Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 23 August 1895 — Page 2
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
RSF- ESTABLISHED IN 1848. Successor to The liccord, the first paper In Craivfordsvtllo, established In 1831, and to The People'.* Press, established 1844.
PRISTED FAERY FRIDAY MORNING.
iTHE JOURNAL COMPANY. T. B. MCCAIN, President. Sfi' J. A. GRKENE. Secretary.
A. A. MCCAIN,Treasurer
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THE JOAILY JOURNAL. ESTABLISHED IN 1887. TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION:
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Entered at the Postofflce at Crawfordsville, Indiana, as second-class matter.
FRIDAY, AUGUST 23. 1895.
CINCINNATI Tribune: One Greene Smith has broken out of the pastures in Indiana and is in New York telling sophisticated reporters about the growth of sound money sentiment in the Hoosier Democracy. It is suspected that Smith is hankering after the flesh pots which Great Grover is guarding against the silverites. He is respectfully referred to Bynum as a horrible example.
UNDER the new tariff law imports have increased and exports ave decreased in other words we buy more than we sell. The total value of goods imported under the McKinley law in 185)4 was $654,95)4,662, as against $731,957,875, under the Gorman law, an increase in value of imports of $76,963,253. In 1S94 the value of the exports of the United States was 5892,140,572, while in 1S95 the value of goods exported fell to $S07,539,247, a loss of $84,601,325.
THE apple crop which was reported in June as "destroyed" now promises to be unusually good. The late variety of "keepers" will be a great crop. The apple crop is not a thing to be despised. It will this year mean many millions of dollars to the pockets of American fruit raisers. Europeans for the last few years have shown a larger appreciation of the excellence of the American apple than before. There will doubtless be a large foreign demand.:
THE Brooklyn Times sensibly suggests that a more effectual measure for the replenishing of the Treasury with gold than any implied obligation of honor on the part of a banking syndicate would be the enactment of a measure requiring the payment of a reasonable proportion of customs duties in gold, while most effective of all would be such a revision of the tariff as might obviate the necessity for heavy imports, and thus enable us to keep our gold in the country.
FUTURE generations will be amazed at the short-sightedness of the present generation in not providing Crawfordsville with a handsome park. The finest cities in the country have discovered that they need a more widely distributed 6ystem of these free breathing places and are moving to secure them. Brooklyn has just paid $230,000 for 140 acres at Fort Hamilton and will convert it into a park, with a salt water frontage of 1800 feet. It is a mistake for any city, large or small, not to provide for a fine park.
NOT much is heard nowadays of Alexander R. Shepherd, the "Boss" Shepherd who found Washington mud and left it brick, and then, when his name •was in every mouth, bought a silver mine in northern Mexico and buried himself from civilization. That was sixteen years ago, and since then Mr. Shepherd has spent $9,000,000 there, it is said, all of it, except $500,000, having been taken out of the ground. When he was (making the improvements in Washington the people denounced him in unmeasured terms, but when he returned there this summer these same people greeted him with dinners and receptions without end. In this respect the people of Washington are not unlike the people of smallerjtowns, even Grawfordsville.
SENATOR VOORHEES once made the statement that a negro had never written a book, painted a picture or chiseled a statue. When he sees the bust of Charles Sumner made by the colored woman sculptor, Elmondra Lewis, which will be one of the attractive exhibits in the Negro Building at the Atlanta Exposition, he will be compelled to revise his statement. This will not be difficult for Voorhees to do, however, as he is already an adept in that art. Some years ago at this sauie^Atlanta Exposition he made a speech so strongly protective in its character that it would have put to blush even William McKinley. In less than three«months afterward lie made a speech in the Senate in which he squarely faced about and went back on everything that he had uttered at Atlanta. 1.1 is tergiversations on the financial question are so recent as to be yet fresh in the minds of the people. It will not, therefore, be surprising to hear of the Senator at Atlanta expatiating on the marvelous progress of the Negro race.
