Daily News, Volume 2, Number 65, Franklin, Johnson County, 3 November 1880 — Page 3

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fDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1880.

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A SECOND TRIAL.

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KSUX)Qi.tJ{ii

BY FTARAH IFLWTFR

ru oommencement it G—- colleg^. [9he ^ebpl^rere poaring into tho

It

cHarch aa 1 entered it, rather tardy. Finding die cboicft seats in the center of the Already taken, I

Keasedaadience-room

m?u»

forward, looking to the right

rthI

the left for a vacancy. On the veiy front row of seats I found one. Here a little girl moved along to make room for me, looking into my?ace with JaTge gray eye*, wboee brightness was fcoftened by very long lashes. Her face was as open and freeh as a newly blown foee before snnrise. Again and again I my eyes turning to the rose-like and each time the gray eye« half smiling to meet mine. £vilently the child was ready to "make up," with me. And when, with a bright

{mile,

she returned my dropped handerchief, and I said '"Thank you!" we ^eemM fairly Introduced. Other persons, now coming into the seat crowded quite close up against the little girl, that we soon felt very well acquainted.

There's going to be a big crowd," she

f"Yes,"

id to me. I replied "people always like io see how school boys are made into jnen."

Her face beamed prlde aa she said:

with pleasure and

They were not green-house favorites just old-fashioned domestic flowers, such as we associate with the dear gandmothers. "But," I thought, "they ^ill seem sweet and beautiial to him lor Htlle sister's sake. "That is my brother," she went on, pointing with her nosegay. "The one with light hair?" I asked. "Oh nd," she said, smiling and shaking her head in innocent reproof not that homely one, with jed hair: that handsome one with bmwn wavyhahr His eves look .brown, toobut they are notr-rhey are dark blue. There! lies got his hand up to his, head nov\.g You see him, don't you?,'

Iu an eager way she looked from him to me, as if some important fete de* pended upon my identifying her brother. "I see him," I said. "He's a very good looking brother," W,. %es he is beautiful," she said with artless delight "and he's so good, and he studies so hard. He has taken care of me ever since mother died. Here is his naina on the programme. He is not the valedictorian, but he has an hc^apt forMl that," s.l*v

I saw in the little creature's femiliarity with these technical college terms that she had closely identified herself with her brother's studies, hopes and sue"He thought, at first," she continued, "that he woula write on the 'Romance

4f«^^idai88^

had, whispered from her childish lips! Her interest in her brother's work had stamped them on the child's memory, and to her they were ordinair things. "But then." She went on, "he decided that W would rather write on 'Historical Parallels,' and he's got a real good oration, and he says it beautifully. He has said it to me a great many Urncs. •most know it by bwt. Olil it begins so pretty and so grand! This is the way it begin** she added, encouraged by the interest she must have seen in my face: "Amid the permutations and combinations of the actors and forces which make up the great kaleidoecope of history. we often- find that a turn of Dee* tiny a hand-—v

Hi

"Why, blees the haby I thought iooking down into her bright, proud face. I isatfTdseeribe how very odd wad elfish it did seem to have those sonorous words railing out of the amiling infanik mouth.,

The band, striking up, put an end to the quotation and to the confidence®. As the exercises nrogreesed. and ap. nroached newer and nearer the effort Sa which all her interest was concentrated* ffiiv little friend became excited antlrestlem. Her eyes grew laigerand brighter, two deep-mi spots glowed on her cheeka. She touched up the flowers, manifestly ^making the offering ready for the eh)rin«.

askd seemed equally mingled, gut when the oveiatnre was play^ Uirouih, and hii name was called, tfess child seemed, hi her eegerojMR, to fora«t me and all the earth be«de him. Hhe rose to her ftet and iwnedjbrwani tor abetter view of her beloved, he mounted to the «peeker*stand knew by her deep breathing that her heart was throhmng in her throat. I knew, too, by the way her brother «u»e up the mwt (a thq lypBL ihit he was LremSX. TlS lSnShcmglimp hk fece was pallid, imad the Iij» bl% as with cold.^ f^t seemed todlsoem that things w^mf^ w*"*i wirh him. Something Jke ftrs?

