Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 48, Number 33, Jasper, Dubois County, 27 April 1906 — Page 1
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8. B. Brannock. M D.
JA8PEB, INDIANA, fjlIDAY A PK 1 1. L7, !MM5
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Di.eciions for Gradin Seed Com.
Paroa VaiversH Igrfctltajrsf Exfcria if SUI on f,inl 14, ivjo
Office and Residence, . mi -tr et 0)pOiite Indiana Hotel, JASPER, INI.
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John Casper, IV!. D. Physician v Surgeon.
Dr. J. J. Schneider.
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.1 AMT.It. INDIANA
FRANK L. BETZ Attorney at Law and Pension Attorney. Will practica ii. Dub. it tad adjoü im lotkw. Procasf ..-Ii!. . i) given t' i-olUetiotM. Noun htbHoin offioe. für Life, Fire aad '" i-nt loauranci ARCH- C. ÜOAKE, l' til IHK Prudential Insurance Company, Profit Sharing Life in.-urance f..r Men, Woassn sad Children. Asjea i t 7o. Amounts IP1" ooo to ..
Money to Loan
at 5 Per Cent Win. A. Wilson, ASPER. INDIANA
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Jefferson Tp. Not lee. B DndtfBainSd trii-ltf of Ja&Vn ship, iHiboia noanty hereby (p ' lli.il In Mill ;itt-li.i to :f litlNlli. ning to I lie ofltoa i Troafaa i I new one mil.- north f Bitdaej ".-l of cm ii week Mid m joej r nt having Lownalnp butiuetja lit It fill . itljfT iV. JOHN W. IM nv, Trufte
Harbison TriMtee'i Not Nottee if bSflSlqf gfvM hat th im.l. ratiad TniBtw of Maritima towiirtlii. '.. nl to tow n-.ii . j. liiiKinew on ; v i Monday of Ute aar, at aty ofRee, n i Di having lownakip fcmcinep j .' -f are require. I to pfeMBl it to I I on MondWqrt. i !,. town up library will he k.p a "iv bMM Bear Daboia. .1 an L. Hrobk, rraateo, ' B IM.",, f. 1 Mm Township Truste' Efotlee, 'HiderMgneil. Treat e of liooiif k wnhtp, Daboit ron n t y , hereby give tiiat ii will attend to ail baauaaaa i rtaininf to the offloo ol rraateo, at bat rr-iilfnf, fi.ur mi leu BOQlbweOl of p. i "He. on Saturday of each week, and all per. ii h iv in? tewaatdi ooinaea topraaoai it ooHatoi lay. CSti in deafriag boota froan the Towaahir 1 try, era notified tfeai the I ibrary h k-m p tny rcaideooe. V'ii.M.i booka at Mr- Mary Rl riar'j n ortrrtiville. I'ktkk J, S.iinw c.
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MoUee, Kottee h men t.iat bofeafketUM Trat ' m.i i.K, n toi,i.,,p ,) :H, j,, ((, 'n i on tba rtrM Batoiday of aarb ' Hh, an-i tin ivaaainiof batonlayaat 'v rt aidoote, one mile aorctbareot o 1 ' f' r the pur K.ee of at n.lne to w Bfhip hnaiMaa Mad all perei m hav " lii-me. with the lownphir ar-M. fU 1 to murine it to trione .lavn .."toWBahip library in kep, at Batt'll rteaM in Irelan.l where all MM 0 'in the UokB. The In.l'ana Bebaol booka will he '3U1.I ,t aaa. t. Toauaa'i store t all 0. Siurri A l: .
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Alter the seed com has been carefully s fleeted as to type of ear and character of kernel and property teste i as to germinatine: power it she ild be shelled anil graded, with special attention to securing uniformity in size and shape of kernal, in order that the planter mav be rHik- .i.
justed to uniformly drop the required number of kernats. If the sheUing and grading are . to be done by hand, as is ener ly the case on the farm, the small round kernals at th tips of the ears and the large irregular shaped kernals at the butts should first be removed and discarded. After this is done or while it is being done the ears should be divided into two lots according to length of kernals. Then each lot i hoald be shelled int a separate vessel an car at a time, Bach ear as it is shelled should be carefully examined for faulty kernals which mav have escaped notice up t this time. '1" facilitate this. th ear should' be shelled into a vessel by itself, or onto a screen or hoard' so that a careful examination mav
made and faulty kernals removed before the corn is put in with the bulk of good corn already shelled. This is very important and it must he remembered that every bad kernal which goes in with tile seed to he planted Will mean an ear less in the crop next fall. After the seed com is all shelled the proper pair of planter plates must be selected to plant each of the two lots. To do this a dropping test with the planter in full operation must be made, trying different pairs of plates, until the pair is found which will drop the desired number f kernal- at least ninety five times in one hundred drops. For making the dropping test set the planter up on blocks, or on a frame of some kind, raising it a foot or more above the door with the wheels free. Attach a handle to the . driving wheel for operating the machine. If you have no attachment for automatic dropping while the wheel is being turned, the dropper must be operated by hand. Operate the planter with each lot of, com to he planted, using differerent pairs of plates until a satisfactory pair is found for each lot of Beef). Catch the kernals at each drop separately, and record the number until LOO drops have been made. The desired nnmberof kernals at the proper intervals, whether hilling or drilling, should be dropped ninety-five times out of one hundred. Edge-drop plates will usually give the hest results. Sometimes it will he necessary to re-calihrate or tile a set of plates that is a trifle to small for the corn to he planted, in order to get better results than can be secured with the next larger size. Io not neglect this grading and testing. Do it on the first rainy day. You will be paid for the work many times ever when you harvest the crop. You can make dimes for minutes at this work. You cannot afford to have a po or irregular stand. A. T. WlANCKO. Agriculturist.
