Greenfield Republican, Greenfield, Hancock County, 14 June 1889 — Page 2
THE REPUBLICAN.
Published by
W.S.MONTGOMERY.
GREENFIELD. INDIANA.
HAZING is always contemptible, but not always as dangerous as in the recent case at the Polytechnic, at Troy, N. when a young man had green paint flung over his clothes and person. The ruin of his clothes was the object of the hazing party, but the result was a serious case of poisoning. All light green paints contain arsenic and can be used only witn great care. Many painters can not mix I'hem or use them without arsenical poisoning. Such facts are not likely to be known by the fools who engage in the abuse of their mates1, but 60 much the more reason why hazing should be severely dealt with. We have bad several murders and quite a number of poisoning cases on our college calendars from this disgraceful amusement.
TIIE morphine habit, which is causing such an amount of talk in Fiance, is receiving attention from the Eaglish reviewers and medical men. It would appear, according to spme of the commentators on the vices of dissipated folk, that all sorts of ghastly diesipatrons have been adopted by women who have nerves and other idiosyncrasies on this side of the water. Tea cigarettes have been superseded by cigarettes filled with various herbs, including opium, which are smoked by the women of London who run to that tort of thing. While the number of ingenious drugs which have been introduced among the women of Paris is too long to be enumerated, there is little serious doubt about the extent to which this particular form of dissipation has taken in Paris. But most of the talk in Lonaon emanates from professional alarmists, wno are forever writing to the editor of a daily newspaper.
LETTERS OF GREELEY.
WRITTEN TO CHAS. A. DANA PREVIOUS TO THE GREAT CONFLICT,
The Remarkable Personal CliavacteristU-s of the Great K«litor Clearly Defined— The Newspaper Art Kxpoutilel—light
Shed on the Politics of the Time—Wit and Humor Abounding Everywhere.
We begin herewith the publicatipn of of a number of letters written by Horace Greeley to Chas. A. Dana in 1855-56. These letters will be found remarkable in other respects than in showing the strong personal characteristics of the great editor. It will require iour or five weeks to complete their publication in these columns. The comments we desire to make are expressed in the editorial of the New York Sun. from the columns of which paper tnese letters are taken.
HORACE GREELEY' S LETTERS.
Chas. A. Dana in N. Y. Sun, May 19, 18S9. We have had from various quarters of late the recollections of conspicuous persons respecting the events which preceded the civil war and there are books that attempt to record the history of those agitated and tumultuous times: but none of these carefully prepared chronicles can compete in vividness or in interest with the series of personal, professional, off hand letters by the late Horace Greeley, which we publish this morning. They relate chiefly to the protracted struggle over the election of a Speaker in the Thirty-fourth Congress, thirty-three years ago. Incidentally they discuss a great many other topics, and the wit, the humor, and the originality of every line will be sure to engage the attention of the reader, yet we suppose their most valuable quality is the light they cast ut on the history of that period.
Mr. Greeley was in Washington as the correspondent of the Tribune, and these letters contain the current narrative of his personal observations, impressions, ideas and emotions. Men of great eminence appear in them, with many besides whose names hardly any one now remembers, important as they have oeen in their day. Mr. Seward, Mr. Chase, Col. Benton, Mr. Clayton, Mr. Banks, are still famous but most of the others have sunk into obscurity. Oa the other hand, we have in this coirespondence scarcely a premonition of statesmen who were destined so sooa to become highly celebrated. Of Mr. Lincoln, Jefferson Davis, Mr. Cameron, Mr. John Sherman, Mr. Stanton, Mr. Fessenden, Governor Andrew, and their compeers, or of General Grant,-General McClelJan, and the throng of military characters who within a few years were to play such parts upon the stage, there is here hardly so much as a suggesstion. History moved with such a rush durin the ten years that followed.
We give these letters exactly as they were written, and our oniy regret is that out of the long continued corres pondence of years, but these have been preserved. In two cases we have striken out the names of persons concerning whom Mr. Greeley expressed .himself with some approbation. Ali the others are dead, most of them many years ago, and praise or blame can no longer effect them or disturb the feelings of their friends. Their names are retained accordingly, and the context with them.
