Daily News, Volume 2, Number 13, Franklin, Johnson County, 3 September 1880 — Page 2
*a
B. P. BBAUCHAMP, Editor and Proprietor. Publication Office, corner "Fifth sod Main Streets sss&= 7 ii a '"iv a.1 '-JjJi1 Entered at the PosttQffic* at T«rr« Bute, Isdlrn, 4Mk KCOldillH guttCjT.
FRIDAY, SEPT. 8, 1880.
forprbsmh^ j|r^
JAMES A. GARFIELD. FOR VrCE FRESIfHK?fT, CHESTER A. ARTHUR.
STATE TICKET. ,v, •".?«
For Governor, iUu
ALBERT G. PORTER. For Ueutenant^Governor, THOMAS HANNA.
For Secretary of State, EMANUEL R- HAWN. For Auditor of State, EDWARD H. WOLFE,
For Treasnrer of State, ROSWELL S. HILL, For Attorney General, DANIEL P. BALDWIN, For Judges of Supreme Court, BYRON K. ELLIOT, Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District. yFor-ClerK Sujpr»mciOonrfHi .A. DAKIEL IiOYSE. v.'V:
For Reporter Supreme Court, FRANCIS M. DICE,* For Superintendent Public Instruction,
JOHN M. BLOSS.
For Congreas,
ROBERT B'i F. PBlRCE.
Vigo County Ticket.
For Clerk.
MERRILL N. SMITH. For Treasurer, CENTENARY A. RAY.
For Sheriff,
JACKSON STEPP.
For Commissioner, Third District, JOIIN DEBAUN. For Coroner,
DR. JAMES T. LAUGHEAD. For Senator, FRANCIS V. BICnOWSKY.
For Representatives, WILLIAM II. MELUATH. DICK T. MORGAN.
Fot Surveyor,
GEORGE HARRIS.
THE NEWS HAS THE IAIU1EST DAILY CIRCULATION IN THE CITY.
WHY THE SOtfTH 18
tOUD
FOR HA*-
COOK
Consider what Lee and Jacktoii would do were they alive. THESE ARE THE 8a mis rJUNoiPLES
FOR
wnwir
TIIEY FOUGHT If OUR TEARS. Remember hi men mho poured fourth their l\fe hlood on Virginia's soil, and do not abandon them note, Renumber tliat npon your vote depend* the tnitce*8 of the Democratic ticket—[Wade Hampton, at Staunton. Va., July 26.
Dn. CHAT-IN, the great tlnlvcrsalist minister is seriously ill.
The Ute question is practically settled. The Southern Utes have signed the agreeMCTTTSJ .|N X'K
IT is said that since the death of Adelaide Neilson, there is no one left to play Juliet but BGEU Butler.
JUST
think
of
the chairman
r»-
mate
cmi infa.. us and
of the In
diana delegation to the Democratic National co^Tentian, writing ajfifsay on cooking string beans.
WHEN a singer Tires in a glass house he throws tones.— Whitehall Tintes. Then let him move into the basement or into the open air, and he won't have that treble. ~-Bu rlington Hawkeye.
Bui to what htm w#es he would corno,
Tim way of the transgressor is, not a milky \KH±\-~MeriiUn Recorder. It has eiml tt) us that the whey is very milky at ,) W.fc /Wpfcr. This is one of that kim pf jokes that ought totwere-mmod-SttrtinffMn JTa#k#$t*
Well then you had butter "cheese it. |H ,I„ 11II 4 ,i*m Thk Philadelphia Record, In speaking of the present new revision of the New Testament. sayi ithat this revision will not Imi satisfactory to the majority of the pious people The numerous verbal change?that have bwn# inade will jar harshly upon the ears and offend the •yw bf ihom who are mo«t -familiar with the fux&eut t«^t» and there will be a |of» 6f dignity ils th*f alteration of many jpasmm* tooonforra their phraseology to modern mago. The antiqueneas styl**-4u'fa# its very fual»l»e&M> constitutes a great part of the charm of the current version of the $crtptures,and in this resjwet there will beno}gain in ihe substitution of more modem words or idioms for those of the King James translation. JlAi a f«wot this IpiMttfjk which have been remodeled have become coosecrated in pious hearts as precious forauIsus and while the Sunday school children of the future maybe con lent with the new renditions, those of a former generation win aot be apt to acci^st tlwtn with much eagerne«#. The exclusion of the greater portion of the pamhle about the WOM lakeo la adultery trill strike many a #ummdcr of one of the mo*t »igniflcaOt les«^n« of tht Bible white the description of the poo! of Belhestia will lo$e much of Ite romantic bwulv by the Dmy&ioa tif th« nagel
r| $ |*$» m*a
tUw
lelM iv
THE OCTOBBB «X(rriOOT
E^-"-
On the 18th of this month, one week from nextMgprfU ernor, repreafentatj|res islatare, and vHe affiro] amendmenV: to tw ooifRitdwii 4 jstate, pr«tvidh»#"tiiAt a plnrality vote shall elect the governor, instead of majority, a^ now. -•~-?.'i'ivg|t.y'i*j!
