Daily News, Volume 2, Number 37, Franklin, Johnson County, 1 October 1880 — Page 2

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DAILY-NEWS

8. P. BKAUCHAMP, SditOrud Proprietor,

'nb! (cation OfflcW corner

Fifth

and Main Street*

Bntered at the Post Office at Terre Haate. Indian*, Hecond-clasa mutter.

FRIDAY. OCTOBER 1, 1880 f* .s'r^ -*.*«*•«» FO%£&E3IDENT

UNITED STATES,

iJius a. oarfiklu.

FOR VICE PHK8IDENT,

JHiCSTER A. ARTHUR

S^AT^f TICKET. For Qovernor, ALBERT O. PORTER.

For Lien tenant Oorernor, THOMAS HANNA. For Secretary of Suite, g-M AKKKl* t^v-HJLMT

For Auditor of $tat«, EDWARD H. WOLFE, For Treasurer of State,

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ROSWELL 8. HILL, For Attorney General, DANIEL P. BALDWIN,

A.jvvoftijs. Ftfth 1

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

FRANCIS M. DICE,

For Snperintendent Public Instruction,

aim

For CongreBs,

ROBERT B. F. PEIRCE.

Vigo County Ticket.

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For Comminsioner, Third District. JOHN DEBAUN. nU jklffi?Tf LA&6HJIAD4.

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For Senator,

FRANCIS V. BICUOW8KT. For ReprcBentativos, -7ILLIAM II. MELRATH.

DICK T. MORGAN. For Surveyor. GEORGE HARRIS.

LARGEST

*Tip dm.

WHY THE ?0B HAH-

Conrider uhat Lee and Jackson would do were [hey alive. THESE ARE THE 8A ME PRINCIPLES FOR WHIO11 THEY FOUGHT FOUR TEARS. RemernbvrttMmen wM^^e^J^rththeir Ofe-blUS* \eoit, 4»« W not dbandm^fpip cidgp. your vote depend* the succeea of the Democratic ticket.—[Wade Hampton, at Staunton, Va. July 26.

TH8.*KW» W1IL LIVE. 3'

A gentleman said to us this morning, that the general impression throughout the city is that the NEWS is only a cam paign paper and will cease to exist when the .fall elections are over. He further stat&f "tbrat certain papers bt tliii city were putting forth ideas through their solicitors that tha NEWS is but a campaign papwr., Now we vcpme before the people to-day and tell them that the'terre Haute

Daily NEWS has a larger circula

tion than 4«f| daily patter published In the city lint It is a paper which every poor man can subscribe for, and pay for it. Tlpit It in the'spiciest, best and most reliabn' paper in the city, one has but to read tiivtn nil and judge for himself

This being true, why,should

been

snow"

fthe

$tews

susportd Everybody know!that before the1 NKW8 was established, thehe vd&a a want in t&e cityrjffi ftfui rnoon paper The NKWS nils that' wans, and comes wifeh^a »ub»Cription itst tki ttita etty, t»f abtfbt flftcen tnmefmi, and still |ioerH^ii|. beiojS true, isn't the NEWS on a paying basis,' and if it ^ispcnd,! N,i ^lie aw| jong ^fterHie l«ave» fall, and "Porter is elected governor, of Indiana, and Garfteld, is elected president Of the United States, and the Democratic party has

,wrapped in "its shroud of

and the warm sunshine of many, years will have fallen upon the headi of 4ho«a who try to injure this paper toy auch damnable lies, will THE DAILY NEWS be found standing by the interests of Terre Haute people un3auoved and fearless.

the presence of King Humbert and aa immense concbtom df people. The Italia is the mbau powerful iron-cUui ejrer^conatruiked. X» \J &J

THR

TVTKNTY FOITKTH

drawing of the

Difetribmtion Company took place yester e*tSecaplulpri*e |S0,000 Uckef 88,619, the second prtee, $ lO.OOOt, -w tmww g$' tiek»t 85.1J8. The foilo^lMuxIrtiyr tUmuch A,m, 8I,43«, 11888 and 6?.m

Srr Taostreos af Wigwtun to morrow '-'I r.*T

HOW HEAE A 80LDIEB CAH DIE AHD -,f TET^ -r /. Now that the Reunion of prisoners of war at Indianapolis has rekindled the old enthusiasm and recalled the suffering and endurance of thousands of men in southern prison, we take from the Detroit Free Press an article on "how near a soldier can die and yet live," which will be read by many of the old soldiers with interest. Thfe writer says that af the battle of1 Peach Orchard, when McClellan was making his change of base, a Michi gan countrymen fell to the ground as if shot stone dead, and was left lying in a heap as the regiment changed position.

