Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 41, Number 3, Jasper, Dubois County, 23 September 1898 — Page 4
JASI-KK, 1UKOIS CIHMTV, llIANA. .ni.r1 ai ib KoiioBci ! Jpr Indiana. fa tayaa a aaton thronen lh mail aa aon.1 duiatll
FRIDAY. SEPTEM BEB 23, L898,
DEMOCRATIC TICKET.
M
Kfl
ol
tltr Tirkrt. Secret a r f :.it- v i::. :. .
Bton, of Boom wfj Auditor of State - John V. Minor, Madison countv.
Treasurer of Mate High laughert .
of M elii county Attorney (ieneral John ti. McNutt of Vigo county. Clerk Supreme (""tirt Henry War rum, of Marion countv.
ujerinten.lent of Public Infraction
W. I HmUTi 'f Starke county. State Statistician Jain es S. Guthrie. Brown county. State tieolojrist --Edwai.l Barrett. Hendrike county. Jtiilges of the Siioren.e C' '.:rt
ec.md Pistn.'t -Lenoanl J. liacaney,
of Shelbv count v.
Third' District James McCabe. of
Warren countv. Fifth District Timothy K. Howard, of St. Joseph countv. Judge of the .Wpellate Court : Firet District Kdwin Taylor, of Vanderlmrg cuntv. Second District C. G. Collier, of Bartholomew county. Third District -Edgar Brown, of Marion countv. Fourth DitrictJ. W. IV van, of Madison county. Fifth District Johann Kopelke, of Lake countv MUS III Tlckrt. For Congressman. M District--Win T. Ztnor. of Harrison county. For State Senator Ephraim Inman. For Representative from Dulis and Pike counties Saaser Sullivan. For Prosecuting Attorney ")7th Judicial Circuit Kerr Traylor. (..Ulli) Tl'k.t For Auditor August H Kneriu-r. For CWrfc dr. Court -Herman Eckert. For Recorder Philip J. Kuukel, Jr. Fur Sheriff Herman H. Caatrup. F r Treasurer -Charles Moenkhaas. Fur Surveyur v m. T Young. F' r Coroner- Philip A. Cruckee. Fur Commissioner, 1st district Conrad Jackie. For Commissioner, 3d district Joseph Fnu.
. kJ 1 Lill wVUIVJ.X!Aof unhealthful iocatiooa for eampa,
I ami total neglect of ordinary sanitary lequireoient. Aud yet the President mains him in place. What party is res pons-ihlc.' COST OF MAINTENANCE.
The Indiana bulletin for the thirty-fourth quarter, just issued by
the Hoard of State I bantu s. contains some very interesting statistic
concerning the lieuevoleut and correctional institution-of the State. The total amount expended fur the j first nine months of the I l WSf for maintenance was 0863,487.28. The gross maintenance per capita
lion ti!' the nn.: month" ot the
various State institutions were as j follows. Central Hospital for lusane, 1124.16; Northern Hospital for Insane. 1114.43; Eastern Hos
pital for Insane, fl'Jti Southern Hospital for Insane, 1135.92; Sol
diers' Home, 1J0 (. ; Soldier.
and Sailors' Orphans Home, 123.
ti4; Institution t r Heat. f 1 v4 ;
Institution for Blind. $182.79 ;
School for Feeble-minded, $180.90; Reform School for tlirls and Wo
man's Prison, 9101. 55; Reform School for Girls. ss.4n; Indiana Reformatory, 185.96. Betaferone to the above figures it will be NM that the Indiana Reformatory OOffi the taxpayers of Indiana less, per capita, than uny other public institution in the State.
TT t is evident that the adlUinistiatiunis preparing for a big standing armv and that it intend.-to keep in the "servne indefinitely a large part of the men who volunteered for the Cuban war. According to tiener. ! Miles we are to have about 50,000 men on garrison duty in Cuba. Itf.OOO in Um Philippine. 14.i"' in folio Rico and 4.X"0 in Hawaii. Of these U.J.UH men about 2O,UU0 will le regulars and the remaiuder volunteers. Appearances.