SHORT PERIODS OF POWER. The St. Louis Globe-Democrat is of the opinion that in the future there will be no long periods of power for any political party. It thinks that if the Republicans select a reasonably good ticket next year they will win, though not by any such majority as everybody six or seven months ago supposed they would have. A revenue such as the Administration's party met with last November always means the complete overthrow of that party in the election two years later. The pendulum is swinging oyer to the Republican side, and the momentum which it has gained may be relied to carry it in the same direction in 1896. It then contrasts two periods in our history as follows:
In the two notably long periods of uninterrupted power—1801-25 and 1861-85—for a single party which the country has seen the conditions were abnormal. In the first of these periods, when the original Republican (Democrat) party was in power, it was practically the only party in the country, for the Federalists, which were never a thoroughly cohesive party, after their overthrow in 1800 never had the faintest chance of success, and they completely disappeared as a party after the election of 1816. The civil war and the questions growing out of it, which dwarfed all other issues and prevented the people from diyiding on economic questions, gave the second Republican party its long lease of sway. Republican power in the Presidency would undoubtedly have ended earlier were it not for the amazing folly of the Democracy in refusing to heartily accept the results of the war —in continuing to fight against facts.
The Qlohc-Dcmocrat goes on to say that at the present time there is no party or section that menaces the government any longer, the dividing lines between thejparties will be on economic questions solely. This division sentiment—theoretically at least, and to a large extent actually—is on lines which are as old as human nature itself. In one shape or another it has revealed itself on all the great questions of national policy which have come up since representative institutions first appeared, and it will live while governments last. In the long run there will be a close balance between the great parties, the center of political gravity will shift frequently from one side to the other, and short periods of power for each party will be tlu- rule.
IN view of the great progress made in the science of medicine and the improved methods of practice the last illness and death of Washington, the account of which has been written by his private secretary, and recently published, will sound queer to the people. There is no doubt that the treatment he received, more than the disease, caused his death. Washington had caught cold by riding in a December rain, and woke at 3 a. m. with a chill. The fires in the house had gone down and Washington would not permit any of his family to rise until the usual time in the morning. Domestic remedies were then applied and his overseer bled him to the extent of half a pint. When the doctor arrived he was'bled again. A second physician was summoned and the bleeding was repeated. The case now looked desperate. The two physicians had no hope, except in one expedient, and the patient was bled for the fourt^i time. Washington felt himself to be dying and gave his last directions with "the calmness of a stoic." With his excellent habits and fine constitution he should have lived fifteen or twenty years longer, and his attack would have yielded readily to modern treatment. History says Washington died of laryngitis, but history is sometimes more polite than truthful. The question is, will not even the science of medicine make such progress that the people living a hundred years from now will laugh at the present methods. Our doctors then will all be back numbers,^
THERE seems to be a vast amount of ignorance connected with the statute regulating the observance of Sunday. Some people are simple-minded enough to believe that we had no such laws until the Nicholson law was enacted, and even in some places signs have been put up to the effect that they intend to comply with the Nicholson law and close up on Sunday. For the information of all such THE JOURNAL may say that the present law for the protection of Sunday and to prevent its desecration has been in force since February 28, 1855. For the last forty years, therefore, we have been living under the same law. In the enforcement of the law courts have always recognized the principle that any labor necessary to accomplish a lawful object cannot be considered as against a prohibition of the statute. In all such cases whether labor is a work of necessity is a question of fact for the jury, and not of law. The supreme court has even decided that turning a heap of barley in a malt house for the purpose of malting the same was a work of necessity.
LAST year we heard a good deal about fanners "moving away from drought-stricken Nebraska." We note with pleasure that enough farmers stayed'in the State this year to fatten their pockets with around £100,000,000 for the grand crops of every kind in all all arts of the State. A year of disaster occasionally cotnes to the most favored sections of the world.
