Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 55, Number 46, Jasper, Dubois County, 5 September 1913 — Page 8
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The only Baking Powder made with Royal Crape Cream of Tartar made from grapes
Insures healthful and delicious food for every
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Safeguards your food against
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It
MWGKLI MMfaU
LAMPERT & BOCKELMAN
General Merchandise.
Shoes
I
and (Jlothina1, ' Dr
Groods, Notions, Staple and Fancy Groceries.
Country Produce "Wanted G-ive us a
Both Phoney Free Delivery West Sixth Street.
Lj 3.11.
I
JASPER,
IND.
Ii
WW
"23 .J .i- I r
Got the Fl
orist
i i .
MRS. PRESCOTT had just heard of the illness of a dear friend. She was about to leave town that morniiag for an extended trip. There was no time to call. Turning, to the telephone, she gof the florist and ordered a choice selection of roses sent with her card to the address of the invalid. Without the telephone she would hayefdeen unable to do this little act of kindness.
CUMBERLAND TELEPHONE L & TELEGRAPH COMPANY
INCORPORATED
Prize Offers from. Leading Manufacturers Boole on patents. "Htnts to inventors." -"Inventions needed:'" "WhjMSome inventorsJaiL" Send rough sketch or mode! Jor search -of Patent' QfficeTrecords. OurMr, Greeley was formerly. Acting'Commissioner grPatents, and as such had JulLchargejoi IhcU. S. Patent Office. -
GKEELEY &M?INTIRE
RftTONTATTORNBYS Washington,.!). C.
Miss Anna Woodward, Soprano at State Fair
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INDIANA HORSE SHOW Brilliant Spectacles a Feature of the State Fain,:
The night horse show of the
Indiana state fair will bo ablazo with
picturesque events which will give them increased popularity among the admirers of blue blooded harnoss and saddle animals. The entry lists show that a large number of the more important stables of the country will be represented many of which have not in other years participated in the Indiana show, and, since the program is to be ffiven in one of the largest and most attractive arenas, aglow with light and accompanied by the music of the John C. Wober band, of
Cincinnati, there is every promise that the horse show five evenings of the fair, opening September 8th, will abound in greater richness than in any year since these features were started some years ago.' The horse show has steadily been increasing in interest for both exhibitors and spectators until now it holds rank with the foremost exhibitions of this kind in the United States. It attracts horsqs from numerous states of the Middle Westhorses which are prize winners in all of the great shows and they come to the Indiana fair because of the rdditional distinction which a blue ribbon won there gives to them, as well as for the rich money awards that are bestowed. Few if any state fairs offer the financial inducement that is held out by the Indiana fair, the prizes for the coming show amounting to $3,005 for harness horses and $1,325 for saddlers, a total of $5,330. There aro exhibition classes for all kinds of show horses in which t ie public is1 interested, with numerous contests ; for both menand women drivers and
equestrians. In the saddle classes there will be events for three and five gaited animals, high school horses, and combination harness and saddle animals. In the harness events there will be roadsters, runabouts, carriage teams, ladies' turnouts, high steppers, gig horses, tandems, unicorns, four-in-hands and teams of two, four and six, to be shown to trucks. All of the important buildings on
the grounds will be open until 9 p. m.,
so it will be possible to see practically the whole fair at night. Auto parties are increasing in num
bers from over Indiana to r.he night shows, as well as in the day, hundreds of motor cars bringing visitors last year. Autos are admitted to the
fair grounds without charge and free parking space is provided. Adv.
Z 9 I Hoiv He Found t I Sleep. 5oooor0ooAoor0oo By SALL1E MENDEEM. Copyright. 1909, by American Press Association. The way I got out of the burglar line
was this: I had mighty good nerve anil wasn't afraid of any one. I seemed to know what kind of a crib to crack and how to do it without waking anybody
up and getting away between midnight)
and dawn, when the cops are most drowsy. AVhilo I was doing a job I thought of nothing except my work and -was both cool and watchful. I wasn't one of tbose blokes who scare people to death or who aro ready if necessary to add murder to robbery. ,Tho truth is I never liked the-prospeet of facing either charge. As I was saying, while engaged at my work, however dangerous. I was
gor had passed aud I had nothing t dc
uuc cuinic i went downhill verv f:i't
What bothered me most was that
couldn't sloop nights-that is, when comfortably stowed away in bed. I
once took a nap in a gentleman's parlor andwas only wakened by the sun coming up and shining in my eyes. I Just got out in time to save myself. But when lying on a soft mattress, with warm covers and no chance of being disturbed, -sleep wouldn't corao to me. 1 lay awako thinking of the
time when r would hear prison doors
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clang behind mo. The thought was dreadful, I'm afraid I was too fine
grained for the business. Month after 4 month my hours
sleep grew less till I feared insanity.
One night: I woke up at midnight after having slept two hours and know there
would bo no more slumber for me till
the next time I wont to"bed. I was so desperate that I pot up with the Intention of going into some house where I had no right and there snatch an.
other couple of hours sleep. I bad a crib In view, a small house with not
much in it. But I was looking
sleep, not plunder. I went there, took
out a pane of glass, entered and went
upstairs to und a place to settle down.
I stood in a dark hall looking into a
room whore a night lamp was burning.