"Honesty is fairly written upon, that man's countenance." "1 stipjxse that is the reason bei has found it imiossible to pet in
MUST GO! All Summer goods will be sold at
In order to clean up stock.
debt to town."
near', evervbodv in this
OUR FALL STOCKS
Are coming within
Few days and we must hav
a
room.
BLACK DU MOND ROUTE TO BE SETTLED.
DEMOCRATIC SPEAKING Notice is hereby given that Hon. Samuel M. Ralston, Democratic candidate for Secretary of State, will address the citizens of Huntingburg Ind , and vincinity, on the political Us e- of thia campaign, on FRIDAY SEPTEMBER 30, 1898, at seven o'clock P. M. The meeting will be held at the Citv Hall.
Let every person attend and hear
the political issues discussed from a Democratic stand point. By order of the Democratic Centn 1 Committee of Dubois County. Qwo, R. Wilson, County Chairman. John E McFall, Secretary.
Conference of Indiana Methodists. The sixty-seventh session of the Indiana conference of the Metho-ii-t Episcopal church w ll be held it Princeton beginning next Wednesday and continuing till Oct. I This conference embraces practically the southern half A the st.-teand is the largest of the three in Indiana. At last reports there w- r- M.'J 7 members, 7'ti Sunday schools, with 58,858 pupils; 777 churches, worth
f 1,77s, '.mm, and W parsonages.
worth $196,950. There are thirty -even charges that pav a salarv of
English Engineer Tine red Will Evami .e. The affairs of the prospective 'Black Diamond" Railroad will come to a crucial test in the next few days, when Sir Thomas Tanend, of London, ÜM expert engineer representing the British capitalists, poes over the line of the proposed road. Sir Thomas Tancred arrived in the city Monday morning and was seen at the tirand Hotel. He stated that the idea was considered favorably by those whom he represented, and if the pr.-mised trathe
! along the line developed as he was led to believe it would, there would j be no further difficulty. A large party of representatives from the different towns interested ! in the toad met him at the hotel. The Mayors of Ripley. O. : (ireen I tit-Id . Ind.; Vincennes, Ind.; YerI sailes, Ind. ; Cynthiana, Ky. ; and ; Dover, Ky. ; were among the party, i Hon. T. C. Dickinson, of Washing i ton, D. C. is also at the hotel. The object of the meeting is to ac'-oinpanv Sir Thomas Tarn-red
SUMMER STRAW CLOTHING- HATS
TO BS SOLD VERY CHEAP.
NEGLIGEE SHIRTS, Etc.,
Our New Samples for FALL CLOTHING made to order, is here and l eady for in spection. Come in and make an early selection. S. KI1EBLER,
11,000 or more, the highest amount r Hne and help demomtl beine fd.tHiO. The total paid in j die advisability of pushing the line
salaries last vear wasf 1M.443. nnd t0 completion
The route is designed to connect
the coal mines of Tennessee with Versailles. Cincinnati, St. Louis, Columbus and many other smaller towns of the same territory. Cinm -.Innati Poflt.
the total raised tor benevolent purposes was $4t'.4"7. One of the important questions to ora1 up will be that of equal lay ind ministerial representation in the annual and general conferences. The conference sermon will be preached by KVv. M. A K:iir, of (ireencastle, and the mi.-sionarv r mon bv Rev. C. C. La-: v, of Indi-
nijKilis. Outside of the regular Recorder. Iiiuiiik. t'-i,,n- ttip nr. nM'iiii will ranli! Khieh, et al
consist of missionary, educational.
Transfers of Real Estate In Iuhois Countv hiring the first
nineteen la s of Sept.
on the Recorder's
iss, as shown.
books. Phil. Ihllv.
to
Sehastian 3 e r 4.
Schrimer. 4 acres in sei 33 t
church extension, frtedmen's aid, Kathrine H-llander to Fran. i Kltieh
W of lot M and B0, Ferdinand. $1
woman's home and foreign mis-ion-ary socitty anniversaries. Biabop W. H. Ninde will preside. The miniderial appointments for the coming year will be announced on October .'id.
