Daily News, Volume 2, Number 11, Franklin, Johnson County, 1 September 1880 — Page 2
DAILY
B. P. BKAUQIIAMP, Editor and Proprietor,
Publication Office, corner Fifthfiod Main Street*
Entered atthtPoetOfllce
at
Terre Haute, Indian*,
to second-claes matter.
WEDNESDAY, SEPT. 1, 1B80.
FOK PRESIDENT
PREStDBNT^ or THE .. TED STAfSS,
JAMES A. GARFIELD.
fife-ED STAfSfJ,
POR VICE PRESIDENT^
CHESTER A. ARTHUR.
STATE TICKER.
J.,
For Governor,
ALBERT G. PORTER. For Lieutenant Governor, THOMAS HANNA.
For Secretary of 8tate, EMAXdEL R. DAWK. For Auditor of State, EDWARD H. WOLFE, For Treasurer of State,
ROSWE7.L 8. HILL, Por Attorney General, DANIEL P. BALDWIN, For Judges of finprerae Coort, BYRON K. ELLIOT, Third District. WILLIAM A. WOODS, Fifth District.
For Clerk Supreme Coort, DANIEL ROYSE. For Kep#rter Supreme Court,
FRANCIS M. DICE,
For Superintendent Public Instruction, ioRN M. BLOS8.
For Congress,
ROBERT B. F. PEIRCE.
Vigo County Ticket.
For Clerk.
MERRILL N. SMITH. For Treasurer, CENTENARY A. RAY/
For Sheriff.
JACKSON STEPP.
For Commissioner, Third District, JOHN DEBAUN. For Coroner,
DR. JAMES T. LAUGHEAD. For Senator. FRANCIS V. BICHOWSKY.
For Representatives, WILLIAM H. MELRATH. DICK T. MORGAN.
For Surveyor.
GEORGE IIA1
THE NEWS HAS THE LARGEST DAILY CIRCULATION IN THE CITY.
WHY THE SOUTH 18 SOLID FOB HANCOCK. Consider what Lee and Jacknon would do wera they aline. THESIS ARE THE SAME PRINCIPLES FOR WHICH THEY FOUGHT FOUR TEARS. Rtmwmber thciMn who poured fourth their lifiuIiLtuvL sm~ pour tote depend* the auceeaa of the Demo orotic ticket.—{WntHe Hampton, at Staun ton, Yn.. .Tuh* 9fl.
AnotfT the Inst of the week the com blncd licet of the European Powers will arrive at Dulcigno.
PRESIDENT HAYES and wife and Gen. Garfield and wife are at Canton. Ohio, to day to attend the soldiers' reunion.
I wwww—
THE vote by which the House of Commons passed the Irish Constabulary bill last night was 105 to 29 Government's majority, 70. .' $4'
AT interview yesterday, Bismarck urged the Prince of Roumania to main* lain Rood relations with Austria, as.Rou mania is the best bulwark against aglta tions on the Balkan peninsula.
Ox September 25, the colored people of Alabama are to hold a mass meeting at Montgomery to consider their grievances on account of the frauds practiced -by the Democrats in the late election. If remedy seems impossible in any other way, a mammoth exodus is to be organized from that State. There are many of them who say that the frauds of the State dec tion shall not be perpetrated at the Presiden* tial election. ........
Tho Future of the United Stains. It is not generally known, even in ultivated circles, that thi» amount of arable soil in America is greater than in Europe, Asia and Africa pot together, ami can therefore sustain more Uvea. This Is no rash conclusion, I speak fttm a scientific bsaia and I will show you what that basis is: Our continentis narrow, and therefore the winds of the ocean water it welt The mountain chains on the east side of the American continent are low on the east side of the old world, are high. From this it results that the trade winds, laden with the wetness of the sea, are attracted lo our land. The breadth of the old workt and its high eastern ranges canse the rainless interiors of Asia and Africa,
America is the land of fertile Ins the old world of scorched plains, plains run north and sonth, and so attract and receive the rains. America is high tinder the ©cantor, the old world is wide hence, with us aamall surface is exposed to the scorching mm, The result is that the jpr^dnctive soil in the old world is 10,000.000 fcpare miles, and in the new, 1! ,000,000. Tims Hnnfts upon its all i» the light of scientific truth, the feet thai America can sustain a greater population tlvan the old world and if die can. It is unquestionable that sim day ahe will
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JOHH 8HEBXAIT8 SPEECH, The speech of John Sherman at Cincm? nati is loo^d upon as the key-note of the" presidential campaign. Situated, as he is, at the heal of the treasury department, his facilities for knowing the true condition of our public affairs, the condition of ourwrnmerce aod mr diplotnaticrela tions in general, ace greater than those of any other man connected with the government, and ourRepubliean fneads, or any other persons identified with the welfare of our nation will do well to read Hon. John Sherman's speech carefully. He says the Democratic party desires to make a change in the executive branch of this government, and appeals to the people to bring about such a change. He says the Democratic party have aright to produce any argument they see fit as to why there should be such a-change, and that the Republican party over this whole country should be allowed to do the same. Said he, the last great change in the Executive branch of the government occurred in 1860 by the election of Abraham Lincoln, and that the Democratic party desired a change in 1864 in the midst of war, the magnitude of which even now staggers us with amazement. It met in national convention and resolved that the war was a failure and demanded peace on any terms.
