Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 13, Number 52, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 23 June 1883 — Page 4

TH E-MAIL

A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.

rtnwucATioi* wins,

Kos. 20 and 23 South Fifth 8treet, Printing Home Square.

P. S. WESTFALL,

EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.

Tii.*RE HAUTE, JUNE 23, 1888,

AX Vinuie Ream Hoxie, has bal»y, not one sbe made with her chisel, bat a real, live baby. Vinnle baa lost a good deal of time, sbe mast be on the shady side of forty, bat we congratulate her, all the frame.

IF Ex-Senator Dorsey is wise in bis day and generation he will not be in haste to rush into libel suits with all the newspapers which have commented on the Star route swindlers. Mr. Dorsey can very well afford to keep qaiet for a while jast now.

A COURT in Pittsburg, has decided that a sleeping car company is liable for losses by thieves, that the company binds itself to protect its patrons while they are asleep and helpless. This will be a great comfort to timid men who are afraid to travel alone, but who will protect us from the rapacious porter, watching for bis fees?

THE Ohio Democrats bave pitted Judge Hoadley against Judge Foraker, the Republican candidate, for Governor of that commonwealth. Both men are residents of Cincinnati and lawyers in good practiou. Hoadley is 53 and Foraker about 37 years old. The campaign is expected to be interesting and animated.

WHO said that practicing law would destroy the finer feelings of a weman At the close of the Star Route trial Mrs. Ricker, the lady lawyer, threw her arms around Dorsey's neck and kissed him till "it frightoned the street car horses in front of the building." The report does not say how Mrs. Dorsey liked this

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of collecting fees. There seemed to be a general "kissing bee" /it this time, Ingersoll getting so excited that he actually kissed his own wife!

THIS spindle-shanked dude, not satisfled with having a lawn inower run over hia brainless cranium, is now having his hair singed off. In connection with this news comes the report that Oscar Wilde has just returned from Paris and appeared at a London Hrcnkfast minus his flowing locks and knee breeches. It is but just to Mr. Wilde to say, however, that he had not been scalped but only "singed" and that he wore the conventional trousers, reaching to the boot.

WIIITK women are coming in style. The fashionable lady must have dark hair and eyes, and a skin if snowy whiteness, except tho lips, which must be of a vivid scarlet. The lemon and strawberry blondes of the past few seasons can cease bleaching and let their locks rosume the natural color belladonna will darken the eyes white cosmetics will give the regulation pallor, vermilion paste will produce the ripe, rosy lips—and there you are, right in the fashion.

WHATKVKK other Democratic politicians may bo for Sonator Voorheesls for protection pure and simple and is not afraid to say so. He has the courage of his convictions on this subject and his convictions are emphatic. But it does not promise woll for harmony In the party In Indiana when he is for protection and Mr. McDonald Is for practical free trade, while nobody knows exactly where Mr. Hendricks stands—or, to viae a more familiar figure, sits. In Ohio the Republicans have declared for protection and they will doubtless do so in this State.

TUB tariff plank In the Ohio Democratic platform Is as follows "Wo favor a tariff for revenue, limited to the necwwltlcs of government, economically sdmlnUtored, ana so adjusted In Its application a* to prpvont unequal burden*, encourage productive Induatrlu* at home, afford Jtwt compensation to labor, but not to create ot fostor monopolies."

This luminous declaration would do credit to the deft hand of Thomas A. Hendricks. It probably, however, was inspired by even a greater artist than Mr. Hendricks, namely,the rosy cheeked and bugle-voiced old statesman of (J rainmercy Park, who thoughtfully sent an agatit to the Columbus convention. Doubtless Mr. Hendricks, Mr. McDonald and Mr. Voorheee could all march shoulder to loulder under the tarifl banner which the Ohio Democtacy have thus unfurled.

