Daily News, Volume 2, Number 120, Franklin, Johnson County, 8 January 1881 — Page 3
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SUBSCRIBE
-FOR THE
Daily News
msr
nm*
X'EIEi -W2SE3K:.
THE LARGEST AND
E S A E
FOB. THE MONEY
P5SLIS1ED11 TIE SMI.
The
Terr* H*at« New* Is pablinhod
Advert l#cmrnt*. ten tent* a liiw, *»cb inaertlon. Dlfplay adverVlwaicnU rary fa price ac carding to time and
So Adverti««meDl« tnterted editorial or aewa matter. AH comwnnteatJoBi aboatd b« addre«»ml to
il DAILY Nl
•&l«ra tuc ttn
fintck
iJuat
Mont arxif .»*. !a|'*y. Tit/ "»Haw*
Tit®
Wmtt
:4
|itre«t fONill W)«f ami. to I 3t ftd rltj IM 9 l»Qt |lmt 141
Sara]j
ti#n
#tf«i, «n 4U»| w. I IT* be now
x:
1
THK
Sat unity Night
V*
every
p+r
af
UroooB, except Knadtj, at UM otttt, corn*r of Plflb tad Mala street*. Pric# -fire cent#
copy. Ser*ed by caiWiri
ta any pari of tbe city, tan cents per week. By OMfl, postage prepaid, forty.five reals month sabseriptioa by the year. fft.OO.
E1IOKY P. BKACaiAMP, Froprlfitor,
SATUHDAY. JANUAUY 8. 1S81. aa-x-.MUi.., .jwu^I •-—isn M. Strlft & Co., of Jollet and Ottawa, til*., have failed.
Saturday Night
has a "star" in its
head., The WUMS men hate got around to the Went.
Thk TENNESSEE Senate has unlocked the "dead-lock."by electing A. Mor Kan, speaker.
Tim trial of the Traversers Is attracting very little attention, as most of the cused arc absent from Dublin
HAYKS is still moving on the Army, snd has retired Surgeon General Barnes and Judge Advocate General Dunn. ft..!.. 1 '.'.'J
TUB
wedding of Mr. Rockwell King and
Miss Lucy Andrews, at Grace Episcopal church, at Indianapolis, was an elegant affair. •"U- 'i'
is ''diauy.' with
future success she has risen to orer one thmmnd "regulars" and Is still on the "boom." .u.1. 'i
THK Brown murder trial in Indianapolis came to an «nd Thursday. Mrs, Brown was sentenced to the Female Rrforma lory for life.
Two Troy officials had a pugilistic encounter yesterday to the evident amuseroeut of Ute Mayor and other city officers, who stood by and enjoyed the scene,
CAFT. BADS, has obtained a charier from the Mexican Government to build a ship railway across the Isthmus of Tehuantepee, with a land grant of 1,000, 000 acres.
FHOM
1
r% I.
the preparation# on foot, the to*
dlcatioo* arc that the Military display at Gen, Oar field's inauguration will be the grandest since the review of Sherman *s Army In Washington. 'M "y'U
1!"11
1
•'.I'l'
SousnoDY ssid that J. O. Hardesty of Ute fWnVr. has been spending the week in working up Orth*schance* for Senator. Its the wrong pull young man. Vigo county, Js for Harrison
THK Southern Soul is not entirely lost to "sentiment^ as appears by the follow ing from the New Orleans which ANY#/1t i* an CTCH fight at (wesent. Claibomc and t^aleasieu Parlfr hea votwl on lhe question of omhibition. last week, the voting t^ingby wards. In Out rti*t p4riih, four wanls vote*! lo favor of preUihitittg the «ile of liquor, anil four against it while in one ward it was a tie, and will have to be voted on again* Whiskey was more sactestful in Caica- .• 'siett. carrying fix out of eight ward*" of those, J.ou»sJaai«i» have been tvkj. of our temperance workers at the oWi elttft'k on the corner of (Wito and fifth stmt*, and sre mskfng an effort jo-'Hcviic. '. -..ut
rm LA
•:~V:
talk has oeea heatti aboot what fc
a legal nolkii he »«l*ieTt*wtnent or wbetlt la^ 8bwi£T, 9tie 'to a
ikmM# mm*
p^per Is t&c w»«t|. TW fdBowtan is UMltPK AS «be «t a»-.i |AW«6Vr.i» HAUCH
Wf,
t-
ummm
pnurn
matter* «t»al!fc* papsarof thewwoiy
mm}
»t«4ia
A UEIHJCKTRR foe AN afternoon paper In this caly yesterday admimjleml a Severe caMigation to the County Clerk,*s chief depity. The latter made Insulting remarks concerning the profession.— (Ji'n'cago Inter-Otean,
Well, just think of a newspaper re porter having "sand" enough to resent a "reflection." It does seem as if the world is capable of producing a few more wonders.