Theball which hit him first struck the barrel of his gun, glanced and struck a button off his coat, tore the watch out of his vest pockei and then struck the man just over the heart, and was stopped by a song book in a shirt pocket. He was unconscious for three quarters of an hour, and it was a full month before the black and blue spot disappeared.

At Pittsburg Landing a member of the Twelfth Michigan Infantry stooped down to give a wounded man a drink from his canteen. While in this act a bullet a|med at his breast struck the canteen, turned aside, passed through the body of a man, and buried itself in the leg of a horse. The canteen was split open, and dropped to the ground in halves.

At the second battle of Bull Run, as a ^ew York infantryman was passing his plug of tobacco to a comrade, a Bullet struck the plug and glanced off, burying itself in a knapsack. The tobaeeo was rolled up like a ball of shavings and carried a hundred yards away. Directly in "line of the ball was the bead of a lieutenant, and had not the bullet been deflected, he would certainly have received it. As it was, he had both eyes filled with tobacco dust, and had to be led to the rear.

At Brandy Station one of Custer's troopers had his left stirrup strap cut away by a grapeshot. which passed between his leg and the horse, blistering the skin as if a red-hot iron had been used,

JH® dismounted to ascertain the nature of his injury, and as he bent over a bullet knocked his hat off and killed his horse. In the same fight was a trooper who had suffered"several days with toothache. In a hand-to-hand fight he received a pistol ball in the right cheek. It knocked out his acting double tooth and passfed out of the'left-hand corncr of his mouth, taking part of an upper tooth along. The joy of being rid of the toothache was so great that the trooper could not be made to go to the rear to have his wound dressed.

An object no matter how triffiing, vMl turn a bullet from its true course. This was shown One day at the Fremont camp in pleasant Valley. They had &, "bull pen" there, in which about five hundred boun ty-jumpers and other hard cases were under guard. Once in a while one of these men would make a braek for liberty. Every sentiael in position would open fire, and it did not matter in the least if the man ran -toward the "Crowded Cattip. On this occasion a prisoner made for the camp, and as many as six shots were fired at him without effect. One of the bullets entered the tent of a captain in the Twelfth Pennsylvania cavalry. He was lying down and the course of the bullet would have buried it in his chest. Fortunately for him the candle by which he was reading sat on a stand between him and where the bullet entered?' 'This was struck and cut &4|are into, and the lighted end drop ped to the floor Without being snuffed out. The ball was defected, and buried itself in the pillow under the officer's head psased out of that and through hiB tent, entered one behind it, passed between two men and brought up against a campkettle.

AT Oakland, Illinois, the Democrats, have no organ and for the benefit of the

few

unwashed in that neighborhood the Herald devotes about three squares to them jn order to keep them leveU.^JJere is the way it's done:

Hurrah for Jeff. Davis! **1^, Booth was a martyr for Liberty's sake. Come out to'day and hear the old rebel yell.

Now for the principles of Lee and Jacksbn. Come out td-day and hear how *rwe Shipped the rebels.

Hurrah! The man that killed Abe Xtiicoiu was a Democrat. The stars and bars have floated from mahy Democratic poles.

Turn out all you loyal Democrats' Yenrgin has been hit with a brick 8

Oh, what beautiful

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Lord, aint we onery. Dennis KeaVhey won't even associate with us. Come on old men, join the Democracy This is theparty that killed your sons.

Say, you young fellows of the north, come over and help. Got fellows here that killed your daadiee

Just look Arn'twe mflne gang ^Lee and Jackson belonged to our party, and so did Jeff Davis and Ben Hill, Bob Toombs and Hampton. Lee and Jackson fought for our principles.

