Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 19 October 1882 — Page 4
§lt£ 'JpzetU.
W. C. BALL & CO-
I EnUrrd at the r»rtoJJlce al,Terre Haute lnd.,a,t »econd-clas* mall matter.]
RUES OF SUBSCRIPTION:
Daily, 15 cento per week 65 cents per mouth: 17.80 per year Woekly, $1.50 a year
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 19,1882
TUB killing ol* Col. Slayback, which occurrcd at St. Lou's last evening, is greatly to be deplored. He has visited our city and has many friends among our citizens. He wa* a warm heatted, companionable and impulsive man, and prone to endure excitement on scant occasions. lie really ought not to have undertaken to wh'p the editor of theGA. ZETTE'S esteem on'empoiary, the Si* Louis Evening Post-Dispatch. More truly than Czar or Emperor or King the editor is the Lord's Anuointed and the sa-ri'f'ious hand upraised against him with violent intent ts usually paralyzed.
ItiN'f 'nils A UrflHTOl' LOFT ICALf
In its comments on Mr. Pi irce's speech
in ilic Lamb— Ptirte joint debate the GAZKTTH'S t'nihusiabtic contemporary the Express bursts out into this strain "He rspldly reviewed the history or the Repuollpnu party, and chahei ged his a.rverrHi to piovo a wiontj or corrupt act In all it* puftt hWnry of twenty yeaii-." 'To etr in human," and Mr. Peirce will IK himself amused at a statement so sweeping. There is something colossal ftb')Ut this assertion. It pi asf8 by the sublunc grandeur of its proportion?, but it is its own best refutation. It topples of its own weight. That the publican or any other party, ohuicb, j-ect, body or individual can show a recojd of twenty-two u-ars unblemished by any fault or error, is such an Utopiao manner of lo. king at life as to provoke a smile. And the amusement is too sinceie for argument to seem other than absurd. The acts of a party are the acts •of the officers and representatives it has placed In power.
Has the Express never heard of one Ulyt-ses Grant, sr.d tbe Belknaps, Robesons ft omneyenu* with whtch he surrounded himself?
Was the whisky conspiracy all,'a myth And were the pardons never written Has the fact that silver was demonetized and a Republican President •vetoed the bill re-monetizing it, teen tor gotten
Has the manner of the recent nomination of Judt e.F»lger so soon passed irom memory
Is all this that George William Curtis has written about political assessments and the Hnbbcll machine a mere phantasy of the brain
Was the squandering of millions of acres of public lands to western railroads the correct thing?
Was the River and Harbor Bill, beyond the assistance it gave to a few rivers and harbors of importance, not an extravagant •waste of money? The party in power must be responsible for It.
Are the Republican papers, the "Cincinnati Gazette and Harper's Weekly wrong when they refer to the last Republican congress as astonishingly prodigal of the people's mon«y? But then what's the use of multiplying examples?
NATIONAL VROHIBlTION.
It is not generally known that during
the last two congress there were two proliibi'ory amendments offered to the constitution oi the United States. One by Senator Blair of New Hampshire on the Rth of February, and one by Plumb of Kansas on the 15th of February, and both are still pending for action.
The following is the Plumb amendment: Beo'lon 1.—'"The manufacture and sale of all Intoxicating liquors and the importation of HUOII llquois fiom foreign countries except for scientific, medical and mecnanlonl purposes in any portion of the United States or tho territories therefore are forever prohibited."
rcr iiiuiiiuiicu. geo 2.—"fongre»8 shall enforce this article
Sec 2.—"fongr_ by all needful TegislaUon. The friends of the amendment claimed they ould get nineteen votes for its support in ihe senate all Republican—being one liulf of their number in that body.
If Ohio had gone for prohibition it would hive given lue cause a great impetus.
That this question is fast growing into a national one is obvious to all. Of course our lit pub!i an senators and re. pros 'ntmives from Indiana will feel bounlto vote for tbis amendment as rather agree to let it pass so as to submit it to th state*. Their motto is to agree to the passages of prohibitory amendmen's by Ug's-laf re^.
