Greencastle Star Press, Greencastle, Putnam County, 5 January 1895 — Page 7
BIG BRONZE STATUES. I finger for a new nose. | BKhllUTS STUPES. —The» K•‘markable Operation of a London
^.‘|S5i3BKLi’3ap. Eli & ftPAOKasss i~ . {'jT'nKL t}ag n . 7 „c
Some of the Complications Encountered in Casting Them.
Surgeon on a Noseless Man.
The achievements of American sur1 peons in bold and extraordinary opera-' lions have long been the wonder of the
Interesting Facts About Some of the World’s Rare Go ms.
ISeantifnl Agate* and t ry.tal* Known ! to the Am*tent*—The Diamond Not the Mo»t Yaluccl. a* I* Com-
mon Ij Supposed.
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Travel Is best ac commodated in the
Through Pullman Buffet Sleeping Cars running over the lines of the Louis*
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This line runs double daily (morning and evening departure) trains from Cincinnati, Louisville, Evansville, and St. Louis to the principal Southern cities. This line affords two routes to points in the Southwest, via Memphis and via New Orleans. This line has double daily sleeping car service to Jacksonville, and the only through line of Sleepers to Thomasviile and Tampa. This line has three daily trains to points in the South-
east.
The passenger equipment of this line Is not excelled in the South.
Winter Tourists’ Tickets at low round trip rates on sale from about November 1st, pood till
May 31st.
Full information cheerfully furnished
upon application to
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Wh.r. 8„m. of th« l..r*.*t America worl<L I$ut now from the othor sido -The l-ro.... Of Th.ir Con- tho Atlantio comes a Story which •truettuo. shows that the old country is waking;
, up a bit in the art of en^raftintf human flesh. A younjr man lias put his linger
Few have any Idea of the difficulty of to his nose, and it remains there per- Beyond all question, the ruby stands casting a large bronze statue. The manently. supreme as the most precious substance popular idea is that molten bronze is A few months ago, says the New in tho world, says the New York Adpoured into a mold, and then, when York World, a youth whose nasal or- vertiser So much many persons the metal has cooled, the mold is gan was missing, as the result of an know, but few are aware that rubies, knocked off and the statue is complete, accident, called at Charing Cross hos- 1 sapphires, oriental amethysts and toHow much more elaborate Is the proc- pital, London, with the request that pazes are all practically the same gem. pss, says the New York World, may the surgeons would supply the de- They are corundum, or crystallized be gathered from the following descrip- fieicncy, artill.-ially or otherwise. He alumina, but with infinite diversities tion of the casting of a large bronze expressed himsi lf as willing to under- ot coloring and infinite different values, statue in one piece: After the plaster go any sort of treatment by which his 11 is carious, but true, that a ruby is model has been obtained from the nr- disfigured face might be made fairly onl y a red sapphire, and a sapphire
tist it is laid upon a frame and built presentable, and not absolutely re- only a blue ruby.
