Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 6, Number 48, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 27 May 1876 — Page 2
THE MAIL
PAPER
FOR THE
TERRB HAUTE,
surprised
I^EOPLE.
BETWEEN THE LIGHTS.
A little pause in life, while daylight linner* JJetwoen the nunset
HIIU
the pale moon-
When dally labor nllps from weary 11 ngers. And soft «niy shadows veil tho aching eyes.
Old perfumes wander back from fields of cl«v«r Seen In the light of suns that long have 8Ct l$elovt-u ones, whose earthly toil Is over,
Draw near, as if they lived among us yet.
Judge Reed's Daughte
L. W. A.
$
A REPORTER'S 8T0RY.
The
Railroad was
ed, and
I
to
When I left the city I took
be open
had been detailed to write it up
with
me. be
sides the conventional traveling-bag, mv finhing-rod and Wook of nies, for
"wasn't
A
fact
first ti 111
I
had determined to have at least one day's trouting in the comparative wilderness which lies about the northern terminus of the new road. thIdox°mann?r, with a°good deal°of
talking about the undeveloped resources pered,
of thecountv, a speech by
habitant, who
when there
the oldest
In
had settled at Shebano
house nigher
to believe he was
Driving
"No."
'n
thirty mile," and a regular country spread in the school house.
slightly metaphorical report had
me by his
-with
id
sat down
familiarity
current topics
and the good lan
guage he omployed in expressing liis
By the time we had reached the
Kle"
I
"Ea-
had learned that he had sold
some land tip north and the capital so obtained brought him income enough to support him in such an out-of-the-way place as Shebano.
What did you sell out for?'
I
know it," said he,
about."
WE
on the piazza
the house, tilted our chairs back and lighted our pipes. You see," said he,
you know hi hi "Judge Reed, who used to be on the circuit?"
I
ra^kon." Did be have a pretty daughter?"' That's him."
any
Krery morning she was up bright and early alter ferns and flowers and moss
like a picture. I
MAY 29, 1870
wood„.and
A sliahtiv meiapnoncai report u»u uij been dispatched for the office, and I felt a heap of books and papers after them
a.
free for ono day'«s sport. The same evening
I
UUO
wet my line in the river which
brings the logs down to the saw-mills. The landlord at the
"Eagle,"
the only
hotel in the place, told me
I "couldn't
catch no fish," and however wrong he structio^he was* right
T^REGAS^HE
quite
faded out,
I
became dis
gusted, and began to reel up. Then for the
I
noticed a man sitt'iig 011
the bank behind me. He was a young ish sort of a chap,and rather good-took ing, but his dress, which was similiar to that -f tlio loggers in that region, led me
one of that class.
011
the river?"
I
inquired.
No." Working iu the mills?''
Tending store?"
"No."
What are you doing?" Nothing." Rather a poor way of getting one
living,"
I
Lying
I
n
quired,"don't you know timber land is constantly increasing in value
"but I
couldn't
keen it. If you don't mind being bothered a bit,
I'll
tell you
HOW
it
came
"my
ittho hills began.
most of life, and
rnnph in the words, but
until I
thing fixed for it, tents and^al
MWr
further,«»
-.JL. &
torjlmandhlsdaught^tuck^pa^nt ^'t
and
sha"t'et.""
a ong with
them,
but he
always
o.mpl«ining_ther0i
one of my pip*. I knew It was •\tr.
rlEht then. 'Mr. Blake,' said be, 'we've turned you out of your house for a wofk butlfvousre comfortable under mv tent, we would like to keep you out fof a month longer. Of oounw Iwas willing to kerp «hem,
came
woula look
never
when Vd tell ber of aome.
,K I'd found ID my tramps, nothing ild do but I n^nst get it for her, and wasn't too fa* away, she'd *0 with
thin wou ifit me. iuvio www
WMI
There was only one thing thatsbe
didnt do right. About a half mile from the shanty, back almost to the hills, was an old hollow log among a lot of spruce trees.
I'd
to
be a
bar's nest, and that
I
uraa nf nnnthAr kind.
