Daily News, Volume 1, Number 153, Franklin, Johnson County, 16 August 1880 — Page 2
pi
5,
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14
DAILY NEWS
K. P. BEAUCIIAMP, Editor and Proprietor. Publication OfflcQ. comer Fifth and Main Slfteet*
Entered at the PostOffice at Torre Haute, Indiana as sccontl-cla*s matter.
MOM)AY, AUGUST 16, 1880.
FOR PRESIDENT
UNITED STATES,
JAAIES A. GARFIELD.
FOR VICE FREttDBNT,
CHESTER A. ARTHUR.
STATE TICKET.
For Governor,
ALBERT* Q, PORTER. "For Lieutenant Governor, THOMAS IIANNA.
For Secretary of State, EMANUEL R. IIAWN. For Auditor of State, EDWARD II. WOLFJS, For Treasurer of State,
HOSWELL H. HILL, for Attorney general, DANIEL P. BALDWIN, For Judges of Supreme Conrt, BYRON K. ELLIOT, Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District,
For Clerk Supreme Conrt, DANIEL ROYSE. For Reporter Supreme Court,'
FRANCIS M. DICE,
War. Superintendent Public Instruction. JOHN M. BL088.
For Congress,
ROBERT B. F. PElIiCE.
Viga County Ticket.
For Clerk.
MEHHILL N. SMITH. For Treasurer, CENTENARY A. RAY.
For Sheriff,
JACKSON 8TEPP.
For Commimdoner, TUircl District, JOHN DEBAUN. For Coroner.
DR. JAMK-S T. LAUOIIEAD. For Sen
a
tor,
FRANCIS V. TtlCIIOWSKY. For Representative*, WILLIAM II. MELRATI1.
DICK T. MORGAN. For Surveyor, GEORGE HARRIS.
ADELAIDE NKILHON died suddenly YEStomlay lit tlx Conlinentiil Hotel, Paris.
TAJ.MAOE preached to tho lawyers yosWtdAy. giving them a grout deal of, thrilling tough tally. .•!. If."1 .•
1 1
A
I1.. ,U. I
DISPATCH
A
from Quetta says native re
ports are so unanimous as to the presence of threw European oflleors with Ayoob Khan that there can he little doubt they are true.
DISPATCH
from London says that'
Tseng, the new Embassador from China to Ruswiti, proposes that the Kuldja quesiiou be submitted to the United Stales and Prussia as arbitrators*. Russia hesitates, and il i« doubtful if alio will accept the proposal.
HON. E. I). SELDOMJUDGE, of Torre Haute, Ind., will vole for Hancock. Mr. SeMoniridgo is attorney for the Indianapolis «!te St Louis railroad, and baa been in the Legislature several times as a Republican.— AVir York JSxprms.
Ed was never in the Legislature, and is not going to vote for Hancock either not verv
much he "ain't."
ECKOPK is again pouring a torrent of emigration to our shores. About !]8,r00 persons from Germany, Great Britain, Sweeden and Italy reached New York last month. This makes the arrivals of emigrants for the first seven nthsof the year 310,101. Of this number nearly one third are Germans. It is estimated that the ImrmiM. ur population from Immigration italic dl reach the enormous aggregate of t(K) (XX) during the present year.
cement peculiarly adapted
to
shitltl
lHitro'emn or any of itsdistillates is made by boiling three parts of re«in with one of caustic soda and five
of water. This
forms a resin soap, which afterward mixed with half its weight of plaster of Paris, *ine white, white lead or precipitated
chalk.
But, foulam! deadly as the ex pi red air is, naUtre, widely economical in all her works and wnyts turns it to good account in its outward passage through the organs of the voice, making of it the whispers of love, the soft words of affection, the tender tones of human sytniwihy, the sweetest Ktrains of ravishing jnu^lc. tl»e ^reuasive eloquence of the finished orator.
