Daily News, Volume 2, Number 27, Franklin, Johnson County, 20 September 1880 — Page 1
Ies
of advertising.
.. ,w. advertisements less than 20 fs, 10 cents per line.
'isplay advertisements accordto space and position,
MI3EHS OX THE
RAMPAGE.
Liberals rtt Chicago
^llave a Split, and tlio
Big Pagan Wltli-
draws from tlio
•V Association.
oioim ltiirr.
t^riHNINi,
o., September 19.-The On|-
I.IIS militia arrived at fJ«*i»»lvillrt. a mile ||H- road. ar 8 o'clock. Everything fit .lime w:i« quiet upon the surface, but inincis were growing dl#per«1e. Jning a miner's confidence lie revealed I following plan of attack. They bad ^•ed upon this evening at ."io clock, ten: were about 1,500 1 locking Valley other, wb !i miners in and around idyllic. Tin: mines are located in a ie valley that runs back in the hills fh-Wfive of the New Lexington militia larding the hills back or the mines, ricii were stationed in front of them lihe roadway. The white miner? split f^tboul half, making circuit of the /ntry and coming tin-behind the hill *«trds" while the other half assembled in nt. By a misunderstanding the whiten on the It ill fired several shots without witg The militia returned the fire and vnied three men, one seriously. This, jjiiHi blood shed, put ?t damper upon »•'proceedings, and the whites withdrew
J^'ouneil. mlonel Lemert thinks there will be no lighting to-night, but ik* to have it fcwed. The miners are all around and l^esperate over their wounded men, 4f.wear vengeance. They are very in 'fcnt tn their professions, but they eerily mean mischief.
ill!
three militia companies
v* all
are
/#.nt will bring forth.
IttKrrititil Abandon* the
on guard
)ight and the miners are hovering «»nd in
all
directions. Everybody is
night, and no one knows
What a
A*MH*IRIIOII.
••IICAOO. 111.. September 1ft.—1The Libjfl League last night discusseed the pro*»d platform until after midnight. Col i] Ingersoll wished to substitute for the |lk abrogating the Comstock laws a "»lution that the Committee of Defense ever it, is claimed that a person has indicted for what that person claims tave been un honest exercise of freeof thought and expression, shall intigate such cases, aud if it appears
A he has been guilty of no offense, then ''Committee shall defend him. If he is kble to defend himself. He said the? nted it understood that the Church *er must, not smother the literature of ^ralistu. They could iiot undertake to :rnd all the slush that is written in this
tes
itry. They had not time to go into quest ion of what authority the United may have over the mails. In one \ise the Government assuredly had a to sav what shall go into the mails. 4vll the Christian world should expunge ^canity from their Book, they would
I'and that the laws against obsctM'itefTO shall be executed against the liible. v^as confidence in the Federal Courts •«iy their eases. uc fr. Wakeiuan, in answering, declared 1 all such trials shall be hvStato Courts. 1/ a jury in a State Court found a ^guilty, "let him go to hell. lady delegate inquiring what the fcguo had to do with hell, the speaker jstitutcd "The Eternal bow-wows, hie debate liecame quite warm, Colo Ungcrsoll protesting that he was trying "uep the League from deitroylnff itito knock some sense into its head.
MoCracken offered a resolution deeding such modification of the Com fek laws that their execution will prorcitiy.ens in the right of freely exercistheir opinions, and spreading them *tvugh the mails. ^olonel Ingersoll and Mr. Green de Aed that if the original resolutions were »pted they would withdraw from the fcgue, which statements were greeted th applause and cries of "good rid«ee." Both amendments were then tod down, and the resolutions reported ^the Committee were addpteil. t*)l, Ingersoll then announced ItiH resiglion as Vice president of the Ajsocia-
t.electedresignation
The was accepted, and Julia II. Severance, of Milwaukee, in his place.
If*-
|?t|
nmu« A. ia«
tKY Cl.t'H, CttlCA(H), 8«pt. 18.— uvl/8. trots in 4:l0&. Firttquarter, 84 tlm^quartwa, 1:86 mile, carrying two pound* over-weigh^ the face of a very strong^wind. •ie (Chicago track has now shown the j'trotting mlie, Maud 8.,~ th« patiag mile. Sleepy Tom, 2:i$£^*nd best wagon n»eoro, HoMfa^jSr'ioK. horsemen and horses lon ^nsas City.