THAT INVESTIGATION. The attempt of President McKinley, and the Republican party, to escape the logical effects of his political appointments of incompetent persons to take charge of the soldiers in the .Spanish war, by a sham, whitewashing investigation, will not redound to his party's credit. He would thus try to shift the responsibility for needless suffering, starving, sickness and deaths in the camps, to subordinates, and make some poor devils scape-goats foi his incompetence and lack of care in making appointments, or deny, if possible, that any unnecessary suffering or deaths have occurred For the first, the appointment of a mule and cattle doctor as a chief
surgeon of a corj of 35,0U0 men is sufficient to fix responsibility on the Republican party for the deaths of brave men in that corps, that no investigating committee can wipe out. The appointment was made by the President because the mule doctor had a political "pull," while it was thought the sick and dying private soldier would have none and the Republican party is directly responsible therefor, and every candidate who would defend such appointing. .t- should be defeated at the polls. For the assertion that unneces sary suffering and deaths did not occur, the appearance and testimony of thousands ot noldiers now in hospitals all over the land, or on furlough to recover health, is convincing evidence of its falsity.
When men eo out patriotically to
tmhtthe battles of their country it
is the duty of that country to tak
the best Hssifle care of them, that
a pirit of patriotism may le eher
ished and not smotheied in the fu
ture of our country, and DO pretend
ed investigation that would even result in finding that "some one hablundered," could restore to be reaved famil es their dead loved ones, killed by incompetent appointments of veterinaiy surgeons for doctors, and thieving quarter masters and commissarys. The truth will be known, and the President had as well face the mus
ic. The first step towards
Passing of (be Gold Democracy. Kroiu the IpftagMM Kepublicim. Mr. Bynum has stated the cau-e if his resignation as chairman of the national gold democratic organization at some length. He believes that the party "has served its purpose and cannot accomplish a reunion of the two wings of the democratic party." He if convinc
ed that the Iirvan wing will reaf
firm the Chicago platform in 1900 ard renominate Urvan unless it is
overwhelmingly beaten at the pills
this fall, and the way to t-ecure such a result is for gold democratto suport republican candidut-m. As the gold democrctic committee was not prepared to go so fai Hynum gets out. He will join the republican pirty and go on the
-tump for it, and the other gold democrats can go where they please. It may as well be said that this is the end of the gold democratic party. Its exterience since 1896
shows that it had no sort of a place in the political field. Third parties r txditical factions mu-t present
'harp differences in policy from ther organi2ations in order to grow
ind succeed, but the gold denio-
ratic party differed so slightly from
the gold republican party on upper-
.,) ,.( issues that the average voter hal no time to study carefully into the fine distinctions presented. Hence the gold democratic v. de, t i small to be worth counting in 1896, has leen gradually disappearing ever since, and not enough of it appears now to be left to encourage ven the formality of putting tickets into the field. So the chairman concluded that it was time to quit. The bolters from the Chicago 0OBvention of 1896 have bM -;!ently leaving their tetnpori d party all along. Some have been returning to the regular fold and some have gone over to the republicans. All
that are left will now choose between these two course-. Where will ex President Cleveland goT The best thing for Agtiinaldo to do is to lie low and run for constable.
Warren W Cooper to Susan Krodel.
