Pike County Democrat, Volume 28, Number 23, Petersburg, Pike County, 15 October 1897 — Page 7
ffcrgiktCountgiraottBt ML 1(«C. STOOPS* Editor ud Ptoprlaior. PETERSBURG. • • INDIANA. FORCE OF TOADSTOOLS. Ensile Tktagi Wkerela Mighty Power ttestde*. Not long ago a portion of the pavement in a street in Paris was heaved out of its place in some mysterious manner. Before it could be replaced numerous toadstools made their appearance in the gaping spaces between the atones. When the stones were removed it was found they rested upon an immense spongy'mass of toadstool growth, which had gone on increasing, until it made a way through which it could push its head into the air. One of the stones raised by it measured four feet two inches by two feet, and weighed two hundredweight. A more extensive injury was dona Jn the same way years ago at Basingatoke. Not many months after ths town had been paved the pavement was noticed to exhibit an unevenness, which could not be accounted for. As soon, however, as the unevenness was sufficient to make openings between the stones, the hidden enemy made its appearance in the shape of innumerable toadstools. So completely had the spores or spawn got possession of the material on which the pavement was laid that it haW to bo completely taken up, and the w hole town had to be repaved. The toadstool and its kind seem to flourish iu places where the light is excluded. *ns in dark cellars, under ■Ragstones and in hollow trees. They require, however, the air. and a certain, though it may be a small, amount of light, that they may reach their perfect condition. Every one has heard of the enormous grow ths *of fungi in some wine cellars. A case is on record in which a cask of wine, having been left without attention for three years in a dark cellar, xvas at the end of that period found to ,bave been borne ou the surface of a mushroom growth until it was forced against the roof. The fungus, moreover, had got access to the wine, and had drunk it all, living upon its sugar, and so the more easily raising the gradually emptying cask from the ground. Fungi have sometimes taken possession of workevl-out mines and occupied enormous spaces. — Emily S. Windsor, iu Chicago Inter Ocean. PHENOMENA OF PERSIAN GULF. Water Chain:*** It* Hue and I’Uh l>t* In M) rtad* In the Sea. The Persian gulf, it would seem, presents some curious phenomena. Recently, in an inaugural address as president of the Institution of Electrical Engineers. Sir Henry Manet*, referring to the advancement of ocean telegraphy, said that in the Persian gulf one occasionally witnessed natural phenomena which to the untraveled might apjR*ar incredible. Iu the midst of the mountains near Musscndom he hud *een during a thunderstorm such displays of lightning as bathed description, lie had at eertaiu seasons of the year observed the water in the bay—which was large enough to hold all the fleets of the world-present exactly the appearance of blood. Not many miles from Mussendomhehad witnessed mysterious tire circles flitting over the surface of the sea at a speed of 100 miles an hour—a phenomenon which no one had yet been able to explain. While Steaming along the coast of Tieluchistan he had been called from his cabin at night to observe the more common phenomenon of a milky sea, the water for miles around being singularly white and luminous. In the sama locality the sea was for short period# as if putrid, the fish beiug destroyed in myriads, so that to prevent a pestilence measures had to be taken to bury those ca.4 up on the beach. This phenomenon was doubtless due to the outbreak of a submarine volcano and the liberation of sulphureted hydrogen. In these waters jelly-fish were as large as football# ami sea snakes of brilliant hue were met with in great numbers.—Self Culture.
