Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 28, Number 40, Jasper, Dubois County, 16 July 1886 — Page 3

I

i lata fAnasmt mm fcUj nets! he shambled upon mm. H from a MM knows where, OUgh ft bee always been npi that Im m mi Indian Territory product. He k wpjhfcA fat Mm )f sttcMif miibmi to 1mm lawttan blood in hk vela, and iMbMoitorkM like a red nu of TIm when Injun Baptist wm a Bttta HeM MM DMttU here KnCW HUM WIWH N WM Smarter than Im k bow. He always bud a . . . cloud on MM brain. Simple, docile, ereuetow. m wm in earner una a tad wrse of border .YUUuUiaa. Nobody asrteiseiW with Ma. H came ana went among roughs, peraoow mm ouuaws uw same among neea wkjoee boeet it wm that they were honest. Hit loaf absences created no comment, and when ha return! a "Hello, Injun," wm the only greeting that ne received. Ho would toil laboriously whan put at work, and would not leave any job that' ha bad ttadortakea until, emanated front hunfr and lack of sleep, he would wander off not to wtura. When chil dren first appeared here ha took a great fancy to them. They rode him around like a donkey, and ha teemed never to weary of their tyranny. According to all aoeounte, ha never exhibited any air m of mental power but once. On one of hie periodical TiHHW IM XIKHHI BC Mil With a party of deaparadoea who were on a marauding expedition. Soma of thaw knew: hint and, thinking they might make nee of the "JooSsb," aa they eaUed him. they persuaded him to ac company them. Whatever they Mked him to do he would do uneoranlsininrJy, and m a hewer of wood and drawer t water n proved hiawelf af great tmm ki me eewpenions. une nirht wmm nn in uh ouuaw camp Mr Hie i,anaaiaa. wiu enter to main there until thev returned. TIm horses ware all brUiled and every thing la iwuew ior mgat, out the un and one mi them, calling Injun to one noe, tea nuniar enough away from the eantp to point out a house that could he eXndy aeen in the Moonlight, and with fcehrmtiane that ha wm to re thara and remain until they euHad for Una, he darted off. Injun ntade hk way ta the honae. walked around it onee or twice, and taon, aeetng an open "door, entered. All wm dark within. Lighting a ntatob, he peered, around, and, aeainr nothinr. he advanced a few atepa and lighted another. In a corner of the room wm the body of a man drenched in blood. Oaee agnin Injun drew forth a match. and, lighting it, he turned around to fall over the prostrate forma of two other men. Hk matches were new rone, but while ha wm neechuiieattr aearehing his poeketa for mora, it to uaweved, from the itory that be aitarwaad told that one of the victim who yet retained oonectouanaae raeogniaed Mat and told him to go for help. However that may have been the fallow who never Were Mimed able to act iaaeiligeatly on two ideM in eat out aka and without waking for naynght in aearch of a neichbor. How long or how far be tramped wm never uiowa, mk aa am not abandon hia aaareh antil he had found aaaktnnce and tad the why back to the eabku The eight that thara preeented itaelf wm enough to make the etonteet heart uU. Every thing in the houae indicated the deeperate nature of the fight which had taken place there. The watte, the ceiling and f cor were cWNul tWitk felOtiNnL eMaral (IMI ttlgaMI new dead, were frightfully mutilated. Injun ahowed how be had entered the pkee, anal finding the ate b of a match c tme ioor he exhibited It with prWe. and by motion and grnnU demon trend hew he 'had groped hie way m wmm nomow piece. The herders who had been anm moned took in the situation at a a at a glance, something ef a band, and from Iajun they karnwd mcakaaf the tattrdcrothe nakire of the work done mdieated clearly enough that revenge rather than reeeory mm aeen tae motrre. Uom mankadng the facte to the proper att nonwes, k wm not long before a pesae wm on the trail of . the mur asrers, anal in a running Mght which Bflarwant ensued between the two parttee two ef the deaperadoes were killed. Injan found his way back, here ki the ecuraa of time, and wm made a great deal of. The svmnaahy of hk old friends wm aroused. and many of them went cut of their way to aoanpttment him and do him "lnjun Bepuet getting ne woum My wnea twned on the subject of hk adventure. and every body would admit that he .wm tolling the smth. After a whik he swTskmed a habit of coins; around rwkh in hk poascssiow, Hrht f!a oooaatouajiy, ana while tt the stuhiecaained in hk finto he asarchlar for Fern time people smiled nt Iaiem, thinking that he wenM get ever the paaakm, but they w mistaken. It grew upon tod ef going through m at nrst seimsd to "iC S A Saw( jpCc9TsmeMNf for the bench t of others, he 1 g to prowiiag around at night m deed earshot - ' : hkn. LaalM going down cellaw wonht nml lnjun there striking matohea. Men apiaex ta their barns would encounter hmi nlwtm myatorkms' and always wkhanmeeh. Lato at night he would jo pTOWImw around the streets wim f tchmlng light ia hand. He mhw people ncrne, scnung as nt almost every atop, and may had dosed the doors of ntham, oome m mnch ef a aakaniii thmahey a. I k

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lortunaM who atood on guard perooivad nothing extraordinary m the aituaUon. An hour or two later the mum returned.

