Daily News, Volume 2, Number 29, Franklin, Johnson County, 22 September 1880 — Page 2
fH'
K. P. BKAUCHAMP, Editor and Proprietor. 'ill IJI.U I.,-,-. Publication Office, cotner Fifth and Main Street#
WEDNESDAY^ SEPT. 28. 1880.
RFIE
STATE TICKET.
For Llentenant Governor, THOMA8.HAHNA. For Secretary of State/
EMANUEL R. HAWNi, For Auditor of SUte, ...JBP^ABD.fl^WQXJE'K.
TgwoSaaTJat
For Attorney General,
BYRON K. ELLIOT, Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District. For Clerk Snpreme Court.
DANIEL ROYSE.
For Reporter 8nprem^ Court. FRANCIS DICE, For Superintendent Public Instruction,
HIi M. BLOS8.J Tin
Jtt-JJA'i
ROBERT B. F. PEIRCE.
Vigo County Ticket.
For Clerk,
MERRILL N. 8M1TH., For Treanurer, CENTENARY A. RAY.
For SheritL^
I
For CtommlMi a
roner,
DR. JAMES T. LAUGHEAD. For Senator, FRANCIS V. BICHOWSKY.
For Representative!),
For Surveyor.
GEORGE HAKRI8.
THE NEWS HAS^THE LARGEST DAILY CIRCULATION IN THE CITY. UJ if ii
.JUJLU.-V._II.-L
w&i TH* sbUTH 18 BOtED FOB HAHCOCK. Consider what Lee and Jacksm -would do were they alive. THESE ARB THE SAME PRMCiPL&B FOR &HICH THE FOUGHT WO UR TEARS. Remember the menu/u ^mred^fowrtkiheir life-Hood wi abandon them note. Rimember that nfion your vote depends the success of the Democratic ticket.-**[Wade
ton, Va. July 26.
Hamptdii, at Staun
son. *AMjreL raacoy MET. This gentlem|ui ^ad tlio exquisite pleasure of doliveiiag a two hpitfl'speech to'die toerriocrocy* of Teitef %'atoie* last nighu SamuelFenton Gary is rinded as a big card by!
sthe
l)erii6cra*tfc fariy,
becau^ot hi* tsqcqnt* affiliation witii the National party. In othet words,,. he is regarded an a political footer—fte flies where he thinks hc can getthemrrat corn and crow the loudest. Samuel j'Fenton Cory iff a fraud, fie is-'the prodigal son of, the Dcmqprati^party. He is j,ust such pf«dl^Ri8on as j^oker ||Mlj Ot&4driUb§8. H* h(Jug|Mhe an (|b(| ^^wiwra|ic party) Waan*£ doing the square thing by him, so he etrmclt hitri fbt a staler, in the nature of a good fat office, and got left. Ho then got mad, and waWted to cut before he dealt, and then lit out for another camp. He had a way up time for a while, struck a Greenback rauehe and slung his flatio money like heowneH the bci# paying lead on earth. He set hte mouth In our publtc sqxiRffe ifi lSTB, and went off and left it for four mortal hours. But hard luck hit him at last, and left him without a chip ortrboec check. Got dead broke because the
J&itf
didn't pan out
down at the heel. Fiat money was no better than a lunphofl earn shucks, so he tumbled to himself and skipped back to the old the old man to cut for a new deal. So the old man sent him tcf this city last night. Don Piaij knows
rSapiuel,,^epton-Car?
aads«y&that&e gAsat roihles^th~feamuel Fenton Gary is that his very existence is a casu^LUy, 4g^er ^«igned for any ^n6|»ki j^ijrpdle. aba to^^guently appear! before us as a very unnecessary man. It is no use to try to answer his speech for he h^» We«h making the same speech for the last fifty years. Some times it is thrown out in faviiyr of tejnper ance sometimes' In behalf of the Jate war sometlmesTn support of moru$ mul ttkowht*.