II l"t»R«!»hrrt nOer a WUHHI, wftt.KHVit.I.K.
IND..
SeptemlHT 18—Last
fht Bamuel Spencer, a farmer luring uth of here, was throwned out of his ^gon by a runaway team, and, the wagpassiug over him, clirusheti his ribs leg, and it is feared that his spine has ^tv so badly injuml that, even it he lives will lie helpless the remainder of his
MjwItrMHil Onilli tf €k!M.
KI.KHART,
Ixn., September 19.—The
^le three-ve*r «ld dhughter of Nicholas %l«a. nf ihbidied ver)-*twldenly at ^'cloek this morning. C-«w» of death iknown. FurUier iuve|tlp»ti«h will be %de to ascertaian the r%wt
$ Patlmt •11%* 'Bedford, Ind., Septew^ar ,ti,e jtnttJfartuHnf etUblishmfttl^ of fhts plaoe W/n operation are co«Bpolled to haul ftLrr for «team-making front the creek mi cisterns ami jfvservoiri having all ven out "//f"
Ripfciherla at OwttsiMt
|RTi.AND. 1st)., SoiUcmbw JK.—T^iete 'dren of John McElfrraih—all he had JLeing w?st of here, have died of Qttheria ibr hut t*»4aya. Other* in f» neifhboritood are down with the bcaiw. .....
'fwv**''
T^i itJ CM
VOL. 2.—NO. 27.
THIS CITY.
—I^ess dust thank you. —The rain was a Godsend. —Our circuit court da^s slowly along. —Secretary Thompson is at his home on Spring Hill. —The fair is ''Sv*r7 aiul.. some. ^»f the boys are satisfiefl, some are not. —The Cadet band will acco'innany 'the O. A. K. on Wcdneslay tnoniiitg. —Don't forget the excursion of the G. A. R. to Indianapolis Wednesday morn ing.1 —('abbage continues to be shipped in large quantities from Michigan to the South. —The excursion of the (-J. A. It. to In dianapolis on Wednesda morningy will be a big thing.
Ex-policeman Kenirk. this morning, took charge of the foremanship of Scath &, Hager's yards. —Election three weeks from tomorrow, tighten up your armor buys oid look the enemy full in the face. —The last glimmer of in'e Vigo county fair for 1880 was sent, to nirrn/n', at 12 o'clock on Saturday night. —Seath & flager arc at u-ork on a contract from the L., N. A. (.'• I» 'f* ing an order for «kK) box cars. —The two chickens, the ind the blind cat, that were exhibited at the fair are all down wit1m//n»i.
—Some terrible Wretch, without the fearof God in his heart, draped the D- A. P- in mourning on Saturday night. —The Young Men's Republican Club meets this evening and a large attendance is desired, as there is'important business a to
The sham battle, at Indianapolis, will take place on Thursday at i» o'clock. P. M. Col. VVm. E. McLean will command the (r, A. R. forces. ^JiiThe city is being thoroughly posied with the Boss Joe lithographs. A paste brigade left this morning to bill the surrounding cities. «„-r:An qlil seller called at our office and desirses an old setlers reunion, lie wants the "old grey'beards'* to come out of their holes and tell what they know. —J. K» Emmet, the celebrated German comedian, will not be at, the Opera House on next Friday night, as advertised. lie is sick and will visit our city at another date.
A Paris youth became so scared at sight of the headless man that his friends bad to have a gallon of tire water taken to his home, to keep him in a proper condition to recieve his hash.
By 10 a. m. yesterday when the church bells called their congmgations, four moving wagon occupied bvfPneir respective owners, and families, when seen on Main Street, bound for the fur west. —We don't lielieve in persecution and would be much obliged to Albert Jackson Kelly if he would pull down that streamer inscribed with something about Landers, that flaunts almost against the nose of the NKWS man.
Joseph Brown a well known Real Estate AgU got thrown' from his horse yesterday afternoon at 5 o'clock behind McKeen Bros. mill. He lighted in a mud pond and received only a bruised hand and plenty of mud.
