Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 3 January 1891 — Page 3
A clear skin
Belli, pimples, blotclics on the tkin, eruptions, etc., evidenco the fact that
tho blood i» not in gooU condition. These symptons result from tho effort
of
nature to throw off tho impurittea,
In
which slie should assisted by
Swift's Specific
This will remedy the disturbance, and
bring speedy and permanent relief bj
forcing out the poison, and will build
ap the system from the first dose.
Book on Blood and Skin Disease*free Swift .-pooiflo Co., Atlanta, Ga
PROFIT IN LITTLE THINGS.
A SticcosBful Inventor T«1Ih What ll« lias Found Morit Ad vantagcou*. Williiim V'estlako, tho railroiul inventor, whose patents liuve made a fortune for him, started in lifo as a roller boy in tho Wisconsin oflice in tho days when this pnjer, which now keeps the fastest of presses hustling to get oft its daily edition, was printed weekly on an old Franklin press. Becoming dissatisfied with his salary of $3 per week, lie severed his connection with t.lie establishment and tried his iiatid at several jobs, learning, among other things, tinsmithing, and finally drifting into railroading.
As a coppersmith lie got work 011 tho old La Crosse road and became an engineer. Ho "filled" tlio first locomotive ever run in Wisconsin, and stuck to engineering until one night he mistook a swinging lantern for the conductor's signal, and starting his engine just as an old lady was boarding the train, threw her down and cut ofT her leg. He resigned uid set about inventing a conductor's lantern that should 1 unmistakable.
The result was tho half given, half white lanU'rn that is used now the world over. The glass could not bo made in this country, and it was three years before he got one mado in Europe. While working on the LaCrosse road lie invented the railroad lantern with a movable glolxs which is now universally used. Ho offered that invention to two Milwaukee gentlemen for $2."0, but they laughed at him. Sinco then millions have been sold and fortunes made out of them.
In 1S63 he went to Chicago with $250 and started a business that became tho Adams & Westlake Manufacturing company, which employs 3.000 men. Mr. Westlake miule inventions by the hundreds aud sold the patents, but he says he never got per cent, of the amount other ]ieople made from his inventions. "I sold my stm'e board for $100,000," he said, ''and the manufacturers make that much every year out of it."
Mr. Westlake had 011 his hands a great many patent lawsuits, and getting tir*«l of the worry six years, ago lie sold all his patents remaining for $00,000 and with them the lawsuits. ITis home is in Brooklyn, and there he solids his time free-from business cares.
Mr. Westlake's patents are counted by the hundreds. He invented the headlight, the car lamps, the oil stove and doitens of other tilings fir everv dav use. He has recently made some great improvements iu the headlight. Me says that lie has found that it is the little things that pay. and that there is no money in inventing costly machinery. n» is at. present amusing himself by trying to invent a substance with whieii to coat the bottom of his yacht which will prevent the formation of baniacles. He says he has made a sort of enamel, so smooth that nothing can stick to it, and it has worked very well 011 a centerboard. He thinks it will work as well on the bottom of tho boat.—Milwaukee .Sentinel-
Suspense.
"OiH uiqu 1, is.'iid chemist, "a doctor came and woke mo out of a sound sleep to prepare morphine powders for an old gentleman named Martin, who had been ill for some time. I weighed out the morphine and put it np according to direction, but thought while I was doing so that the powders seemed to be unusually large. Next morning, when I was arranging things in the shop, I found that there was .1 ten graiu weight in the scale beneath (he one tho prescription called for. ami each of those powders was ten grains too large. "A cold chill ran down my back when 1 realized the mistake, for it meant almost certain death. A short time afterward the doctor came in. and I thought my time had come. Bracing np as well as possible, I asked: 'llow is Martin this morning. Doctor?' 'He's dead.' 'Did those powders kill him?' I stammered out, and in fear and trembling awaited the iinsv, r. But the first words relieved me: 'No: the powders had nothing to do with it. He died half an hour before they were received.'"—New York Ledger.
