Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 59, Number 42, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 June 1917 — Page 4

JASPEll COURlfcR 3y Bk it Doan

AASPEU, DUli.JKS COUNTY, INDIANA RntPrPfl an second-class-matter at the poetoffice at Jasper, Ind., under the act i t. o i oro of March 3, 1879. K . ?inhonotian Si .50 Per Yer. Thi3 papei is mailed regularly to it brcribers ontil a definite order to disontinne ie received and all arrears paid e i od less in the discretion of the pm-Bbria different coane should de 'men advisable. be FRIDAY, JUNE 22, .1917.. . Beathouse Made Democratic

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4 Bert.

Charles A- Greathouse, former

i superintendent of public instuct !fieion. wa? on Friday June 15 elect

'Med chair man of the Democratic "5m& i . i ' Lt f no'ün

i Bernard Korbly, who rosig-ned

."jar.nr.p npnrva t'lmiiLLttc lv ouou

vThere was no opposition to Great

Chouse. Charles Salee. secretary

Viol the committee, also having re

if iigned. Greathouse wi 1 name

successor later. Wonder's Cease! W, E. Tieman, the famous 'Ed'; ex-evangelist; and well known here, has been nominated as a delegate to the new Constitutional Convention to be held next year, by the working mens league of Eransville. Here's success Ed, we hope you win. You are a thousand times more competent than the average petifogger who will be running. It seems quite probable that the teaching of German in the public schools of this country will be entirely abandoned as it should be. It is not the language of diplomacy, of polite circles nor of commerce. It has been sug gested that the execution being done by the French awl English guns will probably m ' ir. the official language of the i wer regions but none wants tc go there hence we can have no use for it Petersburg Press It wi 11 be illegal to kill squirrels this year at any time betwr n Augast 1, and November 1 Thilaw was made by the Ust H41 lature and is now in effect The Convicts of th I.-viiaa Reformatory of Jeffersonvill.bought $5,300.00 worth of Liber ty Loan Bonds- They are said to have earned the money at extra work there. Indiana over subscribed five million dollars. Playing Cards er Hilles. War tends to divert people's minds from normal thought. Su perstition has abundant opportunity for development British and French soldiers believe if three men light cigarets from a ringle match one at least is to die soon. vVith the numb rof casualties of the war the chances are that one of any three men will be killed. The escapes are forgotten and the in dances where it has worked out are cited to prove the case An appeal for funds from a missionary society concludes, "This New Testament saved a French soldier's life " A picture of a bullet torn booklet accompanied the appeal It would probably be fruitless o suggest that a pack of playing cards, banned by the church, might have been equally effective as a sheild. Plugs of tobacco have doubtless stopped enemy bullets and later given soldiers the consolation of a quid, without stirring the missionary society to supplying the army with "chewing." This appeal for testaments is a worthy effort, but why becloud the effort to save men's souls by bringing in the accidental saving of a man's body? It weakens the appeal. tWe can print Without etint Anything you need : W do the job. JLnd never rob, And "huitle" is oar creed. ht JJXT TV DOAKE, Printqrium.

True! Too Tree! 1 Editor Crow of the Petersburg Press says: 'If the government will fuinish us a battery of four or five linotypes, with men to run them, we will cheerfully undertake to publish at least one tenth of the stuff that comes for publication all free, of course The government pays a one-horse power lawyer who never made over twelve hundred dollars a year out of his practise the sum

of seventy five hundred dollars per year for his services as s member pf congress, but it has no monejr to pay for advertising. We are not kicking, but some times wp can not but think that some things, even in a orreat and i - - free republic, such as this, could be regulated a little more fairly." Bill Ko for instance. i Poor Old Bi! The small petifoerger with the big belt, has been loafing in In dianapolis this week and blowing off his bazzoo about the war ending whn five million American soldiers stack arms in Berlin, Germany. Poor old Bill Kox has not got enough gumption to know that it ia a long way toTipperary And yet the people of the 3d Dis trict must pay this egotist $7,500 a year to keep a seat warm. Sacrifice is teessapy. An 'Illinois woman' ' writes a letter t the Petersburg Press which contains this paragraph: I sea in the Press where it says ary mother not wanting her boy to go to war had better put him in petticoats. If that will keep

