Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 28, Number 41, Jasper, Dubois County, 23 July 1886 — Page 7

PCtfttMMIVAOAItK,

A SMgfu BStuofgnS. Santal l2Bne OXd naiaanweste

vtoi at IN POT OXporisOOS vagaries of the mind mo more fully displayed IImmi in the lifMutgr shown in the inosotion ox mintage mm wronfneaoeanessnt the stations. I was recently the havotantery listener to a eontMHHT between an exoeedinrly tento yeeag worn mi and u baggage-muster, which us ay serve to illustrate what I mean. Too youQf woman wished to claim s trunk whioh the said belonged to her. but the ebeek for whieh hud been thoughtlessly loft in a band bag which a friend had taken down town aboppiug- The young woman who waT pretty vivacious and of remarkably mtelligeht expreaaion, explained to toe bggugemaeter, and incidentally (online of waiting people, bait of kn were in danger of paying for !" " . T i . t " . the pleasure of hoaring nor artlose tale by losing imjt wp C w oome to town for a woddint:. taat she had had a gown manufactured 'neoeoieJlf' for the oooasion, and that ibe jrow M was in the trunk in question. it iwi't as U I didnH want the dress to tweer to-day, and then I have the book, you know; so it's all right" "If you nave the check Tt is all right,1 the baggage master replied, with some appear an ocF sufficiently unrntCnt, of considering that the conversation had continued as long as he had a right to monopolise the pretty young lady's attention; "but I cert five up trunks to anybody that asks for them. Ton haven't anybody to identify you and you haven't any cheek.'' Oh, but Lucy has the check," she interposed, dimpling and smiling, "and I'll send it to you to-morrow. I aid I'd send it down in the morning, and I can't do any tatter than that, for I shan't soe Lucy till after breakfast, and you know I must have my dress before three o'clock." Her interlocutor took a chock over her shoulder from a haokman. ami the vivacious lady explained all the eiroosnetonees to n strange but. sympathetic old lady who had elbowed her .way up to the window, so that when the unfortunate official came up again there were two women to tell him the facte in the case, and to explain to him .that tho gown had really been made He wear this afternoon, and it was after twelve already, and that if Lucy hadn't ,gone off in such a hurry the owner of !the trunk, would, of course, have rejneenbored the chock, and that the impertont bit oi metal should be sent down in the morning. "And 1 kuow the number," thevivaoioue young damsel added upon second tnought, as a ohnching argonteert, "or at least I know it. began wish, a seven and thre were three numbers." I feel positive that the baggage-master would have yielded in ume. No man could have endured Mich a siege long, especially an the young woman, reinforced by the sympathetic old one, pretty effectually blocked the window and stopped the entire businees of the dopnrtmeat of inner baggage at a busy into of day. Unfortunately for all concerned, however, at this stage of the controversy a flurried and dteneveied young lady appeareu on we scene, mu made her way through the crowd as nly a young woman or ire engine "Oh. Florence." she rasped, thrust ing forward the missing check, "I got dear up to Winter street before I. found it, and I took a herdic and came tearing back, and I knew what an awful tx you'd be in, and if you hadn't got your dress I'd never have forgiven myself." She stopped from sheer want of breath, and her friend fell upon her with incoherent but satisfactory expression of rapture; while the sympathetic old lady glared through her wide spectaele at the offondine barrage-mas ter, to remind him that ho wan taken, as It were, red-handed in a crime against all that was highest in rights, and remarked with biting emphasis: "There, now, I hope you are satisfed, after all the fuss you hare made nod the time yon have kept all these folks waiting." Personally I felt that a ooUeetton ought to be taken up for the muchabused baggage-master, but ho had so atrogan air of feeing uerfeetiy used to tht sort of thing that I concluded upon the whom that it was hardly necessary to press the point. Cor. iYedee -biirfintur Ww newt m A FATAL PtT. Mow M. rnoteer's Wotf-anHon ratlenlo Mooelvod Thor Woenes. Iiwuin nonera nublhih the followinjT iateresting.deteim of the woW episode tt tlnat PoaoMir three weeks of hood work and the first professional dwapp ointment. According to a oerr sen sh dent of the.ittHwdi, the brute laat caused all the mischief was not a wild wolf, bat a domesticated pet, pof haoM the moot netted Quadruped hi laatsra Europe. Three years ago a borry-ptcking boy found him m the woods and brought him te the village of Biely, Government of Smolensk, where the farmer, Stephen Wassiljew, adopted him as companion to a motherless puppy. Before the end of that summer the whelp had superseded bw foster brother. He had an ultra canine talent for flonksyiem, nad fawned himself into the favor of so manv visitor that hie owner was re nantadlv eeTered thirtv roubles for the spttehy-teHed 'little sycophant, that Boated the hands of every stranger and oonned with the villain vounrsters ad hHly goats. 1 One of the farmer's mtrlm was his nlavmate. At the mots inottttd of ber voioe he would start from jmn eouch at the hcermtoue and scratch mod whine at the door till his girl jriead entered the kitchen. That jyottng lady was ohiefy respoasible for Ihe eneuiag tragedy. On the 88d of nfelHYUjarr Ihnhnn " Bwseslisstl." as VaMV '0Ms4oVdn aw, (sml " mMaJtMn o9T o

