Daily News, Volume 1, Number 154, Franklin, Johnson County, 17 August 1880 — Page 2
MILT SEWS
E. P. BE.VUCHAMP, Editor and Proprietor.
Publication Office, corner Fifth and Main Street
Entered at the Post Office at Tern Haute, Indiana as second-class nutter.
TUESDAY, AUGUST 17,
FOR PRESIDENT OT TUB UNITED STATES,
JAMES
A. GARFIELD.
FOR VICE PRESIDENT,
CHESTER A. ARTHUR.
STATE TICKET."
For Governor,
ALBERT G. PORTER. For Lieutenant Governor, THOMAS BANNA.
For Secretary of State, EMANCEL R. HAWN. For Anditor of State, EDWARD H. WOLFE, For Treasurer of State,
ROSWELL 8. HILL, For Attorney General, DANIEL P. BALDWIN, For Judgce of Supreme Court, BYRON K. ELLIOT. Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District.
For Clerk Supreme Court, DANIEL ROYSE. For Reporter Supreme Court,
FRANCIS M. DICE,
For Superintendent Public Instruction, JOHN M. BLOSS.
For Congress,
ROBERT B. F. PEIRCE.
Vigo County Ticket.
For Clerk,
MERRILL N. SMITH. For Treasurer, CENTENARY A. RAY.
For Sheriff,
JACKSON STEPP.
For Comraiaaioner. Third District, JOHN DEBAUN. For Coroner.
DR. JAMES T. LAUGIIEAD. For 8enator, FRANCIS V. B1CHOWSKY.
For Representatives, WILLIAM II. MELRATH. DICK T. MORGAN.
For Surveyor,
OROROE HARRIS.
NIGHT before last ice ware county, New York.
formed in Dela
THE Chief of the Old Guard, Senator Conkling, will speak in this city during the campaign. il.--.1- —I 1 L-
A TWO minutes' cyclone in Texas yofitorday demolished twenty-five houses and injured five persons.
A DISPATCH from Santa Fee of last Friday says that a sensation was created day before yesterday by the announcement of a rich mining strike in the Mexican village of Los Placitas, about thirty milos distant. The village is built of adobo huts and corals, and the foundations of the houses are rock. Prospector Jesse Martin detected mineral in this rock. lie pounded up and hammered some of it, getting a rich result in gold. He located the streets of the town whence the rock was taken, and had iissa}'s made, with the result of $4,600 of gold to the ton, the lowest grade out of the rock assayed being #43. Governor Lew Wallace has just rcttirned from the place. He paccd oft the lead, making it 84 paces in width. Its length is not known, but 9,000 feet along the vein has been located. Subsequent assays in Santa Fe give from $8,000 to |6,000 per ton The whole of the village is built of ledge, and rock worth per pound has been thrown about as worthless.
THE NEWS AND THE PEOPLEAbout the first of April, the present, management of the DAiiy
NBWS
began a
warfare upon the great steals, and rings, jobberies, &c. which were being perpetrated by the Democratic* administration of tills city. It biased out to the honest citistens and tax-payers of the city, the great wrongs they were suffering by reason of Democratic misrule, and showed no quarter where the interests of our citUeos were at stake, their rights abridged, or their property j&opardtaed by the wholesale jobbery of rings and cliques. Again, when it became necessary to elect a council man from tfie Sixth ward by the reason of Itanison jrt«signatlon this paper took up the gauntlet in the interest of honest government and an economical administration, TUo result of yesterday shows what power the Nsws wielded in the election of Mr. Phillips* and we now stand ready to defend the interests of our people to see lhat their rights arc protected attd .their wrongs punished in accordance with law and good gotf rmnent*
Complaints arv made by the Jews that there exists at Jerusalem no school at which instruction in modern depart-
imnta of knowlete am be h«d. Clmr-
but of teaching practical things there is none. Meanwhile iect:lejUasticfem prevails in the synutogu**, and hospitals n»td alms-houses are jaravided for, but the active man who has to do with the, busy world left in his ignorance.