for the day while dres in" i
mwrmng. 'Convenience is the gateway through which comfort enters.' Try having your work table so near the cook stove that you need only turn to reach it, with the necessary cooking articles in a box cupboard over the table, or in drawers underneath. This will save hundreds of steps m a day. Try having plenty of holders han--inr near the stove ready for Uick usage. Each ne mav he supplied with a cover that can be ea : . removed and laundeivd
try having nimerous small brushes in convenient places one for cleaning vegetables; one for di sh-washing, one for dusting furniture, cleaning1 stair stens etc. Try aavinga note book or slate and pencilhanging in the kitchen to jot down any article that may be found wanting. Try having numerous labt led bags and boxes in suitable places for pan. rn . twine pieces (cotton wool, and silk. medicines, corks, etc. pry taking a nap each dav, if only for a few minutes, it will make you feel more cheerful, hopeful and capable. Try making life a ministry of love, it will then be worth livW Mow in Keep Kg Rrtat May I. as a whilom keeper of hens, and, so to speak, an eggspert, attempt to state what is the differerence bet ween "a newlaid egg" and a "t'nj" egg and how to keep e-us fresh. 4 I cannot speak of the trade names of different grades of ejbut the real difference is that a ne w laid -g is, when hoi led, milky or creamy as to what is called the white, or albumen, transparent or colorless. The egg after being laid returns tin's test of newness for some three or four days, according to the season. After that in can only be called fresh. The freshness mav last f.w oav.
era! weeks, or even months, if the e.Lru- is properly cared for. The only proper way is t. ki it on one end or the other, taking a care to turn it at iea-t on-.v a day. Tids can be managed by having a thin board, perforated with holes in whi h the eggs may rest on a shelf exposed to the air. The etftf remain- (rh and good so long as the yolk i. evenly contained in the middle. The moment the yolk which hot specific gravity greater than the white, touches the shell which is porous, it is exposed to the air, and ceases to live, entering upon corruption.
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You uro :t! that poet in dreuiing Might weave into fantasy ?weet;
ne would sing of your hair golden gieatnmg, He would rave of your exquisite feet; llr would td of your figure's perfection. Of your blue eyes so wonderouslv bnght; He might say, "With the iweatest confection Your lit trio," and. love, he'd be naht, He would die f r jutt one of your kisAnd mre ir th v more precious that wine; And although I'm no j.et, dour t Liis The reason I wish you w ere mine. But Fate, with a dictum eotniRandiag, Say I MUST not in love with you fall: For you measure sis feet when you're standing I'm Are anii two inches, that's all. The Shrimp. Qaaal Esatgi, The conditions at present bids well for a democratic victory this year, as is plain to be seen by unprejudiced min Is. The Indianapolis News, an independent republican paner that is not hide bound sa . s: The present situation certainly is goo ! eno ign for the democrats, It is admitted that there Would he no possibility- of rate legislation were it not 'for democratic-support of the president, whose party is badly split on the question. The republican split on the tariff also weakens it greatly, and plays directly into the hands of the democrats. So we believe that the democratic leaders would he well smktWl
to cut down tiie Republican majority, and to wait till 1906 to make their bir hVht. And yet they may be forced to win a victory against their will. It is at least certain that the elections this year will be hotly contested, and that the republicans will lose some ground. The democratic party comes nearer being united than at any time since 12, and is ivally beginning to assume the role of a more or less effective opposition.
A Kail. Day Sior A man left hi, umbrella in the stand in a I. -ltd recently with a card bearing the following inscription attached to it. "This umbrella belongs to a man who ea i deal a blow of 250 pounds weight I shall he backin ten minutes." On returning to seek Iiis i-o-perty he found in its place a card thus inscribed . 'This card was left bv a man who can run twelve miles an
hour. I shad not be 1
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Trupt NUiliPon rp.
