Daily News, Volume 2, Number 38, Franklin, Johnson County, 2 October 1880 — Page 3
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KecUmn chnfrcar. I'nion Depot time, five tninnles faster than city lime. VANDALIA LINE. {Leave going East.)
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pin
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1:25 am 0 .W am jjylO ra :00 pin
.. 1:32 am ..10:03 am 2:85
(Arrive from \V«
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II.LINOIM MIDLAND RAILWAY. (I.cnv.' for Nortlnven..] |rl« Mitil and
ID
1
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tit ami Ace ... 4:45 pa ^T' 11 ('AGO A RAHTKRN ILLINOIS. S (Leave for North.t jLtml ('liS',ngo Ex....... :35 am
Jf llli* Ace 8:10 pin pxhvillc and (.'hicajfo Kx ... .... ...10:30 'j (Arrive from Norths
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jDANVriXK ItOlTTK. Chicago & Eastern Itt Riircid,
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1.30 a.m 8.44
.1.40 7.40
f. IsMtt 11.80 a. in r.oo
T4ft 4.00
Hi• Haul
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Chicago, Uilvaukee & St. Paul Railway.
t.y/chleawv.. 10.!0 tun Ar. Mtlwsukec VJ.35 p.m I in IA 1 OivummV 4 IA
10.10 10.10 so 9,oo
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p.m
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St. Pan J... 1^1 p.m
A V. II, CARPKNTRll.
f?cn. Pa**, and Tkt .\2*i. Mlhvank*.
Democratic County Ticket,
Vt
For (Jlcrk, .•
TltoNAS A. ANDKKSON
For Tmumrvr,
HAYin M. \V \LhA( K.
F«^r SlH*ritT,
II II'
!, Of IS HAY
For Coroner.
IIKNIIV KHUBXIIARnT
Ftr CNmimijwion^r. Tlitrrt District. —NF.WTON m«KIW»K
For Senator. 5^^'*
UwR
t. y-'lvKSTEIt,^^,l
For Rc?prfsentjit»vt?ss* n.\vn tayuh^
jAM^wHrrwK-Kyirjf
suuscnniE FOU TI^ a H» Rf sWl
Eaihj Netw!&•
|IVi!|OKS. I bb, }.|t
«V X7U* I wonder whon a Man of mtcor* groove I The abjcmal dcpr!i« Wack^nwi (.}•• {, If yon.fn UalU wh« rv j'lv ^tnlkn ndedgle f* Woold carc to [h nk ,-f «:.«• wlkf-
Tin (»ddt'! «ee!M'
I wondcr.wh 'n flie di?w tfn* wlncr Of thrash on mw«y lutnk of Ui.ujtlf'M trw.'ini If
JI»U
-fW give me one ktmi itioR^iit.
Or c*re to give »«,!«« **wi drva'ti. In friend»hlp «rroo?ht. I wonder when the da-k broad ^!iadow !«ncth«n Arm#* the of death and hlxOker wrro.*.
If
von
Wonld
carv to
ki*« awav a i»r.
And wfl'«Mhp nii iatli« brlgtJt {orminowf.^r Ala» 11 SVnf.
Characteristic.
Some one haw brought to light a pr vhte letter from Lincoln to Hooker when the latter was entrusted with the command of the Army of the Potomac. The letter is so ch'iracteristic that we give it in full, as follows:
General—I have placed yon at the hj&ul of the Army ox the Potomac. Of course, I have done thia U[xn wltat appeiirs to me to le sufficient reasoii^, and /et I think it best for you to know (hat I l)«*re are some things in »egard to which I a:n not quile satisfied wi&b «on. I b© lieve you to be a brave an id skillful so/ flier, which, of course, I MR. I also believe that you do not mix in politics with your profession, in which you aie righu You have confidence in yourself, which is a valuable, if not an indispensible, quality. You are ambitious, which with•n reasonable bounds, does good rather than harm but I think that during Ueu. Biinihide's command of the army you have taken counsel of your ambition and thwarted him as much as you cohld, in which you did a great wrong to the country and to a most meritorious and honorable brother officer. I have heard, in such a way as to believe it, of your cently saying that both the army and the government needed a dictator. Of course, it was not for this, butinspiLn of it, that I have given you the command. Only those Generals who gain success can set up as dictators. What I now uak of you i* military success, and 1 will risk the dictatorship. The government will supjort you to the utmost of its ibility, which is neither more nor less than it has done and will do forai commanders. 1 much fear that the spirit which yon have aided to infuse into the army, of criticising its commander and withholding confidence from him, will no turn upon you. I shall assist you tis far as I con t« nut it down. Neither you nor Xapo.eon, if he were alive again, could get any good out of ar nrmy while such a spirit prevails in it. And now leware of rashness. Beware of rashness, hut with energy and dco^less vigilance, go forward, and give us victories."