He follows the history of the Republican party through the last twenty years of adversity and* prosperity, and shows how the Democratic party during that time have fought every measure of national reform.
He discusses refunding and resumption, and shows that many honest men of both parties believed it impracticable for re sumption to occur for many years yet.
He shows that by the result of this Republican policy the people of the United States have been saved $14,200,458.50 each year as interest alone.
Again he shows that on the 81st day of August, 1865, the principal of the national debt had obtained the maximum, being then $2,756,431,571.43, and that this enormous amount which almost staggers the immaglnation, has been rcduced sincd that time $887,104,882.68, being on the 1st clay of July last only $1,919,826,747.75. This concerns the principal alone, the Interest having been reduced in afar greater proportion the interest charge now amounting to only about $70,000,000.
He shows that the Republican administration is paying off the national debt at the rate of ten million dollar* each month, and by the time this administration closes the public debt will further be reduced seventy millions of dollars.
Speaking about our commercial relations, he says that our total commerce last year was valued at $1,500,000,000, and that nearly half a million emigrants have settled in Ihis country, and that our national prosperity lias excited the attention of all$Europeau fiOU&tjkfc, uc auows mat the lowest rate of losses was uuder Hayes' and the next lowest under Grant's administration.
On the cry of fraud hq arraigns the Democratic party and shows that in 1877 the two great frauds attempted in that year were the completion of the conspir* cy of the rebel element to deprive the Re] publicans in the South of their rightf as American citizens, and the attempt to bribe Presidential Electors to vote for Tilden. Ho then shows up the Democratic party on the State*rights question and leaves it to the people of the United States whether or not they waut a change. The Republican party will protect the rights of labor and maintain the national credit
His tribute to Garfield is a fitting one, with which he closed his great speech.
If the Sahara Is Flooded, What! The only important objection which has thus mr been urged against the undertaking 1ms arisen in the apprehensions expressed by a few sxdentists that the evaporation produced "by so lnrge and so shallow a body of water, exposed to the tropical sun, would be sufficient to delnge northern Etirope with incessant rains, and to reduce materially the temperature in all the countries north of the Alps, It has even been feared that winds freighted with moisture on crossing the cold summits oC4he Alps, would precipitate vast volumes of water and produce a degree of cold which wonld give Denmark and northern Germany a semi-Arctic climate and produce a glacial epoch farther north. It i« not probable thAt all such apprehensions arise out of a misunderstanding as to the topography of the Sahara and North Africa The entire region to be flooded is practically shut in hy monntain-chains on all sides. The Atlas Mountains on the north, lifting their snow-clad peaks in some instances 12,000 feet, afford a sufficient bulwark for the protection of Europe from increased humidity. The only possible northernly outlet for air currents from El Juf would bft across Tunis in a northeasterly direction over the widest part of the Mediterranean. Currents moving In that direction, if they reached Europe at all, would touch the shores of Greece after they had lost most of their hltmidiiy. M. de Lesseps, after a careAil examination of the question, is convinced that it would result in the general improvement of the climate of Europe rather than to its detriment, the advantage of the increased evaporation to Korth Africa cannot be overestimated. The swow-clad cliffs of Aban, lying t% the east of the proposed sea, sud the Kong Mountains to the south, would bring down npoa the parched desert gratefril latnsuwbich, with the Assistance of cultivation, wonld in time no doaht redeem tbofKMuids of square mike from the desolation of the sends.
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*sPThe word cycione is ofcomparatively recent invention, and is only to be found in the more recent editions of dictionaries.. It, is the aeuecie Hi for all storms tKa£ have a
tornadoes, waterspouts ana hurricanes. These are species of cyolones. Hence every tbrii ado is a cvclone, hut ever) cyclone is not a tornado. It may be a dry whirlwind* a sandspout, & waterspout, etc.