In the room a woman was In bed with
a child, both asleep. The child was sleeping on the front of the bed, very
near the edge. He was a boy and, think, about five yeans old.
On a narrow lower bed, close beside the other, slept another child, a girl of
about three. She, was sleeping in the
center of her bod on hor side and had
nor chubby fist un against her fat
cheek. It was hot. summer weather
and none of them except the woman
had :any covers whatever.
AVliat Interested me was that the boy's head was hanging over the side
of his bed and so much of hla budy
too, that it looked to me as if lie vras
about to fall. He was restless, and I
knew he would be over very soon.
Somehow I wanted to see Irim fall,
though I kept in the dark so that h?
m
in
feg
ProitmlcsDi5pstiouWi-i ness and Resironlatasneiihtr 5 Opiuiu.Mori)hinc nor Mineral '
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iE Sutton HOTEL WEST BADEN, IND.
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FARMERS AT THE STATE FAIR Purdue University Experts Will Be In
structors of Men and Women. Men and women who believe in the
modernized methods of farming,
which are best mastered through
schooling, yet who do not have the
time or opportunity to leave home
work to s.cquire this highly important
knowledge, will during - the Indiana state fair, opening September 8th, find that the exposition off ere them comprehensive short cuts to (his very kind of collegiate education. The whole fair will be a great schodl for farm people, where they may glean a great fund of information through observation, by contact with breeders and tillers of the soil, and through the intensely practical schooling which will be offered by Purdue University.
Messrs. Thompson and Gtbble will have charge of the animal husbandry exHibit; Richards and Palmer, horticulture; Beavers, Abbott and. Cromer, soils f.nd crops; Philips and Embleton, poultry; Drs. Craig and Whiting, veterinary; Caldwell, Garver and Mills, dairy; Frier, agricultural extension. In addition to these department men, Profs. Skinner, Christie, Hunziker, Fisher, Wiancko and others will spend the week at the Purdua building. The Purdue exhibit will be by .far the largest it has ever given at the Indiana fair and it will be a great opportunity .for farm. people to get txpert help in solving their farm awflonir-Adv.
wouldn't see mo if he woke up. The
next kick he mcule sent him over. He
fell a couple of feet, but didit wake
up. He landed partly on the little girl, V 1 1 i -l i . ...
duc sue cnciirt wake up either. I ex
pected she would, as she moaned once
or twice in her sleep and turned over.
but finally she slept as peaehill as
before.
It was such a delightful picture to ono suffering from Insomnia that I
kept on watching the children. The
I boy continued his kicking and crowded
the girl, pushing her with every move to the front edge of her bed. It must have been half an hour that he kept
this np, when there was a thump, and
the girl lay on the floor. But she
seemed to be as comfortable there as
on her bed. At any rate, she showed
not the least sign of waking.
Meanwhile I heard the muttering of distant thunder, and while I was looking at them all there came one terrific crash loud enough to wake the dead. The mother turned over, but neither of the children. moved. Then followed one crash after another, and I expect
ed that at least the mother would-
wake up and take a look at her children. But she slept on. She must have been very tired or had lost a lot of sleep or she couldn't have slept through those terrible bolts. Never had I heard such thunder before. The only effect the storm had otf any of-them was to increase the restless
ness of the boy. He rolled and tumbled in his sleep like a ship tossed by the waves, sometimes lying for tl few minutes close against his mother's bed, then rolling over to the outer edge of his own. I was sure he'd in time tumble out of this bed, as he had out of the other, and I was bound to see him do it. Sure enough, before I expected It he gave a lurch and landed plumb on top of his sister. Neither of thorn awoke. I reekon-vomen know in their sleep what's going 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 upland put them in their proper places. Then she went back to bed herself and was asleep in a moment. "Well," I said to myself, "if that's what a clear conscience will furnish I'm going to have a clear conscience." I went back to my room resolved never to enter any man's house again but my own, at leasts not for plunder. I went to bed and slept like a top for twenty-four hours. I kept my resolution, found honorable employment and prospered. But I
didn't forget the family that converted j
me. The mother was a widow, and, having a' hard time to get on, I made her acquaintance and married her. But none of my family know that 1
hd bttii a burglar or how I ctxxw to - iL f
The Typical Home-Like Hotel."
Will V. Troth, Proprietor. , m The Sutton Hotel is 'ocated upon a high eleva- I tian affording splendi d riew of the picturesque f
öjjimgö vauey. juocatea one square irom depot and the famons Weisr. Rarl
Lighted, Steam Heated. Hot and Colr3 Water. t?iVa t
n r - - w I T WW. I A - rrooi. 2 Rates $10.50 Per Week, J with all the conver iences of vour homa. "Mn ht- I
I l er table service. Under new proprietorship. A 1 hotel
at a sensible rate vithin reach of all. Splendid f accommodations for families. Write the manage- 1 ment for any information you want. OPEN THE YEAR ROUND.
HE
OLD
EX j JSESi
"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
r
Those Who Read The JASPER WP.F.TTT.V
COURIER Are the buyers of the highest grade of articles and cannot be reached as effectively through any other medium of advertising. Just give this a little thought and you will be convinced that you cannot spend a part of your appropriation better than to put it into advertising in the Jasper Weekly Courier if you wish to reach the best class of buyers.
THE JASi
WEEKLY COURIER
JASPER. INDIANA.
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