Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 55, Number 26, Jasper, Dubois County, 18 April 1913 — Page 2

weekly courier CONGRESS GEIS

1EN ED. DOANE, Publisher.

INDIANA

lASPER

The new nickels are no get than the old ones.

Our idea of the "perfect on that can be wished on-

easier to

gown Is

WILSONJESSftGE Brief Document Telis Purpose of . Extra Session.

Hasty marriages are proverbially likely to lead to long repentance.

MUST ALTER TARIFF DUTIES

Many men take their work more seriously than others do their loafing.

LIpton cannot lift the cup, but all true sports lift their hats to Lipton.

Lawmakers Asked to Square the Schedules With the Actual Facts of Industrial and Commercial Life.

To some not accustomed to the ex

citements and responsibilities of greater freedom our methods may in some respects and at some points seem heroic, hut remedies may he heroic and yet he remedies. It is our business to make sure that they are genuine remedies. Our object is clear. If our motive is above just challenge and only an occasional error of judgment in chargeable against us, wt shall he fortunate. We are called upon to render the country a great service in more matters than one. Our responsibility I should be met and our methods should

be thorough, as thorough as moderate

and well considered, based upon the

factu as they are, and not worked out

' wo wptp becinners. We are to

LUG COST IS HIT

MEW DEMOCRATIC TARIFF BILL

PLACES RAW WOOL ON FREE LIST.

HAPPENINGS

IN

INDIANA

REVENUE IS CUT $80,000,000

Sugar Duty Is Heavily Reduced All

Incomes from $4,000 Up Taxed Underwood Says Revenue Will Aid Legitimate Competition. Washington, D. C, April 8. Carry-

ns: sweeping reaucuons m cvcij

In a statement accompanying the bill Chairman Underwood said the measure would, in the opinion of its makers, revise the tariff "to a basis of legitimate competition, such as will afford a wholesome influence on our commerce, bring relief to the people in the matter of the high cost of living, and at the same time work no detriment to properly conducted manufacturing industries." 4,In its tariff revision work the com-

" .!! Z Z nimre him are A.. L. Evan, of this

!ir;r,r; the city. Mrs. Benjamin Both or Indianas

f. IT" ,. .m tn olis and Mrs. L. L. Lybrand ot Terrw

Noblesville. Walter N. Evans,.

eighty-air years old, died at ms

home in this city, following an illness

of a week. Among the children who-

Washington. April 8. President

Get busy. Did you ever nouce vmuu wn B messare. read today to tne

hard work it is to keep on doing noth- 6enate house at the beginning of urge nothing upon you now at the means committee. It wa3 automatic-

deal with the facts of our own day, .hedule of the tariff law exdept to-

with the facts of no other, and to acco an( Bpirlts, schedules of the make laws Which SQUare With those Democratic tariff revision bill was infacts. It Is best, indeed it is neces- trodUced in the house by Chairman

s&ry, to begin with the tariff. I will -rjnderwood of the house ways and

the lowest points commensurate with revenue requirements and making the

luxuries of life bear their proportion

of the tariff responsibilities. Many

items of manufacture controlled by

. n

Haute. He was In the mercantile,, stock and milling business in this city

for forty years and served one termi as clerk of Hamilton county, being the

only Democrat elected in this county1

in?

the extra session, was a brief, point- opening of your session which can ob-

attention.

ed document setting forth in general

California scientist says the sun terms wnat congress is expected to do

is a magnet It certainly does draw ln the matter of tariff revision. The

message was as follows: To the Senat and House of Representatives: I have called the congress together in extraordinary session because a

A Japanese expert has arrived to study the New York police. Possibly for points to avoid.

scure tt.at first object or divert our

energies from that clearly defined

duty. At a later time I may take the

liberty of calling your attention to re

forms which should press close upon

the heels of the tariff changes, if not accompany them, of which the chief

is the reform of our banking and cur

rency laws; but just now I refrai.

dutv was laid upon the party now m

Arirfiner tnH tn iniurv is where a Tjower at the recent elections which it For the present, l put tnese mauere

man asks for a light and then blows ougnt to perform promptly, in order on one side and think only of this one

the cigar smoke in your face.

that the burden carried by the people

under existing law may be lightened

Now a scientist has risen up to say RS soon as possible and in oroer, also, that cheese causes appendicitis. But that the business interests of the

some cheese can do worse than that country may not be kept too .long In

suspense as to what the fiscal changes

Insects have one advantage in that are to be to which 'they will be re-

many of them mature thirty minutes quired to adjust themselves. It is clear after birth. Some men never mature. t0 the whole country that the tariff

duties must be altered. They must

IMiannroval of the design of the De changed to meet the radical altera-

new nickel is becoming general. Why tion ln the conditions of our ecnomic

go much fuss over a lowly halt dime.' Hfe which the country has witnessed

within the last generation.

