Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 43, Number 49, Jasper, Dubois County, 9 August 1901 — Page 8
Southern Railway.
St. Loiis & LoM Lines. 63 Miles theShortest 53 Between Louisville A St. Louis. Onlv Line between Louisville and EvansYllle. nun hard in irrscT, m) 1. iwi MAIN LINE. Faal Bound. Kant Hound, lift I. I la. I'm No 10. No. a No a. No. I. No. I. No., pm im a if I'M AM. AM 6.00 10.00 8.50 LT. Ko'Tllle Ar. S 45 10 10.J0 10 New Albany 5) 7.10 11.5 11 40 110 10.80 650 6.14 5.J0 4.J5 lt 10 56 V.. Cory don JVt. 7.4 lis" 10 Knallsh S.I0 VJ.30 11.45 BuntlnKburK l.uu Uli Wlnslow 115 w SO Oakland City l 8 1 Qu 1'rincetoii 4 8 54 2.55 2 14 i.UU r IS 3.5'i 8..W 8 OS 1 W 7 S3 .6 Ar SI.Louli L. 8 0 10.O0 A.M. P.M. A M I. M. KVANSVILUt DIVISION . Iii I la Dl la. la. la. No. 10. No. JO. No. 22. No.. No. 31. No. 28. CM. A.M. A.M. A.M. P 4 40 7.10 11.06 Lv Jaaper Ar, .SO 8.50 T.45 11.50 " ft' burg Lv. .0S y.A .20 12.17 " Lincoln ' 6.40 W.50 9 10 12.50 " Boonvllle" 8.01 M AM 3.26 6.50 .. 2.20 1.4 1.15 UN : 6.46 10. lo.uo l.so " KvaMvllle" 7.so No. 24 leaves Jasper dally at 4.40, V Uvea at HuntiuKburir atS.OO, at ar No. 26 leaves Huntlajrburs: dally, at 80 a. m. arrive at Jasper at 6.50. BCMJKPORT and OANNELTON DIVISION. Except Sunday. Da. K. Sunday. No.46. No.41. N0.43. No.41. No 43 No. 45. KM. A M. A M. A M. AM I'M. .I7 8 40 11.85 Lv. Lincoln Ar, 00 11.88 . 45 i io um Ar. KockDort 7.2011.00 7 00 No.54. No.52. No.50. No. 51. N0.55. No.58 9 20 12.27 8.40 Lv. Lincoln Ar. 7.55 6.00 1J 06 10.18 1.45 9.30 Ar. Tell City Lv. 7 07 6.40 11 02 10 20 2.00 9 86 " Cannelton " 7.00 ri 30 1" 60 Lowest ratea to all Kastern and Western points. Folders, rates, and general infor nation will be (urnianed upon application to V. K Clatconb, Ag't. Jasper, lino. B. iitU, A'sst Uen'lFass. A gen:. 8t Uul Mo Harbison Trustee's Notice. Notice is hereby given that the underlined, Trustee of Harbison township, will att 'mi to township business on each Monday of the year, at my office, and Kreons having township business to insact are required to present it to him on Monday. The township library will be kept at my home in Haysville. G io bob Nix, Nov, 23 1900,-y. Trustee. GEORGE P, WAGNER MifDIlOTOUIOf. WAGONS nd CARRIAGES, -And Dealer tnAgricultural Implements and Fertilisers. General Repairing Horse Shoeing. Norti Mail Sfeet, JASPER. - - INDIANA. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Dioests what yon eat. It artificially digests the food and aids Nature in strengthening and reconstructing the exhausted digestive organs. It is the latest discovered digest" ant ana tonic. o other preparation can approach it in efficiency. It in tantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn, Flatulence, Sour Stomach, Nausea. Sick Headache, Gastralgia, Cramps and all other results of imperfect digestion. PrlreSAr. anl 1. Large site contains ZS times Snail alte. Hk allal-utdyspi 'pclamutlrdfreSI Yeparsd by C. C OaWITT a CO . Cblcos Martin Friedman. Red Cross Tansy Pills SstprsuSl Mssilreslltn PAINFUL MsMtrsatlte Aa4 a PKEVBWTTVB tar Ar Safa and Relisble. gST Perfectly Hirmlm Tbs Ladies Purely Vsi slabia Htrt PaiU PRICE SI.OO Saal postpaid sa receipt of price- MsBSf refaaded if net as Til to Gsieaeam Co., Dai afoiaes. Iowa. Martin Friedman. !Ca vests, snd Trads.Ma.rki obtained and sll Pstcnt huaintaa ronducted for Moot Mart Fit., i Own Orncc is eeeosiTi U.S. Patint Orncc e Jaml wr cm aecure patent in less tun than those Iremotr from Waahing-ton. Jena model, drawing or photo., with drr rip .ion. Wr advia. if natentaMe or not. free of charge. Our fee not due till patent is secured. IS fSatseMLCT, "How to Obtain Patent a," wi .. f" uine in ine u . .t. and lor if n countna. wmtm otc Auurru, 0.A.8N0W600. arcsrr Office. Mr asm in stob a. e. WW' WSSjSJSJSJSJSjl
"Snickir'a jokes are very thin," complained Dinsmore.