the boy earn© back fr^m an errand and said he lost the {mcks^reininstuni him: "he'd lose anytH-g. One day laai I, _v
to e*nd for a
1 1
4) •«ac *4^
DEAD ISSUES-
The Greenback vote of yesterday demonstrates that the members of that party has opened their eyes to see the frauds and misdeeds of the Democratic party, I They see that the pupose of their leaders, under the assumption of reform and purity in politics, has been to lead them into the meshes of Democracy. They see that the sole object of those leaders, so far as our national affairs are concerned, is to join with that party in plundering the nation should the people b* so foolish as to allow them to get into power. But we are satisfied that our National friends now see this. We are satisfied that they now see that the issue of Greenbackism is a thing of the past. Their interests are identical with the interests of the Republican party. The whole matter resolves itself simply into one thing: Do the people of this country want prosperity, or do they want desolation?
We presume the answer to be prosperity. Do our Greenback friends think this country would be in a more prosperous condition under Democratic rtilc? What evidence have you that the party lhat tried to destroy the Government of the United States in 1861 would not attempt the same thing in 1881. We know that the leaders of the Greenback party are doing all in their power to hoodwink their followers.
We know that the Greenback press is feeding our national friends large quantities of taffy such as that administered by the National View, which says among other things in regard to the issues of the national-party that "the Greenback party is the party of the people, and the whole people are that party, because there alone are the rights of all men recognized and the duties that all men owe demanded. It is the party of the people, because its root lies in their very heart and springs into life with their rising hopes. It is the party of the people, because they love justice, and its tenets are founded upon justice alone. It is the party of the peo pie, because they are the world, and its foundations arc strong enough and wide enough to lift to a new and higher plane the dwellers in every land. If they reject it, it is because ignorant of its glorious aims they do not comprehend its munificent opportunities. Every man longs for freedom, and to them it offers freedom. Each man wishes that his children may live after him, and this party guarantees that they shall live in security and happiness. It will forward all noble aims, and lives in all high endeavors. It is the despair of the bad and the hope of the good it is the death of barbarism and the new birth of civilization. Let no man wonder that its leaders are 'enthusiasts and its fol lowers full of fervor."
Now, the Republican party for the past twenty years has done just what our Na tional friends expect to do upon the as sumption that their organ is speaking for them. The Republican party is the patty of the people, and its sole object is to perform every obligation that lies nearest the heart of the people. It is the party of the people, because it was founded on humanity and the principle that every man is the equal of every other man. And for twenty years it has given to the people the grandest results ever witnessed by man. We would ask our Greenback friends to ponder well the history of the two old parties and see if the affiliation with the Republican party is not just what they expect from their own doctrine. If it is, then why weaken that grand old party by still voting upon issues dead, and in direct opposition to their own interest
Mark Twain's Reflections on the German Language. I HAVE heard of an American student who was asked how he was getting along with his German, and who answered promptly: "I am not getting along at all. I have worked at it hard for three level months, and all I have got to show for it is one solitary iGerman phrase—'Zwci gla$y" (two glasses oi beer.) He paused a moment, reflectively, then added with feeling, But I've got that solid!"
My philological studies have satisfied me thut a gifted person ought to learn English (barring spelling and pronouncing), in thirty hours, French in thirty days, and German in thirty years. It seems manifest, then, that the latter tongue ought to bo trimmed down and repaired. If it Is to remain as It is, it ought to be gently and reverently set aside among the dead languages, for only the deaa have time to learn It.
On the way to Hetlbronn there were some nice German people in our compartment, I got to talking some pretty
{ecamematters
private presently, and Harris nervous so he nudged me,
AM
jml 'i
Mid
said: Speak in German—these Germans may understand English.''
I did so, and it was well I did for it turned out that there was nota German in that party who did not understand English perfectly. It is curious how widespread our language is in Germany. Alter a wbue some of those folks got out, and pi Gerraarf gentleman
two young danghteregot in. I
k0
fe CK-fmanto one ot'lle latter
b«
rj
1 pent iiias to l-'-ei pickle barm to a I'* damp of autumn sink customer, tt»a before ho rot thetanOto the tuwn/JJio to die if he didn't the lm»g-lulf jrotttof iU and 1
without ««.u.