Mr! I HOD. I wonder if any housekeeper ever went to bed with the feeling that all the work for the day was done. If we had more method in our work we might accomplish more. Try formulating a plan
By the help of lime, oil, butter aud various other devices, the life of an egg may he prolonged for trade purposes hut no egg can he considered fresh which, if placed under a hon. would not hatch, and most if not all. of the shop eggs are dead, if not unwholesome.
H-.w he Fuuled tbe fjirl. No, said the manager of the great establishment, wc had no trouble in getting the giria in our employ to gown themselves in dark colors in accordance with our desires But didn't they make a row when yo issued the order? asked the man who thought he knew something about women. We didn't issue any order Then, how did how did you do it We rireuJated a report that are thought the place would look more cheerful if we required all the girls to gel more col treffest in their costumes, thereupon they held 'an indignation meeting and declared that they would like t. SM any man dictate to them how t drees. Since then Mack and dark grey has prevailed te such an extent that it seems almost like a uniform. - Chicago Post .
11 ISM ms Ji Couch A home-made couch may be evolved by using a nice single cot bed with WOVenwire sprirnr attached, jjrood strotu I. . s v. aii e.iar. l'on this
place by :ii: means, if it can be afforded, a hair mattress with I comfortable and put a pUkm u the head. Now, purchase son,, cretonne and tack a box plaited Vali en" around the sides and ends, then tt) te a spread of the cretonne wide enough to fall over the pbUtted vallan e a little way, finished with simple ball fringe to match, these cots, having neither head nor fotboard, can be turned about whenever desired, As none of the covering is attu'-hed. the couch can be taken 1 apart daily, like a hed, anil the mattress turned, thus preventing it from getting lumpy or the spring from sagging". The same idea may be carried OUl in using expensive portiers instead o cretonne.
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Vegetables as Medicine.
Ha) Them Hive Th-ir Panitular and Valuable Property Asparagus is verv cooling and easily digested. Cabbage, cauliflower, Brüssel sprouts and brocoli are cooliiur, nutritive, laxative and purifying to the blood, and also act as a tonic, but should not be eaten too freely bv delicate IKTsons. Celery is delicious cooked, and good for rheumatic
or gouty people. Lettuces are very wholesome. They are shghtlv narcotic and lull and calm the mind. Spinach is par. ticulaiiy good for rheumatism and gout, and also in kidney diseases. ( miona are good for chest ailments and odds, hut do not agree with all. Watereresses are excellent tonic, stomachic and coo'ing. Beetroot is very cooling and highly nutritious owing to the amount of sugar it contains. Parsley is cooling and purifying, Turnip tops are invaluable when young and tender. Green neute shoots, if gathered in spring and cooked as spinach, form a most delicate and wholesome blood purifying vegetable. Potatoes, parsnips, carrots, turnips and artichokes are highly nutritious, but not so (1 igest ible'as some vegetable... Potatoes are the most nourishhig and are fattening for nervous people. Tomatoes are health-giving and purifying, either eaten raw or cooked. Chilli, cayenne, horseradish and mustard should be used sparingly. They give a zest to the appetite, and are valuable stomachics. Radishes are the same, but are indigestible and should not be eaten by delicate people. Cucumbers are cooling, but are in
digestible to many. IS arr or not to Marry. Of all the mistakes that were ever made since that first and most disastrous blunder in the garden of Kden, there has never been anything moo'' fraught with mischief and unhappineaa to the human family than a marriage entered into simply because some body desired it. To marry for such reason alone is a Krt of moral suicide, and those who are guilty of such folly sometimes live to repent it . most bitterly and oftentimes die hv their own hands because Uiey knowof no other way in which to right the wrong they have unwittingly done. It may be questioned whether it is or not much more injudicious to urge marriages than to prevent them In the one case the wretchedness mav be slower in coming, but it is none the less Sure and far-reaching in its evil effects. It takes a vast deal of grace for people to live together in harmony the J ear in and the year out, and there must be some natural attraction or SOtnething more than somebody's whim or convenience to keep things even and preserve that unity and s mpathetic consideration that are absolutely necessary to make home life worth the living. Therefore, whatever else you do. never urge a marriage. Marriage is on- of the things that must be desired, and that ardently, by the contracting parties. No one has a right to interfere, and to do so i to multiply sorrows for those whose affairs are meddled with in this way. I otable W iimeo. Ev ry woman cannot be beautiful in form or feature, but every American woman can be attractive by her pleasBat manner and agreeable exprexion unless she is so hopelessly tag or illtempered or course that she repels every on. One is instinctively re petted by a course or selfish person, just as ne instinctively drawn toward a gentle, generous, warm hearted, cheerful person 'To be loved.' sas a noted winter one must be loving!" "I have seen manners,' said Kmerson. 'that make a similar impression with personal beauty; that give the like exhilaration and refine us like that, and in memorial experiences they are suddenly better th'in beauty and make that superfluous and ugly There is no beautifier of complex km or form like the wish to scatter joy
anu not pain aoout us.
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