Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 9, Jasper, Dubois County, 23 July 1920 — Page 5
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IAODCD PnilRIPßl Alarme numder of Jasper peoIMortn VUUnUCnpie picnicked at Flt Rock, Sunday.
oa: - Mr and Mrs Ralph Meadows
Mails out: . r r - wereheie from Lojisvil'c Sunday Mails in 8:27 A. M . , jvisitin relatives.
:50P. M
over ro'a
Mrs J. P. Schwenk is
Mr. and M s UYb.in Me'cMor ; fjcm Wirihington visiting
aid tv.o chihl:rn who hud bpen'tj ts. heme Su. dax r,i,.ht. j rerre H-mte Tuara for severa' Mrs AncM--' ,,n3 an ' Came days visit,
Eckeft a d M irj-.f-t I mi i vvi-nt , . .. ., . .. . tStMirv;o' t"! V,,li Ust' Ajaclkmfein lie ha
1" 1 1 1 J ci V l V it l t i t ; w . .
a a
at
to!
"Gir's :irrl womf'n WnUt l the Glove Facto; y Jasper I d. sow J'i or write. Gr
West i ru Glove M 'tf- Co Jaspor Ini.
FOR SALIC; ÜÜOOO ft
No : Pine flooring atSaOp
ds oi
rous as
j ickpo in the h-inds of a man vis- Rutn K nur came home C i - ffin n rtl I. 1 o
V . . 1 1 T-k ! - l . r 1 1 1
rmirer Mrs rneone rveuuui Surd y.
Jlf' Mr and rsCar' ritt ian .nd
children ot Arizona m visiting
relatives and frie ds
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1000. JiiHi vr Desk Company rnpQU
Chamberlain's Cilrc aaJ Uiirrtnea Remedv. This reme 'y ia c rrtain to bo iieede.l in manv iiom s before th umrnr i ever. I5uy it now ajd bo prepared. It in recognize! an a moat reliable remedy lor bowel complaints anil may be obtained at any drug store. Henry Keller the Indian runner of little Kentucky came horr.e from Akron Ohio, hst Saturday to visit his mother.
Mr and Mrs Peter Morgen and two children of St Henry spent Sunday and Jonday with John Fleck and family.
Girls and women wanted st
the Glove Factory Jasper Ind to pew. Call ox write. Great Western Giove Mfg Co. Jasper IndMrs Ctaas Lott and Mrs Frank
Mrs Henry C Fink and daugh-iö;r,Q rtf r.mi;cv;iia 0,0 cnonrlincr
ier, oi ßioniru, Vül"rttUÜ;rarc the first part of this week with
visiting her si3ter-in law Mrs.
Conrad Bate3 this week This township was visiting by an unproarious w.nd and thunder storm last Sunday afternoon, which blcwed down a great deal
of growing corn. toGirls and women wanted at the Glove Factory Jasper Ind to sew. Call or write Great Western Glove Mfg. Co. Jasper Ind. .. Suffered Intense Pain. . "A few yeara ago wben visiting relative in Michigan somethings I had eaten brought on an attack of Colora luorpua", writo Mn Celesta McVicker, Macon Mo. "I auffeied intense pain and had to go to bed. I got a bottle of Chamberlain Colic aad Diarrhoea Remedy and one dose relieved the pain wooder fully. I only took two or three defies tut they did the work. ' The Loogootee B.B. Team bat the Jasper K.C team at Loogootee last Sunday 0to2. The K. C. appear to be traveling in hard luck- A large number of fans went over to Lcogootee with the team and gob caught in the storm coming back. Frank Vonderschmidt has recived two cars of black oil and is now busily engaged in dirtying up the streets with the grease. Oiling and repairing the maca dam streets cost more the fust 10 years than it would to have put down asphalt at the start. We are in receipt of the 31at Annual Catalogue of the Jasper College, which shows the instution to be in a very properous condition. The college year will begin Sept 8, 1920 and end June 1921. Under the efficient management of Rev F. Bernard 0. t S B. the student body is growing larger e ery year. A young man in Wyoming drove two miles ulone before he discovered that his s.veetheart had fallen out of the buggy. Love-making in that state must la-k some of the ardor tha. clnr acterizes it around here.
CÄSTORIÄ For Infants and Children In üco For Over 30 Years
Always bears the Signature of
'Good morning I Have you aeen The Courier7 Evans villo'fl beat paper."