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them oifc of war I'll put my boystevagon but fell off Monday and is

in pettfeoats and tie ribbons or their tats " The hances are that "boys" of twenty-one thirty, inclusive who would let their mothers put them inpet-icoats and tie ribbons on their hats" wouldn't be worth much as poldiers, nor as any thing except ornaments for sewing circles and pink teis Maternal solicitude is one of the sweetest Qualities of human nature. Moth ers do riot want to see their sonsl goto war- They would avoid the sacrifice. But the true mothers of America will not try to, evade it when cruel necessity comes They did not in 1776. They did not in 1861. Nor will they in 1917. Washington Heraid. ÄII That GlittersAll that glitters is not gold, because most of it is beads, bugles, sequins or fish scales. It is the same old glitter that nf rhp Ä7-p; ppntnripq ao the Puritans trad- d them for bi oad acras of rich farm tands, and to

attracted rocmantas. r or oeaas j pieasod to leam that there is a the Spaniards bought gold mines dreaded disease thateocience

day American sailors SWap them ; Cure is taken internally, and ncs thru tUa TQifimoq fnr rarp ArrhVtne ood on the mucous surfaces af the wan the Eskimos lorrare Arctic By8temlthereby destroying the foundation fUrS inf the disease, and eivin? the tmrimir

The delight in glitter is a pi ill! ' iUve and chit sh instinct, it is shine which first catches the infant's eye Civi?ization has not resisted

its tawdry claim any better than Send for list of testimomam. Add; it has resisted the war instinct. GL??y Ttrn2v.fPr?-' T T i j ü i. 1 . ;i.!Omo. cola by Drugmst, oc.

In a decade of emotional strain iti is inevitable that beads and bul ets should both hold man's at tefition. Today women will pay $100: for a spangled gown which . they t will be able to buy for $10 next; year Bufcsae your beads, Jadies. for they come into fashion as often as war. You'll need 'em as long as the optic nerve responds pleasurably to the vibration of light, as long as the auditory nerve joys in the beating of drums and the swish of shrapnel. The Young Bride's First Discovery Their wedding tour had ended, and they entered their new home to settle down to what thev hoped to be one Ions uninterrupted blissful honeymoou. But a'as! the young bride's troubles soon began, when ?he tried to reduce the cost of living with cheap "big can" baking Dowdrs. She soon discovered that all phe got wis a lot for her money, and it was not all baking powder, for the bulk of it was cheap materials, which had no leavening power. Such powders will not always give the desired results. And because of the absence of leavening gas, it requires from tvo or three times as much to raise cakes or biscuits as it does of Calumet Baking Poweer. Thus, eventually, the actual cost to vou. of cheap baking powders, ie more .than Calumet would be. Cheap baking powJers often leave the bread bleached and acid, sometimes vfillow und alkahde. and often unpalat able. They ore not always of uniform .strength and quality. Now the brnle buys uaiumei in peifectlv wholesome baking powder, moderate in price, and always uniform and reliable. Calumet keeps indefinitely makes cooking easy, and is certainly the most economical after all. The Courier Reaches Buyers Are You In It?

Jaspsr Ctmtributes

$3125.20.

