Daily News, Franklin, Johnson County, 30 October 1889 — Page 3
4 2
I
-BY
NEWS PUBLISHING CO. PUBLICATION OKFICK No. 23 South Fifth Street.
Term of SulniTipttofi:
OJ»J year f& IVr week, by carrier.... ...... .Iflcts
The Nkvt#' column* will be open to eoutrftrotor* upon any subject of special or geaeraj loutr&ti. No communication inspired byIll-feel-])tg or of a personal nature will be published
Rejected jnanaseript will not be returned uu te*K accompanied by postage. Person* desiring to subscribe for the Nswhcan do no by telephone or postal card repeat. .Specimen copies furnished npon application.
Where delivery is irreffaUi, immediate com" plaint should be made at the office and It will rwrelve prompt attention.
Remittances *honl«l be made payable to THE $trVH I ULIS1I1NG COMPANY. DO0OLAB H. SMITH,
not to discuss the tarift' has to hustle to 11 ml subject matter for editorial. The dear jsnoplo claim to be tired of this topic, but as it is daily rehashed in every newspajwr in the country the probability is that they know what their readers want. Or eltto they understand what their party wants and they endeavor to make the supply equal the demand for political capital. The tariff will undoubtedly be the leading issue in the next campaign. The people learned the alphabet of the subject last summer ami fall and it is thought with constant drilling they may get into the first reader by 1SH2.
The proposed groat railway consolidation is attracting attention and comment. Will it give us letter service and cheaper rates or will it create a gigantic monopoly from which the people will have no appeal? What will be the effect upon railroad employes? It seems a singular coincidence that at the very time this vast consolidation of railroad intends is proposed. the three great Brotherhoods of railway employes are in convention to
self-interest and self-protection, wands of ouo to be met by the requirements of the other, consolidated capital vs. consolidated laboir. The situation presents many interesting complications.
A iniiit authority on etiquette in answer to a question as to whether it is proper for a young lady to make a night journey alone ou a steamboat says: "If she is obliged to do she tnust secure a^ stat«M*tKm leading from the Lulies1 cabi*f aud must not go down to supper or sit in the salon of the bo«t with the other pasaeugom.- Imagine the pleasure of a trip ot\ the water to a forlorn young lady who sits all the long evening alone on the side of her lerth, listening to the sounds of mirth from the salon and smelUug the dipper of which she must partake Sie^use she haptens to to of the feminine gentler. Ami yet pr.ii^k »ay it is flviug In the fee© o( Providence wieu a wuman wi«he« site had been horn a man.
Thkrr Is a vast deference betwwn crtttcising a man'8 othcial »et» ami his private huainciss. i% come to ti* au «»pUHl fact that premttag an eltn-iion everyUitng falsehood, vilifying of cluimcter. whaUntr will contribute to the rxndidatti'a defeat* But after the votes have all been Iwgg^nl aad coun'^i and one or the other ol the conte.'- .iUts
aud one or the other ol the confer aula
mt
\i
fprj V" W unfu«t, he should he severely criticised. .1 11 tj /A11
Manaffittg Editor.
err rfcuu honk No. 181. ©ir Readers of the DAU.Y NEW# leaving the city »t any tiro? can have the paper mailed to thorn. Address will be changed as often as de*if(»d.
WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER .'SO, l.m
Tin. new jio&Lagc stamps, like the letters they carry, are to be red. TifK detective* have come lo look upon Tiweott as anything but, a Mftscott.
The advTxrates of the theory of evoluion should have too much respect for the dead monkey with their ancestors.
Osi: of the acknowledged great statesmen of the world t* Prince Li of China. The name suggest# that he Is a politician iw well iw a statesman. lie is, however, no relation to the Father of Lies.
IT seems fronvyesterday's testimony in the Omtiin v4m that members of the Clan-na- »ael appointed a committee to investigate the triangle*and another committee to investigate ,Ir. Cranio, also another eommittee to investigate the camps and a fourth committee to investigate the reports of these committees. A few American citizens have now come to the front and selected a jury to investigate the Cian-na-Uael.