SFN*. JOHN RUSSKU, YOUNG IS dead.and was buried at the residence of her brother, in Washington. last Thursday.
Social Amusements in New Mexico.
The Mexicans are notoriously fond of dancing, and will neglect almost anything to attend a
baile
American dances have beeu introduced but the amuaement, .instead of being indulged in In a wild and unrestrained manner, is conducted with great de corura. The ladies all uit on one .side of the ball-room and the gentlemen on the other, and when the music begins the young men walk out in to the middle of the floor and beckon with their finders to tho young ladies whom they desire for partners. At the close of the dance the ladies return to their side of the room and the gentlemen to their own. The waitz of modern society and other fashionable dances in the East would be considered immodest in Santa Fe
baile
ated. The public
Drill king-saloons of every degree are very abundant In Santa Ke. I admired the truthfulness of one sign which is over the door of a low grog-ahou kept in a forbidding-looking old adobe miild* ing nearly opposite the fandango. An old-fashionea perforated tin lantern hangs upon a rude bracket and in the night throws a dim and fitful light upon a strip of white muslin on which is inscribed in large letters: "NOSB PAINT.'* —Santa Fe, Cor. N. J' Tritons.
Cengremsmaa Daggett** Boomerang. When Congressman Dnggett first went to Washington, two years ago, he was charged sixteun dollars and fifty cents for extra baggage at Omaha. This angered tho Congressman so that he vowed to make life a burden for every otlldal ou the Union Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads. When he got to Washington he. began to shif tons and tons of
which the I'nion Pacific and Central Pacific Railroads are obliged to carry free of charge, according to a stipulation with Uncle Sam. made when ho granted them much of his hroad public domain. Daggett shipped boxes of the«e doonmetifs over the road, addressed to hims«lt and accompanied by his Vig frank and the words Conirrcsslonal doeumenta. itm." During the first session he sent seventeen tons of this olaas of matter over the nmd. and as mm as he ched home b« sent It baok asrain. Du^-ett's big hox«*
l*nh.
rt.
a a
,'k"
A WASUWOTOK dla]ji*teh says:, "Personai friends of Prcsidtiii Hayea #y thai be will GO out of office with a SCUM? of relief at the release from hi# position. It is said be will go t© Fremont, and attend to his private business. He hud a competency before he came Into office, and tea* saved something from the presidential salary, till friends ejfpress the belief thai he will soon tireof thoquile village life, and want to go back to public employment. The}* have ewn gone far in lib behalf as to mention him tor the senatorship, ^wed' Pendletott. tf Is not known how far the president sympathise** with these suggestions."
or ball. Manv
and would not be toler
baik
is simply the hurdy-
gurdy of the mining camp or the low dance-house of the Eastern cities. I visited one the other evening and found there nothing to amuse and much to disgust It was simply a low, dingy brer-garden in a little grove lighted with Chinese lanterns. A few tables were scattered about, and there was a raised and covered platform for dancing. Tho music was execrable, and the
womeiu half of whom, were Americans, wero. filthily and shabbily dressed, ana had lost by dissipation every mark of redntiuent or evun of decency which makes tho.sex attractive. The patrons seemed to be cow-boys and mule-skin-ners of the lowest clans, and there was nothing peculiar about the dancing except the brazen familiarity of some of the half drunken women with their
fed
jirtners. After each dance the men their partners up to the bar and treated them, and the floor-manager passed around a tobacco-box from which each woman took a pinch of tobaeco and a piece of brown paper from which she made a cigarette for herself. The fandango has nothing about it but its name which is not disgusting to any decent person. It lacks even the paint and tinsel with which an attempt Is made in city dance-houses to cover up its hideousness.
ft„
bsa^rrv
*5" "V,.\
Periodic or Malarial Fever#.
