Daily News, Volume 1, Number 126, Franklin, Johnson County, 15 July 1880 — Page 2
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E. P. BEAUCU AMP. Editor and Proprietor.
Publication (Mc£, comeT fifth and Main Streets
Enured at the Pout Office at Terre Haute, Indiana, a* «st.-cond-claaA tastier.
THURSDAY. JULY 15, 1880.
FOIi
ROSWELL 8. HILL, For Attorney General, DANIEL P. BALDWIN, For Judge* of Supreme Court, BYRON K. ELLIOT, Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District.
For Clerk Supreme Conrt, DANIEL ROYSE. For Reporter Supreme Conrt,
FRANCIS M. DICE,
F«r Superintendent Public Instruction, JOHN 31. BLOSS.
For Congress,
ROBERT B. F. PEIRCE.
Vigo County Ticket.
For Clerk,
MERRILL N. SMITH. For Treasurer, CENTENARY A. ilAY.
For Sheriff,
JACKSON STEPP.
For Commissioner. Third District, JOHN DEBAUN. For Coroner,
DR. JAMES T. LAUGHEAD. For Senator. FRANCIS V. BICHOW8KY.
For Representatives, WILLIAM II. MELRATH. DICK T. MORGAN.
For Surveyor.
GEORGE HARRIS.
WHEN Mrs. Brown's children were in formed lliiu the jury had sentenced their mother to be hung, the oldest boy sfiid "That's all right she killed our papa and ought to die."
Is THERE not a screw loose somewhere? Hardly a day passes now, but an accident of some kind occurs on the "old reliable Vandftlia," Aint these occurrences get ting rather too frequent. If there is screw loose somewhero, it should be tightened up.
A RECENT cable dispatch says the feel ing in England against admitting a monument to the late Prince Imperial to West minster Abbey is growing so strong and expressing itself so emphatically that Dean Stanley will probably bo forced to retracthis permission.
THE U. S. consul at Buenos Ayres writes the department of state that owing to ravages of grasshoppers the wheat crop of the Argentine republic is quite a failure. A large importation will be necessary. Prices have materially advanced. Wheat brings at Buenos Ayres $0 gold per 885 pounds, aud flour $0 per 100 pounds
GENERAL A. D. savs wants every friend of his to work as hard, and if possible harder, for the electiort of A. 0. Porter than they would have done for him If he had received the nomination. General Streight is a stalwart.— Hhtlbycilltt Rtpubliwn.
There is no discount on Gen. Streight in auy of the relations of life. He is as true as steel everywhere, and had he received the nomination for Governor, would luvvo made a gallant race. How the "boys" would have rallied around their old comrade in arms.
IN no city in the world are flowers used in such profusion as in New York, if we admit the claims of the 7Y»w» of that city It says the New Year's days sales of flowers in 1£44 amounted to $1,000. Now the sale of flowers for boquets and deco rations on that day reaches, it is estimated $50,000, and their sale during the cut ire year aggregates millions of dollars Within a radius of 13 in the municipal limits it is estimated that there are ful!y 500 floral establishments, and that the capital invested in land, buildings, and stock is not less than $3,000,000 or $ 10, 000,000.
POSTER'S RECEPTION.
Th^ reception to Mr. Porter yesterday at Indff&napohs, was a irrand affair, everyway worthy the o&asion, and the Republican party. AH the speeches made were good, but one of the most pleasing inci deat« of the occasion is described by the
A pleasing feature of the reception Mr. rortt vestcnlay was the fact that General A. p. Streight occupied a seat be side him in the open carriajfe which con* roved the candidate from the depot General Streight and Mr. Porter are old friend*, ami those who imagine that the former harbors any ill will on account of hi? defeat for the nomination, mistake the man. Genera) Streight is not capable of harboring malice, and least or all would he do so towards a life long friend like fr. Porter. He never showed hhnself more a man than in joining in the public reception of Mr. Porter. General Streight is no sulker
Of courts Gen. Streight Is no "sulker," -nor "skulker"' either. H«was always at the front—and wiil be yet.
liBllllillll
PRESIDENT OP THS
UNITED STATES,
JAMES A. (JARFIELD.
FOK VICE PRESIDENT,
CHESTER A. ARTHUR.
STATE TICKET.
For Governor,
ALBERT G. POSTER. For Lieutenant Governor, THOMAS HAXXA.
For Secretary of State, EMANL'EL R.HAWN. For Auditor of State, EDWARD II. WOLFE, For Treasurer of State,
4-
aae managing the car influence for good stroyed."
