Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 43, Number 23, Jasper, Dubois County, 8 February 1901 — Page 1

JASPER. INDIANA. FI11DAY. FEBRUARY 8, 1901, VOL. 43 NO. 23

I ml Sil KU HVKKY rilDAV AT J AS- , I K, UOBOtt COVUTT) INDIANA, nv CLEMENT DOANE. OFFICE. In Cooiim BüiLöwa On Wkt Sixth Stkkkt. I'KICK OF SUBSCRIPTION. p,.r v'r, SI Numbers, Postpaid, $1.50. t irter time in proportion. R ifwa OF ADVERTISING. r r kf advertisements It'kfiil raten; io lines $uh) fr first Insertion ; 60c, ,.;i, h aubaoqnnnl Insertion. K.r yearly advertisements liberal On tracta will bemade to regular edrer Users. COM M ERC 1 iL AND JOB WORI Of all Kindt Promptly Mid Neatly ,, IttSd lit I.IHKK VI. I'HU HS. We invite Lnapectioa and busineee. PROFESSIONAL CARDS.

It. M . MI1BUKN. M. A. SNMCKNKY. Ml I. IU It. & SWEENEY. dttorne y s at Law JASPER, INDIANA. (rulnraetiea hUhe Courts r Dutoola ll. .ni.li Ci.'oiti 1'artieulnr iilleiii nu ieM '.inTt I. inn. e,, oh I U K .lH kn i In. I C ntf .lank. I BC i. Vi. t. . i I. COX. w. in vn.it. GOX A HUNTER. . 4A a, j -Byl Attorneys aa aeiBBRsa ivihvna. . i .-. . .... ... . Will nriietlcr ,ii tl.. e.nirt- of ImiIm.i- and kljolntna oouutltM, Collection, and rrobalel TU a peeiHlly. . m i uce in spHvu DUiiamg i rmnn .uriI eb, i, ISO Iv W. A . Trit) lor. llWH Iruyl.ir. TRAYL0R & TRAYMR, Attorneys at Law, JAtPBK, INDIANA, Win practice in the Ooarta of 0ubotaaa4 ' I iOlll I II -. .11 11 1 II S. MTOttlceover Dubol-County stute Itimk. Nb. i. hea lbo. n. naHBu. H M KK AN. FISHER & KEAX, Attarneya at Law, J AS I Kit, INDIANA W ill practice In tlie Court" of DubOlS n'ol Kdjolnmg counties. Special attention alvea ti Mttieuient of etitetee and eollettlon Office In Spayd Bulldina, i r Drag r'' 11 enti ance. Maren .i oo. - ltlillll IIITKTT'KK.

land try and persuade them to turn und H lot 26, Jaeperand Attorney at IewJrom Ae broad road atleadrth to'H

And Notary Public, fASraHi INDIANA. Will practice la Um Ooarta ol Du bole and i erry eoaatiea, iBÄiaBa Jan USJi OPERATIVE DENTIST, JASPER, " INDIANA. sh.oo aer of reern. ea.oo U..I1. Cr.iwn n.l IrMM 0M Killn.it a sp. uity. toteet Mtheda fettlaa' sftwwal toota A i work irenmi Tmnn ReeaeeeMe ofli. o.rJ.hii. Sermtr.h.lm". .lure, on public iqu.rr, ntraooc on Ttn ttreet. 4nffu.i U.lsSS j DENTiSTR Y DR. ii. if. MOSHY, Resident Dentist, tiUNTINQUUltG, I IN I). I'-nucr ilia nri.lcKHKiiiHi service. 10 uu n.-r.lmii r.v work In the Uentul line, mill r., , K,V(. It b.,, ci..-.-t attention. ' !. Piute work nee u v oo icitcil. n. nil ork warranteil Apr in, 'sy INSURE WITH Wm. A. Wilson's General Insurance Agencv, JASPER. INDIANA, Ki.l. It, 11HH y. LIVEBY AND ULI STABLE. FEED. VOLLMER, main strkkt, dimpor, Ind Always have Pe best turnouts, of any vanery lor customers; particularly comtnereial travelers. Courteous and careful drivers to all parts of Puhois and ad- ) Miiin counties. Horses bearded ami OM on cheap terms. Oat lij ISHS.-ly.

