Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 44, Number 9, Jasper, Dubois County, 1 November 1901 — Page 1

VOL. 44 JASPER. INDIANA. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 1, 1901. NO. 9

rClUilfBS KVKKY KKIDA V AT JABPKK, DUBOIS COUNTY, INDIANA, BY CLEMENT DOANE. OFFICE. InCoukiek IHii.pinq On Vk8T Sixth Stkekt. PRICK OK St'BSCRIPTION. Par Year, 52 Nuiubert, Postpaid, 1.50. Sti rter time in pioportion. KATKS OF ADVKkTlSlSU. For leRnl advertisements legal rates; 10 lines $1.00 (or first insertion ; 50c. each subsequent insertion. For yearly advertisements liberal contract will be made to regular adver

tisers. COMMERCIAL AND JOB WORK Of all Kinds Promptly and Neatly executed at LIBIKAL PRICKS. We invite inspection and business. PROFESSIONAL CARDS. C. W. Traylor, M.D. Physcian & Surgeon, Ireland, Indiana. Calls answered night am' day. Both telephones Cumberland Home. Ost M, iw.-iy. and I. M . MILBt'RM. at. A. SWBIKIY. MILBURN & SWEENEY. attorneys JASPER, INDIANA. Will prattle. In the Courts of Dubois and JjoioiUK OoaiBtiaa. 1'articular attention n vfti to collect lone. W-.IC FICK-Jarkaon St., appoalte the Dabnla (' i .tank. Dftt. , "A WM. K. COX. W. S. HI NTfcK. COX A HUNTER, Attorneys at Law JASPER. INDIANA. Will practice in the courta of Puboia and a llolnliiK rounl work a apecialty. doc in spay ü a i bulldln on Public Squi leb. 'J. IMD-lv. W. A . Tray lor. Boanar Tray lor. TRAYL0R & TRAY LOR, Attorneys at Law. JASPER, INDIANA Will practice la the Courta of Dubois and adjoining countlea. rOfllceoTer Duboia County State Bank. Feb. 3. 1W0. LEO. 11. FI8HKR. " M. Kr.AS. FISHER & KEAN, Attorney! at Law, JASPER, INDIANA Will practice In the Court of DUHMS and adjoin ng counties. Special attt-ntion kivui U 'ttletnent of estate and collections. office in Spayd Building, otct Dm Store. M entrance. March J, VJQO. BRUNO BUETTNER, Attorney at Law, And Notary Public, JASPER. INDIANA. Will practice la the Courta of Duboia and Perry counties, Indiana. Jan. , I8M. OPERATIVE DENTIST, JABPin, - INDIANA. a.oo aarr op rmrrn. aa.oo a viuwn ana nriavv won. uoia riiiiDK U0M. Cn.wn n,l Hrl.t. anrk PciltT Ulm malhodi of flttina artificial laatb ' ork nrtnd Tarmi Raaaonablt Oflc "rn r f h and Clay stru t, eaat ot Trinity aUI I'll, 'nit u, itM 1 DENTISTRY DR. B. if. MOSBY, Resident Dentist. UNTINGMÜUO, INO. hl ProMonal aerrloea o all 5J2.5S li3r Wor ln th lental line, and iki7:, . 11 nl cioaeat attention, work .!J! m?Ti P"l'y aollclted, and all 1 aa apr. I, 'W. Money to Loan at 5 Per Cent. Wm A. Wilwn, "8.. INDIANA.

W. C T. U. COLU M N.'

CONDUCTED BY IIR9. M. L. HOBB8. How Drink Hurts Us When Dr. Rush lit his torch of temperance truth and held it aloft early in the nineteenth century, so brilliant was the light that people were startltd as if awakening out of deep sleep. In his famous "Kssav on sputta" he . - - says Were it possiuie ior me lo speak with a f A A .a a mm r . voice so ioua as to De heard from A I C3A ä i a a . line river en. v.roix to tne utmost 'shores of the Mississippi, which Iv.lir,l t Vi tl Iafln4n.il ..f Um f 1 . ft iruuuu nit iruiwi ui me i uiieu States, I would say, friends and fel - low citizens, avoio the habitual use of those seductive liquors." We

smile as we read the expression, has been dubbed the "The "the remotest shores of the Miss- Turkey King." All through the issippi," thinking of our ever wid- summer and fall he makes occasionening possessions, but while our al visits to the farms of the neighknowledge of geography has under- bo: hood, keeping a watchful eye on