up all over with a reddish sand, which pulsive to his best Sunday summer The finest “pigeon’s blood" rubies is peculiarly fitted for the purpose be- girl. Mr. Bloxam, the senior surgeon, come from Burmah, those from Siam or cause of its cohesiveness when worked took the interesting case in hand. 1 Ceylon being too dark or too pale, and and of its stony hardness when dry. It First, the amputated finger of an- t l' e Montana stones being cloudy and Is imported frora France, the best com- other patient was carved and fash- brown. A perfect one carat specimen f-y-A I !nff imm Fontenoy-aux-Uesis, about ioned to the semblance of a nose, and may cost six hundred dollars, while a I sixteen miles frora Baris. I then securely grafted on the face. But diamond of the finest water of the 1 This building-up process Is not so it was found that this mutilated digi- same size can lie bought for one huneasy as it sounds, for the sand has to be tal appendage had not survived its cut- dred and twenty-five dollars. ’1 he rich LI applied in little chunks, varying in size ting up. It was “dead," and failed to color of the ruby, a color which does Jl^ I but ail fitting snugly together, so that take fresh root. I n,,t blacken like the blue of a sapphire they can be taken apart whea the im-) The noseless man, nothing daunted, 1 '’Y night, is supposed to be due to a pressiou is complete anil the mold is thereupon agreed to the surgeon's sug- trace of oxide of chromium, but this is dry. ! gestion that one of his own (the pa- still a moot point with chemists, and In an elaborate casting there will be tient’s) fingers should be cut off to fur- ft ll ure t 10 * 1 even agreed as to the sai>from fifteen hundred to two thousand nish a nasal organ. But in order that phire’s velvet tinge ’I his latter stone of these pieces, ail of which must be the finger should not lie wasted in the * s mu ch less valuable than ruby, being accurately adjusted, or the casting will event of this operation being unsuc- found larger and more abundantly. l>e imperfect. The most noticeable cessful, it was only half amputated. Sapphires really present all colors, the feature in a bronze foundry is the num-j The patient’s arm being encased in pure white variety when skillfully cut, her of workmen employed in cutting plaster, for four weeks he held his own being difficult to tell from a diamond. Up little chunks of the sand and care- live linger to his face in the hope of its This is a deception dishonest jewelers fully and tenderly fitting them around taking root. Tills it did. The portion n °f unfrequently practice to catch the the plaster model. These workmen, 1 which was still attached to his hand unwary. Both rubies and sapphires by the way, are imported along with was then cut through and soon joined llro occasionally met with as “star f the sand, the majority of them being the rest in adhering firmly to the face, stones that is, opaque caboehon-cuti French. i Although minus a finger, the young gems showing the perfect steely rays'
The bl,»cks of sand Iving dry. they man now has a new nose of his own 11 star,
are earefu'ly taken off the cast one by j flesh and blood. | ' rhe emerald is another exceedingly one, and as carefully refitted. This is The transferred cartilage has been so dear stone, surpassing the diamond in the mold. It is then filled with clay, i manipulated by clover Dr. Bloxam that value wh-n of good size and free from and when the clay is dry the little its original identity is entirely lost, l^ws. Unfortunately, this gem is rar.blocks forming the mold are again un- and the further process of shaping it is *Y faultless, but. if uerfect. it easily fitted, and a fac-simUc of the plaster now being proceeded with. It is not fetches five hundred dollar* a carat, cast is obtained. Then comes the most known whether the plucky young Umerald and aquamarine, the latter a delicate part of the work. The clay Briton prefers the “nez retrousse" or beautifully sunny sea-green stone, are model has to be reduced by scraping un-! the aquiline. lie will doubtless be in identical in chemical compisition, belli it is an exact but slightly smaller a position to take his choice. Ho is ing varieties of the minoralberyl with copy of the plaster model, for a quar* j certainly not the sort of man to be con- ^ traces ot different coloring matter, tor ot an inch has to be taken off its tent with any sort ot nose that hap- Beryl is found in all shades from honey
pens to turn up. yellow to the velvet green "f the right I emerald. The aquamarine variety has
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G-ZR-jELElSr O-A-STLIE City Directory
-AND-
PUTNAM COUNTY UAZ2TTEE8. A complete residence, business and street directory of Greencastle, to which is added a county list containing the name and address of citizens, and other information <>f value to every man in Putnam county. SOLD ONLY ON SUBSCRIPTION. IFIRICIE $2.00.
entire surface, and the difficulty of doing this can bo imagined, especially when the subject is at all ornate. Assuming the reduction of the clay * . as it is technically termed, to be msfactory, the core is introduced into the mold, which has again been put to-
gether, and there is
LANDSCAPES WHILE YOU WAIT.
lately become dear and fashionable, and rightly so, for the stone is durable and a lovely object. The lute emperor of Brazil is said to have possessed an aquamarine of over two hundred
Houses in tlie State, and remember he carries the largest and best line of Trunks, Traveling Bags, etc., of any house in the county, and can give you the lowest prices. Driviitf/ Harness from $G.OO up. Work Harness from $ 10.00 n/). And everything in proportion. If vou arc'-onteiuplatiug a new set td harness for spring don’t fail to examine iny stock of leattier and get my prices, as I can save you money. I also carry a large stock of Whips, Blankets, Robes, etc., that will discount any house for quality and low prices. Remember my goods are bought to seii and must go regardless of hard times. All goods guaranteed. 8top in when in town or write me ami I will make prompt answer. Remember the Place—Opposite the Postoffice, Bainbridge, 1ml.
