Daily News, Volume 2, Number 66, Franklin, Johnson County, 4 November 1880 — Page 2

*l-P» B1AUCHAMP, Editor and Proprietor. PaMieetiaa O#to-.eonm Fifth aad Mafb Strata T'^'rr M1 •ater* atlhe PottOaco atTerreBeote. MMW,

Mf SW*H|l"ti*WI TWfttTT Slip ii'f .tr.-, ...,••

1 1

Ida Jamb. ar

—ExprMt.

_i:%?:?f

t.

\w

"I

M-

,f $ WJIWH»VIMw

THUB8DAY, NOVEMBER 4, 188a

1

1

LARGEST

IS ttTHB OTI. -SS^M&-S--S=S5

Thk Sweet Singer of Israel, Wae in

lUWtt I- IBBCWe—i 'H^'fl, Ill I'JBBB

Tnn two banner State in this contest

are lpwk*ml %*••.' uJfrfetfw* Gerteld a*majorliy of M.tliJO iofl tcxm gtrea Hancock" a majority of 70,000.} The 4^, farther north, the less Democrat*. j/Fhe '^farther south, the lew Republicans. «»ft

f-*-

.J-1L IIIJI11111I III! JWIL'n l."W*

'5-s* A FELLOW by the name of Heaay in eiaiurtod that booaasa Joita Caaey had voted the Kepublican ticket on Tuesday f^f^:l^flast, thatJbe had *dd his vote* John, like ~JS trau4ii ibec£siinOd Isle, put amaa-

S sard application to the Impudent feUer'4 eye at once.

'ftfe1tem

if tl*5Jwal Qpltimn of yester

fday^f^«#^4bp^foe to coun otfm«fr Bpaheifatfif)/ Ttief ippointmenU stated as made under a Democratic police board were made before he bedame maml^r.ol the c|ty council. It is due him tliit tbitf correction •chould be made

--SOUS SOUTH.

THE Solid South turns out the accus tomed vote. It will n&t be of much in vote of suffice that states have

-Zu

New Jersey and Delaware

N«WHampshb«. i....i

•i Ohio/

,,

,h

T^eso pt^a cast an electoral vote as

Nel?7oriT* fitM IlHnol

Orego»4^

Nebraska..

91

8

tfew Hampshire...... •.............4 ...3 ..38 ..:5 ..15 ..18 ...5 ...8

Kan^)}i4fr.. Indiana. ••v" •..'.iminH. .vi'i Minnesota Colorado ..(V.....« Connecticut f* Penntylvatjila. i.'.isli *%'. Rhode Island *..•.• *J Wisconsin .i...® n"

Iowa *|7 foul number of Republican electoral votift certain ».l. M9 Tnti) number of votes in Uic Electoral College.. .'.1 Necessary to a choice -1W 2lt will be seen that Garfield has Wt votes tojffiw^dyetU^^e^t.

It has been a glorious victory anderory body seems glad that the Victory Is such a sweeping one

A correspondent to the Boston MernU _?0cU&rW^swiii the ^cliU^al situa-

Secretary of State, Hamiltou TbK o! Qrant, of

oiWk&jr,' jha D. bottg.

of MuMdkditta^tli mWxht Invviot? Be^amio Harrison of Indiana.

Postmaster Geueml T. I* Jan*s New York. 7T Atlowwpy OeoemJ« Stanley Mathews. Ohio.

Seccetrry of the Tiwway-Wbor

to solve will be ths selection of a sncces^ •or for Secretary Sherman. I «ai not «TC« think of the man In the Republican

A

«Jiy breeder saya —, ^5^ikofJ2S «!2£th® ooiiiroS Of port, vofw t*nn phWr *.»«4rfS»ya6-

eoaal andahe wwMmri of chkkenaworlhaa mtteh

#.i 1

irmt aj&r wrra vris *tn mmKipri

|&( Qis rtit of worWNf»ss

\\r

Of the big the ban-

JHancock of

*LECTI0*- t,

§f A The flight is over and there is nothing tfftJIf m*jD»m*5h!!ic party but the s^d I South. New Jersey and Dcleware. While there has been several Republican Con gtyssmen elected in thfi Southern States, ihey are off set by Democratic elections!*1

t.....*i.