This election will, in a«_ considerable degree, sound the key note of the presidential election,
The Democrats are sanfiuine of success in that state, and are dividing thei* powey between Maineand Indiana.
Then follows the Qolofndo election oil the 5th of October the Georgia election on the dth, and Indiana, Ohio and West Virginia on the 12th of October.
Now, as the October ejection & of the utmost importance torn we ask our readers to consider well before they cast their votes.
Let us in calmness view the partial history of the two parties that are striving so earnest^ to gain the ascendency in these elections/j j_ /tM
In the first place, the Republican party tore the shackles from the bleeding flesh of slaves, and made this country the home of the free men. In the second place, the Republican party crushed the rebellion and made it possible for our flag to float in the clear sky without a stain, Again, the Republican party maintained the sacred obligations of the Nation, and brought it to the highest pinacle of national honor. 't'lt •--uLl'tPty S4i^1
The Republican party has fought everf measure introduced in congress for the recognition, of the Southern war claims. The Republican party believes that this is a Nation, with a big N that it isi a government of the people, for the people and by the people, founded oh that broad and sacred rock—the constitution of the United States, vif
The Republican party believes it the duty of the government of the United States to protect and shield each and every citizen of each an every nationality, who has sought a home on our broad shores, in every right which he may possess both'civil and political. This party comes before the people with the broad principle, that these United States are ohe and inseparable, and that the States are not independent soveriegnties, but are the creation^ of a people, protected by the Constitution of the United States.
What is the record of the Democratic party? They have been on every side of every question: "they have opposed every measure of reform introduced by the Republican party.1 While the war hung upon the people of the North like a pall, they met in convention and declared that the wftr was a failure, and that they would not vote another mac, nor another dollar for its prosecution. They have heaped every sort of ignominy upon our Republican brethren in the South, and organized all sorts of secret societies*for the aid of rebels. Their ranks are filled with rebels and moonshiners. They have hanged and shot women and children ^because their husbands and fathers were "Republi cans. And they would to-day, if they had the power, bankrupt our government ami'destroy the Republican institutions of America.
THE Inte^ Ocean, in speaking of the joint discuspion between Porter and Landers, says that "Two men more different could scarcely be brought together, even in so populous a State as Indiana. The one an accomplished, scholarly, dignified gentleman,.of quiet manners the other rough, uncouth, vulgar,^without intellect ual culture or education, but at the, same time shrewd and well versed in the ways of the world. The one a blonde gentleman. with fair complexion, portly figure and distinguished appearance, showing in every motion the refinement of good breeding the other .tall, lank, red faced, and with the manners of his slaughter house. Landers oan talk, and is blesped with the gift of continuance, but Porter will make a polished,?^ statesmanlike speech."
it
Great men will differ. "Porter will make a polished, statesmanlike speech,' according to tike Inter- Omin, but according to John Lamb, "with truth, Porter has made but little impression on his audiences. lic isa fair lawyer but does not known what the people want."^!
Coal Ashes for TomatoesT To raise good tomatoes, says an excellent authority, take away ft wheelbarrow of eerthirom where each vine is to stand, fill with halfsoil aud Jialf ashes and therein set out the plant, Plaste thus treated will bring out nearly double the fruit of others, and much smoother Had larger in this»oil, though in cane of drought the plants require water aooner, and more of it, than those growing in common soil.