A
SKWSPAI'BH
which makes it a point
-*-i "J iTiiia ig dignified jonrnaliam and worthy NO. 7* of a first-class newspaper. Bat the petty, a a in a a
AN INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER, 1 to arouse ignorant prejudice, should be ,,t Pv««tcnlt^l( I deprecated aiul condemned by reputable Piibllsftetl
Every Afternoon Except Sun
a),,
j0urnaig
an(
411 correspondence should beaddx««ed the the United States, then the press of this VKW8 PUBLISHING COMPANY No Attention will be gtren to annenrmou* comma nidations.
decide upon a federation. The purposes tares of all the princes of the blood royal tavev* «n!Mnterest and HoU-proteetton, the de-
intelligent people.
1 fCHAEi, Davitt in his speech before the Parnell Commission yesterday declared that the Clan-na-Gael was no more a secret society than the Free Masons. That may be but whenever there appears to be a foundation for charging the Masonic order with conspiracy and murder and with a constitution that, defies the laws of
country will not hesitate to call for an in vestigation and an exposure. Tt is not because the Clan-tia-Gael is a secret organization that it is criticised. If men desire to form brotherhoods for purposes of fellowship ami protection and they consider that the fraternity is stronger through bonds of secrecy, that it is not a matter for public interference. But if this secrecy is maintained for purposes of intrigue and treanon then it is the manifest duty of the authorities to call for an investigation and to afford them every opportunity to refute the charges and preserve the honor of their organization from every taint of suspicion.
RIGHT AND LEFT.
Tdt u». arttet of the pavement. Is it phult, or pliault, or phelti And what's the way In Triiiidatl.
Jt if prouoitiRX'd and fipelt? —Binghampton Roptibiinui. 1 rover Cleveland, says a conteinjjorary, never smiles when watching a play. Does this imply that he does his smiling between the acts?
Emmons Blaine's gift to hi8 bride was a diamond fleur de lys, worth $14,000. The bride's mother gave her a magnificent silver set. Among other costly gifts was a gold-mounted toilet-set from Mr. George W. Childs.
Said Mr. Spurgi'on, recently:
4,"I
never
have been ordained, and never intend to be. When a church chooses a man to be its pastor that man is ordained, if God 1 ia« called him and filled him with the llolv Spirit and power,"
A careless female reformer, who was aroused iu her room at the Arlington Hotel in Petoskey, Mich., the other night by an alarm of lire, took time to dress and pack her trunk before she ran down stairs, but forgot to wake her husband.
A Sioux Indian named Henry Hokixina I.vman, twenty-two years old, has entered the Vale law school, and intends to practice among his tribo when he has graduated. He entered on the recommendation of the Indian college at Hampton, Va.
Balfour, who Ih called "'the best hated man in England," is still young. He was born in 1H1S, and went to Parliament in 1874. He does not look like a strong man, either physically or mentally, but he hits shown in an unpopular way that he is both.
Mm. Francos Hodgson Burnett's youngest boy is the original of her famous character of Little Lord Fauntleroy. Her eldest son is described tw "outdoing iu cussedness any five boys in the neighborhood." His mother has not written him up yet, though she has often been obliged Ui "tuvn him down."
George Bancroft, the historian, is passionatelv fond of roses, and at his houses in Washington and Newport he has some of the finest specimens ol these beautiful tiowere. His mother,. before him, was also a worshiper of these matchless blossoms, ami it is probable that his taste for them is inherited from her.
On coiug to the top of the EilTcl tower, Mr. Edison wrote in the visitors' book as follows: "Top EitTel Tower, Sept. 10. 18.SVi. --To. M. Eitl'el the brave builder of so gigantic And original a specimen of modern engineering, from one who has
N
RW
eU^^hUweoinmoadecettciesofdtsh cds^ intends! that the event shall life would eugpee! that campaign ttieih^U 'K a very tiet aUkir, and con be laid aside, TIm* otlkss which a man holds should command a ^rtn rw^vt and, unless* hl» conduct waii.aite it, he should be publicly criticised only (or official«da.: The Pre^eHt'ol- Vm. S a a a ntler of sixty millions of people. It vs „. ..