/. Indiana 'v ^kimsetts....: ... Oregtftl.*..

MlnaaaOta ...... Colorado? CeaaecUout..... Pennsyl** la

v...

Michigan

5

--5 Rhod? Island.' .... «.«% •8'000 i.' *r« WUiwmiflA .80,000 —w.ooo

4,000

..ci'Wv.. 26.000

.80,000 .60,000

......... 7,000 50,000 2,000 .........25,000 .8,000 .2,000 80,000 ..,.40,000

oc^et, a»« ate» «n ts

»7T- T^.

*1

Tlwl5»« Joljun btjcket. hf»vy tin* Nrttet wiia Bepablicaa roie. Tb« Un bncket m*n wobodjr'* fool— •. MomrmBtbay htm. he't not Bsnitrat mnl®. Be gt»s work, he R*t# Rood P«y. tm^rhia tta taeW, -niV^tir0 tbi frackfft, nJ* ht»Tj tin with JUpoWlam role. o.look inutthedooH the carpeted floor, mntc In «very room

Mjd th*t J* hi* home.

Ok, ibe littlo Un bucket,

a

the

talee tin bneket,

T^i» j!SvtiiiMck«tjnt#a heavy tin docket with B«pMWic*n rate. ,. «Oeh, P»t, Is It a chiuitrft ye are looktn'* And what will I be aftjicr a cookin' Ho mate nor pcrttttei ye It have for yer dlnnor. -Go 'w*y wWT yer chaiK\ ye #|»alpoen, ye winncr!"

Then#tick toyonr backet, your little tJn backet, tin *lway»fnll—• TU a jolly un backet. 'U» a htjary jm bnckp. wtthRopablleaii rnle, "Shange! Vet's datyon !ay. Hans. Vea yon speata mlt aer

jrQu ™»y* nail

vvh juu i^nrvu 1U1V U^iu little pOlltJCtl IRftUlf Shiswe der prcUteli", and aonrkrat and beer ForaeBodisgti jwrll find ven nbangp cotncrf tfcero."

Den hold on to the bucket! the little tlri backet, ir» alwaya frdl— Tia jolVy On bucket, tie a heavy tin bneket with Republican rule. Then that tip on your change—we've heard it enough. Ton can't fool thfe workingman with any snch •toff. His home ia «o bright, so happy his wifo. He'll vote for good wage* the rent of hi# life.

alwayaft a jolly tl with Rep

An Atheist at the Grave.

Beautiful but aad was the wail of "Bob" Ingereoll at the death of his lost brother—fit requiem of the faithless over the grave of the hopeless.They were infidels both one a self-appointed apostle of infidelity, and they had promised each other this pious duty of eulogy on the part of the survivor to the one who should first be taken. There was ho prayer, no priest, no religious rite not even the prayer of the illustrious predecessor in aoubt, who in his extremity is said to have exclaimed, "Oh, Lord God, if there is any, have mercy on my aotU if I have got any." Why pray to a God that does not exist? Whv take thought for the future that is all a blanw

The eulogy reveals & manifest effort at fin# writing, and the result, it must be confessed, is highly poetical and would be even touching but for the striking incongruity of the whole proceeding. It grates harshly and is even repulsive to nfryt«fcUn «*•*. Infidelity has oold comfort for the mourners at the graves of departed friends. Humanity sighs for immortality. Hope springs immortal in the breast We shrink instinctively from the idea of annihilation. Everything around and within us speaks of God and qf a future life, and we cannot envy the man whose highest idea of life is that it is "a narrow vale between the cold and barren peaks of two eternities.w £old indeed, and, dark and dreary, must be the prospect to one who "strives in vain to look beyond the heights, who cries aloud and hears nc answer but the echo of his wailing cry."