"Perhaus he makes them that way for your special benefit," uggested Winterbottom. "How's that?" "To enable you to see through them." Ohio State Journal. "You ay all the people around here are healthy?" aaid the stranger. "That's what I said," answered the native. "But it is a veiy bad climate." "Yes. People have to be extraordinarily healthy or they don't stand it any time at all." Washington Star. We have now Gasoline For Sale, And a Full Line of other Uoods, Which we will Deliver in all parts of town Free of Expense. Telephone 1 52. Hing us up. JOSEPH BUCHART April H, isoo y. Sold bv Huther AUrich. Skin Diseases. For the speedy and permanent cere of tetter, salt rheum and eczema. Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment is without an equal. It relieves the itch ing and smarting almost instantly and its continued uie effects a permanent cure. It also cures itch, barber's itch, scald head, sore nipples, itching piles, chapped hands, chronic sore eyes and granulated lids. Dr. CadT's Condition Powders for horses are the best tonic, blood purifier Vd vermifuge. Price, 25 cents. Soldbv Martin Friedman, Druggist. Keep Up To DateThe Jastkk CotRIER will help you do so. IIDUM'S LEIDIII PAPER I TMB EVANSVILLE Courier T0Ü SHOULD HAD IT Because It Has the Best News ServiceIt Has the Best Market Page It Has the Best Sport lag NewsIt b Democratic aoa Is Enterprising and the Best All-around Newspaper Published. It contains the Finest of Serials It has the Stories. Best Short AUW A TS on the r1t Ida af tha rreeU ueaxioM of tha dar. Prints luat wrTaTS ataana fb an indeoeadant. atralcatforwari Wannsjr. Our aim la La make a nauaer fa Ptaaiaar. our aim la to make a papar jrwp"" J"" sui wsj nna Lnwm aoaav iaaUhr. anaraat aad full of homavn Yt7 ONLY SI A YEAR, 104 itauia. Mt fee Setapla Cooles. TWICE A WEEK COURIER. VaUISVlLlX. INDa
TWICE -A-WEEK
BsSsss
The Secret of Uvisff Lsf. she said. Mrs. Eliza Works, of New York Sun: Many theories Henrietta, N. Y., was 105 in Noin regard to the art of prolonging1 member when she had her illness, life beyond the scriptural allotment!" What are your rules for long life?" of three score and ten have recently he was asked. "I attribute nay been advanced by old timers of one! long life," she aid, to ray temirhundred or thereabouts, whose re !t habits. In my childhood I markable lonaevitv oermitted them lived on a diet of bread and milk,
to witness the dawn of the twentieth and all through my long life that .... ..i I : . l " i t
century alter have beheld most, not all, of the wonders of the cen- . ... turv now pas:. A lew ui mesa wonderful old folks with plans all their own for staying one hundred years on earth, having actually lived iu three centuries, having witnessed the end of the eighteenth, the whole of the nineteenth and the beginning of the twentieth. But for all this, no tirmly established rule tor longevity has been figured out for the guidance of mankind generally. Theories of longevity seem to be about as plentiful as blackberries in June, and as various as the individuals who invented them. The individual theories, of course, have a certain practical val ue, for each person has proved his rules for longevity to have been successful in one case at least. John Fahey.of Red Bud, Illinois, who at last accounts was still chipper and spry at the age of one hundred, invariably told inquirers that hl lnna !if ami cood health in a
great measure were due to his ab-j little woman who had been married stemious habits and his active out-1 four times and had reared a large door exercise on the farm. Noah family. She was remarkably vigBrockwav Bacon, "a child ol three'orous and vivacious, and even in
