Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 23, Number 30, Jasper, Dubois County, 8 July 1881 — Page 6

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The Typical frtuMMttty. The Washington ormpot)deatof Um New York Jin continues to dish np Um Star-route" oriniMlity. He says: Tue rost matter Geaerat, Sadlne; oa ewry baud evil of corrupt km ens' rtekieae e inrimw look tbroueU tae roferaw of I :e p eent to Um nUiuiiod of a dveeaa of elt euotaiaias' l-oimnt and oktei or porta In Um wmr future toura-eilo tubofdiaate other evidence wfciek will ovtrwkeJai im Kil.tr. It ia Sard for ooo who gala test at lo Umbo rerora and who ttiMUe to ktetorv Of prVVWUS iaVOMlffdt OH tO OMMMO lb BMf laet ton It-oaXv iMpjrtMMmt has been a k of tai tuMy for years. ItwtU bo aoeeay task to compute tee amouat of tae people a BMMtojr stoieu or thrown away. Not only tho lost-office lmpartment, bat nearly every other Department under the Government ha beta Ibe scene of wholesale peculation Tula is not strange, 'lime and again tho country has seemed to aay to tat dishonest party, "Yoo are only clever aad wrifty; we take no stock ia tba stories affecting your good name: they art only 'campaign powder;' go ahaad wt are with you " 80 the party baa oeate to imagine itself tho owner of Um ooontry hi fee simple and should it not make all the money there ia "ia HP' The "Star-route 1 orinee ought to wake up the public to the real Batnre of the party that has rioted in power so loag; for they are a little Um plainsst, most palpable, most openhanded robberies yet brought to light They will enable the most bigoted Republican to ate that the charges made against his party so stead ilt, since 1872 especially, were something more than campaign talk. Indeed the crimes of the party have become as vulgar and tangible as horse stealing and pocketpicking; and the bigoted Kepubiicau sees it Don he still think Um party worthy the support of good men t Can he still any that honesty ia the role nod crime the exception in the Republican party--that the criminals are a lot of low fellows whom it is only necessary to kick out to make every thing roll on as "merry as a marriage be UP'1 We doubt it, for he will encounter this fact in the Tory beginning- that the Republican eand'dite for President, and the party managers generally, were "in cahoots with the leaden of this "Star route" villainy, and drew freely on their guilty bank account for campaign money. 1 bus we hare the iTimiaal and 4 respectable' ' elements of Radicalism linked toirethar itutimnlaMpt Ttian i.

