Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 13, Jasper, Dubois County, 20 August 1920 — Page 5

lASPER COURIER

Jaitper Mailfl. Mails out:7:45A. M.t 6:3') F. M. Mails in 8:27 A. M , &24 A M 7 :50P. M. Mrs Mary L. Eckert spent Thursday in Evansville overseing acreamery eAamination. Mrs Henry Melchior o Janper vhitod friends at Ireland Wednes day. . Miss Rose Kuebler, of Indiana polis came home hst Thursday to spend her vacation with her father and lelatives. Mrs Delia Cox daughter, pet poodle and husband biUe came back Wednesday from a tcur of the north part of the state. Mrs W- A. Traylor tftid dai gh ter Olive arrived home Friday from a few weeks visit at Dös Moines Iowa, Mr and Mrs Albert Sonder man arrivpd home Tuesday from a-visit to Yellow Htone Ptrk tnd other Western places. Mr. and Mrs Georpre VVeyer of Ferdinand and Mrs. Philp Krauss and little son visittheir sister Mrs John Fleck last Friday. Louise Marx accompanied by Virginia Harmon of Louis ille Kv visited horo Siinrl.iv nfc rhf home cf Mr and Mrs WR Leighton. The goose that lays the golden egg don't do half a much cackling as the cold storage pirates do. FOR SALE: 2O0OO foot of No a Pine flooring ntSoOpcr 1000, Jasper Dek Company A Generous Manufacturing Concern of Jasper actually spend good money in advertising the product of one of their rival manufacturing concerns. An engineer discussing a mule owned by a colored boy, asked: "What's that you call your mule?" r I call him Utility'." How didyou come to give him such a name?" 'Tmstudin' de animal and readin' de papers. Dat mule gets mo blame an' abuse dan anything rläe in de city an' goes ahead doin' his level best jist de same i For Stlo Good 80 acre Davies CountyFarm including, Stock crop and tools for sale at $8000 00. Would consider taking residence in some Dubois Co town on past of deal. S S. Wineinger. Jasperlnd, Has Never Seen Their Equal. "I have uged Chamberlain. a Tablets for itouiach trouble, biliouen88 and constipation off and on for the past ten years. I have never teen their ejual yet. They strengthened my digeition, relieved me of headaches and had a mild pleasure action on my boweld. I täte pleasure iu recommending them,, 'eyll, I). F. Pdrmenter, Cridererille Ohio. ASTORIA For Infants and Children BnJUoo For Ovor 30 Years Always beirs the Signature of "Good morniug! Have you ßeen The Courier? Evan h inllQ'g tent papar. 1 ' - licensed to Wed. Arthur M. Renner 2G to Ame'ia E. Naher 30. Andrew B Merkley 24 to Clare M. Schwinghamer 19. Ferd Ransperger 24 to Olive Rudolph 29. Wm G. Thimlinfl: 2G to Sophia Sendelweck 19. Harrison King 31 to Vada Street 21. --" Curtti of Stomach Trouble and Constipation. Kachel Cribley of Bearer Dam, Ohio tick for two year with atou-ach trouble and constitution, taking one uiddicine after another with only temjM)r?y relief. MMy neighbor RPoke po nthimastically of Chamberlain' Tablets" uhayi "that I procured a Kittle of them at our drug tora to try. A fw davt treatment convinced me thtt they were jtiet what 1 bieeded. I continued there ue for several weeks and they curd ma. Liberty Bonds. Final N.Y. Sale Price Aupr 11, Liberty Loar. 3!2S $-0 CO Liberty Loan, first 4s 85 10 T.ihnrtv Loan, second 4s 81.40

Liberty Loan, hrst 8. . . . bo.iu Liberty Loan, second 4l-s. .84 44 Liberty Loan, third 4 ls 83.40 Liberty Loan, fourth 4)8. .88.44 Victory Loan, 34 s 95.70 Victory IiOan, 41s 95.6

