Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 57, Number 26, Jasper, Dubois County, 2 April 1915 — Page 1
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anftrf Vol. 57. Jasper, Indiana, Friday, A PEIL 2, 1915, No. 26.
Prof. Chas. F. Chandler of Columbia University gives t1- fqUowing Definition of beer: "The manufacture of beer first malting and then brewing. The object of -v tue the composition of the contents of the bs J- oai to render them soluble, so as to produce ä u.M wliicii can be subjected to fermentation. The process consists of steeping the barley; the barley swells and is placed on the floor of the malt house. It begins to germinate, and from the proteids in the malt there is developed a substance called diastase, which attacks the 5 starch, making it soluble. When the germination has reached a certain point the barley grains are spread over a large field and germination proceeds. The malt is then y subjected to kiln-drying to terminate germination. "Hext comes the brewing. The crushed malt is extracted in hot water, when the diastase completes its action in changing the staich to dextrine and maltose. The solution is drawn v.C and this constitutes the wort. The remaining grains are treated to obtain as large a portion of soluble matter as possible, the worts are united, hops are added and the wort is complete. It is then cooled to the proper temperature, yeast is added and fermentation proceeds During the fermentation the yeast develops, attacks the sugar and liberates carbonic acid gas and alcohol. The rise of the carbonic acid gas through the liquid causes motion and the liquid is set to work. When the fermentation is complete the beer is drawn off and stored in suitable vessels, in which slow fermentation takes place and the liquid becomes clarified."
Indiana Brewers
GUBSGRRTONS FOR ALL NEWSPAPERS AND MAGAZINES Any Periodical Published in Anv Countrv Received at the Courier Office
liar i;,;gszi h Yn Pair
pies ir Mail rto
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The Jasper Courier, is the only paper in Jasper that is owned, edited and published by a citizen of Jasper. Don't kick about Mail order concerns if you spend your money for your printing to concerns that are owned and bossed by non-citizens of the town.
I1
23nlk soda Is Inferior to pnckngo sod a, PURE
BE WARE of imitation tra'I marks und labels.
is the whole story about
I kK! AftP HAMEK SOPA
iü pacKages
Made only by CHURCH CO., New York. Sold by grocers everywhere. IVrJto for Arm and Hnzstmcr Jloak of valuable KecipcFJELEE.
Association
fen a.MD HAjl ) r- A .
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Costs no moretlunuther package soda never spoils flour universally .uknowledged purest In the world.
, STOP! WAR! " - -tft t A remarkab! bargain a grtat daily newspaper and four magazlntt far the prict or one! Can you affard not ta tako thtm? An amazing fferl The world-widt war if tht topic of discutiion in every meeting in tha family circle, at the store, after church wherever people meet. To keep informed everyone should take a daily paper. Especially it is important to the farmer to keep informed on war news for the price of wheat depends on war. The Evansville Courier a really great daily newspaper bringt the first war news in this section. It is the onlv daily delivered on rural routes on the same day published! bringing all the news of the night fresh from the wires soon after breakfast.
Daily (312 issues) ene year. THE FARM JOURNAL. Monthly, five years. GREEN'S FRUIT GROWER. Monthly, ene year. CO U O 3 FARM ENGINEERING. Menthly, one year. THE HOUSEHOLD. Monthly, one year. Send Subscriptions today te THE EVANSVILLE COURIER Evansville, Indiana. ifmimniiinii!iiiiiniUMi!u:iii!!iii:!ii!;ii'MiH!ii;!i!f!ii!,,iii!!!i!;.!iiii!iu!i!iniiiiiiiiiiii!!!i!ii!iK WOMEN.
