Daily News, Volume 1, Number 48, Franklin, Johnson County, 14 April 1880 — Page 2
mmsasii
E. P. BEAL'CH AMP. Editor «t«t Proprietor. Publication OfBce. corner Viflb aotl Main btreet*.
Entered tl the Po#* iXfic* st Terre liitiu,
home in Galena on Saturday.
Tue
{sdiiiu,
wiwood-ctaw nutter.
WEDNESDAY. APRIL 14. 18«0
TH~B DAILY NEWS i# printed every week day Afternoon, and ddivere/l by earners throughout the cily at 10 ceals per week—collection# made weekly By mail (portage paid by the Publisher) one numih 4-5 cents three month# $135 »iz months $2.60 one year $5.00.— Mail tubucriplhns in advance.
S»AI.L-I'OX piwnt.
i» the rage ia Chicago at
Obn. Ohaxt
in expected to arrive at his
recent galo on the lake* stranded
several ve*s»cU, causing heavy Ios*.
The
The Blaine bureau is not only doing the hardest work, but in Illinois has been practicing some of the very meanest kind of detnngoguery.
The policy of the Grant, Sherman nnd Woahhurne men is to «tand squarely on the merits and strength of their respective men.
Maine's bureati in the eaatern and middle State* will not hnrt Grant very much, for the |K)wer of Conkling and Cameron cannot be broken. vHutinthe West, Blaine realizes that a good Hized bureau could, in a great measure offset the power of Logan and his friends, and ho expect* to reap a groat harvest throughout the-went. If these machines wert! abandoned there is but little doubt that the people convening at Chicago would, if untraiueSed, select the strongest man.
Tit is dispatches announce that the yellow fever lias broken out at Vera Cruz. This should be a suggestion to our board of health to begin at once an examination of our alley* ami other Hlthy places. Our city is in pretty good condition but there are some places that ought to be looked after. It "Yellow Jack' was to begin operations here there is no estimating the deaths he might make. We hope the board of health will look into this matter at once. ,««___
IIavino
Ser P« pe tha( places them in communication with the refrigerator, which is a teltcovered vessel of cylindrical shape, the tultes being made ot copper and riveted* to brass end plates. Ti\e two outward valves on the other side of lite air-pump communicate with the ethereotuleiiser, which is similarly constructed to the re ftigerntor. The tubes communicate at each end with metal chambers, one of which serves as a receptacle for the air that enters the condenser. Tlie whole is immersed tn a wooden tank, through which a stream of water constantly passes for cooling and condensing the ether vapor. A v*cum ia maintained by the air pump in the refrigerator, vapori*ing the ether at a low temperature. This operation Causes an absorption of heat, which reduces the temperature of tlie strong brine that Is made to circulate through the tube* and ice box. The icetax Is tank of red deal, varnished inside, with partition# with holes in them to al low a alow circulation of the brine. Zinc moulds of different widths, according to ihe shape of the blocks of ice required, are iMed with "phre water and suspended between the partitions.— WstvWjr.
Five Bastardy .Hniia Aginst On* Man. Marv Marshall SaRirdar, bwught
attachment were issued in the cases. Mfsm. faxton 4 Warrington brought the sulWk—
We are afraid John *h« a very large irtrawhenry festival on hiftd.
Cohme) iagerwW lectured in Washing* ton Sunday night "What Must I Do to he Saved.
is forced
Hunter
Sc
Washington (lit.patches show the
increase in a very few. months of that peculiar machine u.%cd iti manufacturing presidential candidates culled a bureau. It see in that two of the moat formidable of these machine# are located at Washingington and Chicago. The material from which they are manufactured nothing more nor less than a "bar'l,*' and their power measured from the size of the "bar'l."
heard a number of inquiries In
regard to the manufacture of ice by means of ether, the Daily
Nkws
offers the
following description of the process: It is well known that ether can be made to vaporize speedily as to produce intense cold. andif"when covered with water, its evaporation be assisted, it will escape so quickly as to lower the temperature of the water to freezing point, llence ether is often tised In preparing freezing mixture nnd a machine has lately l»etm constructed for making Ice by means of the remarkable property to which we have briefly alluded. Tlie apparatus consists of an engine nnd air-pump combined on the same bed plate, a refrigerator, an ether condenser, a circulating pump, and one or more ice-boxes according to the quantity reqdirefl—a steam engine supplying the motive power. The two inlet passage* of the air pump are connected bv a copper pliH\ from which branches another coptm
eat concern its supply of barrels from American paper barrel company. These paper barrels will probably super sede the wooden ones for oil as for filter things but at present the company is not quite prepared to put them upon the market—though some very perfect. ones have been "made. Tliev can be furnished cheaper than the oil company oau make their own wooden ones: and when it is added, that if the oil company could obtain them at even half a cent cheaper per barrel than their own factories can now pooduce them, the saving would be $150 a day. some idea may be had of the magnitude of tlie business.