A frequentsubjectofcommentin these letters is the management of a newspaper, and it is not as a generality, but always with reference to some spec'al point in the affairs of the Tri bune. Yet our brethren of the profession will find in Mr. Greeley's pregnant strictures ample material tor instruction and thev are frequently founded upon some broad aud permanent principle, that is peculiarly important to the student or practitioner of the newspaper artMr. Greeley's first thought was for tbe Tribune, and this was the case with him to the end of his career.
W
S&'x&W 1
WASHINGTON, D. C., Dec. 1, 1865. FRIEND DANA: I think worth ISO per month. He has facilities at the
I west end which I have not and never can have, and livine here is horribly dear for those who have to see people.
By and by he may perfect his oppor5 tunities with Marcy S. Co., and then you can stop him. For the present better pay $200 a month than lose him. I see him and confer with him several times a dav but it is best that the business should all go through one channel. So 1 wish vou would write him accepting his terms. If you can easily repeat the hint I have given him, that we value facts more than opinions, it will be well.
Everybody we employ to gather information* seems to think he has the paper to edit, and I expect
Boon
to have
a notice from Dennis that, if we don't chance our course on some public question he will be obliged to relieve himself of all responsibility in the premises by dissolving his connection with The Tribune.
I thank vou for your reply to Dr. liley- He is eaten up with the idea of makinsr Ctiase President.
I am doing what I can for Bmks but he won't be Speaker. His support of the Republicans against the K. N. ticket this fall renders it impossible. If we elect anybody ic will be Pennington or Fuller. I fear the latter. Pennington isprettv fair, considering. He wilt try to twist himself into the proper shape, but I would greatly prefer jone who had the natural crook.
Phelps to-night announced in Demo
cratic
caucus that two of the Missouri Whigs would vote their side. Giad of it.
The news from Kansas is helping us. You ought to see the loving glances I get from Whitfield. We know, each other first rate, hat are not introduced. I think the House will organize on Mondav if not, Tuesday will fetch it.
I hate this hole, but am glad I have come. It does me good to see now those who hate The Tribune much, fear it yet more. There area dozen here who will do better for my eye being on them. Schouler is particularly cordial.
As to old McRea, I think we may as well let him have his $10 a week for a few weeks yet, though I can't use him I wouldn't mind his being a genius, if he was not a fool. He has no idea of keeping his mouth shut, but tells everybody he is connected with The Tribune, but doesn't go its isms, &c. He annoys me to the amount of $10 per week at least but let him wait a little Yours, H. G.
C. A. DANA, Esq.
il.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 7, 185(.
FRIEND DANA: What would it cost to burn toe Opera House? If the price is reasonable, have it done and send lue the bill,
I think this last is the most unlucky week The Tribune ever saw—beaten in t'le documents and beaten every way beside.
It is unaccountable to me that Hildreth did not review the Pro-Slavery part of the message in three or four crisp editorials of a column each. It belonged to The Tribune to do that, and the whole country expected it of us. It was. a great mistake to neglect our proper work and undertake instead the unpopular and unplausible defence of the British side of the Nicaragua question. We have lost ground terribly by this, and must try to regain it somehow. All Congress is disappointed and grieved at not Beeing Pierce and Cushing demolished in The Tribune. I wrote my two letters under the presumption (there being no paper on Wednesday) that the solid work of exposing their perversions of history had, of course, been done by Hildreth. I should have dealt with it even more gravely but for that. And now I see (the Saturday's paper only got through last night) that you have crowded out what little I did send to make room for Fry's eleven columns of arguments as to the feasibility of sustaining the opera in N. Y., if they would only play his compositions. I don't believe three hundred people who take The Tribane care OBe chew of tobacco for the matter. I am very sorry that we can't discuss such a message somehow in the week of its issue.
Now as to documents, Harvey went to the Department on Thursday for the Treasury report, as he had been advised beforehand that it would then be ready for him, and was now told by Peter Washington that he had let some copies go off by that morning's mail. Of course, being told that he was anticipated, he did not suppose that sending the great budget now was of any conse* quence. Was not this a reasonable conclusion? I admit that he should have got two copies and sent one on to you but he only got one, and left that at my room, and I only found it when I came down from the House, too late to send by that evening's mail so I did all I could do—extracted some of the most pregnant passages and sent them to you in a letter discussing them. Since you did not find room even for these, I infer that more could hardly have fared better.