Sr. Lotus is very much exercised over tho question of German in the public schools. A portion of the School Board •ay, with much logic, that they have no more right to use the public money to employ teachers of the German language than those of other languages. As a result of this agitation the question has been raised whether the pnblic funds could tie applied toward educating children under six and over twenty. The Supreme Court has decided in the negative and this shuts out from the Kindergarten all the poor children. The rich can afford to pay tuition. Pourfifths of the students at the free Normal schools are over twenty and it debars all of them from the privileges of these free institutions. The night schools are attended by hundreds of young tata and women who work through the day, Tbey will all bave to go. An effort will be made to have a rehearing in the Supreme Court, but as the law is very dear on the subject, the decision is probably

AKOTHBB hasty shooting is reported from the South. A preacher named Jenkins shot and and killed Rev. Borden, president of a college in Louisiana, for suspected wrong to a young lady acquaintance of his, Miss Butler. But nowcomes Miss Butler and says that Mr, Borden never wronged her, and that a father and two brothers might have been able to take care of her honor in any event, without the interference of the too chivalrous Jenkins. A little judicious hanging in the sunny South of such hot-headed foe

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wonld be one of the most attractive rarH« to outsiders which that section could play. ______

IT is said a Club bouse is being elegantly finished at Long Branch, designed to make public gambling fashionable among women. It might be that if gambling became common among women it would frighten men into abandoning the habit—but it is a costly experiment. For a woman to adopt any of the bad habits of men will cause her to lose public respect a thousand times more quickly than for her to engage in the most menial occupation or to take the platform as the most ultra advocate of "woman's rights."

THE new steel rail mill at Indianapolis was successfully started on Wednesday of this week, after two unsuccessful efforts previously made. Six perfect rails were turned out, demonstrating the ability of the machinery to do the work required of it. The automatic hook-up, by which one man is enabled to do the work of seventeen under the old method, worked well and gave complete satisfaction. This is anew invention and is not in use in other mills. The steel rail industry is thus auspiciously inaugurated in Indiana, adding one more to the important and rapidly developing manufacturing industries of which Mr. Voorhees is so enthusiastically and justly proud.

The Indianapolis News takes the Chicago mail carriere to task because they don't want to go into Scotch uniform of knee-breeches and stockings. The News argues that this sort of leg gear is just the thing for the American climate and pours out a most vicious tirade against the omnipotent pantaloon, If the News is so confirmed in its hatred of trousers and so devoted to the Oscar Wilde habiliment, why does it not start a boom for knee breeches by arraying its own editors, reporters and compositors in the favorite garments? This would be a better way of inaugurating the wisliedfor reform than scolding at the letter carriers. By all means let the News practice what it preaches and set the ball of dress reform in motion.

THK benefit sometimes of new blood injected into the arteries of government id illustrated in the case of Mr. Evans, the new Commissioner of Internal Revenue. He has already decapitated several worthless subordinates, and expresses tihe

intention of decapitating

several more. It appears that the roll of the department had on It the names of a number of retired statesmen, who accepted places simply as sinecures, and who took affront at the suggestion that they were expected to do anything. All these ornameutal gentlemen of elegant leisure, who are drawing fat salaries from the government, and rendering small and inefficient service in return, the new commissioner intends to weed out and give their plaoes to men who will be willing and vigorous In the service of the government. Mr. Evans will receive the congratulations of the entire country for his action. This is civil service reform reduced to practl|jp, and will be popular with everybody but the retired statesmen and their friends.

A NEW YORK lawyer has expressed the opinion that the practice of law is fast degenerating into a commercial business, and that the men who make most money out of it are not the best lawyers, but those whose offices have the atmosphere of a commercial exchange. There has undoubtedly been a marked change in the practice within a few years past. Lawyers are less limited to the mere matter of carrying on law suits, and theitservlces are coming into wider demand in the way of organising divers enterprises and advising and assisting business men in a variety of ways. Nor is there anything improper in this, or to the discredit of the bar, so long as the services rendered are legitimate and proper. An attorney may indeed render far more valuable services in this way than In the very doubtful business of maintaining law suits, which too often are as disastrous to the successful as to the unsuccessful party.