Kone great changes our ideas ot the farreaching value of total absti nence have, H possible, still more exnamled. nnvn h writpr in the Union Signal. While Dr. vance of his Rush was far in adtime, bis most daring claims as to strong drink the harmful effect of upon the mental and moral nature ot man have not only' been sustained, but vastly intensified, with the increase ot light and progress. Consider the motives for total abstinence from the standpoint of physical well being. When the pioneers of our cause first pointed out the evil effects of strong drink upon the body, tbey bad in mi j j the rough and teady yeoman, homeopun, slow moving, hirdir n U.UUJ , UOl omioa i. ptnoo Of high tollf to Ipbva rnmriarativlu fow viaihlt. races But a Se a centurv of irace. DUl aller a Ceoiury Ol scnoois anu oooas, weaiin ana cuik ... a it i i . w

for the better in neatneas of dreea, Franklin. Theae facts, which with lhan frlghten him, but his amazegood taate and personal refinement. many e;,U inter?8tinf ment on looking up and seeing me on the part of the average citixenl bughtou on the occasion of peering down at him in open mouthThe popular demand for a decoroua I16' de.at l.n J iP i 53 ?"; e horror' hke a gg)',e , C?me l appearance, clean linen and neat ?n of 0cloDer 13, lend additional hfe, was excrucia ingly ludicrous.

apparel is proving a powerful mo live to keep the man inside the clothes sober. Even more convincing a motive for total abstineuce in our day is the imperative demand for a clear brain and steady nerves. As the lightning express surpasses the ox team as a mode of transportation, so has life become morl intania exacting and complicated since the days of Dr. Rush. If Napolen the Great, could lose one of bis greatest battles, as historians! Claim, by a fit of indigestion, cerfain it 1 u Ihor Iba honl knot. v.ai t ma u-, iuv -iu-.-cu iupi ness man has every reason to guard against a single dtbauch, lest he wake up next morning and find his business ruined. And not only ia it seen that alcohol stands straight in the way of financial success, but educators are now coming forward and showing that in the home where strong drink and tobacco have a lace the children run great risk of ailing behind in their studies, not being able to cope in mental power and physical endurance with classmates from temperance homes. And t . u : l . ii . l UIKUCBI OI ail in tne ClimUlative mahtruu fnp n.n(i nnnn stands tne latter day demand for consistency of manhood. Id certain elements of character our generation may not surpass, ror even equal, the best men and women the LftftaBvM ..-m.iA I av a uusi ubb jirouuueu, out our sense OI consistency is certainly keener. We now see that neither pomp of sta-

tion nor the sanction of custom can Many home made Christmas gifts mak-e 0010 institutes successful, inatone for drunkenness and weak are Bhown and the first of "The 8lructive and enjoyable. Farmers self indulgence. Our sense of true Journal's Amuzim? Puzzles" an- ' Dubois county, do not fail to at-

manhood and womanhood has come more balanced and ideal. As never before men are beginning Ij see that anything which harms body, mind or soul is utterly incon " . aiatont with (riiA AiarAtv and aanrfh While therefore we are not blind to' O - the fact that both ssductiveness of the drink evil and the means for J ratification have greatly increased uring the Dast centurv. the molives for total abstinence have not only kept place with the foe, but far nntatriniMwlhim. Th twentieth centurv man. to be lomca lv consistent, must needs be a total abstainer. Teaaeraace Revival la Paria.

. "'" ...-. la aaanai of Ma, t . . . ter Latin ,s witnessice revival led by one

Tho students' the old Quattier ins a temperance

of the students

Wr. Illlltiafl Thtnkiiviai Turkey.

