Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 29 August 1889 — Page 2

-*-v

-)THE DAILY NEWS.

VOL. I

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THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1889.

Go

TO

IT

IT

the Fair to-morrow. It will be

the big day and you will meet all your acquaintances.

evidently does not pay to run an "independent" newspaper in Birmingham, Ala. Two negroes tried it and were found one morning hanging on a tree. They suspended publication, so to speak.

is reported that tbe printers are about to join the great strike of the London dock hands. It is difficult to see any connection between the two unless it is that the printers are so accustomed to being "docked" for various causes that they have come to believe themselves "dock laborers."

AN

editorial paragraph in the

ACCORDING

A.'

1

iveral thousand dollars mc

r#Mfiwaukp£|^

[4 Tanner we& 'the G^A*sR» This id irly ^rpriimg in the case of lMdley

/^j|P,who tMj&t com*, out of the last eampatgw^ith Mclean record but the mtetokm ngarly ajlfbeen in favor of the soldP^hs a»d tWlre Is no reason why they should

disapproval.

HON. BAYIJKSS W. HANN.V

OORRKSPORDRNT

arrived home

unexpectedly this week. Mr. Hanna claims still to be in possession of the office and entitled to his salary as Minister to Use Argentine Republic. He probably came home because he can draw the salary from this point as well as any other and the present administration will doubtless see that the official duties are not long neglected for want of some good Republican to look after thetu.

contributes a thrill­

ing protest, made more effective by being poetically expressed, against the state law which permits wandering cows to throw railroad trains off the track. We were about to ask why their "cow catcher" did not attend to its duty and prevent these accidents but it has occurred to us that they might come back at us with the same question about our city "cow-catcher" and we would not have any answer ready.

Wat. the end men of the county coinnuflsionens permit the

NRWS

to act in-

•erlocutor for a moment? If two of the commissioners could afford to gooff oa a junketing trip to see about the contract for the "draw," at a cost of $150 of the county's money, why caa you not afford to appropriate $350 for the mutual benefit of the farmers and business men who paid this money into the treasury? Why dkl yon not arrange for this contract by correspondence? Why did not the economical fit attack the board before the pleasure trip was taken? Music in the air, song ami dance, rattling of the bon«s

few days the boani of county com-

missiouers will again be in session. The

tiret business to come up should be a re-

This cunt«"*t conskleration of their action in regard to •""the ferry. Two votes will be necessary for this. Mr. Ftnkbiner will vote in the affirmative, Mr. Dickcrson in the negative. The balance of powut rests in Mr. Henderson. Upon his rote depends the whole question. Whether the trade vest of the river shall be jwa*y tkally lost by a tariff of fifty cents or whether the fannet shall receive what he is dearly entitled to, vi*. free tmnsportc-

tion across the river, Mr. Henderson shall decide. The eyes of the community are fixed npon him. They await his decision. Mr. Commissioner Henderson, you cannot evade this responsibility. Put yourself on record.

THE

better class of people had hoped that the action of Governor Lowrv and Judge Terrel in regard to the Sullivan prize fight would put at least a temporary check upon these brutal exhibitions but such does not seem to be the case. Every day bringB a recital of an encounter of this sort. Yesterday's fight between Dempsey and La Blanche at San Francisco was exceptionally cruel and disgusting. It was witnessed by over two thousand persons and one would not judge from this that the public had any special objection to this form of amusement The newspapers express their disapproval by a mild editorial condemning the practice and a column with flaming headlines giving the most minute details, heavily garnished with the slang of the "ring."

WHEN*

Managing Editor.

TELEPHONE NO.181.

our morning contemporary dis­

covers a mare's nest in the gravel pic and takes so much credit to itself over the "find," we have hardly the heart to disturb its self-satisfaction. Believing, however, that the public are entittled to the facts in the case we take this opportunity of saying that ex-Mayor Jacob Kolsem does not and never did own one dollars' worth of stock in the Daily

NEWS.