PX&bUHAL.
n:. .v. I*i• 1 Thompson returns to Kan .kakc. The Hud nuts are building a three story brick archous«*
Mrs. William E McLean has been in Indianapolis t\is week. L. -rduo w:ints to buy 200 cords good hard wood. See advertisement.
Hon. A Sullivan will not lecture in this city. The effort to bring him here provtd a fa* lute.
William Mf nuing has been examining the river tor gigging and thinks it will oon be all right.
Mrs. Thoun Ii. Bacon, of New Haven,
Conn, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrn. J. A. Foote. Mr. an4 Mrs J. II. Kleizer returned Thursday night from Waveland, Mr. Kleizer's old home.
George W. Buff, Esq., of Sullivan, passed through this city te-day on his way to Indianapolis.
Mrs. Jn'. Zimmerman of north Eighth street is spending the week with Mrs. Chas. Beriglit, south of Prairinton.
The winter apple crop is quite heavy in Clay and Sulivan counties as is also the crop of hickory nuts, hazel nuts, walnuts and all kinds of wild fruits commonly found in the forrrts.
Joe Davis rereiv. 1 a nfat j.m lease jCsterday, by expreff. fr«m Olro, ioi.tniniug a good square meal. 1 his was in answer to Joe's lament that lie had been starving while his fut'urand mother were East visiting.
Mague, of East Liverpool, Ohio,
W. S. Ridgelv, Cincinnati, B. P. Wigginson, Lafay«t'e, A. M. Posco, New York, and John A. Hoffman, of Kalamazoo, arc registered at the National House.
Wm Singhorse, an old resident of Pierson township, now living in JNeosha, Co., Kanas, raised twenty-four acres of wheat this year, which yielded 650 bushels—an average of twenty-seven bushels to the acre.
Mrs Emma Molloy, thea'le and popular temperance lecturer, will speak at the Central Presbyterian church Sunday Oct. the 15th at 4 p. M. and at 7 :«0 p. M. All are cordially invited to attend, the ladies, especially.
The Royal Templars met in regular meeting last evening, at which they uddoptcd tbeii n*\v by laws, which changes their meeting nights, fiom thes«cond and fourth Fridays to every alternate Friday evening.
The trade in musical instruments has greatly increased at this point and Terre Haute ba3 become a great depot for supplies to the surrounding country. In the front rank of our musical instrument dealers is L. Ivussner, to whom much of
Mr. Ben. Rogers, the enterprising farmer, has several thousand bushels of corn in ihe bottoms, which he intends to husk and get out into cribs pretty soon now, tearing the river will rise as it did last Nrvember. Rogers says he would rather trust a crib than the Wabash with his
FANNY PARNELL'S REMAINS
Are Removed to Philadelphia Today—A Thousand Land Leaguers Present
TUENTON, N. J., October 18 —The remains of Miss Fanny Parnell were removed this morning from the receiving vault in River View Cemetery to the depot and thence to Philadelphia. Mrs Kate E. Digirs, Vice-Pre-ident of the Ladies Land League of New York Mr. Moonev and Mr. Hires, ot the Executive Council of the Land League of the United States were present. Mrs. Parnell and a delegation from Philadelphia were in waiting at the Trenton depot and accompanied the remains. A number of the Davitt League of Trenton were in tbe procession. About one thousand representatives of the Land League party stopped at Hordertown for the mother of the deceased, but she was too ill to make the journey. At Camden they were met by John Howard Parnell, broth ergo! Ihe aeceas'd, and Mrs, Diggs, "vicePrssident of the Ladies Land League of America. The procession started for the Broad street station accompanied by eighteen pall beareis and the body will be taken to New York on the 4 p. m. train.
LASSOING A LION.
