Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 13, Number 30, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 20 January 1883 — Page 3
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THE MAIL
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A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
The Evolution of Bread.
Persons of extreme views are apt to maintain that all mankind, being nor mally savages, were as normally cannibals but, leaving that moot question altogether on one side, it seems prebar ble that humanity ate acorns long before they ate cereals or learned the art of making bread, and that the veneration entertained by the Druids of Gaul and Britain for the oak was due to the circumstance that its glands were the staple food of the people. Bread, properly so called, was transmitted by the Greeks to the Romans and either the latter or the Phoenicians may have introduced the cultivation of corn into Gaul. While, however, the land was mainly covered with immense forests, a long time must have elapsed before the practice of eating acorns, chestnyts and beech mast was abandoned, and even when corn was regularly grown, ripened, and harvested, the grains were merely plucked from the ear and eaten raw or slightly parched. The next step was to infuse the grains in hot water for the making of a species of gruel or porridge, and along time afterwards it may have occurred to some bright gen ius to pound the corn in a mortar or rub it to a powder between two stones. Subsequently*came the handmill but it was not until after the First Crusade that the windmill was introduced from the East, whither it had probably found its way from China. The first bread was evidently baked on the ashes and unleavened, and the intolerable pangs of indigestion brought on by a continual course of "galeete" or "damper" may have suggested the use of a fermenting agent, which in the first instance was probably stale bread turned sour. Plinv has distinctl}' told us in bis "Natural History" that the Gauls leavened their bread with yeast made from the lye of beer yet, strangely enough, ihev abandoned the use of beer yeast, and did not resume it until the middle of the seventeenth century. Its revival in France made the fortune of many bakers then the medical faculty sounded an alarm, declaring that yeast made from beer was poisonous. Its employment was prohibited by law in 1660, but the outcry raised by the bakers and .the public was so vehement that in the following 3'ear tho decreo of prohibition was concealod, with proviso that the yeast was to bo procured only from beer freshly brewed in Paris or the immediate neighborhood. Some form of fermenting bread, however, the French had been eating for 1,600 years in contradistinction to tho gruel and pulseeating Italians and Levantines and the purely vegetarian Hindus.
Atrooities by British Officers. Tho following story told by the Sydney Mail, of Sydney, Australia, is a horrible illustration of the inhuman barbarism that may still be found in certain quarters "of the world. A young British police officer was out with a detachment of colored "boys" hunting for some of the Mayall tribe of blacks who had been suspected of stealing a quantity of Hour. "Thoy came upou a camp of Mayalls," says "the account, "surprised, surrounded them, and forced them to be hospitable. Thoy ate their kangaroo, drank their water, and made them corroboree. After all was ended, that the blacks might not get away in the night and steal more sheep, the ofllcor said to his 'boys,' 'Just you pull out your revolvers and shoot them.' The 'boys' did not like to at first, but the officer was
and was obeyed. When the
ayalls were killed there were three old women wailing, who did not seem worth killing. 'Kill them, too,' said tho officer and they were killed. Three young gins (wives)wero not killed one of them was handcuflfod about the ankles and tied to a sapling. Tho 'boys' rode on in the morning, leaving the officer and the young gin thus socured. Presently a stranger came along (and it was he who tells the story), and tho two ato and drank together. When it became time to move it was remembered that tho young gin was tied up. 'We must loose her first,' said tho chief, and felt for tho keys. He had no key the 'boys' had taken them away. What was to be done? 'I can not lose my handcuffs,' he said and before there was time for remonstrance be had drawn a pistol and shot the gin through tho brain, and then hacked off her feet at the ankles, and so saved his irons."
8etting Their Gaps for Whittier. The letters of Mrs. Lydia Maria Child have recently been published with a sketch of her by Mr. Whittier, of a visit to whom in 1860 she writes: "Whittier made piteous complaints of time wasted and strength oxhausted by tho numerous loafers who came to see him out of mere idle curiosity, or to put up with him to save a penny. I was amused to hear his sister describe some of these irnnUions in her slow, Quakerly fashion, "Thee has no idea,'" she said, "how much time Greenlcaf spends trying to lose these people iu the streets. Sometimes he comes home and says: Well, sister, I had hard work to lose him, but I have lost him.' 'But I can never lose her,' said Whittier 'the women are more pertinacious than the men: don't thee tuul 'em so, Maria?' I told him I did.— •How does thee manage to get time to do anything?" said he. 1 told him I took care to live away from the railroad and kept a bull-dog and a pitchfork and advised him to uo the same. It is a fact that the life of the gentle poet has been much pestered by women. At least one wealthy widow actually proposed to him, and other women have made violent love to him without avail.