THE natural gas industry is fully reviewed in the annual report of the Geological Survey. The important gas fields now are those of western Pennsylvania, western New York, northwestern Ohio and central Indiana, but gas has been found in commercial quantities also in Arkansas, California. Illinois, Iowa, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Missouri. .South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, West Virginia, Wisconsin and Wyoming. The highest actual observed pressure of. the gas has been about 800 pounds to the square inch, closed pressure. In all districts the pressure has decreased steadily and materially. Heretofore natural gas could be easily carried in pipe for long distances nnder its own pressure, but now in most places artificial means must be used to drive it to the place where it is needed. No statement of the amount of natural gas consumed has "ever been given, and the report says it is not possible to make one. The amount has been greatly reduced within the last few years by the cutting off of the enormous waste, while improved appliances have doubled the efficiency of what is used. The total value of that consumed in 1S5I4 was nearly $14,000,000. This is a steady decrease from 3 8S8, when the value was $22,500,000.
ONE Thomas Case, professor of moral and metaphysical philosophy in Oxford University, England, has written an elaborate argument against co-edu-cation. Here is one of his salient points: "I knew intimately, one who, during his whole career, worked for honor in natural science, day by day in the same laboratory and in close communion with several young ladies. He was also 'invited to the hall for ladies, in which one of them lived. Now it is pretty plain that in the future a hall for ladies, conducted on these principles, which are rather smart than old fashioned, might some day develop into a match making institution without the consent of parents." 'The Professor's idea evidently is that young ladies should be raised in iron cages with ropes stretched around them, where no one could talk to them but their parents. When will the world outgrow such silly notions as this professor entertains?
A LARGE balance on the wrong side of the ledger is shown by the figures of government receipts and expenditures for the first half of the month of August. The receipts amounted to a little over $14,000,000, and if they should continue at the same rate the total for the month would be about the same as for July. The expenditures for the period in question amounted to over $21,400,000, or almost as much and a half as the receipts. If this rate should be kept up, which seems unlikely, the expenditures for the month would be 50 per cent, in excess of the receipts, and a larger deficit would be shown for August than for July. Up to the middle of August the deficit amounted to over $16,600,000.
IN regard to Sunday observance Rev. J. H. Thoburn in a recent sermon at Duluth, said: "Sunday, or the Sabbath, is the oldest institution of the world. It is not more a day than it is a moral law written on human nature. It is as hygienic as it is religious, and as patriotic as it is pious. It is the guardian of more that is sacred and vital to humanity than anything else. Men can not get along without it. A proper observance of the day would lengthen the average life at least seven years. The laws of civilization assume that Sunday is a permanent institution. We are suffering a reaction from the Puritan rage, but their 'blue laws' are far more wholesome than the black laws of the modern scienists."
NEW YORK Tribune: What would be thought of a man in private life who, in order to maintain his credit and make his income equal his expenses, talked glibly of incurring new obligations. And yet this is tprecisely what the administration is doing at the present moment. There is no attempt, serious at least, to reduce expenses. There is no effort made to look for new sources of revenue. But there is the same wild talk of "maintaining the credit" of the Government by renewed issues of bonds. How long this state of things will be permitted to last heaven only knows—and the Rothschild syndicate.
IF Secretary Carlisle would but imitate the example set by Secretary Morton and pay out silver on (salary accounts he would be doing a valuable service. Such Senators as Stewart, Jones, Harris, Voorhees, Turpie, Cameron and the rest of them, should have the silver sent to them monthly instead of a draught on Uncle Sam. Doubtless they would squeal as did Secretary Morton's employes, but it would only be a dose of their own medicine.
THE official records show that the total amount collected under the income tax law was $77,000, while the cost of collecting it was $80,000. It is true that the expense was largeley caused by arrangements made to collect the whole tax, but the fact remains that it cost $80,000 to collect $77,000, and the Government didn't get the $77,000 after all.
HERE'S TO THE HEN.
An Iowa editor pays the following tribute to the hen and her product: Take off your hat to the hen—for she is a daisy, and slie_ piles up the wealth of the nation in every great and yellow way.
Hard as the times were in 1894 what did she care? She put on the market 18.000,000,000 of eggs, and then had some left for political processions.
Those eggs were worth a round SI40,000.000 of all sorts, but actually worth 100 cents on the dollar any where and everywhere.
The industrious hen, attending no campfires, no conventions, no federation of clubs—no nothings, but just business at home in the nest—"thar and tharabouts"—produced enough wealth to pay the pension bill, and in doing so clucked away on "Johnny Get Your Gun," "Marching Through Georgia," and rounding up with "America."
