Daily News, Volume 2, Number 47, Franklin, Johnson County, 13 October 1880 — Page 4
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DAILY NEWS
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1880.
Will Vote as They Shot. Senator Morgan, of Alabama, was a Brigadier-General in the Confederate anny, and is now lor Hancock and English. He votes as he shot
Senator Walker, of Arkansas, was a Colonel in the Southern army, and is now* an ardent supporter of Hancock and English. He votes as he shot.
Senator Gordon, of Georgia, was a Major-General in the Confederate army, ana received eight wounds lighting against the Government. He Is now satisfied that the salvation of the country depends on the election of Hancock and English, and will vote as he shot.
Senator Williams, of Kentucky, was a Brigadier-General in the Confederate army, and is so well pleased with the nomination of Hancock and English that he will vote as he shot.
Senator Jonas, of Louisiana, was Ad-jutant-General of Hood's corps in the Confederate army, and is perfectly consistent in his support of Hancock and English. He will vote as ho sh6l.
Senator Lamar, of Mississippi, was a Colonel in the Confederate army, and is as much in favor of a change now as he was during the war. In according his hearty support to Hancock and English he simply votes as he shot.
Senator Ransom, of North Carolina, was a Maior-general in the Confederate army, and is now engaged in making speeches for Hancock and English. He will vote as he shot.
Senator Vance, of the same State, was a Colonel in the Confederate army, and is particularly enthusiastic in his support of Hancock and English. He ill vote wi as he shot.
Senator Butler, of Soflt^ Carolina, was a Major-general in the Confederate army, and, having seen no reason to change his views, will vote as he shot by supporting Hancock and English.
Senator Alaxey, of Texas, was a Maior-general in the Confederate army, and though he would have preferred Jeff Davis for President, is willing to take Hancock and English. He will vote as he shot.
Senator Coke, of the same State, though only a Captain in the Confederate army, has pronounced political views. With his ideas of State rights he could not consistently do otherwise than support the candidates of the Democratic party. He will vote as he shot.
Senator Withers, of Virginia, was a Colonel in the Confederate Army, and has also proved his loyalty to the Democracy by editing a Democratic paper. He is so well satisfied that Hancock and English represent what is left of the Lost Cause that he will unhesitatingly vote as he shot.
The following members of the House of Representatives wore officers in tlie Confederate Array: Messrs. Herndon. Herbert, Sanford, Shelley, Forney and Lowe, of Alabama Messrs. Dunn, Slemons and Gunter, of Arkansas Messrs. Davidson and Hull, of Florida Messrs. Nioholls, Smith, Cook, Persons and Spe^er, of Georgia Messrs. Caldwell and Blackburn, of Kentucky Messrs. Gibson, Ellis, King and Robertson, of Louisiana Messrs. Muklrow, Manning, Hooker and Chalmers, of Mississippi Messrs. Lay, Clark, Hatch and Buckner, of Missouri Messrs. Scalos, Armfield and Vance, of North Carolina Messrs. Richardson, Aiken. Evans and Tillmau, of South Carolina Messrs. House, Whitthorno, Atkins and Simonton, of Tenn. Messrs. Culberson and Jongs. of Texas Messrs. Beale, Cabell, Hunton and Richmond, of Virginia. These gentlemen all did their level best to destroy the Government by arms, and. having failed in that, are now trying to ootain control of it through the Democratic party. They will all vote as thev shot, T*hev can hardlv be blamed. They were educated to hate Northern ideas and Northern civilization, and to believe that Southern ideas and Southern' interests should rulo the country. This was what thev fought for during the war, and what they have labored and intrigued for since. They know perfectly well that the election of Hancock and English will be a Southern triumph, and that in such an event, the South will rule the North. Hence they are consistent in voting as they shot— Indianapolis Journal,
nasby.
Til* l*hllo«aph(«r of Ui« Corwvr* to the ltw •MMMjr tkr Cooilrjr A neat the
Mnlne
jKt*«ttaarTo Tonr Teata Iirwll-Ol«-|u( Knflhli'I F*lt*r« to
"OITVUOWD"
-HMWck'i DfTflopwcnt Polltlelu. LFrorn the Toledo Blado.]
GOVERNOR'S Liuavtv
(wtoh it in the Stat© uv New York, H«ptotubor 30. 1380.