I
1
muttered, bat the young fel
low did not seem to notice me. and
thought
that was tho last
He perceived my trouble, and coming to
where
I
MOST
Her reading was of another kind. Mostly poetrv. She read to me very often, and about three days before she went back to the city she read mo one of Mr. Longfellow's pieces about a girl called Evangeline. It's a mighty pretty story, and it riled me up to think of that poor
girl going all over tho wide countnr
he endeavored to convey. Altera looking for her lover and then not tind-half-hour'U work, and before the day light had
ing him until he was dying in a hospital. We were sitting close together when she finished,and
I
was so touched up
it that
I
about
spoke my mind right out. Then
she turned
a
little toward me, and lay
ing one of her little white hands on my great black paw, said:
'There
didn't see her very often after that. The morning they started away
tor he asked
him if
was standing, volunteered
his assistance. With our united efforts the Joint separated, but we worked on it long enough for me to see that his hands were small, though browned by sun-burn, showing they had no acquaintance with manual labor. After putting my rod up we started down the one street the village afforded together. On the way he became quite talkative, and
1
I
I
would have
to do with him. The total depravity of inanimate things up9et the surmise, for one of tho joints of my r«d stuck, and defied all my efforts to pull it apart.
next minute she toppled
over into my arms kind of faint like then, before
I
know what to do, she was
out of the door like
a
critter go. Still
IN
front ot
claim was
up the river about twenty miles. It lay along a ridge right in the thick of the pine woods in front of it was the river, sparkling in the sunshine,
and back
I
bird, and when
I
I
ijfmched the road they were driving off, ifnd the Judge was waving good-by to me.
Isto«d in the road looking after them, then turned and went into the house. It did not seem like the old place all the brightness was gone. It was some time before
on the table for me,and with it a picture of the girl.
"Things
that.
I
of
I
bad lived there
knew
every bush and
every stone within a day's walk of the shanty. a
Ueed—hoAbout
stood it
until the leaves began to fall, but when that time came
I
sell my place. We talked the matter over between ourselves, and tho opshet cfthe whole thine was
over
to
year ago old Judge
came from
'Squire
your section do
came out I had the money and be owned the old shanty. My Idoa
to Chicago, and the first thing I did was to get a paper to look out a stopping place there, for
I
there Was a great deal in the intonation the tail end of a letter from New York .nd Ml- iu*, of Chi forilm with hi. «W, MJIed tor Europe In t»o Egpyt
•iorv but he puffed away on his pipe in
Sa'"rd*y*
woke him out of his rev- winter
woke Wn, out or »r.v ff£The
0^fof"»»
hfl continued "old Judge time was spent in waiting for the mail to come with my weekly papers. Once or twice I found something about the
1 got out of kilter, and niin to take to the pine
His lungs ha doctors told Kim to Uke to the wood*. His daughter came with him, and
stuck
Reed's, but it didn't amount to much until, a month back, some meddling fool of a writer sent word from Paris
to himlike a Tn^n. wm ^Uie^WMgoing tobe married to a S'f.w5', w. mS/Sl coo,- Ro»l.n oh.p wUh no ml of mon.y id forublca. wo could itmy pl.ee. H« *V.™'* laid™ did intend going away into the woods •», said and then to camp out. He bad
Qf tried a])
hlm op
I turned tne nouso over convince hlm that It was besi
but
?N'RFOR-HM?I".RO.R & D^N±
*nd the move was pleading to botb lord
balsam had a good effect upon him, so It
wasn't
long before he began to take to
for
ft»r
1
V?
like the »ld grntleman the girl I hadn t£n m.rh of. for while tho Jndge was down she never quit him. her fatu«r
around all right, she
was out»» chipper and merry as a sqcir-
She was as bright and P^'A" sunbeam, and had a wonderful knack of ntaking everything good thing. Whv, she Bxediip the old sba«-:oTerby tv that wouldn't have known the. l^areifl hadn't seen bow it wasdone. shape.