A Xi'umV Kvyn to Heaven. Die llerahl is in possession of a cane with quite a history. Tom (ioodyear, an old negro, aged about 80 years, died. In his deathbed was a comiwii walking stick, 011 the liamllo of which were two leather straps, to which wero attached 'wo keys—0110 large and tho other small. The old negro carried tho cane during tho last twenty-five years of his life. Ho never went without it, nnd always proclaimed that tho small key would open his way into tho better world, and that tho large key, shoald he not go to that desired land, would allow him to escape from tho dooi-s of that land wh:ch is hotter than this. But when Goodyear died he left the keys and stick by his
side while his spirit departed to that undMeovered land. It matters not to which place the good old colored man went, he will find the doors open for bis reception. —Patetln (Fla.). Herald.
In ono week o)' tho December pension payments $21,000,000 was disbursed by the government to soldiers and their families.
Within a period of five days during tho latter part of December over $T),000,000 in gold was brought by incoming Bteamers from Europe to tho United States.
It transpired toward the close of Hucci's successful fast of forty-five days that hi kept himself alivo and the jia'ngs of hunger down by heavy opium dose.s. It deadens the nerves so a man cannot feel hungry.
In Hawaii there are two political parties just now, and tho missionaries f.gure in oik? of them. The missionary party wants annexation to the United States. The other party is called the Native party, and those who belong to this wing advocate tho indeiendenee of the Hawaiian islands anil a constitutional monarchy.
Nebriiska farmers appear to be in a hurry. The Journal of that state declares the mo.,ibers of tho Fanners' Alliance are in such haste to get "them air offices" that they are urging the congressional delegation to have all the Itepublican postmasters in the state turned out and their places filled by uiemlx'rs of the Farmers' Alliance, ft cannot be possible, can it, that,after all. it is postoffices and not reform that the Farmers' Alliance is after?
C-. A I'ri/.e l-tsa,r.
Do vou want to earn £200 or £J0(l? Then write either tho first best or the seeond best essay on the housing of the poorer jieople among the wage u*ning classes of the cities. The American Economic association offers these two prizes. The essays are not to deal with the pauper classes so much as with those who earn low wages. There are two ways of housing the ]oorer wage earning classes. One is to huddle them together like sheep or pigs in a pen in vast tenement houses. Call them by what name you will, improve them as you will, they are still and always tenement houses, where the dwellers must necessarily bo in one another's way, and hamper and embarrass one another, and drink np one .another's proper share of oxygen.
The other way to improve the dwellings of the wage earning rluss is to cheapeu r:iilroad fares, and at the same time furnish rapid transit, so that the poorest and humblest family, if they are industrious and sober, may have a tiny cottage to themselves, with a yard and vegetable and flower garden. Many well meaning landlords would undoubtedly build such cottages, but the railroad fares and the time consumed in the trip to aud from work are what stand in the way.
We commend these two ways of looking at the tenement house problem to those who expect to strive for the prize essays. When you have written them send them to the secretary of the Economic iissoeiation, Professor Richard T. Klv. .lohns Hopkins university. Baltimore, not later than Nov. 1.1, .iss) I...
Agricultural ImIucai ion. Connected with the state university of Wisconsin is an agricultural course which seems quite unique. The agricultural experiment station is j,lined with the college, and this will constantly give to tho farmers and agricultural students of Wisconsin the resuit of experiments in all branches of the animal aud vegetable industries.
In order that the instruction may reach the largest number the agricultural instruction is divided into five separate courses. The mere fum laborer who has saved a few dollars can attend the short course aud learn how to get the most out of the fevd provided foi farm animals, what are the best breeds of animals for the farmer, and what are the liest crops to raise upon a given soil. Any In »ly over 10 years of age can take the shorter course, 110 matter if he can only re.-ul and write. No examination is required for this truly practical cmirse.