Following the precedent of almost thirty Thanksgiving Days Horace Voee, of Westerly, Rhode Inland, will send the prize turkey of all his Mocks to grace the new President's dinner table on November 28tb. "When Mr 0M began the custom of sending a turkey to the President." writes a contributor to the November Ladies' Home Journal." he had no motive other than the desire to send a Thanksgiving bird I o m to the man who writes the Thanks i .... a . .. giving proclamation. 1 ne pioneer . a . a turkey went to i'resiueni urant in 1 I . i 1 io. o. it weignea miny-six pounas, and elicited the first of the courtn tUni Vina.A Iw.r. cuuo uuicd luai uaic urru luluiij j every Thanksgiving day cince in acknowledtiemer t from the executive mansion. Mr. Yose the many nocks, and eagerly scan ning the strutting companies for the coming champion, the distinguished mpm her of all the featherv tribes that is to rise eventually to the dig nity of a place on the White House dinner table. Stop the cougu auu cures the cold In 12 hour without nauae-ting " cenUPrlc - . . Lady From Philadelphia. The Real Every one who has read the inimitable "Peterkin Papers" remcmLady from Philadelphia." Sba it was to whom the Peterkins - , iU.ll ,nn- urkat 'T" "TLTai H ' . j i u. .. w . ... i, . a: i t i t eiy lew WIWIM, uuwevci, tuen that the "Udy" lived' that , n .l. hua nurvA tro j i .Ii Oti Iii n nnii rririr nri liiiiiic rt u."' vuiibcuivi uuu iiiut r : ' r, her great grandfather was Benjamin luicicDi iu a r. urjioi hui jusi begun in the Ladies' Home Journal, called "The Lad from Philadelphia." The identity of the per son who conducts this department is withheld. All that is vouchsafed isthat the new "Lady" is an authority on all questions pertaining to etiquette, manners and good form, and each month in the Jour nal ft ml ttn'wer 8UCQ regardlDK the?e POInt9 M may be Kni ,n by young women. November Ladies' Home Journal. Th Thank-wririntr number of th . . I a fit oa ' Mama I rtii rrt a I ia ran an with a()aA flc.ion -nd interestinff and novei features. It opens appropriatclv with an article which WtWai th - t... Comes From " Then there are delightful stories by Hezekiah Butterworth and Laura Spencer Porter, -n(i - new iove gorv called "Chrisine " bv Frederick M mith rvan. Vnfftt ha n intnnc, 8tory about Ira I). Sankey, the great,

evangelist, and Edith King Swain'?"? waa determined to make the recounts the famous ascents she has fal1 institutes better than any held ,.,-,i- : Aia k -.i.i heretofore. Mr. Jacob Gereken, a

VVi KraH v'a nr a ni Avaiona fnr r -" "" ---'I hfiiiaa twttrin arilh tViA hrealrfaut. v. w room, and Wilson Eyre, Jr., pre. ..ni. ia fr a iinirtT.iw.im. a warden Mr Bok cives much g()od advice to young married C0UDl(9 jn his editorial. Another mftat timelv feature is "Whv ShnnM a Voune Mao Support the Church?" hv the Rev Pranria V Clark pear. The regular departments are ia - nnrtnaaalla on nrt thn iii.i-tm. .;. ......i, n k p,i,. pk

kiiiiin nil : aar. ii i a a a a j , a a tin a aa 11. v . . a i j a i uj bii'iiiu i va mm vaaaaa a ' 'u w copy . . . ... . ... ma older pnuosopners were ngnt n regarding self-consciousness as the peculiarly significant mark of humanity. To come to consciousness of one's self and of one's telation to the spiritual universe is to become alive in the tiuest sense. November Ladies' Home Journal, .... Always set ycur face firmly toward health. Say that you are bet ter when people inquire; the very declaration will make you teel so

rn vuuAa,;a i vr .agricultural

r Jf f n'r.Si.i fS ness are remedial agents very nara to deffJit in the Met between ill - netiaild health .-Novembar Ladies' Home Journal.

Perstatent good cheer and bopetul- ... - ,

HAUNTED.

Hf Latail dead. Yet day and nitfht My love is t ver near; Fortius I know by sound and eight And, knowing, never fear. Indrop9 of warui an1 Ul id raiDi - . H! hi' in the miilUDg gral Yet say they, Heath iadaaabf " yt down, two pitying star, ,,,t" lim'" upraised; 11 e knocks against the unseen bars The wiKhJ-ltird stops, amazed. And when a gauzy mist uplifts Retwixttlie earth and moon nis own ovej fonu tne Vaor rifts, nt (0ies whisper: "Soon!" Soon!" ah, my Love, I tranquil wait, Till death's dissolvent wine shaM re ,n-v BOul to jin itB u,at Beyond life's thin sky-line. ntu . The Frightened Friar of Pisa. Edith King Swain, who has ascended moie famous heights than any olher woman in the world, per "f"i ' tmm mnmig ..urm in an article about "Some Famous Ascents I Have Made," in the Ladies Home Journal for November. She was far up in the famous leaning tower at Pi?a, ind bending over a balcony she let fall a toy torpedo, to test her ability to estimate the exact height of the structure by Galileo's method. "Choosing a time whn I was alone on the tower," she writes, ''mil i , Ana a a in citrvVit u 1 n auu uu win a - in c?i u k uciun , I dropped the torpedo, watch in hanJ At thig instftnt frilir came hurrvini? around the corner, and. bv direst chance j 0 a T - J his shaven crown pa88ed directly below me just in time to be struck bv the falling torJ- v:i lJJ II , . . .j . f".-?'! . .. . .. po,ir man lllOUgni pemapS thai 11 waa the crack S doom. He was -

