Paoli Weekly News, Volume 6, Number 1, Paoli, Orange County, 19 September 1877 — Page 1
the n;Uil-v 0f ! i 1 e : -uaSy t";lr. cor. Unit iu-i. i .i irKe roa:?r- m ra VOL. VI. PAOLI," ORANGE CO., INDIANA, WEDNESDAY. SEPTEMBER '10, 1877. NO. 1 I V ls m i'.'i...:'':' under eultivatio on.
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r ! " r I I t t 1 - i . ; if l , . .. t-. - ror' ora'IVS'.'lS. ; - ! ,. , v - v.. T.,. ... ! 1 r , n .-i-iiatt iv-.. i i , t i ' 1 " ii A't v - ,i .) 'v; sii.i si ' '1 ;;U:mi H. M-trvir.an.Jioi ,i r. iiiun;:-.'..' -.-..V,":-!. L. II. E. , ii. a. c i . .llllil v.. ::'; .!. .-,3. N. Tuvlor. Paul's. Y.'iu. .1. 1 lfr'.p. N-ui'i lias.: .fnin'-s M, baker. fh-..:! . ';. W. Tccnnb-n: i i i.i 11. Iati.f-rs. N jrth V' I',. Mul-r brtiicu I.irk: W'm. lb Com veil. J.it k mh: Mi ris-t o!u' i' Cox. i;, i, )....-Wil!iuni T nfur-'b S'.ni Ea .-t. Jtu;i"! M. mmcrs. Kni)-rvrv'':: Henry V . Triiikl " TOWXS18II" A is S KSS O IIS. I a oSi--.fnthatt McVoy. Nnrtlt-f.s' Jolm A. ilutt-liinson. irl f :v , A h;i Frr cir.an. trrw':ii'! -hi !:v:s A. ,!cinkit!s. ort'iW'-a A. lf-d..tr. Frfi;' U bii k Anthony rarvell. ;n k-',ir, -( ii'sirjre . I iick-;re-n',:.fdd .lo.-.s- lb MHtan. SonUia- J"p! 11. Mcintosh. S:anij.t:!'jt i-"k Cccr;.; J MvCoy. jiTifi:s or Tim iikicc. I ;i'-'n; I'.vii, 'tin on, ."imcon Cta-cn. N.trtSi Kst.-t: Clmrlrs llig-lett, James V: an v. (b W. Rice, Chas, Hunger, Jao'j Stuhx. tr;!i:vi'.-: William II. Cov.-ker.b N..r-k : John lb Payne. Wtl:i.tn J''.' a Vr"isck hick: John K. Mavity, Win. II, llwiji't'!. .Uifk.tM;; Jraacs I;lkirvl, lb l'-- KoV r ; i . iJrt nr.U; Albert Mnjlb-'ul, isaac- ! , - Snuth Lasvt. -Jcliu II. iluckiui ati, Wm. i . . i y!i!!;f--crc-i;: A-l.irn Wikle, Wm. II. M.tr'tin, ii i: r.Y i.i: vt son rr : s:s, F. A. ami A. Y. (ki'jli bc"!v''. N't. U'.k nu" ts in rojru-b--r Com rti . t u-a 1 1 n i-'i Friilav cvcniiii:-1 5, ttuv tl Eili M)'n, in each uvnth, except wl:cn die m.-son t'lil's oti IViJay, t!ifa yrrtii :".at nt niny nnj tv. -aim k - Lktrva t'ter. 1. 1 o. r. Rtllaitce boJzc Xo. RiO, Riiolt, meet erry ifimday pvcnii);. I. O. G. T. Paolt h.mW. N.t. .:k metts, in Otbl Fellows iinil, t,,M-y Tue.I y evening. I. (). 31.' Pitch l.O'l.: N"- 2-, tnts ia O-hl 'Fc-lif.wt. I In 1 i-vrrr Thurlay cvulnj. H. K.Oku.vli Ilev. W. W.Wel.k, bntor, '-f-vii-fs at l o'clock P. M. S;.nb.v U,t. Hbt. l.sT5, ti a.I on rdterraile t'.-n. iv a. M. ever; "1 c.3:i;,-, and p; ia v c Vfl r. ; n . 1 .. ;. ! , , r! ." -. F. - r. : " v i - ' M . t i " it - ,' f" s lri, r t ! I , x bli 1 - ( : ; i it. i :m Ciass -C Tkars I r l-VirC- Sa . . lb 1-77. i ! ; c. i u tr.ovn1 nil al- . i :.a.l b--C X C I x j b f i Vt... : 1 . - rx -v to b r. I .( i; iv. '-!.- ' -. he I I P 11V. Tl LI ,.:..),
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r Tbi - a j -r of a r Iff: n f . : , :. 1 it 5 ' ! . fi f r. t: f the rising oi r-?f the c-dl to ! arm- of tl;o abI.'-bodh'd XfopuI.it!ou. ; T!io Eurooan reserve i are to bo ; .stationed at AdrianopU, Sofia and j j A donic,. When "the unclassified1 trmes arc- surntnonril to tin Held i thf Standard of the Propliet will bo ! unfarlcMl and. the .Saltan wiii take , sujiuiiuuwiiiiijana. l nat win i be a critical moment, for it will bo j an appeal to religious Fanaticism and to a destructive war between, j Mohammedan" aml,.i:ifWols. : 'It; will the signal of iha ma.