Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 58, Number 5, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 October 1915 — Page 4

JASPER COURIER By Bici J5d Doane.

JASl'EK, DÜiiOlÖ COUNT V, INDIANA Entered as second-class matter at the poatoftico at Jasper, Ind., under thu act of March 3, 1879. Jim h This papot la mailed regularly to it a;ibschbeiE. until a definite order to diecontinue ;8 receive 1 aud all arrears paid in full; unless in the discretion of the publish 01 a different courao should be deemed advisable. FRIDAY, OCTOBER 22 1915. The Conspiracy Force. Against Ma or Bell of Indianapolis, is Ter and the jury declared him not guilty As Mayor Bell says it was what ever deeent citizen of Marion county expected. Some jim crow lawyer got elected prosecutor on the republican ticket and dreaming of fame and renown secured the service of an ex penintentary bird from Terre Haute, worked taxpayers of Marion county for 25,000.00 for expenses in defaming a decent citizen and then looaes out It is up to the people now to send the prosecutor and his assistant to the pen. When a prosecutor fails in a case like that he should be compelled to suffer the same penalty he tried to fo'ce on another man. On Monday the case against Thos. Taggart was dismissed. Eat loo Much. 'The American workingmen eats twice as much as his body requires, and the American who does not imdulge in physical toil our orof essional and office men eat three or four times too much" said Thomas A. Edison, in an interview recently Edison declared any man will end his worries over the fool problem when he gets to the point where he neither gains nor losses, while enjoying good health. He favors a aimple diet, plenty of minor portions, and, above all things, an end of the dinners wUh "talk feats." I 4 1 certainly would abolish, if I had my way, the dinner with the long talks," he remarked. "Serve eight or nine portions, minute in size, and when the di- j ners would get up they'd feel hungry. . but conit'ortabe. "George Washington Childs had the idea of the public .dinner. He'd 'give one sardine,4 three cherries or strawberries, a tiny fish, two tablespoonfuls of soup and other simple diet. "For the social feature of such a gathering let the diners talk among themselves. They would enjoy the discourse far more than to sit and listen to a windy orator, all the while feeling uncomfortable after eating hearty portions of rich foods. Let's stop making dinners 'talk feste' and social functions. ' ' Edison said a person should eat what be liked, but in the smallest possible portions. He favors a good lpreakfast as the mobt essential mealREAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Frank J. Seng to Robert Kie 79.64 acres, 5200, Anna L, Weisman to Mary E, Hessick, .15 acre, $500. . Arthur W, Miller to Daniel L. Frehse. part outlot 3, Huntingburg $6,50. Frank I. Brown, saurdian to David J. Meyer undivided one thid of 20 acres $533.34. Frank L Brown er al, to David J. Mever 61 acres, $4826,66. Herman Thewes to Bernhardt fl, J. Seger, 140 jpr es, , 5,000. m nufioTi ff0im trrMari a lnnVIlllOWO" """" - enschmidt 80 acres, SI. Maria Lindenschmidt to Barbara Heim 80 acres, $1 . Fountain Belcher to Eliza M. Blunk, .12 aere $450. William L, Dougho D. W. Jones partlot 44 Birdey $500. Loum Ubii to Barbar Denk, lots 8 and 11 JMper 70O. Lovida Rarato Mary E Suttea 40 acres, $L -o o; Marv Schmidt to Kev. aunonKreusara, ' lot 19 Jaspw MinaF. Bailey to Glan E Green .34 acre 1100 Statement at Ownership Required ly I Mio. 24. 1912; Jasper weeKiy .uufw, published J Uir.-HIW.ww" J; JA V1. vnh o- rw liafnro HIB this h. K. 7 dny of Oct. VHb TllUSTB K. DOUOHKRTY lju. iu juatlcttofthoPcaco. h V W9 4..ul Aunl 9 l

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Platinum plated utensils for chemists are now being made by welding the costlier metal to a steel or nickel base and rolling it into sheets. Flowers are regularly grown