Love This Magazine 1 new peer reaches the throne kftthatta distance, is rather small for the McCALUS is the Fashion Guide and House- ij kneels reverently and places lipon -n n naJn V T, purpose." However, Owing to inkeeping Helper of more women than any other iji l . i s . will appear as n ieuilleton in Ja? r f.,! ' , , . macazine in the world, ah the latest styles i the empty chair, where his majesb Kf, -f. .r0 credible perseverance and skill of
rÄTÄSK dressmaking, fancj' work, etc., that lichten Ii housework and save money. Price, only 50c h a year, with one celebrated McCall Dress Pattern FREE. J SEND A POSTAL CARD NOW FOR ' H 1. A FREE Smp! Copy of McCALL'S MAGAZINE: or A FUSE? Copy or McCALL'S fine 44-pacc PREMIUM S CATALOGUE : or H 3. McCALL'S 5100.00 Prize Offer to Every CUURCU. H Addreit llrpt. U 1 THE McCALL CO., 236 to 246 W. 37lh St., New York, N. Y. ISTEof PREMiy FREE icHiMiimimii:iiiiiiiii!iiirmi;aii',:!ij,,i!u 'lüiiüii'üii'iiiiJiiijiiiiiiumuiKnmjiiunni Advertising 'Advertising is the education of the public, as to who you are and what you have to offer in the way of skill, talent or com, modity." "Let the truth be known about your business. - - "The only man who should not advertise is the one who has nothing to oiler in the way öf service, or one who. can not make good. "All such should seek the friendly shelter of obl.vion, where dwell those ivho, shrouded in Stygian shades, foregather gloom, and are out of the game. "Not to advertise is, to Denominated for membership in the Down-and Out club. LE AR NS HORT HAND It will pay you well. It is an assured means of good employment. It is more than that. It is an on employment, it is more uian mat. is an aiuablc personal accomplishment 'A time and xr saver thruout your life. nvaii abor BENN PITMAN PHONOGRAPHY is tauRht in reliable 'echooto everywhere. Let U9 recommend one to you. Or we will auvise you about aelf-imrtruction or lessons by mall. Write to The Phonographic Institute," CINCINNATI, OHIO. Benn Pitman, Founder. Jerome B. Howard, President CP 4 T ?aO" ::K Co?:.. Anronow iwl -ly tu- tri . . mrontinu ts ii t iow strict lyr- . bunt In'fi. v ' I : Pntoiits tH. 1 1 I. vnr ' ti t - tpeeun not e, v vut chnntv. iu t Ufll A hiinisoTtici !:!u'ri -vi w !.,tvi. yeur: four ruontüri, f I. joia bi a!l newt! MUNN & Co.3G!Bas--New fan Vit
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A STRIKING CONTRAST.
Entering tha United States Senate and tha House of Lords. When & senator is elected in the United States he sends hisycreden-
tials on in advance. They are pre-. DUt agine tneir. astonisiime: sented by his colleague, read from ' should some favorite journal .p; the desk and filed in the secretary ( lish in good faith, in daily insu, office unless some objection is ,'ments and adapted according to. raised, when thev are sent to the! notions of some stajf . v-ritei.
committee on DriYiic?e3 and elections for examination. When a senator elect appears he steps quietly up to the cleric's desk, escorted-by his colleague, takes an oath to support the constitution of the United States and is then led to a desk on the outer row, which his colleague has selected for him, where he receives the congratulations of his friends .. and introductions to the senators who care to make his acouaintance. He looks as wise aq may be and waits for adjournment, when he p;oes to thn spnrptflrv nffice, writes his autograph in a big red hook for the use of the cashier tnd draw his mileage. Tn i-hR -"Rtio-IisIi Tinnpo nf ln-ra proceedings are very different A 1.. T i t i newly cheated peer enters thai historic chamber in a robe of scarlet I vplvfit trim-mpr? -nrifh nrmino ofnrn I as his sponsors and escorted by the I black rod, as the sergent-at-arms 1 is known, and the garter kin at i v.T r I arms rrav i-n q oThfi nroeoss on mnmliAs nrnnnfl making low bows to the empty I 1 1 throne and to the presiding officer, ! who is the lord high chancellor, ' i J (?- J 1 J l . M 1 1 i from. different parts of the gilded! 1 1 chamber, to which that imposing h nerson j?ravelv Tfisnrnifls. Whpn ihn i.ought to l,e sitting, the paUnt
noDiary ne nas recoivec trom ir, , ljB afterward related but beforQ mg tne most reimea measurement sovereign. He is then led to t!' v3nct audacit and ndvete he felt for stereoscopic examination, sswoolsaclq where the lord chany-Mo heM TT n i, n tronomers ha7e succeeded m over-