.tri -».« «*A.I ... IM ma
IMHMI-
A WARS NO TO CANDIDATES FOR OFFICE. [From the Philadelphia Bulletin,] It was just after the fill election that we
5
and she had the outest way of fixing them why, she'd tie up oonple of term and aome moat
HO
juet
know^ there
were so many pretty thing® in *W
cept
been tellingjer how it u*ed
I
cubs out of it and
hlm. His name was not Stretch,
bat we shall so designate him. He poured his sorrowful story la tho ear of an attentive and sympathetic listener:
"No,
sir:
I'll
a nomination
they told me
got two
then
shot the old
She wanted to see the
cerdingly they
I
did. She was as tender-hearted as she was pretty. One morning, Just before sun up, we started over to the runway on Kelly's pond, hoping to pick up a little fresh deer meat.
fixed ber up nice
and comfortable behind the blind, and she sat there as quiet as a wood-mouse. We hadn't waited long
old came picking her way up the path. Just as
I
drew down my rifle the girl
put her
hand on
my shoulder
'Don't
and whis-
shoot.
Well, we didti
have anv vension that day. But what
I
I WAS
liked most was her reading.
a good deal of a scholar, having had two winters* schooling and no end of reading, for the city gents who came out my way hunting and fishing always left
nominated
been
I
did hook
made
ever came to the city—I went
back into the house to see that they had not forgotten anything. Just as
coming out of the Judge's room Miss Nellie met me, and taking both my bands in hers said,
'David,
A
house.
11»
ni-
ed to packing all their traps into the wagon, and after shaking hands with the Judge—bo was a polite old gentleman,
me
I
I
you've been
very kind to father and roe. The air and the woods have done us both good, but wo wouldn't have enjoyed it if you had not been here we thank you very, very much and
I—" I
to her face and saw two
I
could go into Nellie'sold
room, and when
I
did
I
found a letter
didn't go very well after
I
tried fiishing, but
I'd
get to
thinking of the times when I used to go alter the Judge's breakfast, and the trout would run off with my bait. Hunting was just as bad, for every time
I'd
draw a bead on a deer something would say
'Don't
shoot,' and
I'd
let the
treated her the community would be filled with horror, but anybody might see for themselves who would notice that her back bair was all thinned out. And it said that
I
I
pretty
well
grew restless and hated
the sight ot the old shanty.
down here
through
hadn't been in Chicago
jut once, and that was when I was a boy. I went blundering through the aper until I found something that set-
fieSFthe'whole
business. It was down
.twMiike poorlng water
hntTe was no use* Into sieve be never heeded a word,
WM
no use,
wera D«t
I
eould to cbeor
for he seemed very disconso-
I turnJdgthe houi orS late, and exhausted all my reasoning
by this time, and
saying good-night to me. my new ao-
rSu'SZo' tbVbS!^ lb. l.nd-
WM
tb. only on^^bera After.
..tVe''
the deer"meat and the trout I brought stoop with you him In a hearty, connoting wort
in for of a way. IWore a week waaup he was on his fact, and one afternoon I came back
rERRU HAUTE SATURDA EVENING MAIL.
never run for
again,said Mr.
ofBoe
Stretch.
"You
know
when they came and asked me
if
I'd
ac
for the Legislature
that the whole community
wanted me to run and that
I
tain to be elected because
was cer
I
was a
whose cbaraoter was so good
body could find fault with it.
so myself, and
bar.
place and
I
took
her over one morning. She had ner drawing things with her, and said she was going to make a picture of the place. She did draw the trees and the rocks and the hollow log mighty nice, but she spoiled it by putting in tho old bar just a crawling into the log froin- end first. But then she didn't know the ways and nature of the varmints as well as
man
that no
I
had a wen on
my leg that unfitted me lor active duty anyhow, even if
I
had not forfeited all
claim to public confidence by turning my grandfather out of doors when he was dying of consumption, and then setting my dog on him and making the aged man roost in a mulberry tree on the coldest night last winter for fear of being eaten up..
People began to avoid me on the street. The general impression prevailed that
was a
I
to
came
Shebano and bung around
until winter set in. One day an Eastern man came to me and asked if
I'd
desperate
villian.
and
I .might
the week and
thai we went
\W *4
thought
I
agreed to run,
»nd
ac
me.- Well,
sir, the very next morning the Argus came out with an assertion that
I
had
detected in stealing chickens, and it gave a full history oftl.e caso, togeth
er with
pictures of the chickens, and
after darkly hinting that since abandoning chicken stealing I had been continually engaged in other forms of robbery, it asked Tf the people of this State wanted to see a chicken thief making laws for tbeui. And the mischief of it was that
a couple
they ever found it out beats mo. It was fifty-two years ago.
