moot sari rttS Ou Orrict IS opposite U S Patcnt Ornc c
and we ran wrure patent io less time than th..srj
iniH.ir innil , .1 1 u 1 1 " ' 1 Send model, drawins- or nhotn.. with desrrip
tinn. We adriae, if patentable or not, free of .charge- Our fee not due till patent is secured.
a aWa.pMI.CT How to Obtain Talents, with
cost of Mine in the I . S. and foreign countries sent free. Address, CA. SNOW. CO.
oss Parr nt Omer MfaaMiMnTON. O. C.
ttSSSSWSSW4
General Repairing A Horse Shoeing.
-o-
A Pleaavavat Anaieeraary. Mr. Frnukstowu Mpiffin's birthday comes next wwk. Let's give a smoker in his honor Mr Larimer That's the very thing.
Spiflins .1 .esu't use cigars and can't
la-ar the smell of
JASPER,
North Main Street,
- INDIANA.
House tad Lot for Sale. I irrod resilience on Mill street
in
I Curiam le Tel. graph.
.lasjspr, for uale cheap, and onreasonsbh terms. The lot haa on it a eood drilled
. v SZ. L. well costing nearlv Ills), furn.shing an totsacco. MtUlmil unfftiiiig suiml" of rooI water. Fot
price and term apply ta uuan.
MatliMon TownHhip TriiHtee Notice. Notice is riven that hereafter the Is Ml'
(tee of Mad si.n township will Is? at the
othce of I r. Bean, in Ireland, on every Saturday, for the pur xswof attending to township laisiness, t n 1 all persons having business with the township are expected to confine it to those days. The township library is kep at Isfiae Alexander's in Ireland, wVro all may obtain the books. The Indiana fVhool books will be found at Wm. T. Young's store at all times. John K. Norman, Aug. 16, o- y Tnistee Madiscn Tp. WtTtht way Ui wealth is as plaitt ns the way to the corner grocery. Have the things to sell and advertise them well.
