Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 44, Number 14, Jasper, Dubois County, 6 December 1901 — Page 8

Southern Railway. St. Louis & LtMe Lines.

Between Mt. Louis. Louisville A and the Southeast.

JOHN'F. JUDYA

TIMBVARD IN KSfKCT, Nor EASTHOIND.

No 1

Lt. St. lx)ul, " l'eutralt, Mt Vernon, " Fnlrfleltla " Mt Carmel, Princeton, " Oakland City,

MuntiuKlniric. I.ouim ille, lxulville, Aaheville, eh ttt.tin i.'itm. Atlanta,

Ar. Li At

4 1 P. M. 11 JO V. M 11 oo r v. 1 06 A. M. I I A. M i 40 A. M. i U A. M. 4 0U A M 30 A. M. I 0U A, M iu v r m. - 0 r m

. 'iO, 1901. No. S. 7 40 A M 10 1 V M 10 40 a. M. 11 4. A.M. II S4V M l jiV m I S3 r. M . 4 .S r, m 4; r M. : r u. 1 10 p. M 0 A. M. 11 SO A, M

Optician,

WKsTH'tl NÜ.

N. I. No 4. Lt. Atlanta 5 30 A. M B 15 V. M. " Chattanooga 10 00 ' M 40 " AaheTille 8 IS " i 10 ' Ar. LovUrlUa 7 30 P. V. I Oft a. m. Lv. IxjuIhvIIU' 00 " " U ' - Hunting. ur 11 SO " 11 SO " ' Oakland City 13 40 A. U. 13 ;tt 1" M. rrlaeatoa l io l o? Mt arintl 1 3S IM" KairrloKl 3 SO ' 3 Sii " ' Mt. Vernon 4 00 I 4S " - CVntralla 4 43 " 4 0 Ar. St LoH 7 " 7 30 ' UKTWKKN KV AN V 11. 1. K AND UH ISV1 1 I h. No. 10. No 33. I.T. IxiulnTille. OOP. M, 00 A.M. Ar. UuntinKl'urg, VI " 11 SO " " Kvauvillf, 10.39 " 1 0 V M. No. 9. No. 31. Lt. Kransrille, 7 30 A.M. I ISP M. Ar IIuntiiiKlmrg. 0 t.i " 3 45 ' -Louisville. IMS P.M. .Ht "

J.VSPKU TRAINS Arrive at fi " , and y W a in, and 3 Z p. m. Leave a 7 10, and 10 IS u m, and 4 40 p, in. "itUCKPDBT and CANNKLTON DIVISION?

Kxcept Sunday. Da. Ex. Sunday. No.4S. No. 41. No .43. No. 41. No 43 No. 43. I M AM A M. A.M.AM P.M. a.tn b 40 11.33 Lt. Lincoln Ar, 8 On u.M 7.4ft tf.OO o 13.35 Ar Kockport 7.3011.00 7.00

Resident Optician. Graduate of South Bend College of Optics. Special Attention given to Physical, Scientific and Physiological Optics. All kinds of If ns on hand or ground to order. teFine line of Spertacles. 0FF1CK: Cor. fth & Main St. JASPER. INDIANA. Mar. 13 'I'l.-tf ' VI ad I son Township Trustee Notice. Notice it jiven that hereafter the Tms lee of Madison township will be in Irelind on the tirtt Saturday of each uontli. anl the ivniainiuij Batardaya at

uiy residence, live miles MuUliwest of Ireland, for the DOT MM of attending tc

township holiness, and all persons hav

ing business with the township are ex oeeted to confine it to those days. The township library is kepw at J. C Evrard's in Ireland, where all maj obtain the books.

The Indiana School books will be

ound at Win. T. Young's store at al times. Qwo, M Ukkksk. Sot. 'J3, 1900-y Tmetee Madison Tp

No.M. No.53. No.50. No. 51, N0.55. No.SB 9 30 13.37 s.40 Lt. Lincoln Ar. 7.SS s.00 13 06 10.13 1.4S K.30 Ar. Tell City Lt. 7.07 6 40 11 03 10 30 3.00 V 35 " Cannelton " 7.U0 6 30 It SO

Safes

!

and

Trains Nos. 1, 3, 3 and 4 ruu solid

Louisville and St Laiuis. Train 'i and I1) Lclnrcn I.oniVi!I

Evansvlllp run solid, oarrvinir chair cars

Train Nu. H and 31 carry through firmeln.. ooMhat betwera i . ji.-v iiiean i Louii Tille. Day trains In-tween Iouisville and -t. Louis carry Cafe Parlor cars, and v. itli MM change of car through sleeping car Ml ilea from St. Louia and lAiuiaville to riiattn nooga, Birmingham and other points la the southeast. Night tialns between LouisTllle and -t.