"'Now,
before a
2
year
look at my nose! It ain't
much of a nose for beauty, is it?
largest.
of chickens
from my grandmothers coop when
was
a small boy, but
I
hiw'n the thunder
I
know well enough that it's crooked. But nobody ever alluded to it until
1
was nominated,audthen the Argus said that there was a tradition that
I
had
the nose mashed around sideways during my career as a prize fighter, although some people insisted that
I
bad
run it hard against a door while
I
was
drunk. And then all tho illustrated papers in tho Stato began to publish pictures of me with
a nose
like tho jib-
sbeet of an oyster sloop, only twisted around sideways: and one of them said that when
I
sneezed on the front porch
the concussion acted Uke a boomerang and blew the back door open. And then they tackled me about my war record. You know
I
the militia. And the Argus published letter from a man who said that during the battle of
(Gettysburg
Iwas hid in a
refrigerator in a cellar in the town, pretending that
I
was ordered there to
mount guard over some rations of colli beef. And tho Argus asserted that tho only manoeuvre
I
are a
great many who look through the whole world for tho one their heart asks for, and alter all never find tho right one." Then she seemed to get frightened and jumped up and ran into the
I
hardened
have stood that, but
you know the way they levied 011 me for expenses was awful. There was that brass band.
I
kept that band in
luxury
for three months and* it used to come around and serenade mo
three nights in
wake all the babies in
naighborhood.
I
sequencef
Hale's office. When we
was
O
to
go
would have
A..
Hlm as was a-settln' out on the
res.
j(
Mis name halnt
Klske
1 thought
you knowed him. He's Mr. Fellows, of the New York *ud he's up hero
f^n t^mr^r t^^and =d him wHtln" letters to bis' paper about the KiUing in front of th^shanty smoking lumber trade."
lindlord," said I, "call me in time
the first train la the morning, and have mv bill ready." Saxoi*. Msy U, lN7»i.
IIK ian't six years old, and he said: "Plemw, Ulster Sarah, can't I have another piece of that nlco costard pievoa mado?" "Why, deary, yon are too full for utterance
IM»W
look at that luciovi
dumpling on your plats* not half eaten.' "Oh, well, sinter, 1 know the dumpling aide of my atoma^h la full, hot thoctiatard pie aide fpels rather empty yet."
IT I* almply aatonwhlng how long the
ot
X*thiV7w^ld«i't have known the wagon* and retain It- origlnil
M*nd belnK rulii
1SlaSiki
the
lost
200
votns in
con-
those wakened babies.
Then tho club would come and call me out for a speech, and when
I
would get
to ask them
in
to feed, and they would stay there and howl until four o'clock in the morning, and get drunk and fight and smash the furniture and bleed over tbo carpets. Tbon tbey would assess me for a massmeeting and adjourn.
I
handed out
cash for posters and rum and brass bands and barbecues and fireworks aud torchlight processions and transparencies and for flags,and tho Argus all the time accusing
ine
"Tho
of buying up votes
and having repeaters in my
pay
night of*THE election tho urutw
band and club came around to
con#rat-
ulate me on my aiiccem, and after having a final spreo and concluding with a riot in the parlor. I went to bed, glad I had won anyhow. The first thing I Haw the A^gua in the morning was the announcement that the lioary-headod chicken stealer bad been beaten by 2,000 majority, and would havo^o keep his eccentric noso at homo ana reflecting that a freo peoplo would nover elect to a responsible office a man who would tree his consumptive grandfather and traffic In the remains of his aunt. So that lets me out in politics. When I run for office again you chuck me right into an insane asylum."^
BILLY McKKE LIVING "IN STYLE." (HjK-elftl to Cincinnati Commercial.] Uncle Billy and Colonel Con. are making themselves free and easy in jail. They occupied, respectively, cells 08and TOO last night, 09 being nsed as a storeroom for the comforts with which they have provided themselves. They retired quite late and were up very early this morning. Not being locked np like the balance of the criminals, tlicy came out on the balcony, and tilting back In cane-sea tod chair*, spent a few hours in reading the morning papers, receiving callers, and dl^".
!'i
the situation.