During the past year no disease ha» attracted so genera! attention as that described under the popular name of
Malaria." It hail 'almost become tho common epithet by which the laity "Heal ated a strange motley of &H« meuts. Even the doctprjr have bowod to the acceptance of the nami/aad alio# it to psww ft Mrrn far more general than its original intent. It was meant closely to describe a class of fevers which wero believed t/ be dependent on vegttable decoatpo-iiuqn in marshy plai'ca, the activity of which depeuds much upoa climatic |nd seasonal conditions. it is far safer to speak of fevers as intermittent or remittent, or, if neuralgia oocup* to call it intermittent nluralgia. if iajsuch, rather than loosely group all ailments finder the term ihalarial. We have seen thus diagnosticated dyspepsia, overwork, disease of the gall-bladder, and consumption. Yet, admitting all this, we must also say that fevers of a periodic type, such a* are believed to be due to. vegetable decompositions, have beeu very prevalent in most of the Middle States the last year. The Connecticut Valley has sutlerod much: Providence, R. I., admits the stranger as a resident and the Massachusetts Board of Health has instituted an inquiry into the causes in that State. It is not now difficult to make a pretty thorough study of localities, with a view of determining causes. Our knowledge of geology, of waterlevels and water-shed, of contour of surfaces, of the phenomena of forced vegetable or animal deconijtosition, of the cffects of moderate moisture and excessive heat has increased of late yoars, so that w. can pursue the study with some good starting points. Thon the observations and records of physicians have become more accurate,
so that the uniform experience of practitioners is worth far more as evidence than it once was. We have had occasion the last year to examine reports, an^ to visit various localities where the disease has manifested itself and to practice in its midst, so as to have various types under observation. Not only have there been the usual periodic forms, but neuralgia and convulsions during the chill or febrile attack have not been rare. This denotes an intensity or a quantity of poison more than usual, and leads to a closer.scrutinv into causes. Testimony more and more confirms the relation of interrupted water-courses, of imperfect drainage, and of abnormal vegetable decay to the morbid material or contagion. We say abnormal decay because it is beautiful to see bow Nature, left to itself, admirably conducts these processes so as to be harmless and to give vigor to tho successive food-crops and grasses. But one can scarccly go into a rural district, where many people dwell, without seeing how ruthless has been the invasion. Embankments thrown up, excavations made, little rivulets overlooked or thrust aside, and a general disregard of the whole question of drainage is the rule in almost every construction or alteration made. Not only is there no oxtraattempt to dry the soil, because of the interferences which construction makes and the greater dampness secured but even natural brooks are not guarded. Vegetation falls into neglect, and, without cultivation to take up' decaying material. and with such overflow or alternation of dry and wet as kills out nature's attempt at compensation, mankind deliberately appropriate the debris to their own shaking, and quaking, and burning, and sweating, aud then wonder where chills come from. One great tendency of population is to get between the hills and tide-water. This generally means that we will intercept water-courses (both in tho ground and visible) just where they are most dangerous to be intercepted near their outflow. In tho haste to build, land onoe farmed goes to waste, and there is often but little compensating vegetation, These marsh-gases are sometimes as {erceptible to the nose as is the
ignis ftttuw
Roeorrte,
qua mm.
of
Doos'% »ion be««ne nobmoos,
and the face and figure of the Congressman also preitv well known. Where vcf h« «fcopf*d he was tare to ask mm* of tht fr. ght agents If thpy had seen any of "my free freight lately.M He always ronde trina«)l knows and wat mertt to add,
most
handle those boxes gently they contain the s2*s«chea of some of the great* m, mm of the Natii«. If
ttm
dimage
any of them Til sua the road fortha full valued On etedttoa day rlws bovs go4 their .w*cnsr% a»d «v«ty htr» "f theta %x»Ur« *^d worfbesl a^rainf
Those l* ran oft ^ie.0ta:h
Divi -n ia located their voting piaces in Kev -a in time to ff*t th- work ha o« ffnv aatf tlwkt:c .i...j. .•• from se to
tm.
Wbm was known that be $ c«T Mil lr 8' U'f- iiSm of .yatlM tmd mm t! Wi--ra.. Cw*m,
de-
*i
ft
de-
**4
mm&t
?i ©f
pi".--p"n ..o
¥hxr.
