Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 63, Number 15, Jasper, Dubois County, 3 September 1920 — Page 4
JASPER WEEKLY COUKRR Oy BEN ED DOAWn
AHrr.ll, IIÜIIHIP COUMTV, ?NI?1AN KntercdaMPCOud.rlrr. :rr.tt r at the ptollicent Jasper, lud. tin 'nrtho act of March 3, 1817nl r'.oncn Uli) IVr Yerr. This pftpci Ismaile, ri Kularly tele aib:critcn aatllVJeÜn'ic Tdfrto liecintiniif i teccivod uri! '.V. r.nctv.r ynM nfall: nnieeo in tue flirre Ucn cf thf publisher a diflercnt conic nhonld be doomed advisable. FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER 3 1920, Democratic Candidates who should be Electe d - For President xfa&i .7" X-V .. ? M ' For Govenor of Indiana, Carelton B. McCo Hough Not a tux lMlK;r. A SoUImt who saw srrviet! For U. S. Senator, Thomas T. Taggart Not a rawcaliy paid lobbyist, Atulh ill. For Congress-
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I JAMES M. & ,j COX Mr
John W. Ewing l'iifortnnat in ! .in; supported ly hl'Vrnx. For State Representative, Micheal A. Sweeney Most competent and best man for the place. For County Treasurer Joseph A. Sondermann Made a good o Hirer. I'rserves re-election. Democrat oomlidiiie for sheriff sliould be defeated, opposed to laboring jiimi, and a bilieeox pet. " Honor in Politics. Ex representative Longworth, of Ohio tells of a negro who brought his three sons to town on election day in a border town in Ohio. ''Hello, Rastus," said a man who knew the neuro, vhH are you doing here?" 'Ts jist projec'in' 'rour' to see how's election " In the afternoon tho same man met Ra.Qtus aain. Have : ou voted Ra3tus?" he asked. 'Yassir, Ts voted an' my boys they 's voted." "How did you vote?" "Well, boss, it was disyer way I meets a Repub'iean on the street an he gibs me Me en dollars to vote his ticket. An' I meets a Democrat an he gibs me seven dollars to vote his ticket SoTvoted for th' Democrat" "But the Republican gve you most money." "Yassir dat's jist th' pint I voted for dem Democrats bee .use they wss least corrupt " A Game For Two. Letui play a game for twj, Let's pretend that I love you, And let's play that you love me in return, Let us have a sweet flirtation, Without senseless ac oration. Or hearts that neither quiver, faint, nor burn. Let uc be cool and calm, without doing any harm To that organ that is called the human heart, But let us. all the same, spoil stupid Cupid's gamr. And be of lovers quite a thing apart. And if the game shoulJ pall, Don't think anything at all, But let me know the proper state of things; So we'll say good bye politely. That we know each other slighly. And turn thelautfh upon the nod with wings.
