Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 58, Number 46, Jasper, Dubois County, 4 August 1916 — Page 4
I 4
JASPER-COURIER By Bks Äi üoani
JASPER UÜISiJIä COUNTY, INDIANA . j . - -
Entered tie aeconrt-asa matter at the postolhce at Jasper. Ind., under the act of March 3, 1S71J.
tfnlww..riniKn .50 Per Year.
Thifl raoet ia mailed regularly to it
,riir nntll a definite order to difi-
fin.iP. 1 received and all arrea paid
jß . nniAGft in the discretion of the
paUfcl'.ei R different course should be
deeded advisaWo.
FRIDAY, AUGUT4, 1916.
(I
t (
i t
1 1
Tho Ticket.
tor ü ovarii or John A. M. Adair, Portland For Lteutonant-Govornor Mason J. iM-
ol?snSor--Jolm NY, Kern, Indiana I ,. tnnif lnrm
H"I,B V'"" 'r t iMr. rnhort tonn)
Secretary of Stictc--Homer L. Cook, mum-, 5?dItor of State-Bale J. OrittcnbcrKcri r"rcaBurcr of Stato-Goorgc A. Bittlcr, ttorney.üeucnil.-Evan B. StotsonLVife?JoCoSJtV.ond Blatrlot-DouBlaa Äc"cÄ Dlatrict-Charlcs E. J'ÄÄe"e court-Philip Zocr'Ä'Äatn'Oourt, First Dlstrlc! John C. Moutt, Martinsville. , T Mate Supt. of Public Instruction Samuel L. Scott, Xew Albany.
If swim you mustf why seek to
Know .
What Fathoras deep the Stream
may flow?
Fop iMiircii, Fair.
The following articles were
i r-i ""
made by The aaies oewmg ic-
cle. durincr the month or July.
' . , ,
M ss A. .Fritch. -mD uiove uase
" B. Lichte HJmb Uorset uover " L. Krodel, Ctoss Stitch scarf 4 4 Teresa & Rosa Beck, Rag rug
9x12 ft.
Mrs. AmosPLster Quilt Top
Mrs. Wm Gardener
Mrs. Mary M Kunkel
Mrs, Jos. Hoffman br. Mrs. Marv M Hoffman
Mrs. Tillie Rottet Crochet Scarf Mrs. Silas Berger Work Api-on. Donations.
Mrs. Marv T. Kunkel Quilt
" Louisa Krempp
John A. Sermersheim John Merder Rosa Friedman
.T T? Friedman Croche1-. scarf
Wm Lampert Cash $1 00 McFall Quilt Top Henry Burger ' Jos Steffen Quilt blocks ArrlUnff. fWsh $100
" Fred Eckert, A. Gerber, Rob, KueWcr, Mary T. Kunkel, Ed. McNerney and John Fisher,' Cut Carpet Rags.
To
Our
Para
s.
Don't Forget To Attend THE BIG Dubois County
Take This Paper.
You will find it what you vrant in the home. And what you wanfc in the school. And what you want in your societies.
Ajid what you vwanfc in your History Club. And what you want in your Naturalists' ClubAnd what you generally want, And if you don't find in it just
jwhat you want, write and it will
be seeu that you iave it. And we want some good agents Some that are not afraid to roll
up their sleeves and get right
down to business. Write ana ask
abou
Poriersviile Painters.
(Received too late for last week.) ... Adam Schnarr visiled ms brother Peter Schnarr who is very
r
U iL,
WHY NOT MAKE
SUGAR?
Woald Save 5100,000,000 Yearly, Says Secretary Wilson
The paper in this issue of the low Lthm?.
cists us 20 per cent moi e jib. m aaci uu rV.Jit wenir. Tn other ren visited her parents this week,
V. COX.
Courier
L, I i Cl 1 1 11 U1U mov -t-w..- iiT t J . . I r I- itrn
worus w., - T ;-V "n dav while wrestling
m five do la k the pVice of Oha, Miller rodEverhart Schnarr SaXper was advanced twenty-five Miller was cut very sevrrely with ' u a -i. lot- Wo rln nnt. lirnken beer bottle
pernwuo-; ""i" r,;-" ,;lf1t,n of .Tohn Fry are
C f h 1 rate in advance will visiting at Alf ordsyille while
be enforced. Otherwise $2.00 their mocher is in tne noapiwi
r er year, u-rouim hk woe, v.o.n vyhu u ; ,
help it.