Mart Hollenger Distinguishes Himself in New Mexico. A Las Vegas, New Mexico, paper of Oct. 3rd contains the following notice ol a Terre 'Hauteau. Mr. Hollinger will return home to-day or to-morrow:
On the day before yesterday two freighters in the employ of Mart Hollinger succeeded in lassoing a mountain lion near Los Alamos ar.d about teu miles from
Las Vegas, in the moot scientific manner. The freighters' names are Levy Roby, a colored man,and Fraucisco Padea, a Alexicau. They were driving 'heir team through a" gulch when they discovered the lion basking in the sun on a bank near them. The freighters stopped their teams and laid a plan to lariat the beast Taking their hair ropes they circWd. around the animal, securing a position above htm, aud while a dog approached the monster from the frout the men threw their lariats simultaneously aud caught him around the neok. A struggle ensued, in which the dog was killed. The men Lad no guns and had to use a great deal ot cau'ion in dispatching their prey. They tied their ropes to a wheel of a wagon and started the hones. This wound up the lassoes and brought the lion tigi against the wagon, when they killed him with a butcher knite. The lion was about six years old and measured six feet seven inches in length. The brave fellows who killed him have reason to thank their stars that the shoe is not on the other foot, as the chances for victory were about even.
Will He Dodge 1 his Question? To the Editor of the Gazette: Will yoa please inlorm me through your paper how Hon. B. F. Peirce stands on tbe prohibition question 1 heard his speech Inst. Monday and exoected hiin to an-wer and define his position in answt to a challenge tf his opponent, John E. Lamb, but was disappointed in my expectation. As Senator Plum's amendment to !}»,• constitution of the United States prohibiting the manufacture and sale of all intoxicating liquors or their importation from any foreign conn ry is pendiug before Congress he will be required to vote for or against it, and it is important to know how he stands on that question Can you answer REPUBLICAN.
Junior Dancing Club.
The Junior Dancing Club have rented the hall over Dealings' bank, corner of Fourth and Main streets for their club
THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTR
A DEPLORABLE TRAGEDY.
Ending of a Quarrel Between a Poll tician and an Editor-
A* W Slayback Shot Dead by John A. Cockerill in the Editorial
Rooms of the St. Louis PostDispatch-
Special to the Indianapolis Journal! ST. LOLIS, October 13—Great excitement was caused this afternoon by the report, which spread like wildfire, that Col. A. W. Slayback had been shot by John A. Cockerill, the editor of the PostDispatch, and In a few minutes the vicinity of the office of that paper, on Market street, was completely tilled 'by people eagerly discussing the affair. Mr. CockeriU'd statement is that Col. Slayback drew a revolver, and that then he drew and fired. Omhe. iher hand, no revolver was found on the body or in the room. The following is as correct a version of the affair as can be obtained until the inquest is held:
At about half past 5 o'clock, Colonel Slayback and W. H. Clopton were seen turning ihe comer of Fourth and Market streets, talking together in au excited manner, aud evidently tending in the direction ot the Post-Dispatch buiidiDg. The stairs leading to the reportorial rooms were climbed in haste, and Mr. Cockerill and Colonel Sla back met face to face. The Colonel began to denounce Cockerill in a scatning manner for the assaults made upon him by the Post-Dis-patch, and in the fury which had taken possession ot him, the Colonel drew a revolver from his pocket as if to wreak vengeance for tbe outrage which had been inflicted on his honor. Cockerill, who had tbe advantage of his adversary by reason of his seli-possu n, also drew his revolver and tired at Slayback, who fell mortally wounded and gasped his last breath in a few minutes afterwards.
CAUSE OF THE KILLING.
The trouble which terminated so tragically dates back to a political meeting held last evening, in which Col. Slayback made a bitter onslaught on the Post-Dis-patch and its reporters, to which the paper responded this evening by uncomplimentary references to Col. Slayback, which rendered him to indignant that he visited the office to demand satisfaction.
After the killing the body was taken to an undertaker's, where it will remain until after the inquest.
Col. Slayback was a well-known lawyer, and brother of Chas. E. Slayback, president oi the Merchant's Exchange. He leaves a wife and six children.