Josh Billings says: -Whenever find a real handsome woman engaged in the wimmin's right biaasinoss, then I am goin' to take mi liat under mi arm and jine the procession." mm
IVamond Pre* will color any thing any color, and never fall. The oaaieat aiiid best way to cco»oaii«. 10 cents, Rt all druggists.
ITOlellan's Perilous Bide.
"Lewis E. Dawson, the big policeman who stands at Eighth and Arch streets, claims the honor of having taken Gen. McClellan safely through, or rather over, one of the greatest dangers of his life. "It was the time the rebels evacuated Yorktown," said the- policeman, "before the seven days' fight in the peninsula. I was then driving McClellan's private ambulance, a sort of Germantown wagon, that he had fitted up for his own use. It would carry four persons comfortably, and I hau a team of four splendid horses to draw it Well, the rebels skipped out of Yorktown one Saturday night, but before they went they filled all the roads in around the town with torpedei—buried 'em under a thin scum of earth, you know, so that you couldnt' see the blamed things till you stepped on 'em, and then after that you never saw anything else. The Sunday after the evacuation was a beautiful day, but that night it rained as it just knew how to rain down on the peninsula, and the mnd well, it knew how to make mud, too. It was about a foot deep, I reckon, when I started on Mon day morning fbr McClellan's headquarters, four miles out, to drive to Yorktown. There were four officers in the ambulance, Gen. McClellan, Col. Colburn, his chief ot staff, Gen. Franklin, and Gen. Fitz Jonn Porter. It was still raining, and the ambulance curtains were closed. We got along all right till we came to the entrance to the Yorktown fortifications, and there right in the narnowest part of the way, was an ambulance wagon, broken down in the mud, and beside it was a stick, planted in the mud, with a little red flag hanging from it. I knew what it was as soon as I saw it the rain had washed the dirt off one of them bloody torpedoes, and the soldiers had founa it and marked it you bet they wasn't going to dig it up without positive orders. "Well, I stopped my team and Ge McClellan stuck his head through the curtains and looked about him. There were some soldiers standing around, and among them was a lieutenant. McClellan called him up and said: "Don't let our men take up any ol these torpedoes. Make the prisoners do it." "Then he looked at the wagon and asked me: "Do you think you can get past?"
Yes,' I said. 'I guess I can, if I straddle that torpedo.' '•'Well,' said he, 'go ahead. I expect we'll all be blown to thunder together.' Those were the very words he used. So I throw my long whip down between the horses to keep them apart as far as possible and drove ahead, and we got into Yorktown without touching the torpedo." "And what did McClellan say then?" "He never said a word. When we got into Yorktown he left the ambulance and went into a house, and presently ho sent an orderly out to tell me to go back to headquarters. I had no sooner reached there than I received orders to turn around, return to Yorktown, and follow the army, so I had to drive over that blamed torpedo three times. I got kinder used to it at last, and was ready to bet that I could do it every time."—Philadelphia Times.
Four hundred Harvard professors and students formed a co-operative society nine months ago, and opened a store, where books, sporting articles, stationery, fuel, pictures and clothing were either kept in stock or sold by sample. The price for everything was 5 per cent above wholesale cost, and members only could buy, but on no other terms than cash down. They also pay $2 a year. The experiment has thus far been highly satisfactory, and no reason for failure in tho future is apparent. There is no capital at risk, the 5 per cent and yearly dues cover the expenses, and the members, now increased to 636, got their supplies at an average of 20 per cent, less than they would have to pay elsewhere. A novel branch of .business is the sale of second-hand books and furniture, by which students get pay for their discarded things, instead of throwing them away. ,•
Gen. Ouster's Eat.