-saere I 5'-'d xbn'mirtalio:; of the Christian l'IUi!m!U suojetas. a ins , .may not b.e intended, but it will -Ik; so understood. The Porto cannot restrain t!se unbridled fury of the bigoted followers of Muhomet wiien it calls upon them in th'e u-:tird form io fiorist fur the religion ' ho fouiided, and to crush it ea mies. If was the intentian of the government to on list. Christiana for the exterior defense of Constantinople, and negotiations were enter, fed into with the heads of the different Christian communities for that purpose. On their advice the project vas abandoned, and, instead, it was determined t form a new organization for the protection of the capital itself, a civic guard, of which the Sultan was to Le the commander. It is to he called the "Imperial Guard," and will be composed of men between -0 and "0 years of njo. The decree does not mention whether Christhins will form a part of it or not. Thy certainly are not reliable champions of Mohammed m rule, even the most servile and debased of them. Philadetphki Press. ; A Scrap of 33orsran EZorc I5iVermont has long been celebrated for the breed of - Morgan horses. Tho raising of the stock has made the fortunes of hundreds of individuals there, and probably added hundreds of thousands of dollars to the wealth of the State. With no wish to detract from tfie good fame of Vermont, it may be useful to remember that this famous breed of horses, as well as their name, originated elsewhere. On the banks of the Connecticut, in West Springfield, Mass., for the. fir-it forty-one years of ids life, lived the Justin Morgan who gave name to this breed of horses-, and In that vicin ity in 170-3 the Morgan horse of his- j tfiry originated. The facts, as abundantly proven, by recollection, tradition and the public records tire simply these: Justin Morgan, the son of a farmer, was born in West Springfield in 1717. He was tall and slim (which is n characteristic of the f Midi v ef tl: it name there to4 1 iy ar.d .-upp. -rh-d hiuwlf chief-j ly by tearhirg -irgieg, wiitiugand j eomiuen k ,"-o.--. lii- u-i.a. --- H! him to truiI n r.-i laa' !y into other i.t i ; .i e -r... ar.d tow:;-, ! .a. d be 7 ..-.-..me f.-.-. S ( f i.,.i -v ,.;.,n- ! -hip at: l;i ;,..!..! if. ...,, ,,f vmmm , - - a da j i i i . r.i i i . . ! -dJ Idsi.o:::. - . b. I in 17-" vi 1 , it If bis f.r...:iy t ) Ili:al 1: b, Vt, 11 ia I , ea; i 1 ci.o .- f tl..- rs t f the tovn and h,l tl." ..be , town tbrk b r t'e.rte er i.ii - :rs. ill i t ii-j iti, .ie;uail iat i.tt.K to Wi-t rir.l d i t a 1 -:-b. -, l.-t)e. It-. i n Mtia'-.w .r-( .!. I ti: ;:, , hbli i j 1 1 : ... a:. I tl. r..e i . - f
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t i'. 1 t It I)Li'.vIi." j of I'arl.ui marble, and your inouth cl a icL rl-tks it i.s f i; iui.kor;tI with sweetness. Nec!it ho .!-5 sired ! t-tr lingers on your lips like honev
i A I .1 ! 0 pr llllil by "True Briton." a liorvo r.