fctfmertaie* in favarof tntrtiu-
ment to somebody, sometimes for one thing and sometimes for another^ but alway« the sa&e agocUftiug howl att& always paid for. His speech cannot*be answered. You might as well try to answer a Chiaese gvmg or a bad smell. Samuel Fcmon Cory might be used to swell a procession to actaaa Are alarm or a lag horn, He reminds one of the story told by the late Sidney Smith who said that a farmer could always tell the number of the coming litter by counting the teats, provided by a kind nature for the ap pro»chin^ family of swine. The witty
Syflflftv said thfiw. trpnprallg^Bfl.te^
for "each pig. Bu "Sometimes through an eccentriciiy of nature, one pig more ap peared tk^hMtl^EhpW^Id case the poaMttlc^pigOPen teat to tfl^rnrwen sessor. until, (^iven pera^Sn, it Would at last caudal appendagii of moTljerTaSSr tKen «uck aiid? s^iiead ^at|l ^hausted ryattre IOI
F'6
-r
imhtfTn tiff fcfght&gifrcj#
ofltlie
the
ndifferent suck, and
squeal and
ounft relief 'n death: In th "|™FBirmhTSfy^TniS~^ to this cruel assembled to pn»raK»t^e ^di^oi world, wirtiotil dwffgir, and of course
without provision, nndslie has gone |5ghtifhg for a teajt ^rojn Pflj^ to party until at last he he has fastened on the tail end of the old Democratic swine and there lie squeals and.sucks, and sucks and squeals, until Divine Providence shall him to another and better world
remove itm !r|"
THE OHTTBCH AND DEMOCRACY A prominent'citizen of this city has received a circular which he was kind enough to furnish us which in very -'few words shows the drift of modern Democratic opinion. It shows what that party will resort to in order to obtain control of the genernT governinent arid just what we may expect if that party should get into power. The general design of this circulaf wbiqh has- been scattered broadcast over our land is to bull-doze our friendly disposed German citizens by hanging over their heads the sword of the church This circular says that the leaders and members of the German Catholic Church are now bnsy at their wore of organization. Already they have thousands and thousands of German Catholic citizen^ musterecWn as members of their secret German Catholic'Lodges connected with every datholic church. They have established a secret German Catholic Society, each member of which has to bind himself oy his oath to stand true to the secrets of the society.
The Cath6lic priest is the President, of such lodge and the'members must first obtain permission from the priest, and if the priest thinks the candidate to be a good German Catholic, then lie will be admitted to join the,lodge Every candidate has to be balloted before becoming a member, and a vote of two-thirds of all the members present in favor of the candidate is necessary before he can be ad mitted. After this vote is taken, the neW' member has to take an o^th that lie will strictly keep all the secrets aud stuud by the constitution of the Gnind, Lodge of t&e German Catholic Church. The ,main principle of this organization and. of its constitution and by laws is that ea$ry member ehall vote the Democratic Ticket That the Democratic Party is the Party where they hate to look for fac(/r», and that the CatholicXlhurch is tjte only true church, that theme/fibers mutt work together like brother$ a^nd more to, and that facors muet be extended epiely to otr Gtermdn Catholic Secret Society and other true German Catholics. That enery member must worM against the syetem fw* schools in the United States, and that, if .'we can not ilo away iciththe free 8ehnot»~ tee, the German Catholic Seceret Society, mfist see to it that Catholit •teachers' be appointed to atlfree schools and tench Catholic bible and Catholic calechtmn in all free schools where Catholic children h/tte logo,
All the children who" visit our free schools will liaVc some day to go to jails and penitentiaries, and that their secret organization will fl^ht the free schools to the bitter end.'
We, the German Catholic Members, vote for the Democratic Ticket, and work for the ticket in order to be part ruler in said party, with a Democratic President and a Democratic Congress we will have pow in getting laws for the^good of our Catho1 lie Church.
That all'members must first obey the laws of the Catholic church, and it is not enough to be a good Catholic, we must flght for the Catholic church, fend believe, that we are fighting for the only trrtrl ch»rch.