Dont forget the Chantauqua at the College Campus Dbegining
next Wednesday, July 28, ard lasting five days. Season ticket)
at reduced prices from association
membeis, or .see Lous Joseph or Albert Rumbach. Dubois Coo ty Fair The hulling managers cf the Dubois County Fair at Huntinghnrcr ivPf.L- ftur novf Any 9 in
7, are leaving no sconi unt irne I in the r effort to uive the dcol e
of the county the beat Fair ever th'sear. Shoar your apprecia
tion bv beiri present ar d boost-
;ng tne fair
GOODRICH F
Be a Freak.
Mr end Mrs Urban Melchior and
family The ball game between the Jasper Athletics and Of.well Sundi y resulted in a victory for
Otwell score 6 to 5 Jasper
caught it in the neck alt around Sunday.
Wbitto do Wben Billious. Eat no meata and lightly of other food. Take three of Chamberlain'a Tableta to cleanse out your stomach and tone up your liver. Do thia and within a day or two your ahculd be feeling liue. Eastern profs are getting it figured out so that by following a well laid out plan a person can live on 25 cents a day. Some of them will figure ic out pretty soon so a man can read ovar a bill of fare and satisfy hif stomach by swallowing his wordsJack Johnson the negro prize
fighter has returned to the U. S and been re-arrested under the
white slavery act. What f c ohshness. Let Johnson go,arrest the white woman and tatto big red "N. L." (niger lover) on each cheek and turn her loose with he negro lover. Don't blame the poor niger. Glean-up Gtiestnut Ex dogg-ry keeper of the Sterling Hotel, Fulton Ave. Evansville Ira Wil shire has been appointed chief of Evansville police who says he is going to clean up the department. All police departments are more or less crooked. It comes as natural for a policeman or a lawyer to be a crock as it does for a hog to eat slop. Birds of a leather flock together Policemen crooks and
lawyers are natural associates. Three jobs decent manwouldn't
have.
Babe Ruth of N. Y. Yankees has pounded ou ; his 32 home run this ypar Life is a fake. He U an ignorant giant, ith a good eye and strong arms; something like a first class steer or Polan China hog. ablo to demand and get $50,000,000 for 6 months work, wl ile there are a million
other men in the U S his equal
physically and his superior intellectually and moraly who can not secure the one hundredth part of his salary. Be a freak
and live easilyJazz andSMmmie
Doesn't Kill Yanks Despite jazz music, the shimmie dance, the strain of the presidential election and rising iving costs, the American peo pie are gradually becoming the longest lived race on the globe, the vital statistics bureau rdi-
catedtodfy in its report. The
national death rate has taken a
big tumble. Beside plural births are occurring in big numbers all
over the country. Approximately 30,000 twins are being born every year now. Births for 1920 are expected to total over 2,000,
000.
Statistics show that 4,000 peoDie can be found any time who
are over 100 yeais of age There
are 30,000,000 American citizens living now who are over 90 Incidentelly more woman live to
be over 100 then men!
Mrs 1 jada Harrod Endorses Chamber
lain's Tablets. "I fufferd for years with stomach
trouble and tri d everything I heard of but the only relief I got was temporory until last 8Drinsr I Baw Chamberlain's
Tableta advertised and piodured a bot
tle of them from our druggist. 1 got immediate relief from that dreadful
heaviness and pain in the stomach after
eating. Since taking two bottles I can eat anvlhing'I want without ditstreas"
writes Mrs Linda Ilarrol, tt Wayne Ind.
A Greal lime.
Greene Out
Liberty Bonds.
Final N.Y. Sale Price July 14,
Liberty Loar. 3's $1 16
Liberty Loan, first 4s SG 10 Liberty Loan, second 43 85.30
Liberty Loan, first 4.14s. - 8G 40 Liberty Loan, second 4 Vs. .85 54
Liberty Loan, third 4Vs 89.10
Liberty Loan, fourth 4;s. So. 4 Victory Loan, 3?4S 95 94
Victory Loan. 4-34 8 9G.00
Ott
Will Sell
Bru:e Greene quit the Secre tary ship of the Democratic Central committee last week and Co Supt R. E- Eckert was appointed in his stead. Bruce like an active job with lots of action, these jobs where all the duties
consist of is sitting Etill, looking wise, and drawing the salary are not in demand ty men who want "action on their money," For Sale: 160 acres one mile N. W- of Montgomery Consolidated Common and High School- Catholic and Protestant churches. Two 4ft. veins of good workable coal now paying- 5000 worth of new improvement. Plenty good water; improved roads Good neighbors, a bargain it 1110 a
c W ' acre. Am a ccal miner. Chas A, Traylor. Got trie Habit. Billy Bryan erst while leading and wou'd be leading democrat has gotin such a habit of runnir g for President that he is about to accept the Presidential Nomination on the Prohibition ticket.