To the Red Cross campaign last Monday, Wm A, Wilson, Gustave Grammelspacher, Mich Wagner, Felix Schneider, and Chris Krate were the team Captains and reported as follows: Xeam lf $842, No. 2, $875.45, No. 3, $339.50, No. 4, $664.25, No. 5, $404 00. On'Tuesday night, accompan-l rsa bynhe Gäy Military Band, a m . , I tlefegajion went to Raysviiia and was royal y reee-vpd- Th local minister .Rev. Neubauer deliver ed an address in German, and Judge J, L. Bretz spoke on the benefit of the Red Cross, and Hon. W. S. Hunter in regard to the benefits of the service, with some civil war reminiscenses . . . . . a. committee was appointed to solicit subscriptions and will re port later. : !nl MN ÜÜÖÜI I OWN 9 4 By John Birk Andy loves the winbows and widows, he was at Neds and put mem up m snining torm. so t 1 l n when the widows pass he can see which is the best locking one Pork chops can sHll be bought but if you du, the pig may laugh in your face, a heifer kick you m your roval highness, a Bull frog get away from you, Moles for meat. There will be more girls and forlorn widows left here after all have gone to war Jimmy says "there is no cherries at Mt. Carmel so he came back and got on the city water again V king for dry territory. It h s been predicted for years of horseless carriages. Ccok (Tony Mehringer) has the original, two mules and a rour wheel contrivance. Stay with them Tony. If anyone desires to see any faces of political people, there are a few m our city whose facial expression represent great men, for instanse, Ned appears as if he was ex-ov McCreary of Ky. Any one who has ever seen the former Governor and Ned Could hardly tell the difference, only that the ex-Gov. is farming and Ned is opening a park. Then one has the features of ex Pres. Taft, one of ex-Gov. Taft Beckam of Ky. and there if one not about town, but at the burg that has often been accussed of being or having the former secretary of the U. S. A. S1GO Reward, 8IÖO. The readers of this paper will be t least one bae been Hl?le t0 cnr" m aii 113 scaes SUKl Ulat Js ; efJ Voi iconstititi Jil tili i 1J . VydLill 1 li UCIU fiioailj o institutional conditions requires ional treatment. Hall's Catarrh strength bj building up the constitution uLd assisting nature in doing its work. The proprietors h?ve so much fakh in the curative powers of Hall's Catarrh Cure that? they offer One 11 uncb ed Dollars for any case that it fails to cure. ress : oledo adv. FOR SAKE. One vacant lot on Clay Street between 2nd and 3d, pt. lot 18 50 xl0. Also 3 room house and lot 50 x 120 on 4th street. Either or both will; be sold cheap Inquire at this office. Application for .Renewal ?f Liquor License. To the citizens of the city of Jasper: Notice is hereby given that the undersigned, a male citizen, twenty-on? years old, of good moral characcei, and who has been a. continuoua resident tot the city of Jaspor for a period of six months before the publication of this notice, will apply to the ßöard of Commissioners of Dubois county, Indiana, at their next regular July Term 1917, for leavelo sell in his own name, spiritous, vinous and malt liquors, in less ouaatities than a quart at a time, with the privilege ot allowing the same to be'ilrank until April 2, li)lS, upon the lollowing described premises, to-wit: Tne exact description of where said liquor is to te ?old is in a front room on the ground lloor of a two story frame building, 20x40 located on the North west corner of th- west half of lot No. 82 in the town n Jasj.er Said location fronts on ix't- 'tnet. Said applic:n. w .11 at the same time and place apply f,r leave toconduct in the same room, in connection with said saloon, a lunch counter, consisting o cheese, sausage, crackers, etn FRANK II. KNAPP. Jane 1, 1917. 3 wk. Every up-to-date Dubois, cotm ty farmer should have his owxi' printed letter heads and eiivel-j opes with the name of his farnr home printed thereon, especially! the envelopes with the return ad-' PrmtU I00 f each for $1.50 On good . material. Give us your order.