administers- -to him the oath.4 His 1 1 sponsors next lead him to the prGpPjer bench, where he takes his seat I for a moment. Then all three rise H and bow three times at the vacant i' throne and three times to the preigh chau - ii & l.cellor then leaves the woolsack and 1, comes down to shake hands with thö I new peer and welcome him to tha I house. The other peers come alao j tnd tender their congratulations. Left TU! Called For. When Wilkinson went to his ofi fice one day last week be felt calm and contented. He hadn't any need to worry about his wift loneliness any more, for he had bought ft capital watchdog for her. But, alas, "when he arrived homt his wife met him with the deplorable news that the dog had gone. "Eh !" said Wilkinson. "Did- ht break the chain, then?" "No," she replied, "but a great, ugly looking tramp came her xn acted so impudently that I 1 th dog loose. But instead of tearin. the tramp to pieces the nasty doj went off with him" "Great Scott!" said Wilkinson. That must have been the tramp 1 bought him from!" London Express. A Peculiar Couplo. Conversation had turned to the subject of two men, utterly dissimilar, who nevertheless roomed together. One of these men was generally conceded to be a "freak." His name was John. "John and Jim are certainly n n'nA nn-UArr queer pair, Opined SOmCDOdy. j j0m and anybody are ft queer pair' opined somebody cIm. ' Pt0r Jhli Ei'an h 1 vr i Cholly What do you think of the gageiDOiit ring I gave your sister? Willie Gee, It's great I She lets mi rear It when jier other fella rg Is ei MlDCinnatl Ommtrclal TriWoac
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DUMfcS' AUDACITY. vi v A Unique Literary Schema of
ttf: Great French Writer. x "American readers are accustomc to surprises in their newspaper : , , . ... . , classic sucfi a?., ior exarr Dante's "Inferno!' Tet the a ishment so excited would not without a parallel in' the ann::I- . . newspaper management, ina-r-as Homer once fig;: red as a fen ' toniste for a Parisian newspaper. When Dumas thev elder was ' incj his journal, Le Mousquetr.i Urbain Fages, one of his assist.: who was an exceptionally jfint4 Or.scholar, wns one d:iv cfithusia. ally expatiating upon the beaut.- ! of the & the "Üdyinmas grew most interested. "If 0Tily yxl could read thcLn Aw original," sighed Pages, I 7 notr? ked Dus. ' Bnt," exclaimed Pages, 4:, ?ear low, yoa don't know aljA, from omp.crn " - f "Will you translate for me0' asked Dumas ererlv. Appnrflmalv Pnc n0rfrtAlr flw vi -i- . -J.-I . . rT : lfl l?e P?;' . ' of the TLaci, .ic would read M LJ1 'literal translation. Duifias atuckh biuiisiciuuji. nullius c .. ,"6" w Faes read he wrote a trans! atigj. and signed it. "In the name of all the ancients, nr -n .1 -n., j 1gP 6 h J ..,.. J p flas a writer accustomed to every triA. umph that he was too bold? And bo the next dav an installment of the Uiad as rendered in i.n,, . i could not read the Qr'eek ; nppeared ftt the-bottom of tfie wire appearea at xne oouom 01 tne page i T,Q McnfmV. A rioTifino n,iTf . 'i
This enterprising bit of Journal- "b ust bo, hndred9 of ..0Q" ism raised auch aXm of- critieißm ,anul of Ucs fartl?f removed than that Dumafwaa peuaded to dis- tho s"n- hvTC 'JUy can be no continue it after th third jnstall- f estl0D of a:,v ,suicient eye dement, though it waa doubted that fon J?" f .AeanwbJe."
he quite understood vhst vbb the trouble. St. Paul Konter Prta. . , u r" A Dilemma's Hörnt. m, i t i t t i a The young lady sighed deeply and was almost affected to tears.
-T j l ' VU 1C0 orbit as our eve distance. Photon I don t marry him he will end hu fnl. . . ,
Me, and I am afraid he wül. . rt i -, . . t 1 She stifled a sob then continued: And Eandolph dec ares that if I don t marry him he Anil go into pol-, lties and become great and famoni and then he says I shall see yhat I nave misseciana l urn airaja ne will keep his word too." Overcome by p?nothr). phc buried her face in her h.mtK not. knowing whether to save n life or to spare the country another politician. The Fir;t Cer us. The idea of (mo coiibu. or ; rn , among the Iiou.an?. "''f.'U a group of the many functiuud performed by the high oflicer called censor received the name of census. It was taken every five years and indicated not only tl.c number of the respective classes of the pc;'!e, hut their domestic positions as huhauds, wives, fathers, mothers, sons and. daughters. The first modern nation to take up the census was the United States of America in 1790. The first British census was in 1801. but this did not include Ireland, I BurgeieJ5ter-What ground for picion haVa you that th prisoner la tba , tourderer? I Constabl Principally his denial mt 1 air. That's &li&yi a raspiclooa I
Blatte.