The clergyman who said: "Let your While the whole face and method of

enemies kiss you," evidently has nev- our industrial and commercial me er felt the smarting effect of a brick were being changed beyond recogniWOund. tion the tariff schedules have re

mained what they Were before tn

ally referred to the committee, ny which it will be reported to the house within several days. Several articles of food and clothing classed as necessaries of life are placed on the free list or greatly reduced in duties. Accompanying the bill is an income tax on 'all incomes of $4,000 a year or over.

The bill will take effect the day after' the president signs it. The main features of the bill are: Sugar would be free of duty in 1916, the bill proposing an immediate 25 per cent reduction and the removal of the remaining duty in 1916. Raw wool would be made free at once, with a corresponding heavy reduction in the tariff on all woolen goods. Placed on the Free List. ' Other articles are put on the free list as follows: Meats, flour, bread, boots and shoes, lumber, coal, harness, saddlery, ironore, milk and cream, potatoes, salt, swine, corn, cornmeal, cotton bagging, agricultural implements, leather, wood pulp, bibles.

A woman frequently changes her prmting paper not worth more than face and always her gown, while to 2 centg a pouna, typewriters, sewchange her jewels is an event calling . machines, typesetting machines,

monopolies have been placed on the since the war until four years ago. Hej

- ... ,, I v as a. uroiuer ujl iuajui uuo,

tree nai.. "Where the tariff rates balance the

tffaroTiPa in onflt. of production at

home and abroad, including an allow

ance for the difference in freight rates, the tariff must be competitive, and from that point downward to the lowest tariff that can be levied will

ort Hrm o tn hf r.nmnetitive to a great-

er or less extent. Where competition husband, employed at the American c r,nt intPrfered with bv levying the Bridge company's works at Gary, does

tax- above the highest competitive not come to see her. Palmer is m, point the profits of the manufacturer Jail at Crown Point under heavy guard, mtPPtPri on charge of attacking his six-year-

was auditor of state in the seventies,)

and former Representative in Con

gress J. L. Evans.

Hammond. Mrs. Albert Palmer is dying at St. Margaret's hospital. Doctors say life Is being shorts ened because she wonders why hert

thing of the changes in our fiscal system which may best serve to open

once more the free channels of pros

perity to a great people whom -we

Iii RPrvfl to the utmost and

throughout both rank and file. WOODROW WILSON. The White House", April 8, 1913.

old daughter. News has been kept from mother Citizens of Hammond are so enraged at Palmer that authorities are afraidj to take him from jail to hospital. Richmond. Everett Taylor, a taxieab driver, was assaulted and;

very painfully injured by two uniden-

W0MEN KNOWN BY JEWELS - i

Each Article of Adornment la Observed and Carefully Catalogued by Society.

Now we know why the "turkey trot" cnange began, or have moved in the' for chronicle, rucnara arry writes m cagh registers, steel raus, lence wu, inow Tre kuuw vYujr u mu I 6 b. . . Uv,Q "Mow Vnrk Times. ?ia Vinnn nnd hand iron.

been discarded by society. direction tney were given wucu - " . uuu l, , , . , uccli . J v,, . . . :.3..!ni "Tc timf Mrn So-and-So in box T minr crHa tannine materials,

i n Vntinh Tnr pnrsHKH uuu i iwrvn nifnitmorannp n fiiii iiuuqli mi i - - iiaii. nuiuiiui . wwv,

ID LUU lUUli iwi w i

has

dance

queta to stand the shock.

dPvelonment was v at it is today. I heard one woman ask another the acetic and suiphuric acids, borax, mm-

No one but dentists will worry over actuai facts. The sooner that is done the statement made by a University tne B00ner we shall escape from sufof Chicago professor that the human ,fering from the facts and the sooner race will some day be toothless. our men 0f business will he free to

thrive hv the law of nature (the na-

Klne George is to wear a crown. If ture of free business) instead of by

it has an open top doubtless its use the Jaw of jegiSiation and artificial ar-

will tend to prevent baldness, dul rallgement

there is litle excuse for u omer-wise.