How we do grow In Maine. Last ye&r we polled 21,000 votes. This year we'got so strong we did not need any candidate, we just Indorsed the Greenback man, and: tfidnl 'poll a single Democratic rote, we appJesawtm.^

quoding around its turn of death and #111 soon be wretched mourners *t its tomb -*D. W. Vc*)rhe*» liOuse of repte&titatives* Mard* 5. 1864. Jp Uwte**- ii 11 in

FIUKK Xdusders la the gehtJeaan of whom the Indianapolis Svm spoke in 1874: "He hiS only the capacity to thine ^a brief hour in the phosphowiiaeat light of a su ppoaed Democratic vfctory, and to stisk. like a dead mackerel on the be&h. where the ware of a political upheaval has left him.**

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HAHCOCK'S LETTEE.

The Democrats are having Hancock letter arranged to use as a campaign document. It would be an insult to,tjie intelligence of the Nineteenth! Ceptui^ to «af that the people of this ceqntry do-not understand that this letter is but a catch and that there is nothing in it. General Martin Beeme in an inj^vie^ Inter' Ocean says in regaira to thisle ^*Hancock and the Democratic managers knew the: sentiment of the ^ort^ip regard to the payment of Southern War claims and were aware that the chances of carrying a single Northern State were against them unless they defied, the intention of complying with the natural demands of the South. While the letter is called a denial it is i^ reaUtyr^ #Ulful evasion of the issue. It Irefers only to damages arising from the war. This does not include supplies taken by our era troops or furnished to them. .. multiplicity of these claims iSMmc®tl»yond belief arid thdir chttra&terraShYftr&das the coat of the Souther^ Thtre are a score or more of ways Jby which their paymtmt m'ay Sev-attailiadi. The bill of Manning, the rebel ^B^ressman from Mississippi, now peuding-^e fore th^ HoUse, wm

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This bilfpfo-

vides that the CirCUit Court shMi have jurisdiction over all ^ai^ mstead of the regular Court 6f^aili,^rWl^n given is that th6 '-^rF of is incapable of transactipg thi? .grfftt volume of clainSs buai the claim is thife*. Tfife Claims is io ch'jcked tip. claims that it wiU tHkft ^g^hfeg^en^ ations to dispose of them. Tr they go into the Circuit Court the eyi$eno£ will be Entirely ex parte,, for our wi^nesgea aire nearly all dead being killedvin Dattie' or dy ing since from diseases contracted in the South, and from natural causes. Jf Manning's bill fails to pas^ another method of obtaining the object 'in view1 will" pe' attempted. By striking out thfe Word 'loyal" from the. pr^ent lawp the^ court of claims would have arbitrary junsdiction over every claim comlngf itom south of Mason and Dixon's line, and SpeOial^claims could be passed upon aft ,anv tipae. {^hen Hancock says the people of the Sputh^ do not desite the pigment1 or th'6&e' 'dlkims, he is either a willing knave bt he does not know, wherepf he is 8pear}ng,. |klLookx at records of the Court of Claims. Look, at the treatment of Qen^rftl Bragg, 'th# Democratic member, after-his speech}) »'»pp6s^ ing Southern claims. He was,theM ,object orthe scorn and hatred of (he D^irtOcl-lats North and South. 'I hbVe

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through the South? and in every sedtion and in every Confederate house there are claims carefuny!prfeleirVed/affd'[tlfe h'dpe is perennial ihHhe breMt»!'Of the people that tbeaq,plaims will ultimiii^r. hev.pai.^ by the instrumentality ofthe D'eniocratic p*artyt .It is^only a matter c^f power .and oppprtuni ty., The$e same people cried, for the withdrawal of the troppis fr6m tlie' South, and'* pVrittiised tli'at the hfegrt)es should remain unmolested that tliey ^accepted the. issue of the War,' arid WOuld give" the tailored' votttt*' his right's The troops were withdrawn and paoification triecf. How is it now? Why, the negrpes are terrorized and oppressed as much as before tfhe"Wat, and ate eilJher bullddzed into a-minority (Ore J(?C) Jirt 7 COUNTED OUT IN KVEKY J£LECTION. "The same principal is involved in- the settlement of rebel .claims. If the D.em ocracy1, of WTiich'ttie 'TSdfa[ffi'fiigf'HheM life, gets ContVol. tbe claims' will surely! be paid. They will,- not dkref rflaunt, the claims in the face of the loypi.North, but by the winding path Of th'trigin "ana the hidden crevices of legislation they Will get alt the Treasury. ^fThe^ claiius can be given: new, names and by the iutriea^es of the law, or its insufflc^fltproy^fipns. thc^y can be presented arid the' Treasury robbed in their pavment. Their holdeVS tJfAiai to le re-established fwith all. their rights of citizenship under AQdy Jphnson's pardon to the ex-Confederates, abd there is a decision of the United States Stfpreto6 Cotiirt affirming the decision bf the English courts that a, traitor after receiving the pardon of hW sovereign, or thfe hieaa executive Officer of the1 nation in whom such pardoning power is vested, is absolved from all past offenses as if they never been committed. This decision is the 9th, Wallace, and dfeals with the case of a participant in the Scotch uprising against the crown in 1747. "The people who hold these claims and the leaders in the rebellion are as confi dent of their Tight of remuperatjion for war losses that they brought.up^p .themselvds in their effort to breiik tip fh6 na" tion