-i by Cob !) Lmcey, a British officer j on Long Island, wno had anim-i ported stallion and mare. "True j Briton" was stolen from Col. Do Lancey at King's Bridge, ZN Y,, wliile be was drinking In a tavern. One. Sjnith (probably John) ran hi in 'across- the bridge and took him to th ) American army, near AYbi to Plains, where he was sold to .Joseph .Ward, of Hartford, CL, for $;ftV a -'great price for those j -lays.' ' Mr. .Ward. keit this , horse three years for a saddle horse, and th -n sold him to oneSelah IMorton, of East Hartford," and soon ' after we hear of him kept one season by Justin Morgan, " of West Springfield, and , two seasons by John Morgan, of Springfield. The dam of the first Morgan horse was probably a descendant of "Lindsey's Arabian," formerly known as "Banger," imported into Connecticut in 17 GO, when he was four years old. His progeny was highly esteemed in Massachusetts 'and Connecticut. Some cavalry horses of this breed so attracted the eye of Washington at the siege of Boston in 177-j-o that Mr. Lindsey, by his advice, purchased the horse that has since borne his name and took him to Virginia. This, from ail accounts, is the true origin of the breed as well as its pedigree: Spriuyjiehl (Mass.) Republican. . A "lodel love-L.etter. .The following epistle was written by an Onandaiga lover to the "object of his affection," a widow lady, the mother of three children. After his passkm had cooled, and he failed to "come to time," the lady sued him for a breach of promise o'T marriage, and recovered $500 as a healing balm for her lacerated heart, the letter being part of the evidence produced on the trial: My Bear Mrs. M livery t ime I think of you my heart flops up and down like a churn-dasher. Sensations of unutterable joy caper over It like young goats on a stable roof, and thrill through it like needles through a pair of tow linen trowsers. As a goslin swinimeth in a mud p'uddle, so swim I in. a sea of glory. Visions of ecstatic rapture thicker than the hairs of a blacking brush, and brighter than the hues of a. humming bird's pinions, visit me in my slumbers, and, borne on their invisible wings, your imago stands before me, and I rech out togiap it like a pointer snapping at a blue bottle 'fly.' When first I beheld your angelic perfections t was bewildered, and my brain whirled round like a bumble bee under a g!a-s tumbler. My eyes stoo I open like cellar doors in a country town, and I lifted my e vs to catch the -ilvL-ry accents of your voice. My tongue ia fu-r.l to wa.-, and in silent admiration I drank in the svtt i'ifecti-ia of Iov as a thir-ty man -waibv.vcth a hot whirky punch. . 1:. th-.1 I" 'd of your face bil i p i . y F , I .-en;. tiMtS feci as h"I c-,uld lift myIf up by ir,y i" bstrps r s b"ia as the church he bell-rope ar - - V t ,.-o 1 r. Ft lit you in n Ilk r,-es ir:n t 4ru "al ... ... hrF.I c 1
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I .mi t nt'-tl my whole unat oniy like a 1 ul of birdshoftiwnigh a rotten : apple. Your nn?e:'is froui. a chunk on a bear's mv: -and Mnvraids of unfledged kisses are there ready to f ....j ...I tl v out una iisrnt somevvners liKe buzzards out of their parents' nest. Your laugh rings in my ears like the bleat of the stray lamb on the bleak hillside. The dimples on your cheeks are like bowers in beds of roses, or hollows in cakes of home-made sugar. :',.;..: I am dying to fly to thy presence and . pour out the burning elo quence of my love as thrifty house- ; wives pour out hot coffee. .Away from you I am as melancholy as a sick rat. Sometimes ; I can hear the June bugs of despondency buzzing in my ears, and feel 'the cold lizards of despair crawling down my back. Uncouth fears like a thousand minnows, nibble at my spirits, and my soul is pierced vith doubts like an old cheese is bored with skippers. - - My