APROPOS of the Mother Hubbard wrappers which are so much in vogue among esthetic ladies, a story is told of a good deacon who wished to secure a transient boarding place for himself and wife in one of our large cities. He answered an advertisement, and the landlady, a handsome woman, entered the parlor. Sbe was attired—in what From bead to foot in a robe of spotless white, half concealing, half revealing, etc. He had never seen anything like it except In the strict privacy of his wife's boudoir. All the stories he had heard of Innocent men, entrapped by designing women, flashed through his mind. He broke out in a cold sweat, and. when sbe advanced with a sweet boarding-house smile, be did not wait to hear the terms, but, clutching his hat, be made one bound for the door, cleared the steps and never stopped till be bad a firm hold on the strings of his wile's blue checked apron. So much for the Mother Hubbard wrapper.

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TOTslaughtersof innocents have been shocking and numerous of late, one disaster after another folio wingcloee upon its predecessor but most dreadful of all was the suffocation of two hundred school children at Sunderland, England, on last Saturday. It appears that the children, to the number of soaie ten or twelve hundred, had crowded into a public hall to witness the performance of a conjuror, and when the entertainment was over they began rushing down the stairs from the gallery. At the top of the first flight of stairs was a door opened only wide enough to allow one child to pass at a time. In their eager haste to get out one child fell, and the great pressure from within resulted in a few minutes in about two hundred of the little ones being trampled and suffocated to death. like the accident on the Brooklyn bridge it seems difficult to account for the panic and terrible destruction of life. The most rational explanation is that it was caused by the children to obtain the toys which bad been promised to them as tbey passed out and the fear that that those who were last would not get any. The scenes at the tragedy were most heartrending, arfid the denunciation of the management is extremely severe. One thing is clearly demonstrated by these repeated disasters, namely, that better police regulations are needed wherever large crowds of people assemble. In nearly every case it would be possible for half a dozen officers or less to almost wholly prevent the slaughter which takes place on such occasions. If some such precautions are not taken, people will soon give up going into crowded places altogether.

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OUR exchange table is freighted with reports of commencement exercises in all partsof the land, and in glancing at the themes for that profound and beautiful thing, a graduating essay, we wonder why it is tliat so few of these graduates write in that fearful and wonderful composition her ideas on subjects she is familiar with. She will write about the "correlation of forces," the "mystery of the universe," "American education," the "lives of great men," the "relation of capital to labor," the "planetary system," the "lost archangel," the 4,fine arts," and every abstruse and distaut topic under and above the sun but she seldom dreams of giving the public her ideas on butter-making, dress-making, housekeeping, or any other topic which fate may decree she shall wrestle within prosaic reality, after sbe is commenced. The male graduate does sometimes, by pure accident, strike an understandable and practical vein. He knowB more than he ever will again, of course, being a theorizer of the doubled and twisted and finest twill. He is as great a foe to wit as tjie female graduate is to practical talk or practical thought. It is seldom we bear a humorous graduating essay. We find no fault with the literature of commencement days merely calling attention to the abstrusity and poetry ef the graduating essay, which proves that the age of realism, although so near, has not fully dawned.

THE failure of Peter McGeoch, the great Chicago speculator, for some $2,000,000 adds one more to the many corners which failed. McGeoch bad cornered the lard market and carried his immense stake for ^several months, but found at last that the country was too big for him and was forced to let go. His financial grip on the banks began to loosen and in a day he saw his great fortune go by the board. As usual a number of smaller speculators followed in bis wake. So far as the county at large Is concerned the details of the failure will be persued with complacency. It would be a good thing if all the McGeoches who try to corner the provision market should fail iu every effort they make in that line. Their success is purchased at the expense of every laboring man and woman in the country, who are obliged to pay an increased price for the necessary articles of food. in order that the McGeoches may reap a million or two out of their "corners." Their failure entitles them to no sympathy and they will get none. They area corrupting element in the commercial life of the nation, tbe bane of honest business' and the demoralizers of thousands of business men who forsake the legitimate paths of trade to seek for quicker fortunes in the whirlpool of specvlation. Let the McGeoches, the Keenes and the Handys be smothered beneath their corners so deep that tbey will never be able to get their heads above water again.

