Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 56, Number 15, Jasper, Dubois County, 30 January 1914 — Page 2
WEEKLY COURIER BEN ED. DOANE, Publisher. JASPER INDIANA
A fallow who hard time. Is s jft generally has The larky guesser often gets credit for having good judgment. The en rest way to crying is to tell her nose red stop a girl from it will make her The candidate who garbs himself to white had better not go to throwlng mud. Of that ?.,?.?? 73 449 In circulation In these TTnkd States how much have you? A rolling stone may gather moss, but think of the fun it has the wayside. no by A single bowl of bouillon cost hotel man $100. It was spilled on costly gown. a a When a man is in debt to all of his old frionds it is time for him to be making new ones. A Philadelphia Ik 1 a nie ko in it. Whi money in poultry? laid an egg with said there is no Prosports of a spoils revival are calculated to drive many a hopeful sinner to the mourners' bench. As a tourist attraction, the sad sweet, inscrutable smile of Mona Lisa should be all the better for the vacation. Perhaps some don't wear diamonds with winter overcoats because they can't afford to have both out at the same time Tf the Eiffel tower sets the time for the world and Paris sets the pace. Frenchmen may well feel proud of themselres. A dictator who cannot dictate In a way that gets obeyed will do wisely to engage a ticket to Paris and uae It frequently. Servant girls who Insist on being called "domestic experts'" will doubtless expect an honorarium hereafter In place of wages. D'ye mind the good old days when mother sent you to the neighbors to borry a dozen eggs because the hens J weren't laying yet? Their refusal to be satisfied with a plug hat in exchange for a cut In salary shows, how far the gentle Filipinos have been civilized. After the lapse of twelve years, a Philadelphia woman seeks $100.000 for breach of promise. How the interest on an untouched investment does pile up! A German blacksmith Is taking a leading role In grand opera over there. This Is not the first time there have been blacksmiths in grand opera. A British ship recently arrived at New York with a cargo of wine. She is called the Hilarius, and yet some critics want to know what there is in a name. Tr. Maurice that he has a "love poir,on;" boon known to instances. de Fleury announcesovereign remedy for well, marriage h. ! effect a cure in some A man's name Is not changed by marriage, but Miss Anastanzisca Moneozcancainia is now receiving congratulations on having become Mrs. Frank Tatrol. Out of respect to his actual usefulness in the world, the fact that the lobster has been colonized in the Pacific will be passed up without ribald comment. The skeleton of a seven foot man has been found on the Little Suamlco. One shudders to think what may be found if the searchers ever go digging on the Big Suamico. Announcement Is made by the nw mayor of Madrid that he will turn his entire salary over to be used for the benefit of charu He is going to be a good mayor in one way. anyhow. A doctor has pur tea. ( ofTee. cocoa and chocolate on the list with tobacco and highballs as things we must not use. As long as he lets red and white pop alone he is all right with baseball fans. The sardine question has come into the courts in England, where It la ruled that a Norwegian snrar does not become a sardine by being packed in oil Kvid t tiy not. but It makes an ac ceptable substitute. What a lot of interesting history has bem lost o; consigned to the tender but doubtful mercies of historians because moving pictures fin not invented a few thousand years earlier! Now It Is announced on authority that there never was a Mary and her lamb, the famous poem being strictly Imaginative The passing of these two celebrated sympathetic characters of nursery lore will leave a gap In the young heart which all the nclenMnc resources of the day will find it dJflS cult to fill
LAVA KILLS