mht n v n uari nun mit v i it' V r ' torpedo was too small to do more ioTgoi io lime me repon. Farmers' Institutes. untingburg News: The season a lmliia . tv arm a . 1 ' tft.i4itli(An ia or holding farmer8' " institutes is i near at hand and there should be felt a general interest in these assemblies by all the farmers of the county. The time for holding the institutes in the southern Indiana counties will be fixed and an nounced within a few days, and while the last legislature acted in a niggardly manner by allowing but '") to meet the expenses of each nAiin t j inalitulo this should not disvwmwt -v, courage farmers from attending thera or ln an maQDer relaxing ih,eir lhem: vast fund of valuable information for the far mers is supplied by the institute, antl the 8e8(,ion8 never to prove interesting and instructive, At a meetlng the chairmen of county institutes and the faculty of I'urdue University, held at I.afay ette recently, there was enthusiasm i .1 i.. . . i. prOKreBBJVO mriucr ui I Hiu&n IWWH . L. . ft n I . 1 ...... . snip, IS uic c'iidiiiuuu iur iuuuif" county and is extremely anxious to make me coming insiuuies in mis couny interesting and successful, a id have them largely attended, Two n8t'tutes will be held in Du t al.:.. - mM I ) ' I . 0018 couiuy mis year juc ui iiru.and one in th city. Chairman Gereken will spare no effort to tend th?se. meetings. They are yours. Make the best possible use of them for the advancement of the and horticultural in terests of the county. U ft- U.L. - BldU.u DL Take as many sheets as there are days in the year. Paste at the head of each the date and inscribe a le gend from your favorite poet Leave a space for your friends to write their names against the day of the vear when they were born. oiud the whole between stiff card hoard, and tie it with knots of ribborit drawn through holes made with a UrRe neede. If you ara clever .;., a.n nn, ink mu mav emhel

..IlH.. .l..a ,v i i'i.Aiiiiu n v. ' ' ' v-'

If llll poll OUU Ulli J Iour "rilb d and thera or vou mav Zinilplmi pVwr -C Udiea' nJ

Hf,h -our book ju, drawings here Willi pvil MUM a aaa j w J may insert at in an illustrated Home Jour

The Fall Elections.

This i an "oft year" in politics, but the November electhos in several statf-H involve questions of more ban local interest. Tber' are a few pecial elections to f i 1 1 vacancies in the national house of representatives. These are: One in Penn sylvania, caused by the death of Marriott lirosius; one in South Carolina, caused by ihe death of J. William Stokes; one in Texas, caused by the death of Robert E. Burke; one in New York, caused by the death of Albert I) Shaw, and one in Michigan, cau.-ed by the death of Rosseau O. Crump. In Ohio there is a gubernatorial eiection, ana tne contest has been esiecially t-pirited. The Republican nominee for governor is Oeorge B. Nash, the present incumbent, and the Democratic nominee is James Kilbourne. A lieutenant

governor, attorney general, treas- payments. This right to succesurer, supreme court justice, clerk ion extends in turn toiheSecre-

of the supreme court and member of the board of public works are also to be elected. Special interest, however, centers in the election of members of the state legislature, which will choose the successor to Joseph B. Foraker, whose term as United States senator will expire on Maich 4, 1908, Senator Foraker is a candidate for re-election. There is a state election in Iowa,

the Republican candidate for gover- bourne, Democratic nominee for nor being A. W. Cummins and the Governor of Ohio, defined DemocDemocratie candidate Thomas J. racy in words which should be prePhillips. In Iowa also there is in served by every American, as folvolved the election of a United lows: States senator to fill the vacancy of; "The Democratic party wages no John H. Grear, who had been elect Iwar against wealth. It is not a ed for the term beginning March 4. poor man's party nor the lich man's He died before quali ying, and his party; it is the people's party. It seat is occupied by appointment by believes that the interests of labor

Jonathan r. uo iver. Mr. uoinver a candidate for election to the spat h now holds hv annointment. 7 : ' r . i , There ,s a state contest in MaryonH tkia vur a un nf nalmnul inw

terest. The state officers lo be wealth, is entitled to paramount chosen, a comptroller and treasurer, consideration. It opposes monopare of consequence only local. But oly, not only because it is unjust the legislature to be elected will and oppressive, but because it i de choose a successor in the United structive of equality; but it would States senate of George L. Welling- not legislate to check the legitimate ton, who was elected as a Republi- operation of our great industries, can, but later withdrew from that It delights to see energy and enterparty. The fight centers around prise rewarded; it has no sympathy ih. otnliilinn -.f Arthur P fiitrman arilh rnmmiinwm nrl annrrhiam

to return to the United State8 een - ate.