'Ich verstehe nor Dentch and ErtgHseW or words to that effect. That any language Is, »I don't understand but German and English. I can iterstimd German a* Veil «s the maniac who Invented it, but I talk it best
I rrw Ku into tha eaves and prepare them Jbr the necessiIV of their fell and thus insensibly ai* close around us,dctacfaea
w-
88
Itfh
yw® -. ,u
fecytfitina new o«t&» our tenacity of u?e by the gentle
pressure of recwrdod aotro#.—j
Garfield's Sew York Speech*
At New York on the evening of August 6th General Garrield was given a reception by the Boys in Blue and thus addressed his entertainers:
COMHADES Asd HOTS ES BLUB, AND FK-LOW CITIZESS or NEW YORK I cannot look upon this great assemblage and these old veterans that have marched past us. and tisten to the welcome frtn our com-ade who has just spoken, without remembanag- how yreat a thing it is to live in this Union and be part of it. This is New York, and yonder toward the battery, more than a hundred ag*, a young tituuent of
COIUUIMKCullejfeyears
ITO*arnruing'
the ideas of American Revolution and Ameri can Union against an American loyalty to monarchy of bis collie' I*re-i lent an Professors. By-iind-by he went to the patriot army, was placed on the staff of Washington to fight the battles of his cmritry, an while in camp, before he was twenty-one year* old, upon a drumhead he wrote a letter which contained every germ of the Con^titattoa of the United States. That student, soldier, statesman and preat leader of thoujrbt—Alexander Hamilton, of New York—made this Republic glorious by his thinking, and left his lasting unprtsasion upon New York, the foremost State of the Union, and hero on this Island, the scene of his early triumphs, we go there tonight soldiers of anew war, representing the same ideas of Union and glory, and adding to the column of the monument that Hamilton and Washington, and the heroes of the Revolution reared.
Ideas outlive men. Ideas outlive all things, and you who fought in the war for the Union lought for immortal ideas, and by their might you crowned our war with victory'. But victory was worth nothing except for the fruits that were under it, in it and above it. We ought to-night as veterans and mrades to stand sacred guard around the truths for which we fought. And while we have life to meet and grasp the hand of the comrade we will stand by the great truths of the war And, comrades, among the connections of that war which have sunk deep in our hearts there are some we can never forget. Ttink of the great elevating spirit of the war itself. We gathered the boys from all our farms and shops and stores and schools and homes from all over the Republic. They went forth unknown to fame, but returned enrolled on the roster of immortal heroes. They went in the spirit of those soldiers of Henry of Agincourt, of whom be said: "Who this day shells his blood with me to-day shall be my brother. Were he ne'er so vile tJil day shall gentle his condition." And it did gentle the condition and elevate the heart of every working soldier who fought in it and he shall be our brother forever more and one thing wo will remember, we will remember our allies who fought with us. S(xm after the great struggle began we looked behind the army of white Rebels, and saw 4,000,000
of black people compelled to toil as
sluvos for our enemies, and we found thut the hearts of this 4,OCO,UOO were God-inspired with the spirit of liberiy, and that they wore our friends. We have seen white men betray the tlag and fight to kill the Union, but in all that long, dreary war we never saw a traitor in a black skin. Our prisoners escaping from 1 ho starvation of prison, Seeing to our lines by the light of the North star, never feared to enter the black man's cabin and ask for bread. In all that period of suffering and danger no Union soldier was ever betrayed by the black manor woman. And now that we have made them free, so long as we live we will stand by the black citizens. We will stand by them until the sun of liberty, fixed in the firmament of our Constitution, shull shine with equal rays upon the white and black throughout the Union.
Now, fellow-citizens, fellow-soldiers, in all this there is a beneficence of eternal justice, and by this we will stand forever. The great poet has said that in inidlvdual life we rise
On stepping stones of our dead selves to higher things," and the Ropublic rises on the
gcrocs
lorious achievements of its dead and living to higher and nobler National life. We muts stand guard over our past as soldiers, as patriots, ana over our country aa the common heritage of us alL
I thank you, fellow-citizens, for this magnificent demonstration.. In so far as I represent in my heart and life the great doctrines for which you fousrht
I accopt this demonstra
tion as a tribute to my representative character. In the strength of your hands, Jn the Her* vor of your hearts, in the firmness of your faith, in all that betokens the greatness of manhood and nobleness of character, the Republic finds its security and glory. I do not entvr upon controverted questions. The time, the plaoe. the situation forbid it. I respect the traditions that require me to speak only of these themes which olevate us alL Again I thank you for the kindness and enthusiasm of your greeting. |Trixnendouscheering.]