Canned berries are bird proof. You put a lid on waste every

time you seal a preserving jar. That rubber ring you put on a preserving jar helpsyou stretch your income. Can't eat 'em all in summer? Not . enough in winter? Home; canning is the answer. Syivestev Vjnderschmidt came up from E,diisTnile Saturday for a few days visit with home folks. Guy Sanders and family motor ed to Boonville Wednesday for a few days visit with relatives Misses Sarah Mehringer and! Loyola Neuschaef er left Sunday for Terre Haute to attend State Normal. The awfu- question "What shall I have for dinner?" is easily answered if your shelves are full of home canned products. Frost doesn't nip canned vegeables. Canned green peas and yellow peaches drive away the blus. n 11 -1 bee mat your garden produces dry beans, cabbage, potatoes and root crops that can be kept withnnf parmino Gli suit Court. The following have been disposed of since our last report Nothing much doing. Elmer Eifert, divorce case against his wife was continued, Albert Bohnert got a judgment against Tlieodore Eckstein for $224.32. Geo. Opel receiver for ?Wm. Sendelwick who disappeared last Sept, was ordered to pay his wife $2,233.33 as her marital rights, also $600 exemption, and allowed her a judgment of $4,500 or so much as may be left after the cost of the receivership has beer: paid. This means that the other debtors can "whistle" for some $6000.00. Frank Beiker, Georp-e Emrlert. Ed Bioom and Albert Heddinger were fined $5 and cost each for contempt of Court. The Schwenk-Whitten case for fornication was continuedHenry Fritch vs the County Commissioners vas on tap Wednesday, and the judge reserved his decision for the time being. Jos Marks, 'case on the same proposition was continued. What to Do When . Backache Comes on "Poley Kidney Pills liave done me more good than $150.00 worth, of other Medicine," writes Chaff. IT. Xox of SiiaXOd, K. Y. When backache comes on, and it seems? as if you can't stand the pain and pressure in the small of your hack and sides, do not feel that you must continue to suffer, but get a bottle of Foley Kidney Pills and begin taking them. They usually help from the very first doses. It is worth a good deal to you to know that Foley Kidney Pills give you just what your system needs to repair the weak sick kidneys. It is their inability to do their work properly that causes your pain and misery. Foley Kidney Pills lend to middle-aged and elderly people the spryness and elasticity of youth. They take away the cause of backache, stiff and aching joints, rheumatic pains and annoying bladder and urinary troubles. Try them today. Sold by Jqs. A. Msliriiwsr r"nTf"TTiT7trrtiinir-r-it nihi i ii nni"mr -rrti F. H. Schmutzler lünflertaker anflLiceiRilEiiata Lady Assistant for Women and Children Calls answered at all hours day or night By H. B. Friedmau Phcne No. 205 Jasper ind. Typewriters! All k. nds and allerrades, REMINGTONS $15 up Instruction itb each machine, Empire Type Foundries, Manufactures Type and Prnters Supply Bunalo, N. Y s5 w 31 r-vs you pnt into a sio should hniäi "U . flollar'f won h of ccmfont a dj;l;tr'.i wtfilt o! met; u inli.ir's worth of rftl Partarai'i. Forovery dollar you pul into a ptlr of aas ycu rIve h ,rH8t value. Yimj jr the h I!her that inooey will buy r you get the 1-t-fcc work thai akiU cun pro. Juce: you get ih' most comfort tliKt Pcicnct can give. .Look for 'L-uh" on the tshoe. Miwieoniy t-y J. I. LEWIS CO., "Bo It Now" Subscribe for the Jasper Weekly Courier, Don't put off for lor WrWw hgt you can do today.

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816 "Wells Street, Marinette, "Wis., Sept. 25, 1903. I was all run down from nervousness and overwork and had to resign my position and take a rst. I found that I was not gaining my strength and health as fast as I could wish, and as your Wine of Cardui was recommended as such a good medicine for the ills of our sex, I bought a bottle and began using it. 1 was satisfied with the results from the use of the first bott le, and took three more and then found I was restored to good health and strength and able to take up my Yfork with renewed vigor. I consider it a fine tbnic and excellent for worn-out, nervous condition, and am pleased to endorse it. AGNES WESTLET, 5307, North Wisconsin Holland Society. Secure a $1.00 bottle of "Wine of Cardui and a 2oc. nackace of I Thedford's Black-Draught today, gj WINE OF CÄI V.N 'i 1 SOUTHERN RY. TIME TABLE Corrected to Jans 2 1917. The Following is (Or Information Only and is not ISÄSTBOUND 5 UAIL S' 9:21 A. M. 13 4:31 P Al. 11 " . 8:30 P. il tfo NtO. NO. So. 12 Daily Iii h No. 1:41 V Time shown at limit in burg. t-ASajJOUKD. I, L) A ! L 1 10 A -. 0, J. 23 4 20 i WE-i H- 'I JS'l 2, DAILY. 12:37 A.. Ä1 10 7:cß P. iJ. 24 " ' 12:03 P. .1. V E CI lyoooiu AEont NO. NO. NO. MO. NO. STRIKE WHILE THE IRON'S HOT! Strike the people for business while they're. in a buying mood. If you want to strike hardest, put a striking ad in the Jasper Courier and keep it there. Keep on striking and the "iron," for YOU, will never grow cold. The Some Telephone Co has the largest Lut ci subscribers and will give you the best: -sar vice You can talk to vou frienäs, order your met chandise and make your appointmervt by the Home 'phono. DUBOIS CO. TELEPIQM . C, We know oi a number of families rhc are regular readers of the Courier Dut are not subscribers, they borrow the paper from their neighbors'. We are gu l to koow that the Courier is thus vnrciated, but why not subserio7 f he price is small and we would ic reiite having these names on our m ti ist.

