Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 8 October 1892 — Page 6
The Best Groceries,
Provisions.
HOW TO VOTE.
Staffip the
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InKtruetioiiH. If yon want to vote a Straight Democratic Tic ket, stamp within the big square containing tin* Rooster at the top of the ticket. If yon stamp within the hig square yon mnst not stamp anywhere else on the ticket or you will lose
your vote.
You must not mark on the ballot with anything but the stamp. Yon must not stamp except on the squares. If you accidently stamp off a square, return your ballot to the poll clerks and get a
new one.
You must fnlil your ballot before coming out of the booth, so that the face will not show and the initials of the ludl | clerks on the back will show. The following information will help
I the voter:
1. If the voter wishes any information as to the manner of voting he may ask
the p< >11 clerks.
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2. There are two ballot-boxes and two ballots to lie voted. One ballot-box is is painted red and is for the state ballot, which ballot is on red paper; the other ballot-box is painted white ami is for the county ticket, which ticket is on
white paper.
:S. The voter enters the room, tells the poll clerks his name: the clerks give him the two ballots to be voted and a stamp; (the stain]) i> a little stick with a ruhlier on the end of it;) the voter goes alone into one of the booths with the two ballots and the stamp; in the booth on a little sti 'f ho will find an ink pad; (this is a clot .Unrated with ink;) the voter touches i • ir.'c pad with the stamp and then sta ip- i.;s ballots. Let the ballots
dry bet e f> ding.
4. After stamping bis ballots and the ink has l>ecome dry. the voter then folds each ballot separately before leaving the booth: he must fold them so that no one can see how he has voted, and so that the initials or first letters of the jmjIIs clerks' names can be seen on the backs of the ballots; he then goes and givis the stamp back to the clerks, and hands the two ballots to the inspector; then he
leaves the room.
5. After the voter comes out of the booth into the room he must be careful not to let any one see the inside of his ballots; if he exposes his ballot so that it can be km >wn how he votes, his ballot
will !«• rejected.
ti. If the voter can not read English, or is blind, or is physically nnable to stamp his ballots, he has a right to call on the poll clerks to stamp his ballots for him: this must be done in his presence and in the presence of both poll
clerks.
7. The voter must vote the ballots given him by the poll clerks and none
other.
s. The voter must not put any mark or sign on his ballots; if he does, his vote will not be counted. If by accident lie blots his ballot in stamping or makes a mistake, let him return the ballot folded to the poll clerks and get another.
ttiink that his language was quite as the clipping you send represents, but it was so near the same that certainly there is no substantial difierence. [The clipping was the one above quoted from The Indianapolis N-ntinel.—Kd. News.] I exceedingly regret that our governor did on that occasion give so much encouragement to profanity. A prominent member of the Disciple church informed me that his son. a young man. heard the speech, and insi-ts that he did say 'Democrats' but I think that he is mistaken, and that the governor applied his language to ‘southern rebels’ and their ‘sympathizers' in the north. Henry l". Johnson followed soon after in a lengthy s|nech, but it was, if I remember correctly, entirely free from profanity.
“E. K. Hasty.
‘‘I’. S.—The pastor of the Disciple church says that my letter is a very fair representation of the facts. He |>er!iaps did use the word ‘Democrat,’ but did not apply it in a general sense, but only referred to those who were ‘rebels' and ‘sympathizers' or ‘copperheads,’ fur that word was used by him. 1 just itow obtained a clipping from the I niou City Eagle, a Ke-
publicau paper of this city”
The News also has the following letter:
“Union City, Ind.. Sept. 24.
