Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 March 1890 — Page 2
THE DAILY NEWS.
VOL. I
90-
...J& 188
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•T should bettddw»ed to the •COMPANY. I. A. HARPER, Managing Editor.
SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1890,
A NEED OF A CHANGE.
THE question of what shall be done with the chronic "drank," is now agitating the Massachusetts Legislature. A bill has been Introduced that a man arrested for drunkenness shall not be fined or imprisoned unless disorderly or endangering the life or prpperty of others. The friends of the "drunk" appeared before the judiciary committee and Representative Eldred made this remarkable statement: "This question comes home to a large part of the population of our state since one out of every thirty-six persons is arrested annually for drunkenness, and statistics show that the fine or imprisonment does not effect any reformation." The women of Massachusetts have for a number of years sent enormous petitions to the Legislature asking for the privilege of voting on the liquor question but have always been defeated, last year by but one vote. The men think as long as the proportion of "drunks" is only one in thirty-six there is no use to disturb existing conditions. TUB NKW8 has frequently called atten tion to tho pernicious custom of daily carting a patrol wagon full of "drunks" to the jail to be boarded and lodged twelve days at the expense of the taxpayers. There is no argument in favor of this custom. It has not the slightest deterrent effect, as the majority take advantage of their first day out of jail to repeat the performance During their imprisonment their family are deprived of their support, which though meagre is better than none, and where the fine is paid it is generally at the expense of those who are needy. Nothing is gained by keeping them in jail at public expense, for the professional "drunk" does not regard it in the light of a punisnment. When a man is simply drunk he should be taken home to sober up. This will not make his family any more miserable than to put him in jail. If he has no home then give him one night's lodging instead of twelve. If he is disorderly and merits punishment put him to work ami compel him at least to pay his expenses. It is an indisputable fact that our present method of defiling with "drunks" is neither deterrent nor reformatory and is the moat expensive that could be adopted. It is high time that we should experiment in some other direction and when we have determined upon a more satisfactory manner of disposing o! our "drunks," we should then consider some plan of reducing the number,
AM. the ministers in Jersey City last Sunday devoted their sermons to urging vigorous and concerted action in regard to ballot reform and the necessity for honest elections, A Catholic priest in the course of his remarks said:
On next will find itt the poU
I -s!S nnytWHH but iu:s
fM-rtWO'Wivrfc'i—hsitiijinic about. to Hell
•Uji'nvM-'.vo VOUintftrtH to iho WM'r. T3u a-U twk St.SI*'. tjyt Xx ili Wi! llolitrr ChontMtlvos for :»«|utirtsr»:.Ju.! think of it! S'V U' i' (Jt, 'i rigbttss fo ,* twtam «tvo l-» it atfe niifttolf Ami I am (Mfeatacrt u» **,.*11 IrWhmen and Ofcthol?**, They will »k* (»r a sM.trier, ro to tb«c iH-sr «*lotn. ilrUik np tho qvnrter. *)d then sit a bwr k« and about liberty. «t upon uiv'M.!»«. If Had out .. ,.r !•. Uwt commit Ml «. M.Jieottii him to Mir fttlM •.' o: IXX him lt» $t»t? pn~-m, »od
UW» iWVW. This is the kind of sermons w© nwd right here in Terr* Haute, and after oar ministers? have done denouncing the men who sdl their vote
lot
them tarn their
attention to the men who fail to east their vote. These represent the two-ex-tremes and while there is amoral difference, the results am no more injurious in one case than the other*
rsw days ago Lily Wolfe filed sail against Frederick* Wolfe, her mother-in-law, for alienating her husband's affections. She changed that the defendant, by the persuasions and threats of disinheritance, succeed in causing her husband to deeer* her. The moSher-in-law's counsel filed a demurrer on the ground that the laws of this state wiU not permit a woman to sue for the toes of her husband's affections. Judge Allen this morning Sustained the demurrer, Tux Kstrs referred to this question editorially a few da5"s ago in regard to a case in Jiew York where woman r£ coremi dAmagee under a statute reetsntly pawed which permifes the wile to sue for the alienated ilMotti of the husband. From Judsre Allen's dec&ion it appears that in this state the old cotnnaoa law is stilt in force. If this is tho mm a bill should be pmmd at the
next meeting of the Legislature repealing the old statute and giving wives the same rights as husbands in such cases. It is not a question of whether a money value can be placed upon alienated affections but simply whether husbands and wives shall have equal rights in audi matters. There wotild probably be no difficulty in securing the passage of such a bill as Indiana is distinguished for the justice of her laws in regard to women. With but few exceptions, the laws make no distinctions between the rights of men and those of women.
