Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 39, Number 20, Jasper, Dubois County, 22 January 1897 — Page 8
New Broom Shop. The best Brooms are hand made v..,.,.. mnA Kv a r-n made At the
Ouckes Broom Manufacturing Co., on West Fifth street, one square from the Public Schools. We make any kind of broom the public wishes by giving us one day's notice. We sell wholesale and retail from $1.10 a dozen up to $3.00 a dozen, and from 15c to 35c a piece. We will work up your broom corn, in three different styles, to suit you, for 8c, 10c, and 12 Sc a piece. On Brooms in lots of 5 to 10 dozen we give special prices, in 20 to 60 dozen lots we give jobbers prices. We also can make your brooms in either grade of corn. The standard are the soft carpet green corn. Why not buy a good hand made broom for the sime money you buy a steam made broom. Give us a chance ; your interest is our interest. " n a m j-
U DC KM IJKOOM MKO. vo. , H. F. Gt't'KKs, Manager. Ju Bell, MM T K. of P. Meeting at Rockport. District meeting will be held at Kockport, Jan. 28th. Who will go? Presidential Inauguration Washington I). C. March 4th, 17. Reduced rutes. Hone Seekers Excursion. 1897. Jan. 5-10, Feb. 2-1H, March 2-1, April 6-20. Call on agent for information. V. E. Claycomb, Agent. Hone Seekers Excursion. To Alabama, Ariaona, Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Georgia, Indian Territory, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Ixniisiana, MiBSouri, Mississippi, Nebraska, New Mexico, N. A S. Carolina, Tennes ee, Texas. Utah. Call on agent for dates and rates. V. E. Claycomb, Ag't. You might as well live on a side street as to be in business and not advertise. Madison Township Trustor Notice. Notice it given that hereafter the Trustee of Madison township will be at the store room of Mr. John P. Norman, in Ireland, on every Saturday, for the pur jose of attending to township business, sad all persons having business with the township are expected to confine it U those days. The township library is kept at Isaai Alexander's in Ireland, where all nia obtain the books. The Indiana School books will 1h found at Norman A (iray's store at al times. John E. Norman, Aug. 16, '9b-y Trustee Madison Tp
SHYNESS IS SERIOUS. MEDICAL EXPERTS SAY IT IS A SYMPTOM OF MELANCHOLIA.
It Taacs Various Forma, but Is Invar lab' 4 m rurrrunarr of lrnieutla A MMN Thal Should B Carefully Treated la Ttaie AJRscts Mm a Well a Wuuivu.
it
(On Mill treat, Jasper, Ind.) PHILIP KÄSTNER, Prop'r. Tbl oommudloui hotel baa bee thoroughy overhauled, and refitted new throughout, j and la now open for public eutertainiut-iit. The table will always be found well supplied, ana price will be reasonable. A good stable for farmers' horses, and beap feed. A icod bar. well supplied with the choicest liquors and cigars, and polite attentioual ways. Oire we a call. Oer. M. VJ-r PHILIP KÄSTNER. UNITED states HOTEL MILL STREET, JASPER. AUGUST KAEGIN, PROPRIETOR. The traveling public will find this house well furnished and the best of attention given to the wants of guests. Furniture and beds all new, and table supplied with the best the market affords. Terras Reasonable. Aug. Kaegln. March 10-93
GEORC
EP,
WAGNER
ancfactcbbb or
WAGONS m, CARRIAGES, o And Dealer In o Agricultural Implements and Fertilisers.
-o-
Kf pairing & Horpe Shoeing, o North Mail Street. JASPER, - - INDIANA.