M of an acre in sec IM t 1 n r 5, flrs). 8eo A Chanes to W. N. Harris. 40 avres in see 34 t 1 n r U, f'. John Wh sner to Conrad Spinner, 'g acre in sec 1". t '1 s r 5. f I, Thoiias J. Nolan to Verner Nolan, 40 arret in ec 23 t I s r :i. f MA B. F. Nicholson to Bernhard Roarekamp, 37 acres in see 4 t I s r fiOu. Loot H Finite to Wei H BttaMper, nt t'lk 2, Blemker's add lluntinghurg, f ,.. Wni H Hilsmeyer to Looto) Fink, pt. M'M-k 2, Blemker's add liuiitmghurg, Peter ierter. et al t Bertha Sonderman, et al. 7v2 acres in sec 28 t 3 8 r -. ft. Louis Miller to f,t iline Moutoux, lot 52 MeC'sJd add Jasper. f"n Win Cluthe to Anna H. Cluthe, n ' lot 111, Jasper, $200. Charit Harris to Wm N Harris, 40 acres in see 21 t 1 n r i, f:i-Y Philip Kres to Louis Mille:. pt lot 2-. St P 4th add Jasper. W. Nareissa Twohev to Iveopold Stenile, lot It, Binlseye. M0. Bern. Johannenian to John i. Kije penbrock. 4 acres in sec '. 1 1 s r 4, 180. 1; -a Friedman to Josephine Friedman, lot i:t. MH' 2d add Jasjr. f!.'' Mormon Piabarto Wilbebniaa Fiaber,
!ts 71 and 76, Blemker's addittion. Hinitinghiirtt. trans
llenn1 Fieken to Javh Ficken, g
an acre in eee 3 t 3 a r o. fU. James M. Kinr to Mary A irosm' acre in sec 24 t 2 a r 3, 10.
of
First in the Field with a Fine SlockoFall Goods! You are respectfully invited to come and examine the LATEST STYLES ! In everything, and notice the very LOW PRICES We are enabled to sell them at, particularly Ladies Fine Dress G-ntids. SHOES, f various new styles, for ladies, gentlemen and children. GENTLE MENS SUITINGS In great variety ready for Artistic Fitting, to suit the most fastidious taste. Our Grocery line is alwrays full of the best. Come and see. GERBER & HUTHER, Troxler Building, Main Street, JASPER, - - - - INDIANA.
WMdtri
baa demonstrated tn tb"tian! t'tuM Uutt it ia almost lufalUU
FOR WOMAN'S PECULIAR
WEAKNESSES.
lrrefT.lri t ir and drrmnrrmwit. It h become the lrariiu rrmerfy for tola cl of trouble It esert a wonderfully healirr, atrenfthenln( and eMthiiiT inflaeore uxa the menatrual orfrant.' It curea white" and fallinaof the womb. It atopa floodt&c and reheve aup
Dreesed
1
and pa'nfnl inentnit)a.
For Chaaire of Life it U the I-tt
medicine made. It ia beneficial during pr-nBCT. and help to bring chi.dren into homea barren fr yeara. It iiiTiaratea, atiraulatea, atrenartheiaa the whole artem. Thia Krt-at remedy i ofer. d to all afBitrd women. Why will any woman Buffer another minute with certain re'lef within reach t Wine of Cardnt only coal fa.00pr bottle at your drmg a to re. yr aAHn. n evufw tprrial 41 . tama. Aieraa. ying tyft m. tht "lai lara .1 ! mfwilrnrnt." k ( kuttur.. JUi Jh mm Uk, Vltuttanougii, Im. Re. I. W SMITH. Camoea. S. C . aayt: "tlf alt uaed Wine ol Ctrdul at hoaia tor taltlaf of th aesB ana it nüreij carad ktt."
M;r h 4. ISM.
UMMKIi K KKVI. 1 HI T "III II
If I I til - I t" II.
laaaa In their o n and n.-aroy ..uiit,.-
I'. r..'i- in tli t.if. tu in. m ik'"' mir
lit ia tnamlv ilTtce work roiiil uctcd at Imme
"ulary traiaitit f"T0 a year ami riprnne i ili-flmte. iMiiiittl'le no) mori tin aal..