, not a Friend or sm cox. Roli NordhofT gave tho Courier
oflicQ a call and declared his was no particular friend of Bill Cox. Yet he employes him inhis bridge cfcses and solicited a divorce ease for him. Nordhoff says "Bill Cox." We pane it different: btllecox," a noun because its a name, common noun, because the name of a common thing, neuter gender, being neither male or female, past tense, be cause it te a has been. Nordhoff says he tried to get Sweenev as a lawyer, and told us to ask Mike. We did and Sweeney said he was a "liar" that after Cox had been empyed for sometime, that on armistice day Nordhoff came to him and wanted him to take the case and he said to Nordhoff. "I I bought :ou had Cox employed? Nordhoff said "Y.s! but we are going to discharge him and get you." "No you wont," said Mike you stick to the min you hired first. I dont want another mans job. So you see Nordhoff that you didnt quiet tell all the truth about that a?e. About the Beckman and Bohnert business at Dubois we dont know ex cept that they were not warm supporters of your" last Spring We told you that you ought to be beat for sheriff and still say so In spring of 1918 when you Were first nominated the factory, men of Jar per were a Nordhoff covvd nobodyelse could pay a vote loose with a crowbar. They worked end voted for your nomination and election. In the spring of 1920 when the fectory hands were on a strike for inceasd wages and billecox aT d his te lirium tremums foeman with other bosses got to "seeing things " You appoints 2G deupt.v sheriffs to fshoot. Shoot who? Your friends? who were violating no law, and not likely to. Why, Bob Nordhoff a decent Sheriff in your place would have told the bosses to hunt their holes- That you was sheriff and when you needed Depute3 you wou'd appoint them. You claim credit for notappointingShurig onGramelspachers request because you si id you believed Shurig was a bul'y, at least had that reputation. No laboring man in Dubois county. No union man, no friend of the laboring man can consistently vote for you for sheriff again, as your actions piove you as un friendly. We are going to send you a copy o this issue, Bob. so vou wont have to rad it out of a borrowed paper. You are a good ciai like your friend billecox too irrow minded to take the nty papers, a banker once told me in Jasper that bille was as narrow minded as a thin sheet of paper is thick. You can exppct no friendship or supp-jrt from county papers as about the only one you favor is the meria sheet of which bilfecox is the largest stockholder and hh Hcnor Geo, P, Wagner is second And neither of them has sense enough to run it and dont pa the men they employ half t e wages they ought to have. Now, Bob, we have written the above in sorrow, not anger because we feel sorry for you; because since you were elected sheriff your polit cal associates of the biUecox. and his Honor George P Wagnei order have been off color and they have got you in bad. We aont believe you ever issued any shooting orders,; but you &re responsible for the action and saying of deputies you ziDpoint, and you knew it, and for that reason did not appoint t :.y ",uie "CAL WCCA The Next President. No matter what happens ii, November the next President ol' the United State "cvi'l be an I Ohio editor who began active life in a printing-office successfully edited and published severa smail town newspaper played an unimportant part in Congiess. and never attained to a national reputafon until this summer."
ProSSS nnJfftfnn ? 'the ROVejmnient and place in Presiaential nominee to belong to, u w,. n .u .-i. a
, ical lite has not been concerned ! with the tariff and the train o:
:,:i.. Kf,, Unf u i oenatL oynuicat wnicn miniÄÄeÄiS Sfe Ä'äeÄÄSf Äm n k u: A:- , i the principles of the p'atform
tica. na ujvcmui ma tuiei v, urK position by hard work- ana sun-i
to mpet the demands of a new t0 what they must ay in their
nL3 ar?an?a A PfeSI Lewis declared that the "return Ä J 2Ua,lty , h ? the Pe; to old times." which both Hardpie; he has r.en to his present inc and CaoiieM wan. is the
side no has the qualities that; make for l popular leader and' t4n T, v c . t T ' i o . Do It Now" Subscribe for the Jasper has a Democratic platform toi. . , . ,4 . , .1 j eekly Courier, Don t put off for to Stan on. sorrow what yoa can do Uxlay.
Enthusiasm lubricates the whels of progress.