The hen producing more—and now you fellows who can see nothing in small things, just listen while we tell you that she produced more in value than the iron mines, and was worth nearly as much as the wheat crop and the corn crop, separately considered.
Take off your hat to the hen—the bird who is all business and has no foolish fad of any sort. She's an ornament to her sex.
THAT was very kind in the man who holds the office of Governor of Tennessee by a title resting entirely upon larceny to issue on order granting permission to the militia of other States to pass over the sacred soil of that State to attend the Chickamauga dedication and the Atlanta exposition. It is hard for such fellows as Turne to recover from the idea that Tennessee is a foreign country.
DR. ETTER'S LETTER.
Ho Tells of tlie Industries of Michigan— Miles of Logs. ».
To tin Editor The Journal. GRAND RAPIDS, Mich., Aug. 18, 1885.— Michigan is a great State. Its lumber industries are almost beyond comprehension. Along the rivers and lakes for hundreds of miles, it is an almost solid sheet of lumber, sawed and stacked, ready for use or shipment.. It is sixteen miles from Saginaw to Bay City and the entire river seems one sheet of raft logs. They float the logs when the river is high and then tie them up, leaving them in the river until they begin to saw. Many mills are running day and night. Ship load after ship load are being sent out and whole trains lumber laden for the southern and middle States. They have no natural gas up here, but they have enough wood sawed up" from slabs, and corded to last a hundred years, and they are generous enough to say they will furnish us wood when our gas plays out. This is a great place for salt wells, and the "salt houses" look very funny. All over the city and suburbs there are small, tall houses with a very high square tower built on them, for the evaporation of the salt water. This part of the State, especially about Bay City, is underlaid with a solid bed of rock salt, and they drill a well down to the salt, then let water flow down and dissolve the salt, then pump the water up and evaporate it. This has been found cheaper than to sink a large shaft, so miners could quarry it out. There are two large ship yards at Bay City. In one that I visited they have five large steel, screw propelling steamers in course of construction, one being over 500 feet long. All those towns are crowded with foreigners. One can hardly understand anything that is said among the laboring classes. No wonder there are strikes, riots and bloodshed when the ignorance of these people is taken into consideration.
Grand Rapids is a very nice city o. 90,000 inhabitants, located on rolling ground, in fact considerably hilly. 1 met Dr. Rankin here to-day, and he is doing well, having a paying practice. The people are kind to strangers in all the Michigan cities. Salvation Armies flourish everywhere in this part of the country. There is quite a fight, or apparent one, on in Grand Rapids against the saloons, but it does not seem to materialize. I came here about 11:30 o'clock last night and saw a policeman making his rounds to see that they were closed. There are two just across the street from my hotel and be peered in, shook the doors and passed on. In a short,time after he left a half dozen men came out of one of them, and of course the cop did not look back to see. J. R. ETTER.
Don't Tobacco Spit or Smoke Yonr Life Away is the truthful, startling title of a book about No-To-Bac, the harmless, guaranteed tobacco habit cure that braces up nicotiuized nerves, eliminates the nicotine poison, makes weak men gain strength, vigor and manhood. You run no physical or financial risk, as No-To-Bac is sold by P. D. Brown & Son under a guarantee to cure or money refunded. Book free. Address Sterling Remedy Co., New York or Chicago.
$0.00 to Petoskey, Mich.
On Tuesday, Sept. 3d, 1895, the Vandalia will run a grand cheap excursion to Petoskey, Mich. Round trip only $6.00. Tickets good to return 10 days. Take fast train, leaving here at 2:33 p. m.. arrive at Petoskey 7 o'clock hext morning. Please advise me is you are going so I may have accommodations for you.
On August 26th to 30tli the Vandalia will sell round trip tickets to Frankfort for $1.00, account Clinton county fair. All good to return including August 31st. J. C. HUTCHINSON. d&w 9-3 Agent.
FOR letter heads see THE JOURNAL CO. PRINTERS FOR artistic work see
THE JOURNAL CO., PRINTERS.