Opinions of Mr. Til den's physical condition vary widely. Mr. Watterson bears the old time bugle tone In bis voice, while another who has recently conversed with him, declares that tbe old man has only a partial control over his organs of speech, and that, although but a few feet from him, be could not transmute his mumbling noises into words. This observer also says that only two persons can understand Mr. Til den's "peculiar pbrasings"—his attendant and his private secretary. These accounts differ widely it is trae, but then tbey serve equally well to keep the sage of Grammercy Park before the country, and that Is all that is wanted Just now. This is apart of the sly game to get into the White House In 18%. Anything bat being forgotten. Uncle Samuel does not mean to be forgotten If hejcaoi help it. _____

O..* I1 .!.„\i THB fallare of McGeoch's larif corner entailed a loss upon himself and others of nearly four millions. Tbe experience may be valuable to those engaged in the jr vVr v: mrm

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Yocso Nutt, who slew his sister's seducer, and his father's murderer, at Uniontown, Pa., is the recipient of congratulatory dispatches and letters from widely separated parts of the country, while Dukes went to his dishonored grave scarcely mourned by any one save possibly his old mother, who was shamed to have evergiven birth to such a son. Rarely has deserved retrioution followed so swift and sure as in this case. There was no possible mistake. Tbe doomed miscreant richly deserved his fate, and an irresistible fascination for the scene of his evil-doing appears to bave held him until the vengeance of heaven should fall upon his head. Not tbe community alone which has been the scene of his villanies, but the whole country breathes freer when such a wretch is put out of the sight of men.

THK assurance of the Philadelphia Times that Indiana has had her day as the controlling factor in presidential contests, rray not be a grateful one to the politicians, but it certainly frill be to the mass of citizens. Indiana has had too much politics to the square inch in past national contests and one of the purposes of making her a November State was to lighten the political pressure at these periods. But it is not by any means certain that the Times' declaretiou is true. On tbe contrary tbe InterOcean recently contained an elaborate and well-argued editorial taking the ground that Indiana would be the pivotal State in the next national contest as heretofore. There is no doubt therefore as to which of the views is the correct one.

7-':

JUDGE WHITE, of Dallas, Texas, thinks tbe great electric storms are due to tbe vast amount of exposed iron. There are 100,000 miles of railway and 200,000, of telegraph wire, quite enough to influence natural electricity. We have cleared out forests and drained the country until we are in constant danger of vast overflows and bave built railroads and telegraphs till we have called down the electric wrath and now must go to live in caves again, like our ancestors, to escape the elements. There is no question about it—we must stop this civilization.

YINGS AND DOINGS.

As you journey through life, remember that the side shows make the most noise.

Here comes the Albany Argus with a demand for "a real old ticket"—the team of twenty years ago: McClellan and Pendleton.

What with a colored student in New York who wants to play Othello, and an equally colored maiden in Washington who pines to depict tbe miseries of Desdemona, the country is likely to have a theatric sensation in a season or two that will be most endurable of winter nigbts. I

ANew York justice has sent a woman to Blackwell's island for six months because she shook her fist at him. The benedict of the Louisville Courier Journal, after glancing over his shoulder to see that his wife isn't looking, remarks: "A justice of the piece has his advantages compared to a married man."

A prominent southerner says Jeff Davis was a bitter man, a mere man of details, and Alexander Stephens an idealist and a dreamer, and that Howell Cobb is the one who should have been intrusted with the presidency of the confederacy. The same authority says thinking people saw after the first year of the war that southern people must give in.

At a recent southern camp-meetingthe eloquent divine said "The wheels of the righteous shriek and groan as tbey toil up tbe bill of salvation and over tbe ruts of temptation and the bridge of damnation, and have to scrowdge pretty lively to get up at all but the sinner, with greased wheels and flying colors, slips down to tarnation like a dose of oil with a rip and a whiz, and raises no dust whatever."

