Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 53, Number 4, Jasper, Dubois County, 28 October 1910 — Page 1
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v'OL. 53Jasi eh, 1ndi1na, Friday, Octobeb 28, 1910. No. 4
Candidates of the People
Honesty, economy and efficiency are now demanded by the people from their public servants. The Democratic state candidates stand for anspare pledged to these very things. A vote for them Is a vote for economy, efficlency and honesty.
TELLS OF COST OF LIVING.
lohn W. Kern Shows Tribute to G. O.
"Mary!! Paying P. Trusts.
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John W. Kern, Democratic nominee for United States Senator, Is now devoting himself la his speeches to a disousslon'of the high cost of living a condition which aas crown up ua der and been fostered by the Republican party, aid od by Theodora Roosevelt and Senator Beverldge. Mr. Kern la still .making good, use of Senator Beverldge's unfortunate Blip about "Mary of the Vine-Clad Cot-
Win. H O'Urian.of
Williwr JU Vollme
tage," and he uses Mary as the cen-l" " " i' wn--wiiu rQi i .v, ,i ,1, , ,v .1 ' District. Joititli Ibach, of HaianioDtl, tral figure In showing that the people M s Lu Lonsport, and'Awlta pay tribute to truets and combinations Ademit of 6,imnbu8 City; Southern diealmost every time they turn around, trict M. Ü. Mottle of Salem, and Edward
W Fait of UPeonfield. For Conjixeea William E. Cox.
J. FRED FRANCE, for Clerk Supreme Court.
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191
THÖMA8 W. DROLLEY, for State Statistician.
THOMAS M. HONAN, for Attorney General.
Said Mr. Kern:
" 'Marys of the vine-clad cottages,' are confronted every day with an economic question which will not down, and that Is the high coRt of living. It la a fact known and felt by all wage earners and salary earners, that the
wageB of the man who wins bread for ,
'Mary of the vine-clad cottage' md Mary's children are no longer sufficient to maintain Mary and the children in the comfortable style to which they 'have been accustomed. "Under the operation of tae tax ea woolen goods' fixed by the woolen schedule of the Dlngley tariff bill, which Senator Beverldge supported
for ten years, and which is contia'aed j Landerebe.
in force by the Payne-Aldrlch tariff bill, the woelen trust has been enabled, according to Senator BeverIdge's confession, to increase the price
and reduce the weight ef the people's
a w At- - t J I
T A m 1 i. oago i em rer nm nair. i DeillOCrallC TICK et. For sage tea take two ounces 61
PcrMatynlHtata -Louis C. EUinRbam the newest dried garden sage and
two ounces of green tea. Put in an iron pot (bo sure "Witt you ubo an iron one) and add hreo quarts of'
boiling water. Let simmer slowly'
until onlv two quarts aro lelt. ite-j
move and let stand lor twenty-xour hours. Then strain and put into bottles. Apply to tho scalp every morning and night, nasssging gently for five minutes. This is a splendid tonic for the hair as well ai dis
tinctly a stain for restoring iron gray hair. ' Washing ErWjroWerlee. Bran water baths are eeod for
worsted and cotton' embroideries.'
They should be made by adding a quart of fresh bran tp three quarts . of water. Boil this for half an hour,' strain and then pour into a coupfe ;
of bowls, add cold water until it is lukewarm, put in tho embroidery and rub till clean, rinse in cleam water and then place in the second basin of bran water, drying the articlo ns quickly as possible. Always iron on tho wrong side.
Dccutttut
Auditoi o. State Lawrence) ivii(. TreMH iier of Statu of Viucennea.
Attorney General Thomne M. lionan Clerk of l ie Supreme C uit -J. Fred France, of Huntington, For Superintendent Public Instruction Chae. A. Qreathouse of InJlanapolia. State Gologiet- E'oUard Barrett, ot I'lainlbi). State Malistkan I'ncmas Broiler a N.rtli Vernni .ludfi' .u. leine U.üxt Bekond District. I) o.uma Monis -jf Kuehville;
I bird Difctriil 0 F Ccx ol Indian p..iis
Judge of Aii iMte tjijt Northern
ForPr eecuiinjr Attorney 7th Judicial Dietrict Barry W. Carpenter. For Joint Benattr for Crawford, Dabols and Perry Counties. B. mar Tray-lor.
For Joint Re, resents the 101 Daoou
and Pike Countie. Peter L. Coble. For Cl-rk CircuH Court. William M Bot-kclman.
