Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 59, Number 40, Jasper, Dubois County, 8 June 1917 — Page 5

1

-4

lÄSPEft COURIE1

Last Sunday was the one day it did not rain. Jacob Schwenk spent Friday Qofnyrlav nt. AlfordsVllle Oil

business. Miss Bertha Padget, of Alf ordsville is visiting friends m Jasper this week. Why, oh why! is it that in every bouquet the editor gets there's always a viper m wide awake and ready for business? X.eo. Schuble, House Mover. I am prepared to move houses and do carpenter work. In bui nest 25 years. Leopold Schuble Sr. CASTORIA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years

Always bears the Signature of

Moines, Iowaf is in the city visitV f TT I

mg ner grandparents, Mrs. W. A. Traylor. Hon. Stanley Kreig arrived at Jasper Tuesday morning to attend court, to the sorrow of some crap shooters. Get busy Prose cucor Kreig.

There ie nothing wrong in being a slave to habits if they are good habits. Jn.n What She Needed. When women complain of weariness backache, dull headaches, and ei nilar ailmentd, they accept those troubles as their lot because they are women, when the ailments mav be the result of disor

dered kidnoye. Mrs. iMarv V. Bunker

thft-Hnrlpnn. writes Of

Foley Kidney Pills, "Just what 1 needed. " Jos. A. Mehiinger adv

By a wise provision of nature

the man who spends his time iooi

ishly will never have much mon

ey to spend that way.

Good For the Little Ones. Every year sees a big increase in the d mand for Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for coughs, colds and croup.

J. A. Parker, Tundgren, la. writes; "I gave my children, aged two or four years

Foley's Honey and lar for severe come, which crave almost immediate relief. I

also took same with good relii8ls." Jos. A. Mehringer. adv.

There were no slackers in Bain-

bridge township Tuesday and there were 289 registered for Uncle Sam's service. The U-Go-I Go Club composed of the younp

ladies of this city Dinned red car

nations on all those who regis

tered.

Wedding Dance. Tharewiilbea wedding dance

at KunkeFs Hall next Tuesday June 12, 1917 m honor of the marriage of Joseph Kreilein and Miss Josephine Lampert Everybody invited.

Stopped Mis Backache, George Lawrence, railroad firpman, Kittrell, Mi8., writes: "I used i iree bottles of Foley Kidney Pills wben I was eo ßick I hardly could stay c the engine, and they cored me. IVf y ick acnedhll the time, kidneys acted -! irgieh: dull headache, felt sleepy ai. the time; nervous: had to rise many t mes e8ch night." Jos. A. Mehringer. adv. Dr. U T. Steinhart, the Washington Dentist, and son of Mike L. Steinhart of Ireland, was married to Miss Aline Hyatt at Indianapolis May 28th. They will make their home at Washington

The One Best Speech with which

to answer one Who gives an Order is 'the brief, "It's done." Mas Had Bsnefical Results. A man is not treating himself fairly

when he neglects backache, rheumatic pains, dizziness, stiff joints, poremascles or other symptens of kidney or bladder

trouble. Isaac ts. in man, YLii vvasnington Ave., Abhbury Park N. J. wr&ee, UI used Foley Kidney Pills and had the most beneficalresirits from same. " Jos, A Mehringer adv

"Good , morning! Have you aeen The Courier? Evans'nlle's best paper.' Forethought People are learning that a little forethought often eaves them a big exdense. Here is an instance: E. W. Archer Caldwell, Ohio, writes: "I do not believe that our family has been without Charr berlain's Colic, Cholera and Diarrhoea Kemedy since we commenced keeping house yeara aio. Whn we go on extended visit we take it with us." Obtainable everywhere.

Carl W. Cassidy

Marriage Licenses.

22 to

Fanny

The Jinfe term of Dubois Circuit court convened Monday.

Jos- Megner was down from;

worthmgton the nrst or tne week visiting relatives. Everett Whitten came down from Louisville Tuesday for a visit, Mrs. Scott Hunter and children of Dawson Springs, Ky are in city this week visiting relatives. Orville Eckert came home Friday from New Castle, where he had been working. The Rev. Pratt left Tuesday

to attend a revival meeting

at Dale.

Mrs. W- A. Wilson entertained

the Twentieth Century Club Wednesday evening,

The County Commist oners

held their regular monthly ses

sion at the Ccurt House the first

of the week.

The heavy rains of the Dait

ten days have done considerable

damage to crops m this locality, the low-lands being flooded and much corn drowned out.

The Dubois county centennial

celebration which was to have

been held in Jasper in September has been postponed until next

year on account of the war.