The

NEWS

NEWS

yesterday brought out the fact that our astute board of county commissioners actually did contract to have the" "draw" in process of construction during the' week of the Fair. Upon being remonstrated with by the Agricultural Society they consented to defer it until next month, just the time when the crops are n*my for market, *f

to the tax duplicates the

farmers west of town will be required to I pay $360 aa their share of the eost of the yl /'draw." In [addition to this/by the sell of the county yommisajgnexs, they 1 also be required to contribute ill

As we have before

remarked the Express cannot understand independent journalism. It cannot realize what it is not to write under the lash.

holds the city council ac­

countable for the sale of the gravel pit. Mr. Kolsem, [as any shrewd business man would have done, took advantage of a chance to make a speculation. If it can be proved that he was in collusion with the appraisers or that there was anything questionable in his share of the transaction, the

NEWS

will not hesitate to lay* it

before the people. At present it looks as if the city had made a bad bargain, Mr. Kolsem a good one and the city as usual is left with the bag to hold.

PERSONAL AND PERTINENT.

Edgar Fawcett's latest novel deals with the humanization of a canine prodigy. Fawcett calls it his dog's tale.

And now Elliott F. Shepard is after the mission to China. Well, that country is a little further away than Russia.

The fact that Queen Victoria has taken to whisky by the advice of her physician is interesting. She carefully avoids Irish whisky, of course.

Senator Ingalls has been honored by war veterans for his civil record. His Senatorial colleagues will never decorate him for his civil tongue.

Mrs. Harrison recently remarked that if a woman loves the society of her husband she should never encourage him to become a public man.

The village debating society of by gone years has become domesticated among the ranches at the foot of Rocky raountairts, j^eekly or bi-W' meetings being4ielau evenings at tli

?in

froito t3£ir 3ard?Hp \vaa unjust." Btow it wis decMeH has not ^transpired. The larger proportion of American authors and scholars write and have written an exceedingly small hand, neat, clear, almost perfect, each differing but little from the others. It hits been suggested that poets are particularly given to this tiny cnirography, bocause verse may be committed to paper much more daintily and effectively in such a hand than in a large and scrawling one. Whatever may be the reason, it is the fact that poets are notable for MSS, of minute and orderly elegance. Tennyson and Swinburne are exceptions. The Laureate's hand-writ-ing is big and spluttering and .Swinburne is said to write like a schoolboy.

WHY WK QO ABROAD.

One is often asked with an air of local pride and sufficiency in the questioner, "Why go abroad? Why travel in Europe or in farther countries, when you haven't seen yonr own conntrv?" It is considered almost offensive by some of our fel-low-citizens to go away'from our beautiful and bounteous land. They declare, and truly, that nowhere is the scenery grander, tne skiee bluer, the stars brighter, the rivers of the mountains more charming than in America. "Why see the sights of foreign lands and leave home attractions unvisited?'' It would not be surprising if. some time a law should be passed' prohibiting the American cititen from seeking recreation and making observations other countries until he cm prove that he has seen all the states in hts ownoceanbonnd republic and then we might expect an amendment including the territories in the required visitation. The patriotism that would confine one's experience to his own county is, however, narrow.

A thousand things turn up in Europe that are enlightening to the American not that any European country is better than our own, but that the older coun tries abroad are instructively different from ours. Hie traveler does not read in France, Germany, England and Italy the crude page* of modem history. There is outspread in the cities and Japdscapes history that has been mellowed by centaricR, and there are refreshment and improvement in it. particularly for those who have lived close upon the heels of the pioneers. One better appreciates the vigorous life that,.has not yet reached the fullness of strength, when he analy*es on the spot the evidence, not only of the rise, bnt of the foil of nations and takes the U*timonv, not of rank and luxuriant recent growth merelr, bnt that which is written in the Hnee that mark necay and disclose tbe reasons for decadence.— M. HaJstead, in Commercial Oa-

*W»OS NO OS4CCT.

"I like to wait on that man, safes the What he "Oh settle his bilk."

Wlia md! tmlmxilK fa? tki

[For Tkt

IVCM*.]

THE OLD MILCH COW WITH A LOL ING GAIT. I1

I he*!* *dttiplalnt, that our neighbor's cow. That in venturing sees a passing train: And in trying to make the crossing—how?