3
swaMa,ani ! -'le-frlnobtiris1,8ridsII Pat-
ant Ou'.M.r t , muled fur MnoCD'Tt f (Ct. On Ori i oerosirt U 'tiwt Omer
lit wc im. i4 ire ..a:r:it M it'Sl IHM taaulaoat :cBVlsfrim VV ivni'iR'. n. MM St. 'ei. SfsWMig er photo., with desertptp n. Us aarroe, it rtentrla or not, free o( iiu'f' 1 MM i i. auf (ill ntn( l act-tired. ...-.... "I- . ... I ' ,.i l'atrnt. .' with
critt id Ma n the C.S. ... Iurcin countries in lu. i
Ca A. CW&COJ
At laut it haa been discovered t hut the. HUH the girl who seem exceedingly by acts in the fashion she does ia that aho is (lamented. Thin ia the reanlt of eatensive investi
gation by inaanity expeta ou both aide of the water. Exceptional bashfulnesa, art it ia called, ia really shyuesa. It ia a morbid condition of the mind, a oertain sort of dementia. Often ia the expression heard that a person is paiufnlly sby. Yet in such an instance no donbt baa been raised aa to the mental condition of the object of the remark. Nevertheless, it ia far mope than probable that the individual referred to wua suffering from inaanity just as much if not more, than many peroris who are living out a tortured existenoe within the walla of a madhouse. It is a well known fact that one of the most notable symptoms of insanity ia that which causes the person afflicted to ahun the company of otbera. Lonelineaa is an incentive to insanity. Confinement in a solitary cell in a prison often breeds madness. It is altogether an unnatural mental condition which impels a person to avoid the society of humanity. No one whoae condition is norma I i-vsr consents to auch an exist
ence. Just how the insanity expert looks at abyutsa ia shown by the following statement, made bv Dr. O. W. Kunz of New
York, whose wide experience makes his opinion well worth considering:
"hbyueaa is as much a dim-use as searlet fever. It is recognized as a symptom of dementia or melancholia, just aa an extremely strong willed person, or one who is what is termed unusually self aasertive, is regarded by physicians as a possible subject for acute paresis. "This shyness takes various forma, such aa a sudden feeling of faiutness and weakness on looking down from any extreme height. It is present wbeu a woman persists in looking under the bed before retiring, although she knowtfull well that there is no man there. I know of one case cf a woman who, when she tnrns ont tho gas, invariably lights a Match to MS if she has turned it completely off. and nine times out of ten she lights another mut i to aw if she threw I lie first mutch into the coal scuttle or fin plan. Thut is another form of whut May b termed shyues. "This shym s is due to a variety of causes. It i. very often the case that a system winch is run down lettds to this condition of mind. The continual think
ing upon any subject, or what is termed brooding over a certain thing, leads to this. If not checked in time, melan
cholia results. "This shyness is as common to men aa to women. Some men seem embarrassed and ill at ease when in the presence of women, while, on the otlnr hand, it is often noticed that the presence of gentlemen makes some women very ili at ease, only, in justice to the ex, it must be stated that this very rarely happens. "There are many reasons for these facts, but the most common one ia ill health, fchould a person so troubled go to a physician, he or she would be regarded as possessing symptoms indicating a lack of will power and approaching insanity in some form. There are waves of morbid shyness, just as there are waves of insanity. There are waves of oertain kinds of suicide, resulting from insanity. There are waves of bridge jumping, killing with ramrs or knives, shooting and death by poison. "Many suicides are due to temporary insanity, brought on by a variety if ! causes. One of the first symptoms is
ahvneaa. Persons afflicted with this
shyness never take up any of the sciences I or professions or become students. They lack the will power necessary to do so. ! Where the normal mind of mau over
comes difficulties and troubles when
they come, the shy, retiring man seeks
' relief iu suicide. j Dr. Henry Campbell, who is the phy ' aician in chame of tiie Northwest Lon
don hospital, says that morbid shyness
is, like other mental disorders, an exag
geration of an unnatural physical state
It is anions women, he declares, that
this symptom of mental disorder is most
often seen. Lacking the physical strerigtn of mau in most instances, they are unable to withstand the depression that some! lines seizes them. That depression gives birth to a desire tobe unobserved. Here ia the beginning of the fit of shyness which moults in unbalancing the
mind and creating the idea that the very sight of others is an affliction to be avoided. Several New York doctors who discussed the question at length said that they had noticed particularly among young women whom they had been called upon to see that those who had ex hihited the areatest embarrassment in
the presence of young men were lacking I in that mental equipoise necessary to the I normal brain. Modesty ia one thing, I thev aaid. shvness quite another. The
one causes the young woman to refrain from action that would bring upon her Just criticism. Tha other is Bimply impelled to a course of action for which
there is neither rhyme nor reason, ana one that only results iu general discomfort. New York Journal.
