Daily News, Volume 2, Number 32, Franklin, Johnson County, 25 September 1880 — Page 2

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.U

DAILY NEWS

.. ,r .t ,* rar B. P. BEAUC1IAMP, Editor Mid Proprietor. Publication Office. comer Piftb and Main Street*

Batcred at the Putt (Mice Terre Haute.Indiana, aa aecond-ctaas matter.

SATURDAY. SEPT. 25. 1880.

FOU PRESIDENT ttafe&aift Jtetaaspy TH* UNITED STATES,

JAMES A. UAKFIELD.

,^!mwEraE8iDBNTCHESTER A. ARTHUR.

BTi.TE TldKET.^^'^-

For Governor,

ALBERT O. POHTKR. For U«u tenant Governor, THOMAS HANK A..

For Secretary of State, BMANOEL R. HAWN. For Auditor of Slate, 6. WOLFE i:

•. VI 1~.

«'... i-.

X'-'

For Treasurer of State, POSWELL

8.

HILL,

ii'-

Por Attorney General, D/NIEL P. BALDWIN, For Judges of Supreme Court, BYRON K. ELLIOT, Third District. WILLIAM Av WOODS, Fifth Diatnct.

For Clerk Supreme Court, DANIEL ROYSE. For Reporter Supreme Conrt,

FRANCIS M. DICE,

For 8np«rkA^dei|t Pi&)Iic Instruction, l| I N

1 1

For Congress,

WBKftT

Vigo County Ticket.

For Clerit,

MERRILL W. SMITH. For Treasurer, CENTENARY A. RAY.

For Coroner,

DR. JAMES T. LAUGHEAD.

'PorSenitOT,

FRANCIS V. BICHOWSKY.

lor awMWiWl vo»& fc mw

ld

For Surveyor,

GEORGE HARRIS.

tire news has TrtE largest

DAILY CIRCULATION IN THE CITY., L-.~ WKY THX iomraui iOLID FOB HAH- }. i~7i *-&«• V. flSBdt

Oonet^er AojT"Lee and *fdcfcson io&uld TH8&B(AKE .THE) p. Tawpm(£LKa am j. ftfa JfOlt WHICH^

FOXfGBT FOUR TSARS., j* the men whopoured fourth their .... j' on tfcgirtia'i toil, and do not abandon th^nnow.c Jtemmbqr tfat npon yowr twte^en^f^f^cc^ Demoorotic ticket,—[Vyade Hampton, at Staunton, Va, Jul? 26.

Wk haye ticdfiedf'Aii commu-j nicatUm from a bpjrtness wd which will, oWooithii^ oii ppidftf ifl

i-A *J

hiiil11 ».* )!.. 'I 'l Jii-LtLiLi.

In the island of Domiuica, one of thei Marquesas l^o^, the' natives hav^s re-: volt«d 4galhst t^ French," and were aboutj to animiat^ thew when they were relieved by & Fre'neh g^n-Koat.

MTak^b Van, of Clnqipnati, has received' a fiatte$§4J$ml fw p^tpa donn|i at the. Palltiaina Theatre, in Rome, in the part Qf? "QUd^ !Tn tfie opera "RifoJett^, opera pei^l wefe fn

lA lb$»Vc$unty

v*» .fc**,- ..

,-«. fcSai-fjSK

a

I

Judos RbBirfso*, of the Spencer Circuit Court, hM decided thatthe fee® paldj ex-jt\ih\(oi of State E. Bl Hc^crlort. As' insurance examiner, belong to the State, and are illegally retained by him, and most he paid Into the Treasury. The? amount I* ovfir $15,WO.