they are df their present right lo

supjre^ the!negro vote in their own Ml terest. The negro is suppressed* and the South is solid because tpe South has'the power. IF the Democrats ire' Ktffcce'ssful in electing thdir Hresident, the South'win* hpve the power,and opportunity tobj^inj about the payment'ofits claims. If the Dfcftitifera'cy of th^ North' *bAm cdhtrol

%£&&& ele!tbral

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SotUh.' Why did it 'not preverit' it from bringinfon the war? The Hon. Thomas Hoyne said, at the. Palmer House the oiher hfgbt, that the NdrtheVh Derfidfcrals v^ere "o^dsed to the war, 'ted oils ft- Ddtnc^ crats are repeating it. This .If untcues The more radical of the Northern Demp craui went South by scores and joinfed tne miT-cause. Thofee wbo stayfed- tt bOihe effterfeti ietb plots' to 4)ura *iNoetheni c&ieBt organized the Knighta of the Goldr ei^Circle, and treasonably plotted ana planned for the overthrow of the unibh arms. The Democracy of tire No Ab tt^ now, if successful, pal Hanto6k!in/olBce

rotes, will govern ied colflfMrid

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THIS is, what the ShelljyyiJ^e. Republican says of our John Exodu*' speech at that pl«» afew, n^t* ago. it,

The Democratic Lamb bleated .in Ihl# Us«

Tscs cmr should be profusely decorated in bonor of the great leader of tke faitiimm.

Dos'T RUt to hear Thompson,

After all, it |s the woman who mortalityt6 tit*Miter'iiidtiftt infUm Wk&*. •1, ^U" •mil'IIJI" 'if' ..8B8B8-

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Tkt proprtriuwt ol tbati knmenaely pop-

QimrMve' frejM**

a Uqulo|wrep««Jfei mf tila* i^ttedy'for the spcqSH i«»ni»HHl»Uoa of~thoe who from anyre«8en dialike la prepare ft-for thesikseive*. It ia very concentrated aad, at the doee is small* Uia rooreeatiiy toklfti by osany. I* baa tbc mme effectual acifem in ait diseases of the Udney% H*er or bowefe~-*£&«M Form-

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Hare Patience.

"The mills of the gods grind slow but they grind exceedingly fine." Hs ve patience. Whatever may have been done to you by an enemy, if it be really an evu thing, a ^eteatable thing, a thing Ihjft is'bad in itself, so that it stains the soul of the doer, you need not break a commandment to have revenge. Lift no do no overt thing, say not word 400?e$ll, pHy no- prayer that punishfment may mil upon the one that has despitefaily TiBed you, but be sure it Call. The time will come when, if you have any pity in your soul, you will wer to help you to

glidly do: aught in your power thfe one who, has to-day stabbe^

mi

sH^efpl wbr^ls tbat imure^ forces axe set to. work

!Tbi» inan the 8liadow?of,£Qme sweet green place, and for revenge or love of lucre "stabs him at his prayers," perhaps—for men do not always pray upon their knees—kills him, and so he goes to heaven." But what iias the monster done to himself? He has made himself a murderer. Ear bettcir death than life with such a consciousness upon it—with that horrible dead face glaring at it from the shadows, and those bloody hands that all the waters of the ocean cannot clean. So, in the hurting of a neighbor, a man hurts himB&f,:Jburns his steps into those paths in Which retribution awaits him, and seldom fails to meet it. Be less sorry for

ourself1, if hkrm befalls you, because of cruelty or treachery of any other mortal, than for that other for the milla of the gods never rest.