No, eternity is not voiceless. An echo has long since reached us from the eternal hills of Paradise, of ravishing beauty and heavenly sweetness. It has spoken, and yet speaks, to millions of the poor depressed denisens of earth with aeepietf^bos, with consoling power. It has dissipated the clouds that hung over the fbture.,and lighted up the darkness of the grave. But, what a melancholy object $B thaf bereaved brother standing on the brink of the grave of the dear thick over

Agnostic and

Apaitle of Atheism that fierce Ioono clast of all Christian traditions what is the highest comfort he can derive from his philosophy, for himself and his ads. in this flriends, great trial of his life? "In the night of death hope sees a star, astA listening love can hear the rustling of awing.1' Is that all But what doos it mean?. What Btar can hope see withtint/aft&f Ana who can tell whether the flutter of the wing that is hear4 is thai of the angel of light or of the cold and clammy fait that novers over the darkness of eternal night? His brother, h* «ays» "whispered with his latest tnaath,

"J am betterm®

mad, aa if in an

•gooy of doubt and struggle of hope hone, he exclaims: (Let ns be-

How can they be true to souls uncon acious, stricken from existence, banished to eternal forgetlblnees? Or is this eternal forgetMnees itself the bo6n? Let thoee who think so derive what comfort they may from the shuddering thought, bat can they reasonably expect us to abandon for this the bright hopes and cheering promisee of the Christian «»«S=SS5S5BS!S^^

A Girl's Composition on Beyfc Boys ia strange things. Boy« is of thige kinds. The baby boy, the litUe boy, and the big boy. I don't like the baby boy, because he squalls and kicks, and ihave to rock him with a cradle. But the big boy squalls or kicks, can rock him wiui stone*. I like thej Uttle boy the belt when it snows 'cause be can haul «b* on hia aled, A boy is httle man, if he behaves himself, and if he doesn't, heiaa littie devU thM is what

mother said she was an old bore. My papasaya he was a little boy once, but mother says she wasn't, and ahe wishes papa wa»« little boy eome more. Siate? says she don't like boys, and^wbfea I saw hW and Tom Brown a fdtung in the rocking chair on 8tmday night, me said she was trying1© sqneesie the life out of him 'cauae iMie didnt like him but I don't think riie w*i hntting any he wotddn't let h«r get up.

It sU I know about boys, at& alw hopes I wosn jnev«r

Boaoi RICSL—-Wfeiat are wea?th and poverty? ThwtartM*mrichaatho

Sbrasftast

ITi.^mtmrfmbm lh»» irholo tt li lxttw pw.Md r» vay np to wealth aad hoaoT, than to mtth and ibonorthrri^uponyoq

Ko human scheme can be so accurately projected but sotno little circumatAnoe may intervene to spoil it. 'Innocence.i» a flower which wiUiera when touched, but bloom# not again, though it be watered with tears.

Persevering mediocrity ia wore respectable and of unspeakably more use than talented inconstancy. hap pi noes. An is

Contentment is not hanpl oyster may be contented. Happin compounaed of richer elements.

The true end of freedom is to develop manhood and womanhood, not to make authors, mechanics or statesmen.

They asked Lucman, the flibulbt "Prom whom did you learn manners?* He answered: "From the unmannerly.

Our hearts ought not to be mere resting places where the Lord sometimes comes, but dwellings in which He abidea

He who thinks he can do without others is mistaken he who tiilnks othem cannot do without him is still more mistaken.

Praying

:&d

1

With hi» little tio bucket, hi» nice tin bucket, 'Ti#

th?bucket, tia a heavy tin bneket inbllcan rule.

practicing Christ's com­

mandments will Keep out sinning nothing else will do it. Positive steps will save you. mmjim •*'*?.

A gentle person is like tne river iiow« ing .calmly along while a passionate man is like the sea, casting up mire and dirt continually, *.

To be happy at home" is the ultimate result of all ambition the end to which every enterprise and laber tends, and of which every desire prompts the prosecution.

Humility is the i&tie proor of Christian virtues without it we retain all our faults, and they are only covered by pride to hide them from others, and often from ourselves.

False happiness renders men stern •and proud, and that happiness is never communicated. True happiness renders them kind and sensible, and that happiness i^alwaya shared.