Our task is to square them with the other night. her products, including broom hanaies

"Let me see," repuea ner com- ciapboards, hubs for wneeis, puata, panion, seizing the glasses. "No. Mri. iatns pickets, staves, shingles. So-and-So has sapphires surrounding These principal items are taken a pearl in her pendant. That ha from tne free nst and taxed: Rough emeralds. It is Mrs. If-and-But" and unCut diamonds and precious "Who is that next to her?" stones, furs, coal tar products, 10 per

With the cross of diamonds and cent.; ; volatile oils, 20 per cent.; spices,

Strikes Blow at Monopoly.

"On the other hand, when the du

ties levied at the custom house are

high enough to allow the American

manufacturer to make a profit before his competitor can entef the field, we

have invaded the domain of the pro

tection of profits. In the committee's

judgment the protection of any profit Ufied me supposed to be reiatives oC must of necessity have a tendency to Qne Qf three ymmg women Tayior had!

destroy competition ana create monuy . ruara to takP. hom from the

oly, whether the profit protected is gkati dnk Taylor sayg tvo of hi8j

reasonaDie or unreasonaDie. passengers were Miss Etta Davis andj

"Which course is tne wiser one ior Miss Nora Thompson. The other he' our government to take? The one does not mow. when he stopped thethat demands the protection of profits, car in front of tne gjr8' homes in the

the continuctd policy of hothouse East end two men jumped into the-'

growth for our industries tne stagnation of development that follows

where competition ceases or, on the other hand, the gradual reduction of our tariff to a basis where the American manufacturer must meet honest competition; where he must develop

his business along the best and most ... . . anj

. . 1 - '

economic lines; where, wnen ne ngnxs order quarantining the Bhanty towa-

of Taylorville. To the public he says: "Now is the opportunity people ot Terre Haute claim they have been wanting, to condemn the place and convert it into a park, thereby getting rid of a menace and nuisance."

car, one holding him while the other beat him with brass knuckles. Taylor had to be assisted back to the taxicab station. Terre Haute. Dr. F. W. Shaley,

nffpr lonsr-distance conferences witnj

at home to control his market, he is

forging the way in the economic development of his business to extend his trade in the market of the world. The future growth of our reat industries lies beyond the seas."

The burglar who entered a Los Angeles home and forgot the purpose of his visit long enough to aid in com

forting a sick baby, is not beyond re-"

demption. r '

Business Not Normal. We have seen tariff legislation wander very far afield in our dayvery far indeed from the field in which our prosperity might have had a normal growth and stimulation. No one who looks the facts squarely in the face or knows anything that lies heneath the surface of action can fail to perceive the principles upon which ror.onf tnriff legislation has been

from 1 cent to 2 cents per pound.

Chairman's Comparative Tabje. Chairman Underwood of the ways and means committee, in his state-

brooch, but it doesn't look like her ment accompanying the new bill, gave

daughter, only she jnever will let any a comparative table to show reaucone wear her opals; 'lucky for her, tions m tariff duties made upon neces-

the jade stomacher?" , , "No. With the oval brooch iet with opals." 4,Oh! That is Mrs. Or-to-Be's

The Minnesota legislator, who Is after a law to make it a felony for a

housewife to "steal" tne wrvau u. d b d

another, must have had a gooa cqo modesfc notion of protecting" the

in his family at some time.

The professional burglar has quit wearing gloves to avoid leaving finger prints. He has discovered that a much easier method is to wash off the safe after he is through with it. The Indian chiefs of the west found nothing else in New York so interesting ae the buffalo at the Bronx. Can it be that buffalo are scarcer than skyscrapers in Buffalo Bill's country?

industries of the country and moved boldly forward to the Idea that they

wrero entitled to the direct patronage of the government. For a long time a time so long that the men now active In public policy hardly remember the conditions that preceded it we have sought in our tariff schedules to give each group of manufacturers or producers what they themselves thought that they needed in order to mmnfnin a nracticallv exclusive

unlucky for another' is her idea. What

has she done to her face?" These women, their dependents and their intimates hold their jewels in the affectionate regard that another group of women might hold their chil-

dren. The entrance to tne circie ol each new piece of jewelry is noted and commented on carefully. It undergoes jealous observation at first. Then, if deserving it, it achieves a place and is duly catalogued. "Look! There is that little Miss Pretty. It's her first night. She's barely eighteen, and see that string of diamonds. I do think that is rushing it a bit, don't you? They might wait till the second year, at least, for a necklace like that. Forever, give me your glasses; the? are better than

