Walkerton Independent, Volume 54, Number 44, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 28 March 1929 — Page 2

Walkerton Independent Publish* 1 Every Thurs lay bv TI IE ISI) EJ’EN »EN 1- A EWS CO. Publishers of the WALKERTON IMIEmiiEST A ORTH 1.1 BERT Y NEWS EVI LI.E STANDARD *Yhe ST, JOSEPI{ COUNTY WEEKLIES~ Clem DeCoudres. Business Manager Charles M. Finch, Editor SUBSCRIPTION RATES One Tear U.S* Six Months .99 Three Months so TERMS IN ADVANCE Entered at the post office at Walkerton, ^nd., as eecond-claM matter. Perhaps rhe hardest promise to keep is the one made at the family reunion to write often. An Oklahoma hunter claims he killed 3.763 crows witii two shots. Two shots of what ? There are certain people who don’t seem to have any special mission in lift except to be news. This is an enlightened age in spite of the startling figures a census of voodoo believers would show. Some of what goes for tin used to be “bronical trouble.” that being easier to say than “bronchial.” The peace of the world might he assured if the great powers could ne kept from comparing each other. “Tung oil is now being produced in this country.” We still think elbow grease would be more practical. “Cornstalks treated b.v the new process make an exceptionally strong paper.” Or would husk.v be the word? The politician who claims he has an ear to the ground better stay in that position, for lie may be due for a fall. First-grade pupils in an Eastern school are put right to work at typewriting. This may explain much of the spelling. One reason Shakespeare is always popular is because people like to go to the theater to hear their favorite misquotations. Back in the old home town there was at least one man who was so worthless that he wasn’t even asked to sign petitions. “A film producer is planning a building of 52 stories in New York." As with the films, however, they will all be built on one plot. ft is hoped some one of the publicists who use it, constantly, will explain how strange a thing ought to be before it can be “passing strange.” What has become of the annual story about the fellow who pulled a fair skater out of the water and married her, after seing her at her worst? When a young husband is asked what he would like for dinner, he habitually says liver, knowing cthe chance of mayonnaise on that is slight. University of California announces a survey shows it costs $307 2<i for a college girl to dress herself from head to approximately 16 inches above the foot, s f The lives of the people of the United States are insured for SOo.oou.ooo.oiM), proving that in this country insurance has become merely a matter ot policy. There was a woman back home who always asked for a glass ot water, when calling, and offered to get it herself, just io see how the kitchen was kept. The government reports a decrease of 5 per cent in the pig crop The ham in rhe sandwich, which has here tofore been opaque, may become transpa rent. “An insatiable desire for change Is rooted in every woman,” says a noted New York jurist. We've heard tha’ she even goes into her husband's pockets after it. In some circles a marriage is considered a comparative success if in family differences the unhappy wife waits for a divorce instead of reaching for a weapon. In regard to the news that threefourths of the explosives produced in the country are used in mining, some one asks if Chicago is in the copper or bituminous coal belt. One of the enlightening statistics of the past year is that we consumed an average of RM) sticks of chewing gum per capita. We can name a party in this office who is far above the average. A broom or a rollingpin was once humorously depicted as the wifely weapon. At present an offending husband is supposed to be lucky if gun play is not introduced into domestic discipline. Who can remember the old-fash-ioned winter when a boy could skate down to the store almost any day for a sack of pastry Hour? Some wives are merely inexperi enced. and others are like the young matron who ordered a ton of chestnut coal, free from worm holes. Scrapfiing blue prints if it can he carried on successfully may make the waste basket to serve instead of the bottom of the deep blue sea as a depository for disabled junk. “Anyway,” muttered the Old ('rah “a man may still take a chew now and then without feeling that tie should first offer it to a lady.” We have wondered whether an en front couldn’t get through one of those talking marathons wi. h a consider able saving of words b.v drawling. These fellows who dictate their novels to a stenographer will have to remember that 3(H) years after they are dead their manuscripts wont be worth as much as hand work.

When bstone, Am. was nelldorado .