W.C T. U. COLUMN

CONDUCTED HV MKH. M . L. H0BB1 . Should Uu Temperance and Religiös H and in Hand. Editor Searchlight: As K .me said, i eligion in sugar to the heait, temperance has a tendency to give out that sweetnes. 1 lie reason many tern, temperance a failure because they have a wrong idea its meaning. If our temperance to train us in taking intoxicants 80 in of I in a mild form, then we night MV it is a failure. well ro or., ua n.tnu.rnni'e wolkerM AN we, U t uip ram woik rs, doing all in our power to help raiae our fallen brother! to a solid footing of manhood or are we not? Do lot mannoM, or are w n i , I i I'll ill ' i m i two i ifiii III.UOI n knee, and H"k bun to help us.' Are our Rev. brothersdoing their dotjf n in rescuing the fallen .' I should have tlieni proclaim the KOapel reKardina temperance twice a montn. Are we to believe teini erance a PlfatlnM iwmittf niiif rnake no yooii I I 1. 1 I vi i v v. m v t vmsv rJ3 ' uce oi ll : re u uoirw u-m f . . 1 . . L. 1 2 . . netaooe a failure just because some lack the true christian temperance spirit and make it a failure? While i , , , nn the ether hand we look Into homes where they have the true CI hristian temperance spirit, do we ' - . . . . . M see it a failure I answer. ".No." 'ps' i"llKr1' wranwiw, hereon earth, and why should we i m nfrnid to teach it? I refer to 2d i 1 ;i ' , . i . 1 eler, lslrli and 6th v.; also to 24th ch. and 25th v.; , ...... , u take ;nese verses lino sioov lucui, Temperance is not a form to have greai occasions and after that to ., . , .. .1 i ; ,i. eaü aside, but it is that which necessarv to make a man worthy on be is necessary to mane a nam wunuj 1 II I i" . I i . . I . . . . 1 MAtsak. to Lie caneu miner, nu-o.i- u, inqiun..r nn.) i, ,iti,.n We art a ternperanoe people, are to teach child, and lay before bim the the evils 'of intemperance. ReliLMon ami tempera prepare one for right liviiiR, therefore, how o " . - . can one fall out with them.' Are we to remain idle just be- . 1 ..I 1. cause we liave signra un invuvc, nnrl nv that we have nothing to do? Are we to shun the man who irabibes in the Homing bowl without oiuintr him an encourauinc word? V.r.. r '....i.i .i.u. i. i.a k.nH WC 8I10UIU IHK" uiem uy me ...... C siiouiu mac luv! j p and speak a good and kind word, and speak a good and kind word, destruction into that narrow ami straight. T. M. Sai.kn. Blbeit, Colo, Prohibi ion Not a Failure. -n t m Hmm miiiiII.. in There are forty live count.. I in prohibition Kansas where the poor houses and poor farms are without a inßle ppuper, and at the last sit- !. t.i 1 , ;i0,i km mmhw tings of the district court, there were thirty-seven county where no enminall were found for trial. Prohi bition satisfies the great majority in that state. What license state can show one county where mere is run a pauper in us poor -imiw 01 .. erimimi 1 for its courts? We think we are safe in saying, not one. National Ten perance Advocate Rum Worse Than Nothing. Die physiological effect of this narcotic poison (alcohol) are pre cisely the same in large and small a w doses in like ratio, and as it is nev- ., , .. VT !ISS1 Ul I lilted 111 tlie systeni it is tj rts a foreign hod v and intruder. ll" u n . It never acts ns a tonic hut sun ply as a stimulant, or nn excitant. I by its local irritant ffect upon the nerve extremities, soon followed by denression and enfeehled respira-

