Daily News, Volume 1, Number 81, Franklin, Johnson County, 22 May 1880 — Page 3

DAILY SEWS

SATURDAY. MAY 22, 1880.

Political.

POK

h'»*a#

fctJi'U-t-' fur Kfpr-#etitacive in Cingrr#* fr jsa tfce Bightb Indiana, atsh.Wt to

«rf the ltr publican t*rtiir-tiUuu. l» be held Trrr« Haute, J«r,e

^rili SC'oisif JF if

Vt II.

for.

Jott* Itornie will a r.andliiat« for the office of Comity l»«rk, xuiijpct to thf di'cUinn of the n««mocratir Sotnltiatlntc Convention.

Urru,t

«if lltn ifr [Kibl'rati Nom-'n lUfij? Convention 1 II

1

H. Keucry, of Vic C'*nniy, i»

22.

FOR HHBBIFF.

JottX BEAi.. o! iUrtif'll

Mtrf will iw tusdiiUk for Slierlffof Vi th« dcciniorR of the llep-Jl'/"

i»« H. KI*K WSH be before the R^pi.bil-

ntifiii for the nomination for Sheriff.

tkkahi kfk.

rfH'vrir

•J'it! I.. 1 i£')»S W iii a lx: iSrj.nhiif.4Ji nominating Convention for

r«.-

lh.

of r..,rihiy Trrwurcr, aahject to the 'hi- or scfifiuii.

T:i' D.ut .'•kw« !.« authorto aruo-. ae« Wleuii W of ,.f8r Creek TftWftuh'p, a* a for To wiirer of Vijjo waitijf, .abject t» th«- «»f Ui«- H«pablican Roiaiiisll!^: eon-

I) W'aiu. of Tn .i» rrr of Ixlor. of !h«- iK'Irif

i-ili a c-irididatr for thf'i» cotirity, »u?jrrl to lbs: tit •eratic nomination convention, of Plmruto, will fx: a candi''uunty Treasurer, to if the Blocrntic nominating con-

N li KKNK'rr. flft'e f'/r !hr -Vftl. .- 'J

oh

Hi. d. Vclitimi.

Cr.*rr*:Uir A a i«i«Ti»!!i of f? lion.

HA of Kl'ey towiuhlp, will ounty Tr*a*urirr. *«jbject to the Republican dominating convt n-

\rr i.kbh.

oi

Mbkrim.

We «.r. aiitfiorijtffl to announce that

?f. Sutrii i-» a raniiUtate for th«? nomination for t'lt-rit of Vltfo county, *iil»jt-ct to the wlil wf the I«'{iihli »r, nominating convrhsion.

W* ar- nntfior!/.«-J to announce tliat A. will a camttdate beforv thf Itppiililkan uount/ (.ii*intioii for tho nomination for Clerk of "fytfO odtitf

L. A, ili uxerr in a candkiaU for Clerk of tluTotirfa. u» the flecSnlon of the Hfpubllc.an Uom na t! njj conv Ion,

am

Wr arc authoriat'd to annoance that WtiTt.f

K. lla.Mitnti la a trtinildnUi for tho oOlct- of Clork

tl",

(mm'*ubJ,

ct ,w thc

1 1

Ciclcdcb Xllioccllanti.

Education for the Kitchen* Tho next great step must bo in aid of ,»e art of cookery and the friends of j^nuine social improvement may congratulate themselves that tho progress education Is beginning to take effect mentof lomestlc life. Coiking-schobls are bo- master's bloodhound in the bedroom,

upon this most important department of, lestlc life. Cooking-schools are lo-"

!ng

organised in manv places in this ountryand in Knglami, and the English Vc taking the lead in making tlicin a Hrt of their national and common school •stem.

Of the importance, the Imperative noessity of this movement, there can not ,e the slightest question. Our kitchens, is Is |»erfectly notorious, are the fortiflea utronchments of ignorance, prejudice, rational habits, rule-of-thumb, and terftal vacuity, and the consequence is Mat the Americans are liable to the reroach of suffering beyond any other xmle, from wasteful, unpalatable, unjalthful and monotonous cookery. Coni.dering our resources, and the vaunted !lucation ami intelligence of American dtnen, this reproach is just. Our kithens are. in fact, almost abandoned to he control of stupid creatures that nour ujion us fVom all tmrts of the glole.