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BY ELMO SCOTT WATSON N JANUAItY 13, press dispatches from k Eos Angeles carried the news that » "Wyatt Earp, seventy-eight, gun tilting D peace officer of 1 lodge City, Kan., and j Tombstone. Ariz., in frontier days, whose colorful career led him thrmah a dozen fatal conflicts with ’bad men’ of the Old West, died her«‘ today.” That brief announcement recalled for a moment a real “Wild West” period in American history, when there took place events in which the bare

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I chronicles of fact reads like the fervent amp exaggerated fiction of the dime novelist. Amj the story of those times seems all the more remarkable when one realizes that they were less [than fifty years ago and that there are many men still living who had a part in the stirring events of what now seems like a far off and dimly-reti.em-bered era. Os course, the number of such men is being rapidly reduced ami the galaxy of real “frontier । notables” is now so small that they can almost i be counted on the fingers of one hand. But in ; the counting there is one name which slam s out i prominently. That is the name of Col. William I Breakenridge. a contemporary of Wyatt Earp in ! the Tombstone (Ariz.) episode ot the real! Wil l 1 West period, and the passing of Wyatt Earjk only ! serves to emphasizes the importance of ’('plom l : Billy” as the sole remaining figure of outstanding prominence In that episode. Not only was be important as an actor in the drama of those stirring days in Arizona, but he is even more imj poitant as a chronicler of thos* days. Fortunately ! for the future historian the story of Tombstone has ! been set down b.v tme who was there n the heyday of that lively place. If the old Nevada I mining town was famous as “b -i d. b-a-d Bodie” i and the old Kansas cow town was known far । and wide as "wicked Dodge.” what would bi' the | most appropriate nickname to this Arizona cow- ! and-mining town of Tombstone whose record was I in some respects even more sensational than ’ either of the others? .’erhaps the name of “Colonel Billy’s" book, which was recently published b.v the Houghton Mifflin company, is the best answer. It is “Helldorado” will) tie subtitle of "Bringing the Law to the Mesquite.” If Helldorado” were the chronidc of I.reaken ' ridge's career as a deputy sheriff in Toi ibstone ! only, it would be interesting ami exciting i?nough. But it is the record of his life for more than half । a century in the West ami to read "Helldorado” i is to call the roll of a long list of famous ’rontier names. For the saga of “Colonel Billy" began j during the second year of the Civil war when he ; ran away from his home in Wisconsin (he was । then twelve years old) to work in the quartermaster’s department of the Union army and soon ! afterwards found himself engaged in freighting : supplies for the army in Missouri. Afte- a few ' months of that we next find him crossing the I plains to Denver with a freighter outfit ami on ! this trip he made acquaintance with the first j of the “frontier notables” lie was to know. “When we reached Jack Morrow's ranch at the । mouth of the North Platte river,’ writes BreakenI ridge, “1 saw Bill Cody, or ‘Buffalo Bill’ for the ; first time. 1 thought he was the handsomest man I 1 had ever seen." After several trips ;u ross the plains Breckenridge enlisted in the Third ColoI rado cavalry which was called to service by Gov. ; John Eyans of Colorado to take the field against . the Indians who had been committing depredai tions on the isolated ranches and among Ihe immii grants coming into the country. As a member ot this outfit young Billy met some more “frontier 1 notables,” chief o whom were Old Jim Beck- । worth, the famous mulatto who liecame a chief ; among the Crow Indians, and Antoine Oenise. who i served as guides for the regiment wliich was commanded b.v Colonel Chivington. “Th >y taught i me a lot about scouting and the ways and habits of Indians,” says Breakenridge. Con:- lering the controversy v I ich t.as ram I for x over the battle of Sind Creek when Colonel Chivington surprised amides royed the camp of Chief Black Kettle of the Cheyt'm es, it is rather remarkable that Breakenridge dismisses his part in t! is famous engagement with a few brief paragraphs. Perhaps the fact that he lias other and more stirring events to write about accounts for that. For the next few years he was busy as a government freighter between army posts in Wyoming, Colorado and Nebraska am! having many narrow escapes from death at the hands of the Indians. Next he became a builder of railroads, working for his brother who had the contract for building the roadbed or the Union Pacific wliich was then pushing west through Wyoming and he was present on the historic occasion when the Central Pacific and the Union Pacific lines met at Promontory, Utah, on May 10, 186*.* ami the golden spike was driven to signalize the completion of the first transcontinental railroad. Next we find young Billy in Denver in the employ of Gen. William .1. Palm*T as! a surveyor for the Denver and Rio Grande wbijb was then

