Jasper Republican, Volume 2, Number 20, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 28 January 1876 — Page 4

INDIRA STATE NEWS.

in convention on the 15th™d instructed the delegates to the State Convention to j vote for Chas A Hubbard for State• W. 8. Mmlms, a prominent resident of or did not know what he was doing. • receipt for goods left at his house by some peddlers, which note was transferred to a neighbor, was the primary cause.

authorities. The receipts of Ute year wore Jdeafiok ofDr. Lemuel Mom, of Chicago, to Presidency of the institution gives and he seems to be peculiarly Which 128 are in the' preparatory department, 140 -in the course d? literature and science,” fifty- in the law c/Hlise, and 107 in the Medical School. Im a recent case the Supreme C° urt decided. that “ Citizens and tax-payers °f • city are not competent jurors to try £ cause to which the said city is a party. A verdict against the city would impose addition alburdens upon all the tax-paying residents thereof. Hence such residents are at common law incompetent to serve hs jurors in ' a case to which the city is a party. Our code does not declare the juaor in-such * case incompetent, yet it nowhere declares that he shall be competent. The decision must, therefore, be left to the' common lata. ’’ * • In Decatur, recently, at a church festival, a cane was to be voted to the most popular physician in the town, or, in other the One whose candidacy brought the most money to tbechprch treasury, Rivalry carried the receipt* upi to a fabulous figure, Each doctor present was bound to be the recipient of the* testimonial. Each was determined to get that little piece of advertising, though it cost him his wealth. Bo the war waxed strong. Money poured in before the , grinning treasurers of the festival as the contest deepened. At last, from sheer exhaustion, the “pool” was closed, the money was counted, and one Dr. Blank declared the winner of the fight and owndr of the memorial cane. A rival of the successful candidate, who had been pouring out his money like water, refused to be comforted, and has actually sued the society for the amount of money he squandered. - The following resolutions were adopted by the. Indiana editors during their recent trip to Philadelphia? WusBBAB.The representatives of the press of Indiaßa.lnaw present in Philadelphia, having seen the buildings in progress of erection for the purpose of holding therein the great Exhibition to commemorate the first centennial of our existence as a nation, and recognizing the need of some assistance from the General Government to enable the projectors and directors of the enterprise to carry out and execute their plans in* manner that Shall reflect credit upon the United States among the nations which will bo represented in the Ex.position; and, Whzbkas, We understand that Congress is at this time considering a proposition to appropriate _ the sum of f 1,500,000 to enable the Executive "Committee to finish the buildings by the time announced for the opening of the Exposition; therefore, be it Beteived, That in our Judgment this great international enterprise is worthy of the generous encouragement and support of the Congress of the United States; that its international character and the magnitude of-the interests Involved should render it superior to all considerations save those of national honor, and that we earnestly request eur Senators and Representatives in Congress to support the bin now pending before that body in behalf of the Centennial Exposition. .Resolved, That it is the sense ot this meeting that the appropriation to be so made should be coupled with the condition that the Government shall be held free from any and all liability for the expenses of running the Exposition, other than for the amount above named. The Indianapolis Journal of a recent date thus speaks of th* success attending • recent attempt to blackmail Samuel Amity, city missionary of the Young Men’s Christian Association: purlng'the past two weeks various rumors ' have' been afloat concerning the absence from the city of the city missionary, Samuel Amity, several of which have been other than of a complimentary nature. We give the facta as furnished to us from a reliable source: Twelve months since Amity was induced to attend one of the Gospel meetings held in the Y. M. C. A. Hall, and while there professed to have been converted. That this was the result we have no doubt, from the fact that his previous life was one of gross wickedness, the catalogue of his crimes embracing drunkenness and immorality of the worst kind. At thia time he was a worker in a machineshop in the northeast part of the city, and his nabits were well known to' his fellowworkmen. He became a constant attendant at the religious services of the association, and evidenced such religious devotion, the purity of which none of the association even now doubt, that the suggestion was made that he be employed as a city missionary for the purpose of laboring among the lower classes. In this work he was eminehtiy successful, and had the confidence of Ms employers and the Christian public generally. Some months since, by accident, he met a man in the Union Depot who knew his history, part of which covered a period of time whenbe became subject to penalty for the violation of the laws of the State of New York, This man blackmailed him to the extent of fifteen dollars per month, and at the time of his departure increased his demands beyond thjmeans of the persecuted man, who, sooner than submit to it any longer, fled. There was no necessity for this blind step, tor ME-fret friends were cognizant of the faets ahd Would have used their utmost endeavors.to render him that protection which his respectable demeanor during the past • twetye months deserved. It is a thousand pities that he lacked nerve, for he was a man of promising qualities. Notwithstanding any attacks that may be made on him he leaves behind him a monument of his work Ln lndianapolis which would be an honor to any man—we refer to the Newsboys’ Home. It was at hirsuggestion and earnest solicits-

Advice to an Expectant Bride.