tion thus showing conclusively that ion Company is farcing ahead at the it does not support animal force. leexlirweetern pobhshlnf houae ...ak . .' , . 1 .1 1 in a specialtv of line Miihcript ion hooks. I hen igitn it disturbs the heart s ,u intf Hilepeo..iein nearly every nook action and intt rfeers with the OlfOU-Jof the country, the company enjoys a lation of the blood by hardening its large and growing trade. As this com albumen, a condition to be dreaded P;'nv I"" ; 1kn,,wn reputation for liberini, hui.. , altty towards its agents un I fair treatmany foi in ni disease. ment of them, an agency in tiiis ooav As Sir Benjamin Hrodie nasmanity for the ebora iok, or some wisely said: "Stimulants do not other publiahed by this eomaaay, would ,-rPatH nerve Power. They merely be a source of cmsi lerahle pro to the

otinhh. von as it were, to use UD , j , . . that which is left, and then leave you more in need of rest than be fore." Better Without Stimulants. The late Sir Benjamin W. Rich ardffon, one rj the greatest of Kng lish nhvsicians, said : "1 have worked actively wnue in - .Inlmnoina moderate measure of !H(0hol daily. have worked aci

. , and I am bound to Male tnai wora done during entire aostinence , ...... :.. lis superior in every rewpeui in 'respect to amount, quality, r ad-'

ively while abstaining altogether. f,lin coated tongue and disagreeable In a word I have made direct pertaete la the mouth, comieg np ol food sonnl experiment on the subject, atfer eaUng. tew stdrita, etc Qo toyooi noiim 1 ... , 1 rnirifit .'mil et it hot ne of Auirust low

naaflof effort, endunnce and mental ease and happiness to that which can be d ne during times of even moderate indulgence."

Dubois Dirt Driftinfs I) iring the 1st mOO til of the ! the 20th century, Mihoara m l rear of the Ke coder's entry book. A ll nie J 1 anion to N t'"V, "1 of an AMI , UAH II I u r '. 4 1 . --cheurmoo t N V Cki lot 5 Jandebeur'a add Huntingburg, $460. Rotina Schmidt et al to Han Schmidt, 60 acrai in eeca 6 and SI, 1 1 and 2, r 4, Lottie I'inniek et al to Elisabeth M. Vowell, nt lot 12 Mini-eve, 125. .lere Sanden ' Jamea F. Saadani, leres in uec 21 , t I n, r hö 40 1 ! . ,,,, d R , , r .. tJ(i .i Hubbard to OhaVlea Sutton, lot 61 Borden' ald Birdaeye, I1S0. Mary A Stewart H al t., Mary I and ,,,,, ,,..,,,, 72of an acre .n see t I V. ,r I I., .ft I . I'. , , , . I I . '1 1 I ' ... I. i .. r j . i i I M 1' .1 ' I E 0 Dnfaadaon to Henr Peters Sr., '9 lot ö, Huntingbars;. 11,200. .lohn. I If eyer to Aoguet II Neihain, so eres in sec t :i h, r ti, 11.500, John .1 Meyer to wn Hettmaa, 40 äcn-s in see '., t ;s H,rt;, fni. J esse Clements sr., to V l. demente, "t 33 SCiea m set s ami 1 1, t 1 f, r , . i .ir..i. i i a."M f ollard to E E Spnrlock, 7 26. t h, r t. 1200, acres in sec w m ltorman to .luiui II Heiirens, j r., 4 eres in see 15,1 i i. r 6, NOOK Louie Rauscher to ( lty f 1 1 mit i ne :i ls ,u.reH j,, 4i t a s, r 5, $238 50. iet Heller to ( K kamsi.ro it, pilot it It A 1 t ll W I ' V?' '.. ir - USB! rv.ii.i. uu iMTUivuu I 'I ' ,VJl Rider'i add Jsaper, Sill. v, II Flick to Freak P Jahn, pj lots 1 and 2, Milburn'a add Jasper, $200. " " ,,M1 ,15?u ' t.L. nr.jju t ur.JJU o. 01 arres in see 11, 1 . m, r , 4-. . Paul l'ersohn to John Telihen, lot 'r SchnelWille. and . 1 7 of an acre in sec 17, t 2 s, rZ, W0. Joha tesanato M IK Hoetaaa. 1 s acres in 8ec it) and io, t2s, r 4, j, j uiMin to K Hiahflll, 22.24 aeree L M HighOH to K liurt.tni, -..m acres In juui 'M tLj t . '.I Hi . - v""V.n .eld S PearlM.rn to John S Moery, ;'o acres In sec IS, t -1. r 3, f l ,Iü. str.tiinm f., l'itv ,,f Mont in?- ,: ,, . Wieher'. add 1 InnÜnetHirst.