Full Vote, a Free Ballot and a Fair Count,"
One of the best sentences in General Hancock's letter of acceptance, which left upon the mind the same impression of neatness and vacancy as a school-boy's copy-book, was that in which the candidate of the Democracy demanded "a full vote, free ballot and fair count." It was an excellent sentiment,, to which every Republican would heartily subscribe. But General Hancock's letter professed to be a statement of Democratic principles. With the platform to which it was a response it was an appeal to the country to truat the eighty thousand offices of the Government in the hands of tho Democratic party. The question for voters, therefore, is, not whether the declaration is a sound one, but whether, being put forth by the Democratic party, it is an honest one, or is a fraud and cheat. The answer is easy.
It is in the South that the? Democratic party does its perfect work. There are no steadily Democratic States North of Delaware. In the South the party has grained complete control. In the South, therefore, it has had a noble opportunity to put into practice General Hancock's motto of "a full vote, free ballot and fair count." Has it done so? What are the factsP Let us look for a moment' at this dark page in American history.
Even Democrats will admit that by the year 1872 the Democratic party ^vas well organized in every Southern State. In Alabama, for example, in that year the Democratic vote was only 10.000 less tlian it was in the election of 1378, two year* ago. Yet, this is the way in which the Republican party has prospered under the rule of the party of •*a free ballot and fair count,"~the figures being the voles cast in the years named:
Item. Rep.
im 78.444 «X#S im 107,116 93. 1878. .....ttrJ,OE 1873 ^..VTl 0.000
What became of the epnbHcan party in Alabama in 1878? It is said that they ran no ticket because defeat was inevitable? Are parties in the habit of doing this? Do Democrats give up voting in Vermont, or Republicans in Missouri? It was because the Republicans of Alabama had been taught by midnight murders and whippings, by social ostracism, and Jby the tyranny of employers, that the less they had to do with politics the better. This is the kind of "free ballot and fair count" the Alabama Republicans have enjoyed. It remains to be seen how much better they have fared in the election just held, under the new svstem which prefers cheating to bulldozing as being easier.
Take the ease of Mississippi, where bulldozing was invented, ana was made known to the world as the Mississippi plan." These are the votes erf the Stale from 1873 to the last election of a State ticket: if
3
T-:*
DrrtL &n. tm£i
...4J2J7S .... SC.7S7 LIS3
im
This is what the Republican party of Mississippi has come to through fear of Ku-Klux assassins, through the operation of the tissue-ballot, through the frauds of Democratic canvassers. And General Hancock has the assurance to prate to us about "a full vote, free ballot and fair eouniP'
Take the case of South Carolina, where the parties were so evenly divided four years ago that it t*ok "four months to decide the Electors! vote of the State. This is wha' the ride-clubs and tissue-ballots, the assassins and swindlers o? the party, led by Wade Hampton and Hamburg Butler, have done for the Republican party in South Carolina in two years:
Denu It-yp.
1S76 90,39(5 81,786 1878 ms~i0 213 It should be noticed that in spite of the notorious and universal use of the tissue-ballot in 1878, the Democratic vote shows an increase of only 28,000 votes. The Republican vote shows a decrease of 91,000 votes. Supposing for the sake of argument that the Democratic votes were honest, it would still be true that 63,000 votes were withheld from the ballot-boxes. Why this change in two years? Was it a sadden indifference on the part of the blacks, whose greatest pride that they are citizens and voters, or was it a chilling fear? JL^et the murderers and ballot-box stuf fers who are the brightest ornaments of the South Carolina chivalry make an swer. and then let General Hancock ponder awhile upon the beauties of their style of "a free ballot And fair count."