centuries, at Des Moines, Iowa, never drank intoxicating liquor, though he chewed tobacco very sparingly until about twenty years ago, when he abandoned the weed that his years might be longer in the land. He endured many hard knocks as a pioneer in the est md Iprt an rtiv life 1 ri the otien air in his vouth and early manhood. Hon. Hoffman, who recently died at Hazleton, Pa., aged lOo, was a small farmer and after he and wood chopper, was one-hundred he! still went out into the woods daily the woods and chopped wood. lie never was in a uay in uis nie, ucv vooe. .it - J : i. : . :i . ... . .. 1 medicines, ana never usea tooacco or liquors. -ow inese oiu maps. , .I i j i . and many others like them, were; ill good boys. They shunned li-i puor and tobacco. They were ab-1 stemious in their personal habits, they avoided luxuries, excesses, indiligences. Look on that picture then on this William Henderson, who recently ,. ,T ;r ; . ilium Pjifwon, who recently led near Middlesboro. Ky.. at the; ge of W, had violated all traditions J di age regarding the use of liquor and to bacco. rrom his youth up he drank, chewed and smoked, and for forty years of his life, it is said, con ll l I M sumeu a pauon 01 wuiskv a uay. He died in the same house in which he was born ; he never was more i ban eighteen mile? away from home, and he never saw a railroad train. His principal theory as to longevity was that whisky is the best of life preservers. In this he was sustained by Captain Arch! Horner, of Vanceburg, Ky., an oldtimer who lately passed away. Wiliam Zimmer, of Clinton, Iowa, who ast year celebrated his 101st birth day, and was hale and hearty, proudly informed his friends that he had smoked and chewed tobacco a a t ever since he was a mere ma, ana no doubt attributed much virtue to the consolations of the weed. Andrew McNeff, of Marion county, Ohio, who celebrated the 100ih an niversary of his birthday last Christmas, was a heavy smoker for eighty years. The argument that smoking and drinking tend to shorten life does not apply in any ot the toregoing cases; neither does it in the case of Noah Raby, who cele brated his 12Sth birthday in March last year. He was the famous old man of Middlesex county, New JerI . . A ar sey, ana upsri many preceuenif when he said he bad been smoking as long as he could remember, certainly for one hundred and twenty years, and had drank whisky whenever he could get it during almost as long a period of time. "Maybe it will shorten my life," he used to say, "but I really don't think it will." More women than men seem to have attained the rank of centenari ans at the opening of the twentieth century, aud they ofb-r a fair variety of recipes for keeping the inevitable at bay. Mrs. Mary Bradley, of Philadelphia, was 101 when the new century dawned, and to the friends who offered congratulations she bequeathed the magic secret. "I attribute my good health and long life to cold baths," she said, "and these l have taken daily summer and winter, ever since I was a little girl. The cold water has always braced me and made me cheerful and bright. If you bathe with warm water you will be cold all day. In winter this is what I tell my daughters, my grandchildren and great-grandchildren." With the vigor of a woman of 50, Mrs. Anna Bently Lewis, of Saginaw, Mich., greeted the arrival of tht- twentieth century, though she was born in the year 1797, "cheerfulness is the beat tonic in old age,"
llioas oecn myisvome uisu. i ot-vcr
aw sweeimeais or arana tea or coit 1 1 Fond Du Lac, Wis., recently fur nished to the world two remarkable instances of longevity. Mrs. Josephine Beausan of that town was announced u- t August as the oldest woman in the liadger state, if not in the I'nited States. According to records vouched for as being correct she was 120, and her death has not yet been reported. She was born in Canada in 1780. In November Mrs. Charity Jane Rotinson, in trer 103d year, died in the same town. Both these women were characterized through life bv vivacitv, cheer fulness and slight physical proportions. They seem to have no set I rule of lorgevity, but came of long lived ancestors. A notable peculiarity of women centenarians is that they usually are of small stature. Mrs. Angeiine Cialspeau, of Northampton, Maps., who died in De ceiuber. in her 100th vear. was a ner laiesi years couia see io reau 'and knit without glasses. Stor the cougn ana curea the cold ID 12 hours rithout ausstieg. Price t6 cents. Hurtful and Helpful Giving. iitjrtaaasi I wa trvin. hard to cet through the State Cniversity on uan littla mnnBr " errifpa. Mr-s XVa ... 