“In reply to your inquiry 1 will say that the article of Tina Sentinel concerning what Governor Chase said at Union City on the 21st of April, IXii, is all false and untrue. The language that he used was this: He was speaking in reference to copperheads, and rebels, and rebel sympathizers, who opposed the pensioning of crippled, maimed and dependeent Union soldiers, and who called them lousy beggars, scoundrels and thieves: corrupt followers, rednosed patriots, who loaf about doggeries; thieves and perjurers: dirty, lousy beggars; scum of the earth, coffee coolers, loafers, robbers, bummers, shirks and vagabonds. It was the men that called the brave and heroic men of 1H01-5 by these names. Unit Governor Chase re ferred to. He never said one word about a Democrat in his speech at Union City. He said if he was a swearing man he would say, may god damn THEM. He also said that this government could never compel!- : sate them (the soldiers) for their sacrifices in the long and dismal march, ami iu the prison hells of the Confederate states. 1 heard every word that lie said on that occa-! siun, for 1 was there from the time the convention convened until it adjourned.
Daniel Woodhpry.
“ Commander Sedgwick Host, No. HS, De-
REMARKABLE OLD ATHLETES,
Tradition Tells of Wonderful Men Who
Lived In the Grand Canary.
After the Spanish occupation of the Grand Canary a certain enormous stone was for long pointed out as one of the instruments of the Gaunche athletic courses. The natives had been able to lift it, set it on their shoulders, and even throw it over their heads. Their | degenerate posterity, and the Spaniards,
5CER PUT ME ONTO
THIS
could not raise it from the ground. Tradition has immortalized one Adargona, of Grand Canary, who could
partinent of Indiana. “ 1’. S.—J. Ik Koss m
wrestle for two successive hours, and having been thrown undermost in a certain contest, got bis antagonist l>etween his legs and arms, and squeezed him so that his bones began to crack. The native was subsequently sent as a prisoner to Spain, where he astounded the people by his performances, according to the National Review. One day, in Seville, he was visited by a brawny youth of La Mancha, who was anxious to try a bout with him. “My good friend,” said Adargoma, “as we are going to wrestle together, it is only | reasonable that we should begin by | drinking something.” A large bowl of wine having been brought, he took this in one hand and continued to address his challenger: “If with both your arms you can overpower one of mine, so us to hinder me from drinking every drop of this wine, we will try our strength together. If not, you may return to your own home.” The struggle 1 took place, and Adargoma by degrees i drained the bowl in the coolest manner j without spilling a drop of the wine. 1 Ilis one hand was more than a match 1
for the other two.
It was reckoned nothing out of the common for a man to take an untelhered ox by the horn with one hand and slay it with the other. A certain native horn priest of Grand Canary in ; the seventeenth century showed that | he inherited some of his ancestors’ | | vigor. He could not only kill an ox in
vL
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and it does jud wt)<at he claims for W*
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and Dr. Commons.” | this wa >’- but one day, hearing that an
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Mr. Hasty says that Governor Chase’s j in the street, he ran out. and. grasping language was so “near the same” as rhat it by the leg, threw it down and so quoted by 1 he Sentinel, t lint certainly | held it until its owner was able to se-
tliere is no substantial ilitterenre, and i
that "the pastor of the Disciple church i L ‘ ure '*• I '.is doughty son of the say* tliat his letter is a fair representation i church before bis death chanced to of the facts.” ^ | have one of his legs amputated for
charges of The i a canct , r . ]t was then found that his
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If jou stamp anywhere insitle the square eoutainius; the rooster you will vote a straight bellioeratie ticket.
Tiiis substantiates
fc 'lfis immaterial whether Mr. Chase re-1 ^'ffh bone was solid, with no trace of j ferred to Democrats, copperheads, or rebels marrow. It must be confessed, bower Hottentots. ever, that the relies of the Canarians 1 he question is. did he use profane Ian- now found in their burying places do ■ guage? 1 he Republican organ of Ran- . , ... . . ’ aolph count v. the commander of Sedgwick I ou f the inference that this G. A. R post, K. K. Hasty, the pastor of was a national characteristic, though the Chris!inn church, and the editor of the their dimensions are certainly a tesfi- \\ inchester Herald, all Republicans, say lnon y () f the strength and size of their
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IS. S. RENICK CO., EAST SIDE OF SQUARE. Agents for Putnam County.
that Governor Chase did.
