Daily News, Volume 2, Number 88, Franklin, Johnson County, 1 December 1880 — Page 1

%E80J ADVERTISING.

^wnseinents.^r

jPBKA DOUSK. '. ,%*%&+%. J-..: nv A Hr*"j g. HosFORp, *& •,,&

lay and Saturday^1

1 December 3rd and 4th. tad Matinea Satardsr &ft«rooos at 9 o'clock.

*t appearance leg Vocaliat I sod CoafaMdiaaae,

If

ilSS KATIE PUTNAM!

8«pport*d by her own Comedy Conn!*#*jtrMaj evening ind Saturday il»*nn»n will be ABATED I)K popular comedy-draraa, WRITTEN k»r*»»»Jy for Mlw Paraarn, entitled.

iiENA, THE MADCAP

"fW

w'f*

JiMt

yOWLTNQ BALL.^.

PROF. DAVID SWING-, MRS. A. S. McCALL. jpora Hons®, Course Ticket*, $1.50 *fft«*cmd aeata for the cour*e without extra pa rye.

girattdd

VARIETY

VICE

-0t

•"•, \.

Sffi advertisements less than SO 10s, 10 cents per line. P|spi&3r advertisements accord to epace and position. jg-wg

feMif

W&Wl

^Xlaa Katie Putnam.

jJ^lurdajr svanlJig wUJ 'his TfcttotnUtd for the I?i time, an entirely new an 9«7ia*J dram*. »r%t{cl e»j»«eially for Ml*# Put nan, entitled,

'Two Babes ln the Wood."

etnber the Matinee Sainrday 'afternoon, of Adml»*im, |S, SO and 7ft eto, nee prleea—Adn«ta. 60c children, S25c, r*el Mala on «al« at Bntton'f,'wHbont exir ip'v

$•

|riday Evening, Dec. 3d.

THE TERRE HAUTE

ORATORIO SOCIETY

,| Will give tho Oratorio of

lute Maccabeus!

,#i

organ and Piano Accompaniment* The J8opreino Soto# will be a«ng Mf'

iSS FA.NNIK KELLOGG

«al(in, who ha* acquired National reputation in uratorio. KIIDK, Condortor K. LIKBIltp, Plaalat,

W. ZOKBEl., Organist.

,v

immiG'S Cent# V^BKVKIJ SEATS ...... Hi .. Cent* lie of aeats begin* at Central Book Slow on

Ineaday, December Int. at# oxlock.

Ibrary Lecture Course

A. A.' 'vntiMrrdT*^0*' JOHN B. GOUGH, 4R3. MARY A. LIVEBKOBE, If

CONCERT

Every Evening at

I

jHA HUH JERSEY'S TIP-TOP SALOON,

|8ftnl «1? Mai® »tr*«t( b«t, eth and 7th »U.

wulsm

AND CRACKERS.

good bfa*L an4 «Uy batter, tracker*. mada freah e**r* day. tali *A tt»* northF«#t com«r of Fonrih and Kafl* «tr**ta.

Ityl THOS. CALLAHAN.

•nAf.

S3 75 4 50

5 00 5 50 6 00

7

I-

g4?J

AND

p$ fi

Mittens

IN ENDLESS VARIETY

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1 ,V-

AND-

tr

4

»S»

,i-i tf

BOTTOM PRICES

T"7i

:»fe

,r-a,-

,•*— AT 4

BCTJ3SrTEK/S'

IMOI'S gnmtehing House,

k"* ftslip

S23

111#

ilM^jnsr ©TjEODHrr.

,*'+ u- n.

,^ji#rra4l 'Ji

BOYS.

We can ftl you and we can

••?•. 'k-.

suit you., We have another S ,V lot of Nobby

0

$£$

fgJIgierjaud^

vjt

3BF

av/•°Frcoats'

~i'2-k

W

Knit Jackets

XJ

And Furnishing goods,,,

••v

will suit you, both in quality tf *1*' -t*

and ptice,

f^ tlte ..MILLER & COX, i*

'r 822 Main Street, north afcfc,

Ne.ir Sixth. VA?