ifs " " , l , V 7 . : ..Jan t and :i thick suit (d underwear

n)ry ri.min m rani ecnmioi i""T,7- ., ,n,.o,. ,

.... , . : i, w, ..-a f . . 1 fln.l.s-' I !l il r . 11. Paul Schmidt to Henry Schmidt, 1 'l' ' sere- in sees t, 31 and ;52, t 1 andJ, I 41 Mary Chastain to Laura C has tain, 2 Anna Wenning to K Altkofar, lots 74 and 76, Dubois, $5. L Friedman and C A Kremppto acres in si'c I. I n. r ... MM. Jos I riedman r. . lot 2t Knndeck'a Jan.r $700. ,)0in i. Friedman to ('bus A Krempp, , (-IH, John L Friedman to Ofc 100 acres in hei C Brittain, last will. Rliji Whitten to Win Schulte, pt lots 1 and 8, Kun add Holland, $330. John M I.uel.tierl to 11 V Kust, lots 8B and S3, Holland, fO0. Frank P I .vt t le to Ti n Howe, .50 of an m , , f f ;j 1Q J()hn w ;aariv to Basil Milburn, 40 acres in sec -'", t 1 n, r 3,900. QusO h ret to Leonard Bret, and pi of lots 9 and 10, Huntingburg, $1,600. Joh , ( m,f , M(.. Mlian. .10 of an acre in sec M, t 2 s, f 8, $800. Nancy .1 McMillan to Kosie K stratiiiiui, .10 ui an acie iu wr ot, 1 - p, 1 , poo Kunkel to Wn i Sorghte, 7 acres m Hv 10, 1 1 s. r , ? e' S.inire Kavsto Daniel J Kamchcr. o acres in sec 22, t I s. r . $1,000. Daniel J Rausch rto Liza Kays, .33 of .111 acre 111 m i 33, t 2 s, r.j, $500. Geo Thimling, guardian, to Martin Ihimllnr. 200 acres in ace 84 and S. t 1 11. r , and t 1 s. r 4, f.'UO. Another Fine Volume. Standard hooks are ever welcome when tliev come to us in forms and hindintr representing all the etnbeliehinents oi the art of bookmakinaj. such a book is "( iladstoue," published by Ute De minion Company, Chieaejo, a copy of w hich lias just come to our desk. The ci ntaati are srell arranced, the Itteatra tiotis are line, the print is clear and neat nnd the bin liiiK is superb. The Pomin one fortunate enougi to securo it. inlereatsd readers hould write the company f .r full particulars. Ciooil Advice. Tim im tut muer ilile hiMrtJM in tlm Uorhi are those Buffering from Srspepela Liver complaint. More than seventyliveper cent . of the people iu the United Htates are atHicted with these two dis ease anil tutor enecis; sucn as sour stomach, sick neauacne, natmuai cos Mvenes-. palpitation of the heart heart - hum, water hrash, snaw inland buruiuir i.iiiiip 111 in. I'll i 1... ,. nn. ii, ii"n 1 ii... t.i t ... 1 ... .. ..... .1 . ... .... er fof 75 ienl(, Two o!M1(, wM r(i,jevi e vo. xrv it. (Jet Uremic s Prine . ..:.. tu. A Al imniac. virion riinniimi, June - lWOeow.