Thb following letter was recently ad that the young wife died soon after her marriage. from the bash of ceremony! lam gazing upon a card and upon a name—a name There is nothing strange about that card. The maiden’sign still looks up from it, calm and customary, as it looked on many a friendly visit, as it lies in many a formal basket lam gazing, too, upon a card where the nearer parent tells the world she will be “At Home” one day; and that is nothing ne<J But there is another card, whose mingling there puts a tongue of fire into this speechless pasteboard, enameling fate on commonplace I It tells us that feeling is maturing into destiny, and that these cards are but the pale heralds of a coming crisis; when a hand that has pressed friends* hands and plucked flowers shall close down on him to whom she

are the gentlest types of • delicate and our side when others have deserted it; graves when those who should cherish have forgotten us. It seems meet to me that a past so calm and pure as yours should expire with a kindred sweetness about it; that flowers and music, kind friends and earnest words should consecrate the hour when a sentiment is passing into a Sacraifient. The three great stages of our being are the birth, the bridal and the burial. To the first we bring only weakness—for the last we have nothing but dust! But here, st-the altar, where life joins life, the pair come throbbing up to to help on in the'life-struggle of care and duly. The. beautiftil will be there, borrowing new beauty from the scene. The gay and the frivolous, they and their flounces, will look solemn for once. And youth will come to gaze on all its sacred thoughts pant for, and age will totter up .to hear the old words repeated that to the/r own lives have given the charm. Some Will weep over it as n it were a tomb, and some will laugh over it as if it were a joke; but two must stand by it, for it is fate, not fun, this everlasting locking of their lives. And now, can you, who have queened it over so many bendjng formSj Can you conM> down at last to the frugal diet of a single heart? Hitherto you have been a clock giving your time to all the world. Now yotf are a watch, buried in one particular bosom, warming only his breast, marking only his hours, and ticking only to the beat of his heart—where time and feeling shall be in unison Until there lower ties are lost in that higher wedlock where all hearts are united around the great Central Heart of all.. Hoping that calm sunshine mt? hallow your clasped hands, I sink silently Into a signature. , , ■ D, S. D.

A Valued Heir-Loom.

A rather tragico-comlc trial has been going on in the Stuttgart between a bridegroom and his intended brother-in-law over an heir-loom in the shape of a lock of Schiller’s hair. A professor in the gymnasium had been some time paying court to a daughter of the Commerzeinrath. This gentleman had inherited from his father, who was an intimate friend ol Schiller’s, a lock of the poet’s hair inclosed in a gold medallion. After the professor’s engagement to the daughter he stated to the father that if he would give her the lock of hair he would renounce his claim to the usual bride’s dower. The father informed him that in a regular family conclave of his own father it had been decided that the relic should, through all posterity, descend to the eldest son, and as he had a son ft was not in his power to give it to his daughter. The professor, not to be thwarted in his desire, set his wits to work'to obtain the treasure, and finding no other way practicable actually stole half of the lock. The father, out of love for his daughter, would gladly have forgiven the theft to avoid the scandal ot exposure, but the eldest son and brother was not to be conciliated unless the stolen property was returned. This the professor refused to do he was arrested for theft, tried and found guilty. The legal value of the treasure was set at fifty thalers; the professor, having taken half, was condemned to pay half the value —twenty-five thalers—and suffer eight days’ imprisonment. Whether the love affair will continue depends on the young girl, who has been an agitated witness in the pending trial. How little the poet ever dreamed, he who was so loving and gentle in his life, «f causing sorrow to his friends so long after his body is moldering dust.— Berlin Letter.