We must first obey the laws of tile Pope, he is the highest law-maker in |his world we must believe that the Pope is mumble. ^WM-1,4* ,n 7/H
We must all look for the United Suites, that some'day the Pope will make ifii? home in the United States, and be ruler, w* must work that our church will some day be the great light in this country.
We must, work -Uke,.. htfiSJfers and all work for our jp^n, ,fi|»d keep all other churches down as much as possible, we must only Imploy laborers and others who are G&tnaft Catholics, and we must all work for the Democratic Party.
The Catholfc Church Is said to be the only true Church of God, the Pope the only mu) in this world which Is laftflible, and tlw^ope to the man we have to go byt aad Ixrfieve his laws above all others.
That no man can be trusted except he ts a member of the Catholic church, no man shall receive benefits or favors unless he works with tl.2 church.
That we. the members of the secret German Catholic Church, are bound under oath of God that every member shall and must worV for the benefit of the only true church, the Catholfc Church, and that it* members are supporters of the Democratic Party, as the Democratic Party la ai-pre*eiitthe only party we ex peel help and aupport from, for our only true church, and that we approve only of suoh laws of the United States, as ow Pope and Church deems worthy of, all other* we will fight to the very bitter end.
m0*
tiou's Address.,
deapotiam ii:
and that, if
we can not havte Catholic teachers appointed, it would be best for Cathotic parents to keep their children at home, and hot send them to those "Blatk R& publican Devilish Free Schools."
al Convention of the Kewib-
National Convention ot the Ke wiolican Clubs of the country ii a iS is andjlecfied a National [Gojfru^it^ef^O^ wfe Franklin wbs made Preside®!^JiffTi"S3. Nltfho
of Racine, Wis., Secretary vetttttnrHtarl^raKr^tne
w,1T,l*,,R,flBtfDuat
Of action
ONE
The Con-
a pollt|cal gijltia In
ita^rwose.1 rotr iiiblriittsd u»ra Hich-
occupies your National Capitol
inir that Government in potftios 4ittBt tr«*0n is wearing a raasn in order to accomplish what itfaiied to compdsa during* a biaod^ period of four years without a mask that it h%i sou^nt to starve the Government as ftH^arved Stimter: that it-has withheld, a ippq^Xropi your soldierB Wtxfclk It could not H?arm fn fhe Held that It has sought to repeal Jn Ctmtfress Election laws so as to enfeeble the National au? thorlty, and iae guarautees to Ujp citizen, so as to challenge anew the auxiouaand patriotic determination which'di8tli4^iMSh«d you in 1861. It is not enough that you are paying the war debt of th^se conapirator#: yoU tmwtapdlORiie to them in ca$kin the form^o^ war ida^tts for ha\ing pounded their re Bullion to pieces you must permit au iacfea^ ol the number Judges of the supreme Behch or the United States, In order ttout rheCwo last ameiadtaetits to the Constitution may be declared null aO^. vedd bv eeason of: ne%-er bavli*s received dtie
suits of. the war and the jtH»taW^hed credit ofthe GoVertmeht to TO'overturned
/to unite In' ii. Rein1 1 With
cite the ooantry, from DwnOcnratlo lis. The enemy, tlty save' the rmes m(^n« a »^l.fra,v^ to,phe4t men,
its attend intevils. The enemy, relEing upon no'lhatrtKnentallty save- the rmes fo Ttfll menv money to urtpe m«^n a mjto pneat m«n, 'he enemy, with a wi.:iced pa« and shameless future, now confronts vou. Touch elbo#S all over theUnion, Save it, do yquruUnpst for it, and remember'itls never wen defended, unleas defended ln eveor!p«rt.blr every maa. .,
N INKTEEN persons died from yellow fever and riine from smallpox in? Havana, during the, lost week of Aaiguak
IJLSAACTP.
fl
DRAPKR
shot ijnd killed Wil
liam McCjary at Sullivan yesterday. A woman at the bottom of ii.
hundred and fifty thousand
TIIK
DQLLAPS
in gold were bought in London for J^ew York yesterday. if'Mf
New York Graphic wants tq use
Sofa fternhnrdt for a crochet needle
Tim
new French cabinftt'^rill soon be '4
announced.
