Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 55, Number 45, Jasper, Dubois County, 29 August 1913 — Page 8
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LÄMPERT & BOGKELMiS General Merchandise..
il
Hry and
Shoes and Clothing, Goods, Notions, Staple FancyGroceries.
I Country PrnauElffEmtBd!
Give us a Call. Both Phones. Free Delivery. West Sixth Street.
JASPER, - IND.
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Prize Offers from. Leading Manufacturers Book on patents. '"Hints to inventors." 'Inventions needed." "Why some inventors fail." Send rough sketch or model Jpr search of Patent Office"records. Our Mr. Oreeley'was formerly; Acting Commissioner of Patents, and as such had full chargejof the U. S. Patent Office.
GBEELEY & MANURE
Patent Attorneys
WASHINGTON, D. C.
I
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For a most delighitul and beneficial cistine.you will find ths donous moun??2n n,lv,?.iäo'1n, Carolina' East Tennessee-THE BEAUTIFUL land üä- The SKY Asneyilic and vicinity, sfisciutcly sacisfssJsry. LOW Routed Trip Rr.tes
VIA
SOUTHERN RAILWAY rRISMlER CAIUUEK OF lUiü SUITI H 9
Tickets will be rold Wednesday AUGUST. 13 and will be good 15 du in which to return. Liberal Stop-OVer arrangements. Through Pullman Sleeping Cars, Day Coaches, Dining Cars. For further particulars and copies of descriptive publications call on any agent of the SOUTHERN RAILWAY or write f WM. HUMPHREYS, D. P. A. 206 Mala St., Evansville, Ind.
Asheville, N, C: 1-1-1.$ 9.75 Hot Springs N. C. 9.75 Tate Springs, Tenn. 9.75 Waynesvillo,N. -10.75 Henderson villefK.C. 10.75 Brevard, N. C 10.75 Lake Toxaway,N.C. 11.75 AUG. 13th
ills
3BÄ
We M
for
Over
iT e Clothes
i
mers
Select What You Want From Actual Fabrics
Custo
3 Vt SofMnf"" i, nj" i, ' SgmavTo'fVkn-i Caning ' ijÜÜtwH f II HHi; giigH ff 1
lPViff2S3t?TÄ H rliMT-- - i' - --
Our Clythlnc worn In erery ?tato In the Union, We even do business with ctmmercial and jroftMlonil men in New York City, the fashion center of the country. They ttll us vt rive thtm Perfect Satisfaction at One-Half the Price they Urnwlr DJd at homa. Vou can easily appreciate that with such an enormous vol-
PMiDit pneaa. We aaye the average buyer about ona-third and ruarantee'satTsfaction.
Man's Mide-to-Order and Ready-Made Suits,
a.75 to 930.00; Spring O'Coatö to $22.50
Yh MMl lmr rrfKaa Vi.- - - - t- . . ,.
EI SlSSSÜt. A11 ?bber'. f nts nd ioUrt' pföfli". Doc't hesitate. If you havo MiikMlVw you w aot katv bov omj It Jj to ci pfct flt'frtei ui.
COUPON-
iiontewnery Wird Je Co., Cbtottot v
ricaao ssna m Ssnipia cex xs cöecied. (Not mere than 2 J
Mec'i lomair r
VT 1 Men lomair wri.
l 14.75 to
anrlng and 8uuur,
Irlci
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lrdr itttta.
J.ÜS. irdcr n 4
Oatii 8uit. Yärj licht treihts. rifinnels, oto.) 1 2.7 and up per suit. "XT A lladö-to -Order and - V Ready-ifade Spring OvsreoaU ad HsinooaU. mTonths' and Boys' Sprinc (Jlothujy. S to IS jrs oi tig, "
Send for Free
Sample Book Miötoo H Ma4 ui mi In Thla loupah
lk Sara, Ü
UIIMMLM H la Mi
nytiop, tnaM ft tt UoatfOTTMrr tht flt.it Book 1 CSatkliiif an :jrcm mvr acv. k4 2 Do it rijfht now. before you fortfet
Montgomery Ward y Co. fco Michigan Avanuo, Madison and Vahlnton Streets
Chicago
W INDUSTRY
WEALTH
State Can Brow Own Sugar,
'Adding $10,000,880 . Yearly to lämli Weal. ' '
"The average AmiMl."nrs -ci.-w.u. -
eighty-two pounds of suir pk- Jj
and only ten pounds of thru irr.t :i .
now protluriiil in this c iuin!vv '!
farmers of the eounirv h :nKl k?
that, money nr huiui'-in uUht won.
put it in their own pockets.