READY-MADE, OK MADE

,T0 ORDER, fc*»i *%M .1^ sn^f •V$r*

V'

t- r. *v%

?, Pi~k'

,s,#

v*

1

':m*' •.Mr*

OVERCOATS

ULSTERETTES

AND ULSTE113.

«12 00 13 00 14 00 15 00 17 18 20 25 82

-v.

8

BREAD

9

10

OWEN, PIXLEY & CO.,

906 and 910 Main street.

STILL AHEAD!

is •"«. m» t«*si

Ladies contemplating purchasing a Sewing Machine will please bear In mind that fe4-%aE* mM ai^?

Tit Old Etliii lovs

is still ahead of all competitors on improvements, They have something new on machines, just oat

Call at their office, -MoKeen's new block, and examine, where they are fbr sale on the most liberal terms.' "*£,

tlNtfe ~?58y!5CT*

VOlT.' 2.—KO. 88.' TEKBB HAUTE, END.-. WEDNESDAVJ PEC. 1, 1880

LATEST BY TELEGRAPH.

SS OF THESIHCOE.

ARRIVAL OF FIVE SURVIVORS AT OWEN SO THEIR STORY

)UNDiY

-l

The Simcoe Swamped in the Storm on the 24th, Near Hanitonlin Island— -j-,* Twelve Persons Lost

Qwsk Sound November 80.—The steamer Manitoulin arrived to-nij^it from Manitoulin Island, bringing J. E. Persons first mate John Nesbit, first engineer Robert McEnerney, wheelsman Mat Nobl68, fireman and P. Cratt, deckhand, of the steamer Simcoe, which foundered the 24th inst. The Simcoe left, Chicago ahels p( euccd continued and Jevere gales on Lake

the 18th, with a cargo of 19.000 bushels of corn and general freight, Stye experiandjevere gales on ipanied with heavy weathered. Early the morning 6f ^e 34th, whilst off JProv

Jiichigan, Accompanied with heavy snow storms, which she *weathered. Earl in

idenc& bay, on the south iyde of Manitou lin Island, the sea was so heavy that it broke through the engine" room, putting out the fires. The ship became complete

npo her upper work& were forced away, carry ing the life-boats with it. The five persons named succeeded in releasing one of the ba0 from tjlie "^freek and got into it. They !Uicn tried to rescue the others who were clinging to the upper works, but were unable to reach them. When the hjjll went down the remainder of the crew were standing forward by the bow and m«$fo no apparent effort to save themselves.' Aiter witnessing the wreck, the life boat, containing the five persons, n|ade for Providence baV, a distance of twenty miles, from which place they went by team to Manitoulin, where they took the steamer Manitoulin for this port. The followihg are the names of those lost: Riohara Hill, captain, Robert McNabb, second mate Ben. Millwood, wheelsman: John Henry, fireman Tom CKHare, Tom LeviiJDonald Carr and McDbug^i, deck-hands Julia Gibbon, lady's maiQ Lydia Williams, cook Geo. Pel ton, porter, and one deck hand, name unknown.' 1'

GREAT BRITAIN*

DUBLIN, November 80.—The removal of the police hut to the place of its' erection at New Pallas has been safely accomplished. the peasantry being overawed by the overwhelming force of soldiers who pitched six tents, in which twenty five police will camp to protect the men engaged in the erection of the hot.*

A large force of police, accompanied byinfantry and artillery, proceeded to New Pallas, this morning, to quiet the disturb ance there.

The Gasetu contains the offer of £1.000 reward for the discovery of the murderers of Wheeler, at Oola.

CORK, November 30.—A barbarous outhas been committed near Trece on a bailiff who was in charge of a house from which tenants had been evicted. A party of armed men broke into the house ana slit the bailiffs ears. The bailiff fainted from loss of blood.