Tl>* Mo*! Sensible iSSiSilSi 10 iliHI Isa pair of Gold Spectacles, and the only place to have them correctly fitted is at 106 Hast Washington street. No one every sold glasses so cneaply in Greencastle. Don’t trust your eyes to spectacle peddlers and
jewelers.
G. W, BENCE, M. D.
A Lightning Artist Who Keeps 1’p with
the Auctioneer.
The groat American desideratum of
. , speed is strikingly illustrated by a . ,P.
- naturally a space painter who has opened 11 studio and 0 ’ ,no,s r '’.' ''’'k' " * | lu of a quarter of an inch between the ex- auc tion room on one of the principal l' olors " f the H ' ry havo beon terior of thh core and the interior of | bu8ine88 stn . ( . tSi apparently to demon- known for ages, since this g.-n reprethe mold. The core is stayed with 1 strate that Longfellow was entirely in ^nted the doubting Thomas, iron rods so that it remains rigid in the | crror when he wrote “art is lontf,” I *^ t ‘ r P pr »‘*ct rubies and emeralds, center of the mold, and the glowing | the Boston Transcript. A man nud P^haps after k'reat pearls, comes molten bronze is poured in from the, happened to stray into the art diamond in value. This, too. has a top and completely fills up the space > ,r a ll ery one morning chanced to speak range of colors, the mint prized l>enig between the core and the mold; after I u f Raphael, and was asked by the rvd, blue.green, and water white, while it has cooled the mold Is removed and | p a i nt e r who Raphael was, and if ho be-1 br ° wn ur >- rr:i . v Gng-s arc not quit* the clay interior extracted, and the longed in the class. Before he so highly esteemed. The koh-i-Noor, of statue is revealed, somewhat rough, it; cou ia answer the artist had execute 1 one hundred and two and throe-fourths
"The Falls of the Yellowstone” in oil. Rarat8 > nlIlks in ,,f si *‘‘ w ‘ th the picture had been framed, sold, and some of the worlds great stones-for the purchaser had gone out with the I lnstance with the < ' r ' ,:,t M<, * ul ' two prize under ids arm. The lightning hundred al "! seventy-nine carats u. colorist had his paints spread out be-1 wei * ht ’ l"aniond is the hardest fore him in heaps on a sort of mortar mit,eral known ' l ’ riUle though it be; board and ranged behind him in pails, a onl«do not affect it. and it is also the while on one side of him are the thou- onl - v combustible gem. It has high re sand canvas frames that he turns oiT fravtivo and dispersive powers ("lire ), before breakfast. Follow him while , and 801116 spooimuns become phi.she produces a moonlight scene. First, phorcscent by the action of light. it he gets out his whitewash brush with-1 usuall -V ‘H-eursas an eight-sided crystal, out the long handle, and. dipping it in ' 1 ' h, * name topaz is applied to three the slate-colored ink, primes the skv ,,f. distinct kind of stones, to the oriental evening. But he is careful to leave a i to P az - wh “', h J s r6all v :l -''V 1 ! 0 "' small circle unscathe.l in the center;' sa BP hire: 10 th ®‘ Sooteh t-M>az. which is that is to stand for the moon. Then onl y ‘l uartz > j Uht as a'actliysts are across the Is.ttom of the canvas ^...violet-colored quartz of little value; brush is flashed, leaving behind p Janil to the Brazihan topaz a vivacious, heavier trail, while two lug patches of hh6rr .v-colorcd g 0 ,„ which is the only l.lack paint at each side form the true to P tt ?V, HGs latter stone takes a shadowy hills. Then, with a narrow I brilliant polish and it feels brush of black, the trees and their j sll I , ! )er - v to ^ t<,,lch - 1 lhe ro8e P ,nl ‘ bare branches arc located, as if tli.. to P az seen in .hops is not a natural artist were striping the wheels of an color ; 11 18 ° btaln ‘’d objecting the
Is true, but very nearly as it will ap-
pear before the public.