This is a letter that could only have been written by Lincoln, who was greater than all his contemporaries, broader, simpler natured, freer from small egotisms/
Advtee to Young Writers.
Williuiu Uullen Bryant once gave the following sensible advice to a young man who hud otiered him ail article for his paper:
My young friend, I observe that you have used several French expressions in your letter. I think, kf you willstudv the English language, that yon will find it capable of expressing all the ideas that you muy have. I have always found it so, and in all that I have written 1 do not recall an instance w.' ere I was tempted to use a foreign word, but that, on searching, I have found a hotter one in my own language.
Be simple, unaffected oe honest in your speaking and writing. Never use a long word when a short one will do as well.
Call a spade by its name, not a well know oblong instrument of manual lalor let a home be a home, and not a residence: a place not a locality, and soon of the rest. When ft short word will do, you always lose by a long one. You lose in clearness: you lose in honest expression of meaning and, in the estimation of all men who are capable of judging, you lose in reputation for ability.
The only true way to shine, even in this false world, is to be modest and unassuming. Falsehood may be a thick crust, but in the course of time truth will find a place to break through. Elegance of language may not be in the power of us all, but simplicity and straightforwardness are.
Write much as you wouid speak, and 48 you think. If with your inferior, speak no coarser than usual: if with four suj)erior, speak no finer. Be what you say, and within the rules of prudence.* No one ever was a gainer by singularity of words or in pronunciation. The truly wise man will so speak that no one will observe how he speaks. A man may show great know ledge of chemistry by carrying bladders of strange gases to breathe: but one will enjoy belter health, and find more time lor business, who lives on common air.
Sidney Smith once remarket!: "After you hav written an article, take yom pen ant strike out half the words, and you will be surprised to see how much stronger it is.
How A Sedentary life Affects Wnmew.* The
Popular ,Scirtur Monthly
remarks
that many of the ills or diseases prevalent among the women in our day are no doubt traceable to the sedentary mode of life among them. The progress of thfc industrial art has done away with much of the household drudgery to which imuy women were formerly subjected, and in many cases want of suffi•eieni occupation f.*r needed bodily exercise. It says: "Th^ fruits of this state of thiugs are strikingly exhibited in certain observations made by the late Dr. Robertson, a Manchester surgeon, who in his practice as a specialist for women's diseases fbuud tnat women who themselves performeu all their Itousehold work round no trare of curtail complaints that these complaints begin to make their appearance in women with one servant, becom* ik#** pronounced in women with two Bfcrvaut8» or worse atiU with those who Iwive three servant*, and so on. He showed statistically that the deaths froui diikl-birtli were ibur liiaea greater to cases of women with four servants thau those with none. On tbe other htutd. we noticed a statem«nt the other day thai since the suspension of labor in the mills of New Kngtand on account of the panic, many of tM female opentti.es have wnght employment as domestic and as a TOttswaneiico there is much itttxe «ickneN« an«Qfg ufeni titan there was previously, litis would seem to aliow that homework Is not as healthy as iabur iti o»Uoa tutlU."
Deaths of Kiofg and Qoeeas af Emglaad. William the Conqueror, died from enormous Cat. from drink and from the violence of bis passions.
William Rufns died the daath of the poor stags which he hunted. ,, Hfnry I. died of gluttony. flenry II. died of a broken heart, occam'ed by bad conduct of his children,
Richard Cceur de Lion, like the animul from whicii his heart was named, by an arrow from an archer.
John died, nobody knows how, but. it in said from chagrin, which we suppose is another name for hellebore.
Henry 371. is said to have died a "natural death." Edward I. is said to have died of a "natural sickness"—a sickness which would puzzle all the college physicians to denominate.
Edward II. was barbarously and indecently murdered by ruffians employed by his own wife and her paramour.
Edward HI. died of dotage, and Richard II. of starvation—the very reverse of George IV.
Henry IV. is said to have died of fits caused by uneasiness, and uneasiness in palaces in those times was a very common complaint,
Henry V. is said to have died of a painful affliction, prematurely. This is courtly term for getting rid of a King.