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THOUSANDS LOSE JAPANESE CITY LIVES WHEN IS BURIED UNDER ASHES. KAGOSHIMA IS WIPED OUT Neighboring Island Is Also Swept by the Fiery Stream Quake Destroys Island and Tidal Wave Adds to Horror Warships to Scene. Nagasaki, Japan, Jan. 15. EarthnnakpK ami volcanic eruntions which struck Kagoshfma, in southern Japa i, on .Monday, were followed by a tidai waye. according to official advices. it is believed the Kagoshima disaster will prove to be one of the most serious in the history of Japan. The loss of life and property increases as fuller details are received, and indications are that the death list will run into the thousands Ashes to the depth of six inches have fallen in the seaport of Miyazaki, on the east coast of Kyushu. A postal employe who fled from Kagoshima says the big post office building there collapsed during the earthquake and tidal wave and that many residences were ruined, while many people and animals were killed or injured. The navy and army departments are hastening succor and supplies to Kagoshima. Government authorities declare that any official estimate of the extent of the disaster will be impossible for several days. The population of the city of Kagoshima, which is Almost completely buried in volcanic ashes and stones, was 60,000 at the last census. The population of the adjoining island of Sagura. the center of the disturbance, is given as 15,000. On this island hundreds are reported to have perished beneath the streams of molten lava of SakuraJima. Many more were undoubtedly drowned while attempting to escape. The violence of the eruption of Sa-kura-Jima is so great that showers of dust are falling here, although the distance between Nagasaki and the island of Sakura is about 90 miles. A refugee who arrived here on Monday from Kagoshima gave the following account of the disaster: "The eruption started suddenly with oolumnB of thick black smoke and flame from the crater of Sakura-Jima. Hundreds of the inhabitants of the small island in the Gulf of Kagoshima. where Sakura-Jima is situated, rushed to the beach and leaned on Doaru junk I and steamers, which carried them across three miles of water to Kagoshima. ashes, stones and particles of white hot lava falling all the while on the decks. 'The horror was increased by the shaking caused by incessant shocks of earthquake, which rocked the houses all day. More than 3."0 earthquake shocks were recorded before nightfall. "The people fled in disordered droves along the highway leading west and north of the city. ' When I left Kagoshima the volcano resembled an enormous set piece of fireworks glowing from the foot of the mountain to the summit. During the night the glowing lava illuminated the entire district. The- volcano constantly emitted thunderous explosions.' The burning rock and ashes set fire to several villages. At Moji. on the Kiushiu railway. 100 persons were killed. Several villages along the root of the volcano were buried in streams of lava. Victoria, B. C, Jan. 15. The entire western part of the island of Ambrym, New Hebrides, has been devastated by volcanic eruption, according to news brought by the CanadianAustralian liner Makurn. The steamer France succeeded in saving 500 natives. 120 ON SHIP REPORTED LOST British Mail Steamer Strikes Ledges on Briar island in the Bay of Fundy During Storm. Halifax. X. S . Jan. ir. The Royal Mail steamer Cobequid. with 1-0 persons aboard, went aground on Briar island, in the Hay of Fundy. as she was battling against a terrific storm just before dawn on Tuesday. Wireless communication with stranded t-ssd reused abruptly, operator sent a last flickering at thai the engine room of the The mesthe Cobequid was flooded. No trace of her has been found and her fate is iu doubt. The greatest fears for her safety are entertained. It is believed she is lost. The distress cry of the which urged immediate picked up by the wireless 'ap S;-.b!e. across the bay relayed to a dozen vessels, now struggling against an I !obequid, aid. was station at and was They are icy gale reach the and mountainous seas to location given by the Cobequid. Seals Off Rampolla Rooms. Rome, Italy, Jan. 14 The seals were removed from the apartment of the late Cardinal Rampolla in the presence of representatives of all parties interested in his estate. An inventory was taken of everything found. Hundreds Killed by Lava. Tokio, Jan. 14. Sakura-Jima volcano in southern Japan iB in violent eruption Refugees declared that hun dreds had been buried alive or suffocated by the volcano's fumes. A shower of rsbes it falling at Kagoshima
MEXICAN REFUGEES RECEIVE PROTECTION
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First photograph received from Presidio, Tex , where refugees crossed the Rio Grande from Mexico after the battle at Ojinaga had raged for days and made it impossible for women and children to remain where there was neither food nor shelter. Two thousand refugees took shelter in this way, and sentries were placed on guard, with orders to return fire should the Mexicans fire on the refugees, who had been disarmed.