If a well-made man be extended on the ground, his arms at right angles with the Wly^ a citx^lc making the naval iU center, will Just take in Uie head, the finger-ends and the feet. The distance from top to toe is preciseily tho wiuc as that between the tips of the fingers when the arm is extended. Tjue lengtli of the There are eight newspapers in this body io just six times Uiat of the foot, t?nited State® which claim to be over while the distance from th« edge of the one hundred years old. Below are the hair on the forehead to the edge of the I names of the papers and the dates when chin one-tenth the length of the tbey are said to have been established Whol© AnttajjoliSj (Md.) Maryland Gaw»»e,
Of the aiity4wo primary el«*meiila I I745 ^»rt»iooQth (2f» H.) &w»Uc, known it* nature, only e^gliteen are Newport (R. L) Hemiry, 11^ New known In the h«ma« bodv, and of thwe »London fOwtn.) Cktr'"© 17f» Hartseven are metallic Iron is found in the ford (Cbnn.) Courant,
hlowl.pho^borttsin tlieljrainJimesSone |{Ont».) J*M?raal, 1 *t»7 ^laag».) in the bile, hme in tlie bones* and dust' uaseMe, Wotveater, ^!aa8,)^py and nsliesin all! Kot only these 11770. een human elements* l«Jt the whoh tv-twot Which tne nnivewe ta n*do,
litw their «s*eHtitt)-..
j,
grain of ^wuex, mi atom
charcoal* And Mich man, tl»e lord of companion thcydewte themselves
earth!—a »rk of fir*. drop of ?ater,
v*v^
DEMOCRACY IN ALABAMA
The great parade of, the Democratic party in regard to their recent victory in Alabama has called forth considerable comment on the elections in that State for the past six years. It will be remembered that it was Alabama that our Greenback friends expected to carry by an overwhelming vote. Now, just to show our readers what position a Republican or Green backer occupies in the minds of the people of Alabama we will take the words of a gentleman who has lived there all his life. He says that on the 10th day of July he went to the town of Pleasant Ridge, in Greene county, to make A Republican speech. Soon after he began, a crowd of white .Democrats, several with open knives and large sticks in their hands, came up.and immediately began to interrupt him, so that he could scarcely utter two sentences without interruption. He remonstrated, assuring them that they were injuring their own cause by such a course, and distinctly announcing to the tin that he did not desire to array mi"-rue* against the. other, but simply I rrn down the white line issue raised by the Democratic party and yet, while reading a letter, published August 14tb, 1879, in the Eutaw
Whig
(Democratic paper), he
was stopped, forbidden by them to read said letter and cursed and abused re peatedly in the vilest terms and one of their number declared that they were all Democrats, and that he should uot abuse the Democratic party. The accuracy of this statement was admitted by the Eutaw
Mirror,
Taylor, of Butler, reply to us in the s&ine time. We opened our case in a calm and pleasant appeal to everybody not to applaud, but to give us dose attention while we presented the facts in the relations to the present political situation, and we soon had engaged the serious and earnest attention of nearly everybody on the ground within hearing of our voice, when man remarked, "We don't want no d—n Yankee to come hero and talk to us wc had better shut him up.' The next thing was for a band from the neighboring town of Shubuda to strike up and the Committee of Arrangements claim they could not stop it,, nor did not."
He next went to Shubndft, and he described his greeting as follow There's the Greehbacker now, d—-n him "Three cheers lor Hancock "G-rdd—n Yankee Greenbacker. he ought to lie killed "Lfft's give him hell,"* and some other plurases of like character.
Now these outrages on our boasted freedom show that the Democratic party in Alahsuna is the same old party that it was during the. Rebellion there has been, no change.
These Southern Democrats expect by the election ol Hancock to force us to pay every cent of tbe rebel claims, and even their war debt, find it is useless for Democratic pelitickuu to talk otherwise. \Ye can now make up our minds to eradicate event vestigr of the Democratic reform thai is within us.