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A aKUNOsTltea FATtfffn. now did yea came barer Vary nice, thk is! H girl ean't tms theater with bar father in, HaA theater k a pnhtte niece, ksj't kp She Tea; beA eew ami yen. get the aaai aaxt to eMf He-By mloajmhod kff'ukj and a atfght ncauatntanm wfch yonr int. night buhtk. Sbs-I shall have to tmwuee yce to pen alaooai m hi ihroufh talklug withfeiipHvent He-Deiightad. Why didaU you a tfwar my note? She What note? He The note I wrote aeking If konjupon you. He-Well She WalL you ee ainiee near innaa a died nana Imu bean vaar narttanlai with me, and I only knew you at moniercy, yon Know. . He I suppose that m the Trethericki preeented me to you I wm sunt oienuy laaorseo. nut, or course She You had no right to meet me every time I went shopping. You know it wm not all just aoeidenta. This k the most extraordinary own ior aeoioenis, taougn. X ncook all the time. She I thought you were going back u fweminesr tia l wm; but I waited to sea you ami. She Oh! But the curtain k goia up now. He I can wh leper. She Tm: but I Mn't ken ta the play and hear you at the Mma time. He J ever mind the play! . . She But I must mind the play. It it very important? lie Xes. May I call 7 She-No. He-Mot if lean make venr fehW acquauuance aown townr She But you can't. m wait ana see. She Why do you want to cell? There are Meaty ef otaes to aja to. There k your due. He Tm, hut you don't belong to my ciuer She PronoM me. He Proposals are not easy. I want to make one to you and 't. ne nonsense! He May I call or not? She Mo. Of ceerM I ean't horn it n jou aura m can. M 1 . .1 lie I don't quite understand. She Well, eeoeoee a rentleman oareir anew lose anew hr niau should Iom any thiajr nnd I should pick h is, want ougni i w uor i m acne k to aim, i Mppoee. She I tii ought you were so deyer! He-Not a Bt. She Suppose you kee yew cardwe: or no. sun nose I left mv fan lvinr neee, ana you Knew mc very siigauy, what would yon do He Gall a messsager boy and send it m von. J he-Ton wouldn't eaU with it, ef rse? He Oartainlr I would. How could yon think that I would be so discern' teous m to do any thing ewer SheVery well. I may leave opera giam nans mine, j. don't My wiu. He How good you are! feud of Play. jrane waere is my m acre it ta unoer veer seat, mr caua. Ana acre is venr oeors-riae. i at n a " How carclesa yen are! LANDCR AND OOMtff. Tke flVaMmVn In the fret pert of thkowtory a mat, ef pn ru&m, luj ef prominence in Western, PenMylvaaia, who had been dkappointed ia hk political asphrationa, died,; and left, among hk other electa, an iron-bound Thk cheat, by the terms of hk will, wm to lesnnm nnopencd hi the custody of the descendants of two f am ittee for the space ef Mveaty-five years. It wm then to be opened, and its con tents published without reserve. , The term of yean wm reached last summer, when the cMket wm eoleutnlv opened and its contents examined. Thev proved to be letters, journals and other documents briagiag chargM against moat of the men who were prominent ha me state nuttng tne teetatot:a lUe-ume. CrimM of alanoat every rrnde were aliesjed asraiast them hr theae papers; whether the naners themselvM were forgerka or not, it k impossible, at thk lato day, to decide. There waa scarcely a family of any prominence in the nekherhood into which the aublieation ef these na not have brought mkerv. The tmeteM Ulegalry, bet prudeatly, dicregarded the terms of the wm, and bnened the oontoals of the eheet Lord Byron s journnk and letters were destroyed by hk eaeontor for the same reason. Mr. Carlyk's diary and ate - booka. in which the acrid bhtcrI ncM of hk soul wm poured out taper Isenal abuceand slanderous gasip ef peraoM wno are mil irrms, wm pun netted, not so prudently, by his litcrarjr eaeontor, and a met , nnaonnt of bioherinsr and nwnkaeantneM hM been the rsoalt. Tnk kmg-Hved maMraitr ' which wowkl atretah mnrdcrouc hands cut of the grave to the maneicu kill, ycen k ppalk na, Tet if we am abontieattor iag bik of maUotoea gossia end scan lei from our careless tonrnte new. are am, we wy to afli mm rem. the Irving mam, and a4eoa a . e. - e, - m

Paw nee ana Man catet a ipga Ha-Ooad cveadear.