Tnit
!)HH on:
Supreme Court oonvefiert yester
day. ii oifiW
THR following is frrrm
it
member of Oongress:
Would
Dehfofrntlfc
4? 1
"HOCSK OF FLRPIOTRBHTATRTKS. ^^F WASHiNOTON, p. Aprill98t
1880. ['i a
VDSAR Snt—Your favor was d,ijjy reivecl? 1
MOSf
I^RlCfDtJbiE"A#p URO? of a ttll, such as ou, suggest* but WBCP THE PHiiS*K5h!X^M:OCRATIC ttOU^
DO XOT BAM
".It h*«. becoa^"(ftl%o^
Imj^ibljQ to ^t^^idiiratipn Villi at alj^ ani3t w^n considered it^p^§sc^ of passing the' House 5s very remote, and THE KtfBlfL GENERA). WllO A"" Tttfc Tit At) OF THE PENSION MPTTEE rN THE SE.VAf E tS S MOKE AVERSE TO Ajtf Spar BT^ lt PA^8 Tt wou^ not be at *npK?bable, therefore that,thevbi^ will he got through. I Win t^rifer brother.If he thinks there aoy^Tng in the matter wTTl cordially act In the matter.
T# P. £. Bst.T«iiooviut. "«!E. W. Crmttizs, Esq" The gentleman denies the above, but it has been proved on h'sm,
,,
ill
A man's comfort in life dei much upon his kfepinglMitt h^k.money affyirs. If you Onc
3£%y be vety. difficult to h&jtgvy iprhlen| is lost.
atT:'
Aur*™# Clubs
ibe -Kepirtli«aii- of tii^1 We delegates of the Kepubucan we, ueietf lu eJlUfUUUU tnization the luneod at CbfcagV...» JhWaast by' a HfepubScan^platfdrm, Ji^aination therron" of (feneral Jomw A Garfield afad^ Chester A. Arthur, solemnly invoke all cttP zens who hallow the Government which w» have recfat ltlram Ws w1 master at «mctu n) us
and a
zealously defended and ^ara^ed. Forfr Vfeatfttonetf Dettioer^te rule prive to your cost and sham^ for half a century. It Is easier to arrest ari enemy »n' his 'efforts to grasp power tbao, to-dlspossess.UiiMt enem^ft 6f power, as waff shown between 1801 and 186t Now is the time to declare that the National House of Bepnesenwtivee shallnpt be a wanton SpendthriftAof'ttt6 sacre'I mone/s of the Government* to declare that the oonsent of the governed to the administration of the Government shall be ze ilously muirttain^d through the agenpy of the free ballot, and that murder atid fraud for pdlitioal ends areW dishonor to the American, people, and an affront the God or justice, without wboje countenance we cannot hope -to irtsure a pros-1 perous and a beneficial political system. Ai republican «overninent'«£#i onlyJexistJ and oe. maintained by. the. free..expressionot, all 4ts citizens, bpeniy defclarftd and nohorabiy counted. Without these factors theref-is na free government. They do it exist today in the sixteen -State*tof- ttte Solid Scnk^lt «T is the duty of the Itepublican party, the duty of ail men who betieie in free gOVernnfebt, who bC-
of the Sauth. ttoe right a, off ree spefeoh, fr^e thought «rid an untram tneled balwt. TJhls el only: be dode througa toe «i«o6aS -of-'
Mut$di'v?£ja p. 0fes?*diy fre,1 cannot, iexiat wltn a its midst. I'hcrfe is a despotism 0i fc««iu
Mi«mlutelhteto'atty^tliM' M'thp
world, 'i hat deap jtisin dep ves a. million anil ^h^ of f¥fee WneH rtrt'64l*:^rf8 kTT that our (Jonstltution arro?4tei and attactia (the 'i atiM®
hW ^throne^j fJf th: eatrlve \)U of your |ust .coi^-
bow toftyift Molopfi en-b/fraud to del .. .. trbl tn Goxierntaentai !B?Si li'i It^rtBar^W