There was quite a curiosity MI exhibition at the fair grounds last week, at least it would appear so from the statements made by the exhibitors. It was in the shape of a pig ten mouthy old. and which the owner elalriikl was the sire of jvigs then on exhibition", Vrbieh wertS three months old. ~A couple of staunch Republicans the tin bonis usod by P. Shannon jind T. Soayp. ut the Democratic jollification the other night, for a one cent post age stamp, and have rak£n to the comer of second and Ohio for repairs. They are of hi»fjr dimensions, and show wonderfully the effect of bad breath on ordinary tin.'
Hebb & Gtxxlwin* the job printers, brtvf ^ust ftftJsh^l the printing of a fortyeight page pamphlet for B. M. Roopraan, for which they used over one ton of paper the greatest qtiantity of paper ever uaed in a pamphlet printed In this etty. They have recently completed a law book of nearly seven hundred pages, bound in f^ri Mr. first law lK^k prftiteS and libtind iVi this Hty.— MaU. i. *, .'
kf
—Constable MK^abe w*s this morning engaged in selling the personal effects of a Mr, Riley, the ma* who was found dead in his bed, last week, at his residence on north Third street. There seems to lie some mystery connected with this ease. Tti. "Riley IHWWjr ma appeared to htve no regular employ meaU although evidently carpenter by trade. No ewu*«jueuoe ifHiiid in his ir.fl^fc»,*bpt w«te a Ctniplei Of tleeds, one of property in Vermillion county, Ind., w»d mw^r Iowa.
i.t* si
J. 'J'ts
S» rtUUvj, r,„ l* round. il i, betters 'Syrfdl/l&i be haschikiren bving. but as yet BO clue n^utly and without filling your stomach »0 thffar whereabout* has been obtained, [with naufe^ng.^^|jnfs^^sifc
'V l' I |l ir III |-Tlf i, iii vWv.i
TERRS
—David S. Gooding, of Greenfield, spent Sunday in the city, leaving- this moining for Evansville. —Six car loads of excursionists vfsited Terre Haute yesterday from Logan sport, to attend a picnic at Monnigers park, rf
—Col- McLean received notice this morning that he had been selected to command the G. A. R. at the eunion at In dianapolis, commencing to-morrow.
Elegant line of Suits for Boys from 13 to 19 years. Fancy Serge linings and Silk facings will arrive Wednesdays Sept 2d.
4
Boss JOE.
—Mr. R. E. Smith, well known here as the, representative of a large boot and shoe house of Cincinnati, is in the city a guest of the Terre Haute House. —Mr. E, Pratt Buell. wife aud sonV at present stopping at the Terre Haute House. Mr. Buell is one of the contrac tors on the narrow guagc road running through Sullivan. Ind. —A large teniperence meeting was held at the Union Depot yesterday afternoon, and much interest manifested. Addresses were made by the Rev. X. S. Perry and by Mr. A). Lyons, an engineer on the E. & T. II. R. R. —Mr. J. Isaacs is again in the city canvassing for the publications he is now handling. Mr. Isaacs was here some three mouth- ago and met with such good success he felt "licourag t.o return. —Generals Slnenm. McQuade anfl Cole, of New York, are at Indianapolis for the reunion. The War Department has authorized the use of the artillery at Indianapolis and the Asbury Cadets will take their artillery with them. —Steps should be saken tc stop the little boys" from fooling the street catdrivers by giving false calls. It is often the cause of great ineonveniehce to the traveling public, for the drivers of cars are so often fooled that they seldom pay attention even when a true call is made.
Wait till Wednesday. September 22d and we will show you the "Boss" line of Boys and VoungMen's Suits, handsomely made and trimmed. "Boss Joe." —Mr. Ludowici, the old and well known citizen died between twelve and one o'clock to-day.1 He lias been sick since last Sunday a week ago. His disease was paralysis. Mr. Ludowici was one of the oldest aud wealthiest of our citizens. He owned the National House block and for many years bad been engaged in the,boot and shoe business.
