Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 53, Number 9, Jasper, Dubois County, 2 December 1910 — Page 8

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Jasper Courier.

An Independent Democratic Newppnrer that pnya

wnat 11 pieatfcii wiuioui neKirg your ncrmueion. vo Tue lln Ed Donno Job Printoriutn is

gj rtioelUd : 1 1 iuc C( 11 tnciciiri piinthy.

JASPEE, IND

By SALLIE MENDEEM. lCopyrtht. 1M, by American Prtss A (Elocution. The ry I ot out of the burxlar lluo was tbts: I had inüjhty good nerve aud wasn't afraM of any on. I aeciued to kuow what kind of a crib to crack and j how to do It without wuilnj; anybody ; up and getting nway between midnight ' and dawn, when the cops are meat

drowsy. White 1 was dolus a job I thought of nothing except my work and was both cool nud watchful. I wasn't one of those blokes who scare people to death or who are ready If necessary to add murder to robbery. The truth Is I never liked the prospect of facing either charge. As 1 was auylns. while eugaued at my work, however dangerous, I was teady as a monument, hut when dan ger had paused and I bad uothüig to do but think 1 weut downhill very fast. What bothered me most was that I couldn't sleep nicht that 1b, when comfortably stmved awuy In bed. I once took a nap In a gentleman's parlor and tras only wakened by the sun coudug up ami shlulng In my eyes. I Just pot out In time to save myself. But when lying ou a oft mattress, with arm covers aud no chance of being disturbed, sleep wouldn't com to me. I lay awake thinking of the tlmo when ! would bear prison doors clang behind me. Tha thought waa dreadful. I'm afraid 1 wa too fine grained for the business. Menth after month my hours of sleep crow less till I feared Insanity. One nljrht 1 woke up nt midnight after having slept two hours and knew there

! would bo no more lutnber for mo till the nest time I went to bed. 1 was so j deiHnUe tliat 1 got up -with the Ini temku of going Into some hot where

I had no right and there sa&teb am othor couple of hours' sleep. I had a crib In view, a small houso with not much In It. But I was looking for Bleep, not plunder. I went there, took out a pane of glass, entered and went upstairs to find a place to settle d wn. I stood In a dark hall looking f a room where a night lamp was burning. In the room a woman whs In bed with a child, both aKleep. Tbo child was sleeping on the front of the bed, very near the edge. He was a boy and, I think,' about five years old. On a. narrow lower bed, dose beside the other, slept andthor child, a girl of about three. &he waa sleeplrg. In the center ot her bed on her aide and had

her hubby" fist up agalnut her fat cheek. It was hot summer weather, and none-f them except the woman had any covers whatever. What Interested me wm that the boy's head was hanging over the ekle of his bed and to much, of his body, too, that it . looked, to me aa if ho wm about to fall. H ,wm restleaa, and I kiMW h would te over very soon. Somehow I wasted to se htm fall,

though I kept In 4be dark so that be

wouldn't see me If be woke up. Tb

next kick he made sent him. Ter. Ea

foil a cöunle of feet, but didn't wake

up. He landed partly on tn lHtle girl.

but she didn't wake up cither, i ex

pected she would, as she moaned occ

or twice In her sleep and turned crvr. but flunlly she slept nt pMcefhlly m

before.

It was suck a delightful picture to

one suffering from Insomnia that I kept on watching th chtldren. The Unf rmt(ntif1 Ii! klfclni niid crowded

' the girl, pushing her with every move

to tho front ed of her b. It muat

have been half as hour tkat he kept this up. when there was a thamp, and

the girl lay on the floor. But eha seemed to be u comfortable tbre as

on her bod. At any rate, aho showed

not tho least ahm of wakln.