Mrs. Custer has presented to Custer Post G. A. R., of Chicago, a hat once worn by Gen. Custer. Sue has recently been made an honorary member of the Post In sending tho hat, she wrote: "Since hearing from you and from Mr. Lenman Hudson last year how much you all prize the red necktie, and how prompt you were to adopt it as a part of your uniform, I have sent to my Michigan home for one of Gen. Custer's large hats, that he wore in many a charge during the war. I think it is no less a part of the costume that became identified with him, than was the Yed tie.— He was the first officer on our side who wore the broad brimmed hat for campaigning. and he also first adopted the blue flannel shirt with the broad collar —having bought one early in the war from a gunboat on the James River."
Dogs, under favorable conditions, live to an age much beyond that which is usually assigned to them. Mr. R. Cordiner. of Oxford, England, knows a black retriever aged 31, and there is no doubt that others are acquainted with like aged individuals of the canine species.
10 gtTH
stock the New York Winter market are most of them well-educated Scotchmen or Englishmen, many of whom have brought their business to a success financially.
The tight-trousers era has developed such a tremendous crop of thin-h'gged young men that it is almost impossible to believe that any other kind is raised in this country.
SWINDLERS ABROAD. If anyone has represented that we are if any way interested in any bogus bitter*of stuff with the word "Hope''in their name, cheating honest folks, or that we will pay any of their bills or debts, they are frauds and swindlers, and the rieUma should punish them. We deal in and pay only the bills for tbe genuine Hop Bitters, the purest and best medicine on earth.
HOP BITTERS
MANRFACRUBIWO
Co.
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MATT.
An Inland Sea of Considerable Magnitude Far to the West of Albert Hyaasa-
The existence of another equatoria' lake in central Africa, far to the west of Albert Nyanza, rumors of which have reached Europe from time to time since Sir Samuel Baker's first journey, is again reported. Mr. F. Lnpton, governor of the Egyptian province of Bahr-el-Ghazel, writes from his station, Dehm Siber, on the 27th of July, to the effect that Rafal Aga, a servant of his. on his return from an expedition toward the Welle told him that he and some of the members of the expedition had seen a great lake in the country of the Barboa, a powerful copper-colored tribe, clothed with a peculiar grass cloth (of which Mr. Lupton sends a specimen in his letter). Mr. Lupton gathered that the position of the lake was in about latitude 3 degrees 40 minutes north, and longitude 23 degrees east and that it was quite as large as Victoria Nyanza.— When the weather permits the Barboas cross the lake in large open boats made out of a single tree, the voyage taking three days and they obtain from the people living on the western side (their own country being east of the lake) articles of European manufacture, such as blue beads and brass wire. Mr. Lupton adds Rafal Agra's own account oi his route to the lake. Started from Dehm Bekeer, marched six days southwest to Zeriba-el-Douleb, then foui days south-southwest to Bengler fout days southwest to Zeriba Warrendema six days southwest by west to the BahrMakwar, which he crossed after visiting several very larore islands inhabited by a people who call themselves Basango. The Makwar is called by the Arabs Bahr-el-Warshal, and joins the Welle, but is a much larger stream both flow in a west-southwest direction. Aftei crossing the Makwar Rafal marched ten days south-southwest and reached the house of the 'sultan' of Barboa, by whon\ he was well received. The lake is situated four days' march to the southwest of the sultan's residence. Mr. Lupton concludes by saying: "I feel I should not be doing right in keeping dark this information, which, when looked into by competent persons, may throw some light on the famous Congo and Welle rivers. I believe that the Welle flows into the lake discovered by Rafal Aga and that the stream which is said to flow out of the lake probably joins the Congo." Mr. Lupton is engaged in preparing a map of his province and was about to start in a few days on a journey to a country called Utubungu, some fifteen days' march to the west of Dehm Siber.
Why He Paid.
A certain Miehigander sa}'s the Free Press who had long succeeded in dodgi ing a certain creditor, was a few weeks aero cornered in the office of a mutual friend, and the creditor began: ••Sir! you have owed me $25 for a year past and now I want to know what you are going to do about it? "Well, I'll think it over.
4,There
Will be no thinking it over,
my friend. If you don't pay me I'll sue you." "You will?" "I will, sir!" ,, "Then you'll bo certain to get a judgment. The party which brings the suit always gets the verdict before a justice. Knowing this, you will take advantage of me?" "I will." .. "Very well. Now, then, I deny that I owe you a dollar." "You do?" "I do, sir, but iu case you want to borrow $25 of me for a week here it is." "I don't care whether you call it paying or lending, so long as I get my money," replied the creditor, and he made out a receipt in full and took the money.