•fW#1.
-,J
«#i' ". A? 'iff
fets wiw «smite*- h«5ttdaJtee l*w ttecnt*. t£x, Mm mltv gNMlcajfe. and its we*»i*rf«S fomfc a»d jxww c»ft fftft »«l atw life '4,^
1^5^
to the eye. They
are not generally stenchy to the degree of the decompositions of animal matter but their heavy, murky feel is well known to many exposed to them. The effects are still better known. We have seen piaoes the past year, where we would nave been perfectly willing to give insurance, that out of any ten nrsons we could locate, for three or ur night) at certain .spots at least tWothirds would have chill and fever, remittent fever, or some other periodic manifestation. While there are wavsidc theories or incidental modifications of view, we know of no point in which physicians who study and who have practiced auiid those diseases are so weil agreed as I bat docomposing vegetable matter is the
manifestation each year is more explio* able as we study more elosoly climatic co&dUiou* and the relations of air, humidity, temperature. a*one and eTectrio conditions to ferments, to draughts, ajid to the various phenomena we well associate under the name of the weather. Hie studv of seasons and temperatures, for the Middle States especially, hare never been more interesting or more marked than those of the years 187S-79 and 187$ 80.
The remarks ble July of 1876, with an exceptional xannct. the «$mn winter of IS79, tht* early he^t as dt-otigH of April and May. «id Irr^ *. writ of ke&tftftd rats humidity which have db rwt'-'nried tli" v.r-nmir.Kvild IkSTft ••V« to OS it»«A|friica«4e In »nflue« oa vegetatioit and hea had U«er« not be^aa a vmf malarial jn:in fe«lft*iin s* #hM» i'S.- tft fwpfysliottk«-» riuz in r«for slfto. Our chn-f ho-.*- for tlrtr ftenm- h» a« th^fe hmmm will wet be tost bat a* drains*^ hftalth will b««a in--I iatsial ent'-.-jwiw, ami b« rw^arded as mt a aaaauer f«r iagwlaiion as »»«r ••uh'iftCRMHMMW. Tb« parties «®eowd
SlUle loss this' ymr for ntetform but w« do know of loefttttles wh«re a health pbmk wtxtM be p^Mi^rri as
U*mf fm ammmblj
m*. mi
mmut I^r whk'. WrnliipMik
caadidas*.—
1^is4 'Sr ?J I'ii i^| ^T flaMi$«% daad^knu,
tm
ollt«r wfteds Oft ill* lawn, drop carvfuily a sitiglt a®iphaii« aoid, (o8 af vmb taso the eantftff of th« phu»t. One d!^» irffl do the WlUlMl
The Bod and the Lad.
Many parents make sorry and troublesome mistakes in* the way they treat thir boys and girls. Thev are not necessarily as cross and severe as tht Rivoi'head man. and vet they manage to inflict on the young onus of their families a great deal of needless worry. Thfty regard the ..childreu as inferiors, which in some respects they are. They are infer'ors as to age, but Of that they will in duo time mend. Socially they are inferiors, for the frents crowd them down like puppies. As to muscular strength they are also the inferiors of the old folks and are sorry for it. too. Tney long for the time to come when they can Knock their persecutors flat in the dust as some slight compensation for indignities committed. Instead of feeling penitent when punished they are stimulated to deeds of greater iniquity. The groat aim of their lives is to study methods by which they may frustrate the purposes of their unlovely parents and to Execute vengeance upon them. Asa matter of mere economy, the parents who work their offspring into this frame of mind sadly miss it. As to the helpful service these children might render it is not a tithe of what it might be if the children gave it cheerfully.
The need for the use of the rod is sadly and mischievously overestimated. There are some children who have no more need of it than of coats of tar and feathers. There are others who need it but seldom. The boys and girls who need It frequently aro rare exceptions. In many instances they seem to need it because injudicious parents have hardenod them by its use. Many a man who owns a "horse will needlessly aud rudely pull and jerk the bit in the moutn of thu suffering animal under the mistaken impression tnat he is improving the creature's manners, or his mode of traveling. In this he is wrong. He is hardening the delicate and sensitive tissue of the horse's mouth. He is Irritating the beast and doing him no good whatsoever. A child's moral and physical make-up is infinitely more del* icatc than that ot a horse. It is easv to irritate and worry and frighten a child almost to death. Most children, even if thev come of brutal parents, aro worthy of better treatment than this. A boy is none the less manly when grown tip because kindly treated and with decent consideration when small enough to thrash. The parent who will cruefy thrash a twelve orthirteen-year-old boy is a coward, who dare not lay hands on the same boy when grown to eighteen, lest he should himself receive the thrashing he intended for the wayward youth. The
lfcw of lore is way, and it will
thing in its
*in?