—Mrs. Snoogins, who lives on Gallatin street, has a cow which grazes during balmy days on the suculeitt grass near the fair grouuds. On last Saturday this cow failed to come home, which was a very unusual occurrence, and as the shades of night began to settle on the classic ruins of Gallatin, Mrs. Snoogins, with a heavy heart started toward the planet Jupiter, which, for several nights has hung over the Vigo County fairgrounds. Arriving near the foot of the hill' east of the fair ground, she found her poor cow in the agony of death, with her hide bristling with arrows like the quills of a porcupine. The poor woman is now a raving maniac, from the fact that the Terre Haute Arch ery Club and some fellows from Crawfordsville, were shooting at a target at the fairground on Friday.
school Teacher*. '®K
Last Saturduy was the regular monthly meeting for the school teachers the meeting was largely attended. Prof. Hodging, of the Normal, delivered a lecture on the "Missouri Compromise," which was spoken of very highly.
Pnllman'!*,
From an official source we learn that the Baltimore & Ohio Company, ^ith the commencement of running their own sleeping coaches, will reduce rates to such a low point as to make theirline popular with the traveling public, llie board of directors of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad Company recently appointed a num ber of examiners to examine applicants for conductorships on the new sleeping cars about to be introduced on the road. The examiners are C. K. Lord, general passenger agent W. M. Clements, master of transportation, and N. S. Hill, purchasing gent. The company will, on or about October 1st, substitute their own Cars for the Pullman sleepers. The conductors of the Pullman cars are applicants, and it is understood that the examiners, at a meeting held Wednesday, reappoin ted all these, beside* several others who are not conductors, but in the employ of the company. The number of conductors appointed is between thirty and forty.— fn/iiannpoii* Journal:
Nrimpft.
An exchange disrespectfully calls campaign speeches "stump tales. Women resemble flowers. They shut up when thev sleep.—{ Evanston Index.
When does a horse enjoy his food most? When he hasn't a bit in ms mouthy
pst
t-fa.
Over a million of Prof, OutlmeUe French Kidney Pads have been sold in France, Who will dare aay they are a humbug!
Are vou low-spirited, "do« n-in-the-mouth/' and weak in the back? Does walking, lifting or standing cause pain in the small of the back? If so you have kidney diseaae. and Prof. Guflmette'i
ftWm
TERRE HAUTE, IND., MONDAY, SEPT. 20, 1880. PRICE 5 CENTS.
WIGWAM,
-.«*/ .* N
I. H. C. RoysS, H. C. Nevitt and Mr. S. T. Ensy Discourse Republican Grospel to a Hungry Audience., ,^/j" i! 4V
7
h*'
As Hon. Milton B. Savior failed to pre sent himself at the Wigwam on Saturday night, the pleasant task of discoursing Republican gospel to the hungry public devolved on Hon. I. II. C. Royse. Hon. II. C. Nevitt and Mr. S. T. Ensy. Mr Jones after calling the meeting to order said that he had an unpleasant announcement to make, which was thai thesjmaker who wfh to have addressed them had disappointed them. This he regretted very much as great enthusiain had prevailed upon the streets through which the torchlight procession had marched i$Pd every thing had given promise of one of the most enthusiastic and successful meetings of the campaign. But he said that in the absence of other speakers there were several gentleman present who would address them. He then introduced Mr. 1.
C. Royse who made a brief and effective speech which was frequently applauded.
Mr.- Rovse spoke something over aa hour and made a good speech. Mr. Nevitt was then introduced and spoke for about twenty minutes.
Mr. Ensy made a short speech and was frequently applauded.
MMHT yun^.
MAYOU'S COlTKT. '"/J
In the city court room this morning there were seven persons arraigned for different offences against the peace and dignity of our city, and after the usual hearing the mayor disposed of them in the following manner:
Lydia Ickers, disorderly, $7.50. Kate Ickers, disorderly, #7,oU. George Ickers, drunk. $6,50. John W. Kidd. drunk, 6.50. James Burk, drunk, $6,50. Patrick Kavenaugli, drunk, $6,50. Joseph Shirley was arraigned* for assault and battery on his wife, but as the evideuce was not conclusive, the case was continued for further-proof.
,1M
'MAK1UAOR MCENSK.
iiwixouuty. clerk's ?ffice we found that two applications had been made Tor permission to marry but some of the parties were ashamed to have people know of the step they were about to take aud we are only permitted to record the names of Marfn S. Lome and Mary E. Getty.( r,
RKAI, ESTATE TKANSFKllS.