HLUU1.U !i!l—^^—_—JJJU»

XkAST night waa a glorious night for the old wheel horses of the Republican party. ••Billy" Williamsihd &i Perkins can get} about as good a crowd as any two mei who have been jbqre, knd the irnmens

^l^sXh18jhcm

a

inks

KcDO.»AU

This hlMtacutus failed to come to timej ImV iilgfti V! a6npuhc«d. He etoiiilyj understood that the people of Terre Haute{ had no use for him?&> he kept dark. He lectured at Indianapolis a few night^agoj to an audience4 of fifty-one pertoni* In the same raUo according to population he,, would have had ah au^ieoce fn Term Haute ctf

brind,1

dog. ^1»ls would include hone but th NEWS force minus the brindle dog. Th NEWS man had bis war paint on. hi tomahawk behind his ear and hisscalpin knife In his boot. He intended tpntaa by ''Sylph1* at all haiards* McDonaJi «u a Httle to s?lpby for tius'cilraate. an his grot expose fell qpon •UN! cwatloa «f aa W* dw*».M

After making such entensive prepara Uops^ deaning up our QatUng gntwan prepaHng plenty of fixed ammunition annlKlNte Sylpfcy McDonald through N^fl we compelled to nurse wrath and skut up the migtiuiae.

mtA tJtet it wiU mot S'ti41

ixattn ft o* «m be secry *wa «r represent* tehe tmtrH (m tfitfr*. „r, sernMim in tJ* £fert»r*i QeGegt, mm Ait jm*t as It and cam kat* si mitied A« if.'*—General «Qrma^s Letter to Oeneral Logan.

t?

5

The next newspajer of which we have any account, was established at Paris, France, in the year 1631, by a gefatlemari named Renaisdot, and was founded as the official organ of the government, This paper was called the Gazette of VrancmM, and was -published uninterruptedly for 296 years, having suspended publication in the 1887.

to be found in almost every comer of thd globe. Since the great evolution of mind from the dark ages, the newspaper ha gradually evolved into the most poten power of every civilized country, and they carry with them*the tastes atid eivilizatioij of the country wherein tli'ey are produced! From the infantile production of Christopher Barker "for the prevention of falsd reports7 under the immediate supervjsibri of Queen Elizabeth! The' nineteentli century looks upon giganticlu,fctto1ic messengers, 8udli|tis the fjtndon 1 {W£S^ New York Herald, Cincinnati Enquirer, and many others fwhich wield such a powerful •influence in human thought^ A, man, io conduct properly a leading newspaper, must be a man of,strong common sense and a knowledge of men. must be educated and energetic, apt must have that peculiar abiliTy^cairetl newspaper sense. When a ma/l r'^ads the editorials of a newspaper he dt'oiice mak^s up his mind 'as to the characUr, ci vitize(i| tastes and mental caliber of the editor^ this is done at a glance.

Nearly i'very man thinks he can be an editor untfl he sets flown in the cOmpflti cency of confidence ahd fails afferWtttiiijj about ten lines. It is true tliat good1 men often fail to make good

that the tone that .pcevades their columm is not ptye, but because, they dp nod know how to strike the popular chord ofj thpir patrons, and consequently must go down for want of patronage. Thp spapfir! may be good enough, bpt^p»|ktrc{iiageU isj what makes a ^ood paper, s,

That newspaper that acts for the interest] of the people among whom it is published is the paper that the community ought tosustain and encourage.

WANTS TO 00 TQ CONOBS88. The Rockville Republican of September 22i\d contains an account of the most disgusting affair of which we ever read And the' strange, feature 9f the matter is that Bayless W. Hanna is the "star" in this drama. ThelRtpuhlicfin says

Bayless W. Uapna, Democratic can-l didate for Congressj closed the Dcinoi eratic meeting at place, |by getting uproariously DRUNK. The meeting was to close by a torchlight proccBsion and a( speech from IiannA, at night.-^Nigh^ eanie but BayleSs did not for tlie reason that he wa? on a huge drunk at W .taiher's Saloon' Rojfjers. the singer, camd