In «oall ^arvie»8 tomatoes should never be left to lie on the ground. Put down small uptight posts aim draw wire horiftontally through holes in the po&j*. or oailon ^ripeof wood inroad of wiren The fruit will be earlier, and there will be more of it
IvIXxtnT FliiOiiiia*, A wry sttcoMBftil way of destroying ants i* by taking a vial or iaoce r, nearly filled fth or olive oil and sinking it in the groa&d near th«attt-hill or their ran-wav% that the rim isabwit even with the snrl^ ofthesoiL The ants are very fend of the oil, and wil seek iti foil It i» tliem. We mxmmmA the use of coal oil diluted in water to dwstwy iimtm Thte mWmm feeia* to be vjxy destr^Uhre to insect li^ and its for thte purpose is rapidly extendiag. A table ^oouful to two gallons of the ordinary rnixtomand it ii wwd willfall and all the iiwecte thai wdisttrily InSit planta. The oil fa wmeused
with a jqnrii^^Ficr#
&
tm.
THOSE DUNNING BOYS. O, yes! it's a good seal for melons ftfst-rite along this slope. Sandy, so there's never standin' water ana we could have 'em easy enough, but. too jBee, thodle Donning boys——*J _..
I should »rtamljt#ia6: thoae^bys had as many legs as a 'centlpede/' said Bath. X. hftar^of them in^every^garden in town, yet nobody ever eaten es the?v Tkej of character than all the village put together, for when I ask vrtsj there isn't more^rg^^ vdi^^m^ody.^^n*t
ries, there is always, the same answer,
4
0, you can't on account of the I)unnii» bdy8.' They look harmi^3, too, Wi absolute despotism, and. a^ good Americans, I sncmla say the time had come for revolt Yarn ar» an told soldier, Hiram. Tell me the wav."
Hiram chuckled Kutn looked at him. The two had become great friends, and he often came down from Us old «hop where' he now and then -^ded his former trad^ of cobbling, and leaning, over the garden gate, watehed her apaong her flower-beds, whiqh bloomed as no other beds in Lowgate, had ever done. Hiram had for many, years driven the stage between Lowgate and the: Spirmga, till rheumatism disabled him, and now ilived with his wife in tho: little l»iMse backof theshoenjaker's shop his son had used till
Eother
e.
way," said Hiram, after a
14
You see it was in their father them and it will out. Didn tLl
eveirtell you about old Dunning?" Never," Ruth said. Wal, there1? one story I think of just this minute that's good's any. to show the way he come up an' the way they come up. I'll just sit down on the steps here while you're pullin' off them dead leaves. It' cu'rus I hain't said any thin' about him before. Old Dunning stood for more tom-foolery, I do suppose, than ,any, other ten men in the township. You see he was lake-mad, like a good many about here, and bound from ute time he was ten years old to get his livin' out o' the lake. Now Champlain looks plain sailin? enougn, but you that just come down in a pleas-' ure-boat from Whitehall, you don't know much about it. Up there in them Narrers I've seen the Doat draw so mnoh water the fish'd just be floppin' up an' down along the banks, an' not a pint for 'em to swim in. An'there's rocks
van'
shoals, an' a man has to keep
his eyes open o% he'll be aground, sure ^'^Wal, old Dunning began just after the war of '12, when a good many sloops was rami in,1 an' he was cabin-boy, an' he went on, first one thing an' then another, an there wasn't one captain oh that lake that didn't make up his mind he'd as soon try a saw-horse for cabin-boy. Somehow or 'nuther old Dunning didn't ever get the hang of anything but, stowing away his victuals and stcalin' whatever come handy. He couldn't see atenpenny naU lyinV round loose but what he wanteAit, an' hed it too, and all so sort of easy and nat'ral that somehow he never got took up for it the way other folks do. His mother had a farm jhst over the Canada line, an' when he couldn't sail the lake he8muggled, an' I could tell you some o' the ways if you cared to know anytime. "He got married finally to a French gal, an' took her home, an' they scratched along somehow, but it wasn't till bis boys was fifteen or,so that he managed somehow or other to get a sloop of his own. That set him up, I can tell ye! An he might have made a good livin' if he hadn spent so much time getfcus' aground, or lettin' his sails blow off, or some such nonsense. They'd see signals fiyin' an' they'd all say:
Old Dunning*8 in another muss,' and sometimes they'd hurry and sometimes they wouldn't. a "These tyro boys took to stealin'just as eas^ as their father. I don't know why they shouldn't It was in the blood bu both sides. These boys couldn't read, an' there wasn't a man nor woman neither that seemed to think it was any o\ their business, I don't know. 1 can see through a knot-hole, as easy as anybody, but I hain't seen yet what the right this thing is. 11" "T
Wal, the long an' sfiort of it
4I_guess
ksent
to th$ West by the hopelessness of making a living from it Hiram himself was too old If or change^ and indeed the neighborhood could Hi have spared him. Grave-digger, bell-iinger, genealogical register for every family in the township, and, above all. story-telier^at large, remembering everything thatnad ever happened to anybody, and witty a dry humor which played in every wrinkle and lighted up his rather melancholy orown eyes. A lit-' tie dismayed at first by his freedona, Ruth had come to find him an ^nfailihg source of amusement, and .pften of something deeper, and to talk over many things which puzzled or troubled her in this new life, in which unexpected difficulties were always cropping up. "You can't expect them boys to be
is,
Cfld
Dunning an' thenar boys got to be kind o' pirates in a small way, an' wherever that sloop caipe folks was on the watch for their gardens Hia!' hen-roosts. Most everybody s3ong the shore has ducks au' geese, an' it was mighty bandyto get one or two o* these. Ah' the queer thing was everybody kaew%an' nobody ever caught 'em, Old JDunning had a wheedly kind oV way, an' he'd go up Into the vllla2^ ah" sit an# tell stories *n' likfe as not his boys wer*» robbin' the gardens of the very men that listened id him. Then they'd set sail and make for the middle o' the lake, an' next day fay the other side, unless they got a load from somewhere. I will say for him he alwajn carried his freight fair an' square, an\ as I say, might a made as J^oest livin' if he'd Mkdu
This time Pin iellin* abwst was sweet-corn time and plenty of nice roasting ears. an' Old Dunning calkilated to live pretty earjr. He was half way up the lake, nigh a first-rate gar^ d«n patch he hadn't never been to, be* eattise the manwa* pretty stuffy an' had adid he'd 'exn alL and give them a ducking too. If they meddled with him. It was a dark night and 'a pretty stiff breeze, an' the swop came adong after nightfaH an* east anchor. The boys went ashore an" filled a sack with sweet mm an1 g*»lag b*ck they fust wraaif the necks o' two gee« as* took them alo«ur Tbet aee the wind wasroin^
m. r$
:MXB
S3 3^
tiMM^ow^nded' ft*
wonld be all right, so they just hoisted anchor an* went below. First, though, they shucked the corn and picked the geese an' threw the shucks and the feathers overboard, an' then they lit a fire an' had a royal! supper eat just like them Frenchers, azi' then got ready to turn in. Weiit ondeck an cast anchor.
we're far eneugh out now to
keep 'em from lookin' ns up,' says old Dunning, and they went to oed. "They slept pretty heavy, and it wasn't till lato-the next momiag that they roused |ip. Old Dunping, woke first, an' started up on dec^, wi^h a goose's- drttmstick his han'd. He rubbed his eyes when he got there and wasn't sure but what he was dreaming, The sloop hadn't stirred one inch, it was a dead cahn, and there they were oot thirty rodsr from shore, aa' them shucks and feathers jest lyin' otk the water teilin' their own story. An' before he oould iiiake up his mifid what he^d befter do: he see the mian polling oft from shore wid the Sheriff alon# with,hip. i.
They sij the devil helps his own, an' it does look that way sometimes. What da you think Old Dunning weat forward, an' helped thwn aboard, an* he points to them shucks an' feathers, an' be «ays:
Ye see, Tve jest lain in right here. I told them boys when they come aboard with that: corn an', them geese, I said to them, "Boys, sez I, ypu was hungry, an' we hadn't lain in enough to hist, atf there's some excuse for jdtii, beta' boys, but I tell you this, oook what you ve got, but here I stay, an' in the mornin' Tm going ashore.jto pay for every mite you've taken,*% Robinson's a fair man, an1 when he" sees Pm fair he won't want to prosecute but by the Lord Haarrvi Til give you to the Sheriff myself if I ever catch you at such doings again." That's what I said to the boys.'