Contentment 13 a good thing, but don't overstock it. Don't think less of yourself; but less about yourself. Worry gives the undertaker more business than doe3 work. Hope is the tonic of the Wise man and the food of the Fool. Headworkis good but it doesnt get very far without a little foot work. You can't bring back whatyou have Io3t, but you can create something new. Never strike a man when he is down; he might get ud and lick the tar out of jyou If your aspirations are high, you will succeed quicker by mixing in a little prespiration. If you can't get enthusiastic o er your work it's a good hunch that you are wherh you don't belong ONBIOGRAPHY. rhllllps Ilrooks once told the boys at Kxotor that In reading biography thice men meet one another in close intimacy the subject of the biogra phy, the author and the reader. Of the three, the most Interesting I.s, of course, the man about whom the book Is written. The most privileged hi the reader, who is thus allowed to live familiarly with an eminent man. Least regarded of the three is the author. It is Iiis part to introduce the others and to develop between them an acquaintance, perhaps friendship, while he withdraws into the back ground. Of nil the forms of literature perhaps no one lias greater vitality than biography, as the name implies, the writing of the life of a great person. In all ages, in all nations tlwre hav? been great men, but there have been few great bitgraphies and yet these have had a permanence and influence accorded to few works of any other class of literature. The reason for tl.is is not far to seek. Wo are all interested in the deeds of men, says Indianapolis Star. We wish to know not only what they did but also what they thought and said and what ditliculties confronted them as they lived and did their work. The lives of great men are the inspiration of the race and It is in the reading of biography that successive gepcratlons com to know about their heroes. UNIQUE COLLECTION. Robert Young, ironmonger, Edinburgh, who passed away recently, wa known far and wide as a collector of horse shoes. How upon row, on the walls of his shop, hung shoes dating from the time of the Roman occupation (those having been found in Monmouthshire) down to the present day. Among the latter were included shoes worn on tho day ol the race by such famous derby winners as Lord Hosebery,B Ladas and Sir James Miller's Rock Sand. Every country in the world, from China to Peru, had been laid undm i ji uro. cm Lewis Dcanunces G.O.P. Pad Stand Asserts old guard leaders are fol owing carefullylprepared plot to gain control of government sa3 East Diet ted PlatformIrankfort Ind. Sept l,-4The great is ue of this time," said James Hamilton Lewis of Chica go spe; king at the opening of . 1 t a .: - r uiu uemucrauu campaign, IS Europe but wi at the citizens of . the United States are going to UU in ttlllUrjCLi "Unl ess the United State can be kept prosperous and her citizens engatred in peaceful occupations to their protit and content at home, no policies of the United States for Europe will be of any avail, either to Europe or to our.-elves-The former U S. Senator declared the Republicans wanted to Vl ' a "4,, uia" 1 n1 i er?nVl fo "fl tS L ? JReaK1r Ja, d l J1 , c n i 1 c .i.,oj j:.: .. ui
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XPOSE UBS
00S1ER LEADERS O. O. P. Workers Search In Vain for Satisfactory Explanation of Huge Slush Fund In Order to Face Outraged Public. OLD GUARD DENIALS FAIL TO CONVINCE PEOPLE Indianapolis, Ind. Governor Cox'i charges that a $15,000,000 "slush fund" was being raised by the Republican national t ommittee for the purposo of "buying an underhold on the presidency," made In Pittsburg last Thursday night, has kept the G. O. P. leaders "of Indiana busy ever since seeking an adequate explanation. Try as they might Republican workers who are not on the "inside councils" of their party find little of comfort In the statements of their lead ers and they aro facing tho growing1 storm of outraged public opinion with every feeling of apprehension. For instance Will H. Hays, the Republican national chairman on whom fellow party workers relied for an excuse for the Cox charges, could not see fit to issue any genial at all. Instead, the versatile chairman only remarked: Wants Subscribers Protected. "Governor Cox may not attack the integrity of those who have contributed toward the fund." Senator Harry New. who Is also well up in the councils of his party, did not deny that' the "sky is the limit" in the Republican effort to land the presidency. "Very poor stuff, very thin stuff from a man who thinks he is a candidate for president," was Mr. New's comment on the expose. Even E. M. Wasmuth, Republican state chairman, was not in a position to wholly deny the Cöx charges, admitting that the "state committee is cagaged in raising by