Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 13, Number 29, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 13 January 1883 — Page 3

HE MAIL

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

Experimenting With a Oat. tew years ago a man registered at Osbkosh hotel, and was assigned a and everybody noticed tnat he a most mournful-looking man. He 3r said a word, but there was that 5ut his face and actions that showed was laboring under some great sor-

Ue had his supper taken to his

vm,

and the waiter said the man nev^spoke, and seemed to be the saddestking man he ever saw. The guests talked the matter over, and they deed that the man was going to comsuicide. A traveling man who had oom next door to the solemn man, k1 who had previously occupied ading rooms in different hotels to three jn who had committed suicide, felt it he was about to experience a irth shock of the same kind, and be in his bed all night and never jpt a wink, believing that the next foment he should hear a revolver shot .he death struggle of his neighbor poison. He never heard a sound ffiight, and when he got up in the rning he told the clerk that ne was I'e the man was dead. They passed room and listened, but could hear ioi.se, and it was decided to look the transom to see if the man was id. It is not a pleasant thing to look »r a transom into a man's room, not jfjwing whether your eye will fall on

Ibrpse or alive man with a revolver tilted at you, so nobody seemed to rn to be the first to climb the step Her. Finally it was decided to throw fat over the transom onto the bed, if they did not hear any noise it \ild be certain that the man was dead fd they could go on with the funeral, fcntv.vas procured, and the porter, fa kiiew just where the bed was local^v/as detailed to toss the cat ovor. l*Vent up the ladder a few steps—not l.igli to look over, because he was prepared to look suddenly upon a

Use,—and taking the cat in both Is, by the legs, he gently tossed her, im over the transom on the bed ocLed by tho mournful looking man. cat was heard to fall witn a dull ,1, there was a sound of scratching ripping, a heavy form was heard to *e the lloor, the cut "permeoued" p'spit,1' and the half-dozen people |tn the hall looked at each other jicrfullv, when suddenly the door led and tho maddest man that was

Jseen in Oshkosh came out in the |1n his night-shirt, his arm and f«iee ling on to the white night-shirt. Lad tho cat by the hind legs in one |1 and a revolver in tho other, and, Id struck at the assembled multitude and left with tho cat, there was liVorst getting down stairs that ever and tno cat was thrown at tho last who went down stairs, and tho returned to his room. He dressed alf, went down to tho office and his bill, and took tho first train |j, novor having spoken a word Tj in Oshkosh, and the people are [is day wondering whethor he was a jiltition speakor, a traveling man corset factory, or an agent for a fand dumb asylum. Tho traveling ^wlfo was so nervous for fear his [Jjibor was going to commit suicide, is ho had tho landlord fears that l!« displeased a guest who might

Iromainod longer, and the porter threw tho cat says that it is the no that he will evor try to find a 1*0 bv tho aid of a cat.'—Peck's Sun.

poster Mountain of Olay in Montana. rollod onward through the midst grotesque anil picturesque buttes onrs audf their broken, jagged and towering peaks stood out Jst tho clear sky on either side to je of the horizon. Suddenly, on |«ft, a broad stretch of beautiful valley appeared, sweeping away mile, gently curving upwards very base of one of the grandest rgest buttos of all, which rises ly from tho level plain to a hoight

Ty 8X) foot. This monster mound jOS along parallel with tho railnr a long distance. Its spino is by one Targe embrasure or pass, iting a small portion of it from .tin body. Its bald and barren Is aro bleached by the awful win'ttpests, and cm its scarred and i, bosom is inscribed the epitaph' .4 rted ages. To it great cycles are

I fs, and centuries hut swift hours ha. But even now, among the frock-ribbed and ancient sis .the Ind tho vales stretching in pensive l.ws between," tho joyful voice of [fid tho busy hum of labor awake rpid cchoes of the past, which erst ...laf&ound but nature's wild. This tr clay mountain stands on the order of Dakota, aud marks the i*f Montana. This is the great

snel

buttes."—Rochester Democrat.

