Elkhart Observer (Newspaper) - October 16, 1872, Elkhart, Indiana OCTOBER 16, 1872. 9. and Is Main OF In in in OF According to time and rates for long lime and laige sized inserted in reading mauer ai AND EMMA M. 1). T. in. 1'. C. J. Jl. D. J. 1). J. iiut J. Arisman ana F. L. 11 B. P. High and Second Rev. h. M. L. E. Uigh and S. U. Services at a. m. am. 7.30 p. m. School p. John's A. E. at a. m. and 7.B'. p. m. Sunday School la 11. Services three Sundays ol each south of Goshen John F. every o School every Sunday at 9 a. St. A. Services every Sunday at a. m. and 8 p. m. at i a. 20., German at iH p. kane no. 13J. U. no. i a. a. y. D. 31. no. 60. F. Monday evenings at 8.UU p. no. Chief P. Vice Assistant a. Financial W. C. Deputy Inside Ni Grand 1". U Monday so. 31. Worthy Chiel D. Chief Vice Financial F. W. Deputy Grand A. Meets T. J D. B. A. P. irom 7,30 a. m tiil 7,30 i m. Sundays from till p. and p. m. 1'2,45 D. m. Going 4,00 and p. m. and Grand 11,30 a. Wabash and Indianapolis 12,'i.i p. St. Louis and Kansas anu 7,aiJ p. m. and Cassopolis and p. i; 8,uO a. Sundays 0,00 p. and Mails the 5,: p. the 7,30 a. m. aud 4,; p. the a. 12,.'50 and 1,45 p. Kalamazoo and Grand 5,15 p. Wabash and 4,15 p. m. St. Louis 7,30 a. m. and 1,43 m. and 7,30 a. m. and 1,1 p. m. Wednesdays aiv Order and Registry open from a. m. tiU 7,30 p. K. P. maila received at this until further no tice on Sunday Mails will be sem as on evenings to all poins West and closing precisely at 1 r. E. brl P. and feed Pigeon of Ind. Horses and Carriages always in ready on van AT Ind. National W. at law and Real Estate Office next door South of Opera Ind. Will give prompt attention to all busi ness to his of Printing and Ind. Orders J. E. Pres. | JouN Treas B. L. F- Comer o Jackson and Second near the Posi Ind. Our motto is to date at DINING HA Railroad at the Elkhart Ind. J. D. Travelers am accommodated in first-class style and a jr. N. AND office east side of Main between Pigeon and High east comer of Fourth and Higi comer of Main anc Jackson Ind. kept In order to make guests comfortable and b and will be kept as a first class reasonable F. located at Main Street comer of Main and Railroad near the This Hotel has been recently tis ted np in and new Board only 81.50 per convenient and especial provision made to weekly or transient - comer of Main and Jackson Ste. ' Clifton House l. J. R. S. 1E3I0NSRAT10N. M. D. 3lMoti: Mahi ' Oxide of Upper Set of CMb paid for Gold The thing is upon the face of with ' Sam. a hold from the Professor of Anatomy and does not agree with there is not only but acts susceptible of in the the of Anatomy and Physiology attend to his own department retorted The 1 tell y is Of course we ills know that the mental powers exert a influence over the but 3-ou tell body of a healthy man inay be so far operated upon by a mere whim of the interrupted but a settled arising from the so long as it is a But it docs pursued conviction have no basis in then the man cannot loel and if he thinks he feelt tl en he shows himself weak and not a healthy The you would advocate is the philosophy of the and charlatans of all I teL the story is a sheer was our Professor o. Chemistry and Experimental He was a man of oi well read in natural a de op very set in his and apt to be severe like all men who art and sensitive in ished he would admit m which threatened to occasion of the present was a story which had ap in one of our i. wan the story of a strong man whi had been made and carried tt by a mere mental hallu The mental impression ved from circumstances had found the man in per feet health and vigor of both mint and in a short time oai him off. The truth of thv had been vouched for by goot and our Professor o and Physiology had his But not believe such said crushing the oi ending magazine ifi his man is either maste or else there can be tiling as human accountability he is of then bugbear cannot conquer liim ill is story cannot be If mm. was prostrated as is here this 1 do not mus been a and not i le mean to quer ed a man's materia cannot be successfully at through a mental Not through an impression of i A mind i cerebral may grad wear the In lie whole organism is really in tilc as the Professor we thv natter to There were six o class that and wt I Iked the matter over alter hac Lit the said Sam. i. join we'll give a and you try jumped at the aid put our heads to ether to lay the I know 3''our said Sam. It was played once at and i bink we can play it won't do for us stu to be the only Thv might smell a secure the help of our very first application was to Professor the Anatomical and AVe told him whai 3oardman had and he wai enough to give the man a In he was Boardman had practically him before the and ht to wipe the out in the emphatic manner sc ho not only joined us in our he lent us the assistance of hit name in our influence upon without that influence we have entirely failed in enlisting olc the black and 3 if we should have been able gain the cooperation of two old farmers of the had not Gardner assured them thai thing was for a fair and honest was the habit of Professor on pleasant tc take a walk out into the He was rigid in his obedience to the of health as he understood and he believed that he owed present robust and vigorous and physical condition in J. great measure to these morning was about a week subsequent to our discussion with the Professor that we were prepared for our One June while the sun was just peeping over the forest-crowned crest of old and the drooping hting heavily upon thp regal Prof. stepped forth into the college and inflated his broad bosom with the fragrant breath of the matin He had emerged upon the gravelled walk