In Illinois the next legislature, and it opposes, and from its will choose a United States senator principles must ever oppot?e, all to succeed William K. Mason, subsidies, trusts and monopolies as whose term of oftica expires March hostile to the interests of the great 4, 1903. Senator Mason is under body of the common people, on stood to be a candidate for re-elec- whose prosperity the welfare of our tion, but in the Republican legisla- country depends."

ture caucus will be opposed by i f'lwirlaj i 1 I itvnü ir fi i . rou i cirtxi (Kn nn-Jtin nf ,,imn rnll.r nf ihp r - .,r - rency to make the senatorial campaign.

in nw Jersey mere n a state, itrigadier (Jeneral Fred C. Ainseiection, the candidates for gover-lworth chief o the record I)d yten. nor being Franklin Murphy (Rep.)8ion oftice in annuai rejrt to and James M. Seymour (Dem ) the 9ecrelary of war shows that 181,Both are prominent and well to do 9Sl cage, were received and dis-

busmess men ot the city ot Newark. There are no issues of national char acter involved other than the maintenance of party lines. In Massachusetts the Republicans seek the re-election of Governor William Murray Crane over Josiah Uuincy, the Democratic nominee. In Virginia, where a governor, lieutenant governor and attorney geneial are to be chosen, the Democratic ticket is headed by Andrew J. Montague. The Republican can didate for governor is J. Hampton Höge. In Kentucky only local offices are to be filled, but a legislature is to be elected that will choose a sue cessor in tne i imeu states senate t a a n a a . to William J. Deboe, whose term will expire March 4, 1903. In Pennsvlvania a state treasurer and judge of the supreme court are to be elected. The Djmocrats are supporting independent fusion nom mees for these omces. which is a phase of the Quay and anti-Quay contest, which seems to beeper present in Keystone politics. In New York state only county officers and members of the assem bly are to be elected. As the legis lature is not this year called upon to choose a United States senator the elections attract little attention outside their immediate bailiwicks. A political campaign of almost na tional interest is, however, being waged with unusual vigor in New York city, in which the Republicans, citizens union ana various othar political organizations, with Seth Low as their candidate for

mayor, seek the overthrow f the Tammany Democracy, whose cai didate is Edward M. Shepard.

The Social Rank of Cab net Officers. The social rank of each cabinet -flicer is reckooed according to his standing in the order of ucceesi. n to the presidency, which is ar ranged according to the ape of each executive department. The State department having bttJO the first executive branch of the government 'created, the dmeirmimrw t1 flJaia ih joflicial and s-ocial head of the rabi 'net and the tirst of its member.- t.i succeed to the Presidency, in th event of the death f both Pr,Wt land Vice President. If the Presiden, ice President ai d Secretary 0f State were all to die oefore th..i"r successors had been apiK-intcl the 'Secretary of the Treasury would become Prehident. heran hi- is ih second oldest of the executive detary of War, Attorney-General, Postmaster General, Secretary of l he Navy, and lastly to the Secretary of the Interior. This gradation thus indicates the social rank of each cabinet officer in bis own circle. Ladies" Home Journal for Nov. Whl1 "oeraey Means and Is. In his opening campaign speech at Bucyrus, Colonel James Kü ana canuai snouiu noi oe nerrautea to contlict and should be harmonlzed bv ludicious leeislation. but u 'il t r a- . i . hat in the event of conflict between thfrn lAhiir w iwh m mi tmrnl of - i ------ v . . v !but it believes in taxing the wealth I - - . rather than the labor cf the counWork is the best of safeguards, .antl tQe PUre escape-valve for bodily distress November Ladies' Home Journal. po-ed of during the fiscal year. Then is no surer beginning for a Pome than simple furnishing. In simplicity. lie safety, reason and art. There is nothing finer nor higher. It is supreme. November Ladies' Home Journal. New Albany Ledger: City Attorney Het-ter, in compliance with instructions from the city council, filed before Mayo Crumbo this morning twenty-three suits each against the Southern and the Monon railway companies for failure to comply with the city ordinance to put up electric lights. The fact that little Delaware is the oldest State of the Union gives her Governor social piecedence over all other State executives who may share with him any official er.tertainment in Washington. Novem ber Ladies' Home Journal. The "Era of Constantinople," extensively adopted in the Greek empire, like several others, began with the foundation of the world, which it fixed at B. C. 5508. This era was generally followed by the ad herents of the Greek church and prevailed in Russia until the reign of Peter the Great. The church is the treasure-house of noble traditions, of high ideals, of great memories. It ia the dwell ing-place ot uplifting aspirations and ennobling bopea. It is made holy by the worship of innumerable multitudes. November L a d i a a' Home Journal.

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