Weary.

ie people are always tired—un feignedly so. When they get up tired in the morning, they should try and ascertain the cause of the trouble. It is veiy often diie to defective ventilation of the bed-rOom, or from using an undue ampunt bf warm bed-clothes and bedding. Feather beds are too soft and yielding, and partially. envelope the deeper, thai producing profuse perspiration. The habit of lying too much under blankets is also very pernicious, by reason of the carbonic acid exhaled by the slteeper bfeing respired Again, it a common error to suppose that by simply opening ay window & little at the top, a room be ventilated. People forget tlvat for proper ventilation there must be an inlet for the air. In bed-rooms there ig often .neither, and if there is a j^rerplace, it is generally closed up. Again, it is-a mistake to suppose that ioul air goes to the top, for the chief iiiipurityv the -Carbonic acid falls to the bottom. There is nothing so efficacious ,m removing the lower strata of air. as the ordinary open fireplace, espeaially if ii re is a re ii

JL boy or /girl Vho has only a few years io spend in school, and who must leave it to earn a living, has no time to wait^ in learning things hot necessary, and hardly time to pursue those branches Which are the prime objects of rudimentary training. Our most intelligent and faithful principals of grammar schools are well aware of this fact, an4 would gladly simplify the course, of instrufttion, but they are powerless^ to do it. Crotchety trustees and commissioners have fine theories of education, Which they are bound to try at the expense of JtKth teachers and pupils.

Woridiig Before Breakfast. A bad etistom 1s prevalent in many fiunllies, especially among farmers, of Working an, hoot before, break-feat, attending ft^ch?ra£ hoeing jarden, cutting wood, mowing, etL This is con^t^nfon miiihy a^uhfci, but it is not ebnetadve to health. The prevalent ^inkmis that the morning air is the purest and the jnoat healtliiul and bracing bat the contnury is the fact. At no hour of th^ day is th/ air more filled with day^^fo^ i^ m?Mmas than about sunrise. The^heat of the sun gradually ditsipstee theee mJaswtic influences as the day advances. Everybody knows thalangour and fiuntaess often experiIria^lror^i^sthburof the mornihg. andlliBs is hkreased by exertion* and waaf of food. W« do»ijafc agree with the tx»rding school rule, which prescribed along walk before breakfast as a means of promoting health, probably the. beat custom would be to furnish eyery of the fiimily-^specialy,

Who labor out of doom-a cup of immMiately after rirfng from

SmfBA? i*w Mxtioo.—-It is inter*

nhere Sur^day laws ire so stringent, rucidly 6ttfowiid or to oniygraiU ly obey6d, New Mexico. The Mex^cans predominate tfce ^obSifion ten to ont kad Aeirreligjoa imperative in its prohibition of work, or play either, on Way* the Amesicans have to Ml in with the prevailing castom. aad the result is tiiat Santa Fe is Mid to keep Sunday more afcrictij than any other American

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A yerbena Mound.

I must tell you about/.my" verbena mound .' The invention was all my own, but as I never had it patented you are welcoine to it, writes Mrs. M. L. Nutting to the floral Cabinet. I had four hexagon frames made of plank a foot wide, of graduate^, sizes. The largest frame was threerlieet. each side, the sniallest i^ot qiliie^albot The largest frame placed on the ground was filled with prepared soiL Then I took apiece of stove-pipe three feet long and punched it Aril of holes (dont"laugh till I get through), and stuck jt up the centre of tho bed. Then the fhime iie^t in size was placed on the filled one, and secured from sagging by cross-pieces. This also was filled, and so with the next two no soil, of, course, being thrown into the pipe, the top of which came level with the top or the smallest frame, and was concealed,by a large vase containing a scarlet geranium. The frames were then painted: gre^n, and verbenas set out in the step-like beds. Every evening during the summer I had several pails of water poured into the pipe, and huw they did blopm 1 hundreds of blossoms displaying themselves all summer to the best possible advantage. Too Many Studies in the Public Schools. "Our schools are burdened with too many studies, ologies, isms, and crotchets of eccentric examiners, who exact of others what they could never do thetnselveS," lately said an experienced teacher in the public schools and ther« was ample jnstificationfor the remark.

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.The man lacks moral courage who treats when he should retreat. No vices are so incurable as those which meii are apt to gloiy in.

To-morrow is the dr.y on which idle men work, a»d fools r^turrt| I Many are willing enough "to wound who are yet afraid to strke.