DISTANCE 0F THE STARS. "
ra Kow Atronomrs Set About tht Tl of Measuring It. r With the exception of a hundred itars at most, we know nothing of fchp (Jistances of the individual stirs. iWhat is the cause of this state of things ? It is owing to the fact that .w hare two eyes that we are enabled not only 'to perceive the direction in which external objects are2ituated, but to get '.n idea of their distance, to localha them in space. But this power is rather limited. For distances exceeding some hundreds of yards it utterly fails. The reason is that the distance between the eyes as compared with the distance to be evaluated becomes too small. Instruments have been devised by which the distance . between the eyes is, as it were, artificially increased. With a good instrument cf this sort 'distances of pe vera! !r.:;- i.my be evaluated. For still greater distances we may imngine each ovo replaced by a photographic ;h te. Even this would be quite siitiif- for one of the heavenly bodie viz, for the moon. ! At one and the same moment let a photograph of the moon and the surroundintr stars he takfn both nfc UÖ uuivutuiy anu at tue i Koval observatorv at Greenwich. Placing the two photographs side by stereoscope; we shall clearl Ce the moonP4anging Ä J, -. , ö-. space ana may evaluate its Qisk -r I n , I . for t,le n a?d he n.ear,!st 1 Pnets' ou,rf ne neiShbors the universe after the moon, the diffi- - colty recommences. ' .The reason is that any available distanpf nn tho pnrfh fnlcrm n pv fereral observers and by substitutnrtTniyirr tnn 1 1 Hi ah I tt -Fn-y tlin -in I ?T. , 6 w thlTI r TTO mflv cov r nor or nTncnn Ic tu . we knov its distance to within , usanata Pa, ot its amount Knowing the sun's distance, we get that of dl i the planets by a well ow? rGh w,n stm hetwcen tho , . v . planetary distances. Cut uiv: for tlle 01(23 stars ""Sl Ule ölu' ,as Pr us viLii a new one distance, zuuv i times greater hau any possible eye I distance on tin- earth, for now that n i n ä rl . , , . , , , Fe Know the cl. ,rt.nce nr. which the fa , ; nrbit , Bun we can take liie din meter of its ' f n rö...-Af .f.ii fcvvt-. v ' i.A tub bUV ritual world ng ccen fp : , a dis 3 bclwPen .u nlre!ldv besfc in the time it TOul taku ufeto traverse it. The time would be about shteen ni;.,utes. However, even ti.is distance, immense as it is, is, on the whole, inadequate for obtaining a stereoscopic view of the stars. It is only tn quite exee :;onal cases that photographs on a ; irge scale that is, bxained by tho aid of big tele- ' icopes show nny stereoscopic efj.eet ior iixea -tars. ry accurate measurement ol the photo3 we may perhaps get somewhat beyond what jre can attain L simple steieoscopic Inspection; but, as we said a moment ago, astronomers have not succeeded in this way in determining the distance of more than a hundred stars in all. -Scientific American. ; A C -ciplinarlan. Miss Hobsou was most popular with the two young and unmanied members of Centerville's school board. They d not propose to iiave any chaut ri teachers in dis trict. No. 3. ' "Do you think Miss Hobson payi quite ".'iuh a4'cntion to disci- ! plino ugostoti ne of the elderlr, mamed m Inol , -..imitteemen onp day. "JDiscipline ' V'iy, of courst the j pays a great of attention to 'ft' asserted EtJ Morter hastily. "yve nevcj nmlfody else beIrin to pay ;h said Henry (XAne. 'Vhv, on afternoon I was 111 111 erc ai N0 aQÜ HiS" HODeon ipent the vhole me every miaI IfkC Ul It i'.C. Li Q wvnv
in that