Jnhn L Kroael ana wue
-M .
maae a uu-meto wi w
The Mountain Labored. tS'Ä 01M.. N.
we ii mnni co
The Home Telephone Co has the largest list of subscribers and will give you the best ser vice You can talk to your
friends, order your merchandise and make your appointment by the Home 'phone. DUBOIS GO. TELEPHONE CO
Next Week See the Record-breaking Races.
See the Splendid Show of
Live Stock and Agricultural
Products.
See the Purdue Exhibit. See the Balloon Ascension.
J I iUVil- i ÄV. .1V
Highlanders Band and $3000 1 ymwmt
Electrical organ. ! lttKniekrk
Meet your friends and lfte'Pnamaij
have a good time. PacificExp9sitio!V
gninntiiHBBM
i i HOW IT WORKED IN OHIO, j
Paulding Banker Shows Mow öugar Bet Culture Increased Prosperity. That the establish merit of the sugar beet Industry in Ohio vill result in an Increase of $20,000.000 in the value at farm lands in the tnto by the end of the present year is the statement of C H. Allen, a banker of Paulding, 0. 'Ohio and Indiana should become as great producer of sugar as Michigan-," t .i r a .mrl nUl iinlaca
sum -r. Ä.IH.-U, auu uvj n-i ftrtn nrPTft -ri ir- nriirnu
hostile legislation by congress inter- öUüAn bttli 1 Ht ntmtUTi
fere with the natural development oi Üils industry. In Paulding county
alone. iltUough the beet sugar factory Wo Could Raiio Enough of Thm In
On Stat, Declares the Secretary of Agriculture, to Supply the Needs of the Whole Nation. By JAMES WILSON, Socretary of Agriculture. One would think that we had enough sunshine and wind and rain in thia
000 each year for these things. This amount slips away from us for our annual importations of sugar, which
here has been in operation only two years, the value of farm property has
increased $3,000,000 as a result of tho
Introduction of sugar beet culture. An
other result has been the investment of $5,00O,00U or more in other beet sugar factories in this section of the state
wi Hi in ivif vAor wliifli in turn
, , Vi, , oi7i Vir 7nö country for all our needs, but at preswill vastly increase the value of tne J . T
fn-m ennnnrltficr flmm nrinn. CUt WU. HIG IJUyillg OUC lü lülUlgU Uli
w.,.. tions the good round sum of $100,000,-
wealth of thia region. "Aside from the direct financial re-
Ushment of i ho sugar beet industry in comes simply irom the carbon dioxide niiin iw nro nnmoi-mis nflmr benefits of the atmosphere. There is no reason
? 'i, f,,',,,!, nr So flirpor. n no we should not save this amount
less import:.. To obtain good results tor our own people, our farmera and from beet culture farmers have found laborers, and so on. We could grow ii. 4 .f i,o,iri lniinr enough sugar beets in a single state to
nn tu i.,i 'Vho poanit is that thou- supply the needs of the entire nation.
n,i, r ,vin WrtmM nri ri,ilrlrmi I liope some day we shall grow all the
are being taken from the overcrowd- sngar wo need right hero at .home. But
ed sections of the cities of the state atprosent we are Dajinguus, and set to work on the land, a back to sum. each year to the cane producer In
th fnrm movomont that is of real the tropics, employing tlie cheapest Ja
nmpHom value. under a foreign fiag.
"This increased Ullage of the soil is When I first entered the cabinet as t.h verv iicst-and. in fact, the only Secretary of Agriculture under Frcsi-
Pffpoiive-means of overcoming the dent McKinley -In 1S97 I had been con-
wnpds that are the chronic enemies of ctcd with the Iowa btato Agricui-
r ni- ui ornn nntl o- tural college for six years, and out
LH LJ liiiuici v.uifÄi.ip, .wi-w
Tnsre
Bp
niii'fi n
ft dir
12
J!
hi . n JniT ah Vi no ah
And brought forth a MJ? "LZ uu""6
n I.,.,. rt,,i,-.n-(3 ürror n IVUÜIV j.huiuvh..j
oos Galore
m
Chas.