The fact that there is not a
a capital bear ex
perimenting with in thousands of oases in which itlu as not deJphia Time*.
been tried.—I'hiUi-
Two Hearts That Beat as Oae,
The other daV ft ymmg: roan went into the You rig Men's Library to look at London Punch. On approaching the table where the newspapers lay, he noticed that
Pumh
was already in the
hrnds of aa Englishman. He SA* Uown to wait for the British humorous periodica!, and beguiled the with an likidritM London S* Every now aud then be cast ft glance across the tabic at the Englishman, who •bowed BO signs of getting through with
Pvtwh. The
glance became ft
scowl, and the foreigner replied with frown as the young party turned over leaf after leaf of the hwtimteA. Men came in, read newspapers, and went ootv bnt the percm still waited for the comic joorcul oa be scanned the |»ees of the serkun one Tl«y scowled across the tftble al each ^ber riiently. Atlast*H young roan made np hi* mind be wwik? get the alieet •ftftoftftrbr »®p«Kiig or«r to Loodoo for and in d%c^ he Hang down the and reached for his h:\i At ~rws moment the E^gfbbmaft Shrew on the table aad rews^'-l for toe WvMmxkd, mtrnering, **ffi rcad hail the adrertiaernenu' nm **$£$\ dtttti} «r wr«wr people b*** a )ff cnimixmt srllfc U»ir»Mi' of and la thN tlsey aire a WIPO^- 'twm mi mm' t^edkss fufly wortii all that is lilted tm them and me at leant vekaow
eMio^eoiiNe Use Bittew in fust xftcii a clliftate ns vrc have of flje year la Bftjr City, and has slwari
tmad .mem-
tot class ti*wl tyllaMe. dicing all that lifted lor ihmLTrtritvm
-w:
'i
There may have been discipline enough in the family of a certain citizen, of Hivorhead, l*ong Island* for there was imminent danger threatening that citizen's son. This lad Had incurred his father's displeasure, and the stern parent was about to correct him with th« r°d, whiah was suppose to bo good for him and to have a tendency to make him a better boy. So many attempts had been made at improving the Morals and manners of thia iad tliat he sfemei to be getting continuomty worse wid worse. He feared his father and halod him, which, under the circumdoes not meat strange, Hav-1 ing endurod thrasliiug alter thrashing and finding no salutary result from them, the poor boy naturally wanted to Ilea awa^fnd be where thrasliln^s are no morel^fSo when tlie last" thrashing was announced, and he was bidden to prepare himself for it, he did so by swallowing a dose of corrosive sublimate, just as if he had been a oockroach or a bedbug. The poison nearly carried him beyond the reach of the parental rod, but not quite. The child surviveo in agony, with the prospect of speedy death. Perhaps a man has a right thus to terrify a thirteen-vear-old son to the brink of suicide, but'it must make him fee! badly if, owing to the exercise of that right, the poor child is driven to a sorrowiul death. To exercise such a right Is brutal. A father can always get along better with his boy by treating him as a friend and companion than by keeping nim down as a slave or lording it over him as if he were a conquered enemy. A rebellious boy m*ny seem to be subjugated by fear, lie yields a sullen obedience, which is totally lacking in respect and which has not a sparte of affection in it. This may pass for compliance with parental deniauds, but it is a wretched substitute for that cheerful and loving regard which child should shosv toward parent
to:
ai^Kf,ftaii..as®sA£
Are sold. Sweeplng-Rcduction made in all lines of
Ulsters and Overcoats,
In Men's. Youths/ Boys' and Children's Departments.
OWEN,JPIXLEY, & Co.,
Wholesale Manufacturers, »»08 and 510 Main St.
WEB1STBR.