As The Kagle says, was it discreet or
corteous for a minister of the church to speak of human beings, even the vilest, as "mi p if liell,“ ami express a wish that
“Goil would damn them to hell ?” What has Governor Chase to say in reply to tlie letters of Mr. Hunt, Mr. Hasty.
Commander Woodbury and the pastor of
' tm&S ti.il
THE PROFANE PARSON.
brtanlc*, stylish an l -mrabltM i.anany <■
gold at the price. KquuU custom made shoescostlng
pfc.
a church of his own denomination pub-
lished in Republican organs >
Cliaae's Had Itrouk.
The Indianapolis Nows had this to say in explanation of what it calls a “bad ’ ’‘ the governor feels sorry and
late proprietors.
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Ivopu Idienn Kxplanatlons that Confirm the ClmrsfOH Atcahist Ciovernor Chase. It will he remembered that the state committee and all the Hepuhliean managers i of tin* state opposed Governor Chase's nomination at Fort Wayne. They advised against his nomination because they believed he would be a load on the ticket to carry; that his labor record would lose the ticket’s vote; that he had no soldier record, having never smelt powder; that he was in the habit of using intemperate language and was too much of a demagogue for the
dignilied ollice of governor.
At the conipre>sional oi n vent ion last April, in I’nion City. Governor Chase’s
i>le. The S';.
from
to economise I
I heSS.uOshoe equalscustom nun $4.00 to $6.U0. Ladies who wish footwear are finding this out.
igiah’ name a
rn of each shoe; look eof deah-rsat tempting them, buoh substItutk
to pros
Saining money under false pret« Yi'. i.. IHIl Lil.AS, Hroi Ul
Cauti
•tamped on th when you buy.
•tltute other makes for them, tsueh substitutions! fraudulent and subject to prosecution by law for '
‘er false t re tern es.
nr,
p
ou, iMass. Sold*
Gil His n
L. 1
M. Campl-’e ii Ac.ys:;
- mcui pi.u Argyl-.Vm Kaj After. IzMt The accoxcP*nying i:.- ui \v , iu ?56 u.s till, of my w* igbt ;”id in .-Ui- Bu«; . i t\. 3.1 ii.. m •• ments W.U .•!:.a 1 ■ d \) - ■ ; in. 31 in. 11 in live month t < atmt n:. Hq-c.... m. ; .». uto. PATIENTS TP^ATrLJ ?.Y MAiL. CONFIDENTIAL Hnrnil<.». i . : > ' For nai tic’i . . ■ ' "t
D? ^
tqivevh was so profanv that the Union t’ity
Tingle, the Hepubliean organ of
. CHASES 0 HORSE HEAD HORSE BLANKETS
Randolph
county, denounced it.
The ludianaplis Sentinel, having lately resurrected tlie |irofane section of the siieech with The K igle'scuniinents thereon, the Indianapolis Journal and News, both Republican organs, undertook to disprove tlie charge, but they only succeeded iu nlaking the matter more serious. Here is what the Sentinel carries at the head of
its editorial columns:
' Democrats are imps of hell. If I had a mind to swear I'd say God damn them to hell. They ought to be dead and moulder ing in the dust of the earth, and the dust Is-scattered to the four winds of heaven that they might tie completely obliterated from the memory of man. -Governor Chase
at Union City, April 21, 1892.
“We submit the question whether Governor Chase's speech was as courteous, dis creet, patriotic and manly as the resolution claims it to be. Was it discreet or courteous tor a minister of the church of God, a follower of tlie lowly Xazarine and a teacher of His word, with its lessons of mercy toward ‘even the least of these,' to
brink, that
"won't do it again.