In front of an engine—Alas, in vain! -g# For the engineer, in a reckless way Drives his engine—* deadly missile,

What a pity it is these trains won't stop For the old milch cow with a loitering gait: That Knights of the Engine, with clubs don't hop

And scare the cow—let passengers wait For time is nothing—Aren't the crossnps free? Don't laws of the state permit cows to roam To eat up gardens, hook the maple tree:

Diteh trains on crossings while coming home? But what does it matter a train be throt From off the track with its human freight A fireman killed,—a broken bone,—

By the old milch cow with a loitering gate? And what's it matter,—an engineer's fesr: A passenger killed by this cruel fate: That millions of property be lost each year

By the old milch cow with a loitering gait The state still pastures this grand old cow The streets and the crosses seem always free: Roads, sidewalks, bridges,—all subservient now,

To the old milch cow and her company Wouldn't the savin* of millions, now sp^nt in fence.

Preventing the ditching of passengers, freights, Be not a sufficient recompense,

For .keeping up cows with loitering gaits?

LITTLE CHERUBS.

Visitor So youn sister is off on a visit, Willie? I suppose you feel very lonesome wfthout her? Five-year-old Willie, dubiously: "Ye-es, I feel' lonesome, but I'm a good deal more comfortable.—Chicago Journal.

Sunday School Teacher—There are just a few moments now before school closes. Would any of you like to ask a question?

Thoughtful Pupil—Yes'm, I ehould. When Adam fell do vou suppose Eve laughed?—Burlington free Press.: "Tommy," said his mother, "3o you think you'll get a prize at school for being good?" "No'm said Tommy. "Why not, sir?" asked the father sternly, laying down his paper. "Because they don't give any," answered Tommy meekly.— The Organizer.

Mr. Hibred—What do you suppose the bard referred to when he wrote of the "slippered pantaloon?"

Mrs.

Slapdash—Really I have no idea. Little Robbie—I bet you I know. Mrs. S.—My son, vou were not spoken to.—New York World.

Father (on a steamer)—I don't know what to do with the boy. He aggravates me terribly. He needs severe chastising, but this is no place to do it.

Mother (equally oppressed)—Take him up on deck, Henry. I heard the captain say just now that there was a spanking breeze on.—Judge.

First boy—I kin lick yon. Second boy —Jes' you try it. "Huh! What'll ye. do?" "I look like you, an' the furst time I hear your dad calling you when you ain't around an' I am, I'll wiggle my fingers at him an' sals him- an' then you'll catcli it when you git home, an' if you say you didn't do it, he'll lick you harder fer lyin'."—New York Weekly.

A little girl out west was leaning out of a window watching the amies of a playful dog. The dog was one of those short, thick fellows, owning the most abbreviated of caudal appendages, which fact was noticed and commente^j^gdh by the girlie as folk»wsfs_r^Ptfor aoddie I fink on b( tier doil&ek^if Dod and

e' royal on

tbe

Solved, and ,Eve

Mmmitg&fkt

bag is remarkably plete, and is made of the hliSlWafc new moss green morocco recently introduced by Albert Barker, which has been selected by her royal highness, as it Imppens to be Lord Fife's, colors. Although tier royal highness has prefQrred a rathesmall bag, it is most completely fittM ift a very compact manner.* It contains all the necessary toilet fitting as well as tli usual writing ancr needlewqfr accessories. The gold fittings Jare bullet-hammered all over, ^-®ach article being surmounted with the monogram (a reversed and coronet) in diamonds, which has been selected from designs specially made by Mr. Barker, and which designs the princess has adopted generally. The nair and other brushes, paper-knife, shoelift, glove-stretchers and the handles of the instruments tre all made ot very fine pale mottled tortoiseshelland mounted with the same device. The writingbook is fitted with some exquisitely illuminated note-paper and envelopes. The bag is of the new shape invented and patented by Mr. Barker, which opens extremely wide and flat, and at the same time is capable of holding more than any other bag of the same size.—Lady's Pictorial. -,,:S

HE HAD TRAVELED.

A young man with a great defcl of hat and a small amount of gripsack came into the Third street depot on a train the other day, says the Detroit Free

TERRE HAUTE DAILY NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 29, 1889.

ER-

v"fis

With the pilot catching any cow estray. Never ringing a bell or sounding whistle!' Why on McShane's crossing last Saturday night,

Number Six, a passenger, two hours late, Caught Smith's best Jersey, and killed outright. His old milch cow with a loitering gait.