to iresto e5 freedom an1,Natlotialltr jia the Sotith. Btit'td tfrortci theiii in the. North. A. Demoe !ttlc vioto: uani the triuniph of the
and ruin. There is but one way to avert* tap threatened evils. The success of the Reputh li6a np«ftt#meaiM- ttoe.8dbr»thacy 6MaW and order Jt maana a Naiion .PPFeii^ tjrprotect its 'bedplfe atltOWe aCa atffadd It rnlSAnS 6qual rights lor all, e«ual!l#«n#duatlyt administered. S"uooe8S" can only be obtained by owahization, by Uttretaitlihg labof. ''©rgantee^ then"Preparo youraelf for the imD?njling oonflict,- Organize as you did in lool", when no' greater
l^t your Republican ballots of1880 Biipprement and secure what your ,Republlcau..bullets tined'lri WJo. We appeal to the Old mtti whose: a(ui9Wfiivt forthito t^tt|e tor^Jw Republic to the'inlddle-aged who held afort the ban^ ner df!ttoeJ»o.»rt6fyili* ifti'diWI^fct iiduwttd the young men who are entering upon the tooll whti^^lutj'the liberty anu
:nds ven 'ahead ii 1 behiiwt
n^s^ie some parijl' hi ^eamsar small, and keeps it up for a
number of years, is likely to become rich
before
^^"'^gWTr&m^^pfope it^e,
he lives long enouj rnwtaij•narwwT
es ot persons
in. general do uot often hel)) t)Q ^h«r peopk^'atnom^r until
themselypa tq their own funda begin to fall off, and their Aman
approacmng to fraud h^'Cy^Yheu they themselves sinking, rcsorml to bos? ^devices1 Which would, ijseem to, he utterly fibreigh'to their nature. A .drowning will
(Cliiteh
at the throat of his best friend
to' save -himself. Beht in itself isidreudfuily '^moralizing. It may sonn-urnes be inevitable but, even when there is no dishonesty connected with it* the iuoral fibre liable to be injured by itjs influence. It cannot but impair one's sell-respect, when he. feels that he is living upon, money which belongs to others. How nmeh better,"' whenever It is passible, to keep a little ahead^ even 'though we deny ontselvfek all thfs luxuries, and §pme ^f he t-omfi^rts of existence.[|ojhi t, *«»t ny. .1^ is also very desirable that we should keep*somewhat ahead:in our work. This may not be possible in all cases as, for instance, when a man's work is -assigned to .certain fi^edhoure, like that of the'opera.tiyes in, a mill. Butthere are certain classes pf ,people »who can choose their time for the work Which they are called to do, and amongst them there are some who invariably .put off the task assigned them as long as possible, and then come to its performance hurried, perplexed, anxious, confused T-*in Such »"a state of mind a^ cerHunly aijifiifl, ^hem for doing their best work.
Onji {^qret of success. iu life consists in keeping ahead of other people in our plans. Societyis divided into two classes—leaders apd 'followers—those who "go ahead,*' and jfch^wl^ffiai into line." Hiow are, great iuttuneg mode Partly, as already said, also by striking out in &dVance (irothersl A. thipg once done, it may be ^y jto copy and to multiply it but it is the ]pioneer who went ahead and first broke the ground that deserves the praise. It is to men, who open new paths, and disclose, to us regions that were unknown before, that the World most indebted.