do getUr g oat of it: the partnership has been estsJ.isbed by indubitable epistolary proof. There is much show bow of hunting down and punishing the scoundrels. 80 far as totmsJter-General Janes is concerned we are willing to grant an honesty of purpose, Tjdr. James is an honest man and a reformer in the true sense; but will he be tMHrmifbut tn n m, L 1 1 Hwniinw to the bitter end P We shell Tie very 6' ; iot use gooa ot tn poMte service, t he be an neraitted; hat mm mm in credulous. The Republican tenure ia so interwoven with, and dependent upon, official rascality that ttta party can hardly "go back on" its thrtfty ones in d ad earnest. We can understand that the work of exposure and prosecution may go so far that it cannot be stopped w.tbout a confession and admission too revolting lor even Radical assurance; but the work of reform has not progressed that far yet. We trust the Kepublicaa administration may set he driven into the -a deaKrute straits. The tide is drifting in tt direction now. It will be a bright day for the country when the party of corruption stands forth naked m all its criminality, and there be no one to do it further reverence. The correspondent of the ftme says "It will be no easy tak to compute Um amount of money stolen or thrown away" by this see syndicate of thievery id the Republican party. It is nu doubt past computation; and when we come to add the "Star-route'' frauds to the other interminable frauds that have depleted Use popular pocket, from Grant's disgraceful reowac down to the present, what an appalling aggregate of robbery do we obtain! A nice party for "business Men's" clubs; a nice party for the hobet sad the bard-trated; a nice party for moial and respectable people; a nice party for young men to join and grow up with:,ra nice party for miaNers and college professors, and all other moral andphTsical instructors of 300th; a nice party to serve as an exemplar of the benefices and beauties of Republicanism; a nice party to assume toe poesomton of "all the merality and all the respectability; ' a aios party to ground itself noon decency and konGeneral James is sad to have at first looked hopefully to an honest nod beneoesa public service ia the future; but we imagine he has ere now despaired of accomplishing any thing durable under the dominance of the Kepublicaa party. First Um storm; then Um purified attnoajwere and the noil hag ImsdtM.pCUvdad PUundaUor. Centfnnlag to tjaktts. Ornnt continues to" gabhle, and the burden of his gabble still is Grant. "Robertson was made Collector because be proved traitor to m- at Chicago," says Grant, and my friends have been insulted because they have stood true torn. Blaine is at the bottom of it. Garfield is weak and easily Infiuenoed." In sonMrMnectsthis is the most remarkable eonfeMion Grant has made iace he threw aside the mask of ratloeaoi and begs to gnbbls. It illuminates with an electric light, w to my. the posture of Grant before the ChMsjm Oonveatlon. It Is cohfee. ;ion of his th,rU-trm ambition; a eon feasiott that he detoimesd froni the lltariaM attitnde of -first cfUmn of the worW to the ignoble character of oHJoe-esker; ooniess4on thnthU showy nmrch aefws the com. uneatwnethe spectacular fiioas-of nn