*®f| itt iier -JaS.' He nwwleanaatoittatic bow. ||Theoa bewildered, strt^gglcxi toc^c camelnto his face, thea a hfelpleas look, and then he stood startn« vsoantly, hke aeomnamtiotilt, at the waiti^l andieeee. The mommtM of painfnl sospeiwio went hy, as»d stilt he atoodas If struck dumb. 1 saw bow it was lie heea «l»vek''with •ts«e4k%hu

4

tfetet I fho 4m Aw

targe dismayed eyes upon me, "He's forgotten it," ne mid. Then a awiftchango

into Iter a**) a strong,

look and on the tuneral-like silence of

the room broke the sweet, brave, child voice:

44'Amid

the permutations and combi­

nations of the actors and the forces which xftake up the great kaleidoscope of history, we often find that a tum of I)««tiny*i hand-^***

Everybody about qs turned and looked. The breathless silence the sweet, childiflb face the long unchild-t like wMrds, produced a, weird effect, ,,

Bat the Help had come too late the unhappy brother w*9 already staggering in 1 lumiliation from the stage. Xhe band quickly struck up, and waves of music were rolled out to cover the de/eat.

I gave the little sister a glance in which 1 meant to show the intense sympathy I felt but she did not see me. Her eyes, swimming with tears, were on her Brother's lace I put my arm around

her. She was too absorbed to heed my caress, and before I could appreciate her purpose, she was on the way to the shame-stricken young man sitting with a face like a statue's.

When he saw her by his side, the set face relaxed, and a quick mist came into his eyes. The young men got closer together, to make room for bar. She sat down, beside him, laid her flowers on his knee, and slipped her hand in his.

I could not keep my eyes froaa her Sweet, pitying face. I saw her whisper to him, he bending a little to catch her Words. Later I fojind out that she was pairing him if he knew his "piece" now, and that he answered yes.

When the young man next on the list had spoken, ana while the band was playing, the child, to the brother's great Surprise, made her way up the stage steps, and pressed through the Huong ef professors-and trustees and distinguished visitors, up to the college presi4 "If you please, sir," she said with a (kjnrtesy, "will you and the trustees let my brother piece now,"

try again? He knows his

For a moment the president stared at her through his gold bowed spectacles,}. and then, appreciatnig the child's petitaon, he smiled on her, and went dowp ind spoke to the

young

man who had

So it happened that when the band had again ceased playing, it briefly announced that Mr. would new deliver his oration—"Historical Parallels." "'Amid the permutations and combinations of the actors and forces which make up the great kaleidoscope of history.—» This the little sister whispered to him as he rose to answer the summons. 1 A ripple of heightened and expectant interest passed over the audience, and then all sat stone still, as thouah fearing to breathe lest the speaker might again take fright No danger The hero in the youth was aroused. He went at with a set nmroose to con-

stained fece. I watched the fece during the speaking. The wfde eyes, the

parted

lips, the whole rapt being, said

thai the breathless audience was forgotten, that her sniait was moving with his. And when the addreas was ended with the ardent abandon of one who catcher enthusiasm in the realisation thatiie is fighting down a wrong judgment and conauering a symj)athj_, the

&

uering a sympath rilling. Thi turo

IQU

really th broke iuto rapturous

intended for the

mo

effect was

ified audience

tat

aigmnea auaience is applause bouquets valedictorian rained

like a tempest, And the child who had helped to save the day—that one beaming little face, in ite pride and gladness, is something to be forever remembered..

—•ft. Nichols*

m.a f-'A Serions Joke. A pracliail joke, which was intended to punish a husband, was unintentionally made to recoil upon the wife, who was the author of the little scheme. Mrs, Phillerton, a Utica lady had a trifling quarrel with her liege lord, and. to make him regret his conduct, resorted to a little bit of mischiefs In half an hour after the quarrel, she entered his presence again, aparently very sick, declared that she had taken laudanum, and had not an hots' to live. She threw her arms about his seek, affectionately expressed her forgiveness, bide him a pathetic farewell, and then, in theatric Style, fainted, having first contrived to stand over the sofa at the exciting moment, upon which she dropped with the artistic grace of Clara Morris. Did this husband rave, and cry, and tear out his hair? Was the resolution to follow her to the other shore his dominent thought? Such conduct was contrary to the character of the extremely political man. After stretching bar tenderlr on the sofa, eo that she would not rol off, he hurriedly procured the assistance of a medical mend and the loan of a powerful stomach-pump. In fifteen minuted the stomach of the supposed suicide was pompod as dry a* a basedrum. When this violent proceeding was about to legin, the lady swddenly recovered conscicmsne«8, and declared that it was all a joke—that »he had not taken poison. But her sfcu would not vigorously that the lady imagined the was heiug tamed inside out. She is received never to die bar poison.