of the planting his hickory staff sturdy strokes as he he met Phillip of our a modest and a close Mr. Ah lovely It You are not feeling I are not feeling well this your What put your I never felt better in my Excuse We were talking yesterday about the change in your seemed as though it had come on But I hope it may bo you And the Professor shook himself to show how smiled and said that only his great regard had made You may be he went I am just plunging into pathology of the and 1 find that hard and protracted mental labor of all have been prime promoters of morbid conditions of that And you are the and your immense volume of Professor stopped the student's tilt by a vehement punch of his cane into the hard You are go your and pray that you may bo as free from disease as I Pardon returned May your walk in the air restore your Professor stalked proudly and at the gate he old the You's dis Hope you isn't you black what do you you eel I didn't mean only i I'd seed ye look so pate And yer 'em look so How So kind ob dead sunk like as if dey was The difficulty is in your own been you you're There That's Go your the strode 3ut his step was not as as He was and the his thoughts reverted to asease of the Within the ear last past at least ten of the old of his own alma-mater had of heart and some oi had died his thoughts up and considered the various of the trouble as he he walked on beyond he and by and by he by the cheery voice of Earner who was leaning over lis to Mr. ye a little venturing out into the damp What do you you don't mean to tell .ne that you are do And why not? Goodness you're as pale as a are at me hrough your tobacco I was the Professor moved but lis step was slower and he to feel an uncomfortable in the region of the By ind by he approached the dwelling Farmer and as he saw the husbandman standing at his he determined this time to the and he did it quite neighbor Beautiful farmer's only reply was of well-feigned What arc you looking good man's face and then he it I know No. How you've What is Ye look like a Hadn't ye better come in and let my women folks fix ye up something warm Professor got away as soon as and turned his steps His heart was growing weak and and he felt a deathly sensation in every part. He thought over anew the most cases of heart complaint with which he was and he now began to wonder whether he would have strength to reach home ' pretty sure indication that his strength was As he reentered the town he was gazed at ever and with wondering Three separate times friends who met him started as if and near to the college gate he was met by Sam. Sam. Jenkins had come out to lie iri wait for the and had prepared himself to assume his but when he saw the man's face so and wan and and when uncertain truly and Lis look of concern was instinctive and ' For heaven's what ia the it I am very Jenkins gave the poor man his and literally bore him tc the and on the in ill told how he had been In where a of the students were the Professor sat He could not go any further until he had taken dear said Prof. who had come you must allow me to prescribe for My heart is all This is only a freak of was on the point of indignant but Gardner stopped It is as I Professor and if you must blame let your blame rest for I upheld the boys in You left the college this morning a perfectly well and you can now of your own how quickly and surely a stronc man may be brought low through mere mental It has been a put-up from beginning to is no need of detailing the variety of emotions which our Professor of Chemistry and Experimental Philosophy exhibited on that Suffice it to that within a couple of nays he had entirely recovered from the physical of the shock of our and that we again heard him decry against the philosophy of the story before is eloquence in the pulpit nor wealth in the but the reviving influence of the Holy Holy Spirit is able to make the world as successful now as in the days of the He can bring in by hundreds and as easily as by ones and The reason why we are not we have not the Holy Spirit with us in might and power as in early If we had the spirit stealing our ministry with it would signify very little about our Men might be poor and their words might be poor and there might be none of the polished periods of Hall or glorious thunders of but if the might of the Spirit attended the humblest evangelist would be more successful than the most eloquent of preachers It is extraordinary not that wins the It is extraordinary spiritual power that wo Mental power fills a but power fills the we know some before whom we shrink into nothing as to but who have no spiritual and when they speak they have not the Holy Spirit with but we know worldly who speak their country and who stand up to preach in their country and the Spirit of God clothes every word with Hearts are souls are saved and sinners are born Spirit of the living we want Thou art the the the source of the people's Without thee they can do with they can do in generous profit is always afforded to the farmer by a good breed of this domestic A pure breed is not but a judicious crossing of such as he has with a better breed. It is a mistaken idea that the makes the There is such a thing as economy of food in and aptness to and all the imported breeds excel in these qualities over the They are superior also in regard to It costs just as much to produce eats and legs as it does hence pigs which have less snout and more less ear and more length and depth of smaller legs and wider are to be There is also a difference in the skin and grain of the The thoroughbred hog has a thin skin and fine-grained Some of the Western pork is not fit to as it is so and rank