Louis carry Pullman drawing room Sleeping cars with buffet MTVfSSi H. H. SfEsrrR. Gen. Man., St. Louis, Mo. 8. II. IUkdwkk.O. P. A., Wash ngton, D, C. UBO. II. allen, A'sst Gen'l Pass. A;.--n:, St Louia Mo. V. K. Clatcomb, Ag't. Jasper. Kodol Dyspepsia Cure Digests what yon eat.

It artificially digests the food and aids' Nature In strengt beninir and reconl

strutting the exhausted digestive organs. It is the latest discovered digestant and tonic. No other preparation can appniach lt in efficiency. It instantly relieves and permanently cures Dyspepsia, Indigestion, Heartburn,

jjiauiieme, oour Momacb, jausei Blck Headache. Gastraliria. Cramnn ir

allother results of imperfect digestion

PHceSOe. andtl. Ijtrtre nw contains 54 times WMtfUam Book all about dyspepsia mailed fre rapored by E. C. DaWITT A CO.. CblcaaS Martin Friedman.

Kitchen Safes. Glass Cupboards. Dining Ex. Tables. Kitchen Tables.

Wardrobes.

LATEST DESIGNS.

Manufactured by ourselves. Save the middle man's profit for yourself by buying direct from the manufacturer. You will get from us the best workmanship at the lowest prices. Every article a bargain. Come and look at the goods. S. VV, Corner Public square. ALLES BROTHERS,

Jasper, Indiana.

ept. 20, 1901,-Cm.

Tie SJstlsc Matena Ii Nssdkwsrk. Famous painters hsve sought to copy Raphael's "Statine Madonna," , but have laid their brushes down in

despair. And what paintem have

failed to do with the brush one woman ha.- accomplished with the needle. Kraulein Clara Kipberger, of Dres

den, has dared to create it is nothing less tban a creation this picture a second time. She spent between five and six years on her work. Krom the beginning she had unusual difficulties to surmount, and when the great undertaking was finished, and noted artists came and looked, they would not accept the word of the artist until they had

examined both sides of the canvas, and recognized that every square

inch of the work was unmistakably

done by the needlt alone. The

contention that the eyes at least had

been painted had to he abandoned. Not a brushful of paint had touched

the picture. Kiloselle silk of vari

ous colors, and in stitches of various

lengths, hud wrought the marvel.

1 here is no suggestion of tapestry

or Ciobehn woik. It is needl

painting, not weaving, both in the

flesh tones and expressions of th

aces, and in the reproduction o

the draperies. The soulful eyes al II B. a .i l " i

ine roomer ana tne startled iook o

tne Lhud are so admiraoly copied

that one feels the full message ofth

spiritual truth, while the texture

and color of the robes leave nothing

to be desirtd. 1 tie tirst exhibition

of the embroidered Madonna had

not closed before the merit of the

work was publicly acknowledged

I he King and Queen of Saxony

came to view the picture and com

phmented the embroiderer.

i d - a i

rrom uermany tne picture was

taken to St. Petersburg, when-

large sum was offered for it. The owner declined to sell, and carried her treasure to London, where it

was exhibited at Marlborough House

before the Prince and Princess o

Wales. Krom London it was taken

to the Paris Exposition, and re

ceived the gold medal from the International Jury. Dec. Ladies'

Home Journal.

Red

Cross

Tansy Pills

GEORCE P, WAGNER

FOR Sippritstd Mtflstruation PAINFUL NtastriaHtn And a PREVENTIVE tor

mm

The Ladies'

IBJtXGtrLaJUTIIS. Are Safe und Reliable. "PeMerUjrHirmleii

Purely Vecatable! Never

Faill

awcTACTuaim or

WAGONS and. OABRIAGES, o An Dealer in o Agricultural Implements and Fertilisers.

General Repairing Horse Shoeing.

North Mala Street, JASPER, - - INDIANA.

Skin Diseases. For the speedy and permanent cure of tetter, salt rheum and ectema, Chamberlain's Eye and Skin Ointment is withon t an eqnal . It relieves the itrh ing and smarting almost instantly and Ita continned one effects a permanent enre. It also cures itch, barber's Itch, cald head, sore nipples, itching piles, chapped hands, chronic sore eyes and granulated lids.

Dr. Cadi

BOnes are the rt tnni i,Ia,i . .