We will present this idea in a still more. striking way. The company referred to makes no fewer than 30.000 barrels a day! Their factories in Cleveland, Toledo, etc., turn them out, all iron-bound and bluepainted at a cost of $1 35 a barrel. Of course, machinery has to do the work: which could not have been done in the days of the old hand- labor cooperages.
One machine alone takes a barrel and fits it with iron hoops, at the rate of 1,200 a day. To attend to these hooping machined it takes a man and two boys for each, to properly dispose of the barrels as fast at the machine "hoops them up." Even the painting is done by machinery.
If the paper barrels can be furnished at the rate of $1 80 each, the saving to the oil company will be $9,000 a week, not counting Sundays.
Gould's Start In Life.
The millionaire started aaa self-made mrveyor. He put his few rude instruments in a wheelbarrow, and trundled it from }oint to point, very much as Fisk peddled about the country in a wagon. One of the best maps of Delaware county has on the margin, "Surveyed by Jny Gould." He had quite a nack for trading, was very sharp aa a cattle-dealer, and one time he got a lesson that,lasted him for life. A farmer had a herd of cattle and Jay went to look at it. In the midst of the I bartering a woman appeared who had a talk with the old farmer, and Jay witching a word or two, heard her imploring him not to sell her cow. "I shall die if you do," she cried. "What's the matter with that woman?" ttBked Gould In his quiet way. "Oh, nothing she's afraid I'm going to sell her favorite cow, old Pailful." Gould thought he had found a prize. He deinandedi that the cow be
rought out, and insisted when he saw ier that she must go with the lot. The cattle were driven home, and Jay's father sent him to see what kind of a milker old Pailful was. Jay had hardly seated himself before the cow kicked him, pail *nd stool sky high, tore around the paaleaped the fence, and started toture, wards home. Jai thing from that wanted to keep.
Lovb
five dfttetrnt wits under the bastardy act ag&taftt John Carney. She allcars that she was delivered of five htotani children, of whow Carney was the father that they wem bora on the 7th of October, 18*? In their entirety. It never occurs to them 21st of December* ISKSI 80th of Fehruam JSfW.aOthof April. \m and the 30th of, April, 1?H. respectively. Affidavits for 1 issued in the cases. |te mouth with its little pearls, the perning soul, the charming
The special catTesjw&defii of ifcc Cm A V*tf Attckat tUc*« nCodsmer a&l writing from Indian-1 The Arizona Miner publishes the bapolB, Monday speaks ia the following which interest f-kin^iennsof 0*o 31rt*n C. Hunter &o*nk the office of Dr. I "Wnee A* iait klif-M am Sorry lo sa "Jlitlbobo thia morning thd lowerjaw of that lien. M.rtvy«i C. Hunter will not be
n»dkiaic Uw Governor. An element
tlHma
has never bought any1\y to this that a woman
"As the Twig is Bent," Etc. In nine $&8Q8 out of tcp, a man's life will not be a success if he does not bear burdens in his childhood. If the fondness or the vanity of father or mother has kept him from hard work if another always helped him out at the end of his row if instead of taking his turn at pitching off, he stowed awav all the time—in short, if what was ligbt fell to him, and what was heavy about the work to some one else if he has been permitted to shirk, until shirking has bejome a habit, unless a miracle has been frought, his life will be a failure,and the "blame will not be half so much his as that of his weak and foolish parents.
On the other hand, if a boy has been brought up to do his part, never allowed to shirk his responsibility, or to dodge work, whether or not it made his head ache, or soiled his hands, until bearing burdens became a master of pride, the heavy end of the wood his choice, parents, as they bid him good-bye, may dismiss their fear. The elements of success are his, and at some th v» and in some way the world will recognite his capacity.
of CmiAKfcjfc^-Tboee who love
children are not UdjjKffeho merely love the pleasure they ca#£et from children those love, not the children, but Ui€ pleasure, and the moment it causes to be pleasure, then fiurewell to the children. Thoee who really love children love all about them—the troubling and the teasing they make, the washing and wiping and worrying they do not tire withj their fretting, they are not distasted with their care, they are not made neryou*by their bawling they take them!