410 MAIN STREET
Dealer In
FINE mil LIQUORS & MS,
Aleo Ageot Beer.
WHOLESALE
HOIJSEl,
2iS
Soutli Fonrtli Street.
WE KEEP A FULL STOCK OF
CALIFORNIA, and
IMPORTED WINES
AND BRANDIES,
ALSO FINE WHISKIES AXI FANCY
LIQUOR*.
Otrr Sour Wines embrace
•»v*
.*:
bcub
.k.<p></p>Clearance
ft
-AT-
0WE% PIXLEY, & CO'S
Will Coni nue I'ntil the Lines
MARRED DOWN
for A. Mayer'K oelebraled !agrr
Oysters! Oysters! Oysters!
Keeps caimiantly on band all kindf of Oyster# which he nrrvee to bla custAmern ot all hours. L. WKRNKR,
88Ira
4IS Main Street.
L. KUSSNEK,
Palace of Music
213 OHIO STREET.
TERRE HAUTE, INDIANA
Oldest made bouse ia VTestera Indiana. Always the largest stock on band kepi la thi* city. Pianos aad orgaas rented so tba rent will pay for th««.
KATZENBACH fc CO.
Have just opened anew
Ber-
ger, Riesling, Itraminer and Gutedel. -i. -k r|
Our Sweet Wines Angelica,
Muscat, Madura, Fort and Sherry and pur Bed Wines. Zanfan-
del, aid Chateau Margatii. *i! ^Pf,»eT4ji|PS- ,-f-
*m
us
.a
in any quasi*
ease free of
ladU
nm zm wm
rw
7..
PROMPTLY FILI
Stocking Yarns,
Daily New
Possesses [many advantaged as a
newspaper orpr all other conipctitM*
ents in compact ahapa the telegraphlr
general newa. which ia spread out in
srw^fai
1
IY?
§'&.
ALL ORX33E:
culated in tlia City of Terr* llaute.—'
KSWS ia
A
mtdtrn newspaper
mlnably in the raetropolitln joumi
Its editorial columnn, while dealing la
ly with National and fttata politics
especially drroted to city, township ».
county affairs. And the mlscellanr
literary selection! are tailed wifh gi
care, and with a conscientious regard
the inatractios and morals of the 1
munity. The aound and hralthfur
flueaca of a hearty laagh ia recognized
Tim Nftws totpi, aad no effort is *pai»
to lay before a«r patroas the latest
choicest productions of lbs Twaina
Bnrdettss «f the land.
.u*
—AT—'
le#!er
5 4
U. It. JEFFER
Sa Wool aad Manufacturer
C'lotlios^Cassiinercs,
Tweeds, Flannels,
Jeans, Blan
Carding and Sptyiniiii,
N. B.~Tb« hlghfet market price la ea« make of cood* exfchacged for woo).
'OF TUX
'1
The People's Pap*
PEOPLE. FOli
PEOPLE.
BY TUX PEOPU
The Terre Haute
in tli^
sense of Jtlie term. It belongs tc|
class of papers which is flourishing
signally^ in the East and Weal, andfi
the especial want of the people of
*U the ntu*
1
vix. a cheap, ipicy paper which fun
es
iu the ntohl reliable l( 1
Many of our people cannot nfford to I
the costly city papers, while others
neither the time nor the inclination
peruse theirlengthysnd indistinct colui
printed injsmall type. Tim NKWS
I
The sitr dcpartaieal of the UKW*
I
well looked after. Each day it cont^
.v -f.
a complete record of the cventi oecu^'
In our midst SeBsatiOBalhtfa la statem/
and matter is studiovaly sxduded, andi
patrons are sble to rely upon the s*
stanza) accuracy of each and every
The KBWS" is circulated more &!gr I
in more towns than soy other dsilyj
in westers indisus^ The
DAW.5
*.4. -u
ed to Solver
so the Txade
N
t\MS A} I t*. "r -4
tb# efily fesrlesa outspoke a snd
pricing Uai^r west of Indianapolis.
NEWK his lldeiisfttl. Ir lifrulatloi
and has now a
tyn* Me
circulation I
"X j« & *-"*-?*«$£ T-1
bout 2000. The NKWS ean be ordl
\h$u& SieJSTEwa boxes, »r diwct fn
the Nrws oflBee comer Pfft^^si*