The Astor doors of Trinity church took three years to complete, a good contrast to which may bo found, as regards time of execution, in the Washington statue in front of the subtreasury on Wall street, which was completed in six weeks and two days. Speaking of the Washington statue, every one bus noticed the bright color, or •‘patina,’’ as it is called, of the legs of the Father of TI is f ountry, while the rest of the body is as grimy as ail the. other bronze statues in New York city. This is duo to the rubbing of the shoulders of street boys and loafers. The founders of the statue say they would make them a handsome present if they would rub the rest of the great man’s body, for a “patina” acquired in this way is superior to any that can be
given artificially.
The statue that gave the most trouVile to the founders, and at the same time is one of the most artistic and beautiful specimens of bronze easting in the country, is Mr. J. Q. A. Ward’s statue of President Garfield, in Washington. The nude figures around the statue are responsible for tlie difficulty of casting. The alloy commonly used for statuecasting consist s of ninety parts copper, seven tin and three zinc; that used by the ancient Greeks being eighty copper and twenty tin. At the time of P.Hisanias they were the first to do any bronze casting; previously articles of ornament were made by riveting sheets of bronze together in the same way that the statue of Liberty is construct-
ed.
The I>o(f That Went to the Foorhnute. An incident which would seem to prove that a dog learns to understand the language of his country was related by one willing to vouch for its truth. A dog had come to be very old in a family in a country village. One of the fatnil3' remarked on a certain day, as the dog lay in the room: “I think Saneho ought to be put out of the wnj\ He is only a nuisance now.” That afternoon Saneho disappeared, and as the days passed did not return. In the course of a week a neighbor said: “I sec that your dog is up at the poorhouse." On inquiry, it was learned that Sanc-ho, having called at the poorliouse and been kindly received, had continued on as a guest And ever after, although ho sometimes made a brief call at his own home, he lived at the town farm, and there peacefu'ly ended his dog's life.
Copies of the Directory cau be obtained by addressing the compilers, THROOP & DOWNS, GREENCASTLE, IND. Agents wanted to sell the Directory in all parts of county.
sc-tot
AN IMPORTANT CLUB OFFER
SCRIBNERS MAGAZINE IE
By special arrangement with the publishers we are enabled to offer SCRIBNER’S MAGAZINE for 181(5 and a full year’s subscription to
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express wagon. Another dash of black answers for a boat, and two irregular touches are the men propelling it. By this time the auctioneer is crying: “How much for this elegant moonlight scene in tlie north woods? Start me!— One dollar and sixty-live cents do I hear? Soldi” And the buyer gets the colors on his sleeve in putting it under his arm. “Little boys,” said the auctioneer at this point, "you had better go home and give the old folks a show. But, boys,” he cries after the slowlyretreating forms, “come down tn-mor-1
dark yellow varieties to great heat. The commercial value of topaz is extremely fluctuating, one reason being that light exercises a bleaching effect
on it.
Another gem, beautiful and interesting in itself, which is occasionally sold for the true ruby, is the red zircon, also called jargoon and jacinth or hyacinth. Jewelers call these stones “jacinth rubies” and charge accordingly. The gem is of all colors, the pure white ones being bard to distinguish from dia-rr-ods. on account of their wonderful
row. rifhave some nice beds put up I tlro .’, Cbosolite is just ns white, but it fe-nWhf c, tknt i-™, ae,wi„’t is 1 ike glass compared with a diamond
or jargoon.