that his elrcnmnavlgsUoa of Um pint with iU noeeuories of camsmmdenta, advertiainw agents, trumpet-blowers, ssmI ao forth, was Um theatrical prologue of a third-to t m lresidentiat campa ga. AilUis was alleged at the time by Many sagacious ebeervers, who were for with written down by Um little gooseqniU ".up.' a" in the play not merely as "(iranl's enemies, but as rtraous who baled Uraat on a xount of a victories over rebel enemies. It was denied with the utmost emphasis that Giant was posing as a third-torni candidate for rrosloWnt It was dcolared that he had no personal wish to be President again; that Um matter did not even engage hU thought, as his silence on the aubeot was said to prove. It was affirmed that those who would be most likely to know bad serious doubts whet tier he would arrant

; the candidacy if it were offered to him. ana wim great postttveneM it was asserted that he would not accept it names it were offered as the "spontaneous voice' of the partr. When it became evident that. In spits ot all the delegate-packing the puissant stagemanagers could do there would be a E'werful and resoluis opposition to the ird-terna programme, the tone ot the trumpet-blowers was necessarily modilied; still, the pretense that (J rant was not personally seeking the nomination, and bad no personal saturation to a third term was continued to the last moment, with the tacit consent of the chief postulant in this gams of political hypocrisy. That it w.a a game of political hypocrisy is now confessed by Grant himself. Robertson was made Collector because be prove! a traitor to me at Chicago, and my friends have been insulted becauie they stood true lo mc." There is in this confession a tone of asperity which shows that Um disappointment of Grant la failing to get the nomination which his friends said he was not seekinsr. and would not ous -voice of ine people." was so slight that the lapse of a whole year has not sufficed to efface its bitterness! "Robertson was made Collector because he proved a traitor to me.1 The oitixen who makes his confession of disappointed ambition in these remarkable words asserts himself with some confidence. modest er men might have endearored to save appearam ea br employing a form of speech which, at least, would not have excluded the supposition that Robertson may have had an idea that the country, or, at lewt, the political majority, was the object wh'ch a wins, if not a patrktic. Presidential Mlcotor should mainly oonider. It m, indeed, supposabie that a eiUten of Judge Robertson's standing and character, chosen by a section of Um people to select a suitable dtiaen for resident, would think that the obligation of fealty, and therefore of dutv. under which he would discharge that trust, was to the country sad not to a particular individual. It certainly was poos his for Robertson not to perceive that, as an American cittxen and Presidential mloctor, his allegiance was due to a single individual, and, therefore. Bot to realise the crime of treason to that individual This tmswibiuty Grant's contassion exclades. Robertson " proved a traitor lo ;" which could net have been the case if Robertson bad aot owed allegiance " to me." Grant confesses that, before the ooontry, before the Government, before Um laws, before tho sovereign political being called the people, he was a personality to whom Use allegiance of an American eitiai n was due. It is an assertion of himself which reminds one of the self-asset Uve propensity of a semi-Soutchioaa of the name of James Stuart, who esma from Francs to England in 1716. An aunt of his, known as Queen Anne, had recently Tainted the Chief Magistracy, and it was believed that Stuart was an office-seeker Mpiring to fill the vacancy. But the Britons preferred one George Gnelph, a Dutchman, and Stuart left the ooontry in some haste, a bitterly d (appointed office-seeker. He afterward declared that a number of Englishmen had been appointed to office because they proved traitors to h m. sad that his fr ends had been insulted, and some of them jailed, because they stood true to him. Looking at the matter from his point ot view, no doubt he was right His error ws in looking at it from a wrong point of view. Like Grant, he was too self assertive; too apt to think of himelf as a Demon to whom other people owed allegiance. Grant's la1 est confession is an extremely unfortunate one for his reputation. It is fatal to a good deal of the Mutietealal admiration with wk'h he has been popularly regarued. It lifts the veil of fictitious great nest, and d seleeef aa aspect of the human nature which the world is not accustomed to assoriate with illustrious characters. -yticago limn. Doroey hasn't got rand enough to peach yet, but we live in hopes of light coming trosn him to show up mors than on 1 dark spot in the last campaign. We suspect neither M acVeagh nor James will grieve mask If the whole Indiana business and the secrets of the "Starroute berT' are shown op. It was not their wan, although thev art in Garfield's Cabinet, who wrote that beseeching letter to Brady. --natami Btmte 6enSenator Ketlogg has evidently gone over to Garfield's side and cut slsnn lesjsje from Coakling. Raking s'se can explain the harsh way In wMeK the stalwart press is handliag him just aow. We do not sMnot t their ra le KcUosnr's strikers as "lesm snaaft wail ansamsaata ftaadanV tnamask tea mtienhlanlr new m. inftsiwsmsma