Mathematics is a science with many parts—a bureau with an elaborate series of drawers. The foundation of all is arithmetic, and in the almost countless compartments of this drawer is contained the whole of the science as it pertains to financial and commercial transactions,, small and great, simple and complex. It is only as one branches out in surveying, navigation or astronomy that any use to made of so-called “ higher mathematics.” Every man and every woman needs to understand arithmetic. It comes in use constantly. It is only one among ten thousand who has any use for any other department of mathematics.— Chicago Evening Jour. TLaxd winter in Boston, according to the Transcript: “The social dead-beat frequents the halls and corridors of hotels of evenings just now, and when he sees a dance going on in the parlors, dons his gloves, ‘rings in,’ and gets his ice-cream and cake without paying for it.” The editor of the Chinese paper in San Francisco has an easy time of it If the forms are knocked into pi it makes no difference with the paper. The types are bunched together, locked up, and it’s just as good Chinese as before. The fact that a seer "and a ■prophet are about the sjtme thing reconciles Boston girls to the belief that to marry {Sears, the yaung piillionaire, would aflM 4 prohl as a matrimonial investment • •** ‘- 1 i-

Studies Among the Sloux.

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SST X J ***♦ fr* your window for • quarter of an hour at a time, but having once ventured to hint to one of them that her ways were most ©» poo com® that she ran in her The manner of lova-mnKing among them is strange. When afflicted with Cupid’s dart the young men go about wearing their blankets in such a manner throw the blanket over her head also, and holding her tightly around the waist compel her to listen to the soft accents of love. In case of a popular belle they will sometimes range themselves in a line at the door of her wigwam and when she comes out pass her from one to the other as each in turn disburdens his surcharged heart. They have been known to keep a girl this way all day long. The language of the Indian is wellknown to be picturesque, and no one can appreciate the grace of their tatatory without having seen it, and even in ordinary conversation their gestures are profuse. It is the very poverty of their language which makesit sound poetic; thus, for “ the ship sails,” having neither the word "ship” nor "sails,” they tay, "ths wind makes the boat run on the water,” thus twinging in two of the natural elements in that one sentence. It is noticeable that when we sometimes express age by so many summers, they always say winters, and when we say " so many days since?” they say "so many nights or sleeps.”— Dakota Cor. Evansville Journal.

A Remarkable Recovery of Speech.

A vert singular case has just com* to light in the town of Woonsocket, R. 1., which is the wonder in medical and scientific circles. About twenty years ago Frederick E. Luke, then a young man well know in hi* native town, was suddenly deprived of hi* power of speech. For several y ears afterward he was in fail ing health and ft was never thought that he could live. During these twenty yean he was obliged to make himself understood by«his mother and* brother, the only occupants of th* house, by signs, using the letters of the alphabet. Vbr th* past four years his health has been improving and he has been able to care for • small garden and materially assist his mother i» the management of household affairs- A few days ago a great change was noted in him for the better. He felt the removal of a restriction in his mouth and he wax made sensibly aware that the impediment in his speech which had made life a blank to him for twenty years had disappeared. He leaped for joy and went to hi* mother’s room, informing her in an audible vole* of the great change which had come over him. His enunciation as yet is not fully restored, hut each day ft is improving, and he is able to converse in a manner which can be understood by the many of his friends and relatives who visit his horn* to congratulate him upon the happy event. Some are of the opinion that the power of speech may again be taken away from him, but this is not probable from hi* present condition. The case will be presented to some of the eminent physicians in the State for investigation, and their report will be looked forward to with peculiar interest. \ >

"Refreshments” on a German Railroad.

Ih Austria we get into unheated cars. The Germans are prepared for this. Every man has two overcoats, the outer one of fur usually, and covering him from head to feet; with these two overcoats and a blanket he wraps himself up like a bear, lights his cigar and defies the elements. But still he needs occasional refreshing. When we reach a station where the stop isover four minujps the German says: “ There is time to drink a glass of beer.” The beer seems to improve as we travel, andat Pilson it is best of all, a light-col-ored liquid, not strong, but full of vivacity. The German speaks of this beer with enthusiasm; it is auegeeeichnet gut bier. Wear® also in a land of sausages, it must not be forgotten. Here the sausage is hohored, and loye for it is a thing not to be concealed. I meant to have said of the ancient town of Ratisbon that, when I walked through the streets, the entire city was pervaded with a smell of sausage and cheese to an extent that I should think one might live on the atmosphere there. At these stations people buy long, slender links of sausage, which they swing about like riding-whips, while they eat off one end. Then they thrust thOm into their pockets; and, occasionally, in the cars, pull them out and eat a foot or two. -Charlee Dudley Warner, in Hartford Courant. ———»i»'«i Virginia legislators are afraid to vote .. 'T v ’ qy C&|J Of &Ou

WOWTIII.I CALENDAR.