Reorgariiatioo. The Home PlomoÜOO Co.. which

.i ..l...,wJ i... i, r-..-..iiv in linnni lud i ' ili u i , r , ounty telephone linen, ha merged v, "r Co., a re-oigam.ation having been eftected this week. The new MIM . -Olli rmuj wu, wn - IM I - - J ..... ,aws o u.e , iC o, u. .... uo canita Htock ot JFlU'Miu. nie headipiarters of the company will he moved from Hirdseye to Uuntinabont. and work will be comi a o inenced at an early day to place an Ian exchange at J a-pet . The ollicers of the company are: President H. Laodgrebe ; VioeI . 1 . I ) II U 1. . w' .. rrCMUeill v . I. IViueiimK , ,. . r,,..lmlr.r UlIIIIU,V' ' , . Philip Dilly; Director h. L. Dufendacli, Mermutl Koeruer, II. L,,r)(li;rebe. C. R. Ramsbrok and Phil. Dilly. Independent. Cause of Bad Colds. Our great annual plague of colds is in full swing. Almost everybody is either about to have, or has, or is ju-t recovering from a cold. Cold1 1 i . l a MM druggists and the doctor- and the cures are seiiinn uv me ion. i ne undertakers are reaping a rich barreel There are three main causes oi this plague : First I ndigestion from overeating and rapid eating. second I oo heavy c lothing. Thil I Overheated bouses. A human being who is alwavshoveling in another meal UpOO the .till undigested preceding meal is S) ... j always in condition to catch anycondition to catch any - , -

thing that may be going, as ine, - . . . -AS IIIC, ... H j oUt-doors especially the men . . ... ... l: . ne average man, a in g n n.- u -; ce or at home, with the tempera - i r l.i.il.or ll.un it ornnlri rlM nn . . ' i .. V. . ... ...;..b , L'HUUKll l.Mrniiii nur' U1I...1 fc.vj.w tect him it be were walking about l.r, L-1 Km li, ,i...M air nn a hitter uiir.it. j mi ...v. vyvH . " . . . ' winter day. 1 he women are more sensible in this respect, hence their greater freedom from colds. Our bouses are heated with an almost poisonous dry heat to a point that makes the skin shrivel and crack. Do you notice your furniture howit dries out and falls to pieces? Vet American furniture is especially seasoned and put together with a particular kind of glue, with a view to meeting the American conditions ol tierce, dry beat. If the furniture can't stanl this heat, what mu-t be its effect upon the body? Living rooms that are chilly are not healthful. Rut they are less un healthful than living rooms that are tilled with hot, dry, stile air. If you wish to avoid colds you must avoid the cause of colds. New York World. HOW ONE SHOULD BAT DAILY. Food Required by Laborers and Brain Workers is Entirely Different. What should one eat daily to retain health. Dr. H. Shoinber sa it depends chiefly upon your OOCU pation. The t..hle for the workinvman who needs muscular foods he gives as follows : Meat, half pound ; bread, one pound; fats, onr-piarter pound ; pa tatoes, one pound; milk, half pint; eggs, quarter pound; cheese, onethird pound. This is the foundation from which meals should be altered for men of the various occupations and professions. In great mental activity, fruits and cereals should bo eaten often. They supply brain stimulants, which are necessary. The various degrees of mental work from laboring up require proportionally less of the food in the above table, and more cereals and fruits. Many men of professions eat too much ruuscle-raaking lood and too little brain-nourishing food, and the an-nreault is sluggishne-s. The Supreme court has decided that a county treasurer can not legally collect interest on money loaned bv him to tb county for the payment of warrants drawn by the auditor, especially when the money loaned belonged to the other funds forming part of the county revenues. Paoli News. Dead in it,'" liko the man in the hearse, are the merchants who don't advertise.

mLt .hin to ctch all1!'1)' to an iiPPf"1 froru Senator Frye,1 lJS C? a vote rjn the bill, Senator Jones these overeaiers nave coius. We d.ess tor the house as if we f - a remarkah e fact tha tij .., ,i..,,rj ou,.o,.,oiu. th mi thia lubeidy bill should be pressed

Krom (ur K.Kuiur ( ..rre.iM.n.jeiit.) WASHIKOTON LETTER.