reform Ho ntiiu :.. it. t, i
Uould be the removal of Alger, WSTttl!& '" r ,rt.,
turiiTl Sale. Itr virtue t( a Fe Kill ie-tiel on a juilfrmt-nt rvn in the I)nlnia t'irniit Court, on the 'Jitt ! y of i tU-r. lvi.. aii'l to me lirvfte.l !y the I'lt-rk f aai'l Court. I will offer r sale, at Mbtte jastlOw aMeMH, to the highest hifler. at the lxrof the Court Houne in liiitxiia rounly. Inliana, on B TI KI' Y. OCTOKKR 10. li-ori the li iiirs of 10 o'clock A. M. .m l t o'clock I. M. of nai l "lay, the renin anil profits for a term not eacee.1itiit ven vears. of the following ds
I m-nlieii real e-tate. situatl in IiiIkh
OoQaltjr, in the Mate of In liana. to-wit The umlivilel interest helf hy John (' I. me in p.trt of the South West quarter of the South Kast quarter of awttsM (IS) town one ( 1 i Siuth ranjre fMir (4) '.-t. ("outlining fix ami three one hun lrv.JthP ( t-100) acres. An-I in esse the rents anl profits fail to hrinf the amount leman!el to satisfy the jii'lrtnent an l le ree aforenaiT. intervft anl coft. together with all acniing 'iwt. I will at the same time ami place, ami in like manner as aforesaid, offer for sale sale, at pul-in- auction anil outcry, to the highest liller, all the right, title. int reM ami extate i:. Im simple of John ('. Line in ami to the ahove "lescnlte! re tl estate, or so much ami auch part thereof as may he necessary to satisfy the judgment aforesanl. which is in favor of Officers of uli .'ir. ii it ('art ami against John I'. I.imSail real estate will he sohl without relief from valuation or appraisement laws, ami suhject to the redemption laws
.( the Mate of I mhtna. llfNBY CASSIflY, Sheriff Dubois Co., Ind. Sept. 1 S".e. M. ft 8.
1
SUMMER BARGAINS ! We have filled our room to overflowing, and want more room, so we are onVrinu bargains in all the latent style of
DRESS GOODS, Linen Table Setts,
Fancy Bordered Fringed and Extra Large size Towels. Mens and Boys Furnishing Garments. Hit itocl f CLOTHING if not equalled in Inbi nunty. It is of the celebrated and guaranteed M.iyti'!d. Ky , manufacture. Every garment guaranteed by the manu fact urr to I a- rMr'-"iitel. If it lloil not j.r v- to, Vmr 3loiic Itark. Call, fxaiuine, and 00 pare pr'ce and juality with other pfore.
C rner "th V Jackson Streets
JASPER, 1 MM ANA.
f.
j J 4 tI ' I C 9 2 a "
ni
r.
E O 5 I
Ail Ohl Atlant' Heads: ''There is a place for everything.' Now for everything to be in itphce the Louisville Dispatch t!i uld fe in the home of every Democrat. The Louisville Dispatch is the poopie's paper, owned by the people and read bv the people. I 1 Louisville Dispatch is the only democratic pajnr published in Luisvihe. it stands squarely on the Chicago platform. It is not only in a flourishing condition after eighteen months battleing against adverse circumstances, but ih today the best news medium in the South. And its Motte It "u petit in i he Dispatch it's so; if it's so it is always in the Dispatch, has ! en fully verified during tlie Ameri-an-Spanih War, during which the MBOtlOttly of its news service has boon dailv apparent. The DiftfM eh news service is furni-hed by 1 he New York Sun. The Chicago Inter (c.an. ThNorthern l'res As-o iation and The Leslie Syodicate, with an activ.salaried correspondent in every important city in the world, besid- -iN own staff of over oi 0 c rrespondents in K ntu ky. Tennessee an l Indiana. iet The Dispatch, it gives the news, and it tells the tru:h about it. The Dispatch i Kentucky greatest pajer. You should be a p m der. For the next few w. eks w will club the Jaspkk Coi kikk with the Weekly Di-p.it. h at the v tr indy low price of 1 '" for Iwtb pepen in advance, hag. u. ...
House and l ot for Sale. A rool residence on "Mill street in .I;i-t. f..r nie rheap. and nirea-nea.bl terms. The l"t has on it k"--' drilled well coatin nearly f 1(W, fnrnihinr an unfailinK supply "of fooi water, hot pn-e and terms' apply to C. Doa.