TRAPPING CROWS. It la Not aa Kaa Mattrr tu Net MS) VVIly ttirtts. Crows are trapped and sold to sportsmen for shooting matches, usually bringing $10 per 100, but, like other things, when scarce they bring more. It is no simple matti r to trap crows, I for the crow is a w ily bird, and to patch htm in a net set for that purpose requires skill, and patience as well, but the hunger of the crow is always tho trapper 'a greatest aid. One man alone would make hut little headway catching crows and would probably sit id) day in his little bough house ready to sp 'ng bis net, hut the crows wtiuld give his bait a wide berth because they would know that be was there. After placing the carcass of some animal on a field the net iB set close to it by bending poles of saplings, on which tin- net is bung flat to the ground, where they are held down by tnggerlike pegs, and a liue run f0 yards or more to a house built of bc-ighs, where the trapper is secreted. I Another carcass is usually laid some hundreds of yards distant on the same or another field, where there is no net set. The trappers, usually two in number, go into the bough house together before daylight, and when the crows bei gin to assemble on the fields one of them goes out and walks away. The crows,
seeing him leave, grow a uttio ooioer 1 and approach the bait in ones and twos, but stop ouly long enough to get a beakful of the flesh and fly off again. The i carcass where there is no net set is of i course the best patronized, but tho trap
per on the outside makes it nis Business to walk near enough to that to keep the rrnwi from settlina on it in numbers
and thus satisfying their hunger without going to the one where the net is. After aw bile their hunger gets the bet- : ter of the ir judgment or their fear, and ! they gather on the careuss where the ; net is. This is the opportunity of the i i.U
'man in the nougn nouse, wno, wun a 'vigorous pull on the line, springs the I net over them. Quick work must be I done then by the trappers, who rush up to the net, to keep the trapped crows
from crawling out at the ends and the front, where it is not staked fast to the ground. With their hands covered with stout buckskin gloves, to keep the crows from biting and scratching them, the captured birds are put in bags ready to be carried eT the field. From 40 to BO are frequently canght at one pull, but it is a rare thing to get more than two springs of the net iu one day. Philadelphia Record.
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L'TTrTltlTTrnri
ÄYeöe table Pr coarat ion for As
stmilating the Food and Regula ting the Stomachs and Bowels of
THAT THE
FAC-SIMILE
SIGNATURE OF
Looisville, Evansvillle & St. L 0 a Ml asm
int K. R THE AIR LINE,
5 Miles the Shorty I'lMft'ii Louisville tV St I IMM
The referred Konto t J
l UIIU t'S( ,
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MUS list
Vent Itotiml.
e,M. IM. A.M. So. A No.i Su.l
i BS B.M I M I.V. Loulsvilla
.W IV. 1 A 1U.n Ar. Huiri.urK .
Promotes DtgestioCrwcTfulnessandRcst.Cot.tains neither 3)iurn,Morpnine nor Mineral. OT NARCOTIC.
Mm tYOdO-SAHLTLPITCBEa
Pitmf&im SmJMx Smnm JtmJUiUSJt,-
jgMSMM3Ms ftBwsftCsM
a noffe-r Itemed v for Cons Um-
tion. Sour Stomach. Diarrhoea,
Worms .Convulsions .feverish oess and LOSS OF SLEEP. Tac Simile Signature of
NEW YORK.
EXACT COPY OF WRAPPER.
7
IS ON THE WRAPPER OF EVEBY BOTTIjE OF"
CASTORIA
Oaitorls Is put up ia ona-tlss bottles only. It li not sold in balk. Don't allow anyone to sell yon anything else oa the plea or promise that it is "Just si good" and "will answer every purpose." V 8eo that you get 0-A-8-T-0-R-I-A.
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TKI.l. CITY ll l.-H in 51 w III Hill. I1JB I.v. I.ineoln Ar. H 10 11M " Tell City : 1.10 Ar. Caiin'toii I.v. T.1C
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A STORY OF LONGFELLOW. Mrs. rulda Tells an Interesting BBtsiM of the Author. BptasTttm of IxiiiRffllow, in hcrvolbjh of literary rt'iniuisceuo , Mrs. Jane J. Fields says: "His kindness and love of humor car
ried Inni through many a MaMOM inter-
IMDtkM. He generously overlooked the
fact of the subterfuges to which men and women resorted in order to get an
interview, and, to help them out, made as much of their excuses as possible.