HUERTA MINUS CASH MEXICO'S PRESIDENT ORDERS DEFAULT OF INDEBTEDNESS. Member of Cientifico Party Executed After He Paid $15.000 to Rebels for Liberty. Mexico City, Jan. 14. The Mexican government will default in the pay ment of the semi-annual interest on the bonds of the internal and external : debts due this month, according to a j decision reached at a cabinet council which lasted until midnight. The decision of the council was announced by Querido Moheno, foreign minister, who declared he had been instructed to notify all foreign governments of the default. The principal internal and external loans of Mexico are held for the most part in the United States. Great Britain. France and Germany. Washington, Jan. 14. The failure of the Mexican government to meet its most important financial obligationsthe interest on its external and internal debt emphasized to official Washington that the Huerta government really was in serious financial distress. Chihuahua, Mex., Jan. 14 Inagico Iregoyen, a member of the Cientifico party, was shot after having paid $15,000 to the rebels, for which he was promised his liberty. Naco, Ariz., Jan. 13 Mexican rebels commanded by General Villa fired upon four troops of the Tenth United States cavalry while they were across the border on Sunday. Two of the cavalrymen were wounded and all four were arrested by the rebels and held until their immediate release was demanded by Captain Tompkins, commander of the border patrol here. The incident aroused intense feeling on both sides of the border and more trouble is looked for. Presidio, Tex.. Jan. 13 The Mexican federal army with its nine generals evacuated Ojinaga, Mexico, and tho triumphant rebel forces under Gen. Francisco Villa occupied the village on Saturday. Defeat of the federal army at this point marks the most important rebel victory of the present revolution. It leaves the rebels iu possession prac tically of all the north of Mexico. 1 1NEWS FROM FAR AND NEAR ltIWOWWWHlWIIIl New York. Jan. 12. Twenty-seven persons were hurt, three probably fatally, when the steam boiler ot a riveting machine exploded under a partly completed structure in Long Island city. New York, Jan. 13. The schooner Thomas Winmore was driven ashore near Sandy Hook. There are seven men on board. A gale is blowing and the vessel is likely to go to pieces. Chicago. Jan. 13. Federal Judge Landis was confined to his home on account of a severe cold, and the case of the United States government against the Chicago butter and egg board and the Elgin board cf trade, in which a violation of the anti-trust law is charged, was postponed. San Francisco, Jan. 13. Richard Creery. a millionaire, was sentenced to five days in the county jail by a police judge for violation of the automobile speed laws. New York, Jan. 14. The body of Henry Brandenburg was found in the ashes of his summer hotel on the Palisade in New Jersey, across the Hudson from New York. When the building caught fire Brandenburg helped his wife and three children to escape and perished when he went back to get money and papers from the safe in his office. Convict Fatally Wounded. Pittsburgh. Pa.. Jan. 15. In a pistol fight with detectives William SchmulWT, said to be one of the convicts who recently escaped from the state prison at Indianapolis. Inl4. was shot and probably fatally wounded. Job for Schrank'e Captor. New York. Jan 15 John A. Kingsbury, commissioner of charities, appointed as his private secretary Albert E. Martin, who seized John Schrank when he shot Theodore Uoosevplt in Milwaukee.
STRIKERS
IN CAVALRY CHARGES MINERS FOLLOWING DEPORTING OF MOTHER" JONES. OUSTED FROM TRINIDAD, COLO. Stones and Clubs Hurled When Troopers Escort Aged Woman Out of Town Two Men Perish in Michigan Mine Fire. Trinidad. Colo.. Jan. 14 Two troops of cavalry with drawn sabers charged 1,000 striking miners here on Monday and several men were seriously injured in the battle that followed. The mounted troopers were escorting an automobile in which "Mother" Mary Jones, the strike agitator, was being rushed to jail. As the mob barred the way of the troopers, the aged woman, who has been active in the field wherever trouble brewed in every strike for years, stood up in tho machine and shouted encouragement to "her boys." Stones and clubs were hurled by the strikers and several of the militia troopers were bowled from the saddle. None was seriously hurt. The melee lasted for fully a quarter of an hour before the mob was dispersed. "Mother" Jones was deported from the southern Colorado coal fields January 4 by the militia. She returned to Trinidad from Denver. "Mother" Jones left the train at the outskirts of Trinidad and later appeared at a local hotel. She was arrested by a detail of state troops, hurried out of the hotel, placed in an automobile and whirled through the streets with the cavalry escort galloping at full speed in front and behind the machine. Calumet, Mich., Jan. 14 A fire in the mine of the Cleveland Cliffs Iron roinnanv at Nneaunee cost two men' 1 1 f - - - m thpir lives. One of these was John Beebe, a pumpman. The other was ('apt. John S. Barrett, who headed the first rescue crew in search of Beebe and lost his life in the dense smoKc in drifts at the seventh level, where Beebe was thought to be. Barrett leaves a wife and eight children. Several others of the rescuing parties were overcome by smoke and had to be helped to the surface. The fire is believed to be spreading rapidly among the timber. Pretoria, Transvaal. Jan. 14 Martial law was proclaimed in the Transvaal and Orange Free State as a result of the railroad strike. Soldiers will be placed on all trains and a general resumption of traffic will be attempted. The authorities gave orders to the troops to shoot all persons attempting to dynamite trains. GLYNN TO REARREST THAW New York's Governor and Attorney General Plan to Act If He Leaves State. Albany. N. Y.. Jan. 14 Governor Glynn and Attorney General Carmody. j at a conference cn Monday, planned the immediate arrest of Harry K. Thaw the moment he leaves New Hampshire. Requisition will be made upon any governor to whose state Thaw may flee. "The case is entirely in the hands of the attorney general, and I agree to his proposition," said the governor. David Laird Is Dead. Ottawa. Ont.. Jan. 13. A promi nent Canadian in the personage of Hon. David Laird, first lieutenant governor of the Northwest territories, is dead here. He was widely known as one of the "builders of the 'Dominion." Of four sons left ono is Doctor Laird of Wisconsin university. $150,000 for Mexican Embassy. Washington. Jan. 15. The diplomatic and consular appropriation bill. Lich is to be reported by the house committee on foreign affairs, will include $150.000 for an embassy building to Mexico City. Willard Fcund Not Guilty. Los Angeles, Cal.. Jan. 15 Jess Willard. heavyweight pugilist, was found not guilty of the charge of tak ing part in a prize fight. Willard was arrested on account of the death of John "Bull" Young.