For Auditor Jacob H Seng. For Treasurer. William Rauscher. For 8heiiff, Jacob H. Schwenk. For Coroner. John F. Mo-nke:. For Purveyor. Emil Berger
For CommiFsioLer,3d D itrict. Henry
Thomas M. Honan. of Seymour, was clothing, and thereby add materially speaker of the last Indiana House ot to the coat of living, for every tl" Representatives, having "been elected Mary makes a purchase " u to the legislature In 1905, 1007 and f0r aer. children, o' ' o clotalaa; 1909. He Is a graduate of Indiana veds 8ne Bl. 0iankets for their University. For four years he was u aBt dIp k lltu dMper city attorney ot B-ymour. and from Jnto ner husbasd'a wage thaa if
1884 to 1WJ1 he was prosecuting attor
ney ef the forty-second Judicial circuit J. Fred Frmsee has lived la Huntingtea lor tiffhteea yeexvraetWB law Md Baakia irlepde. The people ot
hie eftty hare mto W their mtfor
this InfamoHB tar If tax were net levled for the benefit of the trust Truste Always Benefit. "And so of nearly jeveVTttfef. that Mary Is coeed Iwy wr,ti eetafori aadkeana of ar eMWresifad
a 4m .at wMek Mr. rraace made good. melatMaaae of he knUe kee. UautM w.ll an Democrats When she , buys a kikur'rwortB of
Uve rallied to the support ot his caa- uar. a part etcher kHMaad's eerndldacy In hla own-eeunty. This Is else I to the sugar trust. Wbe she tree In Adas couaty, where he once buy hominy, a little money I abUvM and ia not ;forotten. aorbed by the homlay trtist With a Tkomaa W. Brelley, of North Ver- purchase of salt ahe oust pay out of bob. Is knows tar and wide as the her huaband'a wagesa JltUe tribute "father of the Sunday base-hall btll." to the salt trust and a very large a measure which he Introduced In the part of the earntBee ef the patient Indiasa Legislature as the represent- toller who la her helpmate Is absorbed stive from Jennings and Scott coub- annually by the neat trust, and gy tie. Ia the Legislature Mr. Droller to swell the dividends on the watered waa especially active In the Interests stock of the great meat packing esof laborlag men. a fact of which he Is tabllshmenta. When she buys a set very proud, of tumblers or other needed glassware
her little stock or money Is eaten into (by the glass trust, and with every
i
CONVINCED SY et PR IT.
r "..II Bl IVCI ItuaMaa'a T.pin
-
"''udi Is Not Sincere. . iitt
oi semai iron
or aar exniaaar
- . vutniB u. aernt or was
btnrton Herald on MmiUy
! lu1 aenater Beverisas
.c ,uia lor ue ravee-Aia
u.ii u ail on Te, j,-,,
- 1 iiM psaaage. is salami
u aiQong iae ReDusilcaM
l. II T nnl 1
. naving the effect lutea
cuiuji va Iiis
. V1 U1 Ba auempi ve na consen-ative RttnnhlloMa
"-""or uevenaare'e atHtuda nn1
. m u "Puen&nt. It Is bow kav
cuureir nirfnrant ft t.
'"fUUHCani (n th rnnnlnalnn
I k" A - 1
hat tho onlr t. , -W...J
-'"iuib IS inrouah ihm Aim.
Oil ! v ... . . .
" St8Wrt, Of Kokoaan . W.m.htl
ms represents Uowa-
nil i . -
7' ue indiaaa. iai.ia,,,.
. """-ri nas come out nn u t.
. " B",cang for support ia!
. I .1 t . . WWUKtW,
Dem7 . Be N,Dlh d,,lrlct' Md u, A rnator district of Howard
-'mi countiea .nrf .1.
"l"e district in th ,'..
Rril 11- . 1 w ui
Ti. " 1 VII, bqm icjr
'IIU Cand data tnr
0 m Howard county.
"ed with th . 1
- --..amuon of Mr g,frlt 1
oTnaa'i m.
. tariff hilt v
Wthcotllnr hart M. v
' passage ot the blU. HOOSEVEty ,ALKa
10 ä "0? M ' te Make
?.cn for everldge.