'm,, ,h vrf. .ident tieneral of the International j äJLäJAaT II v.- I V. avavn mw st aw 'Sun8hjne Socie v, in the Ladies n Journal for August, "one w day an old-time friend looked me over, and taking out a ten-dollar bill, handed it to me, saying: 'You actually look as if you did not get enough to eat. Take this money and straighten up a bit. Don't forget to pay it back to me when you a . I S OWB. & aoo i oeueve in ivi; Q fi , Now x wa t ofJcharitv, though I , j J- Qeed of öunflhine. I can. 1 don t believe in giving monI was not an was sadput the bill away and cried as if my heart would break. After waiting some days I sent the same ten dollars back, saying I was glad I could return it to her so soon. To this day I hear of her telling how she helped me financially when I was 'hard up.' "Another woman, that same week, asked me why I did not take mv meals at the restaurant where most of the students took theirs. I replied that it was a little too expensive for me. The next day I was called in by the proprietor of the restaurant, and a-ked if I could find time to look over the books of the concern and verify the work done by some one else, and if I would take the pay out in meal tickets. I thought it merely a bit of good luck that had come my way. But at the close of the term the proprietor lold me that ray friend had paid for my meal tickets. Did the kindness offend me? I cried just as hard as I had cried ovi r the ten-dollar bill, but it was a different sort of cry." A Touching Poem About a Real Incident. Ao-ongthe "Frc-h Air" children who arrived at a farm near Pittsfield, in the Berkshire hills of Massachusetts, one day last summer, was a poor little tot who, as she was lifted from the wagon, caught sight of a field of daisies. With a cry of delight she darted to the rail fence the moment she was set down, and, scrambling under it, threw herself, face downward, among the beauti ful white-and-gold blossoms, clasping them in her arms and sobbing as if her heart were breaking. She had never before seen tlowers growing. During her stay she spent all her time among them, and when the moment came to pack her shabby little bag it was found to be filled with tlowers. A touching poem about this pathetic incident, "The Fresh-Air Child," by Elliot Walker, is published in the August number of The Ladies Home Jourual Choosing Boarding -School Teachers fer Girls. "In filling places in my corps of teachers," writes Mary Louise (Iraham concerning "My BoardingSchool for Oirls," in the Ladies' Home Journal for August, "I considered personal attractiveness as well as intellectual qualifications. Girls are influenced so much more readily by women whom they admire on the social side. More than anything else I held out for a simple, natural manner." IsfTSubscribe for the Courier.
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NOBBY SUITS
SPRING GOODS All the latest styles at BARGAIN" PRICES. Come around and let us discussthe subject with you. J. P. HUTHER.
$ East side of Public Square.
alallahalha AftahiA WrW W V V vVV W THE JASPER Make the Celebrated PATOKA
BEST GRADE IN THE STATE OF INDIANA They also want your WHEAT-. And nay the Highest Market Price in Cas Flour and Ship Stuff for Sale at all times
J.
FELIX LAMPER f Agent lor the
e Drill.
Sucker State Drill. Keystone 1orn Husker Fodder Shredder. Blount's True Blue Plows Manufacturer of WAGONS AND BUGGIES. Repairing of all kinds.
twiutm B
So the BUSINESS MAN'S success depends op on his keeping his business before the public in a business wsyTELLIH(x THE TBUTH w hii advertising all the time.
Will help you to the publicity at a small price. The other part i upon your own honor and conscience. The tHead Advertiser Has better publicity than the transient one. Your announcements are solicited.
ThonJ13-2.
AAAA AAATAAAA V W W V Vr Sr V W HOLLER MILLS LILY FLOUR. A. Jasper, Indiana.
ARNUM Baid his success was due 19 his GETTING TALKED ABOUT
courieb
RingUi'up.