The documents in tlie case of Governor Chase and 1.is speech at Union City, produced in The News Monday, were highly interesting reading. They embraced the
statements of friendly win',cs-. s and, more lhrout , h in its beak
important, tlie testimony of Governor Chase himself. For two reasons unijsunl interest alia, lies to the spoken words of Governor Chase. lie is the incumbent of a high office, the chief executive of a great state. The fact of Ids candidacy does not divest his person of the dignity of that position, lie is a party candidate hut he is also governor over the people. Then, again, lie is a minister of a church of wide influence and large membership. The position is somewhat unusual. Hence his words are to be followed with an attention not always ac-
corded tn those of a candidate.
Tlie testimony of Governor Chase in part, and the testimony of his political friends in his behalf are amazing m their obliviousness to or disregard of the gravamen of the offense charged. At Huntington the governor said lquoting the words of The Journal's special dispatch) that “his address at Union City was to the veterans, ami the remarks he made did not refer to the Democrats, but to the copperheads. soldier-haters and rebel sympatnizers. He said he tiad nothing to retract.” His language, according to his own statement, was that lie had no words adequate to express his condemnation of those who insulted veterans by calling them “coffee coolers, red-nosed patriots, bounty jumpers. perjurers and cowards." The severest tiling ne quotes against himself is that when the persons above defined die “their ashes should be blown by the winds of heaven to the four corners of the earth." The commander of Sedgwick post, G. A. K., at Union City, in Ids letter in Monday’s News, says that tlie words were used in respect to “copperheads and rebels, and rebel sympathizers.” Hut the commander
Some of Them liuitit Playhouses anti
Ailorti Thom.
The most remarkable instance of estheticism among birds, in the opinion of Chambers' Journal, is that exhibited by the Australian V aver birds, who build long galleries in which to play, adorning them with shells, feathers, leaves, bones, or any colored or'glittering object which comes in their way. CapL Stokes described one of these bower birds as taking a shell alternately from each side of the bower and carrying it
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speak of human beings, even the vilest, as ‘imps of hell,' and express the wish that
n
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Chase’s Plush Lap Robes
‘God would damn them to hell,’thereby violating bis command, ‘Thou shall not take the name of the Lord thy God iu vain V Was it discreet, courteous, patriotic or manly v We leave the question with our readers.”—Union City Kagle, Repudlicau Organ of Haudolpti county, April 23,
IK 12.
First, The Journal published a letter from l'. 11. Hunt, editor of the Winchester Herald, another Hepubliean organ. Mr. Hunt’s statement, which was published on the editoria page of The Journal on Saturday. Sept. 24, is as follows: What Governor Chase did say in sub-
staiii e was:
"That copperheads, rebels and rebel sympathizers who opiioscd the pensioning of crippled, maimed and dependent Union soldiers should receive the execrations of every loyal American citizen; that no privi that could lx- dd the brave and heroic soldiers of IKn-S could compensate them for their sacrifices in tlie long and dismal marches on the fields of blood and carnage, and in the prison hells of Confederate hate; that were lie permitted to swear lie would say that God might damn tiikm for such baseness, as He had promised He would do
in cases of like character. '
Mr. Hunt does not deny that Governor Chase used profane language, but that it had reference to “copperheads” and not Democrats. As the Indianapolis Journal daily refers to M r. Stevenson as a copperhead, as it always referred to Mr. n
[are the standard. The plash will j shed. All robes have thel
not
'name Chase either woven in the! binding or sewed on the comer.
of Sedgwick post goes on to say what the governor’s words really were, viz.: “He said if he was a swearing man he would
say, 1 rod damn them.”
Tins seems to be a rather roundabout
way of “damning.” It was not a flattering assumption on his part that the people of Union City would la- amused by Ids cleverness iu swearing so adroitly, while at the same time putting from himself the ignominy of his malediction. We are charged (as Governor Chase ought to kn >w) to swear not at all! itizens Hasty and Woodbury, of Union City, do not deny that tlie governor used the language attributed to him. The former says it was substantially the same: Mr. Woodbury has a memory (unfortunately for Governor Chase) and
draws upon it most damagingly.