Meanwhile I hnard tho mvrttortng of

distant thunder, and while I waa look

lng at them all there came one terrülc

crash loud cnoujtb to wake the dead

Tho mothur turned over, but neither

of the children. moved. Then followed

one crash after another, and I expect

d that at teaat the mother would

wake nn and take a look at her ebll

dren. But Bbo sleot on. Bhe mu hart)

been verr tired or had lost a lot of

lwo or she couldn't have slept

fhmueh thoso terrible boltB. Never

had I beard -such thunder befora.

The onlT effect the atom bad on aay

of them waa to increase the restless

ness of the boy. He rolled and tun

iiiM in liU ulen like a ship tosca ny

the wave, sometime Irl for a few

mlnntot dona flsalaat hlfl mUlWS DCtL

than rolling over to he outer edge of hta own. I was sure he'd In time tum

ble out of this bed, as he had out of the other, and I waa bouad to see him do It. Sure enough, before I expected It he gave a lurch and landed pluaib on top of his sliter. N'either of them awoka.

I reckon womta know In their sleep

what's goInK on with their children.

for, now that the storm was over and everything was still as the tomb, the mother sat up In bed, glanced at her children, got up and put them In their

proper places. Then she went back to bed herself nnd was aslee'p In a mo

ment.

"Well." I Haid to myself. "If that's

wht a clear" conscience will fnrulsh

I'm going to hare a clear conscience."

I went back to my room resolved neve"r to enter nny man's house again but my own, at least not for plunder. I

went to bed and slept Uka a top ror twenty-four hours. I kept my resolution, found honorable employment and prospered. But I dkln't. forget the family thnt converted me. Tho mother was a widow, and.

having n hard time to get on, I mado her acquaintance and married her. But none of my family knowtbnt I had been a burglar or how I came ta know them.

QEVIÖEÄOFJHE ßOÖV. The Cough, Sn2 and Sigh Are M.Buri of Self PrsUo.lon. One of tho i iost interesting facts about tho iuirnn body is its powei of self pre .t: ation. its power of

ovnuing or overcoming tne mou sand nnd one conditions which, un

less corrected, would bo injurious

or destructive.

Amon tho most common of :heso acta of Rolf preservntion are ho cou"li, the biieeze nnd the ßigh.

Everv one is familiar with theso

acts, yet few people ever ask them

selves the cause, and lewer sun could explain them. One ot the simplest of tho body's devices for self protection ia tho coutrh. The couirh is merely a blast

of air propelledffrom tho lungs in1 ... a:, i

sucn eft maimer as iu iuix-iln) uialodirasome foreign substance which.

has been drown. into tho throat, tho windpipe or the, tubes leading to!

the Jungs. . j The membranes lininc theso.

porta of the body are very sensitive, I otirl trlinn n fnrpitm matter COmOS in !

contact with them an alarm mes

sage is at onco sect to the nervous "hendqunrters," and the result is the sudden, spasmodic expulsion of breath which is called a cough.

Very often tho cough is produced by tho irritation oftiio aecumula-

tion oi mucus on uic suiiucu wiv.-"-tioncd. In this coso, as in the case

of a foreign body, tho cough is merely a means of expelling Hie matter.

So. vou sec. a couch is morely one

of turc's methods of felf protection. Couirh carea contain some

drug which, by paralyzing the nerves, prevents the cough and al

lows the mueuu to accumulate.

Thus the couch medicine docs

only harm. The cure for a cough is to cough to cough until the excessive deposit is removed. Mean-

time, of course, measures snouia do taken to prevent added deposits.

A sneeze is exactly iikc a cougn, wvo that tho obstruction occurs in

the nostrihs owing to the deposit of some irritant or foreign matter

and that the blast ot air is thrown

out throuch the nose instead of

through the throat and mouth.