up on the Puhlic sang a few songa and made a speech, explaining the out, was too

absence of llanna—tluat he «fcc. The fact was that Bayless drunk to appear. ''V

gwoiMt

OTFLUEHCE OF HIW8PAFBM. There is no power, in the wide #'orld that wieldsso great a general mfluepceiis that wielded bf the newspaper. 4»ul whilst newspapeife. aa fen«»\v |thein, have all arisen within the las* threes dred and lifty years'we may safely say that the Hindus were *crinnrmrrl"wftirfviOrsnreim^ that power more than, a thousand years ago. But we will not tAke Into the Pekiif OmeiU and Canton r-Ww# examine for the earlier papery-}i^ the Anglo Saxon tongue, and set wlktr* kind of character and thought have been moulded by these silent instruments for the past three hundred and Whfcii Queen Eli/.aleth was on the tiironi in the year 1588 then was established under her authority a newspaper called the Enylinh Mercurie, and was edited and published by Christopher Barker, printer to her royal Highness, and was published "for the prevention of false reports A'

1

Again we go back to England wherd the Puftlifi Intelligence was established by Sir Roger L'Estrange, for public wfc/omaj tion and diffusion of netcH, in the yeai? 1663, This paper was -the- father oi American journalism, and from iVha^ grown the almost innumerable newspapers

joew_sppers,7ft6

Aftit Rogers wAs tlirStfgfi, be Bayless at the saloon and got drung also^ The two remnined at the saloon unti^ after midnight, when the lights were extinguished arid they were taken to the, Commercial House. During the time, they wero at the saloon, Bayless got into a political discussion with William Crenter, a very intelligent Irish Catholic Repuhilcan and lecause Cremer did not? acquiesce at once to Bayless* drunken arguntent, he got into a toWeHhg' rage and charged Cremer with recreancy to t)teOatho|ic Chaxch*ndhisQod» A flghti being hnminent between Hanna and Cre-: mer, the Marshal of the town appeared

peare

These are the plain facts of the most dis-! graceful occurrence, without^cploring on exageration, wlilcn can be proven bj as good witnesses as there are in Parke county. Such was the finale to the I democratic rally of hist Monday. No wooded that decent Democmta next morning/ condemned the,, affair in unmeasured tenns, and declare that how they cannot support himi-

As an example of what the Democratic party will resort to, we have but the read the amount of the "count" at Little R^ck, Art. Ih the vicinity of that city la a feepublican township, and in order to de feat them the Democratic returning boanl assert that the judges of the election *VHd not kl#s the Bible wheit therefore the election is void. Their oath was found! regutarly sub«a1l)eii ami sworn to in the poll books which were filed with the County Clerk, and the re* turtka are ill regular ahd in due form of law but somebody having informed the returning hoard tha* the judges failed to ki«s the Bible at the lime of being sworn, the whole returns are thrown out. This Is perhaps an example of what Qen$rat Hancock means by "a full rote* a free ballot and a fair count*

ftf "*V

The burden of Payne's story a few fghje agafWJis State sovereignty. He Wed toipow in the wake of Daniel's speech at 'the Wljswam. and

tey-n

Itol^fl headlong attftkii^? ki^ro m-'1 Tiis Keif f^statesma«Rhi^5from ton rather than Jefferson. His argument e^wuTslTvefto*lKe cro'wcir

Jf the Jeffiuybjanjdoctrine^ WJfitjon to eentralization, ojerate to establish the

there would was cenlrali-,

blessed with, it would seem beWditftrtiliv ^etefra^iAgVhi^i ri^ht, Hamilton or .Jefferson: IT cent zation means that the ^Nation shall have powe#b?enVorc'e its law' 'aiid five every dttebh the ri£ht 18 cast his vote accord ing to the dictates of his own conscience, arid thai Vote shall W hbn'^kly counted, then the Republican party is in favor of centralization!iltff tiiera isnoidyveifwe man in the whole country who is bulldozed at the polls, the llepu^jean

jact/sJ^j«^:fcvot

of protecting that man, even.^-jt cjdls forth the whole strength .|f the government. 1

The Democracy, and especially Payne, might as well sooth»*

:{heir.