7-Hi
.«* •.1- -r *r
Now Haven
4 5
*en
xtoittcwi of fajUitvgen, nil but iMftvetriy gifts, which dtatfttgnisli and crt?bon,feptv entuuj the moreii.u- them and often raise them above human. it* matftibw The supreme Jar r.*es of fire, wt |»eier nature—ompK9sion and entottsiam. By trtgir goti'tksan 1
1
m-
nature—compassion «ad entousiaiiL Bjr
eMhtftusm twar I
-. V*f«- .'/* ,\
^'\~'-r\-%*f/-
an
other Democratic paper published there on July 20, 1880. But this is^5 not all. They cursed his little 7 vear-old boy, who stood dumb with fright before them. Moreover, he was obliged to desist in his effort to speak, and was assured by Mr. William Horton. an aged gentleman, that he was iu great personal danger. lie says on the 2d inst. we had here that which Republicans foolishly expected would bean election, but which proved to be a hollow count. This county, in which the Republicans are better organ ized than they have been for years, and which gave Hayes and Wheeler 1,681 majority, was turned over to tho Democrats. At one box. where we had three respectable gentlemen (two of them Democrats) to inspect the tickets and see them delivered into the hands of the managers, our 018 Republican ballots on the final count turned out to be only 343, the bal, ance going to swell the Democratic vole so that this box that gave Hayes and Wheeler 525 iiiajoriry is now counted Democratic by 15 majority. At another box. where five competent witnesses inspected every ticket carefully, and where every voter marched singly to the box with his ticket in fnl,l view and placed it into the band^ of the manager, our 280 votes panned out ouly 70.1 Or these tickets 190 were rejected, as we are informed, because they were not folded, when the truth is that I folded every one with my own hands except 135. These are samples of this miserable travesty upon fair elections. This is the terrible mode in which tlie South has been made solid.
About, the same time that this outrageous conduct was hurled upon this gentleman. a prominent Greenback advocate had an 'engagement with a Democratic candidate for Congress, for a joint discussion. This gentleman says of the first Democratic Orator "In the course of his speech he said 'The Confederacy still exists, inj' friends, and Jeff Davis, the best friend we ever had, is yet our President and devoted to our interests, and if Hancock is elected, and we have no doubt he will be, you will be paid for all property you have lost through Radical rule, and you must stand by the great Democratic party, for a solid South will give us entire control of the General Government, and we can redress all our wrongs.' His thirty miuute speech was almost entirely of this order. As soon as we reported, it was decided that we speak in behalf of the Greenback party one hour and fifteen minutes, ana that
An Excellent Address by a Sew lfork Soldier.
At a recent meeting of veteran soldiers at Utica, N. Y., Colonel Anson S. Wood delivered an excellent address from which the following is extracted. Better speeches are no: often made:
I want to congratulate you, Mr. President and you my friends and fell»w citizen?, a:id especially rotidn/ Democratic friends* upon the pr««t goodri(Kelv to come t© fhtf eouiitry by the remarkable changes wroyjriit by ro p«at«4 detect in the iaiu*Is of the Deui'teratie party. In th ft good year of gTace, lv*), the
maapn •.
trirseback" flnr I?n rings the
peadbftiJ dutiber bt m#» borrirt vision? of a Ititivltfu country and an ens,ftv(.*i people. The nomination of a professional soldier, unused to the ways of civil and political life, swgfests to their becalmed imajriuation no danger to the Constitution, audi, wxlei no ev|l to the country.
For many years the gtalesntonof the Democratic party have been mere, prophets of evil —urJuUtUyf mu". pross and lnruln the .iposedy downfall of the republic—because the party in power pot mere military -bewes—n »t strtearned—in the .highest of tho land.
These dolefJi knifftttB of the disirt'1 countenance, tired of defeat and hungry Tor office, tainted with treason and allied to rebels, have suddenly taken a new departure. Having thrown overboard their old leaders, they cunninsrti^lnlnsr to the front an old soldier of the fejruias* armv\ in' the vaiu hope that his blue coat will prove a veritable tk»ji's skin to hide the political,d(«ikeys beneath. Assummgthat UK* people are wilfully i.rn *aat of their true character, ttiey l/ope to win under a borrowed flag: what they have repeatedly lost when sailjjiK under their own true colors.
Thf-ir pet jrhost "Cicsari^m," no longer nci'di.d to frighten indepenilent voters with, ha- b:ten a'lowed fc'» gaih -r hi white sheet tib in? hiiti and sieal otf to ih -aveyarrl of jfaseliJepwer^ic humbug ^vcntlw '?hard tltricri,' forsd many e^ions their chief attr»cta»p, ^ftoossca to dra\f anino »ngreraipe im upon the bills This favored year Dem-
Htte^ditow and orator hHve.graeiously (Oti«eiiti riot' hold the Rppabltfao party reiH)iis:t)if tfyy the famine in Ireland, the pestilence in the Orient, and tho earthq&ake in Peru. All their old. battle cries have lost their rallying power and beeo abandoned.