Geo Rl Wilson wes home from

Indianapolis the first of the week visiting hi8 family. Thos R. Wilson was in the city the first' ol the week visiting relatives. Miss Catherine McFali returned Saturday to Washington D. C. after a visit at home County Supt Eckert and family motored to Indianapolis Tuesday to spend a few days. Prof A. G. Worland returned Tuesday for a vi lit with relatives at ewton 111. Child Cared of Bowel Trouble. A fliill of Floyd Onborn, Notary PuMi- f Üunjrannon, V. was taken with b..el trouble Mr. Oaborn cave it ChuiuberUin'e Colic and Diarrhoea Itemed? and it quickly recovered, In BpFakinc of this rmo y lie eaye, It is the best I ever used." Born to Joseph Klueh and wife last Thursday a baby boy. The child died Friday, and was buried Friday afternoon. Mrs Will Brinkley and daughter of Rapid Cir, , South Dakata came to Jisper Sunday night to fttend the funeral of her neice Mrs Cornelia Lorey and to visit relatives. Mrs Cora Doane daughter and son with her husband Arch leave this morning for Indianapolis for week visit. Since lOic ratified the suffrage amendment. The women are the whole cheese. Finger Guf Off. Ernest Goeppner workine for Jacob C Lorey cut the end off one of his fingtrs Friday while cutting On for roofing purposes. The finger is mending as well as could be expected. Married at Louisville on Monday Aug 16 1920. Hilbert Kurikei and Miss Ferda Dupds daughter of Ben Dupps of North Ma?n street. The announcement ha been pnblished at St Josephs church for the past three weeks At the Grand Sunday After-Noon and Hit. 'Tillies' Punctured Rpmance" Mack Sennett greatest comedy ever produced, with Charlie Chaplin, Marion Dressier, Mabel Norman, Chester Conklin, and Mack Swairi. Six reels are packed with thousands of laughs dont miss this Sunday. Evangelical Church to install Hew Minister. Rev. Roland Hosto of Smith :on II!., has been selected to take charge of the Evangelical Congregation at this place, and will be installed as Pastor on Sunday Aus 22 at 10:30 A. u. Rev Hosto is a young graduate from Eden Seminary and bears the distinction of having been a very bright and successful scholar. The public is cordially invited to attend this installation service which will ba held at Trinity Churchy Sunshine four of the World. A Chance of a Life Time. The Sunshine Clubof Trinity Church will conduct a tour of the World which will rival the famous Cook tour. The followiug counties will be visited: Amsterdam, Ho' land, Cairo, ERypt, Tokyo, Japan and places interest in the United States. You will have an onpottunity of visiting the "Streets of Cairo," a Dutch Inn, the beautiful gardens of Japan, and fish in the great Lake Superior. The cost of this wondei ful trip including your transportation, me Is and a few amusement is only 50c for adults and 35c for children under twelve years of age Souvenirs will be for sale at reasonable pricis in each country. The "ship" will leave Pier 25 New York City (Court house) from 6:30 P M to 11 P.M. Aug 28 Tickets will be sold bv the Sunshine Club after Aug. -3 Secure a ticket and take this delightful trip. INDIANS Ask the average boy or girl of 15 how many Indians can be found in the Hoosier state and the reply would be "there ain't no sich thing." Yet the census

Kunkel-Dupps

of 19-0 show that Indiana has alt0 bo incurable. Doctors prescribed local lot of Indian residents just as'JfÄ the census of 1910 showed there'S

were nearly SUU Indians living in preatly influenced by constitutional con our State. The figures for 1910 dition and therefore requires conititu were: Allen, 9; Clinton, 2; ltlui' FH?ll'?,Fata,rh. are -v i ii r Vi i n A l. niinuuctureu byr.j. Cheney & C . Dekalb, 5; b nsnn. 3; Grant, Toledo, Ohio. i. a coimitutional remtdr! 19; Hendricks. 2; Henry, 1; ii taken internally and acta thru th LaportC, 18; Marshall, 1; Miami olooJ on the mucous turfarea of the flyi-119-St.lopnh !) Tinnpcanop te? ,Qtt HunJr4 Dollan reward it l llniL 7. if! T 9p! otf.red for any caae that ilall'e Catarrh .5; Union. r, Washash. 26; core fail to cure. Send for circulars Noble 1; Porter. 2; Posey, 1. aud testimonials.