Jfc £I*BJS» UdOJBI jb • a ljf .... 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9101112 13141516171819 202122 23 2425 26 27 28 29.. .... . .

HOUSEHOLD HINTS.

ill, particularly if he shows signs of asthhim for a week on boiled bread and milk, piece of salt pork and tie it up in the cage within reach. Give ft also a little saffron in its water now and then.—Wooneoeket] (Ji. I.) Patriot. To prevent chafing use a lotion of alum in water, applied with a rag before retiring. A piece of alum as large as a hazelnut, dissolved in a half pint of water, is sufficient. It will quickly heal excoriated skin and harden the unabraded cuticle. The .use of this for years with the most beneficial results is sufficient authority for a trial. It is good also for tender feet and soft corns.

If brooms are wet in boiling suds once a week they will become very tough, will not cut the carpet, last much longer, and always sweep like a new broom. A very dusty carpet may be cleaned by setting a pail of cold water out by the door; wet the broom in it, knock it to get out all the drops, sweep a yard or so, then wash the broom again as before, and sweep again, being careful to shake all the drops off the broom, and not sweep far at a time. The water may need to be changed once or twice if the carpet is very dusty. Snow sprinkled over a carpet and swept off before it has time to. melt and dissolve is also nice for renovating a soiled carpet. Moistened Indian meal is used with good effect by some housekeepers.— Health Reformer. When one of "father’s” business friends drives into the yard at about half, past eleven the good wife knows that he will surely stay to dinner. Father is a great story-teller, and he likes to get hold of a new auditor. How aptly comes a frown of dismay and displeasure on the smooth, fair face of his helpmeet. What can be done? Work is going on according to the day’s plan in the kitchen; the dinner was arranged for none but the family; the children are coming home from school and making a clatter; all is bustle and confusion. She feels that the best dishes must be used, and something extra cooked for the inopportune guest. Now, good woman, don’t do it! Your fine dinner, with its attendant irritation and " upsetting,” will taste no better than what you had prepared. Make no difference in your plans, but seat your visitor with a smile and easy greeting at your hospitable board, and he will feel more comfortat >le and happy than though you gave him a banquet. You save temper and trouble, and gain the enjoyment of giving your friend a real cozy time. A sensible person knows that farmers do not have six courses upon their table daily, and the' wholesome, hearty fare, with good nature and hospitable cordiality, will be tinctured with a sweet, domestic sense that is inevitably lost in grand dinners. Smiles and neatness are sauce for homely meals.— Golden Rule.

Hints on Fruit-Tree Planting.

For fruit-trees the soil should be dry, cither naturally or made so by thorough drainage, as they will not live or thrive on a soil constantly saturated with stagnant moisture. It should also be well prepared by plowing twice at •"least beforehand, using the subsoil plow after the common one at the second plowing. On new, fresh lauds manuring will be unnecessary; but on lands exhausted by cropping fertilizers must be applied, either by turning in heavy crops of clover or well-decomposed manure or compost. To insure a good growth of fruit-trees land should be in aa good condition as for a crop of wheat, corn or potatoes. In preparing soil fatal errors are often committed. As a general thing, trees are placed in the ground precisely as they are sent from the nursery. In removing a tree, no matter how carefully it may be deme, a portion of the roots is broken and destroyed, and consequently the balance that existed in the structure of the tree is deranged. This must be restored by a proper pruning, adapted to the size, form and condition of the tree, as follows: Standard orchard trees, as sent from the nursery, vary from five to efghr°feet in height, with naked stems or trunks and a number of branches at the top forming a head. These branches should all be •cut back to within three or four buds of their base. This lessens the demand upon the roots and enables the remaining buds to push with vigor. In the case of older trees of extra size the pruning must be in proportion; as a general thing it will be sate to shorten all the previous year’s shoots to three or four buds at their base, and where the branches are very numerous some may be cut out entirely. Pyramidal trees, of two or three years’ growth, with a number of side branches, will require to be pruned with a two-fold object in view, viz.: the growth of the tree and the desired form. The branches must be cut into the form of a Dvramid bv shorten in e* the lower nnee say one-half, those above them shorter; base. The leader itself must be shortened back one-halt or more. When trees have PMQ dried or Injured tftuch by exposure ’