Ancient jflnnepieces^

Bowls were used to measure time, from which water, drop by drop, was discharged through a small aperture. Such bowls were called water-clocks. It was then observed how much water from such bowl or cask, from sunrise till the shortest shadow, trickled down into another bowl placed beneath and this time, being the £ialf of the whole solar day, was divided into six hours. Consequently they took a sixth of the water which had trickled down, poured it into owl, and this discharged one expired. But afterwards a more convenient arrangement was made they observed how high the water at each hour rose in the lower bowl,'marking these points, and counted them, thus finding out how many hours were till sunrise.

With the Chinese, the water-clock or clepsydra, are very old. They used a round vessel filled with water, with a hole in the bottom, which was placed upon another vessel. When the water in the upper vessel passes down into the lower vessel it subsided by degree^ announcing thereby the part "of time lapsed,. The Babylonians are said to have used such instruments from them the Greeks of Asia Minor got them, at the time of King Cyrus, about the year 650 before Christ. The Romans did not et the first water-clock before Christ, kit, though the hours of the clepsydras did not vary in length, they still counted from the morning, wnen the clock With us strikes seven, the ancients counted one when the clock with us strikes twelve the ancients counted six. and so forth. This method of counting thd hour was, according to the New Testament, also customary in Palestine jat the time of Christ The water-clocks had the advantage that they could be used in the night, and the Bomans used them to divide their night watches, which were relieved four times, both summer and winter. Conformably to these four night watchea were counted, not only in Rome, but wherever a Roman gamson was stationed consequently also in Palestine after she had become 8 Roman province.

V? A Good Example. J^J "I suppose that you won't go Sabbath School to-day,,Lucy said a mother one stormy Sabbath morning, aetUing herself to read. "Please let me go to-day. mamma I want to go because it rains." "Why, Lucy, that is my excuse for staying at home. How can you make it a reason for going?" "Our teacher always goes, mamma, in all weather, although she lives BO far away. She told the class that one Sabbath, when she went through the storm, and did not JncPeven one scholar, she was so discouraged that she could not help crying. She asked us, too, if wd did not go to our day schools the rainy weather^ and she said, While we must obey our parents, if we ask them pleasantly to let us go they, would likely be willing. Mamma, will you pleaae let me go to-day?"

In the sweet, balmy, delicious happiness of love's first young dream a youth wiU not onlv insist on cracking walnuts for his girl, but in picking oat the goodi«B as well* Two years after marriage he will not even let her have the nut* crtr&nt until is through. Girls, get

Kerosene will make your tin ke**k an bright as new. Satamte* woolen rag and rob with It It win atoo remqare stains from, and dean, varnished furnit. tire.

is the Itanc of nearly every American woman. Fromlitttaafly artsea those dj# orders th%t sosnriy undermine their health and strength. Every woman owes It to herself and fe» her fe«ny touse that cdahrated medid»«, Kidney-Wort. It is th»«aie leotedy for consapittito,

XdbMdert of the kidt^f and liver. TVrtttn^ «L ^y eflScient I

It

yft

K'

men

the

ls.

"Well, I am willing, my dear, if yon wear your school suit. Go and get ready.

But the mother no longer took any interest in her book, but said to her husband (a lawyer), who came in from the library, "Lucy is going to Sabbath school to-day because it rains, so that her teacher may be encouraged by the presence of at least one puptL Suppose we go to (impel for the same reason, if not for a k^'Agrted. I never could plead a cause to an empty court room, and ministeis must find it hard work to preach to amply pews.'1'- '-ts :i, SSJ.S I1J.J !_,!—__l—ii—11'."..' 11!'.'.

[TLSTERETTES,

y^i OVERCOATS

WINTER

mis

i&thl

r^t--

i'.'i

ft.

W&vM

7.,^ %&•**.

4,.

4

VARIETY CONCERT

4

Every Evening at

SHAUtJHNESSEY'S TIP-TOP SALOON, 55mlmm 617Mainstroet,bet. 6th and 7th sis.

iTO $6000 A YBAR, or »5 to $30 ft day in yonr own locality. No risk.