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nnhk food far stock m of beats cr If it ef water, at dry matter can be fee thirty tons to the acre k not at all difMttoreiee, if the trouhk k taken end seme previous experkaoe hMheen had. But these roots arc so excssdi kgly digeetibie that the amount ef dry matter produced per acre k far more autritious in proportion to its weight than any ether food; not even excluding gram. The dry matter ef heats k wholly digestible, whik mat of corn contahM a large proportion of indlgestlUe protein and earbo-hydreeM ara oven im. im louowiujr ta hows tia dnteranec in thk respect: Matvssi. Jssftstlt. Osna SA a MJ Ll is hyles4esia M.7 tj 41 ..... ax . i.t OerWhySretoi ICS es.3 4.7 K3 If aUowaaMkaaade for thedinW ence in the water contained, it k seen that one hundred pounds of dry matter of manrek or surer beets is consider. ably more nutritious and valuable than that of corn, and still more so m regards oats. JBeskles the water contained in the roots and the soluble condition of the dry substance have a moat healthful result in aiding in the digm tion of dry food, m hay or grain fad with the roots, and thus the roots have an indirect value, which should ha credited to them In addition to their actual feeding value. For thk reason every farmer should Erow M many roots m he can wed to is stock, and if be can grow more it will pay him to increase his stock for the purpose of coneuminr hk roots profitably. Sugar beets or maagek are preferable to any other roots, because thev may be fed to cows without any injurious effect upon the milk or butter. ' These roots may be aown any time in June, but the earlier the better. The soil should be thoroughly plowed and made tine; a liberal manuring k required for a fall crop, but artiicTal fertilisers are even better than manure, m they are wholly free from weeds, and weeds are the greatest enemy to all root crops, causing very much extra labor in keeping the young plants free from them. Clean cultivation k indispensable to success, but thk may he secured with little troubk by the following manner of culture The seed, four to six pounds per acre, k sown, in rows, with a hand drill, twenty-Mven or thirty ineHes apart. As soon m the plants are up in the row. or sooner if need be, the band drill k turned into a cultivator, and by the um ef the wing scrapers, the rows, well 1 marked by the roller of the drill, arc cleaned and free from weeds, as soon m theee When the young beets are to be seen plainly, the hand cultivator set to cut eight or ten inches wide, k run across the rows, thus leaving two or three plants in a hunch at thk dantanee apart ia the rows; the rows are worked at the same time, m before. Then the horse-hoe or cultivator ft need between the rows to stir the ground and this should be done frequently. A dreM of six hundred pounds of salt per acre k now given with much benent. ii necessary plus plants may be removed afterward, but m two or three will grow together in company without damage k k rarely necessary to do thk work, which will mjuire the hand hoe. If the soil k not rich enough far a full crop, a second application of three hundred Cads of Mphrphoephate or fna a par acre mar be riven before the second cultivation. Aa the bread kavM grow fast once they have start ed; dose weeding w rarely required, bee the hand cultivator may be run no the rows alternately with the hoc until the leaves meet and com the rows. Moderately small recta arc preferable to large enea m being more nutritions, but it k not dimcuk to grew roots weighing from ton to tourtecn pounds when the soil k in feed condition and the yosmr plants have not been checked by the oTenaen dmi, ef weeds. T. zVmea. CHEAP PfMftTsT. mi There are, at the aJnflfcJ4inHJ St emVeie'M'sn' three quite five cents a yard pretty. Those that stW with starch will wear very "well, and pay for making up. white stiff webs will crack, and aside from being hard to mw, will not be at all durable. Those that am stamped with brirht colors can, by being dipped in salted water, be made fast eefora. AH print ourht to be washed quickly, and never allowed to soak in suds, m thnt givm a dull look. The quicker thev are washed. rinsed, starched and dried, the nicer they will look. I have aeen calicoM WMhedin thk manner thnt retained their beauty till completely worn out. whik drcMM from the came web of cloth were aU. faded cut the first or second time of weaning. There k tee much in makinr a dress to have k ruined by bad washing. M caeca a deal more to make a garmant," tSan the money paid for the material kaett, it is a good nana now, when printa are ao cheap, to make and return? bad-(-.WtlM It. hfW-Mv MV. Art Ir M JJI i rarntoaU Into bcddlnir. when mm esse ! nuy new prints at into at such low prices, rtabtoe and bad qatlta arc , and wMnmer k she time Good comtortabkc a real luxury, to make them up; the days arc ana it is not aara work to ne imm cr quilts. Three breadths ef print, msec yardsj km g, are enough for onsaids covering, nnef the seme for Imhtg, end four bnnobcsaf cotton betting, andabsJI ef cotton yarn to tie with. The ciffhtoen yards of print weald be, nt fire canto per yard, ninety cento; the yarn eight cents, and the W wing fifty oanto; so far two dollars me can make aniee had aerlng thewmhmf-me veers. munsili tohtm mmm mt I