The ( oantru Inbrndi. / A pretty little incident came to my notice a* a result of a letter received from Sweden a few days ago by City Auditor Kckdahl. who was told of Christine Nilssons last public appearance as a songstress and violinist. It occurred less than a mouth ago in the Tillage of Gardsby, Smaland, in the southern part of Sweden. It was there the sweet singer was bom; there she was married first, aud there she celebrated that event a month ago. “It was the twentyfifth anniversary of her first marriage." ■writes this correspondent, “and the people from the whole surrounding country bad gathered to join in the celebration. The largest place in which to dance was in a barn loft, and there the countess was the gayest of the throng. The country boys of a quarter of a century ago were her partners -again, and for many of the dances the adorable musician played the music. She is an adebt with the Tiolin. and -when she played many stopped their dancing to listen. It was a great treat for our Swedish country boys and girls todance to music furnished by the great singer*."—Denver Times. As 044 Marriage faituu. The people of Lithuania believe in being forearmed for emergency. At least *o a curious custom in regard to the marriage ceremony would seem to indicate. It is said that before the marriage is celebrated the mother of the bride gives her daughters parting maternal bos on the ears in the presence of -a number of witnesses. The reason for this remarkable proceeding is that if the wife should at anj time wish to secure a divorce she would have the plea that physical force was used to make her enter the bonds of matrimony.— Detroit Free Frees.
IF YOU’LL SING A SONG. If yen'll stay a *ong as yon go along, la tile face of the real or the fancied wrong; la spite of the doubt If you'll fight It out. And show a heart that Is brave and stout: It you'll laugh at the jeers and refuse the tears. You'll force the ever-reluctant cheers That the world denies when a coward cries, To give to the man who bravely tries: And you'll win success with a little song— If you'll sing the song as you go along! If you'll sing a song as you plod along. You'll find that the busy, rushing throng WIU catch the strain of the glad refrain; That the sun will follow the blinding rain: That the clouds will fly from the blackened sky: That the stars will come out by and by: Ahd you'll make new friends, till hope descends From where the placid rainbow bends; And all because of a little song— If you'll sing the song as you plod along. If you'll sing the song as you trudge along. You’ll see that the singing will make you strong; And the heavy load and the rugged road. And the sting and the stripe of the tortuous goad Will soar with the note that you set afloat; That the world is bad when you are sad. And bright and beautiful when glad; And all you need is a little song— [ If you'll sibg the song as you trudge along. —Nashville American. f THE RIVAL .’*>•'* * $ j* UNDERTAKERS. J ) BY AGNES CRARY. } THEY were having a clearance sale across the street at Isaac Abrahamsou's, and Coffin Smith, sitting in front of his shop, watched enviously the I crowd jostling anil elbowing for the | sake of “two cents less on gingham and silk given away.” He wished his business, too, would admit of spri^ig open- | ings—a sale of shopworn caskets, for [ instance — but he laid the idea aside | with regret. Bragton was not yet ready j for such innovations and he felt fate had been unkind in confining him to j the upper valley; for since his trip to the southern part of the state, the ambition of a progressive undertaker burned within him. Had he lived in Loe Angeles, he felt he, tot), might have adorned one of those large and prosperous parlors that crowd Spring street J or Broadway. Were they not curt dined j with lace, bedraped with light silks, j gay with cut flowers, and in the evening j brilliantly lighted, so that a traveler iu j that one-luuged country might drop iu to look over the latest styles or choose his eofliu while he was waiting for the