From all facts so far ascertained the storm-center, Mhoae cloud-ca*iopy carried the tornado, had a forward motion or translation across the continent from southwest to northeast at the rate of forty-three mijes an hour. -Evidently {be tornado was not continuous, nor was It formed at an^ fixed point on the cloud, but at various points on the cloud, and at different times numerous intumescences formed which developed into cloud-spouts and dropped as tor« nadoes. In proof of this, fifteen minutes after the tortiado had passed through and devastated JUarshfieid, another cloud-spout was seen dahgling from the sky and sweeping wi%eqnat if not greater fun? through Panther Valley, Fourteen miles south of Marah-
rfield.
shlriglos. After demolishing several other adjacent buildings, also covered with tin, it leaped over a brick house covered with shingles, doing no harm, pouncing upon the hduses north, and. sweeping them and everything clean to' beyond "the city limits. The High Sehool. covered with shingles, stood three hundred yards from the nearest point oi the tornado's track. It was intact, but, unfortunately, its tower was covered with tin. The whole tower to the square was torn down, fhe pow-der-house stood southwest of the sehool-how*, not nearer than six hundred feet tc the track of the tornado. It was newly built and covered with tin. The roof was snatched off and hurled about eight hundred feet northwest into the center of the tornado, passing a tsmstory frank dwelling unharmed. A house two squares east of the Cmrt-house, and foar hundred feet beyond the eastern line of destruction, cover# with shingles nailed upon aa old tin nopI, lost the greater part of the roof. The mill north of the tows waa a £iarter of a mile from the track of the tornado, yet the iron smoke stack waa snatched off and carried four miles and lodged in a tree-top. The hilitv cf metallic roofs beimr
ELECTRICITY the trade of tornadoes I haw observed as a uniform occurrenoe elsewhere. I have repeatectly called attention to the fact that tornadoes begin or expend their greatest energy upon bodies of water or railroads. In my lecture at
«f Cydww-
Nor did the torm^do sweep with
uniform velbcity along the face of the earth, but it was seen at times for a few momenta to statid Still, and then with inconceivable velocity to dart forward again .however, only to halt again for breath! It was on such a dart that it swept through Marshiield in less than half a minute. One of the citiasensjo" undoubted veracity, who was in it, bu. whose house was fortunately not wrecked, who was looking at it while coming and passing, to give an idea of the shortness of its duration said he could think of nothing that would give an idea of it except that two of us being together, I, facing south, saving
Here she comes he, facing north, saying 'There she goes.' Twenty persons at least were present who were in the tornado and they corroborated this statement. They said—and their statements were confirmed by Mr. T. iC. I'aul and others who had war experience— that an unearthly howling, as though the liir were filled with thousands of fiying shells, heralded the approach of the tornado, a momentary tf-eraor of the house and then a w-h-i-sh and the house was gone, and all was oven,. /, lr
The shortnej^ of the duration is an important fact that must not be overlooked in explaining facte that will be mentioned hereafter. At one point beside the railroad, some four miles before it reached town, it excavated the earth to a depth of five feet, according to some, and of much greater depth according to others, and several rods square. This is a repetition of what was done in Reno County, Kan., on the 17th day of May, 18/8, when at least one-half an acre of the soil was shot into the cloud-spout* as though a Iftiedihttfe 'ficPthe monthly weather review for Mfvy, 1878, printed by the signal office, a similar explosion occurred twice at Barrington, 111., on the 28d of May, 1878, whtw in all respects a similar tornado to that of last Sunday swept the States of Iowa, Wisconsin and Northern Illinois. The Signal Office, however, gives the area of soil hurled up in one case about one acre, in the other one and a quarter acres. For a distance of about seven miles along the railroad which the tornado followed trees are not only prostrated and denuded of bark, but large trees nearly three feet in diameter were plucked up by the roots and carried forward. In town forest trees afoot in diameter, standing in lawns, were plucked up by the roots and carried away. Stones from five to six feet in their shortest diameters were lifted out of the ground ai?d carried to the top of a hill. A stone estimated to weigh 4,000 pounds fell in afield belonging to J. C. Rose, killed with several of his family by the destruction of his house. The distanoe it was carried and whence it came had not been ascertained. In the great Georgia and South Carolina tornado of March 20, 1875, a stone over two feet thick and weighing from 18,000 to 20,000 pounds, although only exposing on one side five inches to the tornado, was lifted out of it* bed and carried seven feet. As in all tornadoes, houses, both frame and brick, were lifted from their foundations, the former generally carried some distance, the latter hurled back and crushed on their foundations. Like eluewhere, wagons, buggies, carriages, sewing-machines, everything with iron about it, seemed to be the ohiects of its especial fury. Not a metallic roof of any kind is left in town. The Postornce, owned by Mr. Smith, the most substantial bricK building in town and covered with tin, was utterly demolished/ while the tornado to reach it
passed over two building covered with Ubout one hundred and thirty-five de-nhftio-IiiMs Affo* r?f»*n/vK«mn{r feAvoral t* 1_
on even wnen io distances outside oi
Indianapolis 1 called attention to the faet th&t the tornado^ whieh passed through that city on the night of the 4th. oi March last began on White
,lfLKimn^ River leaped to Fall Creek, then upon ySS!?* "^stiiir«r»'ih«^'oraeihdi^
Avenue Horse Railroad, then ripon the canal skirted by the Lafayette Railroad, then upon two other horse railroads, and finally leaying the city on the Peru Raiiroad. doing all its damage and manifesting its most terrific energy at these points.