The police hut has boen erected at New Pallas without disturbance. LONDON, December 1.—A dispatch from Portsmouth reports that five hundred marines are to go to Ireland.

A dispatch from Tipperary reports that the artillery attachment which went to New Pallas, left their guns behind at Limerick. All troops will withdraw from New Pallas after the police of the gar rison has been trebled.

A land meeting held, at Bailey Castle, County Antrim, yesterday, was a failure, only two hundred persons being present, and the speaker^ were hissed.

DUBLTN, December 1.—A circular has been issued from the office of the chief secretary for Ireland, to sessional crown solicitors, directing them not to absent themselves more than twenty-four hours at a time from their respective counties without special leave, and to report to ,11 communications of all the poPorster al lice in reference to outrages.

At a meeting of the Land League today it was staled that several Orangemen were members of the league, and that branches of the league had been established in every county in Ulster. -,-tWr

I STATE 5EWS.

,LCFms

Bi.trrrfox November 80.—Koah A., a sixteen ysar-old son of Noah Stimmell, residing near Craigville, la this (Wells) County, while out with his father, Sunday evening, hunting game, was shot in the abdomen by the accidents! discharge of his gun. His wounds are consuferad f^ttaL

SOOTH BUM.

^rauunTifoTembesr 80.—Sooth Bend now wanting the Cincinnati, Wabash it Michigan railroad. It will company considerable aid to go via place.. The terminal would be Benton Harbor. Some steps will be taken within a few days Which will jmbat»|jr decide the matter.

WATKMOO.

^Watoooo, Nov. SO —The Auburn High School building, together with it* tomatast* was ewsasedbf in this evening. Thiiti odgitmled fmn a defective fonaee The bttlkfiaf wm t* ^towlfwar yeai* ago and coat #14»OOQ» Tim* was $7,090 iosaranc* on the ImlldN a a A

pttWk sdio^s ©f Shis dtr dd*ed UMlay ^jecwiBt afprmlenoe rf *att|jft Is**, ft mm Us adpmsiw Sastlrixii

baSldingwte

basement of tbe building of a residence. A large number of «ases are reported in tbe city.

Henry Lite*, a pioneer of this county, died suddenly last night at his residence, two miles south of this city, of paralysis. He was seventy-ifcipe years of age.

Mike Baidley, all Irish lad, living near the Junction, accjdeatly shot himself through the hand while playing will* a revolver yesterday. '*t.

4d:

180M.

MADISOK,IWD., Ifovember 80.—A passenger on the steadier Louis A. Sherley, named JohnT. M^Makin, was robbed last two men xuuned John Henry and jho were occupants of jrhich McMakin was as [cMakin discovered his

Justin Stewart, the state-room to signed. When 1 loss he informed ve notice to th« ounty when thefboat landed at Vevay, and that official and Stewart, in their possess! jail at vevay. in the state-room

I

Captain Hildreth, who sheriff of Switzerland

once arrested Henry ound the stolen money They \qpre placed in ey effected the theft by cutting the pocket

out of McMakin's pantaloons, but fortunately he awoke |n time to discover his loss and have the guilty parties placed in custody. 4

s-

t. v..Tt—r-r-rxa:

PEOPLE AND EVENTS.

*TTlie Prussian authorities have prohibited betting at races. The Brooklyn Union suggests that H. L. Morey is thankful because he never was born. ^, r«

They seem to be able to make In Chicago as handsome books as are made any where else.—Neto York Sun.

General Hancock's vote in Indiana, is officially declared, teads backward and forward the same.—225,522.

Archibald Forbes is pleased with American humor, and is laying up a stock of good and funny stories to tell when he goes home.

In arranging terms with Sitting Bull, the Hatckeye advises the government to remember the old Russian proverb: "Make friends with a bear, but keep hold of the ax."