V^K
3BTTLLD0ZIHG 15 ALABAMA—THE BIGHTS OF CRAZEHHOP DEXIE%
The telegfapl|ij dispatches whiclf ap peared in th^tiews yestet^ay, detailing specimen o^ Alabflma bulldozing, Is truly a very scions and alarming affair.. If the time has actually come, when a citizen of the Republic, no mattsr where he'itfayf^side, undeterred from exercising any of the rights and* privileges of citizenship, the fact ought -to be known, and aiHhe facts of the case fully inquired into. We do nojt -write aa.a partisan, but as an American citizen. We view this case from an elevation above that of a Repub lican or Democrat, and see it only in the lifitht of a citizen of the Republic.
Is it truer that in one of the States the Union, tf citizen is not permitted to be a candidate, but is compelled to with draw for fear of bodily injury. If this true, then the whole power of the general government should be at once evoked protect, uphold and avenge that citizen.
Times
There is yet another victim of a different stripe. Mr. Robert Spence, who was an Independent Democratic candidate for trifT in Talladega County, issues a card announcing his withdrawal from the canvass. The character and tone of the card give evidence that the bulldozer had been whispering in his ear."
Losing sight of that friendish party spirit which prevails in many portions of the Southern States, and looking alone to the rights of free citizenship, what is the proper thing tp be done in such cases as this? Can there be one particle of doubt as to the proper course to pursue? Should there be one moment's hesitation? We call'upon the authorities to see to it that M. L. Bowie of the State of Alabama,be protected in his right t6 offer himself as a candidate wherever and whenever he pleases. We demand of this government that it throws around Judge Craig the broad protection of the Nations' power, and secure to him all the rights of an American citizen. We conjure this administration tho ihost incorruptable and weakest that, perhaps, the country has ever had, to assert itself,, and guaranteethe privileges of a free man to,Robert Spence, of Alabama.
As a citizen of the Republic, zealous of the rights of all men, and anxious to assist in sustaining the general government in its determination to guarantee to all the States* of the Union an absolutely free government, restained only by judicious and proper laws, we respectfully refer the attention of the authorities at Washington to the state of affairs in Dallas County, Alabama. There, it strikes us is a necessity for the interference of the strong arm of the Federal authorities. And ff every citizen is not made wholly and entirely secure in the full and ample enjoyment of all his rights and privileges except by marshaling the entire strength of the general government and hurling it like a devastating Are wherever its authority is defied or" the rights of citizenship interfered with, then let the mobilization be commenced at once. Not next week, or next month, or next year, but tmc.
This "bulldozing" spirit must be suppressed wherever it occurs. It must be put, dowu, and in such a manner too that it will not occur again. There must be no dallying. One bold, aggressive and determined movement on the pari of the proper authorities, and we will hear no more of Southern bulldozing.
A Rattlesnakes Attack.
When a rattlesnake is disturbed, it sounds an alarm, and hen, if compelled, it will fight, Wh«*n the victim is within reach, the jaws of the snake are separated, and the head thrown back so as to bring the fangs into a favorable position to penetrate the object* The head is then darted rapidly forward, the unsheathed tooth penetrates the body of the victim, and tho poison is injected into the flesh. The sane muscular acts which open the wound, iiyect the venom through the duct, and into the part penetrated by the tooth. The divviwnce of the fang-pointa when the snake bites often cata&es a considerable distance between the two wounds^ The power with which the venom is ejected from the tooth depends somewhat opon the amount contained in the gland and Its ducts. If the f^nake fail* to strike the object aimed at» the •xHson is sometimes projected several 'eel and a case is on record where it was thrown into Uje eyes of a man who WAS six feet from the snake, when it tfntck upwards at a stick held above its coiU _m
mmm
of
to
What are the facts in the case? We reproduce the despaches of yesterday Bulldozing has commenced in Ala bama, as appears from three cards which have been published in the Selma Daily
(Bourbon). The
first is from M. L. Bowie, a native of that State, a one-leged ex Confederate soldier. The Republicans of Dallas county had proposed to nominate him for a count}' offlce. Unbulldozed, the county has5,000 Republican majority. However, the Bourbons have intimidated Bowie into declining in a card, in which he says: "I desire to say that I am not a candidate for any offlce in Dallas County. For anything tha:' have done to obtain one I alone am responsible and not Judge Craig, or any other man. My cori* dition and duty to my family, which demands an honest effort for their support, alone prompu-u my conrse. If by expressing a desire for a public office I have committed a sin I, for one. ate ready to bear my part of the consequences, what ever others may see fit to do."