Avotsttar lent hi

am vasal aoMlMMfaJ with a view of convenience in data work or to comfort during warm weather. They are cold in Um winter sad warm In summer. They are not supplied with water as they might beat small expense, have no means of drainage, ao provision for storing ke, and no method ot ventilation except through open doors and windows. The kitoheu is generally so located teat the tire kept In it will warm the sntir house. As three hot meals are expected every day by the persons engaged in fie d work, and a the amount of washing and ironing to be done is very Urge, the tire is rarely allowed to die out in the kitchen stove or range. As n eonsequence, all the rooms in tbs house are kept hot bv niirbt as weU as dar. The odors of the variom dishes being cooke l also fill the entire dwelling. People often go from the o ty to the country during hot weather to find a cool place and get the advantage of pure air. They never find either in aa ordinary farmhouse. The air is impure not, it is true, from the odors rising from sewers and filthy alleys, but vapor coming from the cow-tard and the kitchen thai forms a portion of the dwelling. In most cases the indoor laborers op a farm suffer mare from the heat during the summer than the out-of-door laborers do. Various wav have been contrived to protect be Id laborers from the heat of the summer sun. but no invention tas been perfected to ward off the heat of cooking stoves. The kitchens of most farm-hooses are places of torment ofuring the season ot hot weather. They breed disease and death. In Metieo and Central America houses have no chimneys. No fires are necessarv to warm the dwellings, and the oooking and lauadrr work are done out of doors, in the Southern States the practice generally prevails of doing the cooking and ironing required for Um family in a building at some distance from Um dwelling-house, the two buildings being connected by a walk covered by a roof. By this arrangement Um dwelling is not heated by the lues required to carry on operations in Um kitchen and wash-room. It is also kept free from the odors rising from dishc being cooked sad the vaoors of the wash-tub.. There is same' trouble in bringing food from the cooking-house to the dining-room, but it is compensated for by the comfort gained. It would requ re but little expense to erect a build ag BC4T the dwelling where all the cooking, washing and ironing could be done during Ike summer month. The walls could be made of rough boards. If ornamentation is dosiredU it could be doae by means of vines. The onlr expene ve portion of the building would be Um roof, which, of course, should be tight and pr Tided with snouts for carrying oil the water. A building of th;s knd would add very much to the comfort of everv family living in the country. It would relieve the dwelling of a large amount of heat, noxious vapors and noise. It would render the labor of housekeeping easy. The building would be useful at other times of Um year, when heavy work, like soap-making and canning fruit, is to be performed During the cooler months of Um year it would he convenient for men to use when conducting mechanical operations. A large amount of discomfort may be saved during the summer months by the employment of oil-stoves for the preparation of light dishes for the table. The amount of heat produced by these stoves is small, and as the flame comes in immediate contact with Um vessels in which water la boiled or dishes cooked, but little heat is diffused ia the room. The firs in aa oil stove ia kindled and extinguished instaaUy, so that a room is hot warmed by the heat produced before or after it is smpmyed for cooking or laundry purposes. The use of lot during: Um summer saves a large amount of cooking. With an ice-box or ; refrigerator, meat, pastry, and many ' fhtkana ekjaiaiMl tiWmwmrmA 4n ftVen K1a ! trvmwmvM. oa ivi pivpwsM vn vaaas uenwiTmay be kept several dnys in good eond tion. No person desires to eat food or to drink fluids that are of Um same temperature as the surrounding air. To be grate: ul to the taste they must be considerable warmer or cooler, and it Senertlly matters little m which conition they nre. Tea is very insipid , when it is the same temperature as the air ia summer, but it ia grateful to the taste when heated to a hundred degrees j or cooled by means of ice. Much labor and discomfort are saved by the um of i ios in the preservation and prepare-! tion of articles of food and drink. I Arbors covered' with twining and ' flowering vines and fitted up with j seats do nutch to render the pmn'ses comfortable during the summer. Thev can be employed Tor setting the table j in, or used when the in mats' of the 1 houe are engaged in ligHt work or in I reading. Men also prefer an arbor to 1 a reading room in the house wlien they are resting at noon or night. CAicoyc ixmes. Mrs. Long, who lives between the miBMim mh amm www vanvnai, ante 1 the Santa Barbara (Cat) ires, while ! milking her cows one evening not long , since, was startled by a scream from ; her four-year-old daughter. Os hastening to the spot she was almost paralyred to sea a large California Hon with the child In its mouth, making toward an adjoining thicket. She followed, helplessly screaming, when the brute, taking fright at her cries, dropped the child, and fled to Um mountains. Although severely bitten nnd bruised, Um little one was ant seriously w jored. - "' sgfqtaaMat BaLammatiBammai en Aasasisasal fMaassaBi mmmma lmmmmm WW WVUWmWm MMIVMI aweTffTPaW PfW S. M S S ... mm . m. . . mgm a nam assy mnmtm, art.. ymmifm moaaesle klttad be sto mmmmmwwmM mmtmrnmi Oy Bj esy awsss m naanr seaay wnn

Otir TtNUnf ataim.