Utd, what is worse, tnere is a general cqtiiescence in this state of things, as if were something fated, and relief from a hopeless and impossible. We profess believe in the potency of education, dare applying it to all other interests industries excepting only tho ftinda?ntal preparation and usa of food to I uitain life, which involves more of economy, enjoyment, health, spirits and the wer of effective labor, than any other bject tl»at is formally studied in the »o«ls. We abound in female seminars, and in female colleges, and high •hools, i»up|HuttHl by burdensome taxc«, which everything under heaven is 'idled except that practical art which

I a dailv and vital necessity in all the -usehuld* of the land

u"he beautiful extract below is from pen of Hon. Ueotfre 8. tlillartl— confrjw tlutt 'ncnwtng years bring th them at\ lncn»asing respeet ftwr wh" do iwi in life, as thooe rds nrv cointnouly use*!. Heaven tft to N? a place for tluwe who have stU iX ded ui^ix earth and it is *ely true wlestial gra«w do not be$t

Ive and blomn in thc hot bUuw of rldly proswritv. Ill fometee arise* fhnn a snj^cralnmdance of jJlties thetnselv^ gtHxl—fham a

«lloos,Inttx

?ien^e sensitive, a taste too a self brgetfUlnc«» too rw jutic. a tinnlesty tw retiring. I will go so far as to my, with a livittg dt» that 'the worhl knows nothing itest men,1 but there are form* of

at. HI:

*E

Itnt^wt or at lestst excellence, which n*ake no aignthere are marthat mis# the plan but not the ike hcn»ca without the laurel, and »*!ttenri» without the triumph*

l||mptation is a feerfbt word. It in4i-

!.«f

the lcgintivnfi of possible series {infinite eviK It is the ringing of an inn, whose melancholy sound* may verberate tlvrongti eternity, like the

Iden. sharp cry of "firef* in the nighty as to instantaneous activity.

lagcasltj of Fraud.

I We find the foUcnring story fai Fraacia* "Huttory of the BajriJt tUigland." In 1870, a gentleman of eminence in I the mercantile world was grieved by the con ten

LB

U'T

the.Srti*.E*)ti

Tv,wt

#b!p. i* a OU)di

date for She-f iff of \'U'" '«ai4iy, ^object to the de daion h! oui.', 1 Afimin* MiHRt r..

nocrsUc Convrntkm. f!I- Creek town*h!p. •e the lUpchHeaii Cotinty

of a letter which he received

from a correspondent at Hamburg, the poet-mark of which it bore. From the I statement it contained, it appeared that a person most minutely described had deinuided the writer, under exfcraordinary drcnnisUncea, of £3,000. The let-

continued to my infonnaticm had been o!tained that the defraader—the dre» person of whom it described —wmand

occasionally to be aeen on the

Dutch walk of the road exchange. The object of the writer was to induce his correspondent to invite the party to dinI ner, and by any moral force which could le usel, compel him to return the mon* I ey adding, that if he should be found I amenable to reason, and evince any gipnji of rej^entance. he might be di.«mbaed with a friendlv caution and five

Imndred pounds, as he was a near relalive of the writer. AM the gentleman whose mime it bore was a profitable correspondent, the London merchant kept a keen watch on the Dutch walk, and was at Inst successful in meeting and Ix-ing introduced to the cheat.

The imitation to dine was accepted and tht- iuj«t, having previously jdven notice to his family to quit the table soon after dianer, acquainted his visitor with the knowledge of the fraud. Alarm find horror was depicted in the countenar.ee of the young man, who with tones apparently tremulous with emotion, 1 thr.t his dLn^race might not be made public. To this the merchant conHenteti, provided the £2,000 was returned. I The vi.Hitor nighed deeply but .saii that to return all was impossible, a» he had unfortunately spent part of the amount

Tho remainder, however, he propose to yield instantly, and the notes were handed to the merchant, who, after dilating I on the goodness of the man he had robbed, concluded his moral lesson by handing him a check for £500 as a proof of his beneficence. The following morning the gentleman went to the banker to deposit the money he had received, when, to his great Burpriae, he was tolu that the notes were counterfeit. His next inquiries were concerning the check, but that had been cashed shortly afb'r the opening of the bank. lie im* mediately sent an express to his Hamburg correspondent, who replied that the letter was a forgery, and that no fraud had been committed upon him. The whole affair had been plotted by a gang, some of whom were on the continent and some in England

Power of the Human Eye. Rome years ago an English officer o! high rank, a Colonel of the Blues, was visiting his friend, Col. or the Guards who resided in Buckingham-

shire. This gentleman had a very fine, b'oodhound. which he kqpt fastened in the yard. One morning, after tho arrival of his visitor, Col. was much

was

surprised at not seeing his friend as usual at tho breakfast table, and he sent a pen-ant to his room to asccrtaiu what had become of him.