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Ike eMKTeftleflnJfi en4ossJea Hi IHBle IePa5emsae need to tweak mL nad In too coarse of person wen neroeiy omen, e setose a donenor lwojJ&j ginning of the trouble the pluck? one hereio Mujlk would have prevented alt tttrtfeer mteentef u at oempantoa not tamed craven at the critical meat Fetor Teberkow, an lotto young villager, asoempenied by bis sister and a young neighbor, was returning front nn all-nirbti duaoe. when they sow the wolf coming down the road In a sort of, sidelong trot and with nn uncanny leer that made thorn etop aside to ghre the traveler aebaaoa to leer e the neighborhood by the etroightost route. But Uushka had seeutuem. and m the next moment made a rush aud naught Peter by the breast "Save yourself, Ohra." the brave Mujik cried to bis tV 1 til. Al U tnd Uien callinr on his companion, he Mier, as no tranptea wiw wms wim, elutohed the bru brute round the nook and wrenched bin head down till he had pinned him flat on the ground. At tnat moment a common poouef-Knnn in the hand of a resolute man could have ended the affair, but the coward ly neighbor had taken to bis heels te protect the retreat of the girl, as he afterward explained it, and Peter' i struggle with the were-wolf now became a duel for life and death. Too soon the grip of his lingers relaxed, and in spite of his frantic efforts te -maintain hie vantage the wolf got hit jaws free and begun te use them with terrible effect, wuen at last a teamster appeared on the scene and began to belabor the monster with a long hatchet The wolf then left his victim and turned on the new-eomot and with two successive ript tore his face nearly off. Minns hit cheeks, lips and nostrils, the unfortunate man staggered out of the way and left the ogre at leisure to turn his attention to a third adversary, the Mujik; Jackolen, whom Peter's sister had in the meantime summoned from the farmstead. Jackolen, too, was terri bly mangled and had to back out toward the team, trying in vain to cover his retreat with a club, but by this time neighbors with flails and axes came running up from all sides and succeeded at last in routing the apparently indeetructible monster. Hut in the ontekirte of the next village the havoc recommenced, and before night nineteen persons, some of them torn almost into nieces, were turned over to the district hospital at Semstow. The village priest of Biely and the game-keeper Niktin Garoewiteh, died on the following day from wounds as desperate as any treated in the hold hospital! of modern armies, for the pet of lliely had attained the siae of the largest specimen of his tribe. Two more died in the course of the next week, and three of Mr. Pasteur's patients are now dead or on the point oi dying. The Russians, as a nation, are not muoh given to lynching, their oftoial provisions for retributive Justice being rather in excess of demands but at the mass meeting of the Semetow peasants the wretch whose cowardice had oost the lives of so many braves men was denounced, in terms which induced him to consult his safety by disappearing under cover of the next even nig,L In Western Russia, wnere the nroc has boon permitted te sur vive, wolves still infect all larger for osts, and their whelps are caught and tamed about as often as the fawns of or Southern All eghanies. Ota a in mH m TWO MIND-RE A DC Ms. o4L mWdpssWHnHol IlrtnMMrtW mW-OoUootor and Mr. BalktM. "Don't any a word!" exclaimed 111kins, improseively, as a gaunt, uash even man entered hie office. Don't speak; don't utter a syllable. I have acquired the gift of mind-reading. A myiitorioue sympathy is established between us. I road your purpose you have come hero to collect Keen A Blunt's little bill. Is it net so?" "It is. Yott are unite right," replied the gaunt, unshaven one. "I, too, have been a mind-reader in my time. The newer Is on me now. I know your thoughts. I can tell you what the speech you are mow rramtng will be. You are going to say: I am Tory sorry, but you will have to oau again.' Am I not right?" Marvelous!" ejaculated Bilkin. I can go further," resumed the prophet, in a hoarse whisper. "You will tell me to oome up about the middle of next week." Miraculous!" cried Bilkins. "But I have not yet done. I can see into vourverr soul. Yon will anewor: 'I ebeoomiiig.o vjk the laat two years. Mm Kl atg time you settled up. " You aetoabh met" Yea, more; you wUI threaten to bring suit against me." 'Just what I was going to do; but I carry my spiritual communion still further. You wUI, say: Sue, and be blanked.' " "My dear shr, yon are umpired, Ton ought to be a w eather prophet," And then, after I give you a tittle back talk; yon will waft mo into too atreet.'' . There is. no use fighting against destiny," responded Bllkms, and a few moments later, as the gaunt, unshaven mind-reader collected his remains from the sidewalk, he, was overheard to remark that the next time he metephysfemna he would pass him by unnoticed. William Abakan, of Mashvllle, Tenn., the new President of ho International Typographical Union, Wat twioe elected to the Legislature whiio aetting hype upon a Nashville paper. He is about flfiy years okL Hk father was a Frenohmna, his mother a Qresk, had ho was born at Marsmllee. Prof. Btebard A Proctor, the Bag m nsteonomor has come to Ameriea to live, nfhi hottte ht to be in Jantoori,