feet eye*, the intelligence, th« constant sense of the creation of anew human being going on under the eyes, the receptivity for lot®, lire thing Ibr love, all »»r overbalance anything tb*i is no* tn accord with
Umu
m*to pat it entirely out of sight and mtmt
ntire
i^ennd^Wtt i» £S£S?ISn,3Eo?th^ple 5h?iw3 't'V *,T£ i« P«rt of tlie herniate Bin™ the .John Coburn bids fair to become a formid able competitor for gubernatorial lion-1 our Savior. TJie bone is shaped ow. Bnt I must not anticipate a letter ?^ler tliat of a human to a great degree devoted especially to this subject
1JJ
Gen.
to retire upon accounts
of Ids health, which is quite ftelde. fie
had a rwvnt attack of fever, from which his recovery is slow and uncertain. By the last word I do not mean doubtfui, for with care and rest he will soon be well. He is a man of such active habits and high ambition that 'laying up for repairs" must be very trying, and lie has the sympathies of a wide circle of friends and acquaintances."
Paper Barrels for Oil.
Hartfcrd Time*. An agent of the Standard Oil Company was in town a day or two since, to inquire about the ehancc® of obtaining for that
folto
jlt) Gouged to a primitive
wag out of
I or vtlduy is ihu.s withdraw* fron? the |ynT. ftraolr, ni*teeti feci below tlie surisfce which makes it comparatively tame. 7?
tLe ground on
itf different from anv
somewhat wide where it is connected
ia somewhat wide where with tlie u»ui&>nd bone, but runs to a
inpnu do shape at
1
tooire pointed
the end of the
chin—never hat! more than air teeth, no igrindera, which leads those who have examined it to tlie belief that those who existed lierte and to whom this bone belongs, were grass or fruit eaters. Skulls have been found in this vicinity of peculiar shape however there is not the slightest doubt but they belonged to a primitive race, of whom we have no tradition save the relics excavated from beneath tlie surface of the earth, often being found eighty to one hundred feet deep. We liave every evidence that there have, at two distinct and remote periods, people lived here who were different in every jarficular. The ruins of the most ancient pre-hisloric race, numerous and mostly hidden from view, being covered by earth, show but liule evidence of the civilization that followed of the more recent inhabitants. The buildings of the Aztecs were constructed with great skill lor protection agHinst the incursions from any enemy, while the inscriptions ujon rocks show much advancement over the older inhabitants of the earth. The canals dug by the inhabitants who lived here about the year 1,000 show master skill, and compare favorably with those buftt in the nineteenth century bv survey of the skilled engineer.
1 News Boy*» lleath-bed. I looked at the boy, whose years numbered fourteen or fifteen, and saw in the white face, hollow cheeks and the unearthly bright eyes, the unmistakable marks of that dread disease which places its victims beyond all hope—consumption. On the table lay an old Bible, its yellow pages lying open where the mother had finished reading. The boy's mind was wandering. He was too weak to cough, and the accumulation in his throat could not b$ removed. "Shine yer boots—shine 'em upferanick—morning ]apcr sir?" came in feeble accents from the pillow. "Paper sir? Morning paper! All about the" .And the sufferer made an effort to clear his throat, which occasioned something like a death rattle. The mother was on her knees at the lounge sobbing, and Jack, her other son who had brought me to the room, was by her side crying. I lifted the wasted frame and moistened tlie poor boy's parched lips and tongue with water from the cracked glass that stood on the window sill. He felt the cool hand on his brow and his mind came backto him. "Oh, Jack, I'm soglad you have come home. I shan't sell any more papers or black any more boots, Jack bnt don't cry. Mothers been readin' somethin' better'n newspapers to me, Jack, and 1 know where I'm goin'. Give my kit. to Tom Jones. I owe him twenty cents. Bring all yonr money home to mother, Jack. I wonder if I'll be 'papers' or 'boots'—up there? Good-by, mother good-by,Jack. See'emshine. Morning "Jim, the news-boy, was dead.— iMroil lYt'e l*rm.
CMtorncns nt Caw.
JOHUST "W. CORY, ATTORFEY AT LAW. Oftlce, Ko. 830 Ohio Street, Terre Haute.
McLEAN & SELDOM RIDGE, Attorneys at Law, 420 Main Street. Terre Haute, Ind.
Oito. W. KJ.BI.OER. A a. II. Klkiscr. G. W. & J. II. KLEISER, Attorneys at Law, Office, 314 Ohio Street. Terre Haute, Ind.
S.
Havw. S. B. Davis,
O
Notary.