OF UNCLE SAM
ASKS DATA ON ROADS SOLON HITS N. Y. CENTRAL AND PENNSYLVANIA. Congressman Introduces Resolution in House That Demands Stock Investigation. Washington, Jan. 13. An attack upon two of the greatest railroad combines in the country, the New York Central and the Pennsylvania lines, as begun on behalf of the Progressives of the house by the introduction of resolutions by Representative Hinebaugh of Illinois. The fir it resolution call3 upon the interstate commerce commission to report to the house upon the interlocking stock control of the New York Central over the Michigan Central Railroad company and the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern company and the influence of this control upon railroad cost, service and rates. The second resolution directs the attorney general to transmit to the house his opinion as to the legality of the relations existing between the Pennsylvania railroad, the Pennsylvania company and the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad company in view of the supreme court decision in the Northern Securities case. The resolution touching the New York Central system declares that "interlocking stock control confers all the powers which actually come from interlocking directorships. Under the present system there is no honest competition between parallel railroad lines. The only purposes of legislation against interlocking directorates is to bring about honest competition in the interests of the public between these great transportation companies." DEATH IN SOUTHERN CASE Eugene Grace of Georgia, Who Said Wife Shot Him in 1912, Killed by the Wound. Newnan. Ga., Jan. 14 Eugene Grace died here on Monday from the bullet wound he mysteriously received in Atlanta nearly two years ago. He suffered from partial paralysis since the shooting. Grace was wounded at his Atlanta home in March, 1912. Police summoned by telephone found him semi-conscious. At the hospital he ac-
cused his wife, Mrs. Daisy Opie Grace, j thQ diSCOurse to end, momentarily, r -of the shooting. Mrs. Grace was fUsed permission. Tho third time this found at the home of Grace's mother happened the mother said, ' I thmk he here and was arrested. Later in the wju st0p now in a minute." To this same year she was tried on a charge tlle child answered in a clear. hik of attempted murder and found not j voice, "No, mother, he lernt going to
guilty. Soon after the trial Grace left his Atlanta home to mother in Newnan. live with his WILL JAIL LAW OFFENDERS Sub-Committee of House Judiciary Body Completes Draft of AntiTrust Bill. Washington, Jan. 12. The subeommittee of the house judiciary committee on Friday completed a draft of the administration's anti-trust bill which is an amendment to the Sherman law. They acted on the theory that guilt is personal and that trust magnates shall be subjected to imprisonment as well as fined. The bill consists of a number of separate measures. These will be introduced in the house after they have been submitted to PrtfMtllt Wilson for his approval. The most important of the measures provides a penal punishment for corporation officers found guilty of a violation of the anti-trust laws. I Plan $50.000 Moving Picture Theater. Chicago, Jan. 13. A plan to build a $50.000 moving picture theater in the loop district for boys was announced by the Hig Brothers, a philanthropic organization. Fire Loss Decreases in 1913. Nw York. Jan. 15. Fire loss in tee United States was lower in 1913 than the year before, according to the total figures issued here by insurance interests. The total property loss was $203.408.250. New Director for Chase National. New York, Jan. 15. George F. Baker resigned from the board of directors of the Chase National bank of New York on Tuesday and was succeeded by John J. Mitchell of Chicago.