mrfriroh n neninst. the rest of the

VV C3 - 4 world. Consciously or unconsciously, j mine 1ooc?öa flm

ith a satisfied smile. "At

she observes, "they are

matched and just the right

. i 0 ihn MhnnV

a memoer ui mo iuuj ,M, n? nriv pitps

hy c been seized with the brilliant idea e uae num. ui- - - i-- , has been seizeu d exemptions from competition be- glasses w of taxing city cats. It Is but a meas .t , w QOo v Pvpn any rate,

ure of retribution; for lo, these many ninu wmiru j ; nerfectlv ure oi rei.nuui.iuii, t Hoof fnrm nf rnmhinahon to pentcuy

r?"'". "uL 7,;, ; the crudest, forms of combination

Cliy UiU3 uavu uCO t , t oth.

KJl facVimsU UIUUUI'V,; , ing is normal, nothing is obliged to stand the tests of efficiency and economy, in our world of big business, but everything thrives by concerted ar

rangement. Only new principles of

moons

pie. The butcher classifies his customers this way: Those who never buy beef

steak are poor, those who buy beer-

steak twice a week are well to do. rangeraent. umy new yi -Bieau . ootinn will snvfl us from a final hard

nH those wno nave it oiusuei uio .v

crystallization of monopoly and a riCn. i fT, in fliionrrQ that

complete iuss uv. iuvv-awv-w

f th wrifowi in the Pittsburgh quicken enterprise aim

Chronicle-Telegraph compares George pendent energy alive. WaÄon to Honus Wagner; show- It is plain what those principles SrSfpitteburgh people still have must be. We must abolish everything m?i. 5A; .ct nrpdnt that hears even the semblance of pnv-

a ülgU llipiu ii -.-w. ! , e f Hfininl nrl-

liege OT UI aiiv umu ui m uuxjju

. , t j i.t.i. Vi i vontntro n n n nr.. Ulli uu&iucqo uit.

It lias oeen aeienuiucu Lua.u . - .. , lifetime of a United States and producers under the stimulation

$1 silver certificate is a trifle more

Jewels the center of at-

size."

So it goes.

ten tion;

tinctive elements of personality. From the tiny necklace, which is the joy of the newest debutante, to the sturdy stomacher which is the consolation of the oldest dowager, jewels proclaim, define, limit, differentiate, vitalize and devitalize society.

i ij -u Vi si nrcaont

sanes. m eacn item uum tue y-" tariff and the proposed tariff had been reduced to an ad valorem basis. The new rates are estimated to reduce the customs revenue approximately $80,000,000 a year. This is expected to be made up by the income tax. Indorsed by President Wilson, the' measure represents the efforts of the president and house tariff makers to

carry into effect Democratic pledges of downward revision and of concessions to the American consumer. Protection to the farmer would be cut throughout by more than 50 per

cent, in an effort to reduce the cost of food. Protection to the steel and implement manufacturer would in turn be cut by fully as wiq a margin. Heaviest reductions fall upon foodstuffs, agricultural products, woolen and cotton clothing. Free Wool and Free Sugar. The free wool proposal backed by President Wilson and accepted by the

BIG TARIFF REDUCTIONS PROPOSED BY DEMOCRATS

Comparative Table Showing Some of the More Important Changes on Ad Valorem Basis. Pres- Proent posed Law. Law.

Per ct. Per ct.

. x. . A r.

than a year, we can cue numeiuua cases where it hasn't lasted a minute.

of a constant necessity to be efficient,

economical, and enterprising, masters

of competitive supremacy, better workers and merchants than any In . .... i ji-.i.:

The hoboes union proposes to petl- the world. Asioe irom tne uuueb mm

r,nn th resident for more freedom, upon articles wnicn we oo nui, aim

v.w I . -1 Ä 1 C

More freedom in what? Chicken probably cannot, produce, meieiui,

hmÄe or freight trains, or simply and the duties laid upon luxuries ana

emancipation from compulsory baths? merely for the sake ot tne reeuu

they vleld, the oojecc ot tne ianu uu-

The widow of a New York policy ties henceforth laid must be effective

vintr Kicned a check for $30,000 tor competition, tne wnetuug ui

c I - ...,, .AC

a spiritualistic medium at the orders can wits by contest witn tne ns u-

of her -husband s ghost Mighty poor the rest of the worm.

policy to have the ghost walk in Development, Not Revolution.