.for the dining tables and for sale m a greenhouse carried on top most deck of one of the new train Fortune Favors The Brave'. "In b itale or business, whatever the game, En law or in love it is ever thesam, In the struggle for power, or the scramble for pelf Let thie be your motto "Kely on your self! For whother the prize be a ribbon or throne, The victor is ho who can 'go it alone !" T G. Saxo. A proof as old as the hills and true as the iving sun is the title of this article. It i3 the man who poes it alone that wins. Take what pursuit you will for example and glance for a moment at the first men of it, the men who have identifide themselves with the occupation; the men who have wone fame and renown in the pursuit of any occupa i )n and you find them as a class, fion on whom the goddess fortune mhs been avish in, De stowing great gifts, and you will slso, men who are brave in every aense of the word at home and abroad in public and private life. While the men who make these 'lament able" these signal faillurci of their lives are those who have tor tneir creed the one word "fail" and that is what they do with their lives and all their undertaking. Do you think that fortune would ever have favored Napolion if he had not been brave en ough to draw his sword for Fracel would history have carried the the name of Ceaser down the floating age if he had not been brave enough to meet Romes foes on many a hard fought fiield. And when at last expelled from the country he had the courage to gather his troops about him and go back, then fortune favored him, and he became king of Rome, the die was cast, the Rubicon passed and Rome was fre no more but Ce&sear and his good fortune? sat upon the greatest throne the world ever kneür. But not only on the battle field need to look for success; history contains far greator names than the Heroes of battle. Would Galieo ever have established his theory of the worlds orbit if he had sat silent, fortune would never have come up to him and ached him his opinion an the sub ject if he had ever been silent and aaid nothing when persecuted Fertune would never have plaecd hii name among the brilliant galiax of names of the worlds greatest son's, as one of the greatest phylosiphers, if he had not laid the courage to stand for his creed and go like the world alone. In law or in love it is ever the same as it proves every day in our courts of Justice, it wai Mrs. Gain's bravery that gave her after a long trial of 40 years the bigest part of the city of New Orleans. It was the bravery of Sir Walter Relige who dared to throw his gold embroidered into a mud puddle so that Queen Bess might pass by without soiling her slippers that first won her friendship and favor and eventualy made him a knight of England, The poet says: "Faint heart ne'r won fair lady" and the English Queen when her lover wrote with a diamond on her window. "Fain would I climb but fear a fall," she answered "If thy heart fail the climo not atall,' Will the hint so graciously given he made hold ef heart and climb to the topmost rouna alter favor, Thouch vou should be untortunate at first remember that nothine ventured nothing gained, also that fortune is a fickle god dess and is perhaps only trying you. Some of the grand 'at tortunes ever made were gathered from the heels of defeat and turned in to victory. As example take the life of James Fisk, or Jim Fisk as commonly called, who went in to Wall Street market! with a thousand dollars and came out at the end of a week without a dollar. It is saia that he swore an oath that Wall Street had broked him it should again malrp him an d hv sticking to his purpose he soon grew to De wortni """ - . . i his million and to own neany an the theaehrs and fiire houses of New York city. Fortune f aver ed him because he dared fight it. ors the brave because the brave ; go into work to win and to accomplish that purpoee they leave no atone unturned, they hazaji their all very frequently and win the timid lay they are afraid an fail.

n human vacuum cleaner!