love for you is stronger than the kick of a young cow, or the smell of Coffey's patent butter, and more unselfish than a kitten's first caterwaul. As a song-bird hankers for the light of day, tho 'cautious mouse for the fresh bacon set in the trap, as a mean pup hankers for new milk, so I long for thee. You are fairer than a speckled pullet, sweeter than ' a Yankee doughnut fried in sorghum molasses, brighter than a topknot plumage on the head of a muscovy duck. You are sweetened toddy 'altogether. ' '"'-'' If these few remarks "'will enable you to seethe inside of my soul,and.me to win your affections, I shall be as happy as a woodpecker in a cherry tiee, or a hungry stage horse in a green pasture.' If you can not reciprocate my thrilling passion, T will pine away like a poisoned bedbug, and fall away from a flourishing. vine of life, an untimely branch; and in coming years, when tho shadows grow from the hills, and the philosophical frog sings his cheerful evening hymns, you, happy in another's love can come to drop a tear and catch a cold uj)on the last resting place of.- , ; Yours, affectionately, Jeremiah Snodgbass. "Verdict for plaintiff' and $500 damages. Life in Texas, A new-comer in a Texas town always enjoys himself. After spending a .short time looking around the place, he grows weary and finally asks the clerk of the hotel if there is any chance -of leaving fun that day. Aral the clerk, scratching his lie ad a moment, says; "Well, I dunno, I leckon we can yet up something for you before night. Haven't been shot at yet, have ye Oh, well, you will be soon. Just loaf around the streets a little while, and even if you aint shot at yourself, you can dodge the bullets intended for some other person. May La you might oi jeet to its cc.miug in that ay, ort o7 ccon J h-i:d you know, mid if you C.i, vl.jj wait a little while, and I'll g-; out with you, and I gut we can get up something rial li(!y." minutes afterward C.rt tu i wo n is the -tudving th tl:..: leaving time cf the not even the ( F ikb him c.i ry the l4.,t a t . : 'i ith P thege,-tit "Ftr r, I '
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J iFs dt near tl gi i vo of Chit... )- - i01 Wednt rth -at two of tl e Lne-
1:1 .j .T.t i I Mid c .i: have J a Pacing behiml the motiument with -Mr. I'almerston, the venerable old sexton, I heard the f .l l . : ?...,,. '"" i-iiuvu.-;tuuu iniui mese melting lovers, almost too full for; utterance. I give it literally: "Angel, pet!" "What, .Charley?" "What, awful poetry, .oh tha gravestones, loveyt" ; , ; "What, sweetie?" "I said what dreadful versos ou the gravestones, darling!" , "Oh, did you my own?" -"Yes, lackey, listen!"Here lies the wif ot Uobert Uucul.-tr: lie walked the wars of eiod jerj"-ii s:." "Oil, my!" ''"' .Then came a long pause. He was holding her hand m one of Ins while the other whipped his pantaloons leg with a cane. Then tho pause was interrupted by: "Oh, sweetie!" "What, Charley?" " ' "Such queer gravestones!" 'Such queer what, darling?" ?1 said what strange poetry on the gravestones." "Oh, did you, pet?" "Yes, angel, look at that one: 40 years a mairlen, 1 year a wife; , 2 months a mother, .. -j ... Ami that took her life.-" "Oh, Charley!" That is just What these loving lovers : said. Saratoga Ijcttcr. JSevspaper ;'De-cision. ' kl." Any person wdio takes a paper regularly from the posfofiiec wheth.er directed to his name or another's, or whether he has subscribed or not is responsible for the payment. 