Boy Shot.

Last Saturday afternoon Nick Hettich a 13 year old son -of Henry Hettich and Willis Sturm. 8 year old son of F. X Sturm were out at the West end of the 7th street, pretending to hunt with a small cartridge rife Shooting at bird, etc. Some way Hettich who had the gun shot the Stuim Jboy in the sido che ball going around the rib and was taken out next to the back bene. After the boy was shot, the boys ran a way and left young Sturm on the ground; he managed to get tu Jos Gxamelspachers and his father and Dr, Sa'b were sent for. The boy came near bleeding to death. Ii is agtinst the law to shoot red birds as well as boys. It is also against the law to sell fire arms and cartridgfs to minors. bo the hardware man who sold the gun to Hettich on credit is not only out the crun but in for a darr age suitThe boozers now have nothing left but remorse, like some ofthe rest of us used to have next morning. No other color scheme requires so much explanation as a black eye, as Messrs. Dempsey and Willard can testify. m m m wten you do any mourning. don't wear the insignia around the coat oleeve or under the finger nails. A woman may have the coura&eto mount a plat'orm and shout for liberty but she hasn't the courage to do it in a last year's batEvery man is merely a composite reflection of all the women he has known; his mother, his sister, his wife and the ten or a hundred girls who have tried to remodel him. In a man's mind, all women are divided into three classes: those ha has kissed, those he can't kiss and those who keep him wondering Chambcrlilni Colic ind Diarrhoea Remedy, Tbii is unquestionably one of the most euccessful medicines in me for bowel complaints. A few dosei of it will cure any ordinary attack of diarrhoea, It has been lined in nine epideraici of desentery with perfect eucceei. It can alwaos be depanded upon to Rive prompt relief in casta of colicand cholera morbus. When reduced with water and ewcotencd it is pleaiant to take. Every family should keep this remedy at hand. The mere act of marrying a woman,' and handing over his freedom, his name, and all his bachelor comforts in retarn for a kiss, is the most sublimely unselfish deed of a man's life and sometimes the only one. An eligible bachelor is a body of vanity completely surrounded by women. An ineligible bachelor is a mass of obstinacy entierly surrounded by suspicion. A confirmed bachelor is a collection of habits fortified on all four sides by eternal vigilance. RED CROSS EXTENDS RELIEF TO POLAND More than $5.000,000 has been spent by the American Red Croas In aiding the stricken people of Poland. The organization has nursed the sick, fed the starving, clothed the naked, sheltered the homeless, schooled the children and cared for the orphans there. It ho conducted a relentless fight against typhus, cholera and other terrible diseases. So today millions of men and women In that resurrected nation speak In prnteful appreciation of The Greatest Mother In the World." Nedrly 200 American Ked Cross workers are now enguged In relief activities In Polnnd. Four large relief bases are In operation and eleven mobile units are In the field. During the Inst twelve months this organization was largely Instrumental In the re-es-tnhllshment of a million refugees at a cost for Renerol relief of more than ?1,000.XX). Last winter one-half million wnr orphans were aided 'materially, and since then a series of large ob plumages have been established to give tbem permanent care. Hut for American Red Cross aid, of flolnls of Poland declared recently, millions of people In that country would have perished of disease, exposure or starvation the last elctitecn months. And the work there must be kept up fur another year. There ii moro Catarrh in this Motion of the country than pH other diieaiei put together, and for years wasiuDDOied