Varieties cf Spiders Have Communal Nests i

Some spiders live in large colonies in close intimacy not only with spider> of different species, hut witti othei insects. In Mexico in regions at ar altitude of 2.otx> yards, spiders are found that live in societies and con I struct common nests of large di men ■ sions like the nests of ants and bee.I Tite nests are in great demand atnoni । the natives of the country, who take fragments of them and hang them

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Is also interesting to mac t iiat at one time he w.i^ « “tourist driver” in ( <il >rado Springs. And <>: e of the passengers whom lie drove from ('oiorado Springs t<> Manitou was a “good locking yom-g stranger «!:<» began to tell me what a womhrful man his father was, how many railroads he owned, what fine horses he had. ‘By the way,' 1 said, ‘who is your father?’ He spoke up with a good deal of emphasis, ‘Cornelius \ and' rbilt.' I told I un 1 bad never heard of him, am! the more Pie louim fellow tried to till me who he was, the denser I got. till at last he realized tnat 1 was kidding him.” Eventually he got a Job with a freighting’ outfit which took Dim down into Arizona and there in IS7S the career wliich was to make him famous began. After working for a time as a freighter and surveyor ho finally landed in Phoenix, then a small xillage. and soon afterward was appointed a deputy sheriff. His first job was to arrest a murderer, which lie did without any trouble, and locked him up in the town jail. But while the sheriff and his deputy were out ot town "a number of citizens mot tit the mill and formed a vigilance comriittoe. About ten o'clock that morning the I'omm ttee went io the Jail ami took two murderers out and hanged them to the cottonwood tree in front of the town hall. They took two lumber wagons, placed a board across the wagon box at the rear end and had the murderers stand on the board with the n >< ses around tlieir necks and tie oilier end of the rope fastened to the limb of the cotionwood tree. The first man to be hanged either fainted or the noose was too tight. He sank down on the rope and as there was very little skick. his neck was not broken; he just strangled. The other man, just as the team started to drive from under him. jumped as high as he could ami his neck was broken. Everything was very quiet when some one in the crowd spoke up. "\Yliy the son-of a-gun must of been hanged before; he knew just how to do it!” In 1S7!) Bi'“aket.ridge arrived in Tombstone ami spent an unsuccessful season as i prospector. Os Tombstone at that time he writes: The interesting period in Tombstone was during the fall of IS7!< and the early eighties. In those tew years Tombstone was born a mining town, lived a mining town and died a mining town. Uke all mining towns in tlieir beginning, money came easy and went easy, all kinds of men and women flocked there and it was soon a lively camp. It is claimed by many that Alfred Henry I.ewis, who was in Tombstone in later days getting material for his story 'Wolfville,” pki<ed Wolfville at Tombstone and lied Dog at Charleston. The rich Tombstone mines brought bad men from all parts of the West into the valleys of the San Simon, Sulphur Spring, ami San Pedro rivers, where stage robbers, outlaws and cattle thieves found refuge, but for all of that, Tombstone was an orderly, lawabiding town. What little killing was done there was done among the lawless element themselves. This element was very much in the minority ai d during the five years 1 lived there 1 . never hiard of a house being robbed or any<ne being held up in the city, and it was perfectly safe for any lady or gentleman to pass along the treets day or night without being molested. Despite this picture of a peaceful village, as [minted by Colonel Billy, which contrasts so favorably with the conditions in some of the larger cities of the pi eseat day, the fact still remains that when Hie lawless element did do a bit ot killing among themselves Tombstone was far from a quiet place. For when “Colonel Billy” went to that town he could stroll down the only street in it and pass no less than forty men who had the right to cut one or more notches on their guns. (Conspicuous among them were the following, all of whose names are famous in frontier history: Bat Masterson, Doc Holliday, the Earp brothers—Wyatt, Virgil, Morgan and Warren —, Luke Short (all of whom ha<' won tlieir spurs