Muvdrt Economic in Lino of Good l6UMlCpJhg He Screw Looffe, Long befoxe tht Introduction of j the Ttctram cleaner Amanda had! Rchierid by liiecr persistence of arm, the energitic wielding of broom and brush, Öia preciie results accom plished by tiiii excellent inYention.J Her husband whimsically complains that the house is always in process of renovation and seldom is a condition which can fef consygered comfortable and livable but be is a mere man and little ca$ bo expected of him, Of coupe, Aijuada is ill from time to time, usually m the result of doig more than ßhe Kight, She baa headaches, backaches and nerves that are on edga. Her sons slip out of the house in the evening because they prefer to be where they are not reproved if they draw a chair from Its place or leave a newspaper on the floor. Her daughters enjoy visiting much more than staring at homo, and her maid seldom remains longxn? than a week or two. Sho had nineteen successive maids in a single ieasonv Somehow Amanda's economics in the lino of good housekeeping lum) a screw loose. She observed one day that alio sympathized with ttio women who liked to have her houso perfectly ordered and who then wished that sho could take her family and live in tbo barn so that the houso need not be disturbod. Mafgatet & Smgitcr, ia Christian Herald. A Vain Preoautloru Lord Talbot D Malahidt was talking In Now York about tho thorough11611 of the ouitomi investigations. "Tho Bmugrgler," he eald, bound to b detected If he trios hlg little cuni In your metropolis. Tho smuggltr'pprtcautloni against detection at thii .lidmirably-manfcgftd port are aa Tain and luAtorout at the precautiona of tht 'dreaming Irishman. "An Irishman, you know, once dreamed that he waa yiiitlng the lato Queen Victoria. " 'Will you have a drink r the queen said to him. M T will said the Iriihman. A drop of Irish, av coorse, hot by preference, your majesty , "Bo the queen put on the kettie, but when the water boüd, the noise awoke the dreamer. "Holy St Patrick!' said he. 111 take it oold next thal " Baccarat, France, has the honor of producing the first glass thp is unbreakable. The new process hai been eucceasfolly applie to tho manufacture of lamp olnmneys for use in coal mines containing much fire damp. The glass makers of Baccafmt hare also succeeded in increasing tho'clajjticitT of the glnes. This ihäj aococipliah by adding magneia arid oxide to the ordinary cry- . Success JVT Ggasrijac. i. f. m I Ii. Corner 7tti & Jackflon Sfc HOME 'PHONE. JLEGAT, BLANKS. Warranty Deeds, Quit Claim Deeds Chattle Mortgages, Real Estate Mortgagees, Inventories Suponeas, Warrant. Reports etc. for Sale at the Goukikk Offick. The Courier advertisers are letting down the price bars into the field of bargains. 7vnr ir rw rs t' . KENTUCKY ?t'w Orleans :t. jr. - For Sale by AU leaiHng Dealers. OVER 65 YEARS' EXPERIENCE Trade Marks Designs Copyrights &c. Anyone endlnR r sketch and description may quickly ascertain cht OiHiii n free whether nn luventt m Is pri nnt'ly patenMihJe. Omimunlcnlions nctlyconUdor.tla!. HANDBOOK onl'ntcuta Bont fr.Krt. niilodt act nor fur socurmir-Datonts. Patents takonthrotnrh Jtunn & Co. recelvo , MHcUti notice, without ciinrßo, In tbe Scktttific American. elr UhMtralod weekly. I-areest ciri any M4outlUc JouruaL Torms. 13 a onyp. f i. bom by ail newaaeaier?. CiH4im,.jewYork

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fl Set of High Grade Pure Aluminum Cooking Ware

e-oumnixawij jbii ill BEND Allw&2s Preferable. Tiie Only Range Made W Hi Aluminum-tad Rust Proof Flues. Things I've Noticed. rimt good arlvei lining has Iho povtr lo br Ihü life into u tirticlt). Also that if the article i Juvuid of mtu'it it will pooh fall flat an n flounder, no matter how strong a current cf praise you broathe i' itf fuvnr. That dolhi's renpond to fadn more readily and steadily than (o urtgumcutH that aie woven with fic tion and bankable vUuuih. Thai an ad tu make a bit inusl be n)oiH thun pJaing and porsuaaivft it Hiust consitiCe, That an ad writer oujht lo inquire as carefully into Uih thinp he going to writn ibo'-.U aH hn would were be buying it for hin own ude. Also, that he ought lo bn if hie to discover selling points about the thing that its owner hadn't pohh. Tbat tbo only way 'o U now the power of an ad is to publish it. 1 hat too inanv areunipnts in a i single ad will weaken confidence. That there is a wide span he tween the eye and tha purse pocket takes a healthy ad to make the trip right away. That a little postal-card talk will often make more direct soles- than a clumsy catalogue. Tbat a good ad run right along in one good paper gets more business I an a fow aemi-occaHional scatter shots all over creation. Tha4 harping on oue siring is a good plan so long as you ring in a few variations to keep the attention of your audience. That a man who ia ignorant of euman nature will write ads that are as flat and flavorless as y ester dav's dishwater. That to write an effective ad you've got to get some point in it clear enough to clinch itself in the reader's mind. That pometimes the ad that holds J the reader's mind and gets knotted in his memory is a dusb of com-raon-senße, flavored with a dash of wi, a flash of fun, a quaint simile and ripple of poetic f ncy once in awbi e not always. I son msPHi Tht Home Telephone Go has the largest iit of subscribers and will give you the best ser vice You can talk to vour friends, order your merchandise and make your appointment by the Home 'phone. DUBOIS GO. TELEPHONE CO SOUTHERN RY !ME BL 1 r4 Schedule Fop Sunday May 2, the Following is for Information Only and is not guaranteed. tfASTBOCrSD No. 5 DULY 9:31 A. . Vn IS 4 .4 P. M. No. 11 " IWKSTWOUSD No. 12 Daily No. 14 " NO. 0 " n.bd a, I'At P. Time shown ns 1 1 uu tin Syburg. No. 1. DAILY. i:W A. M. ' V. U !XO. 2S 4tiq vjo.2, DAILY. 12:42 A.M. So. 10 8:10 P. M No. 24 it 12:15 P. M. V K. GluycoDib, M out