jieer Plan to Send Ooin by Mail vol way to send silver coin by described as follows: Take a wood a little larger than the bow it with an auger—two and or inches for a dollar, one and a for a half dollar and ono inch juarter. Bore the hole as deep as utain

as

many pieces as you want Fill the hoie and t-»ck a thin wood over the block. Write the put on the requisite stamp and the block and

contents

the

I CO. A representative of the I'tiea sent a quarter to Molntvre, ^xandria Bay photographer at

Vie, Out., by attaching it to a

1

a string. The rewipt came back oni) ot photograph of the tag ^rter, and the address on tho

H9TKL MAX'S LUCK. Ci. Tvter, ehief clerk at the Hotel, Ogden, had rheuthe muscle* of the chest and ilder. By applying the Great

Remedy three days he realised 9 restoration, and be is of the fthat there is nothing equal to facoba Oil for pain. The Great ^lemedy is also a specific for ^ad spralus.—Salt Lake (Utah)

The thmt was answered bv Payne, who repeated the song in a slow, subdued tone,|md then sang it making the old woods |:ing trith the tender melody and pathos'yf the words. It touched the heart of thorough soldier, who was not only oaptivjbed out convinced, and who said that tht composer of such a song should never go to prison if he coula holp it. Aid when the party reached Milledgevillc they were, after a preliminary exanination, discharged much to their surpiso. Payne insisted it was because the leader of the squad had been under he magnotic influence of Ross's conversation, and Ross insisted that they had been saved from insult and imprisonment by the power of the "Home SweeiHome,"sung as only those who feel caning it.

The friondjg'ip existing between Ross and Payne emu red until the grave closed over the morjtil remains of tne latter.— Southern Wort.

*t.*"No eye ike Had -Ksop livet in well have addd,

-"j

John Howard Payne in Georgia. I was once acquainted with a Swede who had been adopted by the Osage Indians. He was a friend of John Ross, the celebrated chief of the Cherokees, and his name in the Cherokee language —it was written & Q, pronounced Coh-wen-s-koh-weh, and means swamp sparrow. His brother, Lewis Ross, was named Te-tah-te, which means spoon. My informant was himself called by the Cherokee Te-kaw-wh a-lees-ky, which signifies "The man who writes orders for flour."

JohnHoward Payne, author of "Home Sweet Home," was a warm, personal friend of John Ross, who will be remembered as the celebrated chief of the Cherokees. At the time the Cherokees were removed from their homes in Georgia to their present home west of the Mississippi river, Payne was spending a few weeks in Georgia with Ko who was occupying a miserable cabin, having been forcibly ejected from his former home.

A number of prominent Cherokees were in prison, and that portion of Georgia in which the tribe was located, was scoured by armed squads of the Georgia militia, who had orders to arrest ail who refused to leave the country.

While Ross and Payne were seated before the fire in the hut, the door was suddenly burst open and six or eight militiamen sprang into the room. Ross's wife was seated on a trunk containing many valuable papers and a sma amount of money, and at the unexpected intrusion she sprang up and screamed wildly, Ross spoke to her in the Cherokee language, telling her to be seated, as she would save the contents of the trunk, and as she thus sat down again the intruders told Ross that he and Payne were under arrest and must prepare to accompany the squad to Milledgville1 where they were to be imprisoned. The soldiers lost no time in taking their prisoner away. Ross was permitted to ride his own horse, while Payne wis mounted on one led by a soldier. As the little party left the hovel, rain began falling and continued until every man was drenched thoroughly. Toward midnight, Payne's escort, in order to keep himself awake, began humming "Home, home, sweet, sweet hone," when Payne remarked: "Littlo lid I expect to hear that S"ong under suck circumstances and at such a time. Do you know the author?" "No." said the soldier, "do you?" "Yes," answered Payne, "I composed it." "The devil vou did. You can tell that to some fellows, but not to me.— Look here you made that song you say if you did—and I know you didn't—you can say it ill without stopping. It has something in it about pleasures and palaces. Tow pitch in and reel it off. and if you an't I'll bounce you from your horse ind lead you instead of it."

the master/a eve." our day he micht No popular curative .11 eyes

like Kidney Wrt."

del »tiv

1

are be­

ginning to turxto it for relief from diseases of the live, bowels and kidneys.^ Kidney-Wort nature's remedy far them all. Thoatliat cannot prepare the dry can now prcure it in liquid form of any druggist,

Ripon Lakah is the name of a great Japanese lord *ho is traveling through Europe like Uautior's "Fortunio." When he was ti Vienna he chartered a hotel and seut ivitations to two hundred women to attend a masked ball, at which he waahe only person of the masculine sex p^sent. He made them dance and eat and drink and when they sat down ftsupper, each found a superb bracelet Idden in her napkin. The Parisians exect that be will amuse them with simila fantasticalities.