STATEMENT OF THE CITY EDITOR. Heniy W. Moore, city editor of the paper, who was sitting at his desk writing, says that while Col. Cockerill, John
McGuffin, the business manager and Victor T. Cole, the foreman, were holding a business conference in the editoriiu room, Col. Slayback, accompanied byW. H. Clopton, came into the city editor's room and passed on toward the editorial room, the door to which was closed. Mr. Moore turned in his chair as they passed by, and observed that Colonel Slayback, as he opened the door with his left hand, had his right in his pistol pocket. In less than half a minute after Slayback entered Cockerill's room, Moore heard tbe report of a pistol. He immediately sprang up, and on entering the editorial room found Slayback stretched on the floor and Cockerill bending over him, apparently wiping blood from his face. Cockerill asked Moore to send tor a physician, whidi he did. and in a few moments Dr. McCarty arrived, but not until Slayback was dead, he having died about three minutes after being shot.
COCKERILL 8l'RKENDEKS.
At midnight Cockerill drove up to police headquarters -and surrendered himself. Judge W. H. Clopton, who was with SI ay beck, asserts that the Colonel was unarmed, and he went into the office with the intention of administering a threshing to Cockerill, aud was just taking his coat off when Cockerill fired the first shot.
MR. PULITZER'S VIEWS.
NKW YORK, Oct. 14.—Joseph Pulitzer, proprietor of the fost-Dispatch, said he was too shocked at the occurrence to say anything. He knew of no ill-feeling between the two men. He was quite convinced that from what he knew of Mr. Cockerell that he had acted in selfdefense. Mr. Pulitzer will leave for St. Louis tonigbt.
FOREIGN NEWS.
AT 1HE SOLDIER'S HOME.
DAYTON, Oct. 10.—The new laundry at the Soldiers' Home burned down this A. at three o'clock. It had just been completed at a cost of about $10,000 and was ore of the few frame buildings in the institution no insurance. The other buildings were saved with diffcul ty.
A $2,000 BLAZE.
DES Moimc, la., Oct. 18.—Twenty thousand dollar fire occurred this morning reciting tbe oomplete destruction of sif business buildings, supposed to have been incendiary insurance about $12,000.
AT WINONA.
WINONA, MINK., Oct. 18.—Frost's large flouring mill at Minnesota City, six miles from Winona, burned this morning. Loss, $70,000 insurance, $40,000,
1 his Beats the Snake Stery. A dispatch from Dallas, Texas, says: "M»jor Penn, an evangelist, during a revival, prayed for divine punishment upon disturb rs ot his meeting. Immediately a man dropped dead Last night, at Cmupas-s, Penn made a similar petition. A young lady at once upset a lamp and was burned to death. Immediately afterward a tornado blew over the gospel tent, fatally injuted a young lady, and hurt many others, causing a fearful panic. The tent was flooded with water to a depth of two feet." -"a#??*
A DELIGHTFUL NOVELTY. Ladies prefer Floreston Cologne be. cause they find this lasting combination cf exquisite perfumes a delightful nov-
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J-SJ, ~4tT1 J?
A PROFESSIONAL CONFESSION.
The Unusual Experience of
a
Prominent
Man Made Publio.
The following article trom the Democrat and Chronicle, of Rochester, N. Y. is of so stricking a nature, and emanates from so reliable a source, that it is herewith re-publiBhed entire. In addition to the valuable matter it contains, it will be found excei ngly interest in g. To tbe Editor of the Democrat and Chronicle.
Sir:—My motives for the publication ot the most unusual statements which follow are, fiftt, gratitude for the fact that I have been saved from a most horrible death, and, secondly, a desire to warn all who read this statement against some ot the most deceptive influences by which they have ever been snrrounded. It is a fact that to-day thousands ot people are within a foot of the grave and they do not know it. To tell Low 1 was caught away from just this position and to warn others against neariug it, ure my objects in this communication.