popular subscription throughout the state, a sum necessary to take care of a budget for legitimate campaign expenses and at the same time a fund for the national committee." ' Republicans admit privately that Governor Cox ha3 given a new and unexpected turn to the campaign and that his. revelation of a huge slush fund has left them unprepared for even a defensive attitude. The fact lhat their own leaders who are in possession of the inside facts are unable to issue satisfactory denials has left them nonplussed and to quote one of them they "are considerably up in the air." It is generally understood that the $125,000 quota assigned to Indianapolis, as disclosed by the governor's figures, was to have been raised through the co-operation of Mayor Jowett's political machine with the state organization. This is the same machine that knifed its own candidate for governor, J. W. Fesler, in preference for Warren T. McCray, since which both the Jewett and McCray organizations have found that they have much in common. AGED REPUBLICAN TO VOTE FOR COX Indianapolls, Ind. Captain D. D. Negloy of Indianapolis, a Civil war veteran and father of Senator Harry E. Xegley, Republican floor leader In the Indiana Senate, is going to vote the entire Democratic ticket this fall. "I began talking about the need of a legue of nations In 1864,". said Captain Xegley. "After a man has seen stacks of human beings killed in battle he is ready to indorse anything that will lead to International peaca and that is why I am going to vote the Democratic ticket. The Democrats are right on the league of nations issue and the Republicans are wrong. "I am a Republican by principle, but I can not stand the corruption of the Republican party in this county and state; nor can I stand with any party that is opposed to the covenant. "I am going to vote for James M. Cox, Thomas Taggart and Carlton D. McCulloch and the whole Democratlo ticket. The Republican party needs a new organization; its leaders have played it false." Captain Xegley participated in the battles at Fort Hlman, Fort Donelson, Shlloh and the Atlanta campaign and was a prisoner at Andersonville. He is only one of the many Republicans this year who are repudiating the tactics employed by the senatorial cabal to win control of the government and dally accretions to Democratic strength are coming from this source.
EDITH ROBERTS .
J J V Edith Roberts is among the most experienced of the "movie" stars; although only twenty-two years old she has been with one producing firm since 1912. She started as a child actress. MW! (Copyright.) ALWAYS AT IT. I saw her on tho train Slttin' Knlttln. She had stitches on the brain Sittin Knlttin. It was not a sturdy sock Kur some member of her flock. Rut some dido for a frock Sittin Knlttln. Xever saw her but she was Slttln' Knlttin'. Guess that's all ehe ever does Sittin Knlttln. Bet you when her hair is hoary And she's tatted home to Klory, It will be the same old story Sittin Knlttin. t Evil. 4 Ev-H Is what the love of money Is thus root of. The root Is the lowest part, of course. There Is less unanimity of opinion as to what Is the height of evil. If everything else thrived as well under opposition ns evil does, this would be a far diiTerei r world. Evil is also what men do that lives after them, if Rill Shakespeare is to be depended on. Somebody n long time ngo labeled a lot of things "evil" nnd we have stuck to the labels pretty falthfujly. But most of the tilings they marked "evil" should have been placarded 'foolishness." People who exercise nil the Intelligence they have do nothing that Is really evil. And they have a fine time, with no big heads or next mornings or otlier popular brands of hang-over. Most of the time when wo nsk. "Is It right?" we could get the answer more suddenly if wo said: "Is it Intelligent?" Many things once labeled evil are not so. We were brought up to believe that card playing Is evil, Intrinsically. Also dancing gee, whiz! Dancing was tho worst thing there was! Murder was a Sunday school exercise compared with It. If one plays cards when one shrifi he nnd conld be doing something helpful and necessary. It Is wrong. So would corn hoeing or onion wviyl Ing be. If you were neglecting somjf thing more important for lt... Ditto dancing. Although we do beliove it wrong fflr anybody to do It ns badly as we do. A dancing teacher told us so, one. This isn't nil we know about evil. But It's all we're going to tell here, t Making Up Time. Father Time was looking anxiously at his reflection In the mirror. He gouged nt the bits of pigment In the pores of his skin and rubbed viciously at the rouge-marks on his lips and the sooty place in his eyebrows. - "It's almost Imiosslble for Tne to keep a decent complexion he complained, bitterly.. "Those railroad train men are always getting behind me and then making me up." FINNIGIN FILOSOFY Th' aiiet t'ing f'r annybody t' see is th' other feller on plisant juty. O : What the Sphinx Says By NEWTON NEWKlRK. "II o n e s t y among a certain percentage of business men went out of fashion with tho minuet"