LTru4 te M.ee. Thee-
t tV, Tl
II fHt
Sergeant Brown ("koldlog ap" a bur alar an til the DoHce arrive) Ai, m;
man. dldat know-.I'd been aveln- j
teer for fifteen years, aw year Bikes Oh, doa't aay that. faVi
it mlaht aro orf be nlsUkel Sketck.
yea. wer, ytMrre.a
-mn If I -were a
kaock you dewa far ahaL"
Til bet you $19 I caa
l-r never het-
The
Enlhueteaae. '
one magneiL ea
apeaa in behalf ot Senator Beverldge purchase of crockery she makes her at Richmond. husband pay tribute to the pottery inat nigh woras paseed bfttwsM trust . Roosevelt and Senator Beverldge oa Rooeevelt's Pet Trust the last stage of Roosevelt's one-day,' But the greatest absorber of the trip through Indiana ia behalf of the peopie.a eatings In Anaerlea Is the genator, aad that la coaeeauecce of noo,,, favorite, the arreat Tailed Ue apllt Roosevelt refffied absolutely suteB gtee, CorIK)ration, which draws to address the crowd that awaited hla heavnr WÄB8 0f jjary'a huila the colUeum at Rlchmoad are Ue b4nd everjr Um- ,he buyi R Ua pga underlying facti la a torrent ot eoav, or a fru,t can or ft tin cup, or any ment aroueed throughout the sUte by otQer artjcll of household neeeislty the Richmond lacldent i lnto the comDOitlon of which tie or
Richmond waa the laat stop oa t , or roa enter ,n any fBrm Afld
Roosevelt's schedule. He arrlred a Mary's husband. If he buys a tocl to little behind Urne In Richmond from, WQrk wIthf muBt make ft cootfluutloa Munde, remained in Richmond for gjgantlc monopoly, aad which toirty aalnutee before leaving for the, g0g t0,BWeU the fortuaWa of the maleast but the best the Republican maa tlmlu,onftirea who are behind it agera could 'force from him was a few, And u tlje voor man DUy8 iumi,er
remark from tae piatiorra oi aim vr, fof henhouBe he must pay something:
to the lumber trust, and If he finds It necessary to use paint for any purposes, lead and oil trusts laterccpt part of his earnings. And so on. and on, and on, the drug trust and chemical trut levying tribute wher sickness comes, the coffin trust when death Invades the household, and the marble trust when a tombstone .Is bought to mark the resting place of the dead. Grew Under leverldge. "Of the hundreds of trusts aew
Kowtr et
Enthusiasm 18
power, lou.musi tcoery with it, touch tbouhla and acta with it. It will transmute flroes
into gold, drudgery iato dalight. What matters if Jbe JbouI -cä lives beeide you i crlajid eelleh-?
Set htra a -good uu&piei oay is sunshine, and he liieelit Every
1
At the ZooGood heavy my barrow Li rant
gracious I How today! Yoa VI
irksome task is a chancenor power,
(or the q'ulitft Ä they bring' out are God's pffc ich fit ua to; enjoy Wter 'thraRj? Easy things will come. U youlye spent your hearty Vood" on. Raping Btrcngth, for the very goal of, power ia the ease which comes Irqm strength. We laHgh at -things and people, who used :to co'v or annoy "us. We do gracefully nnd swiftly lhe,taska once. So hard. Ose by ne we hava nriveted mir cliätrls. Wo are free! Nautilus.
remarks that were half-hearted and
did not last a full two minutes. ' When It la recalled that with twe or three exceptions, the stops made by Roosevelt In Indiana during the day ef hla trip were not more than an average of twenty minutes each, the full significance of his thirty minutes' silence at Richmond becemes manifest I
Something happened between Rooae-,
velt and Beverldge on ue train aa
Kle to Rich
Why All Business Men Sfeotild Advertise!
GOLDEN NEEÖLES. " They Were Ueebl When Gallants la Franc Did Fanoy Werk. During the old regime in France, about wkich so much glamour remains to us, the very men who were living and making the history of the empire of Louis passed their leisure time in a way that seems to us ef ttxlay utterly ridiculous. In all tho fancy work on whieh ladiea employed themselves the men setan to have taken part. Poinsinet in ons of i.is comedies represents a young murquis entering ä room where two fair damsels are embroidering. One is working a piece of dress trimming, the other a Marly flounce. The beau examines the embroidery with the eye of a connoisseur, joints out hero and there the specially good touches and is too polite to notice any defects. He takes a little gold tube out of the pocket of his richly decorated waistcoat and selects a dairity.gold needle. He goes to the frame at which Cidalise is working and fin1ishes the flower which she had begun. From her he moves to the ßofa and, seizing one end of the flounce, assists Ismene, to whom ho pays special attention, to complete ner task. At this time it was the custom of the ladies invariably to carry their workbags with them to the evening receptions, in which they had not only their embroidery materials, bwt the last novel, the popular songs, their patch boxes and rouge pots. Gentlemen also carried deftly embroidered little bag3 into company, which held "a whole arsenal of cutlery and fancy articles, such as boxes of different shapes filled with loxenges, bonbons, enuf and scent.' ' At another period the fashion of the day was to cut out drawings from hooks and pamphlek and to paste them dh screens, lamp shades, boxe and vase. The skill in..this -waa to so arraage the drawragsÄor parts ef differentdra wings as to produce a curfea or amusing effect. Then there -caaae a season when all the rage vsr for charades aval riddles, which gave a peculiarly Md opportunity to exercise the nghtand rapid wif so conspicuous In tie French. Every" evening the drawing rooms were converted into
impromptu cnaraaee. 4 aome iaay
woald suggest a word or phrase, and forthwith it would be converted into
the subject of a sprightly little play.
