Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 54, Number 3, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 October 1911 — Page 8

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maä of ci cries or"WAGONS and ARBIAGBS,

O And Dealer In-

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General Repairing it Horse Shoeing g

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Jasp er,

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Jasper Courier.

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JASPEK, IND.

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BARGAIN MONTH

THE EVANSVILLE COURIER BY MAIL ONE, YLAR. $2.00 During the month of October sufocriptiQns will be taken to j?he Daily Evansville Courier at $2.00. One month only OCTOBER thereafter no subscription will be taken at less than the regular price, $2.50. THINK OF IT A DAILY NEWSPAPER A WHOLE YEAR FOR $2.00 The brightest, newsiest mewspaper in gotrtkeni Indiana Full Associated Freaa Reports. i"ws from all polata In ladl&na, Kentucky and Illinois by special correspondents. Clever cartoons BrillUat Editorials Splendid Spdal Features All Sporting News. Complete aad Correct Market Reports. 2o mall subscriptions In towns where we hare af cats who deliver

by carrier.

Remember this trill sever the PrcsMentiat ytv

Tell your neighbor t 'pfeoas kba. Send The Ceurler for a year to Out embe er , ymsr faxilly, relative or friend who teas moved to iem dlstaat town, so he can keep posted on happealagi at hama. Send $2.00 by check, express or money order any day In October te

THE

EVANSVILLE COURIER EVANSVILLE., IND. s The ettly English paper published in KyansvlUe you Kt by mall tho umi day It Is printed.

I Huttsr rrviTi glrtfs.

In South America is to be found a bird from which a species of butter con bo obtained. This animal ft known as tho "oil bird," and ono of its favorite haunts is the island of Trinidad. It breeds in rocky leaves on the mainland, laying its ' ggs in a nest constructed of mud. Tho young birds are cxtraordinariK. tWf otwI ihn if having lffn

. nMV o raelW down in clay pots, produces a kind of burtcr, eavs London TitBits. This butter is used by the natives. The caves inhabited by theso oil birds are usually accessible only from tho sea, und the hunting of these feathered creatures freauently affords exciting sport to le adventurous in spirit

A Two Headed Baby.

J Some time ago thero lived a gan Ucnwn of indok'iit habits who spent his tinio visiting among his friends. ' After, wearing out his welcome in , his own r.iighborhood ho thought 1 he would visit an old Quaker friend

some twenty milos distant. On hia arrival he wa3 cordiallv received by the Quaker, who, thinking tho visitor had takou much pains to come so far to see him, treated him with a great deal of attention and politeness for several days. As the visitor showed no signs of leaving, tha Quaker became uneasy, but bore it with patience until the eighth day, when no said to hira: "My friend, I am afraid theo will never conic again." "Oh, yes I shall," said tho visitor. "I have "enjoyed my visit very much and shall ccrtainlv como again." "But," said the Quaker, "if thee will never leave how can thee com again?" Philadelphia Ledger. THE VOICE IN THE DARK.

-sir M sMiud Kl ll

LiTiTillliTiTig

-AM'ffdaUle Preparation forAsslmilating HwFoodnndRcöulalinglhcStoaachs aralBoNi-cis of

Small Boy- Oil. romo aud look fit this ialr with a h3-l on both wulai-XiOP ton Tolop uu Mary's W'CtTmg. A Jlarvlnr ! :"a i ;ccently married off liU fiuriii daughter, the cere'iiin- t vo?e we'dding were ri. : :r.!i .-lfortion by the "socictx rfrt.p" vi r.-r cHittntry papers iriH. :t rc:irtn. A ck r tw cfr tiie wwlding a fricJ !. ' - i north for some tiu. fr.: ' '.;'! t. to whom he made .;..r reference in reirard to ti-o rvf r.f "event" "I

see by on? ;."rr." yaid he, "that Mary's wedHT 'well nigh beggared descriiltcn." "Well," Faid the oW maa, "I don't know about that, but I do know it well nigh beggared me I" Lippincott's. Airy Criticisml

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Bill (watching the traQc belowülfky thing. Lbea thf m&tom-

la a Way.