I began this letter to apologize for taking up three or four columns with a controversy with Dick Thompson, which 1 shall send you to-day probably by Adam's Express. Considering, however, those XIX. columns of Coroner Fry's inquest on the putrefying opera, I won't apologize. This controversy concerns not Dick Thompson only, but the whole breed of Whig Doughfaces, and the room is well spent. You must give it soon—on the outside, of course.
Yours, soreheadedly, HORACE GREELY.
C. A. DANA, ESQ., New York.
Ill
WASHINGTON, Jan. 8, 1856.
FRIEND DANA: We calculate to elect Banks in the course of to-morrow niirht. No postponement on account of the weather.
I want you to caution your folks not to "hit out" at everything and everybody here, but consider our position. We must have friend?, not only in one party but in all parties, or we can learn nothing. My firct despatch to you last night about the Democratic caucus was all wrong, because I based it on what Phelps of Missouri told others in my presence, and he did not: try to tell the truth. Afterward Barclay of Pennsylvania told me what I telegraphed last, and that is quite a different story—1 presume the true one. Now, don't you see that I can't get into Democratic caucuses? I must learn what they do from somebody, and if we pick a quarrel with all opponents personally, what chance have we for news? You remember the Grand Vizier who knocked in
the head the Sultan's proposal to ex terminate the Ipfidel dogs, with this sensible demur. "If we kill all the Rajahs what shall we do for the capita tion tax?"
Well, now, I object to Hildreth's personal and savage abuse of old Clayton about his vote on Nebraska in discussing the Clayton-Bulwer treaty. I do not particularly want to use Clayton, but Harvey does, and he is about the best man to pump in the Senate. Seward will rarely tell anything and, besides, he lives two miles from anywhere. Abusing Clayton so savagely is Bhying a stone at our own crockery. I would do it if it were provoked but this was unprovoked. It is a train that don't stop in front of The Tribune office, accord ing to Mac's sensible suggestion.
One more: As we don't want war with England, I would not say that the South won't let Pierce go to war with her—can't be kicked into a war, &3. It will be used by Toombs and other mischief breeders to push the country as near to war as possible, and they may drive us nearer than they really mean to, and so find themselves unable to back out Please thing of these things, and don't let your people in New York attack persons with whom we are in daily intercourse here, unless there shall seem to be an imperative necessity for it. Yours.
C. A. D. G. P. S.—Tribune of Monday (just in) says bank suspension took place in '36. It wa3 '37 (May 10). Please correct in Weekly.
I think it wrong to say Catholics, like slave holders, are opposed to reading the Bible when editions are published by them and urgently recommended by their bishops. I dread all meddling with theology. H. G.
IV.
WASHINGTON, D. C., Jan. 10, '56. FRIEND DANA: We have to day our first mail from New York for some days By it I have your's of Monday and Tuesday.
Of course, I know how such things occur as did last Saturday, aad I didn't blame you, but I do think Fry is, on the whole, a detriment. He is always do ing things too late, and has to be hurried and prompted more than we can afford. And then the annoying folly of filling up the inside of the paper after midnight with the opera rubbish crowding out matter already ancient—I tell you he won't do.
I have labored many years to give The Tiibune a reputation for candor and generosity toward unpopular creeds and races and Stewart will use this up if you will let him. It isn't one article on the Jews he is always slurring them, and this is not like The Tribune. I consider even Stewart's anti-Irish articles, though partly true, impelled by a bad spirit, and calculated to make us needless enemies. Let ua try to cultivate a generous spirit in all things. Hildreth is a good writer, but he is essentially a Timothy Pickering Federalist of fifty or sixty years ago, and is always fighting the battles of that class of well-meaning but shockingly maladroit politicians. He hates slavery mainly because the South tqrned out old John Adams. You must gradually teach him to let the dead buiy, &c.
We'll elect Banks yet, now you see if we don't. We made a good push toward it last night. Youis, H. G.
Let me thank you for your handling of Valk. The man is an ass, but a very malignant one. I trust this letter is genuine.
V.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 17, '5G,
FRIEND DANA: I have yours of yesterday. I shall see these treacherous scoundrels through the Speakership, if am allowed to live long enough, at all events. Our plans are defeated and our hopes frustrated from day to day by perpetual treacheries on our side. But for these we should have been successful weeks ago. I don't know when we shall come to a result but there are hopes even for to-day, and better for to-morrow, if no new mine is sprung under our feet, like that exploded by Thorington yesterday. However, that is likely to result through the caucus, in unintended. good.