At the end of the week he was asked to return the loan, but laughed at the absurdity of the request. Suit was begun to recover it, the mutual friend used as a witness, and tho plaintiff" received judgment in his favor and had a clean receipt to show for the debt
How to Turn a Bird Eed.
I
"I'm going to let you into a great secret ana one that I am certain is not
known to the majority of bird dealers. In 1670, Emile Porden, a Frenchman, opened an aviary in Paris and made a specialty of dealing in canaries. He had an enormous cage, which held nearly a thousand of the feathered songsters, whose combined warbling must have been something terrific. Strange to say, every bird was of a deep red color, and the novelty of the thing attraoted attention. The Frenchman did not hesitate to show the young birds in their natural feathers, and old ones gradually changing their color from yellow to red, but he refused to divulge how the change was brought about Red canary birds became the rage in Parisian society, and Porden was enabled to retire In a few years with quite a respectable fortune. In 1878 the old Frenchman died, but on his deathbed he told how he had produced red canaries. And how do you think? Simply by seasoning tbeit food very highly with cayenne peppet just before and during the molting season. When the plumage appears it is red instead of yellow. The health of the bird is not injured in the least by the treatment in fact it is improved.
A High-Toned Lawyer.
Two ladies were conversing about matters and things in general, when one of them, Mrs. Stuckup, asked: "Haven't you got a brother in New Orleans who is a criminal lawyer?" "Yes, he practises law, but he never defends any criminals unless they belong to the first families. He has to be satisfied with their social status before he will consent to take their cases."
•(•"Evil dispositions are early shown." Evil tendencies in our systems are to be watched and guarded against on find yourself getting bullous, heavy, mouth foul, eyes yellow,
If
V(
bead heavy, kidneys disoided, symptons tormenting you, take at once a of Kidney-_Wort. It is nature's assistant don't wait abv'U
Palaoe Oar Porters' Earnings. A Pullman car porter has been telling a St Louis reporter about the earnings of the employes on those cars. Drummers are liberal, young married men are good, women are very bad, millionaires worst. "I had a sad illustration of that a couple of weeks ago. Mr. Gillette, a millionaire mine owner (traveling with Bonanza Maekey), gave me $1. He said, with a terrible stutter, 'It was all the ch-ch-ange he had.' It was a terrible blow, but I went in and Mr. Mackey out for his brush, fumbled around among a lot of keys and finally fished out 50 cents! By jinks! I was mad, but I couldn't say anything. It's so with most rich men. There's Governor Tabor he's jfbout as good as most of 'em, but he never gives me more than $1. There's Senator Jones he went to Deming once with me and gave me $5. On the other hand: Senator Fair, who is fifty times richer than Jones, they sav, came up once, and he gave me $1. lie was nice about it, though—spoke so kind, and told me not to spend my money foolishly. Politicians, when they get money, are mighty good. There's Dorsey, tbe star route man. When he goes down to his ranch he always gives me a handful of •ilver—don't stop to count it." The worst of all are old ladies who want bags and parcels carried, but never give aught but thanks in those, however, they are usually generous.
How She Loved Him.
"How she must have loved him." As Myrtle Redingote spoke these words softly to George W. Simpson a blush of maiden modesty flamed for an instant across her pure young face, and disappeared silently behind the tiny pink pars that stood like pigmy sentinels on a battlement of rose-tinted flesh, soft and warm, and with beautiful curves whose dimpled outlines would have made even an anchorite resign. George had been telling her that beautiful story of the Princess of olden times who, when her lover was stricken down by a poisoned arrow, knelt by his side, and with her own ruby lips drew from the wound the fatal element. When he had finished, the girl gave utterance to the words with which this chapter opens. And then, for an instant, silence fell between them.
George was the first to speak. "If I were wounded by a poisoned arrow, darling, would you emulate the example of the Princess?"
The girl's form shook with a sudden tremor, and her head fell upon his shirt front. "I could not do it," she sobbed through her tears. "Why not?" asked George. "Do not press me for an answer," replied the girl. "But I must know," he says, in low, agonized tones. "Then," she murmurs, pressing him still more closely to her, "you are from Kentucky, and I do not care to catch the delirium tremens.''— Chicago Tribune.
v. ,," V, v.,
IT IS JUST AS CHEAP. It is just as cheap and a great deal Cheaper to keep well tnan to remain in a state of ill health. You don't see sensi\blej intelligent women stand back and hug their prejudices when a remedy for relieving female diseases is brought to their notice. No, sir! They try it first and pass their opinins afterwards. Every bottle of Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock and Sarsaparilla sold to a woman will prove its merits as a reliever of those painful disorders incidental to female life. Try it
Decisions in Commercial Law. A general charge for work and labor of a mechanic, without any specification but that of time, cannot be supported by evidence of an entry on a book.