The next card in concession to the bulldozer is from G. S. Craig, who had been nominated for re-election as Circuit Judge by the Republicans.' The District has a
Republican majority of 20,000, the peop being left to exercise their free will Judge is a native of Dallas county. The Selma Times, on the 4th inst., denounced the candidacy of Judge Craig as "a challenge and a defiance to the people of the county, and that it will be the cause of trouble in the county, for the reason that he was the only Republican candidate there." In view of this he issued a card in which he says:
I have endeavored alwavs to do my duty as a citizen and an officer, but if my candidacy for an offlce is to have this effect upon the community, I ought not to longer continue in the contest, and withdraw from it, believing that with the prejn dices excited against mo by the individuals who non the other side, my tT»e office would be de-
To Hang or Sot to Bang Whet her,suspending between heavfuvi^ and earth by a rope about the neck, and choking out life, adds to the terrors of the law,and deters others fipto criiq6 is.'
Sws
iestionable. In former days" ther-gui.* was often a scene of rioting and unseemly mirth. The country flocked un masst to seesarftffe poor #Tetch strng«3§, and fought for pieces of. the rope ,to Cherish as sacred ^mementoes. This has been abolished (as it should be) and with It tife highly WTbught and generally untrue 'last dying «peeph rand confession.' Hanging is, cortdtroed privately and solemnly. The walls of the prison shut out curious eyes and gaping spectators, and the dying man is robbed of the opportunity of being made a hero or a martyr. But theihet of the igiibminious d$ath remains, ana with.it the query of
cui bano?
Has the gailows more, if as much, terror, as yea^S (jf solitary confinement? Is the dread of a bjrieif pang as great as long a'nd weary and hopeless imprisonment? Win not the guilty more recklessly dare the chance of a rope than shackles and bars? Had not the average criminal sooner dangle from the gallows than be condemned to the thought that comes with unbroken silence and lasting separation from his fellow men? Are there not many who look
Spon
Who shall decide? Humanity woeps ever at the shedding of blood, the taking away of life, and Justice sternly balances the scales and permits nothing of sym pathy to creep into its deliberations. In many States the law has decided upor the death penalty, and( its will is forced to be carried out both'in the spirit and the letter. The advocates of both systems loudly proclaim they are right, and consequently the other side wrong. But hanging has descended to us from barbaric times, and the necessity of it in the then, does not prove it in the now Every year has its own requirements that .which governed yesterday has changed altogether in its light toward to-dav, and it is not safe to take even time-honored maxims without looking keenly to their bearing and intrinsic value upon the present.
It is important that this matter should be settled. All the better part of our nature revolts at inhuman harshness, no matter how guilty, while safety to the innocent demands absolute security, That must never be left out of mind The hand and knife of the murderer must be fettered beyond peradventure, and it is a mockery to snv t»at it cannot be done except by extinction of life. Such an argument "is a shameftil confession of weakness. If we cannot build strong enough—if we cannot guard against escape, it is high time we did.
We woula never argue agr.inst justice, but We believe it should be t^mperec with mercy, and that humanity and religion will soon insist upon the abolishment of the gallows, and the right to take life, except in self-defense, be no longer deemed either advisable or admissible.
That is a very funny ghost story which is going the round of tjio papers. That it is merely a fact of the imagination rather than of history does not mar it in the least. A late traveler, tho word "late" referring not to his decease, but to the hour of the night, while groping his way home, saw in the middle of the highway what he took to be^i veritable ghost, It stood still and was dressed in white, as any conventionally respectable apparition would be. Brave at heart he determined to solve the mystery. Ad vancing with cautious tread ho got close to the "sheeted dead" and struck it a right smart blow with his stick*. What happened immediately after he alone run describe with its proper pathos. He was lifted into the air and came down with a disagreeable thud in the mud of
Upo:
the ditch, upon proper investigation the
ghost turned out to be a white mule,
who was standing the nigfet out in med itative mood, when his reverie was broken in upon by the intruder. The victim declares that whatever his private opinions may be, he shall hereafter act AS though ghosts were a realitv, and steei dear of any communication with them.
—Henry VIII., so runs the story, having quarreled with Francis I., resolved to send an ambassador to deliver a message to that mcnarch in the most menacing terms, and appointed Bishop Bonner to execote the commission. The bishop told the king that the smbassv would cost him his life., Henry replied that if any harm befel hia representative he would instantly cut off the heads of al? the Frenchmen in his dominions.
rott
my
shoulders."