Richard Dunnigan to Cornelia Prcvj,
l4
*4 fraction sec 35, Picrson
township
$3,000
Catliarina J. Adams to Fannie K. Crawford in lot 8 in block 10 Roach tfcMcGadhey's sub 800
COMMISSION Etis' OOt'RT.
J. H. Allen, County Superintendent $183.25. V. Burget, poor. $9.70.
Mrs. "Boss Joe" has just returned from an extended tripTn the East. Miss NoraHarless, of Chicago, is visiting the city, the guest of Miss Allie Buff.
Mrs. Judge Sneeks and Miss Ellen Shcad, who have been the guests of Mrs. Col. McLean, left for their home in Austin Texas yesterday afternoon.
Walter Sies, the painter, has moved his family to Terre Haute and will reside there for some time, at least. He takes a lucrative engagement in the way of the Presidency of the Fine Art Association.— Crawford*tilU Journal. ••*.*.
Miss Cora Wefetfall took se^ral prizes at the fair this week. Although she has taken lessons in painting five months yet she carried of the premium for a landscape in oil. She also secured a very handsome toilet set, over seventeen competitors, for the best cocoanut cake.—Morning paper.
Fair* And Reunion*.
Indiana State Fair, Indianapolis. Sept. 87 to Oct. 2. Cincinnati Industrial Exposition, Sept. 8 to Oct. 0
Clark county. 111., Fair, Marshall, Sept 28, 33, and 24. ^JKnox county, Ind.. Fair. Vinceifnes. Oct 18 to 88.
Soldiers' Reunion. Indianapolis, Sept. 21, 22. tod 23
S A I O A
^a«. Rhodes. St, Louis: W. Kent, Chicago H. T. James, Cincinnati J. QAdams. Kalamazoo, Mich.
Bartram & Co.. the new tollonng firm at $12 Main Street, invite you to ca)i in and inspect their style now being opened. They make up strictly first class foods only, which they will offer at moderate
pneea. teed
iLtrwvA art-*
trr, 'f
meal Rcilroom*. it*u
The newest mania amonjj fashionable women, married and unmarried alike, is to make their bedrooms beautiful. The lately acquired ta«te for decoration is taking that turn, just now, to the utter neglect of parlor and other apartments. Pillow shams aud bed-spreads are laborously and expensively covered with needlework and lace dressing eases are furnished wtiJi elaborated mats and ingenious receptacles for toilet articles, bottles and boxes of the finest material and workmanship hold her ladyship's cologne, perfumery, and powder, more dr less "excellent pictures hang on the walls, or the walls are wholly covered with lace In short, the rage for sleeping in beautiful rooms has possessed the feminine metropolis. Even her toilet-crockery mu&tnow lie of fto ordinary waic. She w:ushes lier hands in a ceramic.bowl, colors her lips and eyebrows out of a crackled Japanese saucer and uses a copy of a Ponipeiian handglaiis to see her back hair. The ideal bed of the day has a canopy over it, and this is made as fine and beautiful as the money and taste of the monev will permit. "The frameworks are made of metal, commonly of burnished brass or nickel. Chintz and cretonne are ordinarily used for the curtains, but satin, velvet and tlie better laees enter into the combination. Unmarried "women affect white and the most delicate colors for the canopies,'and put white doves atop, as emblems of purity —so that the midnight marauder may comprehend the situation at a glance. A novel device is a rack, handsomely .constructed of black walnut or ebony, with hooks for hanking a woman's underwear handily. The chemise, the corset, the stocking, the shoes, all have their places, so that a woman may be as orderly as she likes in undressing, and without the old trouble of using all the chairs in the room. Some of the bedrooms of the period are really marvels of exquisite taster—too sweet and dainty by far to deserve the rude occupancyof husbands. Ilowevtr, the best of these apartments belong to maidens who show them with coyness and pride to their male friends.—(Jincinnati Enquirer.
Skilled Workmen in Demand.
In nearly every branch of useful industry the supply of skilled workmen is unequal to the demand. From one cause and another, com pa rati vely few serve the needed apprenticeship to trades necessary to produce finished workmen. The result is to crowd onr workshops with poor mechanics. And one evil ol'trades unions is that they make no distinction between good workmen aud bofches.