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l , j * - I?* * ® ~ roots, filling every interstice and bringing every root in contact with the soil, when water may be thrown on to settle and wash in the earth around the roots; then I fill in the remainder and tread gently with the foot The use of water is seldom necessary, except in dry weather, early in fall pr late in spring. Guard against planting too deep ; the trees, after the ground settles, should stand in this respect as they did in the nursery. Trees on dwarf stocks should stand so that all the stock be under the ground and no more. In very dry, gravelly ground, the holes should be dug twice the usual size and depth and filled in with good loamy soil. If trees are tall and much exposed to winds, a stake should be planted with the tree, to which it should be tied in such a manner as to avoid chafing. A piece of matting l or cloth may be put in between the tree and the stake. When the tree is planted throw around it as far as tha roots extend and a foot beyond five or six inches deep of rough manure or litter. This is particularly necessary in dry ground,-and is highly advantageous everywhere, both in spring and fall planting. It prevents the ground from baking or cracking, and maintains an equal temperature about the roots. Grass or weeds should 'not be allowed to grow around young trees after being planted, as it stunts their growth and utterly ruins them. The ground should be kept clean and cut loose around them until at least they are of bearing size. Place the packages, if frozen, unopened in a cellar or some such place, cool, but free from frost, until perfectly thawed, when they can be unpacked and either planted or placed in a trench until convenient to plant. Treated thus they will not be injured by the freezing. Trees procured in the fall for spring planting should be laid in trenches in a slanting i position to avoid the winds; the situation should also be sheltered and the soil dry. A mulching on the roots and a few evergreen boughs over the tops will afford good protection.— N. Y. World. Large guns, which, when condemned, were formerly broken up by the tedious process of the hammer, are now subjected to the force of explosion with the same result. A charge of dynamite is placed within the lower end of the bore, which is then filled with water. An explosion of the charge breaks the iron intosmallfragments, in which state it is ready for the smelting or repeating furnace.

SCHBNCK’R PtTLMONIC Stxot, Sza Wbzt> Tontc and Mandrakb Piua.— Thane deservedly celebrated and popular medicines have effected a revointion in the healing art, and proved the fallacy of several maxims which have for many years obstructed the progress of medical science. The false supposition that “ Consumption is incurable” reconciled themselves to death without making an effort to escape from a doom which they supposed to be unavoidable. It is now proved, however, that Consumption can be cured, and that it Aaa been enred in a very great number of cases (some of them apparently desperate ones) by Schenck’s Pulmonic Syrup alone; and in other cases by the JRJBS cording to the requirement* of the case. Dr. Schenck himself, who enjoyed uninterrupted good"health for. more than forty years, was supposed, at one Mme, to be at the very gate of death, his physicians having pronounced his case hopeless, and abandoned Mm to his fate. He was cured by the aforesaid medicines, and. since his recovery, many thousands similarly affected have ” Bed , D , r ; Sc henck's preparations with the same remarkable success. Full directions accompany each, making it not absolutely necessary to personally see Dr. Schenck unless patients wish their lungs examined, and for this purpose he is professionally at his principal office, corner Sixth and Arch streets, Philadelphia, every Monday, where ail letters for advice must be addressed. Schenck’s medicines are •old by all druggist*

Blkeumattam a Symptom Otter DlbThe alarming extent of chronic rheumatism In the country has led to persistent Investigation. It has lately been ascertained that the disease Is the result of other complicated diseases of the liver, kidneys, pancreas, blood, absorbents, etc. In other words, that rheumatism is a symptom. It is also found that, by the removal of the complicated disease, the rheumatism disapBSwZSfa disease has been, and we now hail with joy the dawn of this new discovery. We ail know that the symptoms of these diseases are generally present in cases <rf chronic rheumatism, but lew have supposed the can °be C, f ound h in® Se’Kim’ftCTßAcTS Roon on Cubativb Strop: it appears to b m y an «x rz. i " o ■men’ School of Evanston, 111., reek. Chicago sasEs stead of tike i sense, i - , r i’S'rflnj“eU°‘w ™ to »hS uST,™ ™°eXu»wi bar*« vou*pureliase their brand. To protect their brand from Imitators Pvnoiar A Gatwhla nainnfad (4 mwasl -A . a jrrovMsr uamoie paten tea it, ana ine patent was sustained in the United States Courts. da,< °“. r « randuio^ herB ’ h< >bby fol

mi tied suicide because her sister’s bus-

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