The foregoing statenuMJt ;iiuw'hrs
a buileJ in vl;:eJi the I tp;t ;s;eu( of a ricultuiv has jr.si is..u-.l n ieu-iu i... progress of the sr,-M tr j-.iist:.
during tho past i-:tr Ti i ;eiH)ri pro
ceeds to poiü! while IhV n:i
dticiion of sir-rn duiil IjeotK I:
vnnced ve; rapidiy, more Uj:im .Vin. 000 tons of beets having been gr,v,t last season, 2,000,000 a res addjt.uii. should be devoted to this croiHin or
der to produce at home the suaV nov.
purchased from abroad.
This is n sülijoct .f ;:; '!ar in
terest to Indiana f'.n- U;e hm.-: t'w:
this state lies In the tv:rer of ouo o:
the most iniporfant bee,' ;;u; .tr proddl ing sections of the (ouiilrv. Kot o:ii
have repeated tests in sugar bee:
growing demonstrated, that Indium,
soil is adapted to the production of
this valuable crop, but the successful operation during the past season of
the state's first beet sunr factory bas
proved it conclusively. Although the
season was an unfavorable one and most of the farmers growing beets
OFFERS CHE
FOR
Larger Yields of Ail Crops Following Beet Culture Boost Value of Farm Lands.
TIiö Kind ITou Have Always Boufflit, and Tvliicli lias been is iiso f'jr over SO years, has Iborno tlic signature of
and lias been made under Iiis per
sonal supervision since its infancy.
izSiK AllownonnAtoflß?VAxniiin Mcl
All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-go od" are bnu Experiments that trille with and endan-er the health of infants and Children Experience against Experiment,
w
IN AN IN TANA I'.KET FIK1D.
WGro U'.Vfae.ili;!!- ui;!, ih;. i:;nt!:ii o
this new cnp. the le;:'.: 5-m-i! b
the new phmt .-t I . i:.- st.o iJia!
Indiana W. ? : j beet sujy:;r. fc i 1 . : r, -' "..:snt
throughouf a L- luhi.si of the at least. i:tl ? hat u cua.d t. iL
produce n- i.iiJy ah ih. si;-lr i ;aiivd
for home consiiiiifii.o.i, mi :i!to. it nec
ossary. (ould rmw and inaiuifaPtur-'
half of ail the Kiipu- reimired hy the
L'uited Slates.
Some figurcis from the actual opera-
tio.'is of the beet sugar plant at Do-
cat ir dining the past year will give
som$ suggestion of lh possibilities of this Industry for Indiana. Aside from the investment of $1,000,000 or more,
which the plant itself represents, the
factory paid out to the farmers who gre w beets about $550,000. Some $75,000 was paid out in wages to factory and field operatives. The railways of the state received from the transportation of bets. sugar and supplies over $100,000, while considerable sums were distributed for limestone, cotton bagging aud other articles required in the process of manufacture. Thus about three-quarters of a million dollars was distributed through various channels of Indiana industry as a result of the establishment of a single beet sugar factory within the borders of the state. According to the estimates of the sta
tistical bureaus at Washington the people of Indiana consume over 100,000 tons of sugar a year for which they pay $12,500,000 or more. Trevious
to this year all of this money went outside the state, most of it to the great trust refineries of the eastern seaboard. Most of it still goes there. If, however, Indiana produced from her own soil only chough sugar for the use of her home population all this money would go into the various channels of home industry, .and it u'auldmake .ajerjvtflerence of $25,ÖÜO.ucKTTir urs rnrcre i)armice orpine state. That Is only one, and the less im portant, of the beneficial results that Tvould follow the utilization of a com
paratively small portion of Indiana's farm lands for the production of the sugar, which the people of the state are consuming in yearly Increasing quantities. Of still greater value would bo its effect in adding tre'men douslsJo the farm wealth of the state by increasing the yield of other crops grown In rotation with sugar beets. Experience in countries like France and Germany, where sugar beets hXve ben grown for many years on a lrge
nrn1o oli riv flmf- -fr-- i
wm.iv,, uuu it wi-uiu iiuui 1UUU WUJ.VJ1 IS I planted to this crop one year in four
me yieiu oi wneat, oats ana other cereals .grown in the intervening years is increased from 50 to SO per Cent
Records collected from American farm
ers in sections where beet culture has been followed for a number of years show that the yield of other crops grown in rotation with beets has increased an average of 44 per cent. The yield of wheat on these lands advanced from 2G.9 bushels per acre to 43.1. Corn went up from 41.Ü bushels to 53.1 and oats from 40.9 to 60.G bushels. The effect of the deen blow
ing and thorough cultivation required!