The servant found the ledroom door i^jar, and. on knocking, the gentleman crird, "Come in. and remove this beast out of my room, whereupon the servant entered and was astonished to find the

verv Lirge and fierce dog, who had broken his chain and escnped from the yard, and, having scented a stranger in the house, had stipped into the bedroom, as the door had been left unclosed by a servant who had called the visitor in tlio morning.

Tho i()g was on his hind legs at tho foot of the bed. with his forefeet resting on it, fixing his eve intently and ferociously on the unfortunate gentleman, apparently waiting for an opportunity cn he was

to spring upoti( him, from wln'ci prisoner upon the animal

only restrained by his prisoner his eye steadily fixed ur ur most unenviable condition for more than half an hour. Tbe dog must have been very cunning, as he made his way up.stairs unobserved by the servants.

Shocking Criminal*.

Tho Ohio Penitentiary management determined not to be outdone tiy Edi ••on. have Introduced electricity as a mode of nuniahment The electric apparatus is in a box two inchc* in length, three inches high and three inches wide. It contains an electro majrnet. The prisoner ts taken to tho ducking-box, but is stripped and blindfolded before coming in sight of the water-box he is then led around anil placet! in the box, handcuffed but not shackled at the feet. The room is warm, having fire in it day and night. He sits down in water three inches deep. One pole of tho battery is placed in the water. A sponge is attached to the end of the other pole.

The deputy warden superintends the punishment, which consists in touching tho bore skin of the convict in various places with the sponge. A prisoner turns a small crank attached to the electric apparatus. The coucern is so small that it looks like a child's toy, hot it makcS the snhjeH of punishment yell sometimes as though he was badly hurt or badly frightened. This mode of punishment, it ts tmitl, does no harm, ami in somerasea is a physical benefit 'The punishment is said to be effectual on account of the man being blindfolded. 1 le has no Idea where or when he is going to le touched, and is not nerved against it, as one would lie who takes hold of the poles of a battery with his eyca open and his thought# concentrated for the expected shock. It is said the mode of punishment has reduced the visits to the room +5 per cent. The dungeons have been dispensed with, except five. About one man per week i* famished in the new way.

"When a stranger treats me with want of proper respect,* said a philosophic poor man. "I comfbrt myself with the rejection that it is not myself he slights bat my old shabby coal, and hat, which to say the troth hall no particular chum# to admiration. So if my hit and coat dbocee to fret about it, let them, it is nothing to me.

Sijirts

GET

YOUR SHIRTS

MADE TO

MEASURE,

AT

ZEE TT 3ST IE S'

Shirt Factory,

523

STHEET.

illcrcl]ant (Tailoring anb Cloll]in$.

PHILIP SCHL0SS,

Merchant Tailor

AM) CLOTHIER.

420 MAIN STREET.

Car iXJarHs.

.TERRE HAUTE CAR

AXD

Manufacturing Co..

MANUFACTURERS OF

CARS, CAR WHEEIS

RAILROAD CASTINGS AXD

J. B. HAGER. Pre#*t and Trea». JAS. SEATH. Vice-Pres't and SopX L. G. IXAGER, Secretary.

TKRKE 11.11 TE, 1X1).

fttteccllancons.

N I E

Tlie lcst made In Detroit/Chicago, Cincinnati and other leading factories.

FRED. GOETZ,635

1SIAINSTREET,

SOUTH SIDE.

R. FORSTER &0 SOIT,

HEALERS fS'

Furniture, Mattresses, Parlor and Bedroom Suits,

103 and 104 North Fourth Street,

TEIrtlrilEC ZEi^TJTE,

TJSrJDTJ±3STJ±-

W. S. CLIPT, J. H. 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 OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS, TERRK

IND*

HAUTE,

Railroai) ilimc dablc.

1L41UROAD TIME TABLE.

{Carefalhr corrected to date.]

U&Son Depot—Tenth sadChestaat St*., to all train* except I. A St. L.. T. II. fc S. E. (to Worthiaj^oal. mad freight*. Time. Sve minute# faster than Tt rre Haute tine.