Wet Fisherman

Youngest son of Mr. Pat. Cassidv left Monday morning for

Ft. Benj. Harrison at Indianapolis, where ee becomes a member of the U. S A Eng corps Go 3d luck Carl, Stomach Troubles and Constipation. "I will cheerfully say that Chamberlain's Tablets,, are the most satifactory remedy lor stomach troubles and constipation that I have sold in thirty-four years drug store service." writes S, II. Murphy, druggist, Wellsburg, M. Y. Obtainable everywhere. Cards of Thanks. I wish to thank all who aided me to be elected County Superintendent of Schools. I shall endeavor to serve the public faithfully and beg of all your cooperation in the cause of education. Robert E. Eckert. SlOO Reward, 100. The readers of this paper will te pleased to learn thai there is at least one dreaded disease that science has been

able to cure in all its stages, and that is

Catarrh. Catarrh Demg greatly influenced by constitutional conditions requires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts thru

ho hlnnd nn the inilftOtlS surfaces Of the

Rvsteinitherebv destroying the foundation

of the disease, and giving the patient strength by building up the constitution and assisting nature in doing its work. The nroorietorfi luve so much faith in

the curative powers of Hall's Catarrh f hire that thev offer One J-hindreii Dol-

lais for anv "case that it foils to cure Rend for of testimonials. Address:

K. ;I. CHKNKY &C0.f Props., Toledo

Ohio. Sold by Drugmst. oc. adv Chicken Thieves Busy

On the Troy road. Five set

tino- hens and their es es were

v 2 v. carried off while their owner an wife were at church 'I he par t;es are suoDOsed to be knowr

and expect to stop a had of buck

shnr or re2eive a visit t'ora an

officer. To The PubMc,

1 llwve been umiii: Chfituuerlain's

Tablets for indieeftion for Uu- pnsj sx

tnnnilis rincl it lnrUS EDO UiCfttbDre tt

ta r h?iAP nfvLr used a rerredv tha

,.J t. -. i vi v. r,

dip me eo luui-n uw. ' -j '.-s 8V, lilion, N. Y. Chamberlain

are obtainable everywhere. For sale Two black horses, ages 9 and 7, weighing about 1000 and 900 lbs. priced right. Arch Doane, Jasper, Ind.

Jos P. Nolan Claik 26

Earl Posey 22 to Mamie Cohoon

20, Roger L. Holcomb 23 to Ethel M, Frank 27 The Erie Eailroad Company has Dut ud signs telling the names

of the rivers it crosses, and of the railways it insects. That is a bit of thoughtfulness that travelers will appreciate. Bowel Complaints in India. In a lecture in one ot the Des Moine3, Iowa, churches a miseijnary from India told of going into the interior of India, where he was taken sick, that he had a bottle of Caamberlain'a olic, Cholera and Diarrhoea ßemedj' with him and he believed that it saved hia life. This

remedy is used successfully in India both

as a pieventive and cure tor cholera. You mav know from this that it can be

depenped upon for the milder forms of

bowel complaint that occur in this coun-

ry. Obtainable everywhere.

School Teachers Attention

Do vou want an opportunity to

earn money in your spare time or

during your vacation? Each

agreeable work. No investment

reauired. W e want several school

teachers in each county. Write

or call immediately. If you write name the school you are teaching.

Timber Investment & Securiries

Comüanv. 803-8 K of P Build

ing. Indianapolis, Indiana.

Startling Results Thrill Jasper Peonle reDort incredible resnUs from

pure Lavoptik eye wash. A pirl with

weak strained eyes was Deipea oy one

r.DDlication. Pier mother co-ild not eew

4 A .

or read baeause ol eye pains, in one week her trouble was gone. A small bottle Lavoptik is gauranteed to help

EVERY CASE weak, strained or inflamed eyes. OXE WASH startles with

its incredible results, rare aluminum

eye cup FREE. All Druggists. 1

Different But Satisfactory. Indiceslion causes worry, eick head

aches, biliousness, bad breath and con

stant ilistrese. W. AS McRae. Raleish

'Foley :atharti2 Tablets system fborouirbly and do

C. K Kil-

e Tablets

Cbas. Flick, Jess Bradley, and Ed. Kluh returned last baturday from Sandy hook, Daviess countyThey came by the Wagon route. They found too much rainy water. Dubois Circuit Court. Has b,en in session this week. Hon. John L. Bretz, Judge, presiding and Stanley M. Kreig prosecutor looking after the interest of the State. The following are cases disposed of: State vs Geo. A. Cox, selling without License, Jury trial guilty; guilty fined $50 and one month in Jail. State vs John Kitterman, S. L. W- L. plea of guilty. State vs Tom Abell, intoxication, plea of guilty, fined $5 and costs.