te
He
subsequently wrote his name upon Mile. Ei StePs fan,'which forms a valuable collection of autographs, bearing the sigua-
Mtw Iliittllneton'N I'nwnt*, Tamhn, October :U).~(Special.]—Slisa liuutington has been singularly furtunate in the matter of presents. Them? may not be numerous, but they an magnificent. In fact, few young ladies Ijegan life so well supplied with those luxurious necessities that am the social delight of womankind—namely, diamonds. Her father^ chief present to her is a necklax» containing about eighty gems, none of thent less than two and most of them over thru carats iu weight, and all of the finest water. He has also given her a ic.ik-mficettt. diamond brooch. Mrs. Il. uug£an gives a glorious diamond star, the central gem of which must t*«'igh twenty carats. The father and of iince HatjtfcKlt gave a spletitnond necklace of a single row of guaa, all of large sixe and of meet curious rrnioe Hatzfeldt's present is a tKuiitifid ornament which may be worn in the hair or on a dress, it contains ft single large and ivautiful pearl reinfom?d hv a p*--rfect forest of snmll diamonds. Tltere •. other presents, all
of
diamonds,
and all of tii.'tn of tht* ttioet artistic and Hi .*v ter. After the wedding in a a a fast .•: :h.- in i-, \u embassy.
Yo«K, tVt«ber^X—[^{jecial.}—- A
.'^•ee^.fn^m Wa^haagkm to the Herald «ays: Ex-Sec^tary Bayard and Miss W.Clymer will be married Novemix®rt» 1l«e ivrvm.i&y will be at the ««ithe '..r.dii'a mother on street,
a t{ lt
tin parish chuw h. Su John's.
xsjmmtiy .« bridt", who is simple and* ntj mentations in her u?anner#, has elected that her mother's the seeneof the ceremony, I br in usaesKi ts a ricSi and elegant cinc. chosen with the refined taste hat ."•» given its future wearer the reutausiit ol extreme {astkliousnes& and %rnx-tn«« of sty it la her apparel. After ho vremonv. to which a company made ir 'U iwwj ol the Older and distinguished iu -nd# of the couple will be bidden, Mr.
nnmmcnt to refer to him as Grew the vremonv. to which a company maite
re*** fr.ctid* of the coas|ie will be bidden, Mr. cn» to lm w, for
wm
If he is u»iy as a rre*.^ nt, st wcihimg jottrncv, which will end at, their lib oppoitiintetib an* injnc if future h«we, Dcbiucre Place* Wilmingtuessagess are faliaeious. if Iwxoe* are ton. Delaware.
'&M1'
uke his britle for a northern
TERRE HAUTE DAILY NEWS. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30 1889.
FREAKS OF LIGHTNING.
Observations Made in Various Parts,of the Country.
TUmj Prove Thmt, Contrary to Onwral B»ll«rt Be«ch Trees Are Struck mm Ottmn Other Trees—tjoeer Phwwmena of Natural Kleetrtcity.