It i^ thdMdyto6^d. idea of,a,few xneu in tine gfen^'i'itioti which ^ides ^he destinV of m^'ge'flleratioh th^t ,follows-, Society is alwiwd ih'|' of pien -who, command reigpwCand reyer^ice^ becais^] Of their «!&• jC^wipterl looklap to certain Arsons 'we look down upon others up or down—because of the monotonous level on whichi the mwItitttde stand. If ifc were not for the, example of a few. einipent hiefrpjW sfibuld, h^ve aj(QW fidmdani It)f cMracter. In eyery.fyillag^ .o£ thousand •rinore^l^bitant^ither^ Wti usually som^ four, or five, men and women! wh!«©ii|n|fliuence would be. sadly missed if the^ ^lOflld h^. taken awajf.T Theyike^ aihedd of othepfpeople—in eottferpifeeab well aa'iii character. A handful «f sneb pbwi6ns may slevate the whole tone of the community, Alas iiar the town where all people ure on a level!._It is.sure to l^e a p^tty low leveli has a SQUI iu qhead, but to 1keej ah^ad 'iitt he drops out'Of nis place td make way for some one else. JLn our day those who are coming on the stage of ac4
Lf^evei
tion find it pa^^ularTy hard to get a start are blocked, there is a crowd 9 ibiv ever re^jpe^ble Station or opening, and it is only the1 ^tife" vigilant who: stand'much chaiiccof' ahead.' But remember f^ yd# bdfcriifti that those who have'stncceeded1 Wetri, 'ir« jften sufeH as had to strtvfe hardest ginning.
WhaJ gMci^l .advantage have the grea® majority ot successful men had when they fetiurtfetf in thei^tttfe#1?^ Onl^sfibh'Vks 'th^H found ^ithih tnemH^lves—a cl^a^ head, an, earnest' purpose,' and' a istrorig wfll. 'fhey' hiode ttie^r fortune*—fortune did hot uiffeei
Fighfc your own battle in life. Ask no tavors o£jflyjaa«^and ^ion.will, succeed a thousand times better than those who are, always bese«?Cftffng*patWfta!g£. No one will! ever help you as you can help yourself, be-j cause no one can(be so heartily interested' in your welfare.'
1 1 1 1
.or «iThe Dlaphot«. Ii
This is the name of another wonder Ail discovery of the 29th centuiy, by meUus of which people can see by telegraph. What nekt? ,(V
The rustmment consists of^a receiving mirror, the "wires, a battery, and:a reproducingjspeculum. The receivingmiYror is ani otriAlagm' of Betehiu» and iodide of silver the reproducing speculum is a compound of sekaii®Wi «ttd i«hrottiium. The wires are numecous, Jt is necessary to distincm^. tljaii ^nre s^ould ,nQt he required to affect hut a very small space. The instrofitlehtalaio hitt aihirtbrsix inches bj
/ottr, cotoposed/'of Beventy^wo stiiall
lated covering. toon galva^e hattery, and thttf connect with the afeprodocing plate. When fthe cii^ cuit is closed^ tbe siuys of,ligbtare. c3induct|d^ through an ordi»«y« mmtib, fid theaccoinpfiwj^^h^^ ^hemicw changes in the .apialgam of. the mirror, the electric oirrent, .oanse similar ^anKeftfiarera»4u4og fl^c^lum. TMw^^on i* lwed upon as one of the most woiicterful of'the pres^ d#y.
I
fivz BEST Quovk CLEASEK.—Mix
rourth of an ^ouoce of carbonate pf am* monia, ott^fourtb of an ounce of sulphuric distilled henzine. Pour
on the gi#Mk
sorn
Over a million of Prof. .Guilmette's French TCTdney Pads hare been aokl ia France. JEho-will dare aay* U»ey are a *. "it* *. M**- &
r,
vim.
TTejin and KM Keas, while the common tlyiii^ fish isi: in the
In size the lish is about equal with the her' ring. It is of a blueish brown color at the top of the liaek, white on the belly, and' yellowish red on the tip of the tail and
color. being •milv, and the whole body is squarish shaped Some of the fish have tour wiugs, others only two. The fish clears the water by the H'utl of its tail, keeping! its wings elbse funtil free of the brine it then flies with a r^piri ,mo^ipn1pll he wjngs becoiae dry which generally happens in the course Of sixty yards/ «A.tjouoh of the water enables it to fly on about twenty yards further, add then the fish returns to the sea, exhausted.
r. Tlie tail is I'qfKkod^the lower bend longer.than^tb^ tipper.'