KXTLASATtoji or wmtaKxcB xaaas. •Kvenr day. AH other day. trarJor car* iiqgcar*. cReeltaing

i# ire mfnme* faster than city time. AND

ALIA LINK

Leave gol&g £ut)

•»F»t Line :ia a Hailand Ae« ... ... 3:40 tj *#*Day Kx. SK6 Mail «cd At* MKlim

Arrive from Ea#o

•»PscificSt l*an HillTnto..., 9:55am •**Fa»t Kx 3.05 tn IndUnaptilU Arc T.-00 tLeave \Vf#t)

•sPMlflc Kx ItSfatn. Mall Train *t.Fa«t Hx »... S:io pia (Arrive from Went •»Fa*t Line :32 am Mail and Acc :W a in •»Dsy

Ex. ... S:4Spm TERRE HAUTE Jt L(H,ANsr«RT. lxigauvport Div. of \Leave for Northeast Mall Train 6:*a Mixed Train 4 iArrive from Northwest Mail Train 1:15 pm Mixed Train 5 r00

TERRE HAUTE St EYANSV1LLE. Leave for South •#N«»hvJlle Ex 4:90 •Exprtf# 3:10 pin Freffiht and Acc 5:ti0« ui (Arrive from Sonih! •Eastern Ex :':»pm •M'"hlcaj£T» Ex Freight and Acc 5:00

CHICAGO EASTERN ILLINOIS. (Leave fr Northt 11 and Chicago Ex 7:30 a tn Panvllle Acc 3:H» n\ **Xa»hvilio and Chi capo Ex 10:.VI (Arrive from North* Terre Haute Acc 11:10 a Chicajfo and Terre Haute Kx 5:S0 •sChicago and Narhville Es 4:sSt) a tn

ILLINOIS MIDLAND RAILWAY. (Leave for Northweet)

Peoria Mail and Ex t:07* Decatur Paseeneer 4:tC (Arrive from Northwest) Peoria Mail and Ex OKW lndiannpolb Pa*?eii^r 12:50 ji in

T. II. Jt SOUTHEASTERN, (to Worthington. [Deiot. Main and First St•?.] (Leave f«»r Sotitheftftl Accommodation 7 :ifl

n\

(Arrive from SoiitheaM

Accommodation 3:00 pm INDIANAPOLIS A ST I OUIS. I Depot, Sixth and Tlppeeaisoe Str.j (Leave going Ead •ccFew York Expre»« 1:8!l a Indlnnupo.ic and Xlattoon Acc S:4fl a 'Day Kxprcee..« 3:10 pm (Arrive fcom Ea»t..l

Day SxprfM 10:52 a in •cuNew York Exprem. :8fl a Indianapolio and Mattoon Acc 6:85 (Leave (going Wi !. •csNew York Ex 1 :!W a Day Ex IO:Mani Inulanupoli* and Mattuon Acc 6:87 a (Arrive from Woo! I •c»New York Ex 1 :S3 a lndian»iK)ll) r.n:l Mattoon Acc S:44 n» Dnr Ex

M:iSp»H

Katzoiibrtcli's Havana

Whips, 5 coiit.s only.

BATHS! BATHS!

KEEP COOI

i.

Tyrk::h, Elsctric anil Phis Baths

FROM 25 Is. TO $1.00.

Producing luxury, health. Hygiene and hnppfncM.

Competent Male aad Female AttendanU. ValtinWe a? a nanitary tn earn re and for chronic ailment*, debility, etc, peculiar to thic »ea»on of the year. No. 13" north Sixth street.

Patient* vl»ited at convenient cllistancei", if nnabJe to come for treatment. A H. Defer, M. I). Prop'r.

OIEtlDimRS

PR031PTLY FILLET)

AT

E E S

Dealer in Wool and Maniifactarer of

Cloths, Cassimeres, Tweeds. Flannels, Jeans, Blanket#* Stocking Yarns,

Cardina: and Spinning.

N. B.—The highest market price So ea«h, or onr own make ot j.''"''!* -schatige. iv*J.

Terre Haute Banner,

TRI WEEKLY asi WKEJ.LY.

Office 21 South Fifth Street.

P. CiFROEREIi. proprietor.

THE ONLY GERMAN PAPER IN TIIE CITT OF TERRE HAUTE.

English and Germain Job Printing

Execeted is tbe be*» manner.

«. 7i. B.

Morton Post, No. 1,

f»*fAirr*»*T or ivatA*^

TERREHAtJTE

Headqaaner* 3$% ftoath Third. ReffularHM«firr 8#trrt as4 'V-*» TbnrMiay &KT Roam opmm ewtty

Comrade* ri*lt?n« tike city will al*rar* be m4« wtictm*. W

Mobmot.A4j1.OmStr.Oflceilf.5.P.McLEA*

I«t Cra*nw»«. 5, A.

at