To the question, "Are beech trees ever struck by lightning H. D. Post, of Holland, Mich., makes answer in Silence as follows. He says: "In August, 1SS5, at Mason, Ingham County, Mich., a number of men were at work harvesting wheat a large field west of the village. "A heavy thunder-storm came up, and all but one of them, Aura Hines, fled for shelter to a saw mill about a quarter of a mile distant. He said that his shoes hurt his feet, and he did not iike to run so far he would go to the woods, which bounded the field south, not far distant. After the storm (accompanied with heavy thunder and lightning) had passed, the men returned from the mill to their work, but Hines did not appear. They went in search and found him sitting under and against a large beech tree, dead. "Without disturbing his position, they sent to the village for help, and I went and saw him. "The tree was large and tall one, about two feet in diameter, and leaned a little eastward. A pile of brushwood had been burned on the east side, which had killed the tree on that side from the roots to the height of seven feet from the ground. The storm came from westward, and Hines sat on the east side crouched against the tree, which sheltered him from the rain. Two or three holes, of half an inch diameter,near the right foot showed where the current passed from the earth to his body, partly tearing the sole from his shoe, and passing through the crown {of the coarse straw hat on his head, making a half-inch hole, as if a bullet had been fired through it, the broken straws pointing upward and outward. "There was a plain furrowed trace on the burned and dead bark of the tree above his head, to the green and living wood, but no farther. "The wood of the beech is very closegrained, and in the-living tree full of sap, and the green bark is also tilled with sap, while the outer or ross bark is thin and quite smooth. "Has not such a tree the elements of a good conductor, over which the electric fluid passes without shattering it or leaving a trace! "If this is true, beech trees are probably struck by lightning as often as any others, but it leayes no trace of its passage over them." a-
D. L. Phares,'of Madison Station, Miss.', writes on the same subject: "During a prolonged summer drought about one o'clock p. m. the sun was shining brightly, but a small cloud came from the southeast, and while two other gentlemen and I were seated in my parlor conversing a flash was seen and a sharp explosion heard. In a few moments a man came in, announcing that he had been thrown from the wagon, the driver knocked down, also five of the six oxen,!'three of which were killed by lightning.' Hastening to the spot, about two hundred feet from the parlor, wo found the wagon under the branches of a large beech tree a few feet from the trunk, the wheels in contact with the roots, the forewheels having passed the trunk the oxen all recovered and standing, save the farthestone from the tree. Ho was dead, and never moved a muscle. The messenger was seated on the hinder part of tho wagon when struck and knocked down. Tho driver walking on tho opposito side of tho tree, perhaps ten feet from the trunk, but some of tho spreading branches almost touching his head, was knocked down, somewhat stunned, and, although standing on our arrival, had not fully regained his wits nor his hat. "The treo was tall and thickly branched to the top. On carcful and minute examination, we found no mark of electricity on trunk, root or branch, but later we discovered, perhaps twelve or more feet from the top, a space about threo inches wide and six or eight foet long, as we guessed, from which the bark was torn and the wood grooved. Some days lator we disccove red that a strip of bark extending from the rent above mentioned to the earth was dead and peeling off, and tho wood grooved. Our conclusion was that the electricity mostly passed between the bark aud tho wood, there being most moisturo at place of contact. Not a drop of rain tell during tho day, nor during many weeks before and after tho above Incident. "This is by no moans the only instance in which I have known tho beech tree struck by lightning, nor the only one in which the electricity aecmed, at least, to pass between bark and wood of beech, oak, tulip tree, black gum, Magw^ut amnrfyiora, etc. "Why was neither man killed in this instance, and only tho ox farthest from the stricken tree! TUa explanation is simple enough. Hero was a rhlgo gently sloping to the east, west and sout h. The stricken tree was perhaps twenty feet from the lowest western level. One ox had placed oho foot on tho lowest spot of ground, which it is presumed was near moisture beneath (tho rest of the land being dried, and on tho crest of the ridge to such a depth as to cause tho death of several trees), the circle from moist earth through the ox, the chains and iron of the wagon, was completed to tho tree. One of tho tw© oxen nearest the tree did not fall. All the phenomena caused mo to think that the discharge was *rtmt the earth. "EUviag had many extraordinary, very undesirable and extremely dangerous opportunities of wita'issn phenomena of natural electricity, other f-ets may possibly be given later."
Fotmd in U»a Bsnofcor.
"The most troublesome of travelers," said one of the oldest and best conductors on the Fort Wayne the otherdsay, "are always to be found in the smoker. It generally t*kes me twice as long to get through the smoker as the other cars. That's where the ticket* I are hardest to find. Vox speaking of the train before it gets near town. Most of the countrysam who sit in the smoker seem to always manage to conceal their tickets in some out-of-the-way pocket or lose it among the papers of a pocket-book. They always assert they have a ticket somewhere, and it consumes time to find it or make them pay up. I'm afraid moat of the rogues who attempt to boat their tray are In the smoker tOO."
Ttte fv»»c of alt Birds.