State vs Rhoda Whitten, A&B

with Intent, Special Junge Mc

Fall retired and W. D. Cuml ot

Petersburg appointed.

State vs Otis Green, Neglect

of duty, nollied.

State vs Francis Green, Out-

ting timber on land of another,

continued.

State vs Peter Newkam. vio

lating liquor law, guilty fined $10

and costs. State vs Henry Knies, violating liquor law, fined $10 and costs. Same as above and same fine. State vs Ben Rowekamp, visiting gambling house, fined $5 and costs. State vs Tom Friedman, same as above and same fine. State vs John Mathias, same as above and same fine. State vs John Newkam, same as above and same fine. State vs Frank Fischer, same as above and same fine. State vs Ed Montgomery same as above and same fine, Theo J. Beiker, Admr sale of land comfirmed. State exrel, mandate, appealed to Sup. court.

Clarence Ashby vs Fidelity Ins

n

G a. writes: cleanse inv

not hurt at all. I find them enlirelv

satisfactory and wonderfully different n! more satisfactorv than anv other

pill." Jos. A. Mehringer. adv.

STOP

1

a;

I nn 211 -

L t TTv j. -4 rZ

The simplest and best way to stop coughs, is to take Foley's Honey and Tar You get the curative influence of the pine balsam together with the mollifying effect of the honey, and other healing ingredients. It leaves a soothing coating on the inflamed tickling throat, raises phlegm easily and putt a quick end to hard wearing coughs. 0 R. F. Hull, Mtbe.Ya., writes: "One bottlf öf Foley's Honey and Tr stopped a troubleotnc bronchial couth and ircitmtioa rkat bd bothered mc for fifteen yeixslYaw Uwdft kU iu Try iL sold by Jos. A. MeiiriRper

0. continued.

Cath. Greener vs Jos Greener, divorce, cont. Frank Sheridan vs Nettie Sheridan, divorce., continued. Theresia Renner vs Louis Renner divorce, continued. Albert Urich, Bruce Greene, Phf Kunkel and George Krodel, (2 cases) keeping gambling

houses, pleas of guilty and each lined $10.00 and costs in each case. State vs R. Whitten, A&B with intent, trial by jury, fined $50 for assault, not guilty as to intent The Rube from Patoka tore a hole in the seat of his pants lying to the jury, but those

'men knew a lying hermaphrodite 'when they saw him. Wny the I Hon. Mr. Stanley Kreig will

keep such an egot'stical ignorramus around his office is a mystery to many people. We cannot tell. LOST-Gold cuff button, Main street between Court House and Postoffice. Letter "S" on face. Return to this office. Rid of a Lingering Cough. You can get relief from racking, hackiüg coughs, from wheezy, eneezy breathing, from raw, inflamed throat and tight chest. W. (j. Glazier, Bentonville Ark. writes: "I can recomtnend Foley's lioney and Tar Compound. I used it

for a cough that 1 had lor years, and was eaid to hav consumption bat it cured ine," Jos. A. Mehringer, ady.

REPUBLICAN

BISSIPÄHSEII Six Millions to the? Good Left By Democrats is?Rapidly Vanishing. u: BUILDING "NO MEAN CITY"

Some Eye-Opening Facts Showing Why Opposing Newspapers so Bitterly Denounce and Persecute MayonBell.

13 I

I:

By Willis S. Thompson. ' Indianapolis, June 6. When Goyernnor Thomas R. Marshall, Auditor W. H. O'Brien and Treasurer W. H. Voll