From all Hie testimony (and we take only the evidence of lb publicans), Governor Chase seems to have made a pretty bad break. No doubt he is sorry; no doubt lie would be more careful another time. He i* not the hi st »pe iker who. confronted with a "cold-type" reproduction of his hot speech, lias failed to recognize it. IIis denial, which is doubtless sincere, is entitled to its full weight. Hut due weight is to l>e accorded likewise to the testimony of his party friends who have come to his defense, and who. with singular unanimity, agree that he did indulge in Die profanity, but that tlie object of it was not Democrats but “copperheads.” In the latter regard the governor agrees with them. In the former
he disagrees.
dricks, perhaps they were the ones Gov
base wa
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ernor Chase wanted to damn
The most cruel stab to Brother Chase, however, was reserved for The New Sept. 2(1, which gave two letters received in answer to inquiries from it, as follows
“Union City, Ind., Sept. 24. 1892.
“1 heard Governor Chase at the time to which you refer. 1 do not desire to misrepresent any man. I did not try to remember his utterance. Have never spoken of it to any one until since receiving your letter of inquiry. 1 think he wa- speaking of ‘rebels’ and their'sympathizers’ when he used the strong laiifluage which. I ,ii - |. ■- * 4 . f t i .. i: . tiou of the farmer's interests by metiP who never ran a furrow or planted a
Lumholtz describes several of these playhouses of the bower birds; he says they are always to be found “in small brushwimkT, never in thqopen tield; and in their immediate vicinity the bird collects a mass of different kinds of objects. especially small shells, which are laid in two heaps, one at each entrance —the one being always much larger than the oth< r. There are frequently hundreds of shells, about three hundred in one heap and thirty in the other. Tlnf ■ is usually a handful of green berries partly inside and partly
outside the bower.”
In his interesting book. “Among Cannibals." Lumholtz describes a play ground < if what would appear to be different species of this bird, showing even a greater esthetic taste. He says: “On the top of the mountain I heard in the dense scrubs the loud and unceasing voice of a bird. I carefully approached it. sat on the ground and shot it. It was one of the bower birds, with a gray and very modest plumage, of the size of a thrush. As I picked up the bird my attention was drawn to a fresh covering of green leaves on the block soil. This was the bird’s place of amusement, which beneath the dense scrubs formed a square about a yard each way, tho ground having been cleared of leaves
and rubbish.
“On this neatly-cleared spot the bird had la'd large, fresh leavi*.. one by the side of the other, with considerable regularity, and close by he sat singing, ap parently extremely happy over his work. As soon ns the leaves decay they are replaced by new ones. On this ex ettrsion I .saw three such places of amusement all near each other, and al» fresh leaves from the ♦me kind of trc.':i. u idle a large heap of dry, withered leaves was lying close by. I> seems that the bird scrapes away tho mold every : :ie it changes the leaves so as to have a dark background against which the green leaves make s better appearance. Can anyone doubt that this bird lias the sense, of beauty?’’
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If you want to vote a straight Democratic ticket, stamp the big square containing the
rooster.
My/
-irei'inct after
ChlneM* Frugality.
Dr. Gustave Schlegel has called attention to the necessity of merchants studying the customs and prejudices of the Chinese in reference to commercial ! undertakings, and relates the following incident, which shows the strong practical sense and frugality which pervade i the Chinese. The native pots are very \ thin and burn through quickly, and j some Lnglish firms thought it would be a very good thing to make boilers in England and -i na them to China. Accordingly. a shipload was sent to Hong | Kong. They were cheaper and stronger i than the native boilers, and a few bun- i dred were sold; but the natives would buy no more, though they admitted that the boilers were cheaper than their own, but to make them boil they had to use orach more fuel, because they were so thick. Thiy spent much more in tlie | way of fuel before they could get their
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