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'Vs Ti n iRi uranTn; m h mm Republican Machine Not a Bit Pleased With Him as State Chairman. i SO THE NEWS ABUSES HlMf Opposition Press Unwilling to Admit His Splendid Record at State House VVhjch Has Equal. By Willis S. Thompson. Indianapolis, June 20. Charles A. Greathouse, when he was the unanimous choice of the democratic state central committee to serve as state chairman, told the audience of democratic workers who were present that he did not wish to make too many promises. He preferred to get tc work and, if possible, let his deeds exceed his words. It is on this line that he is immediately starting to put the organization into working shape. He will injec; some ginger into things. At the lirsi meeting which will be held as soon at headquarters can be equipped for ac tion, the woman's executive committee, 11(111.11 111 .lli91St VSX U11V KUIliail JLiUlllI each of the thirteen districts, wilil meet with and become an important part of the state central committee. The present members of the committee will name the women. Chairman Greathouse proposes at once to have his committee in action by perfecting the wo? king forces in every precinct in the state. Hfe it especially able as an organizer, hh ability in this line having been showi in the excellent results accomplishec while he was state superintendent oi public instruction. Selection of candidates for dele gates at large to the constitutiona convention will receive attention, al though no plan has been agreed upon The sentiment of democrats seems tc be that while politics should be kept as for as possible from the convention it is the duty of an organization sucl as the state committee to do all tha it can to be sure that the people an given a chance to vote for the l3igges men in Indiana regardless of what their politics. The Indianapolis News now refer? to Charles A. Greathouse as ä "wheehorse in the democratic machine. That is because he has been made state chairman because the News usee the word machine in an obnoxious sense, and because the towering republican machine presided over b Joe Kealing, Jim Hemenway, Tobe Hert and the Indianapolis News fears that the good work of Greathouse is going- a long way to the undoing- of "state government by Goodrich," which, being interpreted, means "government by the Indianapolis News." Fault is now found with Mr. Greathouse because he twice became state superintendent of public instructior when the democratic state organization supported him. The News h greatly worried because there is ai efficient democratic orcranizatiqn ii Indiana, and because there is a mr of the standing and ability of Mr. Greathouse at its head. The News now appears to be greatlj dissatisfied with the fact that Mr. Greathouse was twice elected state superintendent of public instruction. The editor of the News should havr the honesty to admit now, as it hai done in some careless moments in the past, that the administration af Superintendent Greathouse was the best that has ever been known in Indiana or in any other state in the Union. That under his administration the farhe of Indiana spread to all the states, because of the splendid and substantial progress fnade in all things relating 'to education All the people of Indiana know this. Superintendent Greathouse was responsible for more advanced educational, legislation than all the men combined who ever held the office be fore him, and he put all these progressive laws into successful operation. It will be a long time before any political party in Indiana finds another man of equal ability for the job. While he was superintendent politics was never the first considera tion. It never took precedence over efficiency. The first act of his sue cessor was to depose some of the ablest people in the department and to name in their stead nersohs of abso lutely no experience or special quail fication, other than that they are re publicans. So all that cax be found to say against Mr. Greathouse now is that when he was a candidate the democrats voted for him. After the election of 1918 the same editors can say that not only democrats, but republicans and independents followed the Greathouse lead in voting with democrats to oust the grip of Goodrich on the state government a thing of which the people of the state have already tired. The same complaint is that which has for a long time been made against William H. O'Brien, that when he was i candidate for auditor of state the lemocrats voted for him. Therefore he is a member of some mysterious md awful machine. Yet no man who held the office of auditor did a tenth Dart of what Mr. O'Brien accomplished for the people. As the direct result of his work, the republican debt f three millions which he assumed was entirely wiped out, and the day James P. Goodrich became governor he found the state not owing one penny of debt, and as governor he accepted from the democrats a net cash balance on hand of six millions. More power to any political organization, call it machine or what you will, that produces such public officials as William H. O'Brien and Charles A. Greathouse. And the Indianapolis News, which continues to denounce them, keeps up its. laudation of Tobe Hert and Joe KeaUng as (rtat statah jnn.