About noon tbe^^TSU to their cells to rest or to mediate, and did not make their appearance for some time subsequently. A contract has been made with a restaurant, under which they are supplied with regular meals, composed of all the delicacies of the market. A boy has been hired to run errand* for them, and a colored man has been employed to come every morning and make np their beds and set their apartments to rights.
Tnr parent who sends bis son Into the vcorld uneducated, defrauds the community of a useful ell iron, and bequeaths a nuisance.—[Chancellor Kent.
Mean aonls like mean picture*, are a»»netlnaes_foand in good looking frame*.
RH
*•,'»'{» H&i
always
bee-line for Noya Scotia, and
never turned up until after the fight but once, and then we were surprised, and
I
fired
my musket so wildly that
I
our own colonel in the leg and surrendered to an Iitehman who belangod to our regiment, and who came up to me to borrow a plug of tobacco. To tell the truth
I
to call and see
wasn't much of a fighting man,
but how in the mischief they found out about that refrigerator gets me. Awful isn't it?
wouldn't have minded it so
much only they get up a poster
was
stuck it around the streets and headed it'Stretch's War Record,' and put on it a picture of me with a monstrous lopsided nose sitting inside that refrigerator gnawing at a bone out of the roast beef.
"And
looked down in
big
eyes, and the
tears in her
then, as tho campaign went
along, they accused me of having delirium tremens, of boating my wife, of wiping my nose on my sleeve, of robbing a bank, of soiling iny dead aunt to a medical college, and of holding the doctrine that the whale didn't swallow Jonah, and that when Moses crossed the Red Sea he paddled over in a boat. The Argus said that if my wife dared to tell how
'-4
tjtlO.OOO H. AIXEKOE' t'y
4 -Jt-. THAT
was out with
ORE AT LONDON CIRCUS,
Shii^'n English Menagerie or Truined Animal* A
"5
a!
was ever good at was
falling back that whenever the enemy was expected to be approaching
Owns and daily exhibits the best group of
5 PERFORMING
shpt
ELEPHANTS
In the World, viz.:
CHIEFTAIN EMPEROR MASWRIE,
Nl'li'i'ASi
AND
AND VICTORIA,
All performing in the ring at the same time the most wonderful feats ever seen, Just as represented on bills, programmes, etc., Trained and performed by Prof. Arst ingstall
Rerr'Still.
if -4 & .»
^10,000 CHALLENGE *Kl THAT HOWES' GREAT LONDON CIRCUS,
ETC., ETC.,
Owns and daily exhibits the only GROUP U*' SIX FIKRCK AKKlCAN HYhN AS ill tho World. Trained and subdued by the African Cannibal Montano, and are daily exhibited in the public streets accompanied by their keeper, in an open Iron clad den, during the Triumphal Street Pageant..
$10,000
CHALLENGE THAT
HOWES' GREAT LONDON CIRCUS, ETC., ETC., Owns and daily exhibits the Only Two Baby Royal Bengal
Tigers
(Bom April 21,1875,) ever seen in America.
$10,000 CHALLENGE
v**
THAT
IIOWES' GREAT LONDON CIRCUS, ETC. ETC., OWUN and daily exhibits KKLh in tho public street ofeaoii ciiy or place ol exhibition, Hove* of the largest, most costly and magnificently constructed Triumphal Golden Chariots of India, orCan. of Juggernaut. The Chariot of onomerce, the Cur of Euterpe, tho Chariot of the Sun, tho Celestial Chariot, the legendary Dragon Chariot, and the Cinderella Chariot, and make moot Uerjceou* lMnplny, while In the Grand Eiues-/*oolo-H1 ppo-Mardl-Uran Triumphal
Street Pageant everseen.
4
$3,000 CHALLENGE!
That the Graud MARDI-UItAS CAltNIVAIj far excels in beauty, wonder, and magnitude, any Ampliith^atrlcal, Historical or Kmblemat leal Spectacle that has ever been produced In the world.
$5,000 iHULLKNGE!
TlmtHOWKS'
mrc.\T
9,000 ()IIALLEKOE!
That HOWES' HHKAT l,ONlM)N ClUCtTS, eUl.. owns and dally exhibit* In the public streets, the only African Zebras ever noon in harness (onliuarv shows have these animals caged) by this company they are used aud driven the same as the home.