about their rooms as traps for flies and mosquitoes. The ne^ts are surrounded with threads that serve as hiding places in which the spiders lie in wait for their prey. All the insects caught are used as food for the colony. In the nests, which the spiders never leave for any reason or under tiny circumstances, are ruled heaps of flies, yet the nests are kept with the ut

most cleanliness. Tite public hygiene of tlie colony is looked after by a small creature treated with scrupulous respect by all the spiders. This infinitesimal being does for spider communities what the blind white wood louse does for ants. It is of the family of the I.atricldes; it lives in the common nest with all the spiders, nourishing itself on everything re jected and cast off by them. —Wash ington Star. Empty talk is easily recognized.

(is “bad men tn with” in the roaring days <if Dodge Cltx). Join Rin: •. Kw NaCc. Billy Claybourn, Charlie Storms, 1 r. nk I ■ slie and Dick Lloyd. In ndditicn to the gunmen, most of w nom were gatnblers, tic i.'intrv was full of ristlers and s'age robbers, and when young Billy Bn’akimridge was aiq oiniod a deputy sheriff by Sheriff ,lolm Behan be found that tin* business of "br tiging the law to the mesquite" was one which offered ir.niin •ralde chances for sudden death for those who ztieni[ited the Job. But if ev<T there was a man fitted for that Job, it was young Billy Breakenridm*. and the record which he made as a peace officer is one of the most remarkable in frontier history. He did not mak * it with a blazing six-shooter, for that was not his way. He "got his man” invariably, but he did It by peaceable means. Taki* the case of the man who stabbed and k lied Johnny Leßar, after Johnny had refused to sell him another drink and ordered him out <>t his saloon. Deputy Breakenridge was sent to bring in the ..mrderer. "Better take a I osse,” they told him. "Shucks, no!” replied Billy, for as he • xplains in his book. "I never liked to take a no<sp with in most alwaxs I can handle things better myself.” So he sot out alone, found the murderer and told him he’d better come along. When the man failed to see it that way. Billy argued with him that it wasn’t mm h good to wait and be chased all over the counH.v and maybe die of starvation out on the desert. So the murderer walked juaeefullx to jail and Deputy Billy "got another man” with no gunplay. Then there was the time when he was sent to collect the taxes on the personal property in the valleys nnd mountains east of Tombstone. This was in the very heart of the outlaws’ count, y and It was easy to guess that the rustlers, stagerobbers and others "outside the law” would not care particularly for paying taxes to support the law which they consistently d. tied. But “Billy Breakenridge’s way" was to go straight way to Curly Bill, the most notorious outlaw in that section of the country. I told him I wanted tn hire him to po with me as a deputy nssersor and help me collect the taxes, as I was afraid I mig t Ie held up and my tax money taken from r>-.e if I went alon The idea of my asking the chief of all the entile rustlers in that part of th« country to help me collect taxes from them struck him as a good joke. He thought it over for a few moments and then, laughing, said: "Yes, and we will make every one of those blank blank cow thieves pay his taxes.” Next day xve started and he led me into a lot of blind canyons and hiding places where the rustlers had a lot of stolen Mexican cattle, and introduced me something like this: “Boys, this is the county assessor, and I am his deputy. W<> are al! goml. law-abiding citizens here and xve cannot run the country without we pay taxes." He knew about how many cattle they each had, and if they demurred, or claimed they had no money, lie made them give me an order on their banker Turner. Curly had many a hearty laugh about it. lie told them that if any of them should get arrested, it would be a good thing for them to show that they were taxpayers in the county. The result was that Breakenridge and his “deputy” colli’cted nearly a thousand dollars in tax money with wliich Breakenridge arrived safely in Tombstone am! he confesses that he was "much relieved when I did so.” Several historians have told in detail of other similar feats of Breakenridge as a deputy sheriff which for sheer cool-headed nerve tire not excelled in western history. But you will find no intimation of that in his book unless you read between the lines of his straightforward, modest narrative. His attitude is that "it was all in the day’s work.” Like all true heroes, he was not given to heroics. He did his job simply and lie tells of it in the same manner.