The Rev. Herrick Johnson,of Chicago, says that the Presbyterian church is actually suffering for tbe want of pastors. There is material enough, he said, but every preacher wants a rich congregation at the start. Dr. Johnson tells of a Presbyterian church in Brooklyn that actually called a congregational minister to preach for them because no suitable man of their own faith could be found.

There is in Schuyler county, Missouri, a young old man who, without apparent cause, living plainly on a farm, bas in eighteen years passed through the physical changes of fourscore. At tbe age of 6 he bad all tbe development of strength and muscle usual in a lad of 15. At 12 his beard was grown and gray hairs appeared. Now, at 18, he is as decrepit as any old man of 80, and seems tottering on tbe verge of tbe grave.

Scott's Calamity Jane Combination is a theatric venture to come into the field next season. Tbe manager assures tbe public that he has no amateurs nor barnstormers on his salary list, and that •very character in the play will be "rendered in a thoroughly artistic manner." In every city there will be tableau cars, gayly caparisoned horses, wolves, bears donkeys, and a brass band. Evidently things are to be ••thoroughly artistic" and devoid of amateurishness.

The recent death of General George P. Buell has called out a letter written by him last December to a Southern friend who had chanced to become his prisoner in the dosing months of tbe wsr, in which occurs this suggestive statement. "Ooce, soon after the war, I saw your

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good mother, •sriio I recollect thought her bey was almost ruined because he bad gone to work. I felt sorry for her, of course, bat could not help laughing to myself, for I (though the son of a rich man who educated his children well) had been taught to work always. I wonder what that good mother, if she still lives, thinks of the poor boy who has the responsibilty of 1,200 miles of railroad on. his mind every moment of time."

In old times tbe New Englaud meeting hoo2& was never lighted until singing schools made candles necessary Night meetings were considered highly indecorous. Stoves and fireplaces were not thought of. Of a cold winter morning the breath of the worshipers would seem like smoke from a hundred furnaces. The walls would strike a chill of death into many of the congregation. Manifold devices against tbe cold were provided. Enormous kitcheu fires were exprestdy replenished for Sunday uses, before which scores from a distance warmed themselves aud ate their luncheons. Neighbors from a distant would sometimes erect a plain structure upon tbe meeting bouse green, with ample fireplaces. These structures bave nearly all disappeared.

A visit to tbe Concord prison by the Rev. Mark Trafton convinced him that the solitary cell is a frightful place. He stepped inside and said "Please shut the door." Darkness, silence and suffocation. "Open, open," he cried, He could not have lived there an hour, he thinks. All air circulation passed through a space under the door about two by four inches. The wretches confined there recently stripped themselves naked and lay down upon tbe stone floor, putting their mouths to the small aperture to get a breath of air, "What are those ringbolts in tbe wall for?" he asked of his guid.e "They are put in to chain the culprit up by his bands so that he could not sit nor lie down," was the reply. ______________

BLAINEPS BOOK.

"Twenty Years of Congress—From Lincoln to Garfield. A History of National Legislation." This is the title of Senator Blaine's book, soon to be issued from the press. It will be sold only by subscription. Mr. S. T. Ensey, 731 Spruce street, is the agent for thia city, and, in a few days, with little or no effort has secured some seventy subscribers. It is a book that needs no talking up to induce sales. Every intelligent man knows Senator Blaine and bis ability to prepare such a work as this.

It is truly a pre at historical work, covering, as it does, the events of Congress for twenty years, and giving an inside view of national legislation and contemporary administrations during the most momentous period of American history, with introductory chapters showing the remote and immediate causes of the civil war. What a wonderful period for history, from 1861 onward!—the proclamation of war! the call for troops the issueing of national currency the act of emancipation tbe Confederate surrender at Appomattox court house the granting, at last, of universal amnesty the murder of Lincoln the purposed assassination of Seward tbe attempted removal of Stanton the impeachment of Johnson the election of Grant the electoral commission and seating of Haye* the inauguration and assinatlon of Garfield, those ^ere but incidents of the time, with, meanwhile, the questions of established reconstruction, resumption, national debt, national taxation, and the development of the nation's resources.