THE old adage that "fools learn by experience," has not been verified in the case of the western boomers. The wild scenes of the invasion of Oklahoma were repeated yesterday in the rush upon the Cherokee Nation. Misunderstanding the President's order, which was simply that the Live Stock Association should vacate the territory which they had occupied contrary to law, 20,000 people rushed into the Cherokee outlet, men, women and children, without food or shelter, insane with their desire to stake their claims which they cannot legally hold. And in a few months the rest of the Okla homa story will be told in the long procession of ragged, hungry, disgusted individuals more anxious to get away from their claims than they were to locate them. The same enterprise, energy and willingness to endure toil and privation, if utilized right where the boomers were already located, would produce tenfold more satisfactory results. But although this has been repeatedly shown to be true it has no effect in preventing the same mad rush whenever anew scheme presents itself.
THERE seems to be considerable opposition to the making of a landing place for emigrants out of Bedloe's island. The opponents claim that it will be a desecration of Bartholdi's magnificent statue to surround it with the unsavory accompaniments of an emigrant fending station. On the contrary one would suppose that this was of all others the most suitable place to welcome the foreign refugee. If, as the sentimentalists insist, these oppressed people, fleeing from a land of tyranny and oppression, come to our shores for freedom and independence, it seems most appropriate that they should be greeted by this statue which represents the enlightment of the world. It really looks as if Liberty could not find any better use for her torch than to light the oppressed of all nations to the most hospitable country on the globe.
It IS said that if one will carry arocmd a small dose of nitro-glycerine in his pocket and take it at the slightest premonition of heart trouble he can prevent death from that disease. Still we think that the constant presence of nitroglycerine on one's person would cause premonitions more to be dreaded than he a is as 3
FOR once the weather bureau was correct when yesterday it predicted light snow and a cold wave, but there is every reason to believe they had. a private tip from prophet Hicks.
Tms is a very cold day for the Cherokee strip. The People'* Column. Tt the Editor oj The IMilf Nevt:
SIR: I should like through your columns to make a request or rather perhaps a suggestion to County Superintendent Grosjean, in regard to the time of the teacher's institute. The time now set from the 18th to the 25th of August, certainly will cut short the vacations of many teachers, who certainly are entitled to their recreation. Would it not be possible to have the meeting held later, say the first week of September? And further, the weather at that time of year
is usually very hot. A TK\( HER.
tfliehi ChMtki Are Handled. There are clearing houses in all the principal cities of the United States, doing a yearly bushier amounting to over $52,000,000,000, while the total amount done by English clearing houses is about 188,000,000,000. As showing what an amount of money is represented by the New York clearing house, the amount of money handed through that institution during the past year was over $33,000,100,000, while the London clearing house did over a billion of dollars less business* —New York Letter.
gff SigM After Thirty Thuhl
A tuuarkaUle c.^oof return of sight in one t\w i-s K- W su.l front Waterbury, iheluvkv person is a John MotVuuM, asted 74, He had been totally blind t'ov :D years, buring rendered so by jsand unintentionally thrown in his eyes by a Mend. He is'unable to account for his now good fortune, and physicians are also in a quandary to provide an explanation,—Philadelphia Ledger.
The Anta«rtic expedition, advocated so warmly by the Australian?!, will start probably during the summer of 18&i Undor the direction of Professor Nordenskiold. The expenses will be shared by the Australian Geographical moiety, the Victoria Royal $oc»eiy and Baron Oscar Dickson, of Gothenburg, who has done so much already for pofetrexpJkrat»oiJ.
Dr. Know, the German physician who discovered antipyric* is said to haw made more than a nyilion dottara fTorn Oos&ksof&e dru$ to su&erers from fee grip, ..
It is reported front St Petersburg the Russian physician. Dr. BapehiasH has discovered that diphtheria it easOy corable hy iooculatioa of
The Indiasa couple who wem named A not be wwptised their antkimated hefcvea"*,
XFI« UMSMB
t^ey mad'ti hell-o.—Bost^
SOME FAMOUS CONTESTS.
THE CONFLICT METW AND
Terr Early fn tbe History of tbe United States Gorernment the Xeaberi of the Senate Began to Codkplala That tbe
Journalists Printed Too Much. [Special Correspondence.] WASHINGTON, March 13.—There seems to be an irreconcilable conflict between statesmen and newspapers. These men whose mission it is to do public things and these other men whose office it & to find all about those things, are good fellows together, have many strong per sonal friendships one with another, and equally well know how to make use of each other's services and influence. But even such brethren as these cannot always live together in peace and harmony. Where all hands are independent and spirited, proud and pugnacious, there is sure to be a row sooner or later, and just now we have on hand a peculiar state of affairs in the big and beautiful Capitol of this nation. Up in the press gallery a daily joke among the correspondents is (and I don't consider it a very good joke), "Excuse me a moment while I go down stairs and kill a congressman."