Why do we sigh.-' When gncveo or depressed tho tendoncy is to hold

the breath. Thi3 means that the

body suffers for oxvgen, and the long, deep breath which we call a nah is merely a means bv which the

body obtains lor uscu ine nccessarv,amount of oxycen. Dr. W. B. C. Latson in Health Culture.

mm 'iu i

Tlio Kind Voti Tlnxo Always Bonjjlit, and which has becu in uso lor over SO years, has Iwim th alpptinturo oi nn Ium Iaaa4Ader his per. y-cicOci Allow no ono to decoiro you hi this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and " Just-ns-good" nro bsq Expci imon'H that trillo with aud endanger tho health off Infants nnd. Children ISxpcricoco against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Catorla is a harmless Substitute for Castor Oil, Pare Coric, lrops and Soothing Syrups. It is Pleasant, i; Ifc con t:i ins noithcr Opiniu, Blorphino nor other Rarcotfd substance, ltsnjjois its jjimrantcc. It destroys Worms and allays 13Vvorishncss. It cures Diarrhoea and Wind Colic. It relieves Teething- Trntiblcs, cures Constipation and flatulency. It assimilates the Food, regulates tho Stomach and IJowels, giving healthy and natural hlccjv Tho Children's l'auacca Tlio Mother's Friend. CENUiWE CASTORIA ALWA

Bears the Signature of

Curlno t CAtor. A Ti trninnnt till vtiit'ian of London

MI4 -...... I . " - who ria TernnrKfthti fnr continuing

hii viPita to his rich iitieiu3 altei ho hn'd turnwl their disorders ou of doon, attended n Indy of somi celebrity in tho vorld of it for three months after hT recovery and regularly stayed with her until, ia the English manner, he received his dismissing foe of 3 guineas. Weary of his expetusivo calls and concluding that to lsen tha fe would h to Iom tha visitor, thf

vdltur 0 to gnro him 4j.gincaB at tVa nnrlrcirm nt Ki'fl licit call. . He

looked anxiouity in his hand, then

on tho carpet ana pa. ir f"1""

Um in eTident embaJMetnent.

Hnvo you loA aaythiBgf hi

. i T 11 T V..l

"Whv, mnoam, jl inuugm, j.

droDTed a rnmeo. .

It is only a mistake in tho person, sir," rejoined the fair patient. "It is I Ao have dropped the guinea." The doctor, of course, dropped

rns visits.

nm Diner Out-I shay, bio ennn, d'rou know U'llshnn?

Bocond Diner Out No. Whatah lab

name First Diner Out I dnnno. Tatlcr. A Dilemma's Horns.

The young lady sighed deeply and was almost affected to tears.

"Harold." 6he said, "declares that

if I don't marry him ho will end nis life, and I am afraid he will."

She stifled a sob, then continued:

"And. Kandolnh declares that if J

don't marrv him lie will ßo into pol

itics and become grout and famous,

and then he says 1 shall sec what I

have missed, nnd I am alruid he wu keen his word too."

Overcome bv emotion, she burici

her -face in her hands, not knowing

whether to save a life or to spare .

tho country another politician. Tho First Census.

The idoa of the census oriirinntcd

among the Romans, when a group j

of tire many functions poriormeti by the high oflicer called censor received tho name of census. It was taken every five years and indicated not only tl.e number of the respective classes of the people, but their domestic positions as husbands, wives, fathers, mothers, eons and daughters. The first modern nation to tnl e un tho census wis the

United Sti tes of America in 1700. Tho first British census was in 1801, but this did not includo Ireland.

The KM Yo Mi Jwajs Bougl In Use For Ovr GO Years.

THt CINTtUn CO-'FAWV. TT MURRAY ÜTRUI, NtWfORK CITY.

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JASPER, - IND.

; 4

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THt OLD EXCUSES

"There's no hurry," "I can wait a little lunger for my insurance" have left many a family to face a bitter fight with poverty and privation. If there is one thing that should receive the first consideration of mirrkd men, it is LIFE INSURANCE Now is the time to apply fur a policy. Arch C. Doane Jasper Indirna

Ja sis er Roller Mills-

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