Henry VI. died in prison, by means known then only to his jailer, and now onlv in heaven. I'Yi
Edward V. was strangled by his uncle, Richard III. Richard III. was killed in battle.
Henry VII. wasted away, as a miser onght to. Henry VIII. died of carbuncles and fury.
Edward VI. died of a decline. Queen Mary is said to have died of broken heart.
Old Queen Bess is said to have diea of melancholy, from having sacrificed .Essex to his enemies.
James I. died from drinking and the effects of vice. CliaHes I. died on the scaffold.
Charles! II. died suddenly—it is said of apoplexy. iptive *1)1 int habits of body and from the stumbling of his horse.
Queen Anne died from dropsy. George I. died from drunkenness, which his physicians politely called an apoleptic fit.
George II. died of a rupture of the heart, which the periodicals of that day termed a visitation of God.
George III. died as he had lived—a mpdman. Throughout life, he was at least a consistent monarch.
George IV. died of gluttony and drunkenness.
1
Undressing Little Ned.
"Where is'Whisky Bill,'who used tc drive that old white horse in front of a twenty-five-cent express wagon repeated the man in surprise, "Yes." "Well, it's a curious case," ne slowly continued. "We all thought he'd f?c ie co the dogs, for sure, for he was drinking a pint a day but a few months ago ho braced right up, stopped drinking, and now I hear lie is in good businoss and saving money. It beats all, for the last time I saw him he seemed half under ground."
When you go home at night and find that all is well with your own flesh and blood do you go to sleep reasoning that the rest of the world must care for itself. Do you ever shut your eyes and call up the hundreds of faces you have metduring the day. and wonder if the paleness of death will cover any of them before tlio morrow? When you have once vpan attracted to a face, even if it be a stranger's ,do you let it drop from memorj- with your dreams, or do yotr cill it up again and again as night comes d6wn, and hope it may lose none of its brightness in the
whirling
Svery
mists of time?
!So "Whisky Bill" was hunted down. An inquiry here and there finally traced jini to a little brown cottage on a bystreet. He sat on the step in tho twilight, a bnrly, broad-shouldered man of i»0, and in the house three or four children gathered around the lamp to loot: over a picture-book. w*. "Yes, they used to call me 'Whv.ky Bill,' down town," he replied as ho moved along and made room, "hut it week& since I heard the name. No wonder they think tue dead, for I've not set eyo» on the old crowd for months, and I don't want to for months to («mc.' "They tell me you have quit driuking. One could eee that by vour face' •'I hope so 1 haven't .oiichbJ a dro£ since February. Before that 1 was half drunk day in and day out, and more of brute than a roan. I don't mind saying that my wife's death *et me to thinking, but I didn't stop my liquor. God forgive me, biSt I was drunk when she died. half-drunk at the gi-ave, and I meant to go on a regular spree that night. It was low down, sir, but I was no better than a brute those days." "And so you left your motherless children home and went out and got drunk?' "No, I said I meant »o, but I didn't, "fiie poor things were crying all day and after coming home from the burial thought to get em lucked away in bet! before 1 went out. Drunk or sober, I never struck one of them a blow, and they never ran from me when I staggered home. There's four of 'em in there, and the youngest isn't 4 yeans yet. I got the older ones in bed all right, and then came little Ned. He had cried himself sleep, and he called for mother as soon as I woke him. Until that night I never had that boy on my knee, to say nothing of putting him to Ised, and you can guess these big fingers made slow
Ork with the hooks and buttons. minnte he kept saying mother didn dot hat way ana mother done this way, and the big children were hiding their heads under the quilt todiowW 'heir sobs. When I had fiis do|li0lP5 •Uul his night-gown on, I was ashamed and pot him down, and when the oldest saw tears in my eyes and jumped out
right Aud little Xedr A woman who ^ui writea letter wftti* .owl two-thfrtlB of her' ttmjftie pirrt rtid iiig from her month, is fitted for a betWr «orld than this •"JW -A""..*.
IIs
n~
.1
Nut so fast my friend if you could see the ttirong, healthy, blooming men, worn eu and rhUdrcn ilmt have been raised flrdw bedttttrlnvMi. ^mt most death, by iw of Hop Bittern yon would su»y "Glorious and invaluable remfdv'.* Sec another column.—Philadelphia Prvuu
IOS. II. BR1GCN
Produce and Commission
MERCHANT,
Corner Fourth and Cherry sire 'ts, TEHRK HAUTE. INDIANA.