So ou his return he had decorated his somber rooms; the lace curtains were there and the light rug’s in subdued tones, as for au infant's funeral. A bunch of Wax tuberoses that might come in handy when fresh flowers were scarce adorned the marble slab of the center table, and a discarded cockade of white crape. perked on a chair hack, lent the finishing touch to the room. The first night he had pulled up the shades and lit all three burners in the chandelier, he had had callers enough, but the occasion had passed into unsavory tradition as “Smith's fake funeral.” and the town had resented it as an indelicate bid for custom. Further- ! more the county board, in oue of its ^ periodic spasms of economy together i with a desire to remove too great temptation from the spirits of the prosperous. had taken account of that unlucky opening.and given the contract for pauper burial to Morey. So this morning as Smith sat sunning himself, the skimmed milk of his meditations had soured and given an acid quality to f the smile he wore in the business. All at once a stir up the Yiciuo road roused him. A cloud of dust, then a hat’ess man riding furiously; on he dashed, children and dogs scattering before him as he gained the street. “Horton is dying,” he cried, as he slipped from his horse. “Horton's dying out on the Yicino road, lirown Kucer threw him ami stamped on him. O. my God, why don't some of you get the doctor!** And he fell on the sidewalk exhausted. A crowd gathered instantly and in a moment men were off to Horton's aid and up toward the hills to intercept the doctor. Coffin Smith too slipped away to his stable, and fast as fingers could fly began harnessing his team to the dead w agon. Hortou was dead probably—too bad. but Horton was w ell to do, and had no near kin, so w hoever got there first was likely to get the burying. And in a moment more with a crack of the whip he went rattling off. 1 A« he passed the saloon whither | Morey had led the messenger for spir- : ittious consolation, one of the men about the door called in: “Smith's ahead this time, sure enough. He'll make the first heat before you get started.” “Not if I know myself!” the Irishman responded, as he set down his glass. “And not if I know me bays!” And so a few minutes later a second black wagon went down the street, to the cries of: “A race, a race!” ‘Three to five on the bays!” Shops, offices and saloons were deserted, for to a crowd of Missourians there is only one thing can keep down love of a race—only one thing that would keep old Horton himself from rising to time the men. and that one thing was racing, too, even faster than the good doctor, whose horses by this time were turned once more against their shadowy antagonist. Mr. Larramore was sprinkling the sidewalk in front of his grocery as the crowd came up, eager for the last sight of the men. “Just set out chairs for the gentlemen,” he called hospitably to his clerk. “Ye can see further up the Vicino .from here than ye kin down the street a piece." It was cool there under the awning, icd the men tilted back their chairs comfortably, in preparation for the long waiting, while interest was fairly divided between Horton’s fate and the raee.
**A man onto 70 hadn’t ought to bee* ridin* that horse. It’s a jedgroent oa his bein’ too nigh in his pocket to keep a good fellow to train. I wonder if Brown Racer is anyways hurt." “I reckon there’ll be trouble over the burying, too,” a second suggested, ■‘since he’s no kin to decide. Wonder why he lived so by himself—ain’t noways natural. I knew & man oncst—” And so the talk wandered on to the loved and shady bypaths of gossip, now and then returning to the race, as some one drove quickly hv. When Smith first heard a wagon approaching he felt whose it was. Be set his teeth hard, and all the disgruntled ambitions of the past were in the lash, as he leaned forward and sent it crawling over the backs of his horses. Just' before him the road lay—narrow, graded well up in the middle; Morey would pass only by running desperate chances. But ahead it opened level, wide enough for three wagons, and swept along clear as a track, right past the men by the roadside. Morey’s horses were still I fresh-breathed, while his own—if that I nigh horse played him weak now—the j oath was lost as he leaned forward to j speak to them. At last the level space. Morey began j to gain; to the wagon now. the back ; wheel hub. the seat. Neck by neck, | past the men they flew, each feeling the j finish lay at the cross roads just be- j yond. With a desperate lash Smith i gained a moment, but his horses, now j mad as he in the race, plunged wildly, i and Morey dashed ahead, just over the j intersecting road. The men glared at each othgr^piro- j fessional dignity had gone to the winds | —not that Morey cared, for he had none ■ to lose. “Just let me help you a bit.” he said, i when Smith began to rub down his trembling horses, “or you’fl have a long I time in getting them back into town.” j Smith said nothing, but accepted the j proffered aid. and at last as he climbed ! back into the wagon— “I reckon I’d better stop to see what the men think best to do.” “And I reckon you’d just better be drivin* on. if you don’t want to be j settled wid twict. I won him fair and j decent, and it’s myself has this job.” j There he stood, six feet of strong I Irishman. The two men down the road I.