Wo­

do as well as men. Many make I more than the ainonnt atatod above. No one can fail to meke money fa*t„ Any one can do the work. Yon can

make from 50 cent to $2 an hour by devoting yonr evenings and spare time to the business. It costs nothing to try the business. Nothing like it for money making ever offered before. Bnsiness pleasant and strictly honorable. Reader, if you want to know all about the beBt paying bnsiness before the pnbllfc, send na yonr address and we will send you full particulars awl privatd terms free. Samples worth $& also free yon can then make np yonr mind for yourself. Addres. GEORGE STINTON & CO., Portland Maines tUinO

That Acts at the Same Time on THE LIVERJTTHEBOWftS, and the KIDNEYS.

will be perfect: if Ui«T l«com« oined, dreadful dtsea»e* are sure to fallow wi»fa TERRIBLE SUFFERINB. 1 ftllfeatMtt, Headarlie, D^pepsla., J*onrtf«s» CowrtlfMition aad PHw, or Kld-

Bcy CowplalnUi, ermveltDlabetei, (Miowat la t!w Bopt lTrfa« «r Bb*«- rS aititPiiHHdAdm, TF« DERATOPED TJEOWSE U» TITOOD HI POLSOOM wM uw btuDon tint »boald tare bt«s expelled Mrtarallr-

KIDNEY-WORT

will restore thelM^lthr aeUdn aadilltliw Aectroylnc evll» will w» banf^rt .«•*!*« yoa will live iwttp »uffer. _.

Tbo«wux!» have b«en cared. ^Itandyoo «tB|id oM«wn to the ttonber. Mvft aodbealtliwlUooeeaJoregladdeayowbean. I Whf ^otetrwo from Con-

OrtMWttrtM? _kV Kimt-Wovr will care |w. Try A jwwag««toftoeixAlmmttsfaA*

»Uadrv9t)gmb^eomp«m»t^

r«r Prw&M A«Jtt. «r «hQjr for imiftXfiwiwMKwgit. jw»,fwsa.

wwukwunmm. tnpMea,

la

If Xll W«*

mUtvmttmm

••iMK

tmA

for

s. C.

IN*INgtm,Tt»

aa«i» a

Mi,«lprbaH»

uaimAXDSdnr»u *r

IWNED WINTER

trw I

IS HERE. SO IS

DAVts. S.

PIXLEY & mwM

MV

STOCK OF

COLORED

t,.»i

law*

WOOLEN UHDERWEAR,"'NEGLIGEE SHI71TS,

-vi amTm^Sew Brfttain Wool Underwear,

^^-'7 Vicuna Wool Underwear,'

C-'L,

A. A., B. B„ and X. X. X. Wool Underwear, j*

Medicated Scarlet wool Underwear,

I™- jfcckties, Scarfs, Suspenders. Jewelry,

JT

I'""'' Wool Hats, Fnr Hats, Gloves, etc., v'A- 1 Ti

a, gttsincss SDirectorg. 7

Ali. THOMAS.

sittJh. rl.

ȣu

B. DAVIS,

„,f DAVIS & DAVIS,

Stocking Yarns,

Notary.

rlfv:

r*''*' Attorneys at Law, i' *. 22U South Sixth Street, over Postofflce^ Terrc Haute, Ind.

A "WEEK tn your own town, ana no capi tal risked. Yon can give the business a trial without expense, The

beat

oppor­

tunity over offered for those willing to work. You Hhould try nothing else until you see for yonrself what

foa

can do at

the business we offfer. No room to explain here. You ckn devote all yonr time or only your spare time tothe btisiness, and make great pay for every hour that you work. Women mako as mucu as men. Send for special private terms and particolars, which we mail free. I».00 outfit free. Don't complain of bard times wWlo youi have s^uch a chance. Address HALLETT & CO., Portland. Maine.

A.L3L ORDERS

PROMPTLY FILLED

AT—

Clothes, Cassimeres,

it|.

E E S

Tweeds, Flannels,

Carding and Spinning.. N. B.—The hl^icst market price to casU, or oor own tsake ol soofia exchan ed for wool.

yLAO#S

IMPROVED PATEHT LIVER PAD!