Such is the period, which on the Congressional side, fi.uaa its first full history at the hands gi Mr. Blaine. His work has no predecessor, we are confident it will have no rival.

For, if tbe period chosen is unsurpassed in interest and importance, so is tbe chosen historian especially fitted for tbe historian's work. On the one band, he stands, at this present, sufficiently distant from the events themselves to insure cool perception and deliberate comparison. In tbe prime of his powers, aud un trammeled by the constraints of office, he has given himself wholly to bis great task. On tbe other hand, be possesses that absolute knowledge which comes from actual, influential participation. It is his great fortune to be able to say with impersonal, historic truth: "Of which I was part." On tbe floor and in the Speaker's chair of the House, and again on tbe floor of tbe Senate, be witnessed tbe great events which he now places on the historic page. No important action was taken without his knowledge, and often, in special council, he learned those related facts and underlying motives which gave the action its true meaning.

Such a book should have a place in every library, and it is not surprising to hear of Mr. Ensey's success in securing subscriptions.

RESCUED FROM AGONIZING DEATH. NKW YORK.—Mr. James White, 1652 Broadway, formerly chief instructor in Diekels' Riding School, in tbis city, said to a newspaper reporter: "I broke my shoulder, arm and elbow, splitting tbe socket in four parts. Rheumatism set In and I employed tbe best physician. He tried everything, but I grew worse, and at last be said: 'I bave one more thing to try and if that fails nothing can give you relief, and that is St. Jacobs Oil.' 1 used this great pain-reliever, and am able to my arm, free from all rheumatic trouble. I bave also recommended the remedy to a number of people, and In every case they bave been speedily and effectually cured."

Aw Answer Wasted.

Can any one bring as a case of Kidney or Liver complaint that Electric Bitten will not speedily caret We my they can not, as tooomnda of oases already permanently cored and who are daily recommending Electric Bitter*, will wove. Blight's DtreMe. fttabetea, Weak Back, or arlnary oonipjalnt quickly cared. Tbey parify the wood, mutate the bawela, and act directly on the diseased parts. Bvary '»x*He guaranteed. For sale at ®e. a bottle Cook BeU and Ualicit *Oo. (D

For 36 years," says our correspondent Henry Clark, of Fairflelk, Lenawee Co.. Mich., "nay wife had fits. Tbey would hwt about an hour, and sometimes longer. ttamarilaH Nervine has permanager. aamartuK tly cured her."

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Main Si, bet 5th"an8 6t£.

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SUMMER

HOSIERY:

25 dozen.

Ladies Black Brilliant Lisle Regular Made, at 50c a pair.

19 dozen,

Ladies Fancy Cotton Hose Regular Made, 35c a pair.

40 dozen,

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72 dozen,

Misses and Children's Fancy Cotton Hose, sizes 5 to 8| inch, London length, full Regular Made, at 15,20,25, 30 and 35c.

This is without doubt the greatest offering of Hosiery ever made in Terre Haute, and worthy of every buyer's careful attention.

Plll'K'MOOIIfPEllDlVH OPIUM Our now book by the aul.ior of "Peek's Bad Boy and his l*a." Sal OH onormoiw, surprising old canvassers. Nothing like It. It Is a lltterary novel. 100 lllustrntlonx low In price. AOKNTN WANTK». Terms and Laughable Illustrated Circular FREE. fORNHKEA MeNAKIN Cln., O.

JpRANK PRATT, Importer and Dealer Is ITALIAN MARBLE AND GRAIITB

MONUMENTS,

Statuary, Vases, &c., It COR. FIFTH AND WALNUT TERRE HAUTE. IND.

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