Many ot the word games now curz . ....
rant, with us in America had tnerr origin in the neceisity the French salons were under in the last cen
tury to divert themselves. In Eome
of the salons the fashion of keep
ing a daily chronicle of news, which
was too often a mere chronicle of
scandal, was adopted. Mme. Dou
blet, de rersan issued bulletins
which she called nouvellea a Ia
main, in ner apartments two reg-
JeWs were kept, one of the authena a .
Uo news received here and tncre Dy bar guests, the other of floating rumors and on dits, and from these
the budget of her chronicle was
made up and circulated throughout
France. Appleton 9 Magazine. New P .t:ea For JthePeIlc.
from Mtl
Biond. At Munde Roosevelt waa ap. preying oa the earnings of the peoparently In good humor, but at Rich- pie, aad holding out their greedy mond, a little later, he absolutely re- handfl for tribute on the occaslea ef lused to address the crowd that waited abuost every purchase made for nouse-
for hlBX He declined to give Dever hold ldge Indorsement before that crowd aV lied itiAii.li tt nail immi to Indiana foi saae
that sole purpose. What happened to ralaed the tax rate so high aa te exchange him? In Richmond RooseveM cludo forela competltlen. aad ade waa determined and refused to do Bet., passible this wholesale eUila ef ioerldge's bidding. Beverldge waa ex- meatic competition. Nlae-teatae ec dted and nervous and his remarka te these lawless aad law defying eoi the audience in the colleeum, where blnatioas have been eranied atnte -he went after Roosevelt's refusal, Benator Beverldge eatored the seaate. were auch aa to ditguat hundra aad -Iaitead of demandlna: that the dismay every öae else. crlmJeals whe thaa headed thesaaelvee Clearly Beaator Beterldge waa la1 together U reh the people he preeeborina under lntease excitement The outed a eeearaon oriBalaals, aad pat RIchmend Mofalag New. asks, with- n atrlpee forthelr grose eulragea Upeut beating arouad the bush, whether 0n the publle, he has coateated hlthe excitement was due merely to the' self with pointing out how lefleeat eJtercatloa with Roosevelt or whether' were their -operations, and how freauy Ue Seaator had Indulged In sUtaulaatt they coatrlbuted to the dveieeatat te excesa during the day or both, 'ef Ue eo?yityr.
The business men who can do withoutsome form of publicity to make known their work or their wares are scarce indeed. There is just about one excuse for not advertising, and that is simply that the business is already as big is the man at its head. If there is in the makeup of the man ability to grow, then, as long as he
lives, ne Will seeK lor more uuaiueae, been, tu uuvci a bigger field.
Many a buiiness is in a rut today simply because the proprietor didn't advertise. In the first place, the man who advertises calls the attention of thepublic to some nf his husmess of which he is toroud. If it is so
use, nine-tenüvs have beea orgin-1 Jommollpace that it does not have a phas of which then naturally it will not & to advertise
In other woras, advertising is a suuunauu o uou suppose a merchant who never has seen his name in big print, steps into his store tommorrow morning determined to write an ad. If he looks around and sees only dirty shelves and stock that is several seasons old inspiration to write will quite likely be wanting. And what would be the use? Let him take off his coat, go over that store and that stock, compare his goods and his treatment of customers with that of his competitors, and when he finds ä point where he has them all "skinned" let him begin to shout, shout till the public hears him I
Tfea aerial police at work a yleteal ef the aeex future-fk-eV. J
Simple Remedy. A lady journalist who 'conducted a paie devoted to feminine interests waa 111, and, a male member of the editorial stlft did fluty as her deputy. He soon distinguished himself. A correspondent inquired how grease might best be removed from toup. He read it hurriedly, noticing only that it was an inquiry for the remoTal of greaee. This -as his awer: "8oak a-BoftcloUi in gasoUm -aad rab geatly till the grease ii ewadloateÄr.
..
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avmi mim ek.t .a w
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