One of the features of tho Agricultural college is a dairy school, where the immense butter and cheese interests of the great northwest are duly fostered. This is the first dairy school established in the United States. The difficult matter of milk testing, which has never, as long as butter and cheese have-been made, been brought toa point of exact 'satisfaction. will be pursued till something definite is reached.
For the student, who desires to become a professor of agriculture iu its highest and most far reaching liues a regular graduate course is provided, combining literary instruction with that, belonging to farming proper. The college is also in constant communication with from sixty to seventy-five farmers' institutes in all parts of Wisconsin, so that farmers are en rapport with the school which is educating their sons and daughters, is not often that fathers and sons can thus work together for the same ends while the youths are getting their education.
If the time will come iu a few years when the United Suites will want all her agricultural products for home consumption, und the supply will no more than equal the demand and finally not be equal to it, tho country fills up with population, then one of the first duties of every state is to provide a college where the best methods of farming and stock raising may be learned. Other states might well follow the example of Wisconsin.
Daughters' Dowries. 1
Ono wonders whether Mi-. C. S. Mos- I singer will ever hold up his head again after being riddled with hot shot as ho has been by a number of ladies iti The North American Review. Mr. Messinger wrote a paper proving to his satisfaction that our daughters ought to have dowries wlien they are married, to save their young husbands from going crazy, or blowing their brains out, or bursting a bio id vessel in the head and dying instantly—till this from tho tremendous pressure incident to trying to support a wife who came to them without a dowry.
Mr. Messinger demands that when a new daughter comes into the household her father shall instantly begin to skimp and save in order that twenty years afterward some other mau who marries Dorothy may not have to lxfgin to skimp and save to support her. but may enjoy his bachelor amusements and have a wife too. Mr. Messinger evidently thinks it will be much better for a girl's father to burst a blood vessel in his brain trying to support her than for her husband to do tile same.
Five ladies advance to meet Mr. Messinger on the ground he has taken. They are Harriet Prescott Spofford, Amelia E. Barr, the widow of Henry Ward Beecher, Mrs. Livermoro and Alice Wellington Rollins. Strange to say, the women are all opposed to Messinger's plan except Mrs. Beecher,ami she is 011 the fence, now inclining one way, now the other. Mrs. Spofford believes in making girls self supporting, able to work for their own living: then they will ask odds of 110 man, lmt can take care of themselves if need be. She aslcs whether, instead of being a benefit to women, dowries would not merely "forge another link in their fetters."
Mrs. Eivermore says in effect that if parents are fools enough to bring up their daughters in a lazy, good for nothing way, idle and ignorant of any bread winning occupation, and if then a young man is fool enough to marry such a girl, they ought to suffer all around. Mrs. Barr says, "The tendency of the time is to dishonor marriage in every way, bnt the deepest wrong, the most degrading element that can bo introduced, is to make it dependent upon dowries or any other financial consideration." Mrs. Rollins does not believe in sacrificing the whole family's comfort aud cultivation just for the sake of saving "a dowry for Dorothy."
At any rate, it would come rather tough 011 a poor clerk with six daughters to stive dowries for them all. Such a system would add new terrors to matrimony, which is already said to be going out of style except among oid fashioned people.
I'arucll.
Rather surprising, when one comes to think of it, is the fact that Charles Stewart Parnell, 011 whom the eyes of two continents are fixed at present, is only ft years old. Vet he has lived as much as two or three men in those fortyfour years. When only :!0 he was elected member of parliament from Meath. In 1879, at the age of UIJ. he was chosen president of tho Irish National Laud league, and at once took his place as leader of the Irish Home Rule party.