5,000 rurno E I
That Mile. Dockrill, the only America that rides F'orit BARK-BACKKIinfemale HOOHKS all at one and the same time, ami challenges any male rider to compote with her in thin wonderful feat--her beauty, form and skill, she lias noeniml. no eoiujeer.
50f00t CUALLEKVEl
That HOWES' (JltF.AT LONDON Cllt JUS, etc Special Features, as advi-rtlswl and dally exhibited by this Ojninnny, are to be aeeu in no other concern In America.
§00,000 CHALLENGE! That HOWES' GREAT L«)N^N CIRCUS etc., Manger's English Menagerie of TnUned Animals, and W anil-eras C^arnlval, has the best general outflt In JJharioW, Cages, Aulmals, Horses, Pcmles,Mul^Assea, DonjcoriL W»nin)le, Pftrophernnllii notel, hx* hi billon, ooklng, Sleeping, and Stable Tents, of any Equestrian or Zoological combination In America.
:fA0,O()O t'H.%LLE2*€iE! That IloWES' GHE VT oNl *£J lllCTTS, etc owns and runs *2 railroad cam, vis. 2i lint ears, 10 palace horse cars, 3 elephant nalaee ears, 4 box cars. 1 baggace car, 3 ialiw sleeping ears, 1 palace passenger car, this being a greater number by far than run t»y any Circus, Mt-nag»-rle, etc., in America.
1776. CENTENNIAL CARNIVAL. 1876
A LITTLE WORLD UNDER CANVAS!
—AT—
TERRE-HATJTE, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 7th, 1876.
RETURN OF THE OLD FAVORITES
Show upon the Earth—Hippodrome, Menagerie, Circus, Mardi-Gra», &f.
HOWE'S GREAT LONDON CIRCUS,
HIPPODROME,
SANGER S ENGLISH MENAGERIE AND TRAINED ANIMALS.
And Mardi-Gras Carnival Combination.
5 1*4' ill
j! is*
M-nt
S*"T
i"" HOWES"
4
tt of. i-'H.
Ji 4'
AND MAItDI-GIIAS CARNIVAL,
W'VWjH
"t-
^10,000 CHALLENGE
THAT
HOWES' GREAT LONDON CIRCUS, JI" ETC., ETC., Owns and Exhibits the Only Group of Four Royal Bengal Tigers In the World, and performing in the ring at the same time, trained and performed by
$100,000
*,
I
&
LONDON CIRCUS,
etc., has the best Zoological Lecturer (I rof. Kllingham, from H. H. M. Zoological Gardens, Ijondon,) in America.
«5,00»ClIALLEXtiE!
That 1IOWES' GREAT LONDON CIHCUS, etc., owns and exhibits daily In the public streets, the only Jerusalem Donkyand AbyKinlan Asses ever seen harnewied In America
A
Tho
Spirit of
TO,
Admission—Usual
"Kin. jess
to
i.X /f
CFFLLLEXAE 'RIL'LT S£SE"OK
FIVE PERFORMING ELEPHANTS
In itae world, performing together in the ri'-R at th® same time, the most Marvelous and Won derftil feats ever performen by anima s. tihe word of coTim*ai tt»ey thr»
the dance, keep time with the mu ic, waits, hop, tallt, stand on ilviir hearts, pHy mus:cal Instrum nt«. startle the audience by tneir mderail saifucity, forming a thrilling Table-in of PYRAMID OF ELEPflAN iS, a-« r?piesented on pictorial?, by Chieftain, Emperor, Mandril, Sultan and Victoria.
THE FIVE DIJC'ATED ELEPIIASTK.
The Most Intensely Interesting and Novel Exhibition IN THE WORLD!
More Wild Beasts, More Men and Ilorses. More Curiosities, than any combination overseen. The Most Gorgeous Street Procession ever given Glittering
Eques-Hippo-Zoolo-Mardi-Gras
Triumphal Street Pageant two miles in length. Booming of Cannon. Centennial Chorus of 300 Voices. A Blaze of Gold and Burnished Steel. Fire-works Shedding Rays of Golden Fires.
800 Men and Horses. At 9 A. M. on each day ot Exhibition. Come early and see it. '.'f:?.'
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Press. 1200 Reserved Cushioned Opera Setts
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