Osree-

he aehit one smart sal beiBmg stoen the aeenTsWtmurinal

m mau ens, win wiu m na a ew ee m m lb: get into he? ami nsneh castor to pscvcnl cattk coming unruly than at ta to SVey Tknsa. rem: Two cam asm ei the lonr ef bettor, one can ef nailk. ef which take whites ef six errs CejHrvation Imsao mate that the seeds an hag and hM fair tonnes octet entirely, m in the cam ef me Did you ever try wetting n atrip ot cloth and layhtg it aleng the edge ef your nkc when the cruets ssaarati aatd the sirup And ahw in tnkcn5 it cm titt it eee ma Icm yee are gsing to eat it "JZT ti yon are, itk bettor to cover hCfcioen dough of half n lour, hatf n pound of th yeac or two eggs, n spoonful of sour cream and n of coriander seed. bite of the donrh, roll round pisem and form them in ntsie brstaak cr riaga. iimfsn Jnsigst Young Beets: Cut off the teem, not too near the root, wash withe nt scraping or peeling, and cook from forty minuCM to an hour in hot, salted water. Scrape off the skies, atSee aatd dkh, then cover therein with a dreeaing made by hearing tour tabkep o oaftsk of vinegar with a heaping teMeseecmful of butter; salt and pepper to luting. ChiMye IrNktns. Cream Pim: Bake the cruets emp ty; pick them with a fork before putting into the oven, if they Miseer piek them again. The cream: Pat ene and one-half pinto aweet milk in a pan to soaki; beat one erg. into this stir fewt tolcspoonfuk of sugar, four table anoonfuk fioer, and one-half pint milk : turn thk into the hot milk and stk briskly till well thickened; add on tesstpoonful knaon emenee and put it Into the crusts. TWede JMeck. The importance of lime aa a plant food, to be & applied by its use m a fertiliser, may be perceived by the following; firures: In twenty-five bnehek of itbei re are nine pounds of lhne; in tiiirty-eirht bushels of barley, fifteen pounes; m two tons of clover hay, thirty-five pounds; in twenty-five toM ef turnips, one hundred and forty in two hundred and fifty benbess of pototoestwound pounds biennfak and perennials. Aaanhl Weeds ate largely confined to eultirsed areas, and should he closely watohed. Biennial weeds, tor tax year, but seed k often jttvdeeed quit wuai wwi, wntmurnvm amt mw mrw part, produce no seed the first cany m mc second season. Perennial weeds are those the. tope of which die aown on tne approach ef com weather, the roots remaining alive, fesnJmg nji new shoots year after year. X. M. whkm ty eewa seem astormiand net to. The cow k the and brutal trcMment are the result. Could the milker aemry hk strength ia ter, soMfe to stand k a proper peskiia whik bemg ntilked there weend be ne musm for anger en the pert ef the milker; hence ao brutal would necessarily result. cows kick from natural crao opsration of milkiag k psiafulfrom cr otherwise. Bessce, in it k n sort of surrical onefemmiottf caaarlel mnr0 JI4meiM4r must be conlined to submit. The proper position for a cow to stand in k to hoist" L e., the right hind foot should stop hack; or whatk eqahraieat, the oppoeite foot should be adyaaoed. It will be noticed that a eew fat thk position rests her grsaiw-womnt en the foot farthest from tne milker, ftochbeiurtke she can not then well kick with that It , very plain that ;" if aha wifl not, I stospty propcae to cam pel her to. ror wm parpooo l Keen la th a rape aooei na met Jong. Juake n loop en ene end, go to the left aide ef the cow, loon the rope around the hind ksjc, drop It dews near the eew-ckw. Raroeadthe stsacason (twice tf ). and draw the feotforwasvl m far m neosssanr. Thk k a foread bctot, andKhM ana enVct, in ail eaaea, to cure er break up the noying beast of many eewa that keep eompelSag the ntUer to to tne The plan here given wiU he n eorreeUte of most emus ef kickers sad mtpnata, but when it k net, put the cord around the ham attinr. nsumhur it the top of the stoneflun. nneTif nery, m eatiems rases, draw the amd "M1Mtprarc cow anynew. tic the left foot m first dtwlah a srroarer roes draw tt onf ef harm'a way. I found bntona oaac tocmWng thk hmt treatm.ai. The stmpkMrfsasy piaa ef drswiag the kft foot forward; m fret eeecrlhd, willbsfemndaf great mine to these whe ehaiii toUM Hdhxiieetii. A boy twelve yearn oat hat infilultBt atoeagth toim. H, wahcesjh htdgment mmy be fjasdihig. Jrveaa crwfld eewa wiU stonajfla some when thk smiii Lllia is

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