Cab SS ^Siraoru'Eimt*** Ujn

Twtcn

A

bono.

i«on4 viMSfaaiictt*

(|ffl»«llrCTer, ImrCwpUiA

8kk I ItffM

«qr. .» to

'^^^SSehwwi

tkmamMM. MM

mk*'

7

a

traftTE SHIRTS, £Sdk V\tti

SHIRTS,

^..nwvj

s* inn

1 v. H/i

criri hitatxt orm~,TT'TP'T' rrrrntD"DTT* XT A TTTTT Tl

ft'K&i

__

OPTICIAN AND JEWELER, 629 Main street, Terre Haute.

^Uorucijs at iatn, 7

J7 McLEAN & SELDOMRIDGE. 7 Attorneys at Law, "3,420 Main Street, Terrc Haute, Ind.

1

S

OVER

FRE.

Have 1

been sold country Prftnce.ev, of which hf en perfoct faction, at performed every tin!, used acci/i directions

We now say to the afflicted and doubtlnl that wo will pay the above reward for a sing!

s'

LAMB BAC That the pad fails to cure. This Great will positively and permanently cnre Lui Lame back, Ikslaiica, Gravel, Diabetes, Brlght's Disease of the Kidnevs. Incontlr and Retention of the Urine. Inftematlon Kidney's Catarrh of tho Bladder, High Urine, Pain In the Back. Side or I«oIns, Weakness, and in fact all disorders of the 1 and Urinary Organs whether contracted vate disease of otherwise.

Ladies. 1* you are suffering from Weakness, Leua eorrhea, or any disease Kidneys, Bladder, or Urlnary Organs,

YOU CAN BE CURRIIt

Withoftiiwa5low!ng nauseous medicines, ly we&ring PROF. GUILMETE'S FRENCH KIDNEY

WHICH CURBS BY ABSORPTION Ask your druggist for

fafu»

Jeans, Blankets,

^Onilmette's Fl

Prof

Kidney Pad,

&L

Dealer In Wool and Manufacturer of

and

take no other If he hw not

send pj.00 and yon will receive the Pad by rj mall." TE8TIK0HIAL8

FROM

THE F101

Judge Buchanan, Lawyer, Toledo, O., sa^ "Cmfo?

.Onilmette's French Kidney

Prof

cored me of Lumbago In three weeks time.

bad been, given up by the best

"l aattered

Kklaer Dtoeaw, wjd often

t!t jj|«ease

DotUn*

^b|T Dorfng all this tlme I attffcr^ "1 »g«jny and Ui*esmn* of monejr (koree Vetter, $ P.» Toledo, O., says.

for three rears with sclatlcaj

4

anu »iwu, had to go aboJ

Pad four weeks." Oulrc N. Scott, Sytvanla. O., writes: "mvcbecnaHgriat sufferer for IS yearl Bright** Disease of the Kldnoys. For'ww?r time was unable tog* Mt ot Jed took tor m«Meine, but the/ gave mo only topw«7 I wore two #f Prof, fluilnsptte $ K'dne. six weeks, and 1 now know I am entirely weeks, ftttd I now mow am enuroi/ cur

Mm Heilen Jerottc, Toledo. O., «y»: "For years I have beefi conflaed. a great pa_ the t*?" to my bed. with Lncorroea a.nd weakness. I wore one of Gullmettc Pftda-and was cuM in one inonth

H. B. Oreen* Wholesale Grocer, Psndla). "^suffered for over *5 ye»r« and in three weeks per^tlr c«n

*"fwore one of the «rst ceived more ben«?flt frons It then tts«d. In feet the Pftd" giv® better general

"We are worktng up diidwtteirtagrf'*0®! day/?

XikAa%all$|

ly trade In yonr PJ fts from them c^l

PMf, Frencfc Liter

Vs

diarasMof/bcUver.Stomarh

good. Prt«* Tre*ll*« byaalL

io^«*il. «end for Prof (?l the Sidneys and Liver, fl Addf«M

KEKCM PAD (». lV»ledo,OW

on file at

Oo'm He

UmHsavi