4 A •TO A YEA It. or $5 to CJfi a. .".ay VH] unrjiii yonr own lm*allty. No riak. Wijii\
I ill
II |me®«"«- well
a-
men. Many make
^lyUUmorc than the amount utated above. No one can fall lo meke money faj«t. Any on*.- can do the work. Yon can make from 50 cent to J8 an honr by devoting yonr e.ening* amj !p«iretime tothe bti!»!ne!«t«. It co»«tj» nothing to try tl',« b.islne-'i'. Nothing like It for money making ever offered before. Business pleasant and strictly honorable. Reader, if you want to know nil about the bext paiinsr tjn^nr^s before the pnbHc, eend na your addresf ami we will send yon foil particular# and private terms free. Sample? worth$5 also free: yon can then make np yonr mind for votirpelf. Addres. ftSORGE STFNTON A CO., Portland Maine? 84m6
II. B. Green. Wholesale Grocer, Findlay, O.. writes- ,,,ii I suffered for over 25 years with lame back and in three weeks was permanently cured by wearing one of Prof. Guilmette's Kidney Pads.
B. F. Keeping, M. P.. Druggist. Loganyort. Ind., when sending in an order for Kidney Pads,
*'I wore one of the first ones we had and I received more beuellt from it than anything I ever used. In fact the Pads give better general satisfaction than any Kidney remedy we ever sold."
Jiav A Shoemaker. Druggists. Hannibal. Mo. "WV are working up a Snelv trade in yo:ir Pads, and are hearing of good result* from them every •lav."
1'rof. (imlmcUe's French IJver Fan. Will positively cure Fever and Ague. Dumb A«ns. Anne »'ake. Billions Fever. Jaundice. Dys-pep-to. rnd all diseases of the Liver. Stomach and Bond. Price $1 50 by mail. Send for Prof. Gnil imsite's Treatise on the Kidneys and Liver, free bv mnil. Address
irf^w
$300 Ssward
S ri-
i- ~V."
OVER A
MII^-
LIOJ? OP
rrof. (iuilmette's
FRENCH
Have already been sold in this country and in Franct*. everyone of which ha« given perfer! sati?iction. and ha? performed enres e»ery time when n-ied according to directions.
We now pay to thf afflicted and doubting ones that we will pav the above reward for a single case if
BACK
That the pad fails to cure. This Great Remedy will positively and permanently cure Lumbago. Lame back, sciatica. Gravel. Diabetes. Dropsy, Bright'* Disease of the Kidneys. Incontinnence and Retention of the Urine. Inflam&Mon of the Kidney's I'atarrh of the Bladder. High Colored I rine, Pain in the Back. Side or Ixv.ns, Nervous Weakness, anil in fact all disorders of the Bladder and L'rinarv Organs whether contracted by pri vine disease or otherwise.
Ladies,
iJS
if you are suffering from Female
Weakness, Leucpcorrhea. or any disease of the Kidneys. Bladder, or Urinary Organs.
YOt CAW BK C't'ttKOI
Without swallowing nanseons mcdicines, by simply wearing
,v: PROF. G-UILMETE'S
FRENCH KIDNEY PAD,
WHICH CURES BY ABSORPTION". Ask vour druggist for Prof. Guilmette's French Kidney Pad. »nd teke no other if he has not irot it, send $2.00 and you will receive the Pad by return mail."
TESTIMONIALS FROM THE PEOPLE. Judge Buchanan. Lawyer. Toledo, O., Bays: "One of Prof. Guilmette's French Kidney Pads cured me of Lnmbago in three weeks' time. My case had been given np by the best Doctors as incurable. During all this time I suffered untold agony and large sums of money.
George Vetter. J. P., Toledo, O.. says: "I suffered for three years with Sciatica and Kidney Disease, and often had to go about on crutches, was entirely and permanently cured after wearing Prof. Guilmette's Frehch Kidney Pad four weeks.
Quire N. Scott. Sylvania. 0., writes: "I have been a great sufferer for 15 years with Bright's Disease of the Kidneys. For weeks at a time was unable to get out of bed took barrels of medicine, but thev gave me only temporary relief. I wore two of Prof. Guilmette's Kidney Pads •ix weeks, and 1 now know I am entirely cured."
Mre. Hellen Jerome. Toledo. O., says: "For years I have been confined, a great part of the time to my bed. with Lncorroea and female weakness. I wore one of Gnilmette's K'dney Pads and-WAR cured in one month."
U»:m II I» I I» ».. Toledo. l|i.
•PERMANENTLY CURES
KIDNEY DISEASES, UVER COMPLAINTS, Constipation and Plies.