The New Yorkfkraid estimates that a man in resp^able society in New York city ought be able to get married and begin hisekeeping on an exof $1

husekeeping

penditure of flCVX). Those who have to eke out a misablo existence on $1,000 a year will reliin from such a luxury as marriage.

Shiawassee coiky, Michigan, has a coal-bearing territry of about 25,000 acres, and veins fniging from three to six feet in thickess are found all through the centra northern and eastern part of the copty. Large fortunes, evidently, await IdividuaLi who will go there and pick the claims.

A MODEST fyoQESTlOS If the proud an Massachusetts wh Latin upon every stamped upon it oy put a bottle of seal instead, it wo answer every pnrpc ous 'arm with, a & blows, and an Ind arrows. But Hun than this. It strik English, French an every language. a"fcai ous and deadly ene frame, and she into disease. It against kidney di: oar afflicted humanity meats of the kidneys, bi urinary organs, and to the deepaimig. doesn't wish to chanw Remedy would be a"Ss?tkte*nt design for the seal of some nenakte.

cholarly State of puts so much al State document great seal, would

Remedy on its be briefer, and There is a vigorstriking Latin-, shooting Latin medy noes more blows in Latin, erman, and in the most insidi,s of the human uctlve arrows wages war common in cures aiiliver, and heel th again assaehusetts seat. Hunt's it

The Career of Ed" Stokes. The career of Edward S. Stokes is startling. I was at Gabe Case's roadhouse yesterday when he drove up with his beautiful team of flyers, and sprii ing lightly to the ground, stepped into the bar-room. On every side he was saluted with "Hulloo Ed," and hands were strctched out to grasp his as he moved along Merchants, bankers, brokers, lawyers, millionaires, men about town, gentlemen of leisure, and men of the highest social standing all greeted him warmly, and he was asked by half a dozen men at once to drink with them. Could anything be more extraordinary? He, as everyone knows, is the man who deliberately killed Col. Jim Fisk in the Grand Central hotel, was tried for murder, and spent several years in a murderer's cell at Sing Sing. When he came out nothing was heard of him for some time until he suddenly splurged out as the proprietor of swell up-town hotel which is now famous because it has the most gorgeous bar-room in the world. Stokes has filled this superb drinking saloon with a collection of statuary and pictures— all studies in the nude—which is, perhaps, unrivalled in this country. He next appeared as the bosom friend of John W. Mackey, the bonanza king, who always stops at Stokes's hotel when in New York. After this he took to theatrical ventures by loaning capital to actors ambitions to build theaters. Lately he has begun to crect a theater himself, though his name is carefully kept in the background for fear of the prejudice which still exists in the minds of many good citizens against the man who killed the genial and generous Jim Fisk. His very last move, however, has been in the direction of trotting horses. He splurged out in this direction very suddenly. jogged up to the Fleetwood park one day behind a pair of keen-looking horses named Lyman and Bell Flower. He bragged rather loudly of their speed, and a match was arranged between them and another team, which Stokes won easily, and scooped in more thousand dollars than he had fingers, in half an hour. Since then he has been very solid with turfmen, who always admire a man of that kind. Stokes is still a handsome man, though his face is deeply lined and his hair gray. He is as vain as when he held ladies' receptions in the Tombs, and dresses with an extravagance unequalled by many millionaires of New York. He is popular among men here, which is a curious thing, I'll be bound. One question con stantly presents itself: Would he have attained his present position of influence and wealth if he had not killed Jim Fisk?—Brooklyn Eagle. iwm

OUR YuLSU MEN.