Luck’s Other Name Julius Itosenwald, Chicago capitalist; said modestly on his sixty-fifth birthday that be imputed his success to luck. “I’m convinced.” he went on. “that it’s luck, or opportunity—the same tiling—that makes our Rockefellers.” Then Mr. Rosenwaid laughed and ended : “Os course a great many men fail to recognize opportunity because she is always disguised as bard work.”

TME KITCHEN CABINET

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<(c\ 19-9. Western N«-w^l>:i|.ei Ciiioh i "He who goes down Into the battle of life giving a smile for every frown, a cheery wcr«l for every cross one, ami lending a helping hand to the unfortunate, is after ail, the best of missionaries." GOOD THINGS TO EAT When one cannot procure the fresh i grapefruit, the canned is very delicious

and is all ready to : use, which appeals to the busy house- 1 wife. Grapefruit Salad. — Arrange in rows on head lettuce or In nests of lettuce and serve with ‘

i french dressing and h sprinkling of | finely shredded almonds. Orange Ambrosia.—l’eel and slice oranges in very thin slices. Arrange In a glass bowl and sprinkle with fiM*>b grated coconut and sugar. Let stand for an hour and serve. Jam Dainties.—Take one fourth cupful of butter, one-half cupful of sugar, cream together, add two tablespoonfuls of grated chocolate melted, one tahlespoonful of sugar, one beaten egg. a tablespoon fill of boil ing water, one cupful of Hour sifted with one teaspoonful of baking powder. Mix and chill. Roll and tut into small cookies. Ice with boiling frosting and jam. Put together in pairs. Ham With Pineapple.—Take a slice of ham one inch thick and sprinkle with Hour. Melt a little of the fat and brown the ham well on both sides. Pour one cupful of pineapple and onehalf cupful of water over the ham and bake slowly tmtil tender. Remove the ham and serve with the sauce around it. Spinach With Bacon.—Cook spinach in just the water which clings to it when washed. Cook in a heavy kettle well covt'red for ten minutes, season with salt, pepper and one-fourth cuje fill of lemon juice or less —enough to season. Add crisp, well cooked dry ■ bacon, broken into bits: stir well and Mackerel With Lemon Butter.—Split and bone a mackerel and wipe with a I’heesecloth. Broil first on the flesh side nnd then on the skin side on the | gas or over coals. Make lemon butter 1 by mixing lemon juice with butter and ! spread on toast. Cut the fish ami ar- | range on the buttered toast and serve ; hot with slices of lemon and waterj cress Date Gems.—Take one cupful of flour, fi\(> teaspoonfuls of baking powder. one half teaspoonful of salt, one cupful of graham Hour, one cupful of chopped dates, one and one-half cup--1 fills of milk and two t;iblespoonfuls of melted butter. Mix well and pour into ; buttered muffin pans and bake thirty minutes. This recipe makes one dozen. Everyday Good Things. A good soup or stew is always a i welcome dish on a cool, snappy day.

Meat Stew With Vegetables — Take two and one-halt ' pounds ot beet wit h bone, two quarts of waler, two tea spoonfuls ot salt, a । little cayenne, two j tablespoonfuls ot flour, one table !