The fiying fish itself has hot any teeth it& food, when time is allowed it to snatch a meal, consists of shrimps, infusoria, and" the tlier small kind of medusa.
Natural Curiosities of Nevnda^tq -i
-r~
FJ\fteep miles north of Lovelock static Nevada, there lis a petrified tree 600 in length twf &et thick.- Its brM ^u-e: still Jtfcrfecti, The tree: is lying on-i th4 surface of thei ground, and* is peirified ithrouglv frombark'to core ClarenceKin the geologist,»pronounced it one 'of the greatest natural dtxrio^ities he had eVCr'st^W, Mr. Lovelock says he reCetttly ^tUtoMed across a petrified rattlesnake' in thte ^iicihity of his Tanch The iterpent's bead but his body and tattle Wefe wheftte: The rattlbs gave outsa metallic sOh'od./'Wheu shaken, like the ringing of
body
6f
Whitfield's rpmarks to his congregation. •It induces us: to relate what we saw1with our own eyes and heard With Out own'earii :Wp were listening to an eceeutric olA cle*gy4 man: in Ohio. He was Braking of the: wickedness of his people, their tfatigefr, etc.j
HMy!friends,M
itr nui'i
Flying Fish. "dTitS Wimiorn.
iws," as they their resem-' re truly woup. On rirst ably suppose tliree or four
Flying Fish, or "sea-swa areSUso Cidtet, because bla#e to sw®low8 inpight derrai mhaimtants ^|the seeiag tbejta oiie niigS| rea them to b^birds^ Thftc hram-hes of the family, the more gaily
isia^t with all oyer the oceft^ %fithtropicsr Seldoiu or neverthe lit-
beyond tfaefr ,{,|lg ..c^tffi^....xeuture.-..outMdfi-.thfe,4Kanik water ofthe? tropical seas, his delii*ate or-
!The
head is
It does not rise more than six feet above'
the water, and seldom flies for more than a h!dfe(red ydtdiff llilJK As regards the line of flight, some people profess to Say tl)at«the fish fly against the wind. This may be so sometimes, but it is accidental the fish fly just where they imagine they may get out of the way df bonitas, albacores, and dorodos, their swo: foes, who se^m to Spentl their whole time in hunting these unfortunate little creitures. Often it happens that, in their anxiety to get away from subnumne ebemie^ they tall into destruction in the oir f^r sc^binls on the prowl know that the flying fish must come out, and wait for them accordingly, With all the pajtjenw of deerstalkers. 55'" m£:
t„f
*i,'{ ox':
But at
)est it must eat in haste, for the number of its destroyers is equalled only by their voracity. Sometimes ill their fright,they, will "come on board ship, flapping down oh deck exhausted, and unable to rise agaii}. They have even been known to break thie, glass of the binnacle light, so great is the forte with which they impel themselvei Light seems to tbrin a great attraction foi ithem, and they will fly at night in 6r6w(ts in the direction of a glarei Advantaga taken of this known fact by the' Miifiue4 who go out at night rwitb nets rigged oh poles sticking ont oh all rides of the boat. When the fishing-ground hsis been reached, -.fire is made ina brnziertliaf is rearedin the middle* of the bOat "86on the motlib of the sea are drawn' to th^ir dftftructioii. They Wnie* afeejj and a^e -cbhqttered, fkllhi, down Iielple^ly,'entangled1 id' the ttieshc of the Act Th^ supply of thetii ed^ecikll in the Carribean Seiv, and around the W India islands, seems to be inexhaustibl
1
sivid he "if you dtt notrfepfeUtJ
you'wiiygo to bell just aS dur*
that fly," at th* same time itefaking ic po^s at a fly that) had perched jipon the 6p«i Bible. TW did mah Slowly'ttji^iietl his hand, fingtr by'finger, butno fly waslqbnd. Hfe' Woktjd'dowri iitid 'tiiMtiM
Upon his 6m-
gregation for a minute, and then exclaimed, it Why iyou ploor devils, tbereft some Chance ioryou!ytet."