'neat, rtand

and walking through to the hack-atan he said to the driver of a vehicle: "I want to go to the Wayne hotel." "Yes, sir." "The onliance gives yon 50 cente."4fi "Itdoes." "Here's your moneyiH I've traveled a bit, I have, and I know what's what. Don't try any gum games on "No, sir get right in."

1

The stranger entered the hack, the driver drove across the afreet and got down and opened the door, and as tne stranger saw how he had fooled himself he look as fiat as chalk and muttered: "Yes—I eee—just acmra the street Pve traveled. have, but I guess 1 was

CHTCAOO WLU. FTMMISH SOTH.

A Baltimore paper, speaking of the world's fair, says: "If cheek has anything to do with it the city by the lakes may be selected." The types have inadvertently led the Baltimore paper to make a curious remark. Cheek is a misprint lor check and the Chicago committee's guaranty check of course will be a big one.—ew».

A-SSRFGA

NOT Qvm SMOUOH.

Montana, tlie territory where woman suffrage was supposed to have the smallest chance of success, it developed unexpected strength. A clause empowering the l^egislatore to extend wiffnsge to woman failed by the closest passible vote, *t**ing lort in the constitutioaal

wood

"w

wmmt

Z'\t

1

nigger has been yanked out of the am! pal in tlwe Atoa.

THE BORDER HEROLNES.

SOMETHING WOMEN V8"

THE PLUCKY

ABOUT OF PIONEER DAYS. tv

How Strength, Agrillty and Braver}- Saved Their Lives and Those of Their Friends. Two Thrilling Stories Which Sftow What

True Courage Tbe very first women west of the Alleghanias were Mrs. John Draper and her daughter Mary (who became the wife of William Ingles), when, about 1748, several families moved just over the crest of the low Alleghany divide, where now stands Blacbsburg, Va., and made a settlement called Draper's Meadows.

Having no sister, Mary (Mrs. ingles) had played altogether with her brother and growu up like a boy. She could run as well as he. She could stand and jump straight up nearly as high as her head could leap into the saddle unaided could stand on the floor and jump over a chair back, and so on. This agility aud strength stood her in good stead when, in 1755, she, with other womeu and children, were captured by the Shawnees, and the Indians began a hasty retreat to thenhomes beyond the Ohio. On the night of the third day out Mrs. Ingles gave birth to an infant daughter, but this fact caused no delay, which would have meant the death of both mother and child, for the next morning she was able to ride on. At the Shawnee town the prisoners were divided up and scattered, but Mm Ingles and her baby were kept there, where she made herself so useful that after a few weeks she was taken along with a company of Shawnees to help make salt at the Big Bone Lick, south of the Ohio. Thus she was the first white woman to enter Kentucky, long antedating the arrival there of Mrs. Daniel Boone, who is usually given that distinction.

A PERILOUS ESCAPE.

From here she resolved to escape, and abandoning her babe to the Indians started with an old Dutch woman who had more recently been brought to the Lick. With nothing to eat but berries, roots and mussels, with no weapons of defense, nor any protection from the weather beyond their ragged clothes, barefooted and guided only by Mrs. Ingles' hope of recognizing again the mouth of a large river which she had descended all the way from her home, the two women forced their way eastward along the forested bank of the Ohio. At last hope became certainty, for the picture of the river mouth printed on her memory did not fail her. It was the Great Kanawha, and its sources were the streams which flowed through Draper's Meadows.

They turned up its course, but were often interrupted by large streams, which they were obliged to ascend for miles before they could cross and retrace their channels to the main river that was their only guide. As they got up to where the mountains are high and close together, great cliffs, bordering what is now the canyon of the New, down which the Chesapeake and Ohio railway nrnUjaa its adventurous way, they were often obliged to scale their heights, only to find a worse one just ahead. The old woman nearly gave out, became quarrelsome and finally attempted to kill her companion for food, Mrs. Ingles only escaping after a frightful encounter. Through such almost superhuman trials did she persist, until at last she came to her home. She had traveled in forty days probably 500 miles.