UIlciö. nui - v.v.,-: Pnrf-aresvillp Will have a OllP JOT
Hujrs made a ontrspeecri tun 01 r.rppip. rl pi ails of recen' si rue-
--
Hons and full of expressions ot disapproval, but without a sirlt statement of wnat other thnix Mr. HnvhcswoulJ haze done at any given juncture Hughes speech of acceptance is a pu )iic onnfeinn a candid,'. v -o is
thnni an i?SM ana
policy. Little that is ucw ap Tonra in i i.n sneech. buch stuff
Tnr V,p. raken seriously bh
Pa 1
The Ladies ki met with Mrs Harry Breidebaugh last VVednes dav, ... Henrv Graham and wife visit pf at Alfordsviile last unr'ay. Rube Hontcb, Llod Schnarr and MissE tie Ak'Cornvdc returned from Oakland City College last Tuesday
Able Seairi Murptig. AKl QoamnnM nmhvof H M.S.
f-XVIVi IJVWl""""- i '
1 l
uO
WEBSTER S
HEW INTERNATIONAL
Superiority of Educational Merit This new creation answers with
final authority all kinds of puzzling g questions such as "How isPrzemysl nronounced ? ' ""Where ia Flan- I
dm? ""what 13 a continuous voy-
hausting his soil. Besides all this, we have found that every other crop raised upon land that has been put into sugar beets shows a greatly increased yield.
"Upon a piece of land that had been
there we had made experiments which taught us the great value of the sugar beet not only for its sugar, but as an aid to the other crops and in its byproducts as a food for the stock. We made experiments with all sort3
In beets the previous season I myself of root crops-potatoes, sugar beets,
raised seventy bushels of oats to tne tui,, -
IUI U1U We had
iln nnrnce tho foil HTIO Of II1V WOUIU 00 IÜQ IHOL iUOIIUlUie IUI tuu
the American public even the Somespeed was the inventor of mnef. nHrtißan norMcn of it. Mr. tue most ingenious excuses in
Ruches' speech is a disappoint- order to obtain ieve. ment to his admirers in all par- "What on earth do you repuuv lies He bas been content to ieave f or this time, Murphy oAf the nlfl nlan of blaming QCirpH pantain. as our hero made
the administratiöm for every- his 0ft-repeated request. It isn t thina bad and giving ssmethmg vour reataunt's wedding day, is mA far ovprvthine sood ?
T7;i-U rv eftM' 7,ron iPfl Hat
NDl IflcnilUllGll. with a rin 4U'snotso Daa a:
. that It's ' -trvinb to iook -ser of Chnton u ij n; iavrllv lnika t
Lawyers
T'Vio TiewsBaDers
County, Pa. have agreed not to mention the names of any lawy er in the court proceedings. The met first and declarea
that advertising was degrading and vulgar; then the newspaper
meinet and declarea tnaL wie
lawyers were all politician ana wan t-pd everything for nothing
nd decided to keep tneir nameb fof print. A Physical Impossibility. To run a newspaper without occasionally publishing an item ;i,o ;c nntrne or ffives oltese,
vom rks a levelheaded exchange
is like running a railroad without
havrg accidents ana sniasnup. t s"pithGr is a physical imposs
ibility. No man on earth is to so creat an extent constantly at the
meicy ot ooin irienub cum cuuifla t-hp. editor of a country
.. 1 I
Vi know ot a number or Mmm s wii g ue r in. rT..i.T of the Conner ut re rift. -nb?cribers. they b-ow th-3 raer from their neishburfe. We are a . u know that the Uonrier is thas n i;tel. but why not subscri " lo
pice is nmall iind we woitki . ciate s
aving these naineP on our M-:in2list. j
A man that won't patronize his
home taper is a detriment to his
ommumty A town without af
live, up-to-date newspaper is like'
a ship without a rudder, anü every live, up to -date citizen owes it his support.
I amVy "WhatisaiO?rte?" "What
I is ivhite coalt" '-"How is skat proj nounced?" and thousands of others. 1 More than 400,000 Vocabulary Terms. 1 30,000 Geographical Subjects. 12,000 1 Biographical Entries. Over 6000 lllusI trations. 2700 Pages,' The only diction-
I sry with the divided page a stroke of
genius. --
Rtgnlar and India
Paptr tdiüoES, Write for specimen pages, illustrations, etc. Free, a ecfc of Pocket Maps if you namo kul rater. H?
M ERR AM CO..