In our day very few boys are,:bound"to serve a sufficient time to acquire a proper knowledge oi' thir etrades. Occupations requiring five or seven years to master are picked up in half the time, and so soon as a half-taught apprentice can secure a membership he sets himself up as a journey man, demanding journeymen's wages, although he may have mastered no more than the rudiments .of his trade. This system works id) round, and employers and parents should unite to break it up.
Another error needing attention is the too common notion that it is degrading to learn a trade. A profession, a clerkship— something neat, easy and "genteel"—is sought rather than honest, useful toil. This is all wrong, and the sooner it comes to be understood the better will it be for our boys and for the country.
That certain insects possess a power akin to reason is illustrated by Gieditscli, a Garman naturalist who relates that he one day spitted a toad on a stick which he fixed Upright in the ground. The oder of the decaying reptile attracted a number of burying beetles btlt an they found they could do nothing with the toad while in the air, they mined unde? the base of the stick until it fell, when they buried the toad and stick together. Sucli an engineering attempt would seem to indicate the presence of a definite purpose.
An Illinois schoolmistress was unable to chastise the biggest girl pupil, and called in a young school trustee to assist her. The trustee found that the offender was his own sweetheart, but his sense of dnty triumphed over his love and he whipped the girl. Not only did this result in losing a sweetheart, but her father sued him for damages and got a verdict of $50.
il
•J
1
TERRE HAUTK HOUSE. iflfr
H. Johnson. Newark. N J. Geo: Sullivan. Indianapolis Win. H. Hogarth, Cleveland. Ohio C. B. Wing, Cincinnati Ohio: Barrett, 2s Y. City H. J. Watson, Indianapolis J. C, Porter, Martinsville. 111. I
SEE HERE
a.
t\
Satisfaction invariably guaian-
mil
SEE HEBE!!
•ft'-
S E E E E
mu tip jfST-
PI RLlMIKlf EVERY F.VF.MMi i|( B-XCF.PT SCXDAT,) I
JYorthtresf t'nrntr Fifth and .1 fain Street** e* 'i EMORY P. BEAUCHAMP.
Tht
NKXVS IS served hv the carriers to subscribors in the City of Terre Haute at TEK OK NTS A WEEK, payable weekly, and to subscribers hy n\ait at l.'ic neck or 43r a month.
dQjtfBS & ROGERS
Art jr?pnrfit fojill or1*r# with promptnt** and disptUeft for qll grades of
AND SOFT COAL AND COSE
In any (/minUty, large or small. Send yourordrr#, in%permn, by telepfume, or on horsdmrk, and they will receive prompt atntion, late and early. JS'o postponement on account of the weather.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
TO THE PI' OLTO.
Having just returned from the Eastern markots. where 1 have |nre.ha»«ed one of the mM complete stotjis of
FALL and WINTER
CLOTHING
everphued' on the shelve* of Terre ITnutc clothier. I most respectfully invitt the attention of the buying public to a
of mv late purchases, _,s my low prices lire a
BIG FEATURE.
In mv Merchant. Tailoring better (nullified th:Ui ever to nu the public in every particular.
Uuont I an!
t'tfje demiiiuls of
PHILIP SCHLOSS,
420 Main street.
G-EO. H. HUGHES,
PRACTICAL
WeMtng and Invitation work a *iectttliy. ,, 21 1-J N.Nwoiiil Wren, lTp-stairs, over Locke's Paper House
SAMUEL S. EARLY,
Wholesale Provisions
APPEAL FOR HELP.
I have Contracted for and have on sale,
2
t)F TITK
•jM"BRACE"SUSPENDER.
t'hi? cut represents the only genuine, and is the most perfect device for Kupporting
rk, Lard Bacon, Kuiar Cured Hams. 18 MAIN STREET.
L. KtfSSNER,
Palace ol Music
213 OJHO STREET,
TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA.
Oldeat music house ill Wentern Indiana. Always the largest stock on hand kept in thl* city. Pianos and organs rented so the rent will pay for them.
S E E E E
!n"y
EUBBEB, 3STO ST»IlX3SrGS.
ONLY 25 CEWTS
Other* charge 5i.rents for the sam- article. How is that for Extortion 1
THE A»D -FUE«ISH8It
/,
tf
'EpS»J?fel»tME5KV
•i
m&m