U7.MKMMI n ' v.o. -in 1 M . ' i i i I i i . I ' I . 1 i i ' ' ' 1)mnocrut, and ih.puulcans by nuitualcon.-ent, called the legislative irame todav lone enough to naro I . . I , I . uuiintie in uoiiiK nonor 10 ine mernorv u tlmt anmd oM Virginian, lhn M,irshalI) by attendinK lhw

joint nession of congress held in the ures as to the working of the bill, hall of the House, and taking part and then said tl at Mr. Krye had a in the interesting exercises of the vicious job on bis conscience and Centennial celebration of Ihn ap- could not afford to laugh at anypointraent of John Marsball to be body, and that he had laughed Chief Justice ot the Supreme Court showed that ha would laugh in a of the II. S. graveyard at midnight; that the The republicans will this week man who had charge of a crime and try to hold niht ses-mms of the was pushing a steal, had no reason Senate to f r.:e the Subsidy bill to laugh at anybody He referred through, The opponents of the to Mr. Frye as "a gudgeon smelling bill are not particularly opposed to around in the mud for food and acnight aesaione, but they insist that cepting the d cayed with the good." at all setsione when this bill is be During the latter part of the speech ing considered a 'juroum should be Mr. Frye became so angry that he present. left the Senate chamber, and did not Mr McKinley signed the Army ieturn until Mr. Turner finished, bill Saturday, and the hunt for the C. A. S. . i .a. an ae ' .

thirteen nunureu ouu commissions it (daces at hi- disposal, is now in ful1 cry, and he is already finding MCV7,il "r (Jen. Miles has been promised tin i I le 1 1 f crviii I ( in rn I 1 1 1 - , T , Senator Jones, ol Ark doesn't a""w m't r,'r,,t f',r the failure of the democratic Senators to act as a juim 111 :i !,r,,r"11 opposuion io republican legislation, and especialI,. f.... Bltir. BiikiUu ...v. ;..i,'. , , , , , .. . ... in. .'inj. .'i.i-i'j, uiu, n lutu mo Y9 "l 11,0 l'lJ,J machine i e,w trying to force; .i. .ii fi. if,.. ....lit.. . i.v. .,... t . i - - " I:. L 1 17 1 1 v I ...... It,,, til. ,,il. .mini..n I A I r" L 111 un 11 ''I' ll. '111. - . - Z"lZl-mJl . . r be pressed . . , i

n au leading two others, going for home 18. " . i , '., i",, ÄL . SmI fn.t enJd

i ion ror.LTe--. iiornu' ic e nsinir l" Ul" wiu looks to the decease of the b udens )f taxation the Nicaraaua Canal oi laxanon, uu. .icaraiua anai bill and other measures of far reach - imf importance, remain unacted upon. Ihere milct h nn limitn. tion of debate, and until the minority has had ample opporl unity to consider this snhoidv hill in nil itphases, 1 will not give my assent to anv agreement tor a vjte. Sen - ator Teller indorsed the remarks of Senator Jones, and added a few sar castic words for those inclined to raise a fuss because the right of de - bate still existed in the IJ. S. Sen ate. Ibis does not indicate an earl v

vote on the bill, even if the republi- Heichelbch, F. Kiefner, P. AulenOftM have nerve enough to keep itjberger and Ed. Ilerameriein were before the Senate at the expense ofM on the sick list last week; and, ad other legislation, as its steering course, all the other people around

committee nas uecnieu 10 u . Senator (iallinger made some ugly charges in support of his resolution for a joint congressional committee to investigate special pension legislation. He said that under the present practice a pension bureau had been estahlished under the dome if the Capitol, and pemdon attorneys, be believe 1 for pay, advised clients that it was easier to get pensions through congressional action than through the pension bureau Me called attention to the fact that one senator bad introduced 162 private pension bills, and another 14" ; that the total of these bills in this congress, had almost reached 3,000, and he predicted that they would be doubled in the next congress if something were not done to head off present practicea. No speech made by a Democrat at this session has attracted more attention than the appeal of Representative hanham, of Texas, for harmony in the Democratic party, lty way of emphasizing bis willingness ja a a 1 1 . a to receive with open arms those Democrats who left the regular or ganization during the last two na tional campaigns, he inserted this verse in his speech ; "Return. O, wanderer return, n I M-ek an injured parly s grace; Koranke the sins that made you mourn. And drove von from its fond emhra v ' Cotne home ! Come home ' 0, prodigal child, BOOM home!" Senator Tillman, in calling atten tion to the absence of a quorum in the Senate, during the debate on the Ship Subsidy bill, in accordance with the Democratic policy of insisting on the presence of a quorum said: "I want to give notice that the end of the session is less than one month away, and we have done nothing towards passing the appro priation bills. Now, if this admin 1. in istration wants an extra session and