It is a marvelous career for so young a man. Strange, too, that so young a man should be so cold and reserved as Parnell is said to be to men. Those who turned against, him in the hour when he needed support showed unseemly energy in kicking a man when he is down. Parnell hassutTered everything except death for the Irish cause. As his former comrades dealt the kicks and cutis they must have forgotten that dreary six months which Piirnell passed in jail for the sake of Ireland in the winter of 1881 aud "82.
August Belmont gave 110 huge sums to libraries or hospitals Uiat were to be built after lie was dead, the money inevitably to be lawed over till it was all lost but he remembered handsomely the old employes in his banking and business houses, giving good sized sums to those who had served him faithfully and helped him to amassTiis wealth. To one old employe he left $10,000. To all who had been with him five years ho gave ail amount equal to a year's pay. This was better than grinding down their pay as long as he lived, and leaving the money thus saved in the vain hope of building something that would perpetuate the name of August Belmonr.
Here is a specimen of English journalism when the stately and ponderous British editor means to be withering .and sarcastic. It is from The London Evening Telegraph and is intended to cast scorn ujkui the forty-five Irishmen who deserted Panu.il: "The Irish jx-ople do not desire a manifesto from forty-five renegades, nor an expounding of their policy in Nationalist newspajiers subsidized by Oladstonian gold."
The failure of banks, brokers and business houses in all parts of the country will turn the attention of holders of money to real estate as an investment. If the break continues capitalists will go with a rush to put their dollars into town lots aud farms. Then average real estate everywhere will move upward, til! it reaches figures near .oie at which it was valued fifteen years ago.
Russell Sage said the failures of the first part of December were due to fear more than to anything else. He said further: "There is no comparison between the present stringency and the disturbance of two months ago. There is money enough to go around."'
Stanley's Pigmies.
Stanley writes 111 Scribtier's Magazine more fully than he has done elsewhere about the wonderful pigmies he discovered in Central Africa. He says that many questions luive been asked him concerning these strange little people, among others whether they possessed reasoning faculties and whether they were real human beings. "And whenever 1 hear such questions." writes the explorer, "I mentally say, Triilv I see no difference between the civilized man and the pigmy."
Herodotus first wrote of the dwarf people of Africa. No modern learned IKTsons believed him, however. They were too wise for old Herodotus, and put the story down as one of his sujierstitions. Finaliy Schweinfurth and Piaggia declared they really did exist, just as the father or History had said. But till doubt was jiositively cleared up when, on his journey to rescue E»uiu Pasha, Stanley actually m« with, captured and secured photographs of some of the strange pigmies of the great forest.
In height they range from inches to 4 feet 1 inches. They are as wild :ls it is possible for a human being to be, not practicing the art of agriculture in even its rudest form. They hunt, and live 011 wild fruits ami berries and the game they catch. The little monsters shoot their enemies with tiny poisoned arrows, which cause blood poisoning and death, attended with frightful suffering. To their other admirable qualities they add that of cannibalism. Stanley describes them thus:
The Zanzibar! boys of 14 aud 1.1 years would ofu-n rali(.%- themselves utuli^-sid,- ,,1' the dwurf mull to measure theniselriK, and would manifest villi loud Imi^ilter their pleasure jit the discovery that there wen lathers of families in ex-istonit, not so tall as they.
We had li'.-nrti reports that the pi iV warriors were distinguished for the length of tlu-ir lieanLs, lmt 1 only saw one who could lie said to have a lieard. Their tKidles. however, were i-ov.ired with a brown fell Ioiir enough t' be eayily seized with the llnpers.