Many of our young men are suffering from a state of mental exhaustion, which renders them unfit for business or study. Injurious habits that weaken their constitution are clung to with a pertinacity that is appalling. Young man, stop! let health and perfect manhood be at least 9ne of your chief aims in life. If rou already begin to suffer from disurbing dreams, etc., make haste to strengthen the weak portions of your body by using that friend of temperance and long life, that strengthener of every part of the body, Dr. Quysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla. It will quickly restore your health and keep you from falling into the rapacious clutches of some advertising quack doctor. Be wise in time.

"Darling Nellie Gray."

Cincinnati letter: There are few persons in the south who have not heard and admired that charming negro melody, "Darling Nellie Gray," and at one time it stood in the same rank with "Old Kentucky Home," "The Old Folks at Home" and others of that class. It is less known now, but in ccrtain Southern sections "Nellie Gray" is as household words, and in every list of plantatipn songs it has an honored place. But to come to my story. I was talking the other day to a musically inclined gentleman, whose practice on the violin in a room near my own keeps me constantly striving to be a Christian and not to do anything of a riotous nature, when we mentioned the old song incidentally and he told me the author was his cousin, and that it had a little history.

The song writer was B. R."Hanby, of Westerville, Ohio, who was also a painter, a musician, and a poet. When he was about 20 years of age he sometimes jotted down melodies which struck him and on one occasion the notes of "Nellie Gray" went on paper, and he afterward wrote the words. He had never published any music and this was put aside where he could use it as the fancy struck him.

One night at a little company at his house, the song, among others, was sung, and a gentleman present, being struck by the air, made some inquiry about it, and the facts were given nim. He at once asked the voting composer what it was worth, and Mr. Han by, not being posted, put the figure at $5 and the trade was made- The new owner set about having it published, and when it appeared it strbek the popular taste, over 200.000 copies were sola. Another case of the history of composers repeating itself, or rather of one story, with the names changed, being narrated of many.

"Who was the first man?" asked a Sunday-school teacher of her prodigy. "Adam!" "And who was the first woman?" He hesitated but a moment, Mid then shonted, "Mrs. Adam'"

A TorNo man writes: "Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla cured me of nervous debility, weak urinary organs, disturbing dreams, etc., after I had tried a dozen doctors. I think the fact that it is a sure cure for nervous debility should be generally known. It may save many useful lives.",

"BCrCHCPAIBA.

Quick, complete care, all annoying Kidney, BJatktar ana Urinary Disease*. 1. Droggtsta.

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TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING-MAIL:

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•F MX KIMEr DISEASES.

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Dont buy until yon see It Harry Metceker, late solicitor for the White, will be glad to see his old customers.

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W. H. FISK, Agent.

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firice.or

THE SUN.

NEW YORK, 18S3.

More people have read The Sun during the year Just now passing than ever before since it was first printed. No other newspaper published on this side of thc*earth has been bought and read in any year by so many men and women.

We are credibly informed that people buy, read, and like The Sun for the following, reasons, among others:

Because its news columns presents in attractive form and with the greatest possible accuracy whatever has interest for humankind the events, tho deeds and misdeeds, the wisdom, the philosophy, the notable folly, the solid sense, the Improving nonsense —all the news of the busiest world at present revolving in space.

Because people have learned that in Its remarks concerning persons and affblrs The Sun makes a practice of telling them the exact truth of the best of its ability three hundred and slxty-flve days In the yoar, before election as well as after, about tho wales as well as about the small fish. In the face of dissent as plainly and fearlessly as when supported by general approval. The Sun has absolutely no purposes to serve, sa^wo the information of its readers and the furtherance of the common good.

Because It ia everybody's newspaper. No man is so humble that The Sun is indiflerent to his welfare and his rights. No man is ao rich that it can allow injustice to be done him. No man. no association of men, to oowerful enougn to be exempt fromthe strict applications of its principles of right and wrong.

Because in politics It has fought for a dozen years, without Intermission and sometimes almost alone among newspapers, the fight that has resulted in the recent overwhelming popular verdict against Itobesonlsm and for honest government. No matter what party is in power, The Sun stands and will oontinue to stand like a rock for the interest of the people against the ambition of bosses, the encouragements of monopolists, and the dishonest schemes of public rebbere.