For a moment Robinson looked at the Sheriff, an' the Sheriff looked at him. They was master hands for a joke, an' they pee through this one well enough. They burst out' laughing," an' Robinson says,' Well, Dunning, we'll let it go that way this time. Hand out your money,'
Old Dunning kind of winced, but he took out his wallet and paid two dollar and fiffcyl dents. "•Call again, Dunning,' the Sheriff says, as they pulled off Tve got some pretty good geese myself, and rll trade all you like on the same terms.' "Dunning grinned, but he looked pretty black an' them boys of his'n was black and blue too, when ne gotr through With 'em. First thing they knew ne had 'em out on the cabin floor an' was given' it to 'em with a rope's end. Still, they was Used to that, an' it soon passed over when they found out what h6 was at them for. They was reasonable enough to see floggin' 'em was the only thing to ease bis mind. Anyhow, that's the way I account for their always stickin' together. The house burned down one night in one o' their frolics* or after it, when they,was both drunk, an' one o' 'em was burned pretty bad, an' died. Then the rest come down here—Pets Dunning ah'what children there was. That's their place half way up the east bank as you go down towards the island."
Then these boys are not old Dunning's boys at all?" •*No, not his'n, but Pete's. There ain't but two boys but there's four or five gals all livin in them two rooms, an' how, the Lord only knows. They don't beg, that's one good thing about them but they're wilder than nawks, an' they ain't as civilized as heathen. I don't suppose one of 'em can read an' tbem two boys, Antoino and Pete, they ravage round in all the gardens, an1 they-ve got all the cuteness of their father an' th^ir grandfather, too, and you can't catch 'em. Tve knowed folks with gTapes sit up three nights runniflg with shot-guns, an' no sign of 'em air the fourth night there wouldn't be, a» bunch left Now what I say is What you goin' to do with, 'em? If they'd been this side the lihe, they'd had to learn to read, anyhow but even ^when they were burned out they hung oh, for them French are clannish, and 'tain't long that they've been here-., Somethin's got to be done soon.'*"
Old Hiram hobbled away as the twelve o'clock horii soundea from the farm-house just across the river and Ruth walked out to the gate and stood looking down the village street toward the "Fork" and the little library building. That at least was an accomplished fact, but how many could it influence What power could touch this strange hvbrid population over on Johnny cake Hill, or down in the valley beyond East Lowgate?
She walked slowly up and down the long piazza as she thought.
Cantata Rxtshmore, passing by the garden, stopped and leaned over the Tent«j—with him the usual fashion of calling. To h»ve asked him in would hare s^at* him away at onee, and Ruth, having learned this, sat down oti the step* and waited for what she saw was coming. As she stood the Dnnain^ boya passed, bol withoat looking up, and Bath'# eyes followed theis wStlnfly. •are
Qip^ain Rashmore," she s-ttd, those boys past helping?" iThe Captain looked up uneasily "Helping?" -aid*/ Why should be A^ped^
Oul* Um «aats exotmd we all
""iave toKx^ie we and they itM I41 was goln' to tell you," the Captain said, after a moments silenoe.