upid husband

'not believe her, and pumped so

Jirnka* Brad ffistorieallr. Daring the adminietratkm of Wilham Pitt, in EngUnd, them was a great acardty of wheat and in older to make it go as fiu-as posrfWe^ Parliament passed a law that all the bread fbrtbe army slionld be made oat af unboHed wheat meal. Hiatory states thai the resoU was soch an impttmd coodUioo of health among thex^dkn as and

their offican and

The latter declared that never were the sokliew so healthy and rohnst

mmmny

and from the aratif. kind of bread fWv^ly, but •ore

1

:HliHaw aare

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tame this excin*

heoajBw^ once

osewasdiacootinaed.

Tm MY

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VRT«I^

Asked a bright loofciugman. "Oh! 1 feef fftteable, Fm hiHiou« and can't eat, and my hadtfs iolamel can't wwt. '"Why In the work* doa^t you tak Kidney Wort: that's what 1 take wh«a am mat and it alw^fs keeps me in p«f«A twne. My doctor recommend* it for afl soch uooble* Ksdney-Wort is the«e«ea« forMmoostteaaaMl «3N»»ttsatiOR. ©oot-j tail to try it*—tm§

Ingersoll at the burial

his brotheivJ£bon,C. Incemili, et-repre-sentaUve fr^m Illinois. Ii was a torching tribute of brotherly affection and eulogy Upon the dead tiuufs life and character,

inteter. The love betwe«n!the brothers was always a matter of comment among their associates, and it was the voice of affliction whieh spoke:'

My Friendsr am going to do that

hood's morning alciost touched noon, and while the shadows were still

iOws

were still Silling

toward the west He had not passed on life's highway the stone that mark* the highest point, but being weary for njao* ment he lay down by the wayside, and, Dlacing his burden for a jwllow, fell into hai dreamlesa sleep that kisses down the eyelids still. While in love with life and enraptured with the world, he passed to silence and pathetic dust Yet, after all, it may be best: just in the happiest, sunniest hour' of all the voyage, while eager winds &re kissing every sail, to dash against the unseen rocks.' and in an instant hear the billows roar about the sinking ship, for whether at midsea ar among the breakers of the farther shore, a wreck must mark at last the end of cach and all and every life. No matter if its every hour is rich with joy, it will at its close become a tragedy as sad and deep and .dark as can.be woven of the warp and woof of mystery and death. This brave and teuder man in every storm of life was oak and rock, but in the sunshine he was vine and flower. He was the friend o»f all heroic iouls he climbed the heights and left all super* «&ition8 far below, while on his forehead I all the golden dawning of a grander day. He loved the beautiful, and was With color, form and music touched to tears. He sided with the weak, and with a willing hand gave alms.. With loyal heart and the purest hand5 he faithfully discharged all public trusts. He believed that happiness was the only good, reason §he only torch, justice the onl worship»per,humanity the only religion, and love the only priest.' He added to the sum of human joy/and were every one for Whsm he did some loving service to bring a blossom to his grave he would sleep to-night beneath a wilderness of flowers. Life is a narrow vale between the barren peaks of two eternities. We strive to look beyond the tvfo heights we cry aloud, and the only answer is the echo of our wailing cry. From the voiceleas lips of the unreplyftig dead there comesno word, but intheuight ofdeath hope sees a star and listening love can hear the rustling of a wing. He who sleeps here, when dying, mistaking the approach of death for the return (Of health, whispered with his lowest whisper, "I am better now." Let us believe, in spite of doubts and dogmas and tears arid fears, that these dear words are true of all the countless dead. And now, to vou who have been ehosen from among the many men he loved,*? to do the last sad office for the dead, we give hiapaored «dnst.. there was, there is. nogreater, stronger, manlier man than, him whom we now ign to your care for the moment that ervenes ere the grave receives him.if

$ Land for Potatoes, We cannot get. a great gTowth' df potatoes', unless we have a rich surface soil, We.H'an bft^n get a big crop of clover \vhen the-fjurfaw soil is compattttively poor,! provided the lower soil i«' rich from previous manuring,-or from? thor* bugli cultivation.:' But this'is riot the' case witti potatoes. The sutffece soil must be rich in available plant food. Aclover sod turned, under

a

•iw?