TOMura wfsn Oh. I was I was AsMaoboljr -no. m txm m Or. If rn'w mmt rwmtw Ifjrrawa opa a to a Kee4 BwfeeBKyn4tari, A avast eaei ten samef M re" I star w nHar suss. For i e mt tots Oa.IwtaiIwatai 14 wear aar vetf Villi low 4m Acwoos mr ttt a ot; Wits a MpSwiote ao noary I tMmi A m. tm .mm turn Wnn a aoM hm m my puHiot, Oa.IwwIwasa A tau at aay r4anveaaso aoa saafry Crr. rm an a party Mowjoityli woaM rsaavoakoosM Aaaahawaof OBL t wtah f mrnmm V4 mmrm a m,mmml Wbl e tte beW toa was Svaaj rSMnass fca the p lor. iSktwoasoawof swaes, AaS koepa mmmxtrng hoart Bat. tkvm. I mtmt m. Wna a tttti Maecaotaei I' am m hn. tk.t kaa, l Tool aatton op baedoMl: As4 is- worn -n c moo awe kiss aae, A ad etii aw - unto 4mt Aad I akMiM't am a la aaaay a toag yar. -Mr,, u. F. turn, w ream's AVICE TO SCMMIsVmTS. Whenever I meet a your way to school. party of yon on 1 am stronslr tempted to st p and have a little chat with you. Possibly you might call what 1 would Mir vwrr nsach like preaching. WeU. it mght start earnest thoughts, and we are apt to call words which do that preaching. 1 boys, if ym realise what it ansdueaUoa. Have yon how much your own city or ally devotes to the scaooU. ever oeaeaersd aowmnoh must exnond to keep yea ctothed and in school tor ten or twelve Tears How much paroats often deny UamMfvea. how naany rasawres and iexur ss, that the boys may have a good htgh-schooi edn .ation. and then, perhaps, go to college. Then how nmeh moor yon yoarsou nnsst give, now aaaay 3 ntoer n costs yen to eotam evens dinary education to St van for a nam life, and If yon study for a stun wro must as utreear four years more of hard work. So you see it costs a great deal m money, and in that which is of asore value than mens. in ta and cloa appl cation ta nut Mt me teal von other, have a ler, he may swindle yon eat your proms, aad yon wm to discover n. I rsmombst1 rears asm a ployed ia oar school baildiar who eeald neither read nor write. He frooasoUy hand the boys to add up a bill fur him. or write a letter, aad they mvarmaiy charged him tenor aVtosn cento for their servW It was not vary largehearted for the bovs tvask navamat tor such a small service; bat that not the point I want to make. The z s S m .0 aaan aau vo pav iot tae nee at a learning, aad yon will had it the the world over; sit ssBsiaees men will tell ion that ImowMge and judgment are hired only st a gnat expenms. In aav pro esMioa or trade yon will nnd (other thing being a-inal) Um man af tne nest ooeoaiMa nan toe And lastly, the lack of will cost yen Um society of cultivated people, for of course you snanot associate with Um educated if yoa are ignorant; they would not enioy your socio ty. nor yon theirs. Ignorance will cast you much mortideattoa sad seaay regrets for lost opportunities, so when yon grow uisneanenea umt yon gHrmg up so much far your cdnrai remember Hwiilo not to have one. If you will carefully observe will liud that moat of them have ambition; by that I mean a axed m nation to pos- soasethlng. or to suereed in some undertaking. One man longs to be -me leaiued. sad wdl spend hb days and eights in sandy, savins; ns many plejsares that he may have more time to spend over his basoved books. Another wants to be plorer. so he turns away from all the eoarorts of a uu et hosne. oyer strange countries, meeting untold disconsforts that he may become noted as a traveler or d seoverer. Aaither has set his heart toiling earlr and into tarns hts mind from much that m ennobling. b eomiagoMuad worn in his peisait iar gold. Vow, do these win the object fsr whioh they are atrivmgr Invariably. If they ata.pssidsteat m tbew efforts: there arc few things witldn the hauaas af mmsihillf thai van eeaaaoS ommm If w esaaw wasai mnmemssmawn xemseamsiiWBn aa yoapswentiv ana par Caaaa tJsmsmamX- Ymhmma mmmni c naanaaamss aammj smsrmy ha a

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For wUhout it how helpleas yen are; all your life long yon wilt have to be Bating others lor Um use of their bruias, and are at a dhadsanaaas at every tarn m lisa. If yen have oapitai aad go lata haaiaass, yea must par a high-fwiosd man fee doiaer much which yoa aagat to be eapahas af doing, and even then yen are ma measure in the pomarof aa-