Sm Vvl. r. iu""

wfciuiuugv. race, so cents Martin Friedman, Druggist.

for fler

Sold by

PRICE $1.00

Seat postpaid 00 receipt of

price. Money refunded If not at

Yin de Cinchona Co.,

Dee Moines, Iowa. Martin Friedman. LIVERY AND SALE STABLE. FEED. VOLLMER, MAIN 9TRKKT, Jaffpei, Illd Always have the tert turnouts, of any variety for customers; particularly commercial travelers. Courteous and careful drivers to all parts of DeboSS anl adjoining counties. Horses boarded and

sold on cheap terms.

weTe7

Oct 14. 1S99. IT

Harbison Truatee'a Notice.

.If T

11 1 were a poet my songs should be consecrated to those

whose lives have been failures

whose arrows have missed the mark.

who have died without speaking the

word they had to utter and without

pressing the hand that was destined for them ; to all that has proved

abortive and to all that has ta-ied

unnoticed, to the stilled tire, to the

barren genius, to the unknown pearl

in the depths of the sea, to all that

have loved without return, and to

all that haveeurTered with pity from

none. Maupin. Little Tniofs Tbat Count io Dressing. The skirts this season are decidedly shorter than they were last. Rough and loosely woven mater

ials are the most popular for the

time being. They range in price

lrom seventy-live cents up.

Linen collars are from two inches

and a quarter to two inches and a

half wider than they were last season, and the turn-over designs are preferred. Black velvet belts are quite fashionable, aud will be worn with both

silk and cashmere waists. Leather

belts should not be worn with silk

waists.

The new sleeves are made Mat and tight to the elbow. From the

elbow to the wrist they are slashed, M as a

puned and plaited into many sorts

of fullness, but invariably finished with a snugly-fitting buttoned cuff. Collars and stocks. The little A 1 . I

turn-over conars are mis season

edged with corded linens and are made in every possible shape. Stocks and collars are made with double bows, which are lined with contrasting color. December Ladies Home Journal.

Notice is hereby given that the under

signed, Trustee of Harbison township,

win auinu to townsiup busmen on each Monday of the year, at my office, and persons having township business to transact are required to present it to him on Mondays. The township library will be kept at my home in Haysville.

Uaorai Nix,

Nov, 23 19O0.-y.

Trustee.

(I

;Cam, and TraeVMerksohuined and all PeWi

I SSM Orricc te oeeoeiTC U.S. Para mt atom

Z Z. j ,c.Vr,Jt,nt tima than thoeet rurtotf from Washlnarton. I

..J,,nd.nHd'!'flr)n "r photo., with drarrla-

Kw örsTJU "f.? fr.

. - iirr ic weurro. SWsae4tlT How to Obtain I'atenU," Ith

O.A.SNOWdC.OO.

V. PtTlirr Omer m..u...... I

Keep

Up Td

Hate

The Jaspkr Ootnusa will help you do so.

December Ladies' Home Journal. There is no lack of the Christmas spirit in the December number of the Ladies' Home Journal. Among the stories that go to fill this largest number of the magazine ever issued are: "The Baby Behind the Curlain," by Elizabeth McCracken :

"Christmas Kve on Lonesome," by John Fox, Jr., the Kentucky author; "How the First Letter was Written," by Rudyard Kipling, and the first part of an amusing story of Western ways called "The Russells in Chicago." "The People Who Help Santa Claus" are told about; the Rev. David M. Steele relates some pathetic stories

of the New York poor, and Elliott

Mower delightfully describes "The Linfields' Christmas Dinner. ' ' Mr

Bok's editorial is headed "Personal," and that it is. Ther i a

charming Christmas play for child

ren, and a double page of college girls' pictures, which show groups of Btudents from almost every well known girls' school in the country. By the Curtis Publishing Company, Philadelphia. One dollar a year;

en cents a copy. "Subscribe for the Coobiib.

Proa Distoautlst te 'Loaftkoreaaa. "There is no city in the world with s many foreign rx as New York," writes the Kev. David M. Steele in an article on "The Othr Side of the Town," iu the December Ladies' Home Journal. "Nor is there any class of persons in the city among whom there are so manv 'oueer cases.' i met a man in the

Bowery one cold, wet. winter night selling shoe-laces. He looked so hungry that I took him to a res

taurant, where, alter 1 ha 1 given him something to eat, he gave me his confidence. He talked five lan

guages Italian, Spanish, uerman.j French and Arabic with equal tl uency, but did not know a word of! English. "But who was he? A HMD of thirty five, well sxltujatod, well connected and well bred. F r Civf, years after graduating he taucht Sanskrit in a great university, and for the five years following acted as; the foreign diplomatic correspondent of a Berlin daily. He had inj person interviewed half the crowned

monarchs of Europe, und when this work grew commonplace h enlisted in the Secret Information Service! of the tierman army. Sent 00 a; mission into Russia, he committed a most serious blunder, and he suddenly fonnd himself wanted by two armies at one time to be shot as a

spy. Mis father cursed huu, tns patrons deseited and Iiis triends de rided him. He BiOSpad with his life in time toliee the country. Today this .-on of a Russian count is rolling salt barrels on a New York dock."

s NOBBY SUITS

FALL GOODS All the latest styles at BARGAIN F.RICES. Come around and let us dis

cuss the subject with you.