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We'll Make Yor a Present of a Complete Set This Week ... If you buy the best range ever madsThe South Bend Malleable, we will make you a present of a set of High Grade Pure Aluminum Cooking Ware, worth $12,00- Thisis an extraordinary offer, anc is good during our exhibit sveek only, when sve will have an expert demonstrator with us. He will explain to you the patented AluminumFused, Rust Proof Flue construction of The South Bend Malleable Range, It If the only raiige made with flues of this wonderful metal. It has many other points of advantage. There is no better uaker, and you will be surprised at the small amount of fuel it consumes. Gome aud hear all about the best rnii made and ses the s t of high grade Pare Aluminum C oking Ware y.u alw.iy? wanted in your k.lchon. Many tiaelul eouveairH given nav. Remember the place nud date.

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A Prohibition Picture By James C. Kelly Organized and commercialized prohibition is expert in the art of drawing word pictures but, in its zeal to destroy the legitimate liquor trade, it quite often grossly misrepresents its Subjects. To such tactics may be credited a great deal of the success of prohibition, since it is a movement which appeals more to passion than to reason. One of the fallacies so carefully spread by the prohibition leaders is the alleged affection of the liquor seller for the besotted drunkard or, in common parlance, the "bar-fly". Science long ago recognized the fact that the unfortunate inebriate was more in need of medical assistance than of either penal confinement or prohibition and, furthec, that inebriety was due to personal defects rather than to the fact that liquors were manufactured and sold. An analysis of the actual relation of the inebriate to the liquor business will convince any sane ' individual that prohibition viciously misrepresents the fact when it attempts to show that the liquor trade delights in the urifortunate's downfall. Men engaged in the liquor industry are human and, like all other men, are governed by human motives both selfish and altruistic. Credit either to them ?.nd still you can find no justification, fo the prohibition slander.

The drunkard hurts no one,

hurts the liquor dealer. From a selfish and mercenary standpoint he is a liability, nor an asset, for he usually subfisfi upon the charity of the man engaged in the liquor trade,, Pharisaical prohibition offers him neither food nor shelter nor a cure for his weakness. In a broader way he damages the entire liquor industry by supplying the basis of the prohibition structure. No one is more familiar with the truth of these statement! than those engaged in the liquor business. In the light of the facts it is not difficult to understand their demand for true temperance, and when next you see that old familiar picture of the liquor man gloating over an unfortunate drunkard stop and think, and you will discover that the picture lies. Adv.

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Merchant Tailor

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General Insurance and Real Estate. Special ries on Farm Lonna and Insurance for Dubois, Pike

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dent, Plate Glass, Automobile, Burgarly and Liability

Insurance. Binding

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to IB. WARE Co., Jasoep Ind. 1 1 besides himself, so much a? IiC hJ 4 4 EGG 4 J 4 4 4 4 4 4 Jasper 44 4 44I- i44: I I . .J. f 4. 4 44 4. 4 4 WttSOl Tornado, Hail, Life, Acci Co. rep. Phone 116 2,

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