A railroad company made a check to the order of its assistant treasurer A, for more than its balance, and the bank certified it and charged it to the company's account three days later in in an action against the company, an attachment was issued and served on the bank to reach the deposit a ccount. After this A opened an account with the bank and deposited the certified check to his own credit, and he also made other deposits, the property of the company, and then made his individual checks on the amount, which were given, as the bank had good reasons to believe, to pay the just debts of the company. In this case, Bills vs. National Park Bank, the New York court of appeals, in June, decided that the attachment was good as against the bank, for the certification was not an absolute payment of the deposit account of the company, and the bank cannot defend itself by showing the pavment of the check to one who did not hold it in good faith, but who, in fact, held it for the use of tho company.
Counterfeit Presentments,
There is a man named Pruden, who is one of the clerks at the white house. Hia face has become familiar to a portion of the public from the fact that he always brings to congress snch messages as the president sends. In Abner's beer garden, back of the post-of-fice department, tb£re is a sort of head waiter or first lieutenantof beerbringers who wears little side whiskers and looks just like Pruden. He hits an air like Pruden, too, and when he puts down a
ge
lass of beer before me, I always fancy is about to say in a grand tone: "A message from the president of the United States." He reminds me of the white waiters of the Fifth Avenue hotel in New York. They are compelled to shave the upper lip, whatever other beard they may wear, and when I was there a year ago, I was perplexed with resemblances which I could not help getting mixed with realities. The counterpart of Chief Justice Waite brought QS
breakfast one morning, and at dinner our order was taken by a second Dr. Standiford. Herbert Spencer brought in supper.—Washington Correspondent Denver Tribune.
^A
LADY
pU
u, lake at once a few dost great Use it ss an advance-guard— down ride. Read
writes: "Painful menstrua
tion was tbe bane of my life. I dreaded those feelings of bearing down and that pain in the sides and lions. Of late I got in tbe habit of using Dr. Guysott's Yellow Dock snd Sarsaparilla. It goes right to the spot, gives me strength and free* me from ail pain. I think it is {worth its weight in gold."
CONQUEROR
«f Ml KIDNEY MSEASES.
BEST
KIDNEY and LIVER MEDICINE
METER KNOWN TO FAIL. "I had suffered twenty years with severe diseases of the kidneys before using Hunt's Remedy two days I was relieved, and am now well.'. JOSHUA TUTHILL. "My physicians thought that I was paralyzed on one side. I was terrible afflicted with rheumatism from 1869 to 1880. I was cured by Hunt's Remedy.
STEPHEN Q. ASON.
"My doctor pronounced my case Brtghfs Diseases, and told me that' I could live only forty-eight hours. I then took Hunt's Remedy, and was speedily cured."
M.GOODSPEED.
"Having suffered twentyyears with kidney disease, and efriployed various physicians without being relieved, I was then cured by Hunt's Remedy." SULLIVAN FENNER. '•I have been greatly benefitted by the use of Hunt's Remedy. For diseases of the kidneys and urinary organs there is nothing superior." A. D. NICKERSON. "I can testify to the virtue of Hunt's Remedy in kidney diseases from actual trial, having been muchbenefltted thereby."
REV. E.G. TAV LOR.
"I was unable to arise from bed from an attack of kidney disease. The doctors could not relieve me. I was finally completely cured by using Hunt's Remedy."
FRANK R. DICKSON.
"I have suffered extremely with kidney disease after using Hunt's Remedy two days, I was enabled to resume business."
GEO. F. CLARK.
One trial will convince. For sale fry atl druggists. Send for pamplets to
HUNT'S REMEDY CO., Providence, IS. I.
Prices, 75 cents and $1.25.
KIDNEY-WORT
FORTHEPERMANENTCUREOF
CONSTIPATION.
Ko other dimMli so prevalent la tlUa oountry Constipation, and no remedy