in A popular breed of hogs at the present time is the The best breeders of these pigs are now abandoning this fictitious appropriately calling them the Jefferson county They have been bred too and now lack bone and This can be easily The pigs often die in the West at not having sufficient strength to help it is and their tails dry up and drop off from want of They are valuable to cross upon native and their offspring usually be equal to the improved stock in and possess more feed and make more valuable the breeder will get a finer quality of meat with less there will be also sufficient constitutional vigor to develop the entire and who content themselves witn simply doing no the same time doing no mere Yourman does not wait for a stone to get out of his heaven appointed but naturally rolls it over may hurt somebody's toes in but thousands will walk that future path will thank him for it. The man who has no is generally a cau white washed walking the world with velvet who and bis way to the obscurity he the Boston Night in New York Academy of Music was filled to this evening at the opening performance of the new Italian Opera and the first public appearance of Madame Lucca in It would be vain to waste words in minute description of a scene the exact prototypes of which been pictured agan and again by skillful The noble theater of the designed by its projectors for fine but most of all for the brilliant exhibition of a great Avas made doubly beautiful by the lavish beauty of exquisite flowers was all ablaze with the splendor of and rich with the varied tints of elegant Scenes of this sort repeat themselves perpetually in New but it really seemed as if the beauty and to use a new and striking of our commercial metropolis had made a special effort to distinguish themselves and the occasion by an extraordinary costliness of selection of Meyerbeer's for the initial operatic representation of the season surprised many musical critics and especially those being most familiar with the work appreciated its immense technical difficulties and knew how heavy and dull its music had always fallen upon the popular in shall I not rather say its excessive elaboration and the wonderful erudition which it As a work it the obvious merit of being unhackneyed in this a virtue which the sick and sick to death of and cannot affect to curtain rose with and the vast audience repressed its impatience with great politeness and self-control first three quarters of the opening and Senor being received with decent while poor M. Jamet was treated as if New York had never heard him or heard of but with the entrance of Madame Lucca the opera first began to be received with real animation and It needed only a single look at the 3'et firm little as it glided upon the stage with a stealthy savage or at the mobile features and brilliant to feel the presence of a great dramatic The combination of the dignity of the princess with the timidity of the slave and the and with all this of the brusqueness of the race was wonderfully and was felt in every gesture of Lucca's impatient and in every tone of her impatient and the tenderness with which she first acknowledged the presence of Vasco was imbued with an exquisitely subtile quality which bespoke her complete command of the gentle From the moment of the entrance of the heroine up to her excepting the period of the third in which Selika scarcely the interest and intensity of her scenes Nothing more charming was than the lullaby which opens the second peculiar melody pervaded by an Oriental softness and and which was most beautifully rendered by the prima the contrast between the passionate outburst of self-accusing love which follows the melody and the strain of the air as it again recurs being made most thrilling and In the fourth act the excitement of the audience was at a high dignity with which she selfish curiosity of the flaming expressed in the softest with which she threatens with her death if ho refuses his the half-reluctant and more than half suspicious tenderness which grows upon her lips and in her eyes as she once more listens to declaration of and the culmination of all in the wild ecstacy with which she finally utters the Tua displayed the great actress in a hundred varying forms and enforced the conviction of her deep dramatic insight and her extraordinary gift of dramatic The famous Scena or scene of the upas could not heighten this though it gave new and interesting of the subtlety and sensibility of her Of Lucca's pure and I am not able to speak at present with equally high or indeed with equal precision of It was evident last night that she has an immense voice of astonishing power and managed with great At there seemed a lack of sweetness and a raggedness of quality which implied a wanting of the complete control which the vocalist desired and There can be no of its sympathetic and it is to understood that Madame Lucca was about half sick throughout the and earned her part only by a most resolute exercise of the the success of Madame Lucca in there cannot be a She was recalled thrice at the close of the third four times at the close of the and over aud over again after the fall of the green In the midst of her scene with in the very I may whirlwind of her she was interrupted the scene I was brought to a by enthusiasm of her with more than the wonted bad taste of buried the prima donna in as she was in the act of a fervent declaration of when a tradesman of the Rue St. was walking in the Boulevard St. Antoine with a he offered to lay a wager with the that if he was to hide a piece in the his dog would discover and bring it to The wager was and the piece of money after being