ML R. H. OURE,IMkHm,TtH MT%
uI«MM*fRUNET
NELSON FAIKCHXLD, rfSt.AlW*, VU, I Mfi, "It Is tfiHitlwi frit. AlUrditwi rwn«((rMtiaffnte( fri" Piles »4 OosII
Irenes* li wylrtclr «r«4 •«." C. HOttABON, efBerlMklro, «or«, I ysnVrsrr wwlin fWr mm la ssi I ^CelT mwtm «*TW* Uw Mi SMaejr ijlalnt
IT HAS UlIIV9 W O N E I I I I POWER.
BECAUSE IT ACTS ON THE um,m bowels and kid. KEYS AT THE SAME TIME. •eeawee It eleweee the arstem of the polaonouelwmore that tfevelope In Kidney and Urinary dleeeeee, »U-
twiiwm,
jj
TKOUBLES tthM
M(«4 Uk«»«kOTh IttaMW^wnqrwrr McntwaTPIUtS, M4ta»*nrWMto
Jaundkw, Oonetlpatton*
VHiee* or Hi llheum«tlem« Newralsla and Female dleortfera. KiPHKy.WOBT U»*TTTtwstoM*««swSeseeifcy ewn »re»el4. Om padkac* wfll awk« rix ft» «f aiMlela*.
TO* XT NOW ItT 1 lis tHMW» IMsti, If. WILU, BSBASSSOV*^
itottet
Midway Wort SttStOM4tfttdS
9
ysnHlaa«aldl •adtseqwOrt
mm wM
tqiakNiMnim i«hatp«lW *T
and is
Prions ipsrbMOs.
uqpraD axd saor souo WKLU, KK3LAK9S09A CO., P»W^. Tt
SUBSCRIBE
5 .4-
4
-—FOR THE— tf
1
DAILY NEWS
'?«s?
STAN0S TO-DAY WITHOUT A RIVAL IN THE WORLD., For the com of all kinds of Ague and Chills it has I no equal having stood the test of universal use for thirty year* in the most malarial districts. It never fails to cure, not merely removing for a time the symptoms, but eradicating the cause of the disease, thereby making a pernum*™? core. PRICE ONLY 75 CENTS
VaaafiMtared fcy The Dr. Hari#r Mmllflur Cs., Wo. SIS ». Mala Slrefl, at, Lonli.
*-iriy'n!'Brn?f'vnKrgy^port,r I?1" R^'s"1
\-S
I'
standing, with Dr. Barter Fever and Ague Specific, after the best physicians fkiled to benfit her."
Dr- Y0tTNeBt00D of Little York, Mo., says: "I have used Dr. Barter11 Fever and Ague 8pecVU !n my precUce, and cap heartily recommend it to the public."
W. S. CLTFT. J. H. WILLIAMS. J, M. CLIFT.
CLIFT, WILLIAMS & CO,
MANUFACTURERS OF
SASHES, DOORS, BLIPS, ETC.
Lumber, Lath, Shingles, Glass,' Taints, Oils and Builders' '".'"Hardware,
CORNER OF NINTH AND MULBERRY STREFTb TERRE HAUTE. IND.
GENERAL DEALER IN|
TnTOTIOZSTS, TOYS, HOSIERY, JE3TO.
675 Main Street. Siern of the Big Stocking:.
vJ. O. IB.-..,-A. JE& UST -A- ID.
.. A.TX,A.T3STXC v,
dlUNTic
$ ifn wf* sp
a a
5 E S A E
"FOn'THEMOXEY -|f#
r.'V*:
cored a little girl of Ague of tliree years'
Si:
AND DEALERS IN
"ACH iNEiasH pi!Z M'S
I
14* '3tet
'3 JPJSJFL^ "WB3S3KI-
1
THE LAROBST AND
SffffisSi...' ...' '.L.,,, .' -.• .W
tlM il III STATE. a
FOUMDRY
E S O A N O N -#1W Ma ifact,iuer of
Portable ainl .StiUioiiafy Engines, Flour, Saw Mill and
MINING MACHINERY, IIANGERB, PULLEYS, SHAFTING, ,• UPRIGHT AND HORIZONTAL STEAM ENGINES
602 N. Sixth Street, Terre Haute, Indiana.
Th*lPBiwitaadB«tM«4»«laa«er W*4le. AO' draR mosto nwkes\the_ Reg l\a tor, Agent on
•Kttu exist wbKKWS#' «nd perfect arvOMlr
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