The torHado of Sunday drank up all the ponds and rivers oh its track from Arkansas to Marshfield. It in all oases* manifested its most intense energy at these points. Take, for instance, th§ junction of James and Findley Rivers, both of which it drank up, where it fell with its most destructive fury upon the adjacent settlement, which it utterly devastated, the destruction of which is unparalleled in the history of torn adoAs. 33he phenomenon that attracted most attention and gave rise to the greatest diversity of opinions was the aenudar tion of trees, saplings, hedges, shrubbery, etc., of their uark, either partially or totally. The side facing the direction the storm came was generally divested of bark, while the whole tree or shrub was not generally denuded. As most of the area swept by the tornado was a stream or perfect avalanche of matter, consisting of dust, sand, gravel, stones, brick, lumber, debris of wrecked houses, in fact everything movable in its path, hence there was no lack of evidence that trees, shrubbery, bushes, etc were hit with nying missiles- In fact they were completely peppered with them. The conclusion was therefore jumped at that all the denudation of bark was the sole effect of hurled missiles assisted by the wind. It hence became a desideratum to find a locality where no missiles were flying and where the barking of the trees was not on the side facing the direction—from the southwest—that the storm was moving, but in the direction the tornado was at the time. Such a locality I found on the point between two ravines., on the declivity of the hill on which had stood Judge Ikrnes' house, totally wrecked by the tornado. It is about one hundred yards south of where the road coming from town, following one ravine "north, crosses the ravine coming from the southeast, about two hundred yards above the mill. There is a pile of wagons and wheels at the crossing. The tornado, after destroying Barnes'house, for a few moments stood still at the base of the hill and then leaped upon the hill east. While standing still its center was about one hundred and fifty yards southeast of the point to which 1 nave reference. The trees at this point had lost their bark on the southeast side, that is on the side facing the tornado, and a strong wind—as is shown
TO°fe
from the sidfe opposite to that from which the trees had parted with their bark. Here were trees standing upright shattered, as elsewhere, into thin strips, no thicker than lath, not like those which were in the traok of the tornado facing the direction the storm came, but in the direction it was fchen halting, that is southwest.
I was moreover so fortunate a$ to find more than I sought, in fact more than I dreamed of as existing. I found some trees—black oaks—that had lost a strip or two of bark, but all that remained on the tree was separated from the trunk and some of it hanging loose. I found the bark entirely dctached from the stem and incasing it like a sheath I pulled it off by piecemeal all around one tree and down to the roots. Further search resulted in finding a hickory tree—species, carya sulcata, the thickshelled and thick-barked hickory—that also hod its bark detached by an explosion from the stem, not one particle of it gone, however, but most of it hanging so loose that it can be shaken. Not a vestige can be seen on the bark of any flying missile having struck' the tree.