that fashion. it would be unwise to move toward

this end headlong, with reckless

Some times It does not pay to emu- aste or with strokes that cut at the

late great men of the pasU A vir- verv roots of what has grown up

ginia youth, while trying a Benjamin amoneSt us bv long process and at

Franklin experiment in flying a kite our own invitation. It does not alter

through an electrical storm, was In- tn:nK to upset it and break it and

ftnntU' Ainp.troeuted. i- f n nhnnop to chance, it

destrovs it. We must make changes

cv.stitutlns tinware for silverware in our fiscal laws, in our ut

In the senate restaurant to beat the whose object Is development, a more

souvenir hunters is an expressive commentary on the disposition toward

lnrrpnv that is cloaked under the

name of "souvenir lifting."

house committee, is expected to prp-

, , , , a i j: t-n ooi-oro fitrht within thP. DeiTlQ-

jeweis wnicn manv xue uio vuivc oov.vw 0"w

cratic ranks of botn nouses, it uau not become clear whether the Democratic opponents of free wool and free sugar in the senate would be able to force a compromise on one or both

these provisions. The decision to make a gradual reduction in the sugar tariff was reached by the president and the house committee after Louisiana cane growers declined a compromise that would have established a one-cent per pound tariff for three years, with free sugar in 1916. Direct Tax on Incomes. The income tax which will transfer indirect taxes levied through the tar

iff into a direct tax upon the Incomes of individual citizens and corporations

In-will

Sunshine, Plants and Giris. Sunlight is so important to life that it is little wonder that sun worshipers

prevailed in primitive days. Plant a

potato in your cellar, and if there is a little light the potato will sprout and

try to grow. Surround it with the best fertilizer, water it, and do the best you

can for it except that you keep it in the dark, and it cannot digest and grow.

Cotton cloth 42.74 Cotton clothing 50.00 Stockings, hose and half-hose, selvaged. .75.38 Men's and boys' cotton work gloves 89.17 Knit shirts, drawers, etc., and underwear. 6C.27 Collars and cuffs 49.10 Blankets 72.69 Flannels 33.29 Clothing, ready made. 79.56 Women's and children's dress goods. 99.70 Cream of tartar 24.45 Medicinal Preparations 59.05 Castor oil 33.19 Wash blue 23.59 Saltpeter 9-27 Comman soap 20.00 Saleratus or bicarbonr -4 te A

ate of soda i.ot Sal soda, washing soda 20.93 Borax, refined 21.23 Lime 9.17 Crina and crockery not decorated 55.00 Grindstones 9.21 Bicycles 45.00 Pocket knivea 77.68

. . i j i : x. i t mVi

see now sienaer ana pa .l xu- eXempts all sums below $4,000. process of digestion, the great fanct ion eP

r m r- Infi Ar AOTnnr CTfl 1 It Tl'l I n I 1 1 I L I

pay 1 per cent, tax up to -o.ouu, r n rrr x m tr( . V

of assimilation, cannot go on without

sunshine. Nature's laws are the same in the animal world. It is just as true

that the only girls with red cheeks and sweet breaths, the only girls who become fully ripe and sweet, are those

who baptize themselves fully in glori

ous sunshine. The many pale girls who

.are to be seen with a bloodless, half-

baked sort of face, whose walk, whose voice and whose whole expression is devoid of spirit, are, not half ripe.

An Indiana young woman got ?25,-

000 for a broken heart. Broken

hearts are painful things; but, com-

mercialy speaking, if this, rate is to be

taken as their market value, they are

very good things to have in one's pos-

stiMion

free and wholesome development, not

t nr ponfusion. We

must build up trade, especially for

eign trade. We need the outlet and

the enlarged field of energy more

than we ever did before. We must

build up industry as well and must

adopt freedom in the place of arti

ficial stimulation only so far as u amu

huitd not null down. In dealing with

the tariff the method by which this may be done will be a matter of judg

ment, exerciHed item by item.

The Queen and Gambling. Though the queen is to accompany

the king to the grand national next

month, she retainns her dislike for gambling. But some years ago when

the royal party was traveling down by rail for the derby, the late King Ed

ward proposed a half crown sweepstake on the race, and Princess Mary

drew a horse that had a fine chance.

Prince Arthur of Connaught having drawn his usual blank, suggested he

should buy it from her present maj

esty for five shillings. She declined and held to her chance, which romped home an easy winner. "For any one who does not like gambling," remarks H. R. H., when retailing this yarn, "r never saw any one collect her winning more quickly." London Opinion

Qf fmm ssn.non to sau.uuu: o

per cent, from $50,000 to $100,000, and 4 per cent, above that figure. The present corporation tax, levying 1 per cent, on corporation incomes above $5.000, would be retained as part of the income tax. To encourage trade with foreign countries, the bill would reverse the maximum and minimum provision of thA nreyent tariff law. The new tar

iff rates would be the maximum tariff, and the president would be given authority to negotiate reciprocity treaties and make concessions to countries that grant favors to American exports.