MM
a
than
avoided We cannot judge of the workings of the uneducated and debased mind by the sensitiveness and horror that haunts the one lifted above grossness, and hedged about by refinement. The contrast is as vivid as light and darkness.
Familiarity with crime and its penalties (as in all other things) blunts the senses and breeds contempt. Men soon learn to disregard conseouenoes to coolly calculate and take tne chances. The life-long, criminal knows well what the ending of his career will be, and becomes infatuated with the idle dream of destiny.' He is habituated to the power of the "law, and looks upon it as something not to be avoided. Prison life and association has crowded all good from his heart, and the gallows is robbed of its terrors.
This being the case, it is doubtful if death bv the rope exercises any beneficial results upon the very class for whom it is intended, to say notning of the right to thus destroy life. "Thou shalt not kill" is held by many as an absolute decree against execution, and certainly it is the taking of what can never be restored. Besides years in prison give an opportunity for reformation and repentance, and the washing out of sin.
On the other hand the old laws of 'an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth,' and "he who sheddeth man's blood," etc., is believed justifiable by both the Divine and the human law. It is contended strongly that the sooner the murderer is put out of the way the better for those remaining that a prison has few terrors, for there is always a hope of escape, and dream of executive clemency. In a measure, this is true the badly used freedom that has been restored argues ainst such a possibility, and all chance release should be cut off. Whether, however, this should be done by the repulsive and ghastly scenes at the gal lows/is problematical. Certainly, there can be no hope for the dead man here but we should remember it is sending him shuddering into the hereafter with all his sins upon his head.
"So
rnAY, sire, objected the bishop, "bnf fear there is not one of them thai will fit
WaTST*. JM»* JZ-t •'V.iS l»iJt-".-3fc*"-'/iftv'S* UbiM£«atVff iVdS^?.
TF ?r
Pr»t
Trs's Tfcjs Toxic tins eorr-^TatSerr •wto had been (ioctoreti IT. ilet-ih X^r ser
rum ISFbe
&c.,
1 1
Library of Universal Knowledge. 21 vols.. $10.50. Milman's Gibbon's Heme, 5 "vol., Macaulay History of England, 3 vols., 81-50. Macanlay's Life and Letters, 30 Cents. MacanlAy's Essays and Poems,.4 vols., 1.80. Chamber's Cyclopaedia »nd Enr. Litratnre. 4 vol* 2 Knight's History of England. 4 vol#., $8. Plutarch's Lives of Illnstrions Men. vols., $1.50. Geikle's Life and words of Christ, 50 cents. Yotmg's Bible Concordance. S21,(«00 references
tocellasbcoafi.
Privation of IRuH md GALISAYA BARK, kKsHutarttk lje by 143 lledlcal Profeifloa|*ni2 by
Wii/r*. rte Txx^a.
THK BH. HARtER MEDICIHK CO TL NO. 213 IFOSTH MJLI3R_ 5TSEBT,^ST.ILOXJI6.
E/. FOESTEE &0 SOIT
DEALBRSIN
Furniture, Mattresses, .1 'Parlor' aafc Bedroom Suits
102 and 104 North Fourth Street,
DOES THE CONSUMER GET PUKE COFFEE
Comparatively few people are aware of the extensive""Adulterations to which Roasted Coffee is subjected. The pernicious use of Glucose, Grape Sugar, Gum Arabic., Eggs,
-ju! DAUNTLESS CEYLON M." if r, DAUNTLESS MEXICAN DAUNTLESS PORTO RICO
sla
HAUTEj I3STIDI^3Sr-A..
W. S. CLIFT, J. H. WILLIAMS. J. M. CLIFT
CIJFT.
MANUFACTURERS OF
SASHES, DOORS. BLINDS, ETC.
AXD DEALERS IN
Lumber. Lath, SMiigles, Glass, Paints, Oils and Builders' ii Hardwai'e.
CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREETS, TERRE HAUTE, IND.
W J?
THE GREAT IMPORTANCE WHICH
T7I "CP TP TP
for the Glazed or So-Called Self-Setting Coffee, is not so much
for clarifying and Settling Coffee, as for Adulteration, hiding defects of poor coffee, and increasing Weight and Bulk. The purchaser of every pound of so-called Glazed or Self-Setting Coffee pays for from one to three ounces of adulteration, the amount being detenmnsd altogether by the conscience and skill of the Roaster. Consumers can glaze their own coffee, if desired, at less cost and without the use of decayed eggs of other injurious matter. People who have used Roasted Coffee are becoming aware of this adulteration, and with a preference FOR Roasted Coffee, are demanding better and purer goods.