This blessed year th.dr whole political capital appears to be Invested in a urrarul display of affection far the solpier. The sin+Character suddenly inspired pasffbH be KQfvSlIy i^iSoovered uy the way.ttnd irter" it df^TsiVs Ifself. ilxia t^iao toward no Republican fiend it upon gore ta wave*the iJloouy shirt in
m-'uner Fro, :!itent oi:r blnuchiHl t'a -cs' is not our candidate a s-'hiier? Henceforth no hirrowintrmemories ofthrfpost, who we saoo'ed and scoit'ed at
Lt'ic-vln'* hireiinsrs." and pnytni for rebel v.i,»n:it3, can eome baek to mnr our hip )in.-^ or disturb our feasts! One ud!dti,e is a*soidieH beneath the
aniplii
Ftfteon ytMrs after the great strusrgle for the,life of the Nation is an excellent time for Democratic politicians to turn patriots and soldier worshipers. In 1SS4 the Republicans renominated Abraham Lincoln, the great statesman and Commander-in-Chief of the army, and the loyal Democracy immodi-itelv rallied around the Standard of a General Failure, mounted upon a platform of submission to traitors in arms.
In lWS the Republicans nominaterl the great chieftain of the war, and our soldier-loving friends rushed to the support of that mo?t excellent gentleman andstatesman, who. a few weeks ago, solemnly assured us all ihat were be eompidled to choose between the Democratic Presidential nomination'and a funeral, ho would promptly order the hearse.
Don't vou remember, my worthy Democratic soldier-loving friend, in#, in that in Cm cable contest, you besought, the,dear people not to risk their liberties"by Voting lor a'Soldier? .Don't you tccall the elo juent .vord* in which you prayed for the •idler's defeat? £othe of you were not content to pfay with your lips only, but made your hands do service, as stuffed nallot ixwes and fraudulent counts clearly proved. Your prayers are like old Veto's, and, so far as New York was cmeorned, »uite as effectual. Pete had been a slave, and after the war times got hard and provisions became mighty scarce. Pere was a good u. and In his votv prayed the good I,ord to seud him onoof Masaa Peyton's turkeys for self and pickaninnies, but no turkey earne. In hunger and despair Pete changcd the form of his humble petition, and askou tho good I^ord to send Old Pete after theturitey. The tiUng curved. asacee«K anfl the old man said "Do turkey was on hand next morning before sun up." in 18you tried a new !o|ge. General Grant, sup Ttor to General Hancock every way, was lenotnihated by the Republicans, and In order to compass bisdefeat youpockcted your rinciples, ^uttoned un your vo^ts and said Ayj-thing to, beat Grant." You nominated Horace rtreeiey. whose greatest merit confi8tei in his tbomUgh hatrcl for your party and Its creed but you hurrahed for hint. y«d \"Oted for blm. and wben remibHed that he was not a Democrat, you said again
Anything to l»eat Grant." You failed the disguise wits to thin honest mcr» in your par ssiid the whole thin^r was a fraud and a che.tr, H1 Of .hom in this county \*ote!l tor the soldier. You sto xl TOndemned tweforc the world as a Warty without principles and posiUU^withOOCtrsdaft.
In ^jtS you changed frwt. The order must haveBB&I rikht inwaot face." You started ut as reformer*. Tin- Republican party placed in nomination a brave )Idler, a railbru! Congressman, an ^lc!ent am! Succ«wr»il Uov«rnor. *i»h no snot tHj blemishi.n hfcs native. Vou nominated TIMen and reform." i.« there a Kelly drT bef^ often since has be prayed tt*5 btc«iMl rirgta. with penitential tear moistening h!« ehee! foe ioust*eno9| for the »wfui ckodnesa .lf that awful fraud and tic?, How many time* utoeo fee
taw
faltli uily p^itnlsed fbat lf foe-
jnven for .the siu at .4^ig- r'Oldea he wouW never—well, hardly ever—do
The great farce failed, as all such frauds m««t wrfaiL
And now coatee aaotbor «oat««t. No clarion call for reform starts into life the statesman of Cypher Alley. No attempt fc made to right the alleged rreiAt wrong te. mucin .^ plained of and »o fiercely denounce-l. No ioqaent pica ror Justine to ilwGtist Dsfrsa-i s?a earnest wsnaflM f«r higher tit*eal an4
better r,.nistr«tloo.