JUNIOR RED CROSS WORKING AT HOME

Production of Sound American Citizenship the First Aim, Says Dr. Farrand. Oq th badga of trery xntmhe of th Junior lied Cross are the words -I Serre,- That telli the story of tb ichool children1! branch of the American Bed Crosi and lta effort! to brlsf happiness to children throughout the world. Realizing that the time nerer waa so propitious as rlfht now for teaching the highest ldeala of citizenship, tha entire pretnt preinua of the Junior Bed Cross has been trained udder the tery inclusive phrase. 4tTralnlnj: for Citizenship Through BerrlcV for others. Since the Junior Bed Cross Is the agency through hlch the American Bed Cross reaches the schoolboys and the school girls, all Its actifltlea aru designed to come within the regular school program, and without creat ing now courses or Increasing the number of studies to lend its aid in vitalis ing the work of the'tchools. n vi -The thing that is .needed," says IX. Livingston Farrand. Chairman of American Bed Cross Central Committee, "is not a perpetuation of the Junior Bed Cross, but the training and breeding of souodAmsrlcan citizenship inspired by a the true, fundamental Ideals ofsoend democracy. One of the great conceptions In,; making the Bed Crou a contributor ,to better citizenship in our American democracy la the realUatlon thai afterjull Ue solo hope of my natHmls with the children of tho country The plan eftorganteatlon of the Junior Bed Croes?unake4-the school public, parochial and private the unit, not the lndlrfelual pupils. Mutual service, helpful ccxaesxnAtjc. merk such as clean-up campaign, care ef the sick, promotion of health - re guUticna, participation 'In civic axil patriotic movements a4 tteso nitre agencies 'design ed. to translate lntetllfe and action, the rtiufcir school praram art parts, of the xnacMnerj ivtilcJl the Junior Bed, CrogJ places at the dla&esal ef tne school authorities. Graded atcdy ceuae giving practical methods of civ4c training, supplemented by pmphleU and helpful cug-i gestlonav are supplied to the local 5 schools by tho) Junior BoJ Crocs. An elaborate plan for prtnotlB$ an Interchange of cerrepoQdence.between children In different motions of the United States u veil at with ctilären In foreign lands la being avtXe4 and will take a promicrat pbio in the estahUsMd dasareca grcsraxx In prometlntna ; generJL cause ef chllfl welfare, 7uA ! Crsipuref In home hygitntt;and care of the siek, first aid, and dieting cay be established in all Junior Bed Cross Auzlllartes. The Ideal w and that objective of the Junior BedCroaa are embodied vln the pledge of mvico which tho pnpll takes when herBlgns theimenSerahlp roll1 and pins on his, coat the Junior's badge. The pledge whlchi binds together service and cithcenshlpireads: "We will, seek In all ways to llremp to the Ideals of the Juniir Bed Cross and devote uinexves to its aervlcau "We wllh strivenercT to bring discredit to üia, ourfcountry. bj any unworthy act. "We will t revere and obey our country's laws and do pur tost to inspire a like reve:imceQcd obedience In those about us. We will endecjvor-in all these ways, as good citizens, .to transmit America greater, better and nSore boutlful.than she was transmitted to us. At the foundation of this tool pro grnra of the Junior Bed Of 083 la a great love forj Americans ehlldien, . , . RED CROSS ACTIVE IN DISASTER IEC1EF Wlien disaster hits a coinmuolrp1 flre, flood, earthquake, explcdca' bad wreck or tornado the American Bed Cross can be depended 'upon to tollow right at Its heels with belpV for tho stricken people. Bed Cross Relief Is almost immediately forthceminjg; food, clothing, shelter and funds; doctors, nufses and special workers wth long experience In handling similar trouble elsewhere. v During the last-year, endlntf AinnSO, there was an average of four düajöers a month In the United States. One hundred and Arty communities in twentyeevea states suffered. The largest and most destructive otAtbses were the tidal ware at Corpus Carlatl, Texas, and tornadoes in Mlstaaqlppt, Louisiana, Alabama, Georgia. Ohlo, Indiana and Illinois. In these events of horror 830Spersons were killed 1,3)0 were injrjxed, 13,000 were mad hcrrveless. dout S0f000 families needed htip. tlte property loss was nearly $100,000,000 and almost $1,000,000 tn relief funds, not In eluding emergency supplies was expended. To the eugercigrfrem all disasters during the yecr, the American Bed Cross sent SI20fOOO rorth of errn nilea, 110 Bed Creis nures and nreo pedal rellet traias. To meet the tieedJ of the Atrlcfcen, th organlcatlon net up ten reDef stations, operated thirty food, cessans and as many emergency riosxätals. One hundred and twentura Bed Croaa cheptera gave dlsasöerr relief ftrvtce. If disaster tjtr strikes this town or county, the citizens ean be absolutely sure the Bei Crws will he right oo hand to helpthen la ercry way.