Good riddance for the Democrat-
The eavesdropper hea-d this over the party line: "Yes, When I asked papa to let me go with the bunch to the beach be nearly took my head off. Bnt of course, 1 had my way. It was dreadfully hot aud I suffocated a dozen times on the way. The first thing I did after I got out of . the car was to slip and break my neck. Harold ran and picked me up. I simply died from pain And after I got on my balhing suit and stepped into the water it was so chilly I l03t my breath completely. But the girls coax-d me to wade in deeper and when I waded in up to my knees I stumbled and fell and before anybody reached me I was lifeless 1 finallv managed to get bask to the sloie where I fell de3d w:.th exhaustion. After I got home that nißht the chiggers simply drovj me crazy. The next morning I was dead to the world." There would Drobably be fewer bachelors if they were permitted to associate with manied men. Freedom of Tho Sees
He What do you think th se luxrry taxe? She Wei!, thV . ,
tr.ey aiun t tr x
of
V
A Pimji? nl She-If we appear togeth r so much people will ta'k about us. He Well, then, suppose disappear together. Catarrhal Deafness Cacao: be Cured. by local applications, aa thov cannot reach the diseased portion, of the ear. The e is on. ce way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional nniddies, Deafnees Is caus.-d by an inflamed conditionof th' irncous linin? of tli Knsfa.
icpatty. He is like Lafollette,!chl Tube- .:nhi9tubeii inflamed t-u u . urn .you have a i iul.hu.- ound or imperfect
jüiiiiauii, neaiai, uuiccua et -ai, jheaiins, and when it is entirely closed, all SOre head?, any party IS brtter.Deaftuces is the ru t.and unless the inOlf Without them- riarumation can be taken out and the
tube restored to its normal condition
G
NTROL
OROES
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Watson and McCray Assist Governor In Forcing Through 'Legalization cf Horizontal Tax Increases.
J0KFR IS FOUND IN THE BILL
WOULD SAVr 1 A'PENSE IF hearing will be destroyed forever. Many THEY DID. JeaieB cf deafness are caused by Catarrh
"Habits" ana "clothes" may
be sj nontmous but there's a big difference between them in cne way habits grow on one, but clothes do not, worse luck!
wnicu is an innamoa condition or the
mucous surface. Hall's Catarrh Cure acts through the blood on the mucous surfaces cf the eyetem. We ill giveOne Hundrad Dollars for any caee of Catarrhal Deafness that can not be cured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Circulars free, AliDruggieti 7öc.