proposes to obtain one by delavingi'actory

everything by this bill, they can have one, hut I want to say that as long as this debate lasts, and it will 1"! a long time, I am going to see

that the republicans will have tolisteD tu il "

.Senator Turner, whose speech. . . . . . . . . i a . . against the Snip Mihsiuy bill was auuded to by Senator Krye, as"very amusing" and as showing "dense iirnorance" cave Mr. Frve a scorch- " tr j ; .1 . ; . . II. nil' inni no will WJ hu hi iuikvs. ai compelled him t admit "that there night be errors" in attue of his figHaysville Happenings. Our deepest snow for this winter Saturday night. Jno R. Eisenhut returned to Martin county Sunday, to bein work again for G. L. Hoffman the next spring and summer. R V. Braxton was visiting his parents at Paoli last week. Mr. Henry Breidenbaugh, of Boone to., was in our little burg " l Saturday. Thimlin and wife. near n Dubois, were in town Saturday t,eo- Weber Pr, of Portersville thn noh town Sum r .ugh t own Satu ,,ialfl clean swee Mr (ieo. llfk. , - iiic iiuidc n rapWaS seen riding Saturday. He surely made a clean sweep somewhere, uena ii m I, a irua ri1 in a nn. tinruM it nil v'"l,rJ " " .. - P---' -- - t Jno. A. It on man, near tiaysvuie, was in our town Fr iday and Satur- , :.v transacting uusiuess. Mr. F. Mann. V. K. Mann, F. eilZ anU W. Krodel were rabbit hunting Saturday in Martin county. Pfaffenberger Saw Milling Co., of Dubois, moved their mill through town Friday to F. Sendleweck's, in , l,u"l,D lP Miss hula uchner was on the sick list Sunday. Mrs. John Becher was sick last ; week Geo. Heimus, Jos. Weisheit, N. T. P. Eisenhut, W. B. Hache, Hays vine nan 10 oe iasnionaoie, 100. So will just say we all had the grippe, which is prevalent all over the country. Mary B. Neukam was on the sick list last week. Wunder was die Hern William Krodel und Eddie Seitz im sihn haban, das sih alle woche hinaus gehn zu dem Hem Fritz Mann? Sih sagen whol sih gehn rac coon jnghten drausen ja horch, wan das ding so wehr, betten sie doch immer e-mani kaufen. 1 aeine behls zum vtrTanulkfoot. Only once did Mark Twain appear in public as a political speaker. As a conscientious republican in his political preferences, Mr. Clemens took an active interest in the presidential campaign of 1880. While visiting in Elmira, N. Y., in the fall of that vear, he made a short speech one "Saturday night, introducing to a republican meeting (ien. Hawley, of Connecticut. In the course of his remarks, Mr. Clemens said: "Gen. Hawley is a member of my church at Hartford, and the author of 'Beautiful Snow.' Maybe he will deny that. But I am only here to give him a character from his last place. As a pure citizen, I respect him ; as a personal friend of years, I have the warmest regard for bim; as a neighbor, whose vegetable garden adjoins mine, why why, 1 watch him. As the author of Beautiful Snow,' he has added a new pang to winter. He is a square, true man in honest politics, and I must say he occupies a mighty lonesome position. So broad, so bountiful is his character that he never turned a tramp empty handed from his door, hut always gave him a letter of introduction to me. Pure, honest, incorruptible, that is Joe llawlev. Such a man in politics is j j -. 'like a oouie 01 penuu-wr is factory -it may moderate me ,t.,,,.. hut it doesn't destroy it. I haven't said any more of htm tl an I would say of myself. Ladies and gentlemen, thia is (Jan. Hawley." 'iDiiv-m ee-w f