ffears,! 6n tln$

subject. The Republican pariy doC.Viibt intend to harm them' Every Democrat ought to know therj can be no liberty in a coujitry whpreth^ government, is too,! weak, to prote!t iti subjects in life and liberty. /The aims of the Repubiican party ^i}} not l^ accomplished until every voter fro^i the lakes to the gulf, 64tl' go to the polls andbast his vgte without being'fe'ndan^fc'd in lite and limb: Thinkff this- brother D«nor crat, when yoii go'to the polls to east your vote. Don't be alarmed by liaranguesof isuch mian as Payne. li­

the

Werus of Wisdom. 'ar

Jkity is not only pleasant, tut ^hea^j Persevenufice is the best school fet ivery manly virtue.

A womap, who wants ,a, cjt^ajritabVj heart Wahte a pure heart.

4

The man lacks moral courage whoj treats wh^n he sh,puldi retreat.

r{

No "vaces' lire ]ro^iiicura!b]6 as tBo.se Whiich! men ferte apt 'to glory in. It is the best proof of the' virtues of familj cbele to, .see ft happy fireside. .Dogpod .^o a)li tliat thou mayest keepi thy friends, and gain thine enetmes.^

The rich 'ftte more1 envied by thbsej who have & little thdn' bv those whbj have nothing.

The idle should not be classed among] ^e liymgj tl^ey are a.BO^t. of.d^id'men, to

One act of henencence. one act (rf.re^l is6fultte(SS, is'worth all tlie abstract sentiment in the world.

Ladies are like violets the "more modest, and, retiring they appear, the mpre you,,loye.them.

It is the work of a philosopher to be every day subduing nis passions and laying adid&his prejttdi»^.

1

Kn™

Have nothing to do with any man in a i)assionf( tfor mfen .are Jiot like iron, to. be rougnt upon when they are hot.

It is better .tb, wear out than to rust 6ut. aiitist ndt orily strike tfie iron While it is boVbut fetfik^ till it is ihade hot,-,-..: .'•!

It is a, most mortifying reflection of.

dohe

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The object' bf ikll ambitidii should be |q be happy at home. If We prd not happy there we cannot be happ^ elsewhere. "Benefit ftkt'friends, thkt' they may foWyOti sail more dearly benefit y6ar\ enemies, that they may become yoUrj :v,

A lively, invagination is fk great jgjn provided education tutors it. If not, it fenbthlng but 'a iorl e^haUy luiurtiiEi Jbrallkinds of seedsi

ri

pin our faith ori another tnan^i sleeve, and wibnut to be led^ author, ity, deprives us of mdependence. a^f mibjects ufc to just contempt.

NO rnaft will excel fn his prdfessroff if ke thinks himself above it *tfd coBft-j fnerce will not flourish i» aqy countiy! ^ere commew is not rejected.- ,, -r-

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't. l#1' I

Sleep tor the Brain. i?$

,wBl«Biuga light cm him that fitst l«-| vented sleep/'«ays Sancho Panxaj and, the ,Mrod workman, tinpd in bnOHf OB

do whe^lt^ feels too wfekk to efefr ja^-f thing through, is to go to bed andeleepj asjoug.a^ hftcan.

This is the only actual recuperation o^ brain-fbroe, because during sleep the^ biaiinisinastateof teet,in a eondMonj to re5eive andl^propriateiuticle«)fnti-| triment i^m,the blood, which take» tb% place of tho»e wnich have been wkh bf prevlbd^ labor, since the id of thmking burns tip solid aa every torn of tiie wheel orscaew the steamer ia result of oonsumptiiQh

only 0»e tfntriment p^5-, de» in th« bto6c^ wftich wet*Obtained from the food eaten previatafeljr and Oie brain is ao, teem iff

they $m qeftmrn i* ap 'piprer eoough ia ta*e up a,

MB

DcatB In the Dishcloth. p| A lady in the Rural World says: "1» dtshulotlis are black and stiff and smell like a barn-yard—it is enough--throw them" in the tire and henceforth and forerver wa^kyour dishes with cloth&that