Yon
AJv "••r^
*im
folds Of his
miliia cloaif wc intend to hide ail our sins from tliC'publlc gaze. HV'Ioro this campaiirn is five^, fcopa Prtme cunning artist will tired canvas large enough whereon he can paint the bijrsoltllor lri such Immense proportions that below und underiii ath him—through tho tran^-pn-ent thinness ot this pretender! love for the Uni:n soldier—may be faithiuily portmyed the past and present of tho Democratic party. If the painting prove true to history, and faithfully records the facts, in the far background will be seen the authors of the foul plot to plant slavery upon the free soil of «the West, and chief among these Is English, of Indiana, the Vico-Prcsi'len-tial candidate, whose barrel awaits the tapping. In front of these will stand the worthies who? stood upon street corners, in front of hotel bars and semi-public places during tho dark and doubtful days of the war, and boasted of rebel prowess and rejoiced at rebel victories. Still in front of these wilt bo grouped the patriots who gathered at Chieagoin 18-U, and while their candidate of to-day wus ry'ng to whip rebels at tho front, tre .e'lcrously attacked hitn on the Hank and in the rear that famous body of men who counseled together heftv best to betray the country, and hit upon the plan of declaring the war for tho Union a failure. Near by will be planted the.Confederate flag, which a solid South a few y&n-s ago followed, just as zoalouly as it now follows the Dcmoc^atie banner, and rallying araund it will b».secu the whole band of martyrs who for four years have besieged the Narional Capitol and erept into places of trust and »MtU onoe held by Union soldiers. Way up front In solid column will siand the rebel brigadiers whose votes control
it
Democratic
Congress and whose ranks will lurnieJi Cabinet officers for the hcxt DemoCratlo President if one should eves- be elected. Tho painting will not be'complete if the artist stops here. A plnce must be found' ror^lcetehes of outraged whioh make tho blood run cold— ut.rages which have driveiiloyal incn from their homes and mude a South solid lor the Dom teracy. It must whow—clearly and plaiidy show—twenty years of steady and persistent etfOrt on the fi.irt of the .Democratic party to niin the eredt, hinder ntid* impede the prosperity of the country, ana proW) to the world that revolutions do not go backward.
ne
witb
60 Uwwntt. wba honor**! iMoncaSi
e*pcr -cd statcMa^n^htp. whose, acrviee to your p&ttf and to the country In civil Hfr entittes Wia totibie sujn*rt i*t
Use
party un'i
eomfttco him to pte people. Yon eome with a ptof«wr'nftl aoUt!rr-,i'amanon borstetxvjK —-wtthoot expNWienoe In ««v1H aH"air«, s»»ri ni» (yciaffltta positloQ on the Uve
questftma
the %r. aad ou ask Use cit^ eo
and be »crf Jierto%ave tieir patty and support tbi« testi to to tbo'vobmteer *ol
women two jpalvflnl p"fnf7fmnT?iXSi'HZ,
'i r- •.
fee
tries
"«ia» »r. the able Oaagrem*
by 5*tm-
#-r^*-nf.
an ota soiaier lor ngurcnoaa, is audacity intensified. And yet it was a great thing the Democratic party sought to aceompllsk at Cincin^aii. and In iai*t succeeded. Thev nag^d in bat haste to bury nkleu. and they thi 'tight they had put down uie ghost of the bloody shlri. It is much too earh yet to determiti* vrhich gav« them the greater joy.
For fifteen years- not an election baa boon won by the Democratic party in tW Mate of New ork in which Samuel J. Tild^a'a money and Samuel J. Tiideu's hraiua Jwivy^aot been the most potent factors. Weshii: presently se« »v.- well taat paay can plan aaJ light a battb arterloSing both.
Anu wbv were Tiklen and JLia^vanl, ThurP«ync^iui. Hcnjlricks, put on? sid" ana Ranv olc marched to the front? Why were a lonar iiuc
ot pcied
and faithful
Democratic si ate?men sent to the rear, and the lej.de^si! inrrust^l to one who likeall rerular army oil ers has pretended ail his life to tie a ri'Mi-ptrti'Wn. but nominally aJ?n»ocr*t? Was it because he repr. ntol in a greater degree the principles of the Dem :cratie party man ds tn©eminent at-tt .'smeu named? No one Is So silly as to answer yes. tlbo astute politicians of the party saw only deie it with an honest Democrat ou an honest Dl'fnncratie platform. Or In better word^ a geanInc,Democrat on a genuine Democratic platform. Tae people must be deceived.