On the floor of the house there are plenty of men who said when Correspondent Kincaid shot ex-Congressman Taulbee, "The infernal newspaper chap ought to be taken out and strung up," or, "I am in favor of driving the whole pack of them out of the gallery," There was a good deal of this sort of talk when the echoes of Kincaid's pistol were still ringing in the marble halls, and for a few hours there was no little feeling both on the floor and in the press loft. All true and brave men are clannish, and there-
THE PISTOL INSTEAD OF THE PEN.
fore the statesmen were inclined to stand by Taulbee, while tho newspaper waiters were for Kincaid to a man. But tho little flurry in this end of the Capitol soon blew over. It was discovered that the congressmen who mado the ugly remarks about new^aper .men as a class were tbe chaps who had felt the sting of a few small pieces of "steel dipped in writing fluid, more poisonous, sometimes, than the compounds of the Borgias and it was discovered at the same time that while newspaper men were disposed to do all in their power, in a legitimate way, to help their fellow out of his trouble, they did not indorse 'his methods, nor themselves go about with loaded guns seeking the blood of the representatives of the people. As a "rule the house and the profession get along pretty well together.
At the other end of the Capitol the feeling is deeper. There the trouble is of ancient origin. History is repeating itself in the hostility which is now leading the senate to threaten the wholesale arrest of newspaper men for printing so called secret session proceedings and to close up the gallery heretofore devoted to the use of correspondents. It is a curious fact that the very sedition law under which the senate proposes to prosecute correspondents, or one very much like it, was passed early in the history of the republic as a means of regulating and intimidating the press. During the time of Washington and John Adams tho Anti-Federalist press was very bitter in its criticisms of the administration. Tho Aurora, an opposition paper of Philadelphia, enraged the administration and the senate by printing, before the government got hold of them, Talleyrand's dispatches complaining of the partiality of the American government This led to deep jealousy of the press in administration circles, where newspaper men were denounced as dangerous, malcontents and usurpers of governmental authoritT. In 1788 the administration passed the sedition law, and the first viotim of it was Matthew Lyon, of Phila* delphia, who was tried for sedition, convicted and sentenced to four months' imprisonment and to pay a fine of $1,000 for printing a letter in which he stated that with the president "every consider* ation of the public welfare was swallowed up in a eor.Unual grasp for power, an unboti hirst for ridiculous pomp, foolish auuutnon and selfish avarice,"
While in prison Lyon was elected to congress and took his »eaion getting out of jail Then an effort was wade to expel him as "a malicious and seditious person, of a depraved mind and wicked and diabolical disposition, guilty of publishing libels against the president of the Dnited States with design to bring the
TERRE HAUTE DAILY NEWS, SATURDAY, MARCH 15,1890.
BETWEEN STATESNEWSPAPERS.
the poker from the finephw&e and
heart hb antagonist ov«r the head with it. Another xesotutioia to expel was offered, tot again Lyon was vktorioas, and he Sbelil hi» seat to tbe «od of his term.
The s^ition law w^ aimed poriictslady at The Aaron*, newspaper, aadia short time MiSmiaMsntSkKi was In |uarrel with the editors of that jomml AB the tdgK^R, jtiSfc as they st« likely to do at th» prwsmt time if the senate canriea ltas|i«tetoofar. Half a doxe» progec»tioa» ww^sta*^ *tsroce, federal mMtla M^tlted editor flf.lbtJto
lawyer, Cooper, was~hounaecl"to Jaw oy Implacable federal office holders. In 1812 the editor of The Alexandria (Va.) Herald, just across the river from Washington, was arrested for printing secret session news about the proposed embargo act, thrust into prison and kept there for several months. He refused to give the name of his informant, and was finally liberated.
In 1813 two of the greatest senators, Clay and Calhoun, united in a movement to expel members of the press from the floor of the old senate chamber, where they had been accommodated for many years, and send them to the gallery. The movement was successful.
Later, in Andrew Jackson's time, Reuben Whitney, who wrote articles for Frank Blair's Globe, was threatened with death in a committee room by Congressmen Baillie Peytoh and Henry A. Wise. These statesmen put offensive questions to Whitney, who retorted in kind, and bloodshed was imminent. Afterward Wise and Peyton confessed at the bar of the house that they carried weapons with an intention to use them on Whitney if occasion arose, and thus it is history records statesmen and not journalists as the first offenders in the matter of carrying guns with hostile intent.