Springfield, Mats.
ous-"bedad, Oi hardly loike to
tell vez, sorr, at an, at an, uim; 4 'Oh, come now. Murphy! said the captain, grimly 'Til try to stand the shock " m . Well, sorr, its like this mtoirely Oi hflfl the misfortune to have a
brother born blind sorr. Heaven be praised, he's just got his
soight and wants to see me sor! "Leave's grantd, snapped the captain, as he burst into uncon-
trolable laugater
Expected To Pay. Receiving The Courier at' the postoffice regularly beyond the time for which it is paid means w von WILL BE EXPECTED
TO PAY FOR IT and a plea oJ "ordered it stopped," "never subscribed for it," "only.sub-
for a certain penoa,
P3 O o w ru Ü5
r- 23 O 'S "Ö CT si 3 3 3 . C3
CO
3 a , 2. & ( -O rT i4.
ES
mZmmW Write for sped- I
m 1
i, w on ,m,tlv tho s.amn kind of Iowa larmers ana airymen.
land, got a yield ot not quite fifty. Last a large ueru oi. tmn ..u
onof!ft,. n?o,n nf bind that had tested tnese uiuereiu fuimm u
I Y UCli. tlil'l- IJ-PV--W . I . . m w I ii 1... 4 h.ii h f V r 111 Tri A
lioTi ncn,l fnr cn.r.,r hoots T srrfiW flftY we cows ui eiiu im-u uiu
! j,. . i nrnrlnrt on of inilk and butter.
buslieis or wneai io me sicic ucic luv - .f1I,. i0 hnfirnon Hvonrv-two found that we could not get good re-
111 11111111 T VLVW 7 ww " mf I v
t .. . . ... t ciiltR fi'nui tiirnins. nonitous anu caD-
. and twenty-Live ousneis. raruiereua 4 , . - .
learned so well Uiat sugar land Increases the yield of oats that when they
are in conversation among themselves
and one reports a yield of from seventy
to ninety bushels an acre the other will reply: 'Von liave raised It on sugar beet land. That accounts for it' "This year there will be taken from Ohio citi'v- io the country to work in the beet v-'ds over 5.000 people, and yet this ind-istvy is only beginning in the stats' cu-ht it. have twentyfive bee! ' ;ar factor, und Lndiana, equally f:n orably locaierl and with land peculiarly sliced t- ihis prop, should have an e ; al number."
v.
m;mmm
sal
.jor : j
if
P O
yJ5 ft) C3
w p O o o
vu c Ö ' rf
Qfr . will rot be accepted. The
newspaper Pushed continually' rinted label on your paper every with work, he must get much ot jday it reaches your hands shows the information concerning tran-Lvhere you stand. We do not
piring events second or unm ;want to force the paper on an
handed or not at all. Frequently
un
willing subscriber a single day
tpments are received fromLp:tupr d0 we feel disposed tc
supposedly trustworthy sources fc off a responsible person on
which are sunsequenuy ivuuu uv! suspicion wno aoes uul u-uio be without foundation, Noc one;theexact date of expiration editor in a thousand wdlfully in s iures either friend or foe by mis- Newspapers at best have to representation. Go to himand askt much that isn t ideal, b3 for a correction, and nine cases cause it is mostly their 300 to out of ten, if your cause is just, 'mirror life as it is, not lite as it mil- :A rvKfcJv arif ,f- Ko And in drawing
vnil Will ut: ictcivcu -. j - uui; i u tu .
A W WW
ie
O o 0
ES rt CO Cfl ö p y M, 0 s cn
SOUTHERN RY. TIME TABLE Corrected to July 2, 1916, the Following is (Or Information Only and is ntt Biiaranteed. iSASTBOU"Xl
PLANT THAT IMPROVES SOIL.; The Sugar Eset Increases Yield of Cther Crops. How sn:- 1; Loots imprest the fertility of iht ivA increase tlie yield of all crops . ouii In rotation with them '
Is cxplaiiifd in the National Magazine by Trumau (. i'aluier, who has spent the past iei ywr in studying agricultural methods in Kurope and America. "The sugar l ( et boiuga deep rooter' savs Mr. I 'a In !'. ":t prerequisite to its
(culture is that the soil be stirred to a
depth of ten to fourteen inches. u.he tender licet lot having to undergo the shoek of thinning soon, after it comes up in order to leave but one beet to a place, it demands well prepared, mellow seed bed. (lathering the sugar In its leaves from the atmosphere by the aid of the liglit and storing it up in the roots, it will not thrive if the light is cut off through being shaded by weeds, nnd their eradication means not only a further stirring of tlie soil by cultivation and hoeing, but they are removed
XO 5 DAILY So. ta Ng. 11 " .vo. 12 DailY So. 14
0:24 A. M 4:31 1 AI. S .3U F. il
0 by Harris & Ewlng. JAMES WII.SON. bages because oi a deleterious acid that affected tho butter, but from sugar beets we got a fine quality of butter. The importance of this is in the fact that the farmer needs :o use a root crop in his rotation to clear the ground. The cultivation required by such a crop improves the yield of all succeeding crops. Europe had learned the value of the beet, and the northern continental nations were making their own sugar from it and by using it in rotation with other crops had been obtaining surnrisinclr big yields per acre. But
before going to seed, thus leaving here Q had GQn backward in realix-
W EST BOUND
':ö7iü. Ill 11. 4 A. .M 7;it 1'. 11
a,
o 0 co
NO. 23
Time shown at Iluntingburg. JEASTUOUKD.