Jen Viai rrltn a SBpstsotatst KKg f i0 A W

MONK, PAMM AMO OAIIOIM.

not grow n PrifT srop ef t and n erop of weoos at tno ant tlaM PiuciaaH Tihnee. Ail vor Cake: Half pee unnrter of a pound toon of and OMWHtferoh, whltoa of eight e one altopoonftil salt, one tonepeowful extraet of bluer alntoneU. -PttiMtipk i (toil. A little 4uo In limowaeh for ootbuildings and fences Uagoedtfciag, beoause it makoe the Mow adhere, out it k bad for troos: honoe liueowteh lot To have n beeatifwl bed of trr Chinen nenks. They are of all colors, and when a bed of suoh piaks U v ... mode by sewing seed of all the vavrie ties the eontrnot of colon is Yery-aori-lag. JT. Y. reiecrom. Cold chocolate in a popnlar mi si nter drink. Grind up chocolate, put la a little pulverised sugar and pure cream and it is ready for nso with the addition of ice-water. utwopo Jmnuu. Cup custards are easily made handy ia aa emergeoey. Break am egg into each cup, add a heaping teaspoon of surer and a trifle of salt; flavor to suit the teste, and fill nearly full with milk. Set the cups ia a kettle or pen of hot water (or a steamer) and steam till done. Weitorn Kuril, There is no mystery about making noatsfoot oil, says the Rural Home. The only thing neoooeary is to boil ia a kettle as many cattle's feet aud hoof a can be obtained nod skim off the oil until no more rise. From the four feet of one animal a pint of oil m sen orally obtained and it is well worth, the inning cos ot maamg iw A cold, damn soil, with a hard im pervious subsoil, is not suitable for a garden,; and before it esa be properly utilised should be well drained. For warden purposes, if tae drain has been aid, the treaohiag system is beet for such soils. Any method that permits it to rid itself of surplus moisture, and allows tae air and heat to enter, wm be beneficial. A'. Y. Merald. Apples,' saya Secretary Raseell, .who quoted by the Afces Knglmd Farmer, "are good food for horses as well as for other animals that are not kept for hard work, but if apple are fed in the country to hone that are to be sold ia the spring the animal's teeth will be so blackened by the fruit acid that the veterinarian innpoctors will very likely pronounce them decayed, and the horses oonseqaeatiy worthless or uneouml." Tenderloin of Pork: The pork should be rubbed with butter and broiled on a hot gridiron. Garnish with slices of lemon and serve with sauce Robert. The sauce is made in this way: Mince an onion fine and fry it brown in butter; add batf a cup of vinegar aad half a cup of hot watet or stock; boil a few miautoe and strain; now add a toanpooafnl of brown flout and one of mustard, seasoning with half a teaspoonful of salt and a little white pepper. Boil until it thicken. -Jiaiin liMifnref Oom Starch Cream Pie: One pin of milk, scalded, two teblespoonfuls