Why Davies Von't dot Off the Ticket o

m 1 I .'I i 1 111 f if! r - - ii : ml

Hughes' Chill Tonic. IM LATAH LK Better than Calomel aad Quinine (Contains no Arsenic.) The Old Reliable. As well aj for Chills and Fevers, Malaiial Fevers, Swamp Fevers and Bilious Fevers. Just what vou need at this season. MILD LAXATIVE. NERVOUS SEDATIVE SPLENDID TONlC TRY IT. Don'ttake any substitute. OOc and $1.20 Bottles. Prepared by ROQINSON-PETETTCO., Louisville, Ky. Incorporated.

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COVEWOR COX

Democratic Presidential Candidate i

Will Speak at an all day Democratic Rally and Barbacue at ' Princoton Indv Faipgroundcj, WEdnssday Rug. SSthy A SPECIAL TItAIN Will be operated from lluntingburg to Princeton and return on that dater connections being made as follows:

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Going Returning . Kead Down Kead ITp 7:00 AM Lv Weit Baden Ar. 9:15 PM 7:05 AM French Lick 9:10 PM X7:18AM 44 Norron 44 !S:47 PM f7:14AM Caxco 44 18:40 PM r . f7:S2AM 44 Crjstal 44 IS ;31 PM 7:40 MA Dubois '4 8;23 PM 7;55AM 11 Jaiper 8;00 PM 8;25AM Ar Uuntingburg 44 7 ;45 PM ' ' 8:35 AM Lv HuntinRbur 44 9:50 PM 10;05AM Ar Princeton 44 5:30 PM

f-Flag Stop Big Street Parade. For Farea Consult Ticket agenta.

UU.UU.BJ.U From Jasper and Dubois. r

bAUUHSlUN to LUUISV LLb-

PM m m nav mm m m

mil

SUWDAY. AUG. 22D, 1920f

Tickets sold for train leavinsr Duboii 6:54 p. in. and Janper 7:15 Saturday Aug. 2Ut.f connecting with epecial train leaving Hunting, burg 2:26 a. m. Sunday Aug. 22d. Ticketi alio lold for train leaving Daboia 7 :?o a. ni. and Jaeper 7:55 a. m. Sunday Au. 22nd. All ticketi sood returning on train No. lo, leaving Loaieville 4:o5 p.' in. New Albany 4:25 p. m. Sunday Aog. 22nd. For tickets and detailed information apply to V.E. Claycoinb, Aent jaiper and L. K. Greer Agent Dubois,

mm EAGLE "MIKADO" ihm cd R'rxk

For Sele at your DeeJer. LlaJe la fire a taJei Concd2 t be the Fiaett Peacfl nde'fer ffnrl EAGLE.PENQL. COMPANY, NEW XORK

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3 MAGNIFICENT STEAMERS 3

TV Cmt Shim "3XZAMDEZE CTTT OF DUt" "CITY OF DUFFALQ CLKVELAND Daily, May let To Nor. 15th BUFFALO

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Antn Wvtvalo TtSOA.U.) SaxoAiuTmi ( Arritt Curtuwo 7iMA.ll. CUMiU BoffAU for Nir Fall uwi ill Km -if t yoiaU. RaQtvW tUkeks rwdf bCMM C1Ua4 ud Ha4tlm mr fo4 far tnnt tiiirtatnj mm aw tlwin. Ak i -m-i f r Aamt4m Kp Aft for tickets C. A B. Lho. w Tvul "-fjtt'Il fc.U-H.a lUgai Tri, with I krt ttmn laut, for tvi met itÜ.f lit u. ,u4Um.

butJatl; mkrd ti ! fumtl fcrt Th Umt Ship "SKK AKUllX mI xiU. AUmk tow oor U-pmm pCotJ mm4 d HyUy bl trm.

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vrj mam. 5. Round trip Fere Includee War Tax. PENCIL'No.i74 ä If v Leegtk, 7 iicin. Ixmn J Lrwr tertujo ' 9iOOP.u. IK:

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