To the Democrfty of the Voonltel States: We hev lost Maine. Our dispatch congrfttulatin yoo on carry in the Pine Tree State for Plalsted, wua a trifle pretnatoor. We hev lost it. Me and General Hancock do not underrate the loss, or underestimate the gravity uv the sitoodshen. Hence this proclamashen.
We wus entitled to Maine by every considerashefi uV comtnershel integrity, and only lost it by a series uv the most unhluslun frauds that that demon, Blane, ever perpetratid.
We bought the State fairly and paid for it in good, honest money. Our Chareman, Mr. Baruuru. did not ask the Greenbaekere uv Maine to take their own money, mere, promises to pay, but we bought the votes with godd, legal money uv the Yoonytid State*.
We paid ea high eg twenty-five dollars for a single vot* Mid there was but few uv the incorruptible voters uv the State wich we approached wich didn't "t fire dollars. AfUr this, to her lane count us out, is a piece uv dishonor equaled seldom In the history uv poUttix.
The tan is alt the more serious for the money we yooscd in Maine we hevn't got to yoose in Injeany, wich is still moT« expensive Statu? than Mane, Owln to the Mane likkor law, we coodn't do bar-room treatin' out furnished em likker by the bar!, wich we got at wholesale prices—in Injeanr we are compelled to pay ten cents a drink, wich largely increase* our expenses. To buv a State and then not get It Is hart-
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T" «$
enuiii. vy nev wasua our c&piue, we hev a defeet to start off with, instid uv a victry, and our calke*lashunsis upset entirely. xV,.'-*
Still there is n"6 cause for despondency. We shel elect Hancock, for we hev enuff strength in reserve.
Let every Dimecrat remember that we hev the Solid South beyond any question, and we don't hev to yoose any money down there. The local committees furnish the powder and shot for their active electioneerers, and every Dimocrat in the South hez his own shot-gun. Ef we cood electioneer In the North ez we do in the South it wood be much cheeper, but we hev to take things ez they are, not ez we wood like to hev em.
We hev the city uv Noo York ez solidly ez we ever did. The fact that many uv our best workers are in the penitentiaries uv the State, and that a tiranikle Republikin Governor won't pardon em out in time to take part in the fall campane is suthin agin us, but we hev enuff left. The lower wards uv the city are ez enthooziastic ez ever, and there never wuz a more hartyyoonyun uv the groseries in our strongholds than now.
In Maine the soft-money Dimocrats are workin harder than ever, determined to carry the State in November. In Injeanny and Ohio the soft-money repoodiators are alive, and in the East the hard-money Dimocrats are at work with a zeal that promises success. Our high tariff frends in Pennsylvany and Connecticut, our free-trade brethren in Illinov, all send words uv good cheer, and the anti-furrin element uv Californy and the Irish uv Noo York are workin in yoonison.
We shel hev Injeanny shoor. We hev enuff Kentuckians in readiness to put into the southern part uv the State to wipe out any majority the northern section kin give Garfield. They are all ready and are eager to git away. Over forty go from the Corners alone, wich is a great relief to Bascom, ez he wont hev to trust em for likker doorin their absence, and they are eager to go, for they will hev free rashens in Injeany till after the election.
With our trained sauads uv repeeters in Noo York city ana with our skill in countin there, and with our emegrashun from Kentucky into Injeany, and with what we kin spare from Noo York to Connecticut and Noo Jersey, we shel kerry all them States, and them, with the South solid, settles it.
Gineral Hancock, the superb sojer, and the ardent reformer, is shoor to be the next President.
Dimocrats uv the Yoonited States to your tents! or rather to your groceries. There is no cause for despondency. We hev bin beeten on the skirmish line, but we hev only commeust the fite. All ther is uv the Mane trouble, we are short jist a hundred thousand dollars, and we hev to go down in our pockets for jist that much more.
We implore yoo in the interest uv reform, uv purity, uv law and order, for the sake uv yoonion and the Constitution, for the great principle uv free trade, uv a high, protective tariff, uv fiat money ana uv gold payments, watever yoor pertikeler noshun may be, akkording to the secahun yoo happen td live in, to go to work .with a will.
With Garfield in the chair yoo are out uv place for four long dreary yeers with Hancock, the postotfises is ours. To work, then, with a will.
PSTROLBTTM V. NASBY, Manager.