Indianapolis, Ind., July 20. The first week of the spocir.l session of tho Indiana legislature dispelled all doubts that Governor Goodrich had lost control of the Republican state machine. From tho time the lawmakers took their seats Monday afternoon, until the week's work was ended, there was no timo that the hand of Goodrichism was not evident and one of the anomalies presented was the manner in which Republican leaders from Senctor Watson on down played the governor's game In stemming anything that indicated a revolt against the "rubber-stamp" program. Governor Goodrich, In his message, was obliged to confess that the "best legislature In fifty years" had made numerous mistakes and he made tacit admission that he had summoned the extra session in order to patch up the deficient administrative record. He admitted that the tax law, which he and the Republican organization had praised, was a failure and he asked the assembly to legalize the horizontal Increases that had been declared Invalid by the supreme court. Probably no other feature of the tax law had been as unpopular as the arbitrary elevation of assessments by the state board of tax commissionera and it looked for a time as if the governor would have trouble in pushing through his measure The Indiana Federation of Farmers took a decided stand against it and things looked dark, for many of the legislators hailed from the agricultural districts. Powerful aid, however, came at the beckon of Goodrich In the person of Warren T. McCray, Republican nominee for governor. McCray coincided with the' governor's views and was Instrumental In lining up the lawmakers for the measure. Two of his campaign managers, Lawrence Lyons of Brook and Fred B. Robinson of Indfanapells, worked openly about, the state house In behalf of the legalization measure and many important conferences are said to have been held In the candidate's headquarters in the Claypool hotel. As a result the bill went through the House with a Republican majority, the Democrats refusing to sanction the all too apparent attempt to override the opinion of the high court. Goodrich's economy plea, which he uttered over the state during his campaign, was badly shattered by the Introduction of administration bills calling for appropriations of nearly $2,000,000. In fact the session Is being referred to as tho two-million assembly and It has become evident that the finances demanded will all but deplete the treasury before the year Is out. m The Democrats came to tho rescue of the session when It was struggling with eight different administration bills designed to amend the election and registration laws In order to provido for women voting and a more simplified form of registration. Evan B. Stotsonburg, formerly Democratic state attorney-general, revised the various bills Into one comprehensible measure, and it was adopted. Joint bills introduced by Sonator Edward P. Eisner and J. L. Axby, Democrats, designed to make women voters eligible to public ofläce and Jury service, were killed without mercy by tho Republicans "because they lacked merit at this time." An Innocent-looking clause in the administration tax bill provides that bonds held on sewage disposal plants ßhall be non-taxable. It Is now recalled that the gbvernor and some of his trusted lieutenants were stockholders of a company which saddled a disposal plant on the city of Indianapolis for $170,000 shortly after one of the stockholders, Jet Moorman, had testified that it was not worth more than $15,000. Persons familiar with that deal, vhich has been the subject of much diverse comment here ever since it was consummated, are charging now that the proviso exempting those bonds from taxation was inserted for the benefit of the administration clique who are holding the securities Inasmuch as the bill was one of thosfe printed by the governor before tha session convened, it is thought that It was carefully planned and was Inserted among a number of other items in order to camouflage It from the eyes of the legislators. The Democratic members of the committee that considered the bill detected the ruse and refused to sign the report, but even after the Republicans had been warned they Insisted on reporting the measure out with
out modification. The outstanding development of the week shows all too clearly that Governor Goodrich haa manipulated the session according to his own ideas and that the Republican leaders bare been brought to a realization that in the campaign this fall they must make their races on a plA.tforz& defending Goodrichism.
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'i m$m -iÄ-S : , -v r : v ;; '"' : William farum in "if i were king WILLIAM, FOX PRODUCTION
Walter Law Appears With William Farnum.
Walter Law, who has appeared in many Fox pictures, is case for the part of Thibault in the big Fox special production of Justin Huntly McCarthy's "If I W ere Kinp;." To be nrespnrerl with
William Farnum as star. Mr.
Law was born in Dayton O., and was educated at the Ohio State Univ ersit: . He appeared in the
original cast of "Quo Vadis" and laer starred for five years in The Sign of the Cross." He was also in vauderv'llo for a long time. Mr Law is six feet one inch in height and weighs 220 pounds. Hishobly is to eat and grow thin.
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LOUl ROUND TRIP FARES
FOR THE DUBOIS COUNTY FAIR, HUNTINCBURC, IND. Agents will sell ronnd trip tickets at roduced fares on August 1st, 2d, 3d, Ith, 5th, and (Uh, and fcr trains scecduled to arrive Huntiuburg before noon August 7, limited to return before midnight of August 9th. 11)20. Races every day. Zeidman and Pollies twenty car Exposition Show. Sensational Aeroplane exhibition and pass ngerm carrying trips every day. Numerous other attractions 0 T. r For detailed information, consult ticket agents.
t
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Hughes' Chill Tonic.
1'AI.ATAIlLi: Better t lan Calomel and Quinine (Contains no Arsenic.) The Old Reliable. EXCELiIESBIT G-EBISRAL TOPJIC As well aj for Chills and Fevers, Malaiial Fevers, Swamp Feyers and Bilious Fevers. Just what you need at this season. MILD LAXATIVE. NERVOUS SEDATIVE SPLENDID TONIC. TRY IT. Don't take any substitute. 60c and $1.20 Bottltt. Prepared by ROBINSON-PETETT CO., Louisville, Ky. I:corporated.
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INT. ERECTING MEilBING A COOD INVESTMENT
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