hYuiIF white, cloths that you ciin BM tlirongTiV an3. see if you ..ever have thai disease-. again»~. Th«re 8oineU»H* otlier cau^ts, but I have stnelled a whole hH?se,ftd l»r typhoid fever ui ne r«ig.' 1 had some neighbors once—

of them were sjck, at pnertiuie with typhoid fev^r.' TWe tfoctoi^ ordered the yin&gar jbarrels whitewsished and threw* about forty cents worth of carbolic arid iu theawill-pail mid departinent, I went iato. ,tle kitchea juid. mada gruel—X jneeded.a diah-eloth, and stook^d around and fouiid seVen^' axtdisuch 'mgsf.' I burnedi them all, and called la daughter of tlie house to get iue a dishblothu She looked around on fcho table.su«ftVhy,? said 8he,.'fchere Wa^ about a dozdn hero tliis morning,' and she looked in the wood»box anddon the nuuitlepieco, ioritl felt in ti»e dupboardi a: sti nr*.uc 'Well,' said,- 'I saw sofcie' old black: totten raga lying aixmnd and I burned them—for there is denth in such dishcloth8 as tli'ose, and you must never use such again.' I took turns at nursing that,jfietmily' for weeks, aud I believe Jjose dirty xfishcloLhs wem the cause of jdll tiiathardwork,'' •Tli^efore, I say to every housekeeper, keep j»uk? dishclotlis clean. You may only bruab And couib y«ur head on Sunia^a you need not wear a collar unless you go from hdme—bub you must Wash your daribciofchs. You may only sweepj theJSobrwhehi the sun gets right thei window^ don't need washing—you can, look:tint of the door .that spider's web! on the ffconfcpowh don't hurt anytliixgibut aa^ou love y,pur lives wash out your dishcloth* !Let the foxtail grass grow in the garden (the seed is a foot deep anyway) let the holes in tlie heels of your husband's footrags go undarned let the sage go ungathered let the children's sho6s go two Sundays without. blackingViet tHe hens set four weeks on one wq«ien egg—but do wash out vourj dishdothfc l&t^wi&ou: ?, xac.edoth,] wash

yOuciacca?-ranii»i

,f(

Itfany are witling enough to woun who are yet afraid to strike. To-mortow is the day on whieh idle meiv work, and fools return.

1

How few faults are there seen. )py us, which1 we have not oureelVM^dnftnitted.j The:Chrael« ally th^ifii is' a Welt' ofj wisdom at the root of evfery'gray haif.,

T^e ^art,^, ^.^pokwhiph we ought iWv fo tear in our hurry to get at its con-j

It is with life its with coffee be who* drinks it pure' must not draTn if fo the diAk di

If you,would no| ^iave,a ppreoii deceive you, be careful. n,o.t 1 mistruBt/him.1'

*et Lieir zr* 5c

without, a curtain for your windows andj tjike /br.your tea,-.—but for heaven's sake: ke*ep your dislicloth elenri. ,i\j

1

•. .1 -nra—grt—rrr

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The Snow of Age.

"No snow falls'IFghfer than "the snow age bufnttie is xie'AVieV, inelte/'

of age bufhi»ne is for it nevei!

Tbe.figureijis byAiOjmeans novel, but the, closing part of the sentence iB new as well as emphatic, The scriptures represent tige ,hy,rthe almond tree, which bearo bltissouas, of the! purest white. ''The aibiond tree shall, flourish"—the head-shall be hoary. Dickens ^ays of one of his. characters whose lia|r was: .turning gray, thalj .'Ut. looked as. if timej had lightly splashed his snows upon its passage." .: i, Vlt never uielts''miio never Ii Age is| inexorable. lis wheels must move onward—they know no retrograde, jnove-j ment, The old. man may set and fciug,/

?'I

ipp:

^9.£ to let, him, know you!