ALBERTA CROP YIELDS
At MacLeod, Alta., weather conditions were excellent all through the seaicn. Ninety per cent, of tee wheat up to Oct. 1st graded No. i. the only No. 2 being fall wheat Th- yieli ran pod from 2e to 4) bushels per acre, with an average of 28. Oats yielded well, and barley about 60 bushels. Inverary is a new district in Alberta. Here wheat graded No 2 and some of it went 50 buhelc io the acre, oats going about 7.". b::h Is Lethbridge correspondent says: "Ii the Monarch district the yield on summer fallow is averaging tbirty-üve bushels, a large percentage No. 1 northern." 4,A11 spring grains are yielding better than expected in the Milk river district, south. A 300 acre field of Marquis wheat gave 41 Vi bushels. "Experimental farm results on graia sown on irrigated land place Red Fife wneat in the banner position, with a yield of 59.40 bushels per acre. Oats yielded 132 bushels to the acre. "John Turner of Lethbridge grew barley that went 60 bushels to the acre. "Red Fife averages in weight frm 60 to CS pounds, and at Rosthern the Marquis wheat will run as high as 04 pounds to the bushel, while a sample of Marquis wheat at Areola u fighed no less than 68 pounds to the bnshel. This variety is grading No. ! hard." Calgary, Alta., Oct. 8. The prob lern of handling Alberta's big graia crop is becoming a serious one. and there is a congestion at many points in southern Alberta. One thousand cars could be used immediately. The C. P. R. prepared for a normal year, while the yield of grain was everywhere abnormal, with an increased acreage of about 23 per cent. Moose Jaw, Sask.. returns show ßome remarkable yields. Bassano, Alta., Sept. 25. '13 Individual record crops grown in Alberta Include 1,300 acre field of spring wheat grown near Bassano which went thirty-five bushels to the acre and weighed sixty-six pounds to the bushel. Noble, Alta., Oct. 1, '13 All records for the largest shipment of grain by one farmer will be broken this year if the estimate of C. S. Noble of Noble, Alberta, proves correct. Mr Noble has notified the Canadian Pacific Railway here that he will have 350,000 bushels of grain, chiefly barley and oats, ready for shipment very shortly. L. Anderson Smith, writing to a friend in the Old Country, located at Killam, Alberta, Says: "Anyone taking up land Wffi find Alberta an ideal province. The soil is a rich black loam, varying from 6 to 12 Inches in depth. The land here In this district is not wholly open prairie. At intervals, sometimes closely, sometimes widely scattered, there are small plots of poplar and willows. These generally grow round some small depression in the land, and the snow drifts here in the winter and melts in the spring filling these sloughs (province "slews") with soft water. Nearly all these sloughs have old buffalo tracks to them, for it was from them that they always got their water. The poplars are very useful for building barns and hen-houses. Wild grasses are plentiful, while tame grasses, such as timothy, brome and western rye grass do remarkably well. Adverti sement. "And Again, My Brethren! ' A certain small girl, wearily listening to a long sermon by a minister who had the odd habit of drawing in his breath with an odd whist lo. whispered to her mother thai she wanted to go home. ' The mother, expecting j stop i thought so now for three times, but he i- ' gone and bio wed himself up again ECZEMA IN WATER BLISTERS '74S Congress St., Chicago. Ill My eczema broke out like little water blbUers. Each one was full of water and would itch until I would scratch i it open, then the water would run out and it would get sore. I first got the ! eczema on the back of the hand and I scratched it so hard I made it all sore. Then I got it on my legs just above the ankle and above the knee. "I jsed what they call and it stopped the itch but it got worse. Then I used . In all I had the trouble for about two years. One day I saw the advertisement of Cuticura Soap and Ointment in the paper. I wrote for sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and I tried them and then bought some more. Cuticura Soup and Ointment left my sores nice and sn ooth. I used them for six weoks. and am now cured; the eczema left no marks." (Signed) F. W. Horrisch, Oct. 19, 1912. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold throughout the world. Sample of each free.with 32-p. Skin Hook Address postCard Cuticura, DepL L, Boston." Ad?. Caught. Mrs. Peck John Henry, did you mail that letter? J. Henry Yea. my dear. I er held It in my hand all the way to the mail box. 1 didn't ven put it in my pocket. I remember distinctly, because Mrs. Peck That will do. John Henry. I gave you no letter to mail Judge. Putnam Fadeless Dyes do not stalm the hands. Adv. One way to make U to envy her a woman happy