The fact is, they've just been to my house, an' I was moif' beat than Pve been in a long spelL-L What do you s*nose they wanted? Wanted 1 should take 'em on my boat! I sea to 'em. ,* You must think Pm crazy, knowin' the name you've got Don't you know you ain't to he Ipn^odfUrther'n ode kin see you? What you thinkin' about to suppose anybodyd have you where you could pick up as fast's they JUuddownf Antoine spoke hp. He's got the qutakest tongue. Tm worse'n Pierre,' he says, 'but if I got a chance to go on your boat, or anybody's, JPd pnrbriiise there1d be no trouble wltBr us, apViW$'d keep it too.' ?What put it into your heaasP sez We've been watchin' for* chanoe,' says Antoine,'an'soon as I heard 'em'sayin the store Johnny Hanson was dead, an' you w9p&„goin' to have two instead o* one, Pierre said now was the time. I could take Johnny's place in the cabin, for we was just a size, and Pierre said you wanted good-loo kin' boys to match your boat, an' we oould ask anyhow*'
Well, ypu've asked,' sez I, an now you can go. I don't take boys for their faces, foe ain't a fool. Boys that want to go in.to.tbe company's service can't be thieves—that's known all o\»r the township for thieves, them ana their father before 'em. The plaoe ain't for such, an* never will be,'
I will say I felt bad. That Antoine, straight as a dart anda kind of. look about him that you feel iust as if you'd got to look out for him, but massy sakes! I can't take no suoh boys, there's half a dozen after the plaoe'now. It ain't.a bad berth tor.a boy with any go in him. Tve said No' to plenty, and there ain't any call for feelin' bad that Tve said
4
4
WOn
44
44
vThese
boys had been on her mind Is long time, and she knew them far better than Hiram supposed. From the beginning. in spite of their reputation^ there had seemed more in them than the majority, even of those better born. She had met them often, sometimes coming with a string of fish from the riren sometiuMss With berries from the pastures, and £elt certain that, bad as they might be, they were the sc&pegpats for many not yet suspected. The boys eyed her suspiciously in their first tafks, tiieir brilliant, dark eyes answering hers with less ?f real human feeling^ than came from Phil the pointer's. But Ruth had been content to go slowly, and welcome the smallest change ais erlderioe there was something to work upon. She felt an envious drawing toward both, as if, in spite of every thing a^ainst them, something might still be done to. make men of them. At thirteen and fourteen they could not be hopelesr cases, ret who* was there to
44
No' now, an' yet I seem
to., Somebody has to go bail for their good behavior anyhow: and even if 1 was fool enough to take em, there ain't anybody fool enough to trust 'em. The folks know 'em too well. There's plenty here I might refuse, an' never think of it again. But Antoine looked at me with them big eyes till I was skeered for fear he'd draw a
4
Yes, out o' me in
spite o' myself. They ain't as bad as they're made out, for there's boys right here that'd never think o' doin' what they did last winter, an' I found it out yesterday. You know old Randy Ripley out on the S wanton road, that won't go to the poor farm because she's got a trifle of hor own? Well, them boys—for all they're lazier'n a toad in the sun—they kept her in wood last winter, an' tfhey helped her fix her garden this spring. An' she coaxed'em to learn to read Ttyey wouldn't go to school, but she's learned 'em somehow, an' when I said to-day:
You can't read, an' you ain't fit for no place,* Pierre says:
4
44Do
Yes we can, for
we learned last winter.' ...Well, thars ain't no use in sayin' more about it I must be goin' on."
you mean, Captain, if anybody*
were willing to sign for these boys you'd take them?" Ruth said. It's ten to one but that I might*, just as an experiment" the Captain answered.
44
The signin's a form, any
how, just to show they've got somebody to back 'em. If I don't they'll most likely take to the bad altogether, and I'll be taxed along with the resto' the town to keep'em in jail. I've as good a, mind as ever was, but you see, "tain't rational,"
,4Then
we will be irrational togeth
er," Ruth said, smiling.
tIt
441
wanted a
chance for them, and acre it is. Til sign, and we will give them a fair trial. I'm a property^hoFder and a tax-payer
dO?" 'Jin
"You don't mean it" said the Captain. Folks111 say we're crazy, I reokon we are. It's bad blood."
It will be worse if we let it run in the: same old channels," Ruth said. Try ihem awhile, and if it fails, we will let it go as something beyond us." "T can't say I will, an in a minute this way," said the Captain.
44
Pve got
to think it over more. 'Tain' prudent What'11 your aunt savf"
She will say she is gladl She has always declared those Doys could be made something of if there was anyone to do just the right thing. Come in and talk it over with her."
The Captain followed, shaking his Jjead. Such speed was not at all in his usual course of action, but an hour later he came out looking as if his mind were made up, and went down the hill and toward the river. The boys were
on the river fishing, their mother said, a tall woman, with the brilliant dark eyes they had inherited, and whose house looked more comfortable than he had expected. They rowed hastily and wonderingly to shore as they heard his call.
44
Pm goin* to give you a try," he said. "Be at the bay Monday morning."
The boys turned pale, then red, and looked at him in speechless surprise as to what had wrought the change. "Miss Dvsart's the one you've to thank for ft," the Captain went on.