would I were, a boy agaiin"-tbut he grows older as he sings. He niay reail] of the. elixir of youth, but he caniiO find itjiihe imay^sighv for.jth.e secrete of Jthat alchemy Which i& able to make:hitn young, ibutrsinging brings it? not. He .may gazebackwardwithan- eye pf-long-higiuppnjthe rosy scenes of early "jy ears, aaone who gazes oh' his hbme, froiri the deck of a departing j§hip. whiali every ikiomentiCarries him farther and farther aWay. TPoor old manl He lms little mqre ito doithan die. .it. ii tEheysnoW of winter comes, And. ^hede its! white blessing upon the valley aud the tooctntains, biit soOn the sweet spring comes and smiles it all. away Not so with that hpon the brow of the, tottering veteraaii. There ip, nov sprihg whose

W^rihtltcau penetarafe. its eternal lrost. Ibcameito stay.i JtS'sirigle flakes fell uu-notiCied-rTand now.it is. drilled there? iWe shall see it increase until we lay the ibid!than in/his grav^*j There it, sliallj be absorbed by the eternal .darknessrrrfor tiiere isino age in heaven.: OajSTeft why ^jeak.of age in mournful strain It is beautifill,, honorable eloquent. Should we sigh at the proximity of death* when life and the worlds are sq full of empt?njess? Let the old ex«H because tjhey are old. If aJy n\ust ^veep foung, at tlie, long, suwesr iVata*®'Wrf'ore th^m. •y{£\, copie the now,, for it is an ^ifibleni. of oeace and of Test., it,is but a temporal imfa wfeitik• ^Lattl^e gfitesot fara#se.io ,t)e replaced by a bri^ter an4bett«?q^ til t^i*# —?—A~ ttt- -r—.HiU'iliftofj, .fi'VK*« fit, uiiilu ailT-* .jrftto.i oa. 't IB tod av AUNT MABCM^ CL

%^oung man dop't marry a girl becaust, ahe ia pretty#i: Will ,be*ttity,, satisfy you tbjrmiihi the lifelong Journey, to thp exchlsiQP.of moral qualities, mmd a^^lceaEt^ [WUlpeAutv alone cook your din^er^tCftio yow children and prove ti tnie..solace in the hours of weary toil: |nd tfiaV-the lfttofevery .man PAmtM Il^p6eVhiu3 9ai9: fBaMtraatfoatttAa good.agbua, a flower J« £oeti tod«l,biv««».0eBd witbta^o liour.rt ""TWed hdt youreelf to that which time Hit surfely'sftateh ftonepyou, leaving the fUd^d withered cbeek and vacant m1i^.- othdy well tlie character and, c^MliUes bf the object of ybur choice. See to it thnAt she -pc^fe^es am ind rjpn-

titiie Hs #p£«t in rt»dirvg

novels«md fashion notes. And

Abw«4ll,* beifiBUred *h«!ft weJl di»ci Mined' in those virtdes wltliorit which, feotne is iraitdied. Sweetneae of temper

'wishy-washy1 sort but on ry theSfrbo levelopi

tifibW wivei and mbtberi, ftithful in fBspdship. and devout Christians, capablF^ttcetting both at home ahd in ijiffuences for the right

s.,

ft,

sgtf&s

Health, Comfort and Pleasure. isites for a cheaply that gem and by a _____ beautiful and niYeresjTng localities—tlie justly renowned Manitou House, at Manitou

tlire

mpor be

life

nleus from the thriving Yqlajre S^irii^^if Ihe-DenvCi'ahd

is but live luiles ?of Colonido Uio Grand Rail wayT and Concord coaches

TTn Ireamness^on "'amvaToi

of the "Fontaine qui Bouille," land tlie passengers on the wide piazzas of the Manitou House, which is a large, roomy,