All this is what we ate told almost dally by our friends. One man holds that The Sun Is the best rellgk llshed, because Its Christianity

Sun is the best religious newspaper ever pubanlty is with cant. Another holds that It is the

If yog already khow The Sun, you will observe tuat In 1883 It Is a little better than ever before. If you do dot already know The Sun, you will And It to be a mirror of all human activity, a storehouse of the choclest products of common sense and imagination, a main tay for the cause of honeat government, a sentinel for genuine Jeflersonlan De me racy ,a scourge for wickedness of every species, and an uncommonly good Investment for the coming year.

Terms to Hall Subscribers. The several editions of Thk Sun are ser by mail, postpaid, as follows: DAILY—55 cents a month, ••.SO a with Sunday edition, 07.70. SUNDAY—Eight pages, $1.2® a year. WEEKLY—91 a year. Eight pages of best matter of the daily Issues an Agricultural Department of unequalled merit, market reports, and literary, sclent! flc, and domestic Intelligence make Tub Wkkki.t

Sun the newspaper for the farmer's household. To clubs of ten with 510, an extra

Address™*' I. W. ENGLAND, ^bltaber. The Sun, N. Y. Cliy.

DR.LQ.C.WISK.WS

PWE TBEE«~ VPAR COMAL

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the money will be refunded in every

nstanco.—f Author. N. B.—YOUNG and MIDDLE AGED MEN can save much time, suffering and expense by reading the Science of Life, or conferring with the author, who may be consulted ou all diseases requlrin skill and experience. Address

PJSABODY MEDICAL INSTUTE, or W. II. PARKhB, IS. I*. oc28-ly 4 Bnlilnch Street, Boston, Mans

undllutaA is the Irjp

newspaper printed, becauttlr

•eady whipped half of the rascalsittl party, and Is proceeding against th.e lalf with undiminished vigor. A third

Republican has already wl of thati other half believes It to be the best^magazlne of general literature in existence, because its readers miss nothing worthy of notice that is current in the world of thought. So every friend of ny sraes tnat appeals with particular force to his individual liking.

PROMPTLY 0USE8

Gncto, Colli, BroscMlS, iflMi am conmptia

IT ALSO BBADICATEB

DI8EASE3 OFTHE KIDNEYS, LIVER AND STOMACH.

WisrrrLD RicnAJOW,*r Excmjios,Wi^writ**: "I bad Typhoid Kerer In 1863, followed by *ttadH»g Omgh. I tried everything I could bear of that might do n« •ny rood, bat grew wotie from L.j to d»r until tb«j doctors Midi faewratfa IMuWhsabt'shad

Phi Tes* Tae Ospiau Eight bottler

restored idjr health entirely." JUt. C. 8. Has**A*, Beamjk PA., ««y»: "I afflicted With tveniSore Throat, c.**iy gTmt pai* mmhJWmddUtnArimg m» deep.

I tried different m**-

dtaiwithout relief, antif the twdaoiiWof B«*. J. V. Ldb Indacwd me to use Db-Wmsaet's P»k Tsrs TAR OoamAL. One bottle completely cored my oompUirn.

Ltdta A. Bakx*, Asasstiixc, Mien., mjy. "IJf1 the Artkmafor thirty ftar*. Not »W« lie down prior to taking De.W«habrt Tint Tee* Tae Ooemal. Hare had so trouble rfaee then."

D. B. Ostw, Shamseceo, m*a: "Wwnr" Pixc Tbee Ta* OcmuiAt hat entirely cmrtd me of ITHsif Df/mcm.*

DB. WW HARTS PINE TBEI: TM CMOfilLbwitaf thnagboat the country for the ^JWrtyywrt sad is nemtoed one «f tU mctt rtUetU »»Scia. ««Jttet7lraCTtt*

•'sM

1140. UtsMik Bull C*., Cto'U, O.

rABitKB* mm# FAKTr*3WP WM

CAN MAKEISSM

Dntiinr ttw F*JI irw Vk'-Vt. t-if p»rti-aodr?

Dviig Ml J. V.

p»rt, »Uft.

ir+T tk Wsels—n, 9.S

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