DAVIS & DAVIS, Attorneys at Law,
22^ South Sixth Street, over Postofflce, Terre Haute, Ind.
jr. KELLE 7ST, Attorney at Law, Third Street, between Main and Ohio.
CARLTON & LAMB,
ATTOKNEVS AT LAW.
Corner of Fourth and Ohio. Terre'Haute.
PIERCE"&~HAIIPER7 Attorneys at Law, Ohio street, near Third, Terre Haute, Ind.
BUFF & BEECHEEr
ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Terre Haute, Ind.
JT. XI- BLAKE, Attorney mt Law. Ohio Street, Terre Haute, Ind.
C. MONXTTT, Attemeyjd Law, 322, Ohio Street* Terre Haute, Ind.
EGGLEST0N & BEED,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Ohio Street, Terre, Haute, Indiana.
C. SrtttsoK
Dl'NNIGAN^ STIMSON, Attorneys at Law, 3Q0$£ Ohio Street, Terre Hayte, Ind.
A. B. FELSEXTHAL, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Ohio Street, Terre Haute, Ind. F. C. DANALDSON,
ATTORNEY AT LAW, Corner Main and Third Street*,
at last year's wholesale prices.
Pfjnsiciait.
~I)R. McGREW]
80S OHIO St., bet. Third and Fourth-
AL. SCHA AT., Proprietor.
WALL SIBLEY'S
SAMPLE BOOMS No. 18 South Fifth, twtwwm Main km!
LOW BREAK
S-D-G-A-R-S
-AT-
W.W. OLIVER & GO'S
CALL AND FIND OUT PRICES
COR.4TH AND CHJEBRY.
1VE A-3STTJF' A CTTJI^EII^S,
{The value of whose products is counted by millions of dollars, feel their advantage over limited dealers more than ever before, for they eanalford^to sell their merchandise at a much lower ligure than small dealers can. Our belief remains unshaken, and we shallact upon it, that the best time to sell cheap is when others are selling dear that more fortunes have been made by selling at low prices than at liiiih prices and, finally, that the price tells, and every body tells the price, whether the price be hii^h or low.
The fabrics from which we manufactured our spring and summer stock were selected before the recent advance, which enables us to not only save our customers the middleman profit-, but also save them the isecent advance that every small dealer had to pay for his goods.
We therefore take pleasure in announcing to our patrons that Men's, Youths', Joys' and C'hillhvn's Clothing, (tent's Furnishinur Goods of every shade and grade, will be retailed
OWEN, PIXLEY & CO.
508 and 510 Main st., Terre Haute.
W. S. CLIFT, J. II. WILLIAMS. J. M. CLIFT
CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO,
MANUFACTURERS OF
SASHES, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC.
AND DEALERS IN
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders' Hardware.
CORNER OK NINTH AND MULBKRRY. STRKVTS, TERRK HAUTK. L\!.
BTTCT^EYIE] CASH STORE.
GEORGE ARBUCKLE,
DEALER IN
Dry Goods, Notions, Furs, Shawl&, Underwear, &c. Butterick's Patterns, Ladies' Ready-Made Suits and Dressmaking a Specialty.
MAIN STREET. CORNER OF SIXTH, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
S I I A N
North-west cor. Third and Main. Rc*idence--67B Ohfo street. Offkf honr*- fr"om 8 to jo a.m.. 1 tn
ft
p.m. and
A in
fi p.m.
iDinco anb ignore.
OLD KENTUCKY BOURBON
COURT EXCHANGE SALOON,
Clrji 0oode
NEW ARRIVALS
AT
JAURIET & CO'S.
Novelties in Dress Goods
POLKA DOT SATIN,
Polka Dot Trimming Geat Variety of Si
OMo.
tyOld Kentucky Sour Maah Whisky, fine brands of Cigar*. Wine*. elc.,\snMantle (mi hand. ..
Silks in hades,
Polka Dot Caahmi*r«w and Orenadln**.
French Suitings, French Bunting*, fresh arrival of Jet Trimming* and Fringe*. A aasortment of Tien, Bow# and ua, from 15 cent* to $15, Dotted and figured Swing good* in great variety.
SHETLAND SHAWLS.
A Large Line of Elegant
BLACK DKB88 GOODS ADE SILKS. A Latgc Assortment of
Spring Cloaking. Monde Cloth*, Lace Ton Liule Glove*, Kucbinga. Revering, FrilT ing, Swits Embroidery.
You will find u* headquarter* for nice good* at reasonable prices.
Corner Fifth and Main.