carefully the two had proceeded some distance form the M. Dumont called to his dog that he had lost and ordered him to seek it. Caniche immediately turned and his master and his companion pursued their walk to the Rue St. Meanwhile a who happened to be just then returning in a small chaise from perceived the piece of money which his horse had kicked from its he took it and drove to his in the Rue Caniche had just reached the spot in search of the lost when the stranger picked it He followed the went into the and stuck close to the Having scented out the coin which hehad been ordered to bring in the pocket of the he leaped up incessantly at and about The traveler supposing him to be some dog that had been lost or left behind by his regarded his different movements as marks of and as the animal was he determined to keep He him a good and on retiring to took him with him to his No sooner had he pulled off his than they were seized by the the conceiving that he wanted to play with took them away The animal began to bark at the which the traveler under the idea that the dog wanted to go Caniche snatched up the breeches and away he The traveler posted after him with his nightcap and literally sans Anxiety for the fate of a purse full of gold of forty francs which was in one of the gave redoubled velocity to his Caniche ran full speed to his master's where the stranger arrived a moment breathless and He accused the dog of robbing said the my dog is a very faithful and if he has run away with your it is because you have in them money which does not belong to The traveler became still more rejoined the doubt there is in your purse a with such and such which you have picked up in the St. and which I threw down there with the firm conviction that my dog would bring it back This is the cause of the robbery which he has committed upon The stranger's rage now yielded to he delivered the piece to the and could not forbear caressing the dog which had given him so much and such an unpleasant correspondent of the Philadelphia Press calls attention to a fact which seems of sufficient importance not to be lost sight of. From a careful study of the diseases peculiar to he claims to have good reason to know that in the large cities of the country most of the deaths among these animals have resulted from drinking in the public Every old diseased horse drinks out of says the I have seen a half pint of corruption left in the basin after such a horse had taken a and immediately afterward I have seen a fine horse drink from the same what was little better than In this city the very best of the trotting cattle are often watered at the bublic and the only wonder is that diseases thus contracted are not more Emily whom we are to have the pleasure of listening to as a lecturer this has come up to her present honorable position by a series of graceful She is now 37 years of and is the youngest daughter of the Rev. Ferdinand Immediately after leaving she was presented at court and for several years was contented with the gay society life of Then she turned her attention to literature and wrote a upon was well In 1863 she established the Victoria Afterward becoming deeply interested in the woman question she entered the lecture field with great It is in the interest of the woi king women of America that she comes to our and it is supposed that among them she will spend most of her is the name Greeley has invented for soldiers who favor the election of Gen. An enormous is what he calls their without a is the sneer he tosses at Gen. than whom no soldier is more honored for his or beloved for his noble While Mr. Greeley's organ has only these contemptuous terms for Northern Mr. Greeley himself still just pride in the military and achievements of Stonewall Jackson as much as Sherman and veneable and renowned minister of the Gospel months ago was smitten with since which time he has lain in a helpless and almost speechless but to all appearances with his mental powers unimpaired till he He was in his 88th year at the time of his and had spent sixty odd years in aud most arduous labors in the servece of his great The Rev. Peter Cartwright was in many respects a and certainly a most He was as fearless as a possessing a will unbending as a fixedness of purpose which could not be and convictions of duty most and with a marked excentricity of Wherever he preached during his ministry of nearly three score years and people gathered in immense numbers to hear The name and fame of Peter Cartwright have gone abroad all over and his death will be mourned of He entered ministry of the Methodist Church at the age of 19, was a Presiding Elder of that Church for fifty and as he had an unwavering believer in the Christian the Cincinnati the Indiana Democrats Imported Superintendent of the Jeffersonville makes oath that the tickets over the New Albany and Chicago Railroad for the forty-four from Louisville to were paid for by a This is direct testimony from a man whose is believed by those who know This exposure has driven the Democrat conspirators to an attempt to break its What they call evidence is of the queerest They have Thomas of New and Thomas of make oath that they have called upon C. E. the passenger agent who the tickets to the and that he made a statement that he did not know the person who bought the This is all they pretend to produce by way of evidence bearing on the They then plunge into and that a full investigation shows that the tickets bought a hired scoundrel in the employ of the Grant and Morton Why not name If they knew of such a person they Not naming him shows that they are merely asserting a us look at the features of this Forty-four