Friends are won by those who belieW in winning.

Uh

How few faults are there seen by us, which we have not ourselves couimittecL. Death is the foreshadowing, of»,14e. We die that we may |ie ncf inore.

A man's own good breeding is the best security against other people's iu manners.

Only what we hav# wrought intoi our ^nc^sm1F&2W%^y-!,y Humanity is of all the graces the chiefest when it doesn't know itself to be grace at all.

It is the work of a philosopher to be every day subduing the paseaons and laying aside his prejudices.

Have nothing to do with any man in a passion, for men are not like iron, t® be wrought upon whfen hot.

Whosoever would work wiselv and with success, must have clearly before him the ends he wishes to accomplish.

Our own hands are heaven's favorite instruments for supplying us with the a an so

The wealth of a man is thef numtier of things which he loves and blesses, which he is loved and blessed by.

We are haunted by an ideal life, and it is ltecanse we have within u« the begun

f...

An Oswego girl dropped one of hei laise eyebrows in a church pew, and it so badly scared the young man at her side that he &inted. He thought it was his mustache.

Let a man pull a straw ont of a haymow at Leadville to pick Ris teeth with, and the fi»st thing ne hears is: "Say, you thief, did you know hay was worth $200 a ton around here

If you think no one cares for you in this cold world, just tell your neighbors that you propose to keep hens. You will be surprised to see what an immediate interest they will manifest in you. "The Lord lovetli a cheerful giver," but there's no use chucking a copper cent into the contribution box loud enough to make the folks on the back seat think the communion service has tumbled off the altar.

It is said that there are two or three men in this country actually suffering from liver complaint, despite the thousands of "certain cures" advertised in the papers. This is strange, if true.

Gentleman, by request of kady—"Conductor, put this lady off at the next corner." Polite new conductor—" 'Xcuse me sir: seems as how she's behavin' of herself: don't seem no occasion for proceedin' to 'xtremes.": j'-iXi*

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A lady told her little son, who was teasing for something to eat, to .wait until breakfast was ready. Wi^h a tear in his eye, he burst out, jest honestly sometimes think you're a stepmother 1" "Do you know what you are eating?" whispered one of the boarders, as he hatched his neighbor wrestling with a piece of leathery pie. "Alas," sighed the martyr. "I know only too »well. Tis but a little fkded flour." And passed his plate for another slice.

If the young man who went to call on a girl on South street last Sunc^ay, but who suddenly left the front door and shot out of the yard, with a dog attached to the dome of his trousers, will return the dog, a reward of five dollars will be paid by the girl' father, and no queaf.

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tions asked.

To make shoe pegs enough for American use consumes annually 100,000 cords of lumber, and to make our lucifer matches 30,000 cubic feet of the best

Eoot

ine are required every year. Casts and trees take 500,000 cords of birch^ beech, and maple,, and the handles of tools 500,000 more. The baking of our bricks consumes 2,000,000 cords of wood or what would cover with forests about 50,000 acres of land. Telegraph poles already up represent 800,000 trees, and their annual repairs consume 300,0Q0 more. The ties or our railroads, consume annually thirty years' growth of 75,000 acres, and to fence all our railroads would oosi $45,000,000 with a yearly expenditure of 16,000,000 for repairs. These are some of the ways in which American forests are going. There are others. Our packing boxes, for instance} cost in 1874, $12,000,900, while the timber used each year in making wagOTiB and agricultural implements is valtittd at more th^n $100,000,000. fnii

Reeipe for Making & Live Town. 1. Sell yonr building lots at reasonable prices. ji 2. If you can ajford to do so, donate a buildihg lot for some large business enterprise, and thereby, enjj^^lhi Value

your own town. 4. Patronize the buy^ineas men of your own town. i5. Always sum up your expense when you visit places, out side of your „pw» town to buy goods. tk 6. Speak 'Well of worthy public enterprises. 7. If anything should be undertaken that may TO of benefit to the town, do not speak ill of it to others because you happen to be prejudiced against it 8. Speak well to strangers ojf your town and people. -i 9. If you have surplos money, od not invest it in far-off speculations, but give yourself and your town^ the^beoefit of by establMiing some profitable fectory. 10. Encourage yoar local newspaper by subscribing for, advertising in, and for it.