Since my letters get in somehow, I am less uneasy here, but every traitor and self-seeker hates me with a demoniac hatred which is perpetually bursting out. Lastly your friend Judge Shankland, General of the Kansas Volunteers, has notified me that he shall cowhide me (for rudeness in refusing to be further bored by him) the first time he catches me in public. Now, I am a hater of novelty, and never hrd any taste for being cowbided, cowhid or cowhidden, or whatever the pa9t participle of the active verb used by Gen. Shankland may be, but he is shoit of funds, and I could not think of putting him to the trouble of chasing me all over the country, so I shall stay here for the present. I trust the man of whom he buys th« cowhide will know him well enough not to sell it on tick. I prefer to be the only sufferer by the application. Yours,
C. A. DANA, Esq. HORACE GREELEY.
4
VI.
WASHINGTON, Jan. 21, '56.
DEAR DANA: 1 send you by this mail a letter from Dubuque which I asked the banker Jesupto write, and which seems to me of greater public interest than most of these local letters are apt to command. As I solicited it, and have kept it several days waiting for time to correct it, I hope you will piint it soon.
I send also a letter by Ewbank on Dr. Hare's revelations, which seems to me good enough to print. I did not solicit this, and am under no obligation to print it. But it seems to use good, though I don't judge between it and the other side. You could easily make it a communication, if you do not want it the other way.
And I mean PIBO to send you by this mail Schuyler Colfax's speech of Saturday, showing up the Democratic argument for a Plurality ruie in 1849. This is one of the great hits of the session, and I want you to print it «t once. It ought to go the weekly, for it justifies us clear through.
I will try not to bore you with Hiich a load very soon again. N. B.—"Gen." Shankland's cowhid ing not yet come to hund—or back. Yours, H. G.
C. A. DANA. ^,
e*
vn*
WASHINGTON, Friday Night, Jan. 25. DANA: 1 shall have to quit here or die, unless you stop attacking people here without consulting me. You have a paragraph (utterly untrue) from £a Boston jmper stating that Pennington was in Boston closeted with Gov. Gard
ner, which was interpreted here as an attack on P. Then comes one from an Ohio paper, classing Bell with Moore and Scott Harrison as opposing Banks long after Ball had come back to Banks. And now comes an awful attack on old Brenton, who has been voting steadily for Banks and the Plurality rules for at least two weeks past—certainly since the second nominating caucus. This article will be handed around and read by every shaky man on our Eiae beiore to-morrow noon, as an evidence of my malignity against every one who ever opposed Banks, and an earnest of what they will all get at soon a3 Banks is elected. It will hurt us all dreadfully. Do send some one here and kill me if vou can not stop this, tor I can bear it no longer. My life is a torture to me.
H.G.
VIII.
S WASHINGTON, Monday morning,"» January, 28,1856. DANA: If you were to live fifty years and do nothing but good ail the time you could hardly atone for the mischief you have done by that article on Brenton.
The stupid old dunce had killed himself, and I had decently buried him. After doing all the harm he could, he had come back to us and was voting steadily though tulkily. His power for mischief was at an end, and he could never again have been in a condition to do any. Your savage, blundering attack upon his putrifying carcass has raised it out of the grave and reanimated it with power for mischief. A great testimonial of sympathy and confidence is being got up, and good men are signing it. He is to shine forth a glorified saint, tried in the purifying fires of The Tribune's malice and falsehood—nay of mine. I have the whole right side of the House upon me—one down, another come on--and I have had to explain the matter separately to each. I had to go to the old animal himself apologize humbly, and tell him I had telegraphed a"* contradiction, which would be in Saturday's paper. But Saturday's paper came and no contra diction. I have it in yesterday's Third Edition, but there is probably not another copy of that in Washington, and I have to stand before the House for another day as a liar as well as a libeller. This will go all over the country as an evidence of my bullying, falsehood and malignity against any one who ever dared to think of another candidate than Banks. It will injure The Tribune horribly, and enable the old mule to throw away his district in the fall.