London Fly Campaign. Even' sign of a determination on the part of the local government board to deal wit'i the house fly is to be heartily welcomed Experiment lately has been directed to the fungus which Is said to possess destructive properties. The difficulty was in obtaining enough of it, but Edward Hesse has succeeded in cultivating it artificially. When it is spread about where flies sre they appear to eat the spores, which germinate in their bodies and Annll- 'hem. It would b wel-

Razor 72.36 j Scissors and- shears. .53.77 Knives and forks 41.93 Furniture 35.00 Cattle 27.07 Macaroni, etc 34.25 Rice, cleaned 54.05 Eggs 36.38 Stocks, etc., of fruit trees 54.44 Mineral waters 43.56 Spool thread ..22.95 Sewing silk 25.00 Wrapping paper 35.00 Book 25.00 Brooms 40.00 Matches 27-59 Harness and saddlery, other than leather 35.00 India rubber, manufactures of. .. 35.00 Lead pencils 35.00

26.65

30.00

50.00

35.00

25.00

30.00

25.00

30.00

35.00

35.00

17.35 31.11

15.00 15.00 6.87

6.00

8.50

16.25

1.31 6.00 35.00 8.33 25.00

35.00 and 55.00 35.00 and

55.00 I

30.00 27.00 15.00 10.00 23.81 33.33 14.29

Richmond. Alf. Underbill, charged with malicious destruction of property, was released under $500 bond. He will be given a hearing Monday. It is alleged that Underbill maliciously destroyed a section of the Richmond water works main, which cut off the city's water supply nineteen hours. Columbus. On the William Porter farm near Flat Rock the high waters of the recent flood uncovered an Indian burying and camping ground, from which many relics are being tak

en by sightseers and curio hunters; A number of Indian skeletous were unearthed, together with hatchets, pipes, "niggerhead" stones, etc. Local physicians say that the skeletons are those . of members of the Flathead tribe oCIndians. New Albany. The body of an! unidentified man was found in the-, river here. He wras apparently aboub forty-five years old, five feet ten inches tall, and weighed two hundred!

pounds. He was dressed like a laborer, and in his pocket was foundISO, which included a new twenty-dol-, lar bill of the bank of Madison. Herre Haute. Dr. John Owens.j of the state board of health, who; is here investigating health conditions, says the residents of Taylorville, the shanty town opposite the city,, should not be permitted to re-occupy1

their shacks. He says there is disease in the filthy and unsanitary conditions of the bottoms, where the villäge is situated. Dr. F. W. Shaley.! county health commissioner, says the town must be placed in a sanitary condition before the people return to iL;

27.58 30.00 15.00 15.00 25.00

15.00 15.00 14.00 20.00 10.00 25.00

come news indeed if a method apparently so simple were to prove effective; but we cannot help doubting whether any living creature would go on eating a substance which had nroved fatal to so many of its rela

tives. Our experience of animals is that, even if they are induced once or twice to eat an injurious food, they very soon discover it to be noxious. London Globe.

We know who the crank li: other fellow, of courae.

Terre Haute. C. M. Fortune,, judge of the circuit court, decided against Grant B. Lemmons, who went into court with an appeal fromi the decision of the state board of den-i tal examiners, which refused him a 11cense because he did not take an examination. He contended that hel should have a license because he hadj practiced for ten years. The courti held that the board did not usurp authority under the new dental law. Franklin. The floods in Indiana, will mean a loss of at least $40,-

000 to the endowment campaign oU Franklin college, is the opinion of Dr. M. W. Haynes, who is head of themovement. Doctor Haynes, believing the people in the state will be unable to respond to the college need, will! go to New York and lay the situation! before wealthy men, who stood ready? to help in the final endowment move-, ment, and ask for support. Elwood. At a meeting of the stockholders of the Bhvood Fair association, it was decided to call, upon the members of the association, to make up the $3.000 necessary to repair damage done to the fair grounds.

and buildings during the flood lasc week. The stockholders are given until April 15 to pay the assessments, and unless these are received by that time the association will disband and the grounds and buildings will be disposed of. The fair has been conducted at a loss her for the last fiv vsar