ttyonaru mnafnitansalo as to

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same what traJs or c liaMwdt sallew. That hs true, tmtii yen awneid stenei tam yon saayejurk law ssa ehijnTaVa ommen InaUmn eJani'nnhBa nWsamJn axnjl an0 Ton want to get the sbsms ThamaJL 7 a w . ay ho tmygS may n in either yon want to make Uw mast of tsasn. Harmg net year hawt en this, do not look tar sJMad and etpect to aceosnaiish great thaga when saanot expect algrbra and less yon have 1 Remember the duty wtocm m af nrst -I ' " -T-Thirailiisnsaiiiis Bo you reeaembrr the legpeed of the man In pnrsnss af tho four leaf cawrer Whan a bar he was toUUas if a eutdd find a four-saaf elowor it eraold h to him a talamaa of good sattsmev and with it in hie as sown aanxem in any undertaking was sesro; m enariv h Be he started east to sastreh for this Isu token efgood. He Wt hU frwnds to waniier aluns m tha m hn aea.eh, but all an safe. At hnt, adamsmsmtaaad wata-omt eU saan. be rataraed to the eld learns itsiinl to she; and as he totteewd sp the pathway, lo! dote bassea the grew a J ov4eaf Jdoewr. Ussayataat bstwaan tSe leaves the despised apeder; it aurdv as soaaarhere smraae tear books. (rof ana Kmlc Dom't InStcr. tm ami Know wnmt ton eaght to da, then goaJboat st ptxaaptlsr; and work at ..aXIS. B . a . . mmm k iuiiigwuur. bh naaan n. ware arau and reata u-rarl Sowdtoia. Is . there a garden to be weeded, corn lo be hoea. hay to hs raked, coal to hs neeugbt up, aa erraod to be doae. a lesson to be learned' nwhe that tie first thiajr. and if saiesieao. the oahr wmg. aatd hi is la'ashed. Tar emn- ! fort sad roar swree in hss doswnd very much upon the hah yoa barm in taJsnsatter. Ton had some people who are aJ wars mymg they havem naath todo. and tet they seem to aecoaapioh very tattle. They are net eoaslortaaie. smd they era not sssrresrfuL Pssmps Char ansa a letter to write; aad they worry over it everv day for a west, eahaaatiag aa much strength in this ntrMasomrrand -dread ie go about iC' cacti dar as an other would an writuur a railroad prawdeats, hoakera. 1 have what wo call waecatiwa 1 tspsttea. It is the power cf fersaing ! an acoarate iadgaMmt eairaJ demsr a ! thing, or giroHr order for it. st :andthea dmasoiina. st: t so that the next th an-1 doae m the " AkJi4 Wtth mmVmmUbtmmmm HthS they witt enjoy nefciw n or rear or Kgat (aU meaa lac name thing) h tarn i from Its attarhsseat to Use ooae. and , mllammation - that ia, a rauaef Wood i to the spot takes place a- mstaattv as ; in ease of a cut ea the Htger. Why ' For two reason a. Some hSoad-vcwesi are raptsnad. and vary Batwrallr awanr ' oat their coatenu; aad soBund. br an mfaltiale pht aiolog leal haw. aa ndlitMHsal sapplyof b part, to repair tho is seat to ae nges to sr-ae. t nmke grow logethar. the torn part. FromUus dsamyiyaf Mood Jths wo call Of 4 'ante anaak, lan dead has sn to be doae. to get rid of a. aiiow tae parts to grvsw to if the finger ha ret. it wil ; long as the woand m ttvssnd apart evr sntif-hoan nor wtti a torn U grow tther. if in ia aretched a. Um eraviees ssorsseat of a tJsere'ore. the brst aad step in every1 ease of sfsaian Is paaiest qsjetade af the part: a suagie head of the joint witl mtard what Satare has been bonre;a narad-nig. It iam' this way that pcrioas w,tb oprsinrd snkto are aaaay month ia ging wvtt. of stnriin. tmea, thaldne who be kesat pan sdmnSd he sapt m bed. smd so wsth amsry gfuern aeasmns. The "waitus' csa "he got rid of ia sa?veral ways; by a bondage. uuassV at nUeaeeaaf sftnln .shanM be am pled hy aakdnfal physsosn. othn aim msrtiBra tarn and hmt of mats mac raiahV A bondage tSHW allied iMeantae Jsaut atilL keeps an eVceaa of Wood from chiming ta the part. smd. by its i BneaW'o)ua eVns1 enaeTsmaTBtJJWni Qm VKSsfim s"lJeW"ar de ef tvaagrid of the oW-'iagis let cold wattwrunomtlmh

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