Aiiiouj the pig-inies there ant two distinct tyjies. differing widely from one another. One is a clear, li^ht bronze in color, the other is much darker, almost black. Tim former is distinguished by an open look-the eyes are far apart, lar^e, protuberant. mill of a brilliant. Hashing, limpid black, rcMnindiiiE one of the eyes of gazelles: the skin 011 the face of youth has the sheen of old yellow ivory, that on the Utdy is of a sober light brown. The darspr raw an- distinguished for great proi nathy of jaw. tap.'riug at the e.hin almost to a .itit: the eyes, are deeply set and close together the nasal bridge greatly stink. They have narrow, retreating forehejuls, projecting 11 IIS, tho skin of the body is rough. and the fell is very marked. Itut 1
Rit.h are socially distinguished for
their small, delicate1 hands, I fingers and narrow. highly arched ftvt. We have s.'• 1 some a few—who might be said *.» lie well formed. The little plump beauty wo saw with Uiairrowwn— an ivory raider—was a bewitching little erentu.e thirty-three inches high. It is possible that this lieauty was duo to perfect health and the good food wiUi which she was fed by the Arab.
Considerable attention lias been directed to the American Federation of Trades. It litis great and sweeping aims, aud its founders hope in time to include in its meinliership all the trades and labor unions in the United States. Tho federation\s first object will be to thus unite such organizations. Then it will work to establish "self governing unions of v-iige workers in every legitimate occupation" where such unions do not already exist. Finally, it: will endeavor to influence public opinion through the platform, the press aud legislation, to further what is really the leading object of the federation, and that is. "to render employment .and the means of subsistence less precarious by securimj to the toilers an equitable share of the fruits of their labor." This is it larfe programme. especially the last part of it, which may mean anything.
England was the country where the Episcopal church is founded in opposition to the Church of Rome, the country where the name of Defender of the Faith was added (0 the other titles of the ruler of Great Britain. Yet by a curious turn of fate London ia fast becoming the financial headquarters of Hoinati Catholicism. Legal decisions adverse to various Wealthy religious orders in France art driving these orders to take up their residence in England. Among them are the Carthusian monks. Lazarists. Christian Brothel's. Sisters of Charity aud Sisters of Nazareth.
A woman artist, who spent considerable time in Paris as student and learned the neat little economies of tho French, wants to know why we cannot have in America the cheap wood alcohol that single women, girl bachelors and even families in Paris use for cooking their food with. Probably one reason is that kerosene is so much cheaper among us that it would not. pay to make tho wood spirit alcohol to cook with. But the alcohol is so much cleaner and more agreeable to have around than the oil that it is a pity that it cannot le had.
Men are color blind as compared to women in the proportion of about 19 to 1. This fact received curious corroboration in an examination of 00U Chinese women and the same number of men for color blindness. Of the I ,:0U examined l'.l men aud 1 one woman were color blind. Thirteen of the men were completely green bliud. Only a colorless space appeared where the green was. The question why im*n are color blind frequently and women so seldom is to bo put along with the query why men stammer and women seldom do.
A man who was the first colored surgeon iu the United States army, Dr. A. T. Augusta, died recently in Washington. He received his commission regularly as a surgeon in the volunteer service of the United States army during the war.
Sugar!
20
pounds .\e\v Orleans Sugar 16 pounds Golden Sugar. 17 lbs. White lixtra Sugar. 16 lbs. Confectioners A Sugar. 15 lbs. Granulated Suirar.
1 iiriiitiirp, Stove and (irooerv Store.
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Slio Was Completely Cured. A ilmiyhter of my custormer suffered from .suppressed menstruation, ami her health was completely wrecked. At my suggestion she used one bottle of llindlleid'B Female liegulator, which cured her.— 0. W. Heliums, Water Yelley,Miss. Write Tiie Uifidlieid Heg. Co., Atlanta, Ga for particulars. Sold by Nye A' Co. Crawfords^llle, lnd.
Oold In the head? or Ohilblnlns? ot Chafing? or a Burn? or any Old Sores? The best thing In the world for It 1b Oolman's Petroleum Balm. Get a free sample at the drug store of Nye A Oo.
All plush goods damaged by fire at half price at C. L. ltost's, 207 etust Main street.
THAT HACKING COUGH can be so quickly eured by Shlloh's Cure. We guarantee It. For sale by Moffett, Morgan Oo.
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