Denver Is the Scene of an Awful Horror at Midnight.
An Explosion Wrecks the. Gumry Hotel, and the Ruins Take Fire.
Belief That Not Less Than Forty of the Inmates Have Lost Their Lives.
Tottering Walls Interfere with the Rescue of Victims, Whose Cries Are Heartrending.
DENVF.R, Col., Aug. 19.—'The Gumry hotel, Nos. 1725 to 1733 Lawrence street, was wrecked by a terrific explosion at 12:10 o'clock a. m. The rear half of the building, a five-story brick and 6tone structure, went down with a crash.
The hotel was crowded with guests and many of them must have been killed, as well as the entire force of hotel employes, who were sleeping in the portion of the building which fell.
On both sides of Lawrence, from Seventeenth to Eighteenth street, and on Larimer, directly back of the Gumry, the plate,glass windows of tfie business houses were blown in and a number of pedestrians were injured by falling glass. The fronts of many buildings in the vicinity were badly wrecked.
A Mass of KuiiiH.
The hotel structure for 100 feet along the alley and extending 75 feet toward the front is a mass of debris. Brick and plaster are piled in heaps 20 feet high, and from this mass of wreckage can be heard the moans of the injured and dying.
At 12:35 five injured persons had been taken out. They were all inmates of the upper story, and sank down with the floors, escaping more fortunately than those above, who are still buried in the ruins.
The firemen were working like beavers, and digging into the debris, but are making little progress. The remaining portion of the building, from which the guests are being removed by ladders as fast as possible, was expected to fall at any moment, and precautions to avert further loss of life added to the difficulty in reaching the dead and injured.
Forty Probably Dead.
By. some estimates forty people were in the portion of the hotel destroyed, nearly all of whom must be dead. It will be late before a full list can be obtained.
The cause of the explosion is uncertain, but it is supposed that the battery of the boilers in the hotel basement exploded.
The sound of the explosion was heard throughout the city, awakening people in bed a mile from the scene. A cloud of dust was thrown a thousand feet in the air, and as there is not a breath of air stirring it still hangs in the air like a huge column. Minute atoms of powdered brick and mortar are descending like gentle snow.
At 12:30 the ruins were burning fiercely and the firemen were obliged to retreat from the work of rescue. Every engine in the city was pouring streams into the mass, but it was evident the flames could not possibly be gotten under control before many of the injured had been cremated.
Awful Cries of the Victims. As their chances of escape lessened the cries of the imprisoned people increased, heartrending shrieks rising from every portion of the great mass of wreckage.
Fears were entertained that the front portion of the building, which seemed to be tottering, would fall and bury the firemen at their work.
During the height of the excitement a hose team ran away on Eighteenth street, stampeding the great crowd of spectators. A number of people were more or less injured by being trampled npon and falling in the broken glass, which covered the btreets and sidewalks in every direction.
Electric light wires dangling from broken poles in the alley added fresh peril to the firemen. One horse was killed by coming in contact with alive wire. Two injured women had been almost extricated from the ruins, when the flames approached so close that the rescuers had to abandon them for their own safety. Both voices were soon silenced, fire completing the work commenced by the explosion. The bodies of three women were also to be seen in the back part of the building, but could not be reached.
Cook Lost Her Life.
PITTSHURUH, Pa., Aug. 19.—A wind and rainstorm Sunday night did great damage in this vicinity. The towboat Lud Keefer was sunk, and the cook, Millie Colbaugli, was drowned. Her body has not been recovered. The Dacotah, an excursion barge, was also sunk, but can be raised without damage.
Her Neck IJroken.
TOLEDO, O., Aug. 19.—A special IICR-j Blisstield, Mich., says Mrs. Emily Harkness and son Hubert, of Port Dalhousie, Ont., who are visiting here were thrown from their buggy in a runaway and Mrs. Harkness instantly killed, her neck being1 broken.
1
Mills Burnett.
AITKKX, Minn., Aug. 19.—The mills of the. G. \V. Knox company were Completely destroyed by lire Sunday. The loss is $'-'0,000.
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