In order to meet this demand I have erected a building and fitted up the most modern and improved machinery for roasting coffee, and am enabled to meet and vanquish all competition, by placing in market,
DAUNTLESS ROASTEI) COFFEE!
Which is, without question, perfectly Pure and Unadulterated, being roasted from
Sound, Sweet Berries i: the Best High hit GoSees
So delicately mixed in-such proper proportions as to produce a Boquet of Aromatic Flavors, making a most delicious and healthy beverage. If you want a delightful and healthy drink, ask your grocer for I
I HULMAN'S DAUNTLESS ROASTED COFFEE.
I am also packing the various coffees of the best grades separately, under the "DAUNTLESS brand, which is a guarantee of the excellence, and will be known as ,, DAUNTLESS MOCHA ROASTED COFFEE.
DAUNTLESS JAVA DAUNTLESS MARACAIBO
DAUNTLESS GOLDEN RIO "~7V --—7 DAUNTLESS RIO DAUNTLESS SANTOS _'1 DAUNTLESS LA GUAYRA
Sold only in Pound Packages and each package containing 16 Ounces of, Pure Coffee. lEI.
7*. Fdri*
Jarres Brown of
us to tender you Ula gratexul led sweats fhr tli« gre*t bene-
'fits his n?fl rifiwKTfrom tba use of your "iE3*TONIC. IS* U-lis ss that, *ItechaTmf pua twobottioa med- __ of Ito 1 tdch she mccb LifCFACTURSD BT"~"
JO JlLM JCLi
IROJLSTIEilD COFFEE
Has of late years acquired as. a staple, has naturally suggestsd the ment of this branch of trade. It is already an established fact that can be purchased at a much less expense than the consumer can Coffee and roast it. The only question is
1
bettor developRoastcd CofiFee purchase Green
Vigo Spice and Coffee Mills, Terrc Hante, Ind
Chambers's Encyclopaedia
15 Vols. Over 13,000 Pages. Price During July, $0.25J-
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e. a. a.
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Headquarter* 33(j South Third. Regular meetings first and third Thursday evening ', each month. 53P~Reading Room open everv evening.
Comrade? visiting the city wil always be made welcome. \V. E. McLEAN. Com "dr.
JAV CUMMINT.S, ADJ't. RKO. PI-AXETT. P. "Q. M. Offlce at Headquarters
CALL AND EXAMINE
THE NEW
Improved Howe.
THE SIMPLEST, LIGHTEST RUN NING, MOST DURABLE AND EASIEST OPERATED
OF ANY
SEWING MACHINE
In the Market. For sale nt 28 south Sixth street, opposite Post Office.
The Howe Machine Co.
a
T. D. OLIN, Agent
TO 60000 A YEAR, or $5 to #9) a day in yourovyn locality. No risk. Women do- as well (V# men. Many make more than thfe amount stated above, No one can fail to make money fast. Any one enn do Yon can make from 50 ccnts to $8 an
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The Terre Haute
in inspccial
we will supply the 15 any one sending from
IS THE OLDEST AND
BEST HOTEL
Between Indianapolis aud St. Louis.
It is a Firsl-CIass Itouse in every respect
COtt. 8EVEKTH /k MA IT* HT9.
NERVOUS DEBILITY.
GRAY** »PK€ «FIC
TRADE Oreat
En-T,»AD«
glish Remedy, An nnfailing enre for Seminal Weakn ess,. Spermatorrhea, Impotencyi anI all Diseases that follow as a se-' qnence of Self- "•v*
•EFOIE TAIilB. Abt.se as loss AFTER TAKINQ. of Memory. I'nivcrsa! Lassitude, Pain in tho Dimness of Vision, Premature Old Age
Back fnd many other Diseases that lead to Insanity oil Consnmotion and a Premature grave. 1
SSTnll particulars in onr pamphlet,'which wt desire u» send free by mail to every one. taTT'he Specific Medicine is sold by all Druggists at $1 per fMCkage, or six packages for |5, or will be dressl^
ma'1
on
«c«ipt of the money try ad*
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$Vi a day at
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Costly ontflt and terms free now is the time* TTiose already at woi^re U/Ing up large sums of money, Address TRUE CO..
Augusta, Me.