mer took over the job of managing

state finances, they found a Republican debt of 2,609,163.12. Cash in the treasury was only $9,463.91. All the counties had been milked dry with demands for advance payments, future revenues had been anticipated and spent, witk nothing coming in from any source. All state institutions were run down and needing extensive repairs. None were properly or decently supported. Repairs were made, new instiutions built, paid for and placed under efficient non-political management. All state debts made by Republicans were paid. The day Governor Goodrich took office there was turned over to him an actual cash balance of $5,699,331.94, with not one penny of debt. The first day of June, five months after he received the big Democratic cash balance, this cash on hand had been reduced to $3,329,387.10, and strenuous efforts have been made for the full five months to find a way to levy extraordinary taxes in order to cover the deficit which the Republican administration anticipates. Fine comparison of records. Since when Thomas Taggart was mayor of Indianapolis, no man who has held that job has been so viciously and maliciously abused by the press as has Mayor Joseph E. Bell. Since when Taggart was mayor no man in the job has done so many constructive things. Mayor Bell has done larger things and more of them that permanently benefit the people than all the mayors that ever preceded. He has done big things that, others promised but never did. He has done them economically ana thoroughly. His record stands today as one of the strongest reasons for believing that the next mayor of Indianapolis is going to be Dick Miller, the Democratic nominee. While it has cost him unlimited personal abuse and villification, he has demonstrated that it is 'good for the people at large to have officials who will not surrender government to unscrupulous newspapers, even when they go so far as to indict, and to conspire with prosecutors to pay the people's money for perjured witnesses in attempting conviction. Much was done to retard all things undertaken during the past four years. When he was elected mayor, Bell had promised that he would elevate all railroad tracks. The retiring administration, dominated by the News, sought to wreck his plans and give contracts to suit the railroads and throw a last reward to their political fviends. The first act of Mayor Bell was to repudiate these contracts, whinh provided for lowering all streets into dark tunnels under the tracks and depreciating property values for many blocks either way. He demanded track elevation of the right sort, and he got it. Trains will run over these elevated tracks during 1917. Other cities of the state will sooner than some may imagine be confronting this same problem. The work of Mayor Bell stands a model of speed and good results. A stream of no mean size and a menace to the health of a large part of the population had furnished candidates with stuff to talk about for years. They had all promised to cover this nuisance. Joseph Bell promised it. The News said he could not do this and all the things he was pledging. After the election the News and the retiring administration hurried a contract to go to their friends. That contract stands today to accuse them. It provided for paying $1,800,000 for the job rushed through in a haphazard way. Mayor Bell stopped the signing of the contract by court injunction and was denounced for so doing. When he took his seat as mayor he let the contract on proper bids and specifications, and It is finished and cost the city $907,0Q0, just half what the News and its friends tried to pay for the job. Four automobiles can drive through this drain abreast. Candidate Bell also promised flood protection. He said he would build a levy, have a boulevard on top of it, with parking and sidewalks, and would do it inside of $1,500,000. The News said this impossible promise made him unfit for the job, that he could not do it for $5,000,000. He did not got to start until the legislature of ii"15 gave him an enabling act. That levy, with boulevard and parking, is complete. It cost the city less than $1,200,000. Not a word of credit from newspapers. Indianapolis is the only city in any state that has this work done since the flood of 1913. He is lighting the city by the best and cheapest contract in the United States. It is saving the people more than a million dollars in the ten years. The News and the public service' commission tried to kill the contract, and Mayor Bell, backed by public sentiment, won. The story is not half told. No wonder, then, that the people Of Indianapolis want to see the same sort of work continue. People of the state will not wonder that Dick, Miller is the one best bet for the next mayor to sucCf ed Jutph E. Boll,

OURTH OFJULY CELEBRATION!

Maple Park, Everybody Invited

NED KRESS, Mgr.

eras

,0

L

TV"

00 ßo

9

2L

r. m im

io Vitra

.1

tt

o

SttNh

600

0

CTo5

o

.0

,0.

.0

6

ft'

"Liberty Bonds" Come Join Us For Victory and Peace See aTexpeneni8h J0U with them yourBeff 6 inveetment for Dubois County State Bankf Jasper

.0

o

.0

o"1

if-'

o

o

.0

.0

,0

1

M

.0

L n e" ä

O VJli ft

O 9

HUGHES' CHII.T.

PalaUile Bett th. colom.l n, Qmlalne . JX2g iffiflJJSSPgraJ Tonic

Try it Don't take an'v "J. plendid Tonic

PR PAR ED BY S'8' " - J BotUea OUlsviLLE OBISON-PETTET COMPANY i-Tiuuc (Incorporated) - lENTUCKr

SPEf!TAl nrnD

The Evansville Courier DIbj mail, one year Regular price $4 fnd i The J asper Courier Weekly, one year Begular price $1.50 For Drice of Tho r?,.: ,

5.00

Including Sunday Courier $6.00 Send subsenphons either to The Jasper Courier or ihe Evansville Courier

9

WILLIAM, A

Q-3neral

SOI

Insurance and Real Estate

11 1I8S iSSSf Ilif

oaas and Iaauraace for Dubois Pike and

Special rates on Farm L

1 . U1H I KH a r g counties. Fire, Toroado Hail, Life, Accident

, igaiiy uuu -uiaDinty Insurance, iiondin Co. repaesented. Phone 116-2

1

l