I, DAILY. 4:20 A.M.
1
n.in
i :20 P M WESTliUUND
j'NC 24
DAILY. 12:37 A. M.
10 7:5 l M.
" l2;0Sr.Ai
V E CI lycotnu ,Ag.ii
most
proper correction will be madehe line between what 1 innc.ivo nt-inf- nnrl what isn t th
wm - iponVHentiou; judgments will Ä Philip Zoerker after you ;conscienuoui 3 have shot your rocket don t play a,.TanriPV v,as no hard
with the stick. Always parasites J rufeb governing its fn Jasper to suck around. onlumns. The editor red
T.P. no riri-tofoiedfato think-serves the right , tc , rsas judgj
" . a;., Srs rim monf i nnil LUC r iaiuci
igtha se Uuu they come.. and will
ncr piÄU v
caaes
exerase
ht
:'V 1IWE
F-1
BP.
V -1 ;
! 2 . flffi
t i
i
v.
1
V T . a i .
KX3 maae inc w edal Award to LW.H4MFER KENTUCKY
weedloss Holds for succeeding crops.
Being plowod out in autumn gives an extra fall plowing, which leaves the land in condition to absorb instead of shed the fall ;:id winter rains and store up the moisture for the following season's crop. With the removal of the main root myriads of fibrous roots are broken off and loft in the soil to an average of n ton to the acre, and In rotting tlii-y not only deposit humus in the lower strata of soil, but leave minute channels through which it becomes aerated and hence fertile. The roots of subsequent crops follow these
. . . i j r j Ä i
interstices ana arnw uumraeni uum rJce lIje south.
two and three times the depth or son formerly reached, and hence the farmers double and treble their soil output without increasing their acreage."
Cold tRCdal wer aIko awarded n Chicago
V?
for Sale by All Leading Dealers
, Id Papers the Courier offic
Beet Pulp as Cattle Food, in summa rixlng the important features of sugar beet growing In various parts of the country the Department of Agriculture calls attention to Its peculiar importance to the middle western states because of the extent to which stock feeding is followed as an Industry In this territory. Beet pulp that is, what remains of the beet after -the sugar has been extractedhas been proved to be the finest feed yet discovered for milk cows and for fattening cattle, sheep and
I other farm animals. This is true
whether the pulp Is fed In its wet state as it comes from the factory or
OC , after being dried. A business of about j $2,000,000 a year has grown up la tht
I
sale of dried beet pulp, -in which oi tt cjl& b ihlpptd to aaj dlitianji
lug its importance. The year I came into the cabinet the United States had produced only 29,000 tona of beet sugar. I managed to get public spirited persons to contribute beet seed to begin investigations, and we found that the
t two northern tiers of states had tho
most favorable conditions for beet culture. Ye made elaborate inquiries, sent seed in all directions and had tho beets mt back to us for testings. At the same time we started encouraging beet growing in the north we began to stimulate the growing of
And I anticipated
that by this time our farmers would be growing enough of each of these products for our needs. 15ut, while they grow today substantially as much rice as is consumed in the United States, the beet crop furnishes only a small proportion of our sugar. It 4s mora difiicult to educate our farmers to beet raising. It is a more complicated form of activity. LASt year our sugar beet crop netted 595,455 tons of sugar, worth $05,505,000. Of this the farmers received about $20,350,000 for the beets, a fraction over 40 per cent. The beet tops brought
i $3 an acre, amounting to $1,35S,47S;
the pulp (left nfter the sugar is extracted from the beets) was wrth $3,033,106 and the molasses, a byproduct of tlie sugar, $1,211,036 So the total value of the crop was orer 170,000,000. There Is no more pro4tabt crop 'tfcam & lugar bMt I
that rig
. "I riT