Almost every Southern State makes the same showing. Here is the record of Arkansas:
Df.m. Rep.
1872 38,415 41,t5Sl 187fl 5\07l 187* 88,728 0J,(M)
The same is true in a lesser degree in Louisiana. There was no general election between 187G and last year, and for the former year we take the official figures:
Don. Hop.
137«.. 70,rt36 75,iar 18?J 5«,9W 3G.611 Every one of these States— and at least one other, North Carolina-- would be Republican upon a full vote, a free ballot and a fair count. General Hancock knows it. Every Democrat knows it. But simply to serve the purposes of the illustration, let us say that these five States are fairly Republican. They give, all told, 39 Electoral votes, which will honestly belong to James A. Garfield. The South could then give General Hancock only 99 Electoral votes at best, and he could never by any possibility be President of the United States. By all means, let us have "a full vote, free ballot and fair count."—N. Y. Tribune.
jJ®*We would do justice to the Union General. A friend has asked us to recite his civil claims for the Presidency. Here they are:
It
This covers his entire life-work, is a record of which no man fit for th" office of President can be proud.— —Rochester Democrat.
Management of Grass Lands. JOHN B. MOORE, Esq., of Concord, Mass., gives his experience with grass lands, which is very suggestive. He does not top dress the land, but plows it up every five or six years. The land which he lays down to grass is generally where he has raised a crop of cabbages or cauliflowers, frequently both. He generallly plants a couple of acres with cauliflowers, and his rule is to keep twenty-five acreg in grass. On this, with ten acres oi swale hay, he keeps four horses and thirty head of cattle, and sells annually fifty tons of hay in a year. On his farm he always has refuse from his vegetable garden and also corn-stalks, which he Feeds to his cattle. He cuts two crops of hav in a year. The first crop he sells the second, with his swale hay, garden refuse and corn-stalks, foe feeds to his stock. His horses he feeds with his be^t hay, and never lets his cattle feed upon his mowings. The grass that grows after the second mowing1 ho lets remain upon the ground. The land which he has in grass is moist, and he could not turn his cattle upon it without their poaching. This ho considers one of the reasons why he raises such heavy crops of hay. A neighbor of his, who always fed his cows on the aftermath, and who^ has equally as good land as his, and who mannied as heavily, failed to get anything like so good crops as Mr. Moore did. When asked why it was, Mr. Moore replied that he attributed it to the fact that he never fed his aftermath. Since that, his neighbor ceased turning his cows upon his mowing, and now lie cuts as heavy crops of hay as does Mr. Moore.
Self-Winding' Clocks.
A CLOCK-MAKEK of Copenhagen, named Louis Soenderberg, who for some time past has had charge of that city's electric time-keepers, has just invented an ingenious appliance which obviates the necessity of winding up the regulator, from which the clocks in question take their time." By a mechanical contrivance which periodically cots off the stream of electric fluid emanating from the battery, and brings an electric magnet to bear upon the relaxed mainspring in snch a way as to renew its tension instantaneously, perpetual motion is practically imparted to the worts of the regulator—that is to sav. as long a4? the batteries connected with it are Kept properly supplied with acids. Hie discoverer of this important improvement has satisfied himself, by six months successful experiments in his own workshops, that his system works faultlessly, sad has applied for permission to adipt it- to the electric clocks set up by the mnnicipality in different parts of the Danish capital. ,Biectricity,"'*«nder' 'Mr. ikK*nkrberg's compulsion, is destined not only to make the Cojxsohagen clocks go, but to wind them up, with never-ending re-
currctK«e. tinti! tlie —London Teltgrapk-
ANNUAL FAIR
9
-f
-OF THE
Vigo AgricultuaaJ Society,
AT-
TEKRE IIAI TE, TXD.,
-ON-
September 14, IS, IS, 17
Premium list can be had of the secretary by mail, at the stable of Beanchamp & Miller, "or at the Recorder's office, and the Woolen mill of U.R. Jeffcxs. \V. T. BEAITCHAMP, Pres.
S
'crock of doom-"
L\ R. JEFFERS. Sup't. Jos. GILBERT. Sec'y. W. S. CLIFT, Treas.