corn starch, three tslespoonfula sugar, yelks of two eggs. Wet the starch with a little oldmilk. Boat the eggi and ougar until light, and stir the whole la the scalded milk. Havot with two teaspoonfuls lemon. Line a pie plate with pie cruet and bake. Fill with the eream and cover it with frostiag made of the whites of the two eggs beaten with two tabtopoonftile ougar. Set in oven a few minutes to stiffen. Teton PARINQ THE HEELS. ... a rornsoioes wntooi ioo Among the eausoa of oontraetioa of the hoof is tae prevalent eastern of rutting away the bars which ordSaarly sunaort the heels and prevent their approximation. Tbi method is directly operative m producing this deformity, which, in soane eaoos, may be considered in the Hght of local atrophy diminished nutrition. DimtnUted nutrition generally remlta from disorder Im the digestive organs, ao that contraction of the boot aad indigestion may ooexiet, althomgh maay physician deny the oo-cxietenoe of, the etteesses. Ckmtrnctkm of this kind is not apt to occasion lameness, because there is a very low grade of vital aetioa in the parte. But contraction is now and then the reoalt of deep seated disease within the hoof-naricalartiir'.tia and faminitis, for example; the animal is then dead lame while Um mBammatory diatheaU lasts. Trcatmeat Contraetiom aeeooittsA with mflammatorr aetioa of the ttsuee or cartilage of the foot moot be treated in the mm manner as recommended for faminitis; in nil cases endeavor to give the frog a bearing on the ground, and in order to do this tine shoo ought to bo removed. A dry, brittle and contracted hoof naaybe improved by repeated poulticing; with soft soap and rye meal, applied cold. So soon Mtho hoof softens let it be dressed, night ami morning, with turpentine, linseed oil Arnrntram hn utoft pasters, the animal kavinr nothhtr more than tips on hte feet, is the best treatmont A ...l. uu. Amt w umm ken a wndrf!l usTeat an contracted hoof, bat lltk and ktof every kind are unfavorable to nealUiy notion. If any benefit belongs to seen -s-! ci- i! ia. i. ju. nn o ojnwwn a w: ipiKnM,nm iv. n to mm pevpenj n panram ot. rvwininsr moisture: therefore cold noukiees and water are far superior. Clay and meet earth placed in the stall for the to stand en are far interior to stuffing of wet oaitttm, which can be romored at ploaeuro. In order to keep kin contact witb the sole teomuata two strips of wood between the sole nod shoe, one running lengthwise and the other eroeswiee of the foot. It affords considerable prossnrs to the foot, M cooling and cleanly, nad hi farsnnoriortetno abore artkdes.--Ctego M Anybody mtert knows a tnmg bojfahBhPj tsV Loomnn jLss B)taA k i BsBmaBRnaBsT oVnnr- OB jJjjjJJjiJJI "oW'a'B TLw snBjBRiTPB e w" aanm smnnnmntjBensnB PaBBr WB Bn OrfasRa flois) rRava aahnaJT