The famous Cilley-Graves duel in 1888 was the outgrowth of a quarrel between statesmen and journalists. Cilley, a member from Maine, 'charged James Watson Webb, then a Washington correspondent, but afterward editor of The New York Enquirer, with having received a bribe of §53.000 from the Bank of the United States. Webb challenged Cilley, sending his message by the hands of Congressman Graves, of Kentucky. Cilley declined to recognize Webb as a gentleman, and in that lofty manner which some latter day statesmen imitate, refused to "get into a difficulty with a public journalist." Of course Graves had to take up the tight on his own account, and promptly challenged Cilley. This challenge was accepted, and the preliminaries were arranged by Henry A. Wise and George W. Jones, the latter afterward a senator from Iowa, and still living.. Rifles were the weapons, and on the fourth fire Cilley fell dead. He left a wife and three young children, and, having been a very popular man, his death in this manner caused a great deal of excitement all over the country.
It is worth while here to pause aud-re-mark that it was one of these quarrels between American statesmen and journalists that gave to the world the modern system of reporting legislative debates. In waging their persecutions of the press of Philadelphia, the Federalists of John Adams' day found it convenient to drive an editor named Cdbbett out of the country, Cobbett retired to England and there began tbe first complete reports of the parliamentary debates ever published, while he also conducted a great political journal. Thus parliamentary reporting the world over may be said to have been born out of the persecution of the press in free America.
One of the foremost of American journalists had a serious personal difficulty with a statesman. More than a third of a century ago, when N. P. Banks (whose white head is on the floor below me as I write) was speaker. Horace Graeley was a newspaper correspondent in Washing ton. As a correspondent he was as pugnacious as he afterward proved to be as an editor, and he succeeded in rousing the ire of a big, six-footer congressman from Arkansas of the name of Rust.
This fine specimen of the statesman met Greeley on the steps of the old Capitol and struck him with his fist, and was following this up with his cane when bystanders interfered. In the letters of Mr. Greeley recently published by Mr. Dana, of The New York Sun, this assault is often spoken of, and it is made plain that while not subdued the young correspondent lived in no litUe fear and trembling of the personal violence .with which he was so often threatened, At any rate, he armed himself with a revolver, and allowed it to become known that he would not stand any more pummeling. After this he was not molested.
Those were fighting days. It was at the same session of congress that Mr. Wallach, editor of The Washington Evening Star, then a struggling sheet, now earning an annual profit of $200,000, was attacked on the street by "Extnr Billy" Smith, an ex-con-gressman, who was getting rich out of some mail contracts. Smith knocked the editor down, but the latter got
AOIUCE Cftssure ASSARTED.
government into contempt*" This reso- his assailant's thumb between his teeth, itttton was defeated,, an& Lyon kept his and it was never known who had the seat. He must have been a very pugna- heat of it. ciows sort of a journalist, however, far An amusing incident of the year 1858 soon afterward he became involved in w&s the wrath of a member of congress personal quarrel with a fellow member, I from Wisconsin, William Sawyer, not Griswold, of Connecticut, and they catne related to tbe present senator from that to blows the floor, &nd one of them. {state. Sawyer was written up in The
New York Tribune as a "witter," who ate sausages behind' speaker's chair and wiped hi$ hands eta. hk bald head. **Then," said the artic}®* "he hi teeth with a jackkmfe, and goes on the floor to abase the Whigs as the British |oi*y."Sawya-iBad^ Ibis, mnfiiiwUit' in winning for Kitwwwa# &e nxeknamoof "Sausage Sawyer,'1' aad in having Pnhinfm) ths viitit Of tfk article, expelled privjlc^ea of the SooSv ftfifwui! became a member hims^f, and famous as the twister of the British Mutt's tail.
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There have been a number of such cases as this. In 1872 two newspaper men, White and Ramsdell, obtained a copy of a treaty in advance of its consid-
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A
TUB DAUNTLESS*
PRISONER OF THE SENATE,
eration in the senate and printed it in The New York Tribune. The senate arraigned them for contempt on their refusal to tell whence they had procured the copy, and confined them for several weeks in one of the committee rooms, where they were fed on oysters, terrapin and champagne,
A few years ago Senator Salisbury, of Delaware, who never liked newspapers, organized an investigation into the manner in which executive session secrets are obtained, and threatened all sorts of vengeance upon the offending scribes. The senate marched up the hill with the old senator, did its best to scare some one, and then marched down again. Hannibal Hamlin—nice old statesman he was, too—became enraged at a newspaper writer once upon a time and endeavored to have revenge upon the whole class by introducing a resolution to deprive the craft of tbe supplies of stationery which they had been getting for use in their galleries from the public stationery room. The correspondents proved that tbe value of the stationery used by them did not amount to more than a few hundred dollars a year, and invited the senate to cut off the supply. They did more they at once began a merciless arraignment of senators for the manner in which they used up their stationery allowances in the purchase of opera glasses and similar articles for ladies who were not always members of their families.