Thaddeus Stevens estate Is now nearly settled, and it is believed that th£re y?ill be enough to pay the bequest of $50,000 for the founding of an asylum for orphan children.

Cincinnati reports a case of spontaneous combustion in the sawdust in an ice house. Whether the ice was reduced to ashes, as was once asserted by an Bastern paper, is not related.

During September, October, and three weeks of November there were over 1,000 cases of diphtheria in New York City, with the large proportion of 481 deaths. In he re re 1 5 0 a

The Bessema steel works, the Albany and Rennsselaer spike mill, and Burdens water mill at Troy* N. Y„ shut down Friday on account of low water, One thousand men are thrown oat of employment.

The Western minister who preached on "Spiritual Corns and Bunions" has fonnd his match in the Brooklyn Baptist broth er, who was posted in last Sunday^ pa pen for a sermon on "Something worse than Diphtheria. *4.

The American Register, published in Paris, says a young American lady, who Is to make her debut on the stage as soon as Worth gets her dresses done, recently recited "Mary bad a Little Lamb," before the American Colony in Paris, so pathetically as to drown the drawing-room in tears. In fact,: they had to take up the carpets the next day and send them to the steam drying machines

Wfejr Are Ts« II Mai at

Becasse you have allowed your bowels to become costive, and liver torpid. Uae Kidney-Wort to produce a free state of ike bowels, aai /t will stimulate the liver to proper action, cleanse the skin of lis yellowness, cure billons headache, and cause new life in the blood. Druggist have It, both tixj and liquki—^w»'# 4Z*raidm

Mm.

T. D. Oils has Just received ma-

other Invoice of .new goods. These are goods that were ordered from the eastern manufacturers to he made sad delivered hereon the 95 of Nov. But owing to€he she has tose* »nustS yesterday mm ihS ISlSil SOVd*" fashion and wlQ be sold at redoced 87ts

great rash in able to get her

NEWS.

i"

'it-"

RICHMOND.

iHstil

RICHMOKD, November 29.—Hon. B. C. Hobbs, ex-presidfcnt of Earlham College, has gone to .northern Georgia and eastern Tennessee on a amission to the Cherokee Indians. In 1880 the government grau ted the Western Cherokee reservations in the Indian Territory and those east of the Allegheny mountains lands in Geor gia and Tennes^se.

The latter w$re granted an educational fund of $40,WO, which has never been paid, and it is for the purpose of securing it and the accrued interest for the purpose of establishing schools among them that Mr. Hobbs .has gone South. After a conference with the chiefs he will visit Washington and claim the appropriation in their name. I

A Good Beginning.

Governor Grey issued his first pardon yesterday, and pie recipient way a petty larcenist from Ins own county (Randolph) named George Clark, who had been sentenced to one year's imprisonment for stealing a pistol valued at $6. The case had been brought to the notice of the late Governor, whp had determined to pardon the man at the expiration of six months and Governor Grey having some kirowl edge of the merits of the case, acted upon the recommendation Hf the Circuit Judge and granted dark his pardon.—Indianapolis Journal. -J—

Indianapolis News/ Jacob Bush wants $3,000 from^ajL. & St. L.. Railroad Com pany for tieirig run over by a passenger train at the National road crossing,, while coming into the city with a load of oats, on Sept. 4, 1880. The complainant admits that he heard the engine whistle when 500 feet away from tbe train, but charges that the whistle was not sounded continuously for a quarter of a mile on approaching the crossing, as the "whistle nuisance" called a law requires shall be done.

PRICE 5 CENTS

One reason Chicago is not healthy is boaanae the couutry around it is always III. Why are pianos the noblest of manufactured articles? Because they are upright, grand and square.

What is smaller than a mite's month? A man who reads a paper ix months and then reAises to pay for it.