•'HORTON S DYING.” were watching:, and Coffin Smith drove on. ' j A little later Morey drew in his horses, just as the doctor drove up. He ! waited in silence until the examination | was over, then hat in hand he drew j near. “I've come for the remains.” he said, j solemnly, “since I won, which these j gentlemen will swear. Besides,” as he j caught the doctor's eye, “besides he had no folks of his own, and so in a l way he comes to the county and tom^” I he said, “bein’ as I bury the indignau* j pore.”—Overland Monthly. « i MAKING A NEWSPAPER. The Kdttor Man* Have a Very Good Liver. The leading articles which look so imposing and which express the policy of a paper on important subjects are not troublesome from the point of view j of organisation. The editor decides i comparatively early in the evening j what subjects shall be written about, and he. of course, also directs the lines which the articles shall follow. Unless he be a very wise or very foolish man ! he does not attempt to write any of them himself. The editor who really edits a papeT ; has no time to write, lie is responsible for everything and has in the last resort to arrange everything. He or his as* sistants read every line of every proof* l sheet; they have to be constantly on ; the lookout for insidious errors, for > “doubles”—the same news given twice j or given previously—for matter which ! should not be published and for num* ; berless other equally important things, j A really competent editor is one of the ! rarest men in the world, and one of the j ablest. The work of a cabinet minister j cannot compare with his work. A j really good editor can direct the policy i of his paper on some essential matter ! at one moment and at the next detect a ! “turned comma.” Nothing is too great I and nothing is too small for his instant ] comprehension. His nerves must be of I iron or worry will kill him; he must i feel his responsibility, yet carry it j lightly; he must not harass his staff. Above all, his liver must be in good order. Indeed, we think that, given this and ability, the other qualities will be added unto him.—Chambers’ Jour* naL A lasll Bojr*» Cosisdruk Everyone in the room had given a conundrum, and the guessing proceed* ed variously, No one thought of four-year-old Ted. who sat very quietly in his corner, listening thoughtfully, and at last he said: “I*ve got one. too: Why is the Cong’ational steeple painted brown?” Mueh surprised, every one laughed, and then began to guess. All sorts of attempted answers were given, but the little boy shook his head, and explained, very seriously, when all had “given up:” “’Cause the church la brown.”—Even Where.
RANTING REPUBLICANS Trrtac to Drowo 0*1 Some Kotor*oaa Foots. Once more the administration papers are crowing lustily about the state of the treasury. They began to have this kind of hurrahs about the time their miraculous tariff bill passed the house and are may look for a fresh attack at least once a month. When they go into one of these fits they begin by telling what a terrible time the last administration had with the gold reserve. It .was continually worrying, they say, and having the utmost difficulty in keeping the coin stock up to the mark. The president and secretary of the treasury “were at their wits* end.” They resorted to “every expedient” for the purpose of getting and keeping gold, and to little purpose. But now behold! “Less than seven months after the inauguration of McKinley exactly the reverse is true and Secretary Gage is obliged almost daily to refuse offers of gold. The treasury has more gold than it knows what to do with and instead of paying freight has issued hints to assistant treasurers all over the country to discourage gold payments as far as possible. It is more than likely that the treasury will soon be actually on a gold basis and forced to pay out the yellow boys for expenses.” How distressing that would be! And how sad to think that all this embarrassment and danger is due to the unspeakable wisdom and transcendent genius of a republican administration! Why, then, do the roosters exult? Why can they not restrain their exuberance in face of this impending calamity long enough to explain some things? Down to the time of the passage of the Dingley bill by the house all the republican sages were declaring with one voice that there was nothing the matter with the treasury but- insufficient revenue. That was the only reason why gold ran away, and it would never come back until more revenue was provided. I Now, it is notorious that the shortage of revenue has been greater than ever since the passage of the Dingley bill, yet the sages, and their horubla-.versare boasting that the treasury is getting [ more gold than it wants. Wouldn't it be well for them to step crowing long enough to mend their reputation by showing that the fact does not utterly demolish their theory? They persist in ignoring other no-{ torious facts and that is why the publie memory should be jogged again. They ignore the fact that the quan- j tity of gold in the treasury is small j compared with what it was during j Cleveland's first administration and down to its close. The total amount of j gold now in the treasury is $1 $4,500,000, J round figures, of which $147,500,000 be- j longs to the government and$37,000,000 j is held against certificates in the hands of the public. At the end of Clove- j land’s first term the total gold in the j treasury was $326,500,000. of which j $196,300,000 belonged to the government. while $130,200,000 was held against certificates. Thus it appears that the government owned nearly $49,000,000 more gold and held in its vaults $142,000,000 more at the end of the first Cleveland administration than it does how. And for a year and a half before the close of Cleveland’s term the holdings were about the same as at the end. Yet nobody was worrying for fear the government would “be forced to pay out the yellow boys for expenses.” Nor did anybody borrow trouble because from 70 to 92 per cent, of the cash received at the New York custom house was in gold coin and gold certificates. Nor should the public forget the fact which republican roosters try to crowout of mind that it was not nntil the beginning of the Harrison administration that the treasury began to lose gold and that during that administration the treasury lost very near $93.000,900 in gold owned. Finally, the public should not permit the vociferous crowing to drive out of mind the fact that it was during the Harrison administration, that the revenues of the government fell below the expenditures for the first time in 25 years or that it was during the last year " of the republican McKinley tariff that the revenues fell over $72,000,000 short of the expenditures—by far the greatest deficit in time of peace in the history of the country. It now remains for the republicans to beat their own, record of unparalleled badness before they get through with their thaumaturgical Dingley law. They have made a most promising beginning for that achievement of prodigality.—Chicago Chronicle.
OPINIONS AND POINTERS. -The thicker the tariff wall is built the easier it is to see throughit.—Puck. -Whenever a republican discovers that his party has abandoned all the principles of Lincoln. Greeley. Sumner and Trumbull and is therefore compelled to leave it. have you noticed what an idiot and rascal he becomes in the estimation of the newspapers belonging to the Hanna bureau?—Columbus (O.) Press. -As well look for oranges to grow In Siberia or snowstorms to prevail at the equator as to expect the republican administration to bring about general prosperity. Its daily business is the systematic and legalized pillage of the people. Its regular occupation is robbing Peter, the producer, to pay Paul, the plutocrat.—Kansas City Titu#s. -The big tariff-pampered corporations are responsible for the great bulk of the grossly ignorant and semibarbarous Immigration from southern Europe. The coal mining districts of the country are the nests of anarchism —the swarming centers of a population which has no conception of free government, has no appreciation of free institutions and are riotous enemies of j native labor. Probably not one in s hundred can read the language of the country whose laws protect them and whose privileges they enjoy.—Mianeap- j »lis Times.
DING LEVS DEFICIT PRODUCER. A Bond lua* Is A no ns the InntafSt Proha bill tie*. Mr. Nelson Dingley very coolly informs the country through the New York World that his celebrated tariff act may reasonably be expected to produce a deficit in the government's revenue of something like $30,000,000 before it can be expected to make its benign influence felt. Between Mr. Reed’s “state of mind” as a panacea for financial evils and Mr. Dingley’s deficit-pro-ducing tariff act the country has some rare prospects before it. Mr. Dingley says the deficit will be the natural result of the vast importations that took place before the bill went into effect, but we think it must be clear to all sensible persons who know the eharaeter and effect of the Wilson protection bill that the importations in anticipation of the enactment of the Dingley law paid their due proportion of revenue into the treasury— so that these importations, instead of contributing to the deficit, have actually tended to cut it down by adding | to the resources of the treasury. But what effect will the predicted def- j icit have on our finances? The repub* ! llcans during the campaign of last year j declared over and over again that the j bond issues were occasioned by the ! treasury deficit, and they raked Mr. I Cleveland fore and aft—especially aft, j in the nature of things—for permitting ! such a dangerous thing as a deficit to 1 make its appearance, thus compelling : the government to issue bonds in time of peace. And not