The last conspicuous victim of a burning desire to regulate the press is exSpeaker Keifer, who, at the^lo«e of the Forty-seventh congress, in revenge for som«i criticisms passed upon him in the newitpapers, ordered tbe public admitted to thf! press gallery of the house. At the first opportunity the correspondents took possession of the gallery and barricaded its doom Gen. Boynfcots, dean of the corps, and Mr, Barrett, now editor of The Boston Advertiser, stood guard behind that door all night, and when morning came and the public, armed with the speaker's passes* presented itself for admission, tlie door was hermetically sealed to all hut representatives of the preaa, Keifer was beaten, and from that day to this the press has been anything but generous toward him.
Hie lesson of history would seem to be that the newspaper buzz saw is not a safe thing to fool with.
USE
HULMAN'S
Dauntless Coffee.
IT HAS NO EQUAL.
CLOTHIXG.
WALTER WELLXAX.
WHT is it everybody reads THE KSWS? itoontainsalf the home news, and cosU only 10 cents a week, delivered by carrier.
MUSIC.
COLLEGE OF MUSIC.
Wee Cta«ttt^Hsrwmjr,
Dmauttki Artood H«dena Lpspia^ei.
J. BUKQWITZ,
VH .Mate St, mm XL ft „W«iikfi»-aroee*jr..'
f-
IfOJSOF SAND!
mmmMV
It takes sand to sell good, nice, well made clothing at the prices we are offering
them now to close them out, but we mean business' and the opportunity is voure tiu th Why not improve it? See our reduced closing out prices. 125 percent on children's
and boys' suits 25 pes cent, on heavy underwear, all grades and qualities- 33 per cent, on men's suits in broken lots, mostly small sizes. We invite your iuspection.
J. T. H. MILLER, Clothier and Merchant Tailor, 522 Wabash Ave., North Side, Near Sixth.
onThe'New York Herald, obtained possession of an advanoe copy of Polk's Mexican treaty, a "confidential communication" to the senate. Of opurso he printed it, and for his enterprise was arrested and brought before the bar of the senate. There ho refused to tell who had given him the document^aud he was put in jail till the end of thifsession.
DENTIST!
*T NO. 897% INAIN »TBEET."S« Moo GOLD and RUBBER PLATS* a spocialty.
A. J. KELLEY,
Attorney ,at Law
m,S OHIO 8TRKCT.
DR. VAN VALZAH„$
DENTIST
Office in Open Home Block,
[DR. B. A. GILLBTT11
DENTIST.
1 Filling of Teeth Specialty.
Office, M^Keen't New Block, Cor. 7to and Kaln
LEO. J. WEINSTEIN, M. D„
Physician and Surgeon! Rcgldence, 620 Chentnut street. Office, 111 8. Sixth (Saringd Bank Buildinn. All calls promptly answered. Kenidcnce teloj»hone 218.
DR. W. 0. JENKINS
Residence remains tbe name, comer of Kifth and Linton street*. Residence telepbone 176 office, No. 40.
DR. BALL,
otf8
DISEASES. MOLCS, SUMSPLUOUS HAIRS REMOVED.TUMORS,
HOMPCEATHI8T8,
Orrioe
Night
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NOSE THROAT! CHEST
OFFIOK, NO. at SOUTH SEVENTH STREET,
SYDNEY
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DAVIS, JNO.
DAVIS & ROBINSON,
LAWYERS,
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GKOROK M. Dav»,
6
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Booms 1 and 3, WAKREN BLOCK
S. W. Cor. Wabiusb and Fourth Sts.. Torre Haute
I. H. O. ROYSE,
IIS3urance „~™.
No. 517 Ohio Street.
DR. F. G. BLEDSOE,
lit "ii "#old a iransfe tee ce fitli h: 0 any ass "0 tr b* nd •ay wil on
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MEDICAL ELECTRICIAN.
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p. ia. lis Month Hixtls street.
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las ret "market
Vr{#nn(mwS-&t
102 SOUTH SIXTH ST.
CAII*answered
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