We firmly believe in the maxim that, for all judgment of any man or any thing, it is useful, nay essential, to see hk good qualities before pronouocing h» bad. ,-4 .*

i3nsinesQ jpirf ct ^rx rT~ ftf

CAL THOMAS.

OPTICIAN AND JEWEL3 689 Main street, Terre Haute.

r#' '1 BRAZIL,,END.

^ilprncgs, fli

-A. J-. KIDLLE Attorney at Law, Third Street, between Main and Ohio.

a-m w. usr jjut Attorney at Law, Ohio Street, Terre Haute, Ind.

A. B- FELSENTHAL, ATTORNEY AT LAW. Ohio Street, Terre Haute, Ind

ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Terre Haute, Ind.

I ALL O^tXDE^S

PROMPTLY FILLE1

-AT-

IJ. R. JEFFER8,

Dealer in Wool anrt Mnnnfnctnror of

Clothes, Cassimores,

Tweeds, Flannels,

JeaiiB,

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UH iutmn mi1

A (M

"Now, children," said a Sunday-school superintendent, who had been talking ^oliis scholars about good people, "when I am walking in the street, I speak to some persons I meet, and I don't speak toothers and what's the reason?" He expected the reply would be, "Because some are good and others are bad," but, to his discomfiture, the general sltont was, "Because some are rich and others are poor." i«f'-l fi *tf Where the Lnmber Goes.

Stocking Yarns^

Carding and Spinning.

N. B.—The highest markup price In ca*«li. «r own make ol goods exchanged for wool,

^Terre Haute Banner

Office 21 8path Fifth Street-

P. GFHOBRER, Proprietor.

,, C1TV OK TEKUK HALTB.

English and German Job Printin'

1 ,t»3i

1

HendquartcrsOonin|ei*cialTraYeler|

JUSTICE HOUSE,

JftKV

5

Attorneys at LAW,

420 Main Street. Terre Haute, Ind.

S. 0^ DAVIS.

S. B. DAVIS. NOT".

DAVI8 & DAVIS, Attorneys at Law,u

23K South Sixth Street, over Post off, A

Terre Haute, Ind.

1

Kxecnted in. the V)OKt mnnncr. I

Son» 62831ain Street. ThUis a Archil oftheBibg^r form butgreatly' iniprov( and much nner than the Singer Company Machine of corresponding j#tyle. Plea* examine it. ....

$30

tr

WIM

.v

GARLTON & LAMB j-* ATTORNEYS AT LAW,

Corner of Fourth and Ohio, Terre Ha

4

BUFF & BEECHER,

-4|Bliifiketsi,.rte

it®

Morton Post, No.)

•tl*n HKrAItTMKNT OV INDIANA. TERRE HAUTH "TIliWpwrtow South Thlij iiegulanncM'tln^xfu-Kt And thli

ThiiPfli'v evenings, each mont! 0r!'«-idlng Room open even evening.

Comrades visiting the city slwaye be made welcome. W. B. McLEAN, Com'dr*

JAT CtTMMTKOS, Adj't. I GEO. PLANKTT, P. 1. M. 0 I at Headquartors r.

DREUSICKE,

CARPENTER AND BUILDER

Manufacturer of Drensicke'w

"^Patent Refrigerators, Cor. Ninth ant! Hycamore Ht«., TERRE HAUTE INI

"SEWING MACiiHfEo.*1

$25

Bijys a Sigwalt, with loose ance wheel, end leaf and drawers of A. Van Sant

Buys the No. 3 White with en. leaf, fancy top and five drawej A great many have been sold 1

this community a^t $45,00, ---•buys anew Remington with en leaf, And two drawer*, a ver* finely finished, splendid work in,

machine.

$40

Buyaalight running Domestic tho finest of sbuttln sowing mi chines, with end leaf and thre

drawers.

Buy* a flew No. 8 Wheeler WiW, wiUi end and b^k leaf ana three -dta*(renu

The Van San is are general dealers an' keep all the really yajualfle fgwing chines in stock iWhi|h|th^ ntft cheap fo cash, good note!*r |r«np| monthly pa} ments. The^abfr k^p needles ani part*.and make a specialty of repairing.

If ^eirwiwt

Qranges, Lemops, Orai|ef

California Pears,I Cocoa

nuts, Banahiins, etCpgo

Whtta's,on Mtiin street.!

hJWit 'VV*-1s