"0 CP mL
DAILY NEWS
NOW ENJOYS A CITY CIRCULATION EQUAL TO THAT OF ANY DAILY PUBLISHED IN THE CITy, AND HAS THE ADVANTAGE OYER 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 WORK DiGMEN—the men who PATRONIZE HOME INSTITUTIONS.
ADVERTISERS Call and see us. We will give you Reasonable Rates, and Guarantee Satisfaction.
3
CO
ALL
IS.
Si
Beautiful Grounds, Ample Accommodations, Large Premiums.
Plenty of Amusements.
Long List of Special Premiums, Races every Afternoon at 2, Archery on Thursday P. M.
Bicycle Races on Friday,
Usual Kates on Railroads.
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12^
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CO
Sfjirts
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YOUR SHIRTS
MADE TO
AT
liTJlTTERS'
SMrt Factory,
MAIN STREETS
PROMPTLY FILL
•AT-
U. It. JEFF Ell Is
Dealer So Wool ami Manufacturer
Cloths. Cas»simeros, Tweeds, Flannels, Jeans, Blanket' Stocking Yarns,
Carding: and Spinning.
N. B.—The highest market (»rice in cash, or own make oi Ckv1s csohanstfil for woe1.
Terre Haute Banne
TRI-WEEKLY and WEEKLY.
Office 21 South Fifth Street P. GFROEREK. Proprietor.
THE ONLY GERMAN PAPER IN Ttd CITY OF TERllE HAUTE.
English and German Job Printing
Executed in.the best manner.
e\ a. n.
Morton Post, No.
USRARTMENT OF INOIANA,
TERRE HAUTF
Headquarter? 33South Thi{ Regnlar meetings first and thi Thursday evening#, eachmont,
J#" Reading Room open evetl evening. Comrades visitinc the city w| always be inndo welcome. jf
W. E. McLEAN. Cora'dr. .TAT CiTxuixoe. AdjM. Gso. PLANBTT, P. Q. M. OFLU| at Headquarters
CALL AND EXAMIN1
THE NEW
Improved Me
THE SIMPLEST. LIGHTEST RUN* NING, MOST DURABLE AND EASIEST OPERATED
OF ANY
SEWING MACHINE
In the Market. For sale at 23 south Sixtl. street, opposite Post Office.
The Howe Machine Co.
US
T. D. OLIN, Agent'
A TO $0.*V A YEAR, or 85 to f# a «iay Jn yonrown locality. No ri»k. X*o-'\ men do a» well a«» men. Marij make more than the amontjj mated above. No one can fail make money fast. Any one can
the work. You can moke from 60 cents to $2 ail hour by devoting yotir evenings and spare tlm« the business. It cotl* nothing to try the biisfne#»f Nothing like it for money making ever offered
IK*
fore. Butincus pleasant and strictly honorabk Reader, if rou want to know all about the be* paying bnnincM before tne public, send us youi address and we will #end yon full particular* and private terms free. Samples worth also free! you can then make up yonr mind for yoursclfl Address GEORGE 8TIN80N & CO.. Portland' Maine.
NERVOUS DEBILITY.! GKAV« f»l»FXIFI( MEDICIXF, TRADE HAWjheUrtjt En.TRADl WAWt glish Bemedy,
An uu falling cure for Seminal Weakn ess, Spermatorrhea. Itnpotency. ana all flfc«*tsthpt follow as a re-' qaence of Self-
BIFORE TAKIItA tase JossAFTEl TAKIRti. of Memory, l?nivcral Lassitnde, Pain in tb Back. Diranesa of Vision, Premature Old .A*e and many othet Disease? thai lead to insanity oi Consumption and a Premature grave. jyFull particalars in ont pamphlet, which desire to send free by mail to every one. tSTTH Specific Medicine i» sold by all Dru^ixt* at per package, or six package* for $6. or will sent free by mall on receipt c1 the money by dressing
THE &RAY MEDICIXE CO.,
NFT, 8 Mechanics*BFYCK, DKTOOIT. MICH. Sold in Terre Haute and fey all Dmgglau everjr where.
of
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wffartns from aay te.ttoaj IT tcoiwws
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