There is an old legend in Europe which makes the wren, and not the eagle, "the king of all birds.*' It tells how the eagle once chaJeagcd all the birds to a tiriai of high fiyisv#, the one tte&t towered furthest aloh within a given time to reum overall the others forever. He had gained the "place nearest the sky," and was about to claim the victory, when the wren, who bad nestled among his feathers unobserved, guttered into the air over him, said was proclaimed king &y the universal acclamation of the feathered throng.
Fvr 10 «*t# par wed yea can beep informed.
THE MODERN BARBER.
He Differs in Many Ways flrom the Ohta Semper of Two Decades Ago* This is indeed an age of progress, writes Frank Boderus in the American TonsoriaL Science, literature and art have contributed to the physical and intellectual improvement of the human race. Inventors have perfected machines which lessen the hours of labor, and thus give to man more time to devote to pursuits of pleasure and to the adornment of his person. Fine clothes and jewels, however, do not improve a man's appearance if he neglects the attention of the barber. That the barber's services are being more and more appreciated is evidenced by the increased number of "tonsorial parlors," and in the improved character of the men engaged in the tonsorial profession.
Twenty years ago a barber-shop resembled a glue factory in the variety of odors which it contained, and a second-hand store in the appearance of its few articles of furniture and adornment. The barbers, too, were in harmony with their surroundings. They were, of course, of various siaes and dispositions, but they always wore long, greasy hair and dyed mustaches. They were "boozers" and chewed tobacco, apd expectorated freely upon the hair-bestrewn floor. They "sawed" off the whiskers and "chopped" off the hair of their customers and told vulgar stories meanwhile. But the public "had very little use for barbers in those days. Gentlemen mostly "rasped" off their own stubble, and tho poor "scrapers" did not earn enough to dress decently or to indulge in more refined tastes if they had them. CP' 1p
But now how changed the appearance of the modern barber-shop and how vastly improved the condition of the barber I As fashion began to require gentlemen to patronize the barber more frequently the business became more remunerative and a better and more intelligent class of men engaged in the profession. As competition increased each barber tried to excel in workmanship and in making his shop more attractive and inviting, and now we have "tonsorial parlors" that are positively magnificent in rcspect to their appointments and decorations. Even the humblest bar-ber-shops are at least clean and cozy and have improved, luxurious chairs and better arrangements for tho comfort and convenience of their patrons. The "bum" barber and the "boozer" have given way to men of genteel appearance, courteous manners and correct habits, and now, instead of being regarded as a menial, the barber has raised himself in public estimation, and his calling has been advanced to one of necessity and respectability. -J
PARDONED HIS OPPRESSOR.
How a
Missouri Governor Returned
Good
for EviL
Sitting in the rotunda of the Alexander Hotel of this city, says a Louisville letter to the New York Sun, Proctor Knott told this story: "It was the most remarkable scene lever witnessed. It occurred during my early manhood, when I was Attorney-General of Missouri. Robert Stewart was then Governor of that Stnte. One day I was in his private office when ho pardoned a steamboat man for somo crime. What it was I have forgotten, but that does not matter. The man had been brought from the penitentiary to the Governor's office. He was a large, powerful fellow, with the rough manners of his class. "The Governor looked at the steamboat man and seemed strangelv affected. He scrutinized him long and closely. Finally he signed the document that restored him to liberty, but before he handed it to him he said: 'You will commit some other crime and be in the penitentiary again, 1 fear.' Tho man solemnly promised that h« would not. The Uovornor looked doubtful, mused a few moments, and said: 'You will go back on the river aud be a mate again, I supposeV "The inaa replied that he would. 'Well, I want you to promise me one thing,' resumed the Governor
4I
want you
to pledge your word that when you are a mate again you will never take a billet of wood in your hand and drive a sick boy out of a bunk to help you load your boat on a stormy night.' Th#steamboat man said he would not, and he inquired what the Governor meant by asking him such a question. "The Governor replied: 'Because some day that boy may become a Governor and you may want him to pardon you for a crime. One dark, stormy night many years ago you stopped your boat on the Mississippi river to take on a load of wood. There was a boy on board who was working bis passage from New Orleans to St. Louis, but ha was very sick of a fever and was lying in a bunk. You had plenty of meh to do the work, but you went to that boy with a stick of wood in your hand and drove him with blows and curses out into the wretched night, and kept him toiling like a slave until the load was completed. I was that boy. Here is your pardon. Never again be guilty of such brutality.' And the man, cowering and hiding his face, went. out. As I never heard of him again I suppose heUxikcare not to break tho law."