1

1 u.

I East side of Public Sanara

I eoooooooooye)el THE JASPER ML I f MILLS Make the Celebrated

- rvwe wa j v e. P. HUTHER, BBBBk m mm at

A Unique Christmas Entertainment. Some merry girl- g ive an entertainment la.-t Christmas which was unique only in its adaptation. The invitations were f rj "A Christmas Dance," and all were asked to coin1

in costumes representing fruits and

vegetables. The rooms were dec

orated as for a barn dance, the man- ,

tels and corners beaked with celery, 1

cranberries, hollv, and bunches of yellow maize male from crepe pa

per. hen the guests arrived the

rooms looked like an animated

kitchen garden. One girl was love

ly in pale green chtese cloth abundantly trimmed with celery leavs.

notner was a veritable Leres in

corn and masses of wheat and poppies. The men wore enormous boutonnieres of celery tops, carrots

and iiarsley. Their grotesque ap

pearance seemed to inspire a cer

tain humorou-i contagion to their spirits, and the affair was universally conceded to have been a reat success. December Ladies' Home

Journal.

PATOKA LILY FLOUR.

BEST GRADE IN THE STATE OF INDIANA

They also want your rWHEAT And Day the Highest Market Price in Casf Floor and Ship Stuff for Sale at all times

J. & A.

There is an etiquette governing

the giving and receiving of presents,

as there is about most things, because there is always a best way to do everything. If we penetrate be-

ow the surface of the little courte

ous conventions we shall hnd that consideration for the feelings of others underlies all. Do not trv to1

make your gift look as though it

Coat mrre than vou paid for it.

Aside from the paltry spirit of such !

giving it is a delusion and a snare.

or next vear your offering must

seem to be as tine as the one of this season, or you may appear to have

been less anxious to please vour

riend. The best gifts are those

which put no tax upon material re

sources, but trifles of which the recipients may make frequent use, and so keep the giver in mind. Take the time to write a few words

of loving or cordial greeting on the

cards that accompany the trifts.

Without that evidence of individual,

personal thought the offering of even

the finest present appears somewhat 1 1 t . .

graceless ana periunciory. A message on a card is better tban a note,

because more informal, and one

should not seem to make much of a gift. Having your presents daintily wrapped is not less a matter of courtesy. Let their outward appear

ance commend them. Leave them or send them to their destination the day before Christmas unless you can insure their reception early in the day. A tardy eift appears

ike an afterthought. Deceralier

Ladies' Home Journal.

A Tale Almost to Good to be Troe. During the blizzard of 'i: I start

ed one day from the central office of the Bureau of Charities to distribute money to some cases report

ed for "instant relief." In an attic

found a poor widow, a seamstres,

with one child, a boy of six. The

room was cold and bare ; there was no fire, the windows were loose and snow lay upon the floor. The boy

had been kept in bed two days to

keep warm. 1 asked the usual

uestions and gave the woman two

dollars. All this before I discover

ed the boy. Suddenly his head bobbed from beneath the bed clothes, and at sight of the two bills his eyes became moons. "Cee-e-e, Mister! All that for us? Then we can give

some to Ted Burns s mother downstairs to buy coal. Can't we, Mom?" The Rev. David M. Steele in the Ladies' Home Journal for December.

FELIX LAMPE1H

Agent for the Drill.

State Drill.

Keystone t?orn Hnsber ? Fodder. Shredder. Blount's True Blue Plows Manufacturer of WAGONS AND BUGGIES. Repairing of all kinds. A0Mtu, Jasper. Indian?

B

ARNUM aid his sue c ens was due t his GETTINGTALKED ABOUT

So the BUSINESS MAN'S success depends up on his keeping his business before the public in a business way TELLING THE TRUTH advertising all the time.

GOURIEB

Will help you to the publicity at a small price. The other part is upon your own honor Jam! conscience.

The Stead"' Advertiser Has better publicity than the transient one.

Your announcements are solicited. 1

ThoneJ13-2,HRingnB.up.

i

a