It accommodates two hundred guests— RWi6or,g|W, BARKER, Esq., an old and well-known caterer foKtby t/ra-sfeling entirely) and newly ntrea up, readiness for the summer campaign.^ It is supplied with hot and cold wale*, oafti-rooms, biirbershop, ball-alleys, billiard and refreshment saloons, and its tables are as bountifully furnished as any of its eastern

hotel, so .that its guests can be jit all tnde&ih idle^J&ickftstii^^afi&n Witlil home or businessj while Upcle Sam pro-, vides also t?fW«l«»ly incite* short five minutes' walk from the hotel brings the guest to the celebrated mineral and soda springs,.andl\ttle fartherop, the iron anf stnpiWr chies.- The hofasfe'ik'snugly sheltered on all sides by the mountains, md ot a distance seems to be almost at tlieA-et^y ftJOt'of bTd Pfk%*s P6al^ itself.* .The scenery fin everyv direction is magnificent, and. pleasant walks and drives! abound on all sides.: Near here are the celebrated localities, tlie Garden of. the Gods, Glen Eyrie, Monument Park, the Mesas, Ute Falls. Shiann Canon and Falls, and from' the. hofeT daily excursions are made to the summit of Pike's, Peak where the U. S. .Observatory and telegraph station is situated, and from which such magnificent views can be had n\s are unexcelled in the Wide world.

Let the tired out and overworked, business or professional man, the invalid, the pleasure-seeker, arid'the lover of nature, bend Irs steps westward to this lovely spot,,Lather than to the crowded and fashionable watering .places of tlie east—and«ev(en a short visit in the full enjoyment of a real home, the sunny skies and life-giving air, the healing waters, the magnificent scenery, and the: soothing quiet and rest of this delightful resort, will enable him to return home with renewed health, life and hope. ~'j•!» t,

Tlie Future of tlie Lid ted States. It is not generally known, everi in cuU vivated circles, that the amount of arable soil in America is greater than in Ehrope, Asia and Africa put: together, artd^ c».oj therefore sustain' more lTVe^. This is rio rash conciusion. I speak from a sc!6ntiSc{. bfisi^j and will''sho^r ^ou. ^hat that basis IS': Our ^ohtiiie'ht iS iiiufroW, and therefor^ the wiridS .of the' ocean water it'well*. The mduhhvtfi dhkJii^oh iTOntiii^nt tlife bid

ft, results

our and

its high east^rnTi^^^cause^^e rmriless int^iora of Asi/i, and Africa. Agafq America is the.l^nd of fertile plains .the ld .worid ojf, st:oi,qhed plains. Our plain* tun north sand south, and *o attract and receive the rains. America da high under the,, .equator,, the old w.orld is wide* heitce, witb oisa, small?surface is exposed to the scorching sun. The result is that ',)te productive soil in the old world is i0.000,000 square mhee, and,in the new, li 00O,O0». «Thu» IAir8te TipOiit tts5 all in Uie^ight of ^cientitip-trutht the #act that Ainer^ can 8\isv»in a greater population than the oldi,world and if slie can. it is unquestippuile. tlwi soiiie daj* she #iii

J-' I -i-.. -.iiMJLU-I'. U. Sa singular tn$l, tTla^otof the. Imperial Kitpolebus.lifisjti^d i'fr -France, Or oa Pirentin soil. Napoleon L, the founder of the fan^ily, diod a prisoner on the Britisli islpnd\.pf .^.II^ensL in the South Atlanti'q Ocvan his son. Napoleon II., died in AwLrla^liis nephew, Nar poleon llln died up e^ile in England, and his. grawdiiephew. 'the young piffn whom the Frencii. imperialists hoped would onfe d'.vy rule Fiance as Napoleor. IV., met his,»fekle«at titft spoiat of Zulii spears in byuth ..^fr^cij^ y\r, 1- I.

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.bftiwtflli I Cr«t»»I. DAVID.M. vVALLACE.'f'mT hh htihm-M

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4Hch a one io juMix- heaxt,„and while loving aBdcheoahing&il BOtto prove youneif worthy tp be the poeau«or of iocha{MrM^e»geta.,

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•"^ao^tTw&rwhsi ine range outdoor* than when confined. haab^en Wdt^twUh fowla allowed considerable freed«i,20 oer cent, only of their egga fiuled to ^with le« freedom,forty per oenL and in cloae cowfiiMwoent, sixty per cent were not hatched.