Speaking one day of tho persons who came to see him at Nahant, he said :
'One man, a perfect stranger, came with .ma s I a If. J 1
an omnibus run or lames, ne uiawasiiii
ed. introduced himself; then, returning
to the omnibus, took out all the ladies, .a A I H :aL
one, two, tnree, rour ami nve, wnu a
little girl, and brought them in. I en
tertained them to the best of my ability,
and they staid an hour. They had scarce-
lv -rone wheu a forlorn woman in black
came up to me on the piazza and asked for a dipper of water. "Certainly," I
replied, and went to fetch her a glass.
When I brought it. she said: "Ihere is
another womau just by the fence who is
tired and thirsty. I will carry tnis to
her." But she struck her bead as she
passed through the window and spilled
the water on the piazza. un, wnai have I donel" ohe said. "If I '.ad a floorcloth, I would wipe it up. " "Oh.
no matter about the water, 1 said, ir Ton have not hurt yourself. " Then I
weut and brought more water for them
both and sent tbem on their way re
freshed and rejoicing. '
"It would be both an endless ana onprofitable task to recall more of the curious experience which popularity brought down upon him. There is a passage among Mr. Fields' notes, bowever, in which he describes an incident
during Longfellow's last visit to England which should not be overlooked. Upon bis arrival the queen sent a grace- . ..aa A. SWT t
ful message and invited mm to winnsor oastle, where sbe received him with all the honors, but he told me no foreigu tribute touched him deeper than the words of an English hod carrier who came up to the carriage door at Harrow am! naked nertnissinu to take the band
of the man who had written the 'Voioea of the Night.' "
BMBM BBSBB SM 9mm
ROLLtn NIILLV,
THE JOT CHK
Make the Celebrated
PATOKA LILY FLOUR.
BEST GRADE IN THE STATE OF INDIANA They also want your
And pay the Highest Market Price in Cash.
Flour and Ship Stuff for Sale at all times.
BROTHERS
WAvMtNQTO. D. C. 0
For Fin Job Printing tho Jasper Courier oftioo is the place to go to get it.
About tha
"Bv the way. where is the major
nowaday'" asked the mutual friend. "He is iu an institution for the treatment of the feeble minded." said the colonel, with a trace of acrimony in his voice. "You don't say I" "Well, sah, ibey don't call the place by that nsuitt, sah But you ran see for yo self that it amounts to the tame thing. It is a water our establishment, a. " Cincinnati Bnquirar.
Tha End of Books. What brings about the end of books? Ia it fire, weter, worms? As every ship launched is bound to be wrecked, every theater to be burned, the finis of the hook is its reduction to ashes. What be
came of the Alexandrian library? Did the Saracens burn it in 640? Them is this question asked: Was there any library at Alexandria containing 700,000 I books? (Jibbon inclines to the opinion that there was no such library. Canon 'Taylor insists that if there had been a , library it was burned in the time of Ju- ! Hub Caviar. Traditiou seems to indicate, however, that there was a library in I the Herapeom, by no means a large collection, but whether destroyed hy The- ! null ilus or Thoodosius is uot known. It
; looks as if the charge brought against the Arabs rested on no foundation. Re- ; cent explorations of Alexandria, JH95-6, i show no traees of the Scrapcum. The
seaport of Kgypt was built on a damp foundation, and, granting that there was a librarv, if not destroyed by fire,
i then the papyri might have suffered
from decwy due to water. Hooka of today taken to India, to the southern täte and to the West Indies perish through mildew. New Y.rk Timea.
FELIX LAMPERT Agent for the Empire Drill. Sucker State Drill.
Keystone Corn Husker A
Blount's True Blue Pews. Manufacturer of WACON8 AND BUGGIES.
Repairing of all kinds.
Jasper, Indiana.
Hall Township BtuiiMj
Notice is hereby given that thr m
llgtMu, trustee 01 null towni attend to township business OD Mchi unlay of the year, at niv office Mai sons having township buainewt I sact are required to present it to hut Silt ii n luv.