;by sugar beets in boosting -the yields of the other crops grown in successive years is all the more striking, as the 3Tields obtained by these farmers before beginning sugar beet cultivation wTere well above the average Applying this rate of increase to Indiana farms would mean that the agricultural wealth of the state would be increased $25,000,000 a year by the general adoption of sugar beet growing. Not only does the establishment of the sugar beet industry add directly to the wealth of the state from fAie money it brings in or keeps at home
and indirectly through the increase of other farm crops grown in rotation
with beets, but it also adds greatly to
the market value of farm lands. In Michigan, where the sugar beet in
dustry has reached such proportions that the state produces all its own sugar and ships a considerable amount
to other markets, its effect upon farm
values and business prosperity in the sections surrounding the factories is
clearly marked. Many of the farms in
these districts were heavily mortgaged ten years ago. The mortgages have
been paid off so rapidly that today al
most the only farms In the sugar coun
try that are not debt free are those
that have been bought in the past few
years by newcomers who want to share
in the prosperity that accompanies this
crop. Bank deposits have gone un.
The sellers of agricultural implements,
dry goods men and dealers hi all other
lines tell of improved sales and report
that collections of bills are made with
much greater promptness wherever the
sugar industry has been introduced. 0. A. Dugan, a banker of -Decatur, who has watched the development of the industry there, keeping' careful rec
ord of business transactions in the city, has estimated that the value of land in
the city and on the surrounding farms for a distance of several miles has risen nearly 25 per cent since the factory's establishment. This is not surprising in view of the fact that in every case where the beet sugar industry has been established in any part of the country a gain of from 30 to 100 per cent has taken place in land values within three or four years. When the beet sugar factory at Paulding, O., not far from Decatur, was started, two
years ago the same upward tendency
of land prices was observed, and it has been found that the increase since that time has totaled more than $5,000,000 in Paulding county alone. The adjoining state of Michigan, whose soil produces beets in no way superior to those of Indiana, now has seventeen beet sugar factories. Indiana could support no less than 166 if all the available land were used for the crop only one year in four. While this figure represents a distant possibility, there is no reason why the state should not have from fifteen to twenty-five such establishments. Taking the lowest figure, fifteen factories would mean that when they were well under way the state would have a yearly income of $15,000,000 a year for sugar alone. Of this huge sum $S,500,000 woujd. go directly .to the. farmers for fcheir'De'esr$injCöövoTricr go to the 4,000 or 5,000 workmen who woiild be given employment and the greater part of the remainder would stay within the
state. The increase in land values
would be almost too great to estimatecertainly not less than $40,000,000. From the results obtained in the nro-
duction of beet sugar in Adams county and surrounding sections and from tests in growing beets in other parts of the state, which show that Indiana can produce as high a grade of sugar beets as any state in the country, there Is no doubt that if the policy of growing within the United States the sugar to feed the American people continues to receive the encouragement of the federal, government as it has in the past fifteen years, Indiana will take a leading part in the sugar beet industry and through it will add millions of dollars to her animal wealth. That the upbuilding of this industry is important to the consumers as well as to the producers of the state was shown plainly enough in 1911 when the price of sugar, which "had gone sky-rocketing: up to 10 cents a pound and was being held at $G.7o to. $7.5 per hundred pounds wholesale by the trust and other refintrs, came tumbling down to its normal tevel as soou as the yield of the sugar tit fields came upon the. market
CASTOR! A
Castoria is a harmless substitute for Castor Ok tre goric, Strops and Sootliing Syrups, f It is Plcasuiiv Xt contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance, its age is itd guarantee. It destroys Worms and allays Peverishuess. It cures Diarrhoea and "Wind. Colic. It relieves Teething" Troubles, cures Constipation and Flatulency. It assimilates tlie Food, regulates the . Stomach and Bowels, giving- healthy anil natural sleepy Tlie Children's Panacea The Mother's Friend. eiüIiE CASTORIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
m Kind You E
m Always Bought
n Usg m ver 30 Years.
THS CENTAUR COMPANV, 77 MURRAY STREET, NEW YORK CITY.
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Typical I IT 1
The Sutton HOTEL .WEST BADEN, IND.
de-lie Hotel."
Will V. Troth Proprietor, The Sutton Hotel is 'ocated upon a high elevatian affording splendid dew of the picturesque springs valley. Located one square from depot and the famous West Baden Springs. Electric Lighted, Steam Heated, Hot and Cold Water. Fire rroor. ' Rates $10.50 Per Week, with all the conver iences of your home, No better table service. Under new proprietorship. A hotel with service :urpassed by none in the vallev at a sensible rate mithin reach of all. Splendid accommodations for families. Write the management for any information you want. OPEN THE YEAR ROTJUD.
UL
"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. Arch C. Doane Jasper - Indiana
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Those Who Read Thp. JASPFR wf.tcttt.v
nATTT " v I r JLIJi.JLJL.JLJ JL
y . Arc tfle buyers of the highest grade : of articles and cannot be-reached as effectively through any ether medium of advertising. Just give this a little thought and you will be ' t convinced that you cannot spend a part of your t appropriation better than to put it into adver-
using m tue j asper weekly Courier if you wish to reach the best class of buyers.
HE JASPER WEEKLY COURIER 1 JASPBf?. INDIANA. r
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