2. If any person orders his paper discontinued, he must pay all arrearages, or the 'publisher -may continue to send it until it is paid,' and collect the whole amount, whether the paper is taken from the ollice or not. o. The courts have elecideel that refusing to take newspapers from the postofiice, or removing and leaving them uncalled for, is prima facie evidence ot intentional fraud. Mrs. Lucy Hooper, in her latest letter from Paris to the Philadelphia Telegraph, after saying that the; splendid frescoss of the Grand opera house are already dimmed by smoke, adds; "Truly the Grand opera has been a fated ; building from the very first. The emperor, who planned it never beheld its completed glories. The first new opera ("Jeanne d' Arc") produced within its walls was a dead and dismal failure. Springs -of water burst; forth when its foundations were commenced, unci formed a lake that had to be drained at great ee-t. Thr- se.nery has twic been , The drop curtain f.il j suddenly o:io night in tho mi I lie j of an act and cutio near I-.i'dirg ' I 'aure. Over tvs edy v.tn-kmen 1 -; their lives duri::g the eret'ti-m ot the c i cvr i j . ; l y r , iiln i i i be cor ti '.am j to IV ris to ing nigld a task ! . M, o i :i d ir.:e, tl, ' i w net i log on tke e whF'h, ;.,"lce i I ":f,ri;i. now tl. . 1 1 bit i:g-' of tie" f 'y r van nng awny. j , . . ... . . . . . . s ty w ith ele Brabt ra hou-.e may CF.. vieve rt AF.dorr, a Tree. -erii ' e : . r i r t t t;
j. 1 f t , - .i i t"- "i (K.i-,. . . 1 -v. i. t i.i i' ivi'i 'f'- o;" Xf. ; i)m 'in t;1XtlBaker I'aslui is nominated the Graphic ! t..t t - . tin .successor to ( aiui.ui a una jt i4 announced thai G. 1'. L Ha rep, son -in-law. of Nathaniel II, tw tnorise. is encrat X'.d in writing a I novel. Why ' not send a commission to Joseph? Howard might t.;t-t lost ehadng iiitri aibover (lie plains at '1 this headlong rate. 1 ' '! I John Keeiy, the motor man, has j . . i acquire!. , a .a immense lot tuae.
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tlresses well, eats spring ehiekcis, 1 vviH l,;,ve ttt loMt hM0,M .bashed and is said to own mm worth !,W sale tliis season. -r ofdiamonds: ;: "' ' - .....The Murphy movement pro-
It is reported amu-id tlj.it the fall petticoat has -vea-y wide seams, but laud ti' lovt ! what do:." a m.m up in the fourth story know about Mich thing-.' Detroit FYu.; Press. . : Spencer, who lilL-J the State savings hank of Chicago, was a Moody con vert, and seems to havo been busy converting the assets of the bank at the same time that Moody was converting him. ' Mr. Ilalph Wal do Bmeisoti is 7 1 years of age. die speaks of himself as a man whose work is nearly ended; but the only sign of lading power noticeable in conversation is a slight hesitation and apparent effort in. recalling a needed word especially a proper name. Dr. Hans von Bulow is reported to have said, "if I stop practice fur one day I. notice it in my playing; if I "stop two days my friends notice it; if I stop three days tho public notices it." " eAlphonse Baudot, tho voting writer whose novel of ''Fduonie" has given him such a Parisian reputation, is a" foppish lookin individual, . with long tiair pai tld in the - middle, much : bei ingd r...d jeweled. : Bishop Haven, speaking