C.4L THOHfAS.

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".litfhR •'••Aiiirft w.itt i. Vf 1 'iUin-rt For Clerk,

For C^ronesif' 4-^^j

HE^RYEH^E2m'A¥l^.:

For jCqmiai^ioneri Third DisfHAt/

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OPTICIAN ANp .JEWE 629 Main street^, Terre Haul

RoaAfaArters Comuieivial Tniv

JUSTICE"BOUSE dOIIW WOWIIliW-t yr.

BRAZIL. 1ND. S$-

^itoritcns al Cam.

1 iMScLEAN & SELDOMRII)OE, -f Attorneys at Law, 4^ Main Street, Terre llant^?. Inu/ SwO. Biavis. SJH.DATIS. N

DAVIS & DAVIS. Attorneys at LaW,

22% South SixtJi Street, over Post.4

Terre Haute, Ind.

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.. ^w^ 3^tfeney atLa^r, Thinl StreeC, betw'ech Main and Oh?

A O N ,*A.TfOfitoS AT LAW, Corner or Fourth and Ohio, Terre Ha.

c. CdSTTTT^ utmhhak Attorney at'Law, 322?, Ohio,Street, Terre Haute, ln(l

~A^5.FEIjsentiIAV ». ATTORNEY AT LAW. ,^ii1 A-

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V5Ohio Stron't. Terrt Haute, Ind,

BUFF & BEECHER, ,, ATT0HNEVS AT JAW,

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Torre Haute. Ind

fUisccllaiuows

jPLH.'Lj ORDERS

PROMPTLY FILLt

-AT-

lT. It. JEFFER8, Dealer in Wool and Mannfacturor

Cloths, Cassimercs,

Tweeds Flannels,

Jeans, Blanke

Stocking Yarns,

Carding and Spinning.

N. B.—The highest market prlcc In catih, or

owp.j9f]$ -„,.

Wil-WHRKLY AKB* WREKLY i( i,

Office fHum

-21

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Democratic Coiinty Ticket1"

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-THOMAS A, ANDERSON.

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For Treasurer,

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For Representaf^M^1b"***

DAvlulf.»/EAYLOR

mr^^iTLOt'K,^,

HATS~®iBONNETS

'AT EMIL BAXTER'S I" ji ••. iikjy' "ji

Wholesale and Retail Millinery Store .. Tbe Uugeat stodi and lowest

%s. a

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ftoath Fiftk Atree

P. QFROKBER, P^aprlelnr.

uitiiH .j.1 J. ".'nnffj i.ivO fotu-1 THE ONLY GERMAN PAPER IN Tt fclTY OF TERRE HAUTE. tM 11M »iu

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I '. r*.'V Ii J'i AI i't'USyllJ Mf, 5 English and G-ermanJob

Print

tf- W 11 Bxccnted'in the heat mariner. '1

PijisttUMUthu,:

DR. A. BLflMJO®®'.'''

Eclectic iad Bot&oic Fbysicia

After a 8tn«ly nud practice of thirty years, fhirteGii yelirsof that, time with the Indian* W6«t has jlerinauoiilly iocnted' in the city of 1« Hante. I ho doctor treats all manner of (liBfa ^ucce*ftfully he warrant#,, a cnr«, of and alt jictirvons* and lupn? formation*, with' •the nnftof the knife, orhuruh nK rli,cInc-«. Con. tatSoil /frefe. Offlee. h^tWWcn S»»tond and Thl Btreets, on Main. Uo«ldenra. &18 isortli Pi/th Will be atjofflceduria# U« d*y, «»U. .at renide' at night.

Morton Post,Ko.

DsrAHrrKmnroFiNUJAKA, TERRE HAUT^V iEieadqnartert Wl% South jThMi JltiCgiUar roeetingB flrp andt^^ Thurnday evuuings, cacn rooi'l

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i^KeMlttig Room open evej evening. 1 lOomradM viiitfri* the city wl

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