Thtirman and ••sia^eS-rif^tS would die "burnin," Tydeuand rtsfonn is not onh- doad but stinke: Randall and a return of rebels to power was bablo to be indicted by a Ponnsylvania rraiu! jury as a pubfce nuisance. Payne and bis barrel was faopeiul, but the spigot might run dry. Hen^fiCks and his rag ba would not live to reach the battery, anu ovecboard tbey went, and the B»urbon mourners go atMHit the afreet* wondering if it will ever S"tnn nhtunu't /fur is' ("irrni soldier.
A Boidiw was -xtiiitiiinarodat Cincinnati by the Democratic party l«w,i.isC !)emorivtnc i- aders kndw "4lia?i^ without' a s?hte olf ft t^ hide the geaaral 5 cusscdn»3s" oiihi-y cause there was not tbe faliuest hope of success. It is said that.murder
Wif!
ou:, and the committee
to notify the nominee of his scleciion to be the st bir be-.irer of the party couid not ketp the secret. The old tienci-iil was told that it W.LS not frr his brilliant lighting at Gettysburg, but bis toadying to rebels In New Orleans and lex as that gave him the victory. "Your nomination," s:iid Mr. Stevenson, Chairmau of the '.mventiou, in bis letter officially notiiying ^eneral Hancrck of his nomination, made alone because in the mi'M of arms yofififnstrated thoM^hct (iualitius of a soldier, but," as Colonel John W, Forney wrote in 186$, bccau-ie in Now Orleant, where he is at present st ttion-d as eommaniliug officer of the Fifth Military District, he does riot olfend the tastes or hurt the foolingS Of thetpeupie there by wearing the National uuiforni. Would it not soothe the sensitive footings of the patriotic Louisianians It he should don the gray/"
It, wtis not bccaase of General Ilanqpek's hoiKic bravery on the field, that at New ork in 180S and at Cincinnati iu 188 ), delegates from a Solid South gave him their ardent sup-' port, it was because of acta of his, while Military Qovernor, that showed his sympathy for the old order of things, and a desire to restore rebels to power before his own gaping wound, received at Gettysburg, had firmly heal.
And this old party, with all the rottenncsaof years upon it, comes to the loyal, patient peoplo of tills goodly land and demands that it bo a*ain entrusted with the administration of affairs, that it may put in every Federal olScc, from l'xv-ident down to tbe' humblest postotliee in the land, either renegade Republicans or boisterous Democrats, who will owo their places to the solid vote of a solid South controlled and run by men who to-day glory as much as ever in the justice of "the lost cause." Are you, my fellow citizens, are you, my fellow soldiers, prepared to give votes to accomplish this? Recollect that from no Democratic Convention held iu any State, from no Deraucraetio newspaper published anywhere in the South, from the lips of no Democratic statesman hulling from the late Confederacy, have you or I or any one ever heard a single confession that the rebellion against this Government was wrong, or a single admission that our olforts to preserve tne XJnlon were right.
Tho Confederate llag must disappear forever. The lost eauso" must be decently burled out of si&ht tho Union must bo the god of our stateamenship, and tho blue the color of our uniform everywhere, from Maine to California, from the lakes to the gulf, in Mississippi as well as in Now York, beiore It will do for the Republican party to loosen its grip or surrender control or the Nation.
That great pariv to-nia-ht and in this campaign lights uot upon the defensive. It comes not as a suppliant, but as a conqueror, it points with pride to its record and demands its rights. It took possession of this Government when Democrats and rebels were leagued against It, and through the perils of war and the disasters of peace it has brought it in triumph up to its present high position and crowned it with freedom and prosperity. has nominated as Its standard bearer a re rescntatlve American, a volunteer soldier who smelied powder, a statesman whoso attainments anu abilities no one questions or disputes^ a man of whom the ablest Democrat in the land has written: "1 have been his dovoted friend for many years, and I am resolved that I never will believe that ho does not doserve the affection I have, bestowed upon him. If he will carry the principles which regulate his privato life into his public conduct he will make the best Chief Magistrate we have ever had."