negroes taken from Louisville in a by Their tickets were bought by one This was in ' the midst of a heated in the accusation of importing negro voters had long been bandied about in They were taken by a circuitous route to a place where Democracy of a malignant type were detained there several then to whose venomous type of Democracy is well where also they were detained several and after all this parade through ultra Democratic regions and over roads managed by they were dumped at Indianapolis into the hands of who forthwith played out their part of the play by having some of the negroes arrested for intention to vote one will suppose that if Republicans designed to import the negroes to vote they would be such fools as to make this ostentatious parade of them through the Democratic regions of these negroes deceived by a who pretended to hire them to go to to vote the Republican for the purpose of exhibiting in order to give color to a hue and cry against the It was a cruel as well as a scoundrelly piece of But it was not merely to the Republicans that this job was In Kentucky is a horde of rascally Democratic whites ready to be hired in Indiana for a small And along the border in Indiana are counties in the control of a party which is ready to receive these The Democratic leaders in Indiana have appealed to Kentucky for and a formidable conspiracy has been organized to carry what they regard as the pivotal trick of an ostentatious of forty-four negroes in a to be exhibited around in Democratic was a trick to blind the eyes of the public to the gigantic fraud by which they expect to carry Indiana by Kentucky white It was also in pursuance of the persistent purpose to create the rule that color shall be regarded as broof of an illegal and the colored voters shall be driven from the polls in Ohio and Indiana as they were in The detection of recently imported negroes is so easy that this as a means for carrying elections in Ohio and Indiana is Their color everywhere distinguishes But there are no means of stopping the voting of white Kentuckians in the counties where Democracy This is the great danger to which pur institutions are For there can be no respect for when it comes in by swindling the the death of Dr. Francis the distinguished German-American the world of philosophy and science loses one of its most useful and honored thinkers He died aged 72. One of works was the Wayne has 410 buildings in process of e N. Y. is doctored by five female severe shock of earthquake was felt on in Iowa and is estimated that 3,000,000 inhabitants from the famine in Business College is to be opened in Fort Wayne on the 14th of after ninety odd now expresses great disgust at Billings says that he never knew a dog of eny breed to take after he had been thoroughly vaccinated with fire a t Sing consumed stores in the principal business part of the Two persons were seriously Loss over 1150,000. Madison Courier Mrs. Sarah Clern is again in her old quarters in the Jeffersonville and for She has again appealed for a new is in the best of health and being confident of another and a triumphant She occupies the same cell in the prison that she did last and has resumed the usual daily duties allotted to fail to see the appropriateness of the following for the We find it under the head of in the Sunday edition of the Cincinnati To be sure is a minister in the and as are identified with Sunday it may be that is the reason it is suitable Sunday A minister once told Wendell Phillips that if his business in life was to save the he ought to go South where they were and do it. ' That is worth thinking replied ' and what is your business in ' To save men from replied the ' Then go there and attend to your rejoined Mr. a series of disheartening it now seems probable that Gen. Rosecranz will have the satis faction of seeing his railroad project in Mexico inaugurated under auspices that assure its speedy The later advices from that country are all favorable to the and show that it is to be undertaken without It will be unde that what it proposes is nothing less that an but as the oceans are nearer together there than at the higher of the scheme is scarcely as formidable as our Pacific The road is to be of narrow will be built from the city of Mexico both The western end is to be and it is expected that cars will be running from the capital to the Pacific coast by the clos e of the year 1876, The tactics that are resorted to to secure favorable action on the part of reference to the subsidy that is are quite that branch lines are promised to San Luis Co and half a dozen other But public opinion is said to be almost unanimous in favor of the and it is not doubted that congress will reflect this THE of is His age was widow of Col. expect to remove to South Bend from are very scarce in and command high The new Methodist Episcopal Church and other buildings are being retarded on account of lack of Riddle has been appointed railroad agent at New Carlisle vice John F. attorney for the Chicago and Canada Southern Railroad says the line of the road is located on the Benton and New Paris and will be finished next year through to Laporte Car Factory is now in Condra was instantly killed in Willis Laporte by a limb falling and striking upon hifi head while falling a Sunday Mrs. Phebe wife of Horace Warren of Wakelee station on the Peninsular left home and has not been heard of Cassopolis returns From Ohio and Pennsylvania are not as favorable as was antic Indianapolis e first premium for the baby was awarded to S. P. Howe and at the Boone in Democrat Hereafter the Fourth Ward Greeley Club will meet at the saloon of on Spring P. credit for the and it to your