1
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For Clerks ifnitijt? ff, iji
THOMAS A. 1 .'I 0 ttHpj $M& For Treasurer, »iw
DAVI1»'Mr ffftl/E/ACE. .L
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replace od thj hfinds. a»i ,|ritn a cloth rub the fingen^^wc!, unfii perfecCly fitted to the kiadi.'nllii ~«k«»er aiM» i4a «»den«gat eiodi,RhtMB«ika dOreleiidetrls Mrftctly luwtahw t# the Wirt dWicAte tfets^ Apply with w«oftsponge, nl»in^gently unfil the tfMlfe dftkppfeatf care Dffttst be'taken Ml to eS« behzlne is very ^uit-
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Wholenle and Retail Millinery Store
The l«^t •tocjK and lowest f^ica.
I
OPTICIAN AND JEWE
(129 Main street, Terrc IIuu,
eadq uartci*s Coniinerclai Trav
JUSTICE HPJJSl
Jfrlkx JiOMHKK, Fritp'r.
Itorne neHal it .J
jMoLEAN & SELDOMRIDGK
Attorneys at Law%
420 Main Street Tcrre Haute. In
»i. t'
A I
S.B.D^N.
DAVIS & DAVIS.
Attorneys at Law,
x"i
22 South Sixth Street, over Post of,. Terr^ Haute, lud.
j. K: EJ H, X, JED Attorney at Law,
Third Street, between Main and Oh.
CARLTON & LAM
ATTORNEYc! AT LAW.
Corner of Fourth and Ohio, Terrc 11#^
c. jF.w.i«c.o.iTxrT:,
Ohia^trefat./rerre Haute, Iml
A. B. FELSEKTH A1U IVvi ATTORNEY AT LAW/-
.,
OhioStreet, Terro Haute, Ind.
& B^cbeb!
ATTORNEY^ jj'
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ALL OlFtrDEHS
PROMPTLY FILLiv /ifl
-AT-
.rUi1 R. JEFFERS,
lo^Dealer In Wool and MAiiiifactor^r
Cloths, Oassiniem, •Tweeds, Flannels, Jeans, Blanke' Stocking Yarns,:
Carding and
rt
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..!«».<p></p>Spinning.
•ntr N. B.—The hlgheBt rosrket price In c&sli, or own malus ot goods exchanged ior wool. ,ii j.i„
k.arfj
hell. TKd
the1 isnake is as hard ks'H joCk. ii iii'.f'
A paragraph JSJ related in reference to one of
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TBt-WBEkiV AKD W BKKLYl
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SI Soatli riftk ttrsc-
P. QFBX)EJRiiR, f|0pricttor*) v.',n-i
THE ONLV GERMAN PAPER IN TT
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diTY OF ri AVT|! :i ju A ». FOtfYtffi I 1 '.ifJ English and Gherman Job Printi •i .!'• ^IBxecttted^ t.«e H^it tosnife^'|'
twd, ician.
DH. A. H. GILMORB,
Aft«r
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astndysnd practice of thirty yeafa',
ililr^en yearn
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tbat tluie With the Jnataos lit
weaU l^M®v m{iTie,ntly located In,the city,of 1 ilkrttft. Tnc ftoctorlr«at» all manner or dlaca Kticccrafally he warrants a cure of (!aAce JIND PJL,6«NTYONN AORT ,LUPUS FORMATION*, )'V
HtreetK, on Main. KcKidence. 318 ntortu Frftn'r wWroihrrtHi the day.' and -afreilrteni
4'WS't t'
,31. ».
Morton Post, No. 1
DCTA w****r or ihpias*. TEEM HAUTr eadqtiartiern 2H% Sonth Tjiiof
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