If purchased separately these periodicals ironld aost $1.00. IT IS THE PLAN OF SCRIBNER’S to give its readers next year a history 1 of the past 25 years in the the United States. (18t*9-’95. These years have been unparalleled in the history of the world for national development and material progress. The narrative will be written in a graphic and picturesque style by President Andrews, of Brown University, and
capable artists will illustrate it.
INOBERT GRANT, whose “Reflections of a Married Man” will long be I t remembered, has writtten a series of articles on “The Art ot Living,” in which he sets himself to solve, as far as such problems can be solved, questions which beset every well-to-do family: The Income—The Dwelling Household Expenses Education of Children Married and Single Life The Summer Problem, etc., etc. Beautifully illustrated. / 1 EORGE MEREDITH, whom more than one good authority has proVX nounced the greatest of living novelists, has written a strong serial,
The Amazing Marriage,” to begin in January.
D. HOWELLS will contribute a novel entitled. “The Story of
a Play.”
I N THE LAND OF DON QUIXOTE will he a series of three sketches l illustrated by a number of Daniel Vierge’s wonderful drawings. O INGLE ARTICLES in great variety have been arranged for and the illustrations will be elaborate. SCRIBNER'S FOR 1895 WILL BL BETTER THAN EVER. If you desire only Scribner’s Magazine remit !?!5.00 to the Publishers: CHARLES SLR.I USER'S SOSS, URt-157 Fifth Avenue, X. 1.
W.
hero to-night, so that you needn’t go home to sleep.” And the “professor” has the lead by three pictures on the auctioneer, who begins to point out the merits of “an elegant forest scene."
They Were Twin*.
The mother of a family showed the
. .. , ... ,, ticket collector on the railway a couple Sotice to Stockholders. of half-fare tickets for her two chilof^hVcentr.rN^tiona"Bank of Oreenciistlej dren. The latter, after looking at .iU; ef hjitlann. that a meeting will be held , them doubtfully, said: “How old are at said bank, on j they Z’ “They arc only «!▼, nud thev TUESDAY, JANUARY 8, 1895, • are twins.” "Ah?" Then after a For the purpose of electing nine directors to moment's pause the mar inquired: r a r e^^ “And Where were they born?” The between the hours of 10 o'clock a. m. and 4 mother (unthinkingly)—“This one was P m. of said day ^ 0 ’hair. President. ' born in New York and the other in
M. D. BRIDUDS, Cashier. | Paris."
An Unusual C oincidenco. The Vienna correspondent, of the London Standard says that on one of tUo estates of Count I’otocki in Galicia the very rare event of a mother, daughter and granddaughter each giving birth to a son on the same day has just occurred. The mother is forty-eight, and the infant son is her sixteen tli child. The daughter, who has just presented her husband with his eighth, is thirty-three years old, and the granddaughter, who was married last year, is not yet quite sixteen. All tlie three new-born sons are strong and healthy, and the some may be said of their mothers, who belong to the Polish
peasant class.
India Shawl* at XVimUor. Queen Victoria's store of India shawls is failing. The shawls are getting scarcer and scarcer every year. After the India mutiny tribute was laid upon certain princes and chiefs in India to their sovereign lady of divers costly stuffs, and for a number of years the shawls, etc., arrived regularly; but of lave ycais, owing to the deaths of some of the tributary potentates and the suppression of others, the stock has much declined. The precious articles
There are two kinds of chrysoberyl used us gems. One tlie well-known oriental cats-eye, an opaque greenishbrown cabochon-eut stone, showing a steely flash or line like silver wire; the other, the little known but beautiful and curious alexandrite. This unique gem is olive or pistachio green by daylight, and it has the remarkable property ot turning a raspberry red by artificial light. The green tourmaline is much like alexandrite by day. This is the most chemically complex of all gems, and it occurs also in red and
brown crystals.
Spontaneous Combustion.