P. 8.—We shood git along better ef English would give down ez he wuz expectid to. But he won't give a dollar. He is a very thrrftv man, is English. He wood hev made a splendid proddygal son. Ef he hed taken' his sliare uv his father's estate, he wood hev come back with a mortgage on all the kentry he went to. Ef ne hed struck sich bad luck ez to hev been compelled to eat husks with hogs, he wood come home with the shoor.
R[aine.in
P. S.—No. 3.—A mortifyin mistake occurred at our literary biirow, yisterday. Thfcre wuz a lot uv campane documents left over from the campane eight years ago, wich wuz sent out by mistake. Among em wuz a pamjfhlet in wich the great Butler wuz called
Beast Butler." Dimekratic committees receevin uv em will destroy em, ef they kin reed so ez to distinguish em.
OUR Fl.rRTATTON,
Which is to be played Thursday is noticed as follows in the Scranton, Pa., Titrw*:
The Mackay-Sylvcster company gave the above play last evening to a greatly leased audience in the Academy of lusic. There is a good deal of really fuhny business interspersed, which was presented with a raciness and piquancy that disarms criticism. We cannot find it in our heart, after laughing heartily for two hours with thorough enjoyment, to dissect their work on the subject and expose the flaws. We have not time to mention all the performers. It is enough to sav that none fell below the average. Mr. Mackay was excellent as the old commedian, and Miss Sylvester in her duplex performance of the mischievous and irolicksome Laura Lighthcart. and the old, but inflamable, Sara Seeker, was just as attractive and laughter-provoking as she could be. The dance of Laura ana the train boy at the picnic was a yrry beaut if ul and eniovahlc performance/ On the whole we think we can say for the audience that ther were well pleased, and we advise the lovers of a good laugh to go and see them.
The following notice of "Our Goblins,** which will appear at the Opera House Friday evening is taken from the New York T^Utffrem: *\ur Goblins," which wis produced at Haverlj's Fourteenth streets theatre last nl&U is one of the most excruciating funny piece* of extravagant specialty that we have ever seen on the metropolitan stage. It is of the 'Tourist" and "Trou lywiours" ortk-r. and is brimfuH of mirth provoking situation and song, and is pre sented by a set of artists who are nnsp turtle In the line of business. pmset
*.
logs.
P. S.—No. 2.—Hancock opposed my
uttin anything about a defeat in He sez we hav hed all the jolliticashen over it, and the Dimoorisy beleeve that we hev earned the State. Ez half the party don't never read, the chances are that they will never know we didn't carry the State. The General is developin remarkably.
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•WE BEAT
Rebsand Rines Can't run This Country.
HONESTY AND REFORM THE PEOPLE MUST HAVE.
Never in the history of politics has there been such a quiet election as that of this county yesterday. On main street one would think it was Sunday instead of a day of battle with ballots between the Republic on the interest of prosperity and good government, and Democracy with its disgraceful proceedure, rings and cliques. Voting began early and was conducted in a quiet and orderly manner, and for one we must say that our saloon men did a noble thing for both parties in closing up their saloon. There was no drunkness, and every one seemed to have made up his mind to vote and see that his neighbors voted. So the election period off into a glorious Republican victory as will be seen from our table herein which is as complete as we could give it at the time going to press except as to minor state office which would naturally follow the election of the whole ticket.
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The wife's native, land where she lovod.—[Dumas.
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From a railroad official who was in company with Wrn. Thaw, vice president of the Pennsylvania company, last week, and who conversed with hin concerning the rumors that the Pennsylvania company had scooped in the Terre Haute & Indianapolis road, we leard that Mr. Thaw strted that the relations between the Pennsyivonia company and the T. H. & I. company was the same as they had been for several years past, and all rumors to the contrary were groundless. He sup posed the report started from the appoint tnent of I. W. Caldwell general manager of tbe line. This, he said, would be ample grounds on which newspapers could build articles. the
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Greencastle, Indiana. Fort. Wayne, Indiana._ DesMoines, Iowa. Blooinington, Illinois.
SPECIAL ANNOUNCEMENT
TO THE PUBLIC.
Having jnst returned from the Eastern market*, where I have purchased one of the nio*t complete siocks of
FALL and WINTER
CLOTHING
everplaced on the shelves of a Terre 1 Ian to clothier. 1 most respectfully invite the attention of the buying public to a
of my late purchases, as my low
Six a
-c
prices irr
BIG FEATURE.