spoonful of butter, two cupfuls of diced potatoes. one-half cupful each of diced | carrot and turnip. Remove the meat from the bone and cut into inch cubes Place the bone in the cold water. Sea son the meat with salt, pepper and roll in (lour, then brown in the butter with one small chopped onion. Add j । this to the bone and simmer for an 1 hour and a halt or until the meat is j fender. A halt hour before the stew j > is to be served add the vegetables. the potatoes a little later than the carrot and turnip which usually take longer * to cook. Fe sure that there is liquid enough, then drop in the dumplings i am) cook ten minutes. • Potato Soup.—'l ake four good sized potatoes, three large onions, one and I | one half quarts of water, two tea spoonfuls of salt, one and one-half cupfuls ot evaporated milk diluted with one and one-half cupfuls of wa ' ter. drain* 1 from the potatoes after cooking, three sprigs of parsley and a few dashes of cayenne, Roil the 1 potatoes ami onions in the water with । the salt. When tender drain ami mash. Reserve the water for the soup i Add the chopped parsley to the milk ' which is scalding in a double boiler. I add all to the potato very gradually. I stirring to keep smooth. Season with cayenne and celery salt ami serve I i very hot Drop Dumplings.—Take two cupfuls ! ‘ of Hour, four teaspoon nils of baking , powder, tine leaspoonful of salt, one- ' third of a cupful of evaporated milk and two-thirds of a cupful of water, ' or one cupful of fresh milk. Mix the ! thy ingredients, stir in the milk ■ quickly and drtip by teaspomifuls into , I the hot stew. Cover and cook ten I minutes. Serve the meat in the center I of the hot platter, then a row or a | heap of carrots then the potatoes ami , 1 ; a row of turnips. Around them arrange the dumplings. Mushroom Gravy.— This is delicious I served with beefsteak. Take one cup i , i ful of mushrooms, canned or fresh | ' । Fry in two tablespoonfuls ot butter I ! until brown on all sides. Add salt ami ! pepper. Thicken the gravy from the ! 1 ( steak and add the mushrooms, let cook ’ ( up one minute then pour over the ; ■ steak and serve. New Kind Curtis, age eight, ot North Salem. 1 had never happened to see any comb 1 h »ney and consequently he hardly : 5 knew just how he was supposer) t< eat if. He hesitated and then asked: t “Well, do you eat the skin?" —Indian j apoiis News Education's Aim * This is the end ot education —that we may become something more than I an interested hanger-on in the march ? of the world’s progress. — I»r. John Grier Uiblnn.

Mrs. John Durrum Says Could Write Ail Day and Not Say Enough Good About Milks Emulsion "Have been thinking for some time of writing you in regard to Milks Emulsion. •’When I wrote you last fall I was very much discouraged. Doctors had told me for five years that I had T. I». Five doctors told me last fall that I was in advanced stages <»f T. B. “I have taken your wonderful medicine all winter. Sometimes’ I would neglect taking it every hour, but would take several doses a day. and this is the first winter for seven years that I haven’t spent most of the winter in bed. I haven't been in bed sick this winter, and for two years I had been so sore across my abdomen I couldn’t bear to press on it. That Is all gone. I do all of my housework now except washing; weight 117 pounds, and feel fine. “I can't praise your Emulsion enough. I tell every one I talk to what it has done for me and feel ashamed if I neglect it sometimes when I know what it has done for me and what it means for me. “I could write all day and could never write enough good words about Milks Emulsion.” Yours truly. Mrs. John Durrum, 451 W. Green St., Frankfort, Ind. Sold by all druggists under a guarantee to give satisfaction or money refunded. The Milks Emulsion Terre Haute, Ind.—Adv. Use for Periscope Small individual periscopes for seeing over the heads of crowds are n<>w seen in use occasionally at race tracks and golf courses when large gatherings make the view ditiicult. The device consist of a small rectangular box about 30 inches long am) 3’£ Inches wide. It weighs only a few ounces and may be carried easily by a little strap at one end. Periscopes once had a sinister connotation as the seeing eye of submarines, but now they grace opticians’ windows along Fifth avenue. New York. They come finished in bright-colored leather to suit the fancy—or the costume, if the purchaser happens to be feminine. Well Suspended Mrs. Decollete—Have you noticed that my new party gown is longer than the other? Husband (giving her the o. o.) — I.onger? You must refer to the shoul-^ der straps. —Boston Trarscript. alwayslepF - IT ON HAND Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Helps Her So Much Pittsburgh, Pa.—"l was just completely run-down. I had tired, heavy.

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and about the same in tablet form. This Is one medicine a woman should have in the house all the time. I am improving every* day and I sure am able to eat. I am willing to answer any letters I get asking about the Vegetable Compound.”—Mes. Ella Richalds, 21 Chautauqua St. N. S.» Pittsburgh. Pa.

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sluggish feelings and I could not eat. I was losing in weight. I read so much about Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound and what a good medicine it is, that I started taking it. I have taken eight bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound