Daily News, Volume 1, Number 92, Franklin, Johnson County, 4 June 1880 — Page 3
1
DAILY NEWS
FRIDAY. JUNE 4. 1880.
Political.
FOB C-OMiBEMM.
THOMAS H. NKUOX,
of Vigo County, if
Srrrr
A
can
didate for Representative in Congress frjm the Eighth District. Indian*, subject
to
the decision
of the Republican nominating convention, to be held at Terre Haute, Jane 28.
FOR SHERIFF.
JOHX BEAL, of Harrison Township, is a candi date for Sheriff of Vigo County, subject to the deciaion of the County Democratic Convention.
ANIIAHAM
MABKLB, of Otter Creek township,
will be a candidate before the Republican Connty Convention for Sheriff. JACKHOS
will be a candidate for Sheriff of
Vigo County, subject to the decision of the Republican Convention. WILLIAM H. FUK will be before the Republi can Convention for the nomination for Sheriff.
W)1 TY THEAM KKR.
CAPT. JOHH L. BROW* will be a candidate be fore the Republican nominating convention for the office of County Treaaurer, subject to the wishes of the convention.
The DAILY NEWS is authorized to announce WEBB W. CAST©, of Sugar Creek Township, as a candidate for Treasurer of Vigo county, subject to the decision of,the Republican nominating convention.
D. M. WALLACB will be a candidate for the office of Treasurer of Vigo county, subject to the decision of the Democratic nomination convention.
N. B. KENETT, of Pimento, will be a candidate for the office of County Treasurer, subject to the decision of the Democratic nominating convention.
CKKTEXAUT A. RAT, of Riley township, will be a candidate for County Treasurer, subject to the decision of the Republican nominating convention.
COUNTY CI.KRK.
We «ro authorized to announce that MKKHIM, N. SMITH IS a candidate for the nomination for Clerk of Vigo connty, subject to the will of the Republican nominating convehtion.
We are authorized to announce that C. A. J'oWKit will be a candidate before the Republican county convention for the nomination for Clerk of Vigo county.
L. A. Banwurr Is candidate for Clerk of the Courts, subject to the decision of the Republican nominating convention,
JOHN HOTSB will bo a candidate for the office of County Clerk, subject to the decision of the Democratic Nominating Convention.
We are authorized to announce that WILLIAM K# HKNDUK
II
is a candidate for the office of Clerk
of the Vigo Circuit Court, subject to the decision of the Republican Nominating Convention.
FOR COROVKH.
Wo are authorized to nnnounco the name of Dr.
•IAS.
T. l/Ai'dtiRAi) as a candidate for Coroner, subject to the decision of the Republican nominating convention.
We are authorized to announce the name of Dr. JAMBS F. MIGURW as a candidate for Coroner, subject to the decision of the Republican nomlnu tiug convention.
Cyprian Women.
A. wo approach tho Moslem wnim i* Irnw their ynshmnks round their fiu-i Even the Greeks tidoct to shun our The little ones either dart inside or lnd their heads in their mother's lap in order to escape the evil oyc. But all are moved and excited by your presence in the streets. Sometimes the doors are silently put to as you (?ut near not always, and in truth, not often for tho natives of both races, and especially too Moloms, look on you as friends. A trickle of water can be heard in every yard, whilo dates and oranges riso above ievory wall. Arches run along three
Bides of tho enclosed space. Under these arches on the ground floor lodge the enmel, mule and ox supposing that the owner has such property as camel, mule and ox. Every family has a palm tree, almost every one has a garden and not a few have ,a water wheel. Ahove the a*clu* live the family, the female members in a department of their own. Men are content to iodgo like shepherds, near their mules and cattle, while their wives and sisters sleep in chambers j' overlooking the orange trees, and within hearing of the water wheel. Women of all ages, clothed in sea green, nink and orange garments, sit under tne trees,
droning their native songs, while their busy fingers draw and spin their native silk. Yentas and balconies hang above the streetK, luring in every breath of air. I The jalousies are down, but you are made aware, by the echo of .whispered words and feminine laughter, that tho critics are at. work on your pale face, pnggeree and riding boots. A hundred alleys, winding under minarets and palms, in and out, among an endless se* ries of fountains, orange clumps and olive jiroumls, make up the labvrinth of
Nicosia, this jDiimoscrs of the ^ea.
Bayard Taylor tells a story of a ladj in German v. who was culled" suddenly to provide ft dinner for the reigning duke. {She wits at her country-house, short of provisions, when she receive*! word that the duke was near by, and would dino with her. Th? only meat at band was 4 a hnunch of vtnison nnd some scraps for sonjv The soup went off well. But, «8 the waiter was bringing in the venison, he unluckily lifletl the dish, and the haunch fell to the floor- Tho lady was in despair, but without a flush on her countenance, or A quiver in her voice, said, quietly, "Take it away.**
The ill-fntcd haunch was taken ont, put on a new dish, regarnished, ana Drought back again. Tho hostess, who been talking serenely with her roy-
J* lhad wen talking
al visitor, cut off a delicate slice of the venison, and said. "Will your Royal Highness have of this?" He was shrewd enough to detect her artifice, and good1 natuml enough to show an indifference to accidents, ibr he replied, not wilhont a touch of sarcasm, "Thank you if you please, I will take a piece or the first,"
Greeley and Taylor.
The following chapter of autboiography. detailing the commencement of the life-long friendship between those distinguished men, HORACE GBEEUEY and BAYARD TAYLOR, is part of a letter from the latter t® the Tnoune soon after .the death of Mr. Greeley: "My own intercourse with him' (Hoi* ace Greeley) though often interrupted by absence or divergence of labor, was frank at the start, and grew closer and more precious with every year. In all my experience of men, I have never found one whose primitive impulses revealed themselves with such marvelous purity and sincerity. His nature often seemed to me as crystal-clear as that of a child. In my younger and more sensitive days, he often gave me a transient wound but such wounds healed without a scar, and I always found they came from the lance of a physician, not from the knife of an enemy.
I first saw Mr. Greeley in June, 1844, when I was a boy of 19. I applied to him for an engagement to write letters to the Tribune from Germany. His reply was terse enough. "No descriptive letters
Y*
he said, "I am sick of them.
When you have been there long enough to know something, send to me, and, if there is anything in your letters, I will publish them." I waited nearly a year, and then sent seventeen letters, which were published. They were shallow enough, I suspect but what might they not have been without his warning.
Toward the end of 1847, while I was engaged in that unfortunate enterprise of trying to establish a weekly paper at Phoenixville. Pa., I wrote to him—foreseeing the failure oi my hopes—asking his assistance in procuring literary work in New York. He advised me (as I suspect he has advised thousands of young men), to stay in the country. But I haa stayed in the country, and a year too long so another month found me in New York, and in his office, with my story of disappointment, and my repeated request for nis favorable influence. "I think you arc mistaken," he said "but I will bear you in mind, if I hear of any chance."
Six weeks afterward, to my great surprise (for I supposed he had quite forgotten me), ho sent for me and offered me a place on the Tribune. I worked hard and incessantly during the summer of 1848, hearing never a word of commendation or encouragement but one day in October, he suddenly came to my desk, laid his hand on my shoulder, and said: Yoii have been faithful but now you need rest. Take a week's holiday, and go to New England." I obeyed, and found on my return that he had ordered my salary to bo increased.
I think none of his associates at that time ever wrote a line he did not critically read. His comments sometimes seemed rough, but they were always wholesome and almost invariably just.
Once he called me into his room, pointed to a poem of mine which ha/ just appeared in a literary magazine, and abruptly asked: "Whv did you publish that gassy stuff?" My indignation was even greater than my astonishment. I rotorted, fiercely: "Mr. Greeley, I should feel hurt by your question,"if I had any resjeefc, whatover, for your judgment in regard to poetry!" He smiled a sad, forgiving smile, and said nothing. Years afterward, I saw that he was right the poem was only a piece of sounding rhetoric, for which "gassy" was i5erhaps a coarse but certainly not an inappropriate epithet. In this, as in other respects, the disipline he subjected ine to was excellent if not the result of intellectual perception.it manifested an instinct even more remarkable.
Two pictures, equally illustrative of tho man, remain with mo from that first year. One, an afternoon in the little editorial office under tho roof Mr. Greeley bending over tho yellow transfer-paper on which tho telegraphic dispatches were written. The light from the window fell on the top of his bald head, which presented its full circumference to me as he leaned down. I was looking at it vacantly, when I saw a fiery, scarlet flush rise from his neck and temples like a wave, and flood the white crown. Tho next moment he rose, threw back his head, and uttered a fearful shriek. For a minute, nearly, I thought him mad. He flung his hands up and down ami cried: "It has come! It has come! "and laughed in half-delir-ious ecstacy. It was the news of the passage of the Wilmot Proviso. •Another day, his little son Arthur^ whose exquisite features, blue eyes anu golden hair, remain in my memory as a more angelic apnarition than any cherub face which Rapliael ever painted, came into tho ollico to meet him on his return from a journey. When he saw the boy he gave a similar'shriek, caught him under the arms, tossed him aloft, and finally clasped him to his breast with a wort!less outcry of passionate love and joy, so intense "that I almost shuddered to hear it. I felt then that I had caught one of the clows to a correct understanding of his nature that he was "dowered with a love of love," which, in the reticent world, feels itself to be something akin to weakness, and often feigns its opposite in order to naf*k its presence.
Grains of Gold.
A curt answer has two edges. The doctor's memory is apt to fail. I None are overstocked with patience.
The
fight.
right must sometimes yield or
Death has nothing terrible in it but what life has made so. Censure is the tax a man pays the public for being eminent.
The man lacks moral courage who treats when he should retreat. Motives are like harlequins—there is always a second dress beneath the first.
Make a man think he is more cunning than yourself, and you can easily
outwit
him. If you woilul render your children helpless, never compel or permit them to help themselves.
Never reflect on a past action which was done with a good motive and the beet judgment at the time.
Absence destroys small passions and increases great ones, as wind blows out I kindlesjSres,
Shirts
GET
YOUR SHIRTS
MADE TO
:m::ela_stt:r,:e,
_«T
HU1TTEE/S'
SMrt Factory,
523
l^LJ^XJST STREET.
33 XT ""ST YOUR
HATS & BONNETS
AT EMIL BAUER'S
Wholesale and Retail Millinery Store. The largest stock and lowest prices.
PHILIP SCIELOSS,
Merchant Tailor
AXl) CLOTHIER,
420 MAIN STREET.
(tar toorks.
TERRE HAUTE CAR
AND
Manufactoring Co.,
MANUFACTURERS OF
CARS, CAR WHEEIfi
RAILROAD CASTINGS AND
A I N E
iUcccliuut Collating ani (Elotljing.
J. B. HAGBR, Prte't and Treas. JAS. SEATH, Vice-Pres't and Sup't. L. G. HAGKB, Secretary.
L. A. BURNETT,
DEALER IN
Leather and Ides,
No. 115 South Fourth Street, Terre Haute, Ind First Store North of Market House.
TERRE HAUTE, IW».
illisccllciuons.
-R. FOBSTBE &O SOIST,
DEALERS Df
Furniture, Mattresses, Parlor and Bedroom Suits,
102 and 104 North Fourth Street,
TERRE HAUTE, IISTIDIAnsrA.
\V. S. CLIFT. J. H. WILLIAMS.
CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO,
MANUFACTURERS
OF
SASHES, DOORS, BLINDS, ETC.
-AND DEALERS IN
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass, Paint?, Oils and Builders' Hardware:
CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS. TERMS HAUTE, IND.
is
J. M. CLIFT
Post ©fiuc DnlLctin.
Closing of the Mails and Carrier BellToy Carriers Leave for
EAST. Delivery. Clo&*&
Indianapolis and thro' east 700 am..l&OOni Indianapolis* and stations oa YandaliaRailroad... 7 00am.. SWan Indianapolis and stations on
Yandalia Railroad 1190 am.. Indianapolis and stations on I 7:00a m..l^Qtaiait I. Jt St. 11 90 am 230p3n Eastern Indiana. Chicago and
Northern Illinois 11 30 a in 815 pan Eastern Kentucky 4 90pm..
Upm
Indianapolis and thro' "*t— 4 20pm.. pan Indianapolis and stations on Yandalia Railroad 420pm.. SIS Jin Iowa, Michigan, Minnesota and
Wisconsin. 4 30 pm.. SlSjoa WEST. St. Louis and thro' west 7 00am..lEO^ate Junctions on Yandalia RR. and
Southern Illinoi 7 00 a m..r2Gfcn3K St. Louis and thro" west 420pm..ISttfccA St. L«uis and stations on Yandalia Railroad 4 20 pin.. S 36 a 3D St. Louis and stations on 1. &
St. L.RR 4 30 pm..ld3&aao St. Louis and thro' west 4 20 pm.. 21&|uu Marshall and stations south on theDanville&YincennesRR.ll 80 am.. Peoria and stations on Illinois
Midland Railroad 7 00am.. 60Gaau Stations on Toledo, Wabash & Western RR. west of Danville 700 a m..TO0&3»aa
XORTH.
Chicago, 111., (thro' pouch 7 00 a m.. 10 CSyai Danville and stations on E. T.
H. & C. RR 7 00am.. 6ta&x> Iowa, Minnesota, Wisconsin and Northern Illinois 7 00 a Chicago. Iowa.- Michigan,
Minnesota. Wisconsin and [-11 20 a m.. ^15pat Northernllilnois I 7U0am.. 60aro Locansport and stations on T.
H. & Logansport RR 490pm.. Stations on Indianapolis. Decatur fc Springfield RR 7 00am.. G.Q5»a Stations on Toledo. Wabash &
Western RR.. east Danville. 7 00 a m.-iOSOpao Northern Ohio, Northern Indiana, Michigan and Canada... 7 00 a m..t
SOUTH.
Evansville, Yincennes and Princeton 7 00 a m..l3G&x»St Fort Branch and Sullivan (thro1 pouches) 7 00am.. 130frm& Evansville and stations on E. &
T. H. RR 7 00 ft m.. laOfcan^ti Evansville and stations on E. & T. II. RR. 4 20pm.. 2SDpsa Southern Illinois and Western
Kentucky 4 30pm.. 2 JSSiyan Southern Illinois and Western Kentucky 7 (Al a m. tSC&mai Worthington and stations on
T. II. &. S. E. RR 4 20 pm.. Gt«am HACK LINES. Prairieton.PraineCreek.G rays ville and Fairbanks,Tuesday,
Thursday and Saturday 7 00am.. TWaa Nelson. Ind., Tuesday and Saturday 1 80 m.. 1 OQfna
CALL AND EXAMINE
THE NEW
Improved Howe.
0
0
THE SmPLEST. LIGHTEST RUNNING. MOST DURABLE AND EASIEST OPERATED
OF ANY
SEWING- MACHINE
In the Market. For sale at 23 south Sixtfa street, opposite Post Oflice.
The Howe Machine Co.
S1S0
T. D. OLIN, Agent.
flTO $0000 A YEAR, or $r to $&> ti day in yoar own locality. No rfsfc. "Women do as well as men. Xny make more than the urrMxinf, stated above. No one can f»fl I* make money fast. Any one cast 4o
the work. Yon can make from 50 cents to ?ir am hoqr by devoting your evenings and snare the misiness. It costs nothing to try tne 1)UH1MWW»1 Nothing like it for money milking ever offerewUj*. fore, business pleasant and strictly honoctbil*. Header, if you want to know all about tho bosA paying business before the public., send fwor address and we will send von full narticulara uid prlt'ntc terms free. Samples wortn $5 also von can then make t:p your mind for nutwK. Address GEORGE BTlSSON & CO.. fortlawS Maine.
Tti Terre
Eon:
Haute
IS THE OLDEST AND
BEST HOTEL,
Between Indianapolis a:td St. Lecs&s.
It is a First-Clafs House in every reffvtcft COH. *FVE\TK 1 HAI!V
MISS P. J. SUMME,
CL -A.13rt"V
1ST
AM) PSYCHOMETRIC HEADER
Will diagno«e disease end preterite tire remedies for a speedy sre and describes a person' J. or absent. TERMS K»- rilairi'os'-s of Sh
-'aaratC*»
friends, either J-tvwsK*
il.00: delineation of character, business. e»e«.S0tw leading from 8 to
"it
a. m. and from to
\t
ra.
Room No. 1. St. "harie« Hotel. Tbfw Krert.
Call for the Havana Whips at Katzenbaclfs.
H. H. Blcbardwa St o. are «tll! oeHtan Quertuwarr. Rlau and Plated ware •Id price*. 99" Main ttreet.