This grand party with no blemish upon its record, but with many honorable scars received iri its quarter ot a century contest for freedom, comes with James A. Garfield as its leader and bids you stand by it as it stood by you during the war.
It comes showing you in its admirable standard bearer what free America oan do for the humblest boy in the land.
Its candidate coniefr, showing you, tn his own personal history, what pluok, and perseverance, industry, and brains, under the inspiration of free institutions, can do for the son of the hnfnblest artisau in the country.
The Republican party comes In justice and in riifht to again meet and crush rt« ancient foe.
God bless the old party and give ft abundant victory:
Got to Stand It.
ON one of the hottest corners of I Woodwa -d avenue, at high noon yesterday, a small boy with a boot-black's kit sat under the full blaze of a sun pouring down for all it was worth. The boy perspired, roasted/blistered and almost melted, but he had stuck there for half an hour, when a lady passing by halted and said: "Litt le boy, aren't you afraid of being suu-struck?'' "Yes ma'am,"1 was the prompt piy"Then why don't you get into the shade?" **I can't," "Did any one tell vou to wait here?" "No, raarra, but Ifm doing it on my own hook. It's awful hot, and I'm most dead, "but I've got to stand it.""
She looked to see if he wis tied, and was about to go on and regard him as the son of a brutal father in a saloon around the comer, when the lad explained: "There he is now! That boy up there is the chap I was waiting for, and I had to sit out here to see him when he turned the corner. He's the feller that called my sister a poke-eyed rabbit, and miroing to jump in on him, and lick him most "to death! I wish you'u hold my box so! p*--
the bulge
oil bini afore he suspects auj ihing."— Detroit Frw Press.
FRAXCK is at present suffering from a plague of wolves, no less than half a million of these animals being estimated to exist fa France at the present moment. The damage inflicted by t'. se creatures in their nootuml raids from forest and mountain is estimated at about 60,00*i,~ OOiJ francs annually. The lar^re number of wolvas is the more supri-ing as a regular 1 h\v known as the Lrfmveterie, and' upon i&cn, |g 'ihiahitaiB4d to Iti4p dowii will beasts: from the retirn* p«kb» list -I it appear? tliu onIt. wohes were kRled In l«7t» Two bill4 hare b*m introduced on ihe saibjcct, and it is prop»ed to placra high price on the h^ad of each wolfr-as high as &X) francs in the earn of a known
44
man*
m*
P:
ppHMpm
SI8fW«.
ANNUAL FAIR
TEKBE HATTE, "TNTIT:. I"* ft' rnti
5
-i—ON-
Septrak H, IS, IS, 17 & 18.
Beautiful Grounds, Ample Accommodations, Large Premiums.
Usual Rates on Railroads.
Premium list can be had of the Koeretary by mail, at the stable of Beauchamp Miller, or at tl^e Recorder's
Office,
Jeners.
MADE TO
IM: E5A.STJE/B, *'i,
.AT
\Wy-
O? THE £.
Vigo Agricultuaal Society,
-AT-
Plenty of Amusements.
Long List of Special Premiums, E.aces every Afternoon at 2, Archery on Thursday P. M.
Bicycle Races on Friday.
and.the Woolen miliof U. R.
W. T. BKACCHAMJ*, Pres. U. R. JEFFERS. Snp*t. Jos.
GlLBEUT.
Sl'C'y.
W. 8. CI.ift Treas.
E
DAILY NEWS
SOW ENJOYS A CITY CIRCULATION
EQUAL TO THAT OF ANY DAILY
PUBLISHED IN THE CITY, AND HAS
THE ADVANTAGE OVER OTHERS OF
A DAILY INCREASE.
BUSINESS MEN,
Should Note This Fact. Also, the Fact that THE NEWS Circulates Largely among, and is the Friend of the WORKINOMEN—the men who PATRONIZE HOME INSTITUTIONS.
ADVERTISERS
Call and see us. We will give you Reasonable Rates, and Guarantee Satisfaction.
i..
v«*
t-4, if
HITJlsrTE]E?/SJ
SMrt Factory,
M-A.X3ST STREET.
i»i "I 1 jt»i
*k-.! .'-'»*
iHUscclUmcous'
ALL OIFtlDZEIFtS
PROMPTLY l^ILLEL1
1
»i AT i1'?-* =s
Clotlis, Cassiiaeres, Tweeds. Flaimels, Jeans, Blankets, Stocking Tarns,
Carding: and Spinning:.