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the mad. swift tsteufhtitaMt; tine-. oat lo ail peettag of me weather haueUas, aaa rea went atoned braffta what a seed thing k weald be. Ia a few dare the eicnal iee ateeieted a very heavy aad Swift seat word te the saggaoMsg that they had ha aev the track deer of the uneal ten to frame. M 'Ncwrea tee,' " he eeM, this terries U te arattfead. that we'll he tor, an not a wheel wilt be itsppH.' "laetraenoa were at to start in aad seettoa bonis, and in eome naags of extra laborers were a aherel aaew. Bet this iwuw ateta red to dMat mm to be ia a keirr. Tfeeday bricbt and dear as eew eonl ask for, the aright feoawhag; waa eoatty yZZJ7Z-: i Jmm, wiUt m ao oiffa e aeow eoeieVt stand it ear longer. "The bo rtretoaeseatamiisage te Swift iaenirter: Waors is that aaow-stormr' another took tt up aad seat in hie tioe. In a ivw aoera Swift peeoWod avs hundred msnsnis front HJineie. Iowa, M ri aad Mmesaota, inenJrinc whore it naight I heoayeetodte arrive ntthestatiin of inquirer. One of 1me tejra w mmb nontbr exarsea. sad nntet his waMseMwtoolnd ante, ear war. Ia war teejr kept it ap aatfl peer Swift was tfcftoekod ot o m bM,1 m the baM-bell noooie aaT. and. after cirinc ereen tiMoigaei'torTiee roperls sfcseid he flred the road, no wont home aad aeafed for thirty -six Isoon." MARVELOUS FORT ITU DC. The W WNI-rowor A shooting sttcideateeeerredat Laehhta Taeeday evening. The barge W. H. Lewis was noarhtganewdeefc,wben,aatensaalt arooe wm mrowa oat and attached to the ufnebhiagN poet on the wharf. The other end of the rope was fattened te the poet on dock. OaeoC the heads, ArtharBorable, oaagat hie leg botwoon the poet aad the rope. The prsasnre (fee barge boiag heavily laden) wan so enormous that tae peer Mtew's teg was broken m throe peaces and his feet wronehjod completely of by the ankle and thrown teroral Tarda forward on tee dock. A eoawidereMe anmber of poopte wore aieombM at the wharf at the Mm aad wHeeeeed fee eeearronee wish senation ( borror. Kotfeor the eantnin nor mnj of too ImmhU oiMaki rsadiraay aooioVanee. they wore fat each a eonditicn of ter ror. The mea imeetf diepteyod sinraler fortttado, aorer atoring a cry, and aeteallfliaapos forward, took aphis foot and oKamined it feonajhtfaUy, at the same tiat MTwiaw the woaadod atosaa with his teeklnsr. rs. Vateio aad JPare hiattondaace. They did wbat ftboy ooeJd forthesen'oror.tint gevettas iea tnat me tec weald hero to be odfrooaabore fee knee. Hewaermnorod to tfao Xoiro IHmm HoopMel, never leetec aad ronwrkingte theeanhe was teinc driven away feat ae kjui ha wabM mat Wnt to onu and see khn. The easeio aetewerthy for fee I wmmnLm vkb4 M. agnrdo of i . ,u - i -- lOMonsw 3tew. There is a lot en West Jaeboen street, ht this city, wbiea is one teondrod and tfty foot wide and only one foot p. It mine remnant of a seiMfng let which wa -oawrod nUan Jaokeon ihreet was teMont. 1 The owaer of this rsmeant wanted te soM j Hteadwottertaaaoateoafee odjoialog lot froodac en a cram otroet. Tae latter , nfneedte bay fee long Hbaen of land at fee pries ashed. Its ewaoi snoted a tewerhts; fence of roaga en his oloBsjated toot of sreesd, ly ssmttiag oeT bis neighbor's view of Jackson street. Be ha now added the coot of fee fenoe nad fee amonat of last year taxes to fee tenner price of fe ttiinln hk no4ger wilt nay H THE MARKETS. jtsnr Toast. Jaly It, ims. OAtTUtnetvo seera...... 4 sfJ tm rLOCaeedteh!l.rI !!, WKKAT.3ta.tsod OATt Wtotorn nttned M ranar-Xew mete. u a u aw ST. UWM. COTTOX JaWMttnrmrteMedtmn.... I f nOOO OemmoateOoieot.... HKCT--Panrtoimeec - If 2 Mednun to MrotcM ittif-M. --- - a is MMtKKA Wua UK 0Tk Ojt V3S::: tn j ste tISS nieiHsm.. i ss asm tSrSSSlSS f3jrTu Onotn Omry n roaJt-Mow ftggrS?! eMeeseeeoo i wooc--ffmemunetee.aew. I csuo.voo. - u niTTia miMim ....... 1 et a a m et 4 m & rr , , 1 f ' 4 at a I to Oeteo.... I" VLdTJa-WtaMt- 1 J laeents..... . 40 4nW wnmAT-4toxStn poaw-no. u s. ...... .-...-m o irjt ,S Waae - - .If van.... es a SfO r.. ...... OATS Ko. KAWSASorrr. WRJtAT-Ke.t..'...T. CMifaooeeeeeeoeeaeoe ot ......... it m 4-.. ......

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ZmBR. JOHN BULL'S

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UNIVERSITY

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