It is one of the most wonderful, im« portant and significant physical facts 1 ever saw. It should be secured by some scientific institution, and, if not for its scientific importance, as a memento of one of the most fatal tornadoes on record. But it will be of inestimable value for study and information to future generations i& their researches into the mysteries of Nature. The tree stands about a rod northwest of a shattered black oak equally as interesting and significant, whose top, bowed southeastward—for I bold there was no wi&d—by the electric attraction of the intense vortex, was prevented from breaking down by forming a brace of a s'rip two inches thick, split off the rank hv a simultaneous explosion. The Strip is not separated from the trunk at it* ends The brace makes an angle of
gres». It is evidently Qwing to the •imolta&eousness of the pull and explosion that the brace was formed. The fragment, forced out by the explosion, was prevented from returning by the shattered trunk bending from the poll at its top at the, same instant. brought away specimens of limbs, stems from Osage orange hedges and tops of brash that were in the track of th€ tornado. They are not only divested of their bark, but the ends of the limbs and the smallest twigs even are rifted Into fine fibers so that they look like paint-brashes or little brooms. There is a significant fact accompanying this rifting which gives a dew that unravels the.whole mystery. This fact is, that only green branches and twigs are rifted into fibers, the twigs to the very stems to which they are attached. The diy and dead brancb^wdjwigs are
What explanation «an heaven these phenomena, and what cause out fee assigned for their occurrence? There Is hot one explanation that can be given* md but one cause that cam be assigned for all of them. That explanation is that they all are the effect of electric action, and consequently that electricity is the caase of tfcmfc
That electricity Is the cause oi them Is evident from well-established electric laws and from well-known modes of electric action. Beccafta^ ^ne hundred sad fifteen years ago, perforated solid glass baU two inches diameter. In one end of the perforation he put a wire and a drop of water on the end of it in the other end he put another wire in contact with the water. Both wires were part of at circuit in conneo» tion with a Leyden. jar. In passing a discharge through the circuit, the glass ball was dispersed into dust. What was the cause of this explosion and consequent dispersion?
One poiind of writer measures 22.752 cubic inches. If the water be gasified it will make 44,8S2 cubic inches of gas, that is I4i934 cubic inches of oxygen hyarotherefore, in oeipg gasified, dilates about two thousand Bmes ifi volume. The passage of the •lect^c ^urrenit electrolyse th$t is gasifies, as instantaneously the water as fire explodes gunpowder. The drop water hende was instantaneously panded to two thousand times its mal volume, and this shattered the glass ball into fine dust
gas and .29,888 cubic inches of h^ $ gen. Thje water,
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The sa]p under the b&rk ana in the body of green wood was in the tornado instantly gasified bj the bursting up from the earth of a negative electric current to meet the positive electricity descending on the cloud-spout. An explosion was the conse(juenoe the sap, or rather the water in it, was expanded by gasification two thousand times in volume, throwing off the bark, shattering the trunk and rifting the green twigs into minute fibers. That this was what took place is proven conclusively by the fact that the dead and dry limbs and twigs were notaffeoted, and, though in immediate contact with grebn ones, remained intact.
!,
The great affinity ot tortiadoes for bodies of water, for railroads, for metallic roofs, for anything made of metal or containing it, is explained upon the 'same principle. Metals are the best conductors of electricity known. They, hence, respond with the greatest alacrity to the inductive action ef the electric cloud, and confront it with higher charges of electncitv than any other objects upon the surface of the earth. The most violent electric explosions, hence, occur at the points covcred by metals. Every one conversant with electric laws knows that this will be the natural and inevitable result.
I could take up seriatim all the phenomena attending tornadoes and demonstrate that they are the efiects of electricity, but I have neither time nor space to devote to that purpose. One more remark and I will close. That tornadoes arc electric phenomena is beyond controversy. All experience and observation prove it conclusively. This proof is amply furnished in their aspect, if it were in nothing else. The funnel-shaped pitch-black cloud-spout depending and dangling from the buffcolored or deep orange upper cloud indicates it. A fiery red core is sometimes in this jet-black spout sometimes green, blue and red flames run all around and ovep the lower end of the spput ..as thnwh it wpi-a /in
If you arc troubled with fever and ague, dumb ague, billions fever, jaudice, ays pepaia. or any disease of the liver, blood and stomach, and wish to get well, try the new reu.cdy, Prof. Guilrnette's French Liver Pad*. Ask your druggist for it, and take no othor, and if he has not got it, send $1,50 in a letter to the Frcnch Pad Co.. Toledo, O., and receive one by return mail. J. J. Baur Terre Haute, Ind,, sole aeent for Yigo connty.
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ot
ocner times the spout has a dull leaden core like a burning candle surrounded bv a haze with a phosphorescent glow, 'fliese aspects are constantly changing, and endure but for a momen-
At some points after this last most wonderful meteor had passed tire balls brought up the rear, exploding like rockets at other points electric currents for half *an hour flowed through iron rails and wires. A telegraph used by boys in' Marsh field to learn the art of telegraphing was thus afieeted for more than thirty minutes afterward. That water was gasified by the tornado is proven by the odor of sulphur, or rather phosphorus, along the track' This odor was ozone, and ozone is oxygen gas just liberated from its combination with other elements.
JOHN H. TICK.
Sniptuit Hill is the unaccountablc name of a Massachusetts place,
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