In my Merchant Tailoring department I am better ou&llfled than ever to meet, the dc-nmnds ». the ptiblic in every particular.
PHILIP SCHLOSS,
420 Main stree
GEO. H. HUGHES,
PRACTICAL
Wedding and Invitation work a specialty. SI 1-3 M. SECOND STMT,
Up-etair*^ over Locke's Paper Honst-
SAMUEL S. EAHIA,
WbolesaleProTisions
Pork, Lsird Bacon. Siiicar Cured Hants. 18 MAIN STREET.
L. KUSSNEK,
Palace ol Music
213 OHIO STREET, HAUTE, INDIANA
Otd««t lassie In W«rfe»n ludianaL Alwcjr* tbe tarfftmt
rtoek
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kepi in
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city. PUnos Mid organ# rented «w» tlw» rtirt wHI p*y for
at
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All over tlie'City and
OWEN, PlXLEY
Prices,
Wholesale Manufacturers of Men's, Youtlis', Boys' and Children's 1
CLiOTHI3ST
XHNT THE Always was, and always will be
1
And Purchase Your Fall and Winter Goods at
MANUFACTURERS' PRICES.
Their Mammoth Stock of Gents' Furnishing Gh(^«ls that arc being retailed «t
JO-BSIISTG- PRICES.
ALL SHADES AND GR ADES OF
Underwear, Hosiery, White Shirts, olored Shi Neckties, Scarfs, Collars, €ulfs, Handkerchiefs etc.
Daily additions being made to their already attractive stock, and they invite careful inspection.
THEIR MOTTO: Price to All. All Goods Marked and Satisfaction Guaranteed
braistch: houses.
Nos. M. 36. 88. 40 and 42 N. Pennsylvania st„, Indianapolis. Nos. 508 and f10 Main street. Terre HautCf Ind.
WM. DREUSICKE,
CARPENTER 'AND BUILDER.
Manufacturer of Drensicke's
Patent Refrigerators,
Cor. Ninth and Sycamore Sts.,
TERRE IIAUTK IND.
Argand Base Heater
E. L. PROBST,
FoirrtSi street, bet. Main and Ohio.
KERYOtJBJDEBILITY. UR.tY'W «PECH1"C «E9iaHll TRADE great Sa"TgAOK gliih Remedy
A a in core f«w Seminal Weak ties*. Spermatorrhea. Imio»«opr, and AIIDISEWMSITTMRT fol a* a *y- ««. I' »t Mt-
IIF01E TASil^Ab a# AFTfl TAttfll* of Memory, t/ni tftal. Pain In the Back. DirarM1## SUUm. Preammw Old Age, and many ot&cr IH*«a«e» that ieiid to InMnlty or CtonstiropHon and a Premature gyave.
Kgnpij''- narti-• 'At*Inot"r jwwnphkrt,wbfebwe dtvire tOMMkd fW.« by mail u*mmi%£F"Tbe Specific Mcdici»« fe» **M fcH %»gjf0«ti» at fl per package. package# for $1, or will be M-ot frw by dd t- tvlpt rf the money by ad-
1
(IRAT NRSIIIHK CO.
.Vo.A M^rbaate#' Hlodt. Dernot*. KICK. Hkttd In Terr* llmte and by all Draggtsia rwry-
r*
Or
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HW
I
in Plain
or Money Ke-
Ind.
Dayton. Ohio. Lockport, New York. Utica, New York. Springfield, Ohio.
508 & 510 MAIN ST., TERRE HAUTE, II^TD.
Oitcc Wore to the Front.
John II. Sykes, the popular hut is again on dcck with one of the complete stocks of fall and winter hoa gear fof gents ever shown in Terre Haul I Mr. Sykes has long been intimately CG nected with the mercantile interests this city, and those who have onoe p»' liim will never fail ^tp call
nu
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Shirts
GET
YOUR: SHIRK
MADE TO
MEASTJBif,
EC IT IT TIE K/ S
Shirt Factory,
523
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I
A.X3ST ST^B3B3T5
BUY'YOtTR
HATS & BONNET^
AT EMIL BAUER'S
Wholesale and iktail Klllinery 8tor SUK31 and knrvst prices. fj|
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1
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