of his trip to Africa, represents the Christian people as the only ones who undress when they go to bed. Probably they are the only ones in Africa who have "anything : but their skins to take off. The unknown giver of the 02,300, wdiich enabled the Pilgrim, society at Plymouth, Mass., to finish, daring the present-season, the colossal statue of "Faith" upon the national monument erected there In honor of the Pilgrim fathers, proves to have been the late Oliver Ames, of Easton, Mass., who was a native of Plymouth, ' A Xew York correspondent reports that' young Bennett has resigned the active control of the
Herald, which ii now undertaken j are having a wonderfully eueeeby Connery and Xordhoff In tho j n meeting in the east part of tho
etbtorial dep ircm'uit. d Mr. Wii-I'.ti-iOu ali.ir.i Uxy in LliO riie-o three men p ty IK lt rent, anu makt uiat i r cin 'J f e.jn.i-rn. V ..... . ". - , ,. ! . 1 A li var e - ! vt i, ii.-'l nil i .r.ci . . r . . Th t i u i l 1 . . i . m, t i ft ,d : ;m a I l i c .is Viiis: i.O1 I ' ire th-e I.i I '. r v 1 . t - vwe.l He in
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1 :-.fy ;',;r I h - 'th and :i u ilhl, :t hri.ud eoi.i.i-i. ot one in r I'Kie iiuiividua!. . The new opera !.-.:-' at G when oaipIvU d. will cost about A crazy man ran through tho streets of 3Ii!lcr.-burg stark naked a few days -inc. A po-toidce has been established at Ibdmesville, withS.S. JXivh as postmaster. : ' : - -Cholera 1- getting in its work at a f eat, rnii aniofigst tho he in CJackbrd he former. of' Gibson' county f,wi K ""en uiaijti aroutut .eurnmitviile, Aiideron county. : - Princeton Democrat: .-.Princeton can boa-t - of tho bcjt looking "school marms" of tiny town in the State. , ; , ' ," Wayne county is snaking preparation for an old settlers' meeting. It will come oil some time in October. " ; ' A cheese manufacturing ' "association" has "been formed in Hesi"d r i c'k s county, w Ith a capit a 1 s t oe k of $3,000. ' -' ' ' "l ' On-Thursday a woman was-r&ri over and fatally injured by 'a raco horse at the fair grounds, near '"Anderson. ' '-' ' -'' : Steuben county has eleven diyoree cases at the presant, term of court. How they doyp one another over there! -; , :::: . Tho . Home City woolen ; mills have, been shut down forthe present, throwing some 30 persons out of employment. . - . j A eaw I 'g recently cut up at i a i i ; d -al: i handful if ol I -tele V. rsijie ' mi: - t i n w is, V 'F.rtl ; . ; At V ,n i u iF in AFi-hii. aori county, th. m F lday, V2,-") f -A of Iu-nbr -. i made out of five - twines. DJphi Times; Willard B.)T;tij of Scott township, Steuben county, Is 102 yevars of age. Ho soldiered in tho wars of 1812 and ISfd. The young men of the M. E. congregation of Princeton presented the pastor of tho church, J. W. Webb, with a hue gold watch a few days sin eel ' " ' " Mnrtje Wel', a lioy injured a Wabash' 1 several ' weeks 'since by the explosion -of blasting powder, died from tho effects of his injuries" en Thursday.. , . : Ilokomo Tribune; - One hundred and t wen ty-oue marriage ticenses have . been Issued. , by . our county clerk since-. January 1, 1877, up to this time. La Porte Herald: The Dbninhn C U HI ' n Cirib! - ti imujirargo no ' 1) XV tke. ' ii) Ila Iit 1 At Wia. in U r 2 p- rri t v - the 1 I !g-. N e if- -t dr. t - 1 ion t h --. : n 3 1 t il VO '.l In- i s i i Z. t