As it is known that spontaneous combustion sometimes takes place in cargoes of coal, it has been suggested that under certalu conditions enormous coal-fields may ignite and In time produce volcanoes. Occasional and violent eruptions may be caused by the burning away of barriers and the inflow of water suddenly producing an enormous bulk of blcuui, which must find an outlet. The idea that clean cotton may take fire spontaneously is scouted by many experts. They claim that what is called by this name is the result of some spark that may smolder unobserved fo.* weeks and then may break out in some unsuspected fashion. Tobacco, linen, jute and oily cotton, however, inflame spontaneously on « hat would seem, to a scientific mind,
ZB-IE-S-T Condensed News,
Stories,
Miscellany,
Womens Department, Children’s Department, Agricultural Department, Political Department,
Answens to Correspondents^
Editorials,
Everything, vtill bi rents if tei rail' CDUEIEE-JOrnUL,
Notice to Son-Residents. The State of Indiana, Putnam County. In the Putnam Circuit Court, November Ti rm, 1*94. Franklin VermtUron and .Maggie E. Vermillion
v».
Thomas Howerdson et al.
Complaint No. M52.
Now come the Plaintitls. by Lewis & Corwin. their Attorneys, and tile their complaint herein, together with an affidavit that *aid defei’iisuts. Thomas Howerdson. the unknown heir? a* Isw of rhonias Huvrc.'d.io'i, decessed, Susan Yates, the unknown heirs at law of Susan Yates, deceased, William W. Yates, the unknown heirs at law of William W. Yates, deceased, Jeptha Yates the unknown heirs at law of Jeptha Yates, i deceased, Samuel Webb, the unknown heir, at law of Samuel Webb, deceased, are non-1
residents of the State of Indiana.
Notice is therefore hereby given said He fend&nts, that unless they be and appear on thekth day of the next Term of the Putuiuu Circuit Court, being Tuesday,
1-enruary i», A. D.!S9£,nt tb» Court House A ten-page, eight-column Democratic Newsin the City of Greencastle, in said County and j paper. Henry Wuileison is the Editor
State, ami answer or demur to said complaint, ,
the same will be heard and determined lu their $1.00 A. YEAR day of Ducem tr. A. I . . RVVII rk tbe paper and Premium Supplement sent
DANIEL T. DAKNALL*. Llerit. t ree to any address. Write to
COVKiKB-JOURNAL COMPANY
Louisville, Ky.
The STAK-1»KES$
and'memtwr’^f^he Omario Vet.^inary Mcdi- And tkc Weekly Courier-Journal will be sent cal Society. All diseases of domestic anlin#lB one yvur to any address for si.TB^Addrese
By W. II. H. Cullen, Deputy. Lewis & Corwin, Pills.’ Attys.
3t:i«
G. C. Neale. Veterinary Sarpr.
are kept in HaiKialwucal wardrobes at ,, i,ai won hi seem, to a Windsor under the care of the queen's J insufficient provocation,
first wardrobe woman.
caTefully treated. Office at Cooper Brothers’ Livery Stable, Greencastle, fnd. All caks, day and night, promptly attended. Firing
and Surgery a specialty.
THE STAK-PKKS8, Greencastle, Ind.
Clean Meat Market ! HICKSON & RAY
Keep on hand the best
Fresh and Salt Meats,
SOTICE.
School Fund Ilorrowers.
All borrowers of School Funds in Putnam county having interesl on their loans due or past due are hereby notified that they muat settle the same immediately, as the law makes it mandatory to bring suit for fore- ! closure, If interest is not promptly paid. I Take notice, also, that It your loan haa been running for a period of Hve years or
Fish. Oysters, Poultry! r^note.!^ by giving
Those interested should heed these fact*
All to be sold ut lowest prices Goods i^^ilEdko'the.e'makt^s wEtd*^ delivered to all parts ot the city gkorge m. black, promptly. **1 Soutli lutliftlHl staGPt, Auditor of Putnam Qjunty* just north of tire dept, headquarters. Greencatle, Ind , Dec. *7. iwm. at*;