Tin" towttahip library will al-'iefJ
at my oince near nonunion"!, and tlx ( ucnn are invited to call there for libra
books.
The Indiana Series of School bot
niHV le lial at niv offiot, ami at Juia
Meschede', in Celestine.
Luv i L. .1 a DM Trustee Hall tOWBsi A uar. , IKtHi. v
Farm For Bale in BfadiM
Township.
( tac of the liest farms n 1 i
township can be b 'iaht mi eas u
3'1 acres, with houaa if six t :iix7." feat, plenty ol stock water. produced li" hushels wheat er acn. u other crop, in proportion, nice orcbt) l-'otir miles from Jasper, '2 ' fi land, 5 from Duff; HO acres cleM Will be divided into two or tlm . if ilesireil, and sold for one-tliird va hulnriee on easv time, interest on i
note for deferreil payments paya
nuaiiy. per acre. . very uesi plare. Apply to 0. I oase, Jasper. Boone Townallfp Truster Notice. The undersigned, Trustee of rVwi tnuiishiti. Dubois county, Iteieio : 1
notice tltat lie will auenu t" h,i bsjh pertaining t the oAoa of Traft it
resilience, atxiut one mne west ui r tersville, on PottofirTillc lad llMl nad, on Batardajra of each weak
repiests all persons liaviuir ( business to present it 00 Saturday, I eiiw ilesirinu- IsMiks l'miu the TownsJ
mvm b
Lihrnrv. are nottlie! that the i.mra
kept ly Wm. McIIarris, in Porten
.. li. V OKI man, inisitr
Aug 7, 1S1SV y. Harbison TniHteH XofiM Notice is herebv givCB that tM un.ie
siirned, Trustee of llarliisnii will att nl to township I'tisinec- nr Saturday of the year, at my offi a pernons having town-Hp t msinesij trniHa-t are repiirel to present on Saturdays.
The township library will Ik? M!1
niv home in Havsville. , .
I luliana School Hsiks are for an Henrv Ruehrsohnerk in Haysville, Adain Harkerin Kellerville, Inrtl Jons BatTXi Aug. ;W, 185-y. Tnvw Columbia Township Tr lee Not ir'. The undersigned, Truste at OojM "p., Dubois county, lad., will fm . . a a i ... . unc
Township IMBtneai ai ins '""" ivery Haturdav, and persons M' wnship business to transact m Itiested to preaent it on that J7 The Township Library is ketvt it sffice of the Trustee, where taoK a tied can obtain books. R. P. Surra. Traft Auf. loth, 196 y. (sootl ItetleMM "'" For Salt'. House ol eight rooms and 1 and good cellar, with three town Ireland, i.sxl water, stable, an-i oat buildings. In g.1 0fL way: a nice home near Choren schools, with gmKl society -urn Will be sold very cheap If"
Apply U Ü. ooajia.
aagast M. m
WOOL. WOOL.
.... . . . . ... . . i M .Kin I,, VL'n vnaWn 1 i ImT ! AO
This la the rsyt mnrUrt nn ours is xnr ncni mmm- v. .,.. . I JHlTl Brailles wo hav. better Isrllltlo. than other houses In having m.n7 lariartfiri,-. to apptf Wo et pM 5ej ton pH' gUg h- noi ,n trade No trsveltug senU. Hhlp all your wool snrl farm produce uinct w HERNDON CARTER CO. aaal a.. . AIR t AID Murr 11 Court. LOTJIBVI1XK, KT.
iiv a aaaaa mmm -
a.
w I
For Commircial Btationary Df Eviry nmcrip-
on Viiit the COURIER OFFICE.
NEW FALL GOOD - LATEST - STYLE Mrs.C.Hochgesant Cor. N. Main A 14th St.. Jl The pdbUe are invited to w innpect :ny now good, ol W gAti lenrn my Very sUOW l'rif4 1 Kor everythinp. My I "j prtKM'rirs and dry gocxlf ,fl
ui with the brut. (X)0TRT iMtonrcB wa. at the highest market price. Mrs. C. Hochgesn Apr. , l4.