A college of music where lessons on the aoronet are given should be called an "ittititoot. 1Ji«£

The man who stepped on an hour glass thought for a minute that he was making foot-prints on the sands of time. "Don't lie afraid,'* said a snob to a German laborer "sit down and make yourself my equal." I voUld haff to blow my prains and," was the reply of the Teuton.

We are told that "Gen. Sherman was always coolest when on the point of attack." Most people are hottest when on the point a tack.

He asked a Cincinnati lelle if there was much culture in that city, and she replied, 'You just bet your boots we're a cultured crowd-"

George Washington never told a lie, but then Martha never skirmished in his pockets and insisted on knowing all about letters written in a feminine hand.

A lady being asked how ojd She was, replied: "I was married at iS, my husIjand was then 30 Now he is twice as old —that makes me twice 18. 1 tn 36." ^,-i» $

HORSESHOES.—The duto at which horses WBre first shod with metal has never been satisfactorily determined. It has been contended that passages in Homer prove that the art of shoeing horses was in practical use in his days but the phrases supposed to indicate this are metaphorical. Fleming, a scholarly English veterinary surgeon, has made it clear that the daring experiment of driving a nail into the foot of a horse was not, ventured upon iu classic times. Different coverings were in use from a remote period, both in Greece and Italy, to protect the hoof. These were not generally adopted. They were awkward and cluuisy in construction and they were only used from sheer necessity, upon hard and stony ground, or in cases of footsoreness.

When it is said that Poppro or Commodus shod their horses with gold, this must mean that some sort of sock or sandal was drawn over and fastened to tbehoof, plated, perbttps, with metal on the role. At Pompeii. liouian stables have been excavated, and in them have been discovered bones of horses, and the very ring-bolts to which they were tied, but no trace of an iron shoe. There is nothing in ancient literature or relics to prove that iron plates were attached to the hoofe of horses iu Greece or Italy before the fall of the Western Empire. The first mention of "iron shoes and their nails" Occurs in tbe''Tad ta" of the Kmperor Leo VI., whei'e they are set down as among the articles requisite in the equipment of a cavalry soldier. Horseshoes were doubtless in use before that time (A. D. 900) but this is the first known mention made of tbem. From the remains discovered in tumult, it has 'been established that the Celt ic nations used metal horseshoes festciK'd with unils at a much earlier date but the date is ouly conjectual.

TI/K Morris.—'The Moquis Indians of Arizona, numbering seventeen hundred, live in seven villages on the tops of three cliffs or headlands that rise more than six hnndred feet above the plains. Why they chose these unhandy places is a mystery. On reaching the villages, says a recent visitor, one finds one's self on a flat ledge of bare rock, which extends out from the main table nearly half a mile in length and from ten to perhaps three hundred feet in width. The sides are almost perpendicular. The most populous of these villages, Wal-la-pi, is on the extreme end of the rock, where the width is not over a hundred feet. The water for all purposes is carried on the backs of men and women from a spring near the foot of the mountain, a distance of nearly a mile, while the wood is brought eight miles. Here these people have lived longer than they can tell, even from their traditions mid hetherto they have been averse to a change of location, notwithstanding the difficulty of obtaining their necessary supplies and the distance from their fields and herbs. „i,i ,jaa-!.."„

11

Nature's situ Ice-Way.

Tbe kidneys are nature's sluice way to wash out the debris of our constantly changing bodies. If they do not work wroperly the trouble is felt everywhere. Then be wise and ss soon ss yen see signs of disorder get a package of KidneyWort and take it faithfully. It wlll clean the sluice-way of sand, gravel or slime and purify the whole system. Pruggist* sell It both liquid and dry.

ly efficient either vtmy.—Independent.