A CHICKEN S DEVOTION.
The Bird Starves Itswlf After Its Master's Departure from Home.
Stories of dogs whose devotion to their masters was so great that they abandoned themselves to starvation after their master's death arc not rare, but few would have expected a chicken to prove capable of such an attachment. But the more animals, in general, are studied, the clearer it becomes that even the humblest of thtja have capacities iitce our own.
A correspondent of La Nature, a French scientific journal, relates that his young brother had made a pet of a chicken of the Houdan variety. Every morning, in coming out of the house, the young maa brought with him a handful of crumbs, orof grain, or of something else that chickens like, and little by little bis Houdan pet acquired the habit of following him about the place.
In a grove near tho house there was a bench. When the young maa reached this bench he invariably seated himself, and the fowl, jumping up by his side, picked the food from his hand, and wss petted by being stroked on the head and back.
This had gone on for quite a long time when the young mass left home to go to college. For the first day or two the chicken seemed not to bo inconsolable over the loss of its friend, but took its food with the rest.
After a few day*, however, the fowl seemed to become aware that its friend was sot coming back, and it was Mixed all at once with aa unconquerable melancholy. It lingered morning after morning under the windows of the house as if waiting for its master to come out.
Finally it betook itself to the bench where its master had been accustomed to feed tt, and there it remained, as head under its wing, almost motionless, day and night It was useless to try to tempt it with food the chicken refused to look op when the most tempting hmndfuls of grain or dongit were thrown down before it, Its eyelids were closed, and its intention to die of hunger was so evident that it was deemed merciful to kill it.
7%r 2ta% .Yens hat com to stey.
PROFESSIONAL..
DR. T. W. MOORHEAD,
Physician and Surgeon,
OFFICE, 12 SOUTH EIGHTH STREET,
Residence, 115 North Eighth St.
DR. VAN VALZAH,
DENTIST:
Office in Opera House lUoek.
H. C. ROYSK. MARK R. SHERMAN.
ROYSE & SHERMAN,
ATTORNEYS AT LAW,
No. 517 Ohio Street.
L. H. Baetholonkw. W. B. MA BARTHOLOMEW & MAIL,
DENTISTS,
IP (Successors to Bartholomew Hall.) £v 529 1-2 Ohio St., Terre Haute, Ind.
DR. E. A. GILLETTE,
wsm%
DENTIST:
Filling of Teeth a Specialty.
Office, McKeen'K New Block, Cor. 7th and Main.
LEO. J. WEINSTEIN, M. D.,
Physician and Surgeon!
Residence, 620 chestnut street. OtVtoe, 111 s. Sixth (Savings Jtank Building.) Ait nil Is promptly answered.
DR. C. T. BALL,
Limited to treatment of eatarrb, throat nervous diseases, tumors tvnd superfluous hair.llG South Siactln street.
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BliUXKER'S BALSAM.
We warrant UKUNKKK'S CAKM 1,NATIVE HALS AM to care Summer Complain*. Diarrhea*. Kin* -Djwn terry, Cramp Collr, Cholera Morbus. Chronic Diarrboa, and CoagomoiQ ot tfee Stomach and Bowcla or refund the m^ojjy.
We challenge any one In tho world for SI .On), to prodnoe a remedy or pmrrtption oi «9«»] freaen, pwsmpteww and pleaMatoew lor tna disorders named. We offer $500 for the ailfhfaMt harm ah own to recalt from its n»o, either in Infants or adnlis.
Sold
druggists. 25 and SO eta. Tta
ufate sest by mat! on rccrij-l i.'to pay poKtstre. Addwas. CLOU* MKDICIKB CO.,Ticxax HAtrra. Im.
HonacRrtereacea McKesas sad U» Vif? Co. MaOopal Banks.
OYSTERS.
FBESH NEW YORK AXD BALTIMORE
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-AT-
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CQAL, KTC.
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