only Mr. Cleveland. | but the democratic party, was called j harshly to task for enacting a tariff I law that would create such a terrible j thing as a deficit. In the face of all this, Mr. Dingley j, comes out boldly and says the deficit i under his celebrated monopoly-feeding j and trust-breeding act will amount to ; $30,000,000 the first year. If the repub- j lican theory of bond issues is true Mr, I McKinley will have to engage in that J business before he is many months old- j er. If the failure of the treasury in- | come to keep even with the outgo makes ! it necessary to issue bonds in time of peace. Mr. McKinley (in the interim of appointing negro postmasters in the south) would do well to have his bond plates prepared. The so-called deficit under Cleveland had not reached $2$,000.000 before he was compelled to issue $110,000,000 of bonds. This being so, ! nothing short of ah issue of $200,000,000 will satisfy the deficiency promised by ! Mr. Dingley as the result of his wonder- 1 ful law. j As all sensible men know, however, I there was no such thing under the , Cleveland administration as an issue of | bonds to cover a deficit. The violation j of law by which Mr. Cleveland made greenbacks and treasury notes payable ! in gold instead of coin drove some $300,- j 000.000 of our gold abroad, and Mr. i Cleveland, acting as the partner of the I gold grabbers, issuedbonds to buy the | gold back. That was all there was to j the bond issues. It is a very fortunate thing for the J republican framers ofthe Dingley law that the cheapening of the gold dollar ; with respect to a number of commodi- j ties has helped busfhess and revived j hope in the minds of the people, otherwise the so-called deficit would have j assumed alarming proportions—for the j treasury receipts are in direct ratio ; with the prosperity of the people.—At | lanta Constitution.
r* IO UCtnUw nMO »• It $U>d« for Equal Justice and Good Order. Mr. Bryan performed both a patriotic ami a political duty in calling attention in a recent speech to the democratic position on the great questions which are now fretting1 labor and causing needless alarm in some unusually calm minds. After point ingout that the party took strong ground in its last national platform against the too free and hasty use of the restraining power by the courts, Mr. Bryan said: “Those who hare suggested the burning of property and the destruction of life as a means of settling labor disputes do not understand the genius of our institutions. The American pople are law-abiding. When the laws are bad they change the laws.*’ In this observation the Nebraskan gave expression to the conservative force which is a guarantee of the perpetuity of American institutions. That unfortunate class of persons who see danger to these institutions in the acts of i judges who may interpret the laws unjustly or in the errors of other officers who may misuse their power, display, as Mr. Bryan says, a lack of understanding of the spirit and active force of our governmental machinery. The ballot is in the hand of every American citizen above the age of 21 years. He can use it to correct every abuse of power and every injustice imposed by the strong upon the weak. If it be “government by injunction” to which he objects he can say so at the polls. If enough people agree that his objection is well founded, the cause of complaint erf 11 be soon removed. The party doctrine on this question was Intended to emphasize the fact that this is a government of the people and that they have not only the right but also the power to apply the remedy to any wrong use made of their machine by those intrusted with its management. The declaration is only in line with the contentions and tenchingsof democracy from the days of Jefferson. There is no anarchy in democracy. There is nothing in its traditions or in its creed which counsels violence for the correction of public or private wrong. There is nothing but equal justice and good order in democracy, and those who interpret its character in any other way do not ««► derstand the genius of the party of Jefferson and Jackson.—Si. Louis Republic. ' -Mr. McKinley is in favor of the free coinage of silver If England is. That is the republican financial programme up and down.—'Atlanta Constitution.
B.&O.S-W. RYj TOCi Table »w»lua leare Washington ns follows tat CAST BOPJ»B. !»•. •.2:68 ft- m* W*ST BOPNB. No. a . .. 1:21 a. at No. 12.8:17 a. mf No. IS, l’vea 8:06 a. a Not . ..... T:17a. nj* No. 5...... 8:04 a. a N* 1.p-m* No. 7 .....13:«p. aft 5° •. 1:18 a. mf No. 1...... 1:43 p. a N<k 14. srr. 11:46 p. m+ No. t.11 :U3 p. a# • Dally. ♦ Belly except Sunday. ..Wf detail Information regarding rata ^me on connecting lines, sleeping, nttJ •art, Ms., address THOS. DONAHUE. Ticket Agent; B. A O. S-W. Ry„ . Washington, In*. J. 38. CHESBROUGH, General Passenger Agent, St. Louis, Mn
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