If rm are troubled with fever and ague, dumb ague, billbus fever, jacdioe, despepsin, or any diseases of the liver, blood or etosMCh, sSd wish to «t wen, try the new remedy. Prof, Gutonette's French Liver Pad. Ask your druggists tor it, and 1.1^. «TI^N IF KA kaa «SAI SW»T ST IMA

take noalkor, and if he haa notgotit $1.50 in a letter to the Frence Fad Toledo, O., aad receive one by

miL

Co.,

If yon area mSenrfrom soy disease of tbe Wdaeys tiy Prof. OnOinette's fwnch Kidney Pad, and ttkeno other, It win care yon,

Recommended ^"t^ bluest medical authoritv for Paralysis. Hheumatira, at Shhi JDhfimi

Catarrh, Gleet, ^hpidfU, Dyspepsia and aH Female jant new b^ house. Com­

petent attendanta. Cheapest sad best baths in the world, Bath house at ths loot of Wilmt street.

Tens Hsnte, Ind.

fjFVKJMiato KVSBY ITKNINS (mm tvmr,). Ctrnmr Fifth and Main Jtawff

MMORY P. BEAUCHAMF.

The Nawa it •errad by tfc* earrtara to anbsoairain the City of Tarra Haata at TKN CElfM WEEK, payabla waakJy, aad to antweribara If mall at lte a waak ar 4&c a month. *,

COMBS & KOGERS Artprtpar t* JUl ordUrt toiih prompitmt and dispatch tor aU gradM of

UU AND SOf! COAl AKD COB:'

In any quantity, largo or tmalL Send your order*, in poroon, by ttfophone, or on horMbacki and they mil receive prompt attention, late and early. No poetponamomt on account of the watAer. ^'hU'W7

COAL OFFICE.

N. S. Wheat is prepared to furnish aH grades of coal ana wood—both soft and hard coal, as cheap as the cheapest. To accommodate his friends and tho trade generally he has a telephone placed in his office, so that orders can be received or sent from any part of tho city, and receive the same attention as if left at the offloe. Thanking the public for past patronage, he guarantees to be as prompt in supplying them with the best of coal in the future.,..

OFFICE, MAITV STRKET, Opposite Terre Haute House.

COAL-COAL!

^A.. isATOi^r, 1 Cor. Ninth and Main at*., dealer in

Office cor. Second and Ohio streets. 77mO

A W I I

I*

ALL KINDS OF

HAS REMQYJJU -xS'Sf. 654 MAIN STREET,|

(McKeen'i New Block)'

Wlicre he sells

CHEAP,

"m6

11

nrf*

BKARI.—Luther

Siir ASrnSiiAViNo TMK

was one day leing shaved and having his hair cut in the presence of Dr. Jonas. He said to the latter, "Original sin is in us like the beard. We are shaved to-day and look clean, and have a smooth chin to-morrow OUT heard has grown again, nor does it cease growing while we remain on earth. In like manner original sin cannot be extirpated from us. It springs op in us ss long as we exist. Nevertheless we are bound to resist it to the utmost of our strength, and to cut it down unceasingly." ii, I iiiiii f/gaT— sir

OHAS- DEt-A.XJ,

Corner Third and Moffatt Sts., DEALER IN

ALL KOD8 OF

FAMILY GROCERIES.

SPECIAL^ ANNOUNCEMENT

1

ffarinf jati rettfroed from the festers mufcsts, when I have parchaaed ona of the moat earn

FALL and WINTER

is

and

it is equal

CLOTHING

everplacad am ttts ikdrw of a Tarra Saate dotttK. I not tespicttaUy tartte tha altacttaa «fths tafias paMUeta a

at mj lata pwcham, as my km vriem ars

HO FEATUBX.

thap«JAicfaiaTW7fartJ«lar.,

PHILIP SOHLOSS,

3

"i a

Soft and Hard Coal,

AND COKE.

All order* left at office promptly attended to, and delivered to any part or the city. 87m5

ANDERSON & CHIK

—SELLS— i|

BRAZIL

Block aid Nut Coal 1

AT BOTTOM PRICES.

-1

i"! '4^

Notions, Toys and Hosiery'!

THE PUBLIC.

&""r. ... -i 1 4

420 KmSm itnit