She for you. But, mind you, if 1 setf he~« or tail of your tricks, overboard you go, and no quarter. Do y&j understand?"
44
Yes,air/'
Antoine answered with a
sort of gasp, and looking after the Captain who hurried away. Much gratitude would have embarrassed him, and indeed this was most thoroughly a case where action would speak loader than words.
And, in spite of town wonderment and the general declaration that the Captain must have lost his senses, actions were too positively what Ruth had hoped, to give any ground for doubt that a cbanee had been what they needed. In spite of grandfather and father, there was something in the two not entirely killed by a lawless life. Hie rigid discipline of the boat? seemed rather to please than disgust tfaem- Tho brigbt buttons of the regulation dress were an approach to the uniform even* boy loves, and the French mother had given them a eertsia ease and adaptability that made tham favorites with crew and officers alike. Where they will end is no longer an open question, and Captain Bushmore has ceased to shake his bead as he thinks ever the chaeoe he gave those Dunning boy*."—JSMen Campbell.
iSIidccllancoQe
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Carding and Spinning..j i. N. B-—Tho highest market price in ca&h, or own. make ot goods exchanged lor wool.
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t*
©. U,
Morton Post, No.
DBFARTJtlSirr OP INDIANA, TERRE HAUTI
Headquarters 9SH South Th. Regular meetings first and tht Thursday' evenings, each mow
CVRcading Room open evt evening. Comrades visiting tho city always bo made welcome.
W. E. MrLEAN, Com'dr. JAV CUMMINOS, Adj't. GEO. PTANLCTT, P. Q. M. 0F at Headquarters
GALL AND EXAMINE
THE NEW
Improved How
THE SIMPLEST, LIGHTEST Rl NING, MOST DURABLE AND EASIEST OPERATED
OF ANT
SEWING" MACHINE!
In the Market. For sale at 28 south Six/ street, opposite Post Offlcc.
The Howe Machine Co.
S1500
T. D. OLIN, Agen
TO $6000 A YEAR, or $5 to $90 a in your own locality. No risk. Wtt men do a» woll as meM, Mar!'*' make more than the amour stated nljove. No one can fail make money fast. Any one can 1
the work/ Yon can make from 50 cents to $2 hour by devoting yotir evenings and spare time t'| the business. It costs nothing'to try the bnsint Nothing like it for money making ever offered fore. Bnaincss pleasant and strictly honorabki Reader, if yon want to know all about the b«|| pajrlng onstness before tnc public, send us yon address and we will send yon full particulars ati private terms free. Samples worth $5 also free vou can then make np your mind for yourself Address GEORGE 8TINSON & CO.. Portland Maine.
NERVOUS DEBILITY.
GRAY MPKC'IFIC BBIWCIXK
T»AO« MARr^^t
py
Xoaaattt
En.mAoni«
^8^ ,gli«h Remedy,
An tmfalUnjtcure for 8emin»al Weakness, Spermatorrhea, Imnotoncy. And alIDIfteai^cstHat
-y. follow as a sc*
nenw of s«tf•, Jr,"rv.., „.
IEF0RE TAWKfl-Abuso tessAfTIlt TAIIIC of Memory, I'slversal Lassitude, Pain in th Back. ])tmn#*# of VIskm. PreinMnre Old Ay and many other Diseases that lead to Insanity Consumption and a Premature grave. jaBTFtxll p«rt1cular« tn our psinpblflt, which desire to »end free by n. to rjvery one. jSTTh Specific Medicine Is iol«i by alt
J)raggi*u
fi|U¥
at
per package, or she packages for $5. or will sent free
mall on receipt of the money by
dressing r|f|S
CO
No. 3 Mechanics* IIHock,
DRTBOIT, MICH.
Sold In Terre,Ilante and hf.*ll Drug^ifts every
wkem -""'-•v*'" a
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math.
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nw wt«r«Bxp
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trrmvUui'
oafals, without IntMft
rwhstxw(«l
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ot sy fis o«
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mdk bat It ytm itlieta at mmv«d Irandrtds.
watt
t«t% aslrMted or mmmns moo -p a-ataarsA"'-
o«w MoP -"-STL
isemraatestte Wi err*«ad vmmmm umoy ibciVixxAttxm.
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