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"There are weet turiri awalUn: many an humble soul lighting, against great odds In the batUo of tctmingl commonplace lift' What to Do With Bits of Leftover. Most housewives have dozens of ways of re-cook Ing or serving leftover meat, but too many throw away leftover vegetables or serve them again wanned up In the fame faucc. Vegetables of most kinds aiftnlt of so many ways of cooking that even a spoonful should never be wasted. We have any number of recipes which tell us how to serve the vegetable In any quantity, but we have to do In this nrtlcle with small amounts which aro beneath the notice of tho average cook. A spoonful of cooked bean washed from tho sauce in which they were served added to a potato salad will make that quite another dish; th same Is true of peas, corn or other vegetables. One cupful of stewed corn will make an escalloped dish sulllclent for a small family. Butter a baking dish, put In the corn with alternate layer? of buttered crumbs; dot each layer with bits of butter If dry crumbs are used, and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Pour over enough milk with a beaten egg added to cover the corn, and bako until Ann. A cupful of corn will provide corn fritters for four people. Add egg, a tablespoonful of milk and flour, to make a drop batter; add half a teaspoonful of baking powder to the flour; fry the size of largo oysters In a wellgreased frying pan or in deep fat. t There Is no economy In combining with leftovers expensive foods such as butter, cream, eggs and milk, to make them. pass muster with the family, for the object In using leftovers is to bo frugal, nnd at the same time serve an appetizing dish. Corn Muffins. Rent togother one cupful of stewed corn drained dry; two egg yolks, onequarter tcaspoonful of salt, a teasioonful of melted butter; add one cupiul of milk, one and one-half cupfuls of flour sifted with a tcaspoonful of baking powder. Beat vigorously for live minutes, then fold In the wellbeaten whites of two eggs. Half-flll heated muflln Irons and bako In a hot oven half an hour. A cupful of tomatoes well seasoned, heated and poured over toast makes n most tasty, luncheon dish. Eggs may be added if more nourishment is needed. Tomato In small quantities may be added to salads, soups or escalloied corn. Cora with tomatoes makes a most attractive escalloped dish. Cold string beans make an excellent salad. Cook two strips of bacon, cut In dice until brown; add a bit of minced onion, salt and pepper; add ft Utile vinegar and the beans and servo hot. Add a generous half-cupful or more of grated clieese to a small dish of creamed string beans. A green pea omelet makes n delicious luncheon dish. Drain a cupful of cooked peas,' mash with the back of a spoon and season with salt and peiIer. When the omelet is ready to fold, spread over It the peas; fold and finish cooking. A sauce for lamb chops may be made of the usual white? sauce with peas added. Serve as a garnish on the platter of lamb chops. Scalloped onlon3 are especially good using cold cooked onions, a layer of grated cheese and a cupful of white sauce. Bako covered with buttered crumbs. (Copyright. 1820. Weitem Nwip&pr Union.) Rewards Tr GEORGE MATTHEX7 ADAVW ! IT IS an Economic truth that most work Is undertaken for Howard would not bo done without Reward, and Is strenuous and well directed in proportion to the Beward. So Taussig states In his "Principles of Economics." This condition will undoubtedly always remain true, but If you want to be among those who are this world's Leaders In Thought and Action Do a little more than that for which you are Rewarded. Fortune does more than favor tho Brave. It favors tho Alert and Industrious the Thinkers whose Thoughts reach several miles beyond their pay envelopes. Gustavus F. Swift, loyal and enthusiastic in his 'Job as a poor Butcher boy In an. insignificant Xew England town, and'Gusfavus P. Swift, founder and builder of Swift & Confpany furnishing the meats and provision for millions, is a case in point He saw Reward BEYOND his pay envelope, Do a little more than, that for which you are Rewarded. But remember that Money and Material Achievement Is not always- Success. Lincoln Wtft next to nothing in Money, but Us life was an Evidence In itself of what he felt embodied infinitely more than all Material Reward. No one nor anyOlng is able to give you in Happiness and Contentment what your own Character and and Tenco of Mind can. Do a little MORE than that for which you are Rewarded. o Winding armatures of electric moton is tho purpose of a new motordriven ma china .