ih

In order to secure such A plettsure/^e must look Well to^aU the conditions^ Wewarit first, land that is free" firom'stagnant watof. If th#fand needs draining4 it is in vain to expert a go6d crops' Sec^ ond, a fine, free, mallow «oil In sayingt t|iis, I do not mean any special descrip-1 tlon^of llvtd. GoOd crops bf potato^ mk he grovm on kgreit variety of soils, rjvnging from a hlack 'iwnck to a ht»avy clay loam, ora blbwijiig sand/ Bm. in order to raise good crops of potato*** bn clayey land, it is necessary to it a tin mellow

1

ifeond:tion.1 Th: plant

early. Arid what is of 'still gr-nt*»r( m? portence,iwe must kefep the crop clean by thorough cultivation between the rows, and tiie owftsional use of the hoe in drawhig the soH around the growingplants, killing weeds at the same time,'

Wood Fowls for Laying.

A noted writeron fowls savs -»"For lay tag hens, select larpe, strona, healtli birds of the Leghorn varieties, with huge, square bodies, without regard to: thio points, such as pure white fiat ear, lobes, or vety yellow or comfaa With just five points, ©r plumage thaA is perfectly white in the white varietj, «r without a white speck in the lirown. It ianot that these points areanyctetriment to the health or the vigor of the biids^ hot a odastitutioa has neen too often sacrificed to thenv. which ofteou results in a strain of enfeebled though^ handsome Hfewla. The* Leghorns are acclimatod iAmorican^,hreed«,i whidt orimnated fwmfcirthj MecHtenranean, afed ffeeyihat4

cromem from

all r—peeto important price. Votaoie# I. and work b«ing oomplcted

October

for the edition in

th«rad*aiK5# will

a good foun^r

dation to work tipotr, and a »6d ofany^ liind isgood. It keeps the ground loosrf

and moist and the potatoes like to bury tjiemkelves in it: It Is a real pleasure to3, strike a hook into a hill and pull tty sC ddSten smooth, goOd-sixed potatoes Out ^d^eayed sod

beoosn

4

S#JSiSM2'SStlirtSS®SSS

Lin* Ofj

twn

proved this country l?y circum«feaa^ that have ^ven thetft, ^re-«nsil^ot position for the fkrnier, when birds such as are alxm recommended are ^ected." In V^ardf to fowSifor ti«rket !ie adds:. n)ther b»eeds or

them, are,

much ketter thaa the tedidnis, or any of tha smaller fcteefo. piidcens that are the result of a DoT^n oorft and Brahma he7«, ai« lar?^ a»d puitii»« much earlier than the tife. Hdneoteiv thejr ire hardy, fleshy, tender and fine 6*wM HotMana in place of IQrkiRffl am also toed tb eroes on Brahmas, orlo breed wi^i the Hr«t mentioned mm, ak fa)lc fowls, ml are to cross with

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WmlWIlHi k| THE^flU RtRIEfNGMClR CJT1K

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CLIFT. J. H. WILLIAM8. ^M.

CLIFT. WILLIAMS& €0, ,v.

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£ORNER 0? NINyMpLBERR1?JSTREBT^

A N A O I.

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JW^fho h»w^a^^owft4n-Je caootlbT «»d weak tn the hidt^/-.Do®? walking lifting or staodteg cae^ ia the small of mm&f If kidney dkea^ aail Prcrf. Goilmette'* Fren^t Kidney Pad hit the which irill.dnna.yoit iokD] nttlyaml without fimaf *aodMfea*6'

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jumkr, Lath Studies, Glass, Paints,, Oils'ao^ Baflders^

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A. S, 1ST A.

A A N I

SHOP

A IN E S O A N O N

ortable and Stationary Engines, Flour, SawJSff and!

MIl^NG MACHINERY J' A.NG E R?, a wmwa av,^ .UPRIGHT AND HORIZONTAL STEAM,EN^IN^S'« W& N/ Street, Terr© Saute, Indiana

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MANUFACTURERS OF

SASHES DOORS, BLINDS, ETU.

D:BALjER^

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Chambers's EncycIopaedia h* a porflooof the Library of TTrtlwail Mrteaaaddition*.oompietain 1JTolumesltoo. Inttii ran rery clear apoparat) CrBP- ?n9M«* AV 9'-w ag-sgMauf. tn* |B Wemtt

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'ftjtnry of Tfalremi ^(wrtedgeJ^ta^fia.OO

l^Mrioan SSS^S^^Ctmmbm't SaatolppmiiM,

Knight*a Hiatory of Plutarch

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wufttjpMtS[SSi

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American* Additions:

Standard Books.

iQiMaruuMU I

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