4A Memory of Pickett's Brigade and a' Night Attack. ( Some years after the civil war a' ga'thcring of veterans of both sides was exchanging reminiscences at a banquet given by the board of trade of 2Cew York, writeMrs. La Salle Corbell Pickett in Lippincott'6. The presiding ofiicer was Colonel J. J. PhüÜps of the Ninth 'Virginia

nregirrietit, Pickett's division. lie

was speaking of night attacks and recalled ono in particular, not because of its startling horrors, but because of a peculiar circumstance, almost resulting in tho compulsory disobedience of orders the obeying, a3 it were, of a higher command than that of earth. "The point of attack had been carefully selected." said Colonel

PJiillips, "the awaited dark night

had arrived, and my command was to fire when General Pickett should signal the order. " "There was that dread, indescrib

able stillness, that weird, ominous

sience, that always settles over everything bef cro a fight. You felt

that nowhere in tho universo was

there any voico or motion. "Suddenly tho awesomo. silence

was broken by tho sound of a deep, full voico rolling over tho black

fold like the billows of a great sea,

directly in Una with our guns. It was singing tho old hymn, 'Jesus, Lover of My Soul

havo heard that grand old

musio many times in circumstances which intensified its impressive-

nes-s, but never had it seemed so solemn as when it broke tho stillness in which wo waited for the or

der to fire. Just as it was given thero rang through the night the words: "Cever my de&me4eM bead With the shadow of thy wing-.

"Heady! Aim! Fire to the

left, boys 1' I said. "Tho guns were shifted, tho volley that blazed out swerved aside, and that defenseless head was 'cov

ered' with tho shadow of hi3 wing." A Federal veteran who had been listening looked up euddenly and said: "I remember that night, colonel, and that midnight attack which carried oil so many of my comrades. I was the singer." There was a second of silence. Then "Jesn; Lover of My Soul," rang across that banquet beard as on that black night in 1864 it had rung across tho lines at Bermuda Hundred.

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"The baby ees learning ze Freach, fe madame." '"He's learned the gestures anyway." Carper's WecUr.

Klngtake Stories.

Xinglakc, the author of "Eothen," was afflicted with gout, and he had a fancy to try a lady doctor and wrote to one to ask if cout was

.beyond her scope. She replied,

T)ear sir, gout is not beyond my Bcepe, but men arc." it was Kinglake who uttered one $f the neatest of mots on thepeculLar character of the Times. He had little fnr.dness for that journal, in fpite of personal friendships which might have been expected to loften his news of the oucstion. Tho m-

per was still to him a eori of jugi : i t-i.t . n

L'uinui, irrtrsiaiiuic nuu liueuu. un leeing the announcement of tho dew editor's marriage he exclaimed: Heavens 1 That brings the Time ljtatioM with hiBiBig f

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Shoes and Clothings Dryjl

Fancy Groceries. Gauntry PrnducE WaniEd! GrivE us a Call. Both Phones. Free Delivery West Sixth Street. JASPER. - IND.

A Setter.

v.

'"What kind of a doj; Is Uiat, my

"It's a setter. Can't 70a lee kla How Semlnoles Bury Their Dead. Seminolc3 burv their dead on top of the ground after wrapping them In blankets, but always leave tho top of tho head exposed. They build a fen over the body and usually chink t wfth earth. When his Equaw die3 the husband wcara his shirt until it rots off, which is not strikingly distinctive. When tho husband dies the Equaw doesn't comb her hair for three months. Little reverence is shown for tho dead. When Tom Tiger's graYe was robbed and his bones taken for exhibition the outcry over tho desecration was almost wholly a newspaper affair. Tho nearest settlers were unalarmcd and rJndiaiM iftdrfmt Collier's

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THE OLD BCUStS

"There's no hurry," "I can wait a little longer 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 married men, it is LIFE INSURANCE. Now is the time to apply for a policy. Archie. Doane Jasper Indiana

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