Had this simply been a story of human maintenance under dreadful circumstances, it could be matched by many another woman's story of that period but it amounted* top most valuable exploration,^nce, until knew that their waters gathereat river, or emptied into the what was the Ohio's lower course, hor that saline springs existed in the western valleys! When Mrs. Ingles stopped near where Charleston, the capital of West Virginia, now stands, and made salt for her cap* tors in her own kettles, she was laying _th®l foundation of the long race of Kana#fck*salt makers and of one of the most extensive local industries In the west. This woman lived to be very old and saw turnpike stages and steamboats affording a quick passage over the route she had traveled so wearily, which became one Of the main avenues of emigration and gives today the shortest railway route between Chicago and the seaboard.

Pleasonter stories are those of the women and girls who with such courage and skillful woodcraft have undertaken long missions to carry news that help was needed, or to get powder. Such was that girl's ride In .the mountain edge of North Carolina, which named all the creeks according to the miles she had passed. Such was "Mad Ann Bailey's" ride, from Clendemin's fort, here at Charleston fW, Va.) to Lewisburg, 100 mileB away, to get powder upon which thetr salvation depended and such was the daring exploit of pretty Elizabeth Zand.

She was the sister of Cot Ebeneser Zane, after whom Zanesvilla, O., was named, but who in 1783 was near the fort at Wheeling. A sudden alarm caused everybody except those at Zane's house to hasten into tha stockade, among whom was the colonel's young sister, a girl who had just returned from school in Philadelphia and was totally unused to these wild scenes. The attack was fierce and prolonged, and the powder gave out before the red skins showed any signs of retreating.

In this emergency it became

necessary to replenish their ammunition from CoL Zane's house, which was about fifty paces distant.

It was therefore proposed that one of their fleetest men should endeavor to reach the boose, get a keg of powder and return with' it Tbe eatwprbe was full of the keenest danger^ yet many volunteers presented themwives for the f«sk. Among them was Elizabeth Zane. She was young, athletic and fearless. "You haw not one man to spare," she pleaded. "If fail—it is only a girl, who will not be missed hi the defense of the fort. Let tne go J" Bar services were accepted. Divesting herself of impeding skirts she stood ready for the haita&lou* adventure, and when tbe gate was o$«(|ed she bounded forth, buoyant with youthfuf confidence of success. Wrapt In axna&ecoent, $*» Indians beheld ber, bat shouting: "A squaw? a squaw5" disdained to interrupt her progress to her brother's door. TbenOol Kane fastened a tabtocloth arottmfter waist and, emptyingInto it a keg of powder, Again the door was opened and aba darted out. Tbe Indians were no longer paasfoa. Ball after haii sang around b«r Mrs, but none torched her, and in a moment ber flying feel bad carried tbe precfcms burden safely into tim fart—Charleston (W. Va.) Oar. New YorkCaaunercfal Advertiser.

Swell Feet.

Mrs, Frank Leslie has been credited with having tbe smslWat feet of an/*woroan\in Juarrica. 8ke wearsa Jfo.,1 sboa BtttMb. Lsstte has had to scomander the honor to Mia Minna Irving, tbe porta*, wears a sfca Soulier than Xo. L-Pbilna«pbia Pwt

Ths waaberaesasn at Hoil«»d,»tarf fortlw whiteness of their linen, urn refined borax as awsabiag po wtkr, esfa* a lsrgo -fes*dfal of

sriy not

TO5£?3RTTA ITAB

is al» good

tiyi woolan gooda.

to

Who's got the key?

1

TL»

IP

'•MM READ

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ft

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TETE NKW YORK STAR passed Into the hanfli of new managers in November last, and anew corporation is now la full possession and control of it.

During the first months of the change the improvement made in It was so pronounced that It came to be recognized at once as

A Live, Bright and Brilliant Newspaper. Its news columns are filled with the freshest of foreign, domestic and local news, its editorials sre crisp, positive and bold. Its Democratic principles are so pronounced and orthodox that the Democratic National Committee, on Its recent reorganization, selected it as tbe medium for placing Its official action and utterances before the voters of the party. It

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ITS SUNDAY ISSUE OF IS PAGES Is regarded universally as the best combination of original literature with news which t» uow published in New York city on Sunday. The matter selected fer the literary column# Is supplied by scores of contributors of th« highest merit and reputation. Their united contributions each Sunday would make a volume as large ss Jfarptr't Magaudnt, and treating of many mora subjects than any monthly magazine published ever discusses. The whole at a cost of only 8 cants for 16 pages!

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Office, with Dally News, 23 south Fifth StreetV 'i.

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