Now I write once more to entreat that I may be allowed to conduct The Tribune with reference to the mile wide that stretches either way from Pennsylvania avenue. It is but a small space, and you have all the world beside. I can not stay here unless this request is complied with. I would rather cease to live at all. If you are not willing to leave me entire control with reference to this city, both of men and measures, I ask you to call the Proprietors together and have me diecharged. I have to go to this and that false creature and coax him to behave as little like the devil as possible (Lew Campbell, for instance), yetin constant terror of seeing him guillotined in the next Tribune that arrives—and I can't make him believe that I did not dictate iOliSo with eterything her§. If you want to throw stones at anybody's crockery, aim at my head first, and in mercy be sure to aim well.
We had no miil from New York this morning. Who takes the responsibility of omitting my dispatches when you are away?
We hope to elect Banks to-day. Yours, HORACE GREELEY. C. A. DANA, Ejq.
The Faith Cure.
New York Sun. Extraordinary testimony to the efficacy of the faith cure has lately been offered by a person of no less ecclesiastical consequence than Canon Wilberforce,of the English Church. We copy from the London Standard: "I have no shadow of doubt that I was healed by the Lord's blessing upon His own word recorded in St. James, but, as in so many cases, there was sufficient margin of time and possibility of change of tissue between the anointing and the recovery to justify the skeptic in disconnecting the two, and therefore my experience has been of more value in strengthening my own faith than in the direction of public testimony. I can only say that mv internal ailment wag of such a nature that leading surgeons declared it to be incurable except at the cost of a severe operation, which leading physicians thought me unable to endure with safety. While endeavoring at the seaside to gain strength for the operation, the passage in St. James was impressed with indescribable force upon my mind. I resisted it, and reasoned with myself against it for two months. I even came up to London and settled in a house near the eminent surgeon that I might undergo the op eration but the spiritual pressure increased until at last I sent for elders men of God. full of faith—by whom I was prayed over and anointed, and in a few weeks the internal aiiment passed entirely away. 'This was the Lord's doing,and itis marveloui in mine eyes.'
The passage in James to which the restored Canon refers is thie: "Is any sick among you? let him call for the elders of the Church: and let 'them pray over him, anointing him with oil, in the name of the Lord. And the prayer of faith shall save the sick, and the Lord thall raise him up." The interest in this case lies net only in the successful application of Scriptural directions to healing, but also in the fact that such a remedy has now been re sorted to bv a Christian clergvman.
His Proposal.
Life.
Edgar—Mies Edith, I—ah— have some thing most important to ask you. May I—that is—
Elith (softly)—What is it, Edgar? Edgar—May I—Edith, would yon be willing to have our namts printed in the papers, with a hyphen between?
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til lately. Best 8 8Bl watcb In the world, l'er-1 fret timeikeeper.
ISolid Gold Hunting Cases. Klet-ant and magnificent, lioth lodica'and gents'size* with works and cases of eqnal valne.OIVE PERSON In each locality can Mean on# FREE. How is thispotslblet We answer—we want one person In each locality, to keep In
Ihelr homes,and niiow to thoBfi who CAII, a cotui^ete lioe ofonr Valuable and very useful HOUSEUOU. N.ynPt.ES. These samples,aa well as the watch.we send free.aiid after yoO have kept them in your home for S months and to those who may have called,they l»come your own ProPj*t»» It la possible to make thin Ki «at offer, sending ttis SOLID GOI.II watch and COSI1' samples five, as the showing of the samples In any Ideality, always results In a large trade tor
up
after our samples have been In a local ity for
a
month or ^two
we usually get from glOOO to *SOOO in trade fromthe, surrounding country. This, tlio most won'jerful offer eTer known,is made ill order that our samples may h« placed at mica where they can bo seen, all ovor America. riio at once, ana make'sure of the chance. Reader It will be hnrdly any troubla for you to show the samples to those who may call at your Horn* •nd your reward will be most eutlsractory. A poHtal card on which to write ua costs but 1 cent and after you know all,if on do not care to go further, wliy no barm is done._ ®.ut
yo,u,??
•end your address at once, you can secure I- IIEI-. one oi tn» best solid gold watches In the world and o.ir large line of
O S S A E S W a a AddraaaOKO. 8TINSON CO.,Box 811, POUTLANU, MAIN&
DR. ELLIOTT'S
Medicated Food,
A Sure Cure for all Diseases in
HORSES,
Cattle, Sheep and Hogs,
Arising from Impurities of the Blood, and from Functional Derangements.
A DEAD SHOT ON WORMS, AND A CERTAIN 1EVENTI0N A HOC CHOLERA.