On the firstday of June 1881,1 lay at my residence in this city surrounded by my friends snd waiting tor my death. Heaven only knows the agony 1 endured, for words can never descnbe it. And yet, if a lew years previous, any one had told me I was to be brought so low, and by so terrible a disease, I should have scoffed at the idea. I id always been uncommonly strong and healthy, had weighed over 200 jounds and hardly knew, in my own experitnee, what pa:u or sickness were. Very many people who wi.l read this statement realize at times that they are unusually tired and cannot accouut lor it. They feel dull and indefinite pains in various parts of the body and do not understand it. Or they are exceedingly hungry one day and en tirely without appetite the next. Tlr.s was just the way I felt when the relent legs malady which had fatened itself up on me first began. Stiil I thought it was nothing that probably I bad taken a cold which would soon pass aw»y. Shortly after this I noticed a dull, and at times neuralgic, pain in my head, but as it would come one day and be gone the next, I paid but little attention to it. However, my stomach was out of order and my food often failed to digest, causiog at times great inconvenience. Yet I had no idea, even as a physican, that these things meant anything serious or that a mon*trous disease was becoming fixed upon me. Candidly, 1 thought I was suffering from malaria and so doctored myself accordingly. But I got no better. I next noticed a peculiar color and odor about the fluids 1 was passing—also that there were large quantities one day and very little the next,and that a persistent froth and soum appeared upon the surface, and a sediment settled iu the bottom. And yet I did not realize my danger, for, indeed, seeing these symptoms continually, 1 finally became accustomed to them, and my suspicion was wholly disarmed by the fact that I had nopain in the affected organs or in their vicinity. Why I should have been BO blind I cannot understand.
There is a terrible future for all physical neglect, and impending danger always brings a person to his senses even tbongh it may then be too late. I realized, at last my critical condition and aroused myself to overcome it. And, Oh! how hard I tried! I consulted the best medical skill in the land. I visited all the prominent mineral springs in America and traveled from Maine to California. Still I grew worse. No two physicians agreed as to my malady. One said 1 was troubled with spinal irritation another, nervous prostration another, malaria another, dyspepsia another, heart disease another, general uebility another, congestion of the base of the brain and so on through a long list of common diseases, the symptoms of all of which I really bad. In this way several years passed, during all of which time I was steadilv growing worse. My condition had really become pitiable. Tbe slight symptomB I at first experienced were developed into terrible and constant disorders—the little twigs ot pain had grown to oaks of agony. My weight haa been reduced i'rom 20« to 130 pounds. My li'e was a torture to myself and friends. I could retain no food upon my stomach, and lived wholly by injections. I was a living mass of pain. My pulse WHS uncontiollable. Iu my agony I frequently fell upon the floor, convulsively clinched the carpet, and prayed for death. Morphine had little oi no etlect in deadening the pain. For six days and nights I had the death-premonitory hiccoughs constantly. My urine was nlled with tube casts and 'albumen. I was struggling with Bright's Disease of the Kidneys in its last stages.
While suffering thus I received a call from my pastor, the Rev. Dr. Foote, rector of St. Paul's Churvh, of this city. I felt that it was our last interview, but in the course of conversation he mentioned a remedy of which I beard much but had never used. Dr. Foote detailed to me the many remarkable cures which had come under his observation, by means of this remedy, and urged me to try it. As a practicing physician and a graduate of the schools, I cherished the prejudice both natural and common with all regular practitioners, and derided the idea ot any medicine outside the regular channels being the least beneficial. So solicitious, however, was Dr. Foote, that I finally promised I would waive my prejudice and try the remedy he so highly recommended. I began its use on the 1st day of June and took it according to directions. At first it sickened me bnt this I thought was a good sign for me my debilitated condition. I continued 10 take it the sickening sensation departed and I was able to retain food upon my stomach. In a few days I noticed a decided change for the better as also did my wife and friends. My hiccoughs ceased and I experienced less pain than formerly. I was so rejoiced at this improved condition that, upon what I had believed but a few days before was my dying bed, vowed, in the presence of my family and friends, should I recover I would both publicly and privately make known this remedy for the good of humanity, wherever and whenever I had an opportunity. I also deteimined that I would give a course of lectures in the Corinthian Academy of Music of this city, stating in full the symptoms and almost hopelessness of my disease and tbe remarkable means by which I have been saved. My improvcmen* was constant from that time, and in less th«n,three.months I had gained 2&
pounds is flesh, became entirely fix* trom pain and I believe I owe my lite] and present condition wholly to Warner'jl Bare Kidney and Liver Cure, the remedy! which I used.
Since my recovery I have thoroughly re-vestigated the subject of kidney difficulties and Bright's disease, and truths developed are astounding. I therefore state, deliberately, and as a physician, that I believe that more than one half the deaths which occur in America are caus-ed by Bright's disease of the kidneys. This may sound like a rash statement, but 1 am prepared to fully verify it. Bright disease has no distinctive symptoms of its own, (indeeJ, it often develops without any pain whateyer inthe kidneys or their vicinity), but has the symptoms of nearly every other known complaint. Hundreds of people die daily, whose burials are au'horised by a physician's certificate of'Heait Disease,""Apoplexy," "Parah^is," "Spinal Complaint," "Rheumatism/' 'Pneumonia," and other common com plaints, when in reali'y it wiu Bright's Disease of tbe Kidneys. Few physicians and fewer people, realize the extent of this disease,or its dangerous and insidious nature. It steals into the system like a thief manifests its presence by the commonest symptoms and fastens itself upon the constitution betore the victim is aware. It is nearly as hereditary as consumption, quite a: common and fully as fatai. Entire fami lies, inheriting it from their ancestors, have died, ami yet none of tho numbu knew or realized the mvst rious power which was removing tnem. instead ol common symptoms it often shows none whatever, but biinus death suddenly, and as such is usually supposed to be heart dif-ense. As one who has suffered, and knows by bitter experience what he says, I emplore every one who reads these words not to neglect the slightest symptoms of the Kidney difficulty. Certain agony and possible death will be the sure result of such neglect, aud no one can afford to hazard such chances.
I am aware that such an unqualified statement as this, comin? from me, known as I am throughout the entire hind as a practitioner and lecturer, will arouse the surprise and possible animoaily of the medical profession and astonish al! with whom I am acquainted, but I make the forgoing statenu nts based up facts which I am prepared to produce and truths which 1 can substantiate the letter. The welfare of those who may [xxssibly be sufferers such as 1 was,is an ample inducement for me to take the step I have, aud if 1 can successfully warn others from the dans-erous path in which I once walked, I am billing to endure all professional and personal consequences.
J. B. HENION, D.
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Sixth and Wain streets
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Opposite Patent Office, Washington, D. afayMentlon this OH per. A Aa week in~your own town. f5out IL hfoflt free. No risk. F.verythlng .nllllnew. Capital not. required. We
VW||J furnl-n you everything. Many are making fortunes. La
dle* make as much as men and hoys and girls make great P*y Reader, if you want a business at which yoa fan make gieat nay all the time you worn, write ror particulars to H. HALIETT A CO., Portland, Maine.
CUriCTIEA rermanentiy Curns Tumors of the Scalp and Skin Cuticura remedies are for sale by ail dnigslrt-s. Hrhteof Cntlcura, a medicinal I i»'liy, smalt boxes, 5uc large boxes, 11. Cuticura Resolvent, the uew blood purtfter, II per bottle. Curie ra Medicinal Toilet Hoap, 25c. Cuticura Met 'cloal Hliavintr Soap, 15c in bars for barbers nd large consumers, 50e
PrinciraWlegH^ IorTER Boston, Mass. All mailed free on receipt ofjjrioj^
p:
'ESS5SS,~$45io$100
Per month during Fall and winter, in every county. Interesting and vainable information, with full particulars. I free. Adcren at once,
MCCTTBDY A GO OtnclnnOh1M
Dl a ainc JL sold on installments and lARUd Otgblpped to all parts of tbe
ORGANS I
for catalogue. Horace Waters A Co., manufacturers and dealers. .838 Broad way, New ork.