N. B.—The highest market price tn cash, or our own make oi goods exchanged for wool.
Terre Haute Banner,
TRI WEEKLY Ann WEEKLY.
Office 21 South Fifth Street.
P. GFROKRER, Proprietor.
THE ONLY GERMAN PAPER IN T11B CITY OF TERRE HAUTE.
English and German Job Printing
Executed in the best manner.
0. QV. U.
Zr-
in
pxwrbMlUi or
DML
]k
E E S
Dealer in Wool and Manufacturer
1
Morton Post, No. 1,
DKPAUTMKXT OF INDIANA. TERRE HAUTE, Jleadqnnrters sai-jj South Third.
Regular meeting* first and third Thursday evenings, each month. JST"Heading Room open ever* evening.
Comrades visiting the city wll •iHvays he made welcome. W. E. McLEAN, conrdr. .JAY CUMMINOS, Adj't.
GKO. PLANKTT, P. t|. M. Oftke at llcadqnarters
GALL Aid) EXAMINKf
THE NEW
Improved Howe.!
SMCl
."-J"*
TITE SIMPTiEST, LK ITT EST RUN NFNG, MOST DURARLE AND EASIEST OPERATED
OF ANY
SEWING- MACHINE
In the Market. For sale at, 23 south Sixth street, opposite Post Oflicc.
The Howe Machine Co.
T. D. OLIN, Agent '1
A ATO $4M)00 A YEAR, or $5 to $*) a day lUnn yonrown locality. No rixk. Wo-
8 8
nil HO PI
ON
«Jy on
ormfim bnwtU,
an
a or an am stated above, No one can fail to make money fast. Any one can do
the work. Yoa can make from 50 cent* to $2 an hotitfry devoting your evenfnjpi and fimre time to the laiBinesH. It coftn nothing to try the btinineiir. Notliini? like it for money making ever offered before. Baalnewt pleasant nnd ptricMy honorable. Reader, if you want to know all about the heat. paying buiincBB before the public, send
uh
«RA¥M HWMJIFM: nEDM IMK TRADE
your
address and we will new! yon full particular* and private term# free. Sample* worth alf«o free you can then make up your mind for yonruelf.! Address GEORGE 8TIN80N & CO.. Portland Maine. *mfi
NEUV()US JE HI LiT Y.
Ep
.TRAPK MARK
gliah Reaiedy, A a in cure for Seminal Weak ri i. Spermatorrhea, Imj»otcncy. and all L)i*eane»that follow a* a m-
1EFDRE TAUMlTbu"" AFTER TAKIRfl. of Wemory,« Tniveraal La»citnde,
If
YOUR SHIRTS SSi
ruu *rr
Pain In the
B*«k. Di»ne«s of Vfmlon. Premature Old Age.j snd many other Dioeases'that lead to Jneanity or| Concnmptiotf and a Premature grave. ^T*F«J1 partlcniara in oar pamphlet, which wc dexire to wnd free by wall to every one. 0T"The Speciik Medicine is #old by all DrtJ^fi»'t# at $1 per package, or «tx package* for $5. or will be nent free by mall on receipt of the money by addrenaing
THE CIBAY SKDICIKK 0., So, 8 Mechanics' Block, DrrnOiT, Mien. Sold in Terre Haute and by all Dragglata every where.
a mn
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of
yotcr dsUea prvUl cnmaUftitK aa
I
urtbrattiwrr*-unn*&lavotk..iMttHomrmi.nurbt
I'
•M Hop from but ton maertng from a o( ctck-
ronoti.
Ttter*.
Wboewr T*«*2| Wb«or»er ToU that yynr |M or SrocSitoHt. toTmtt*g, ttkf HOP
WwAj
tiMrorMM 'I wltl
carnd if
jiopmttemi
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ca*Ujr from MM I0*e
bweo jww Mtod a tlm«)y
turn ot
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a an atawtata aad IrrintoH or
HOP
tor
4naktsamt»,
tiae of
r« u»cf
optim,
tobaeeo.o# nareotlca
MSbydrnt-tkuuiter
gUi*. Cbwlu1, MT KTvm
NEVER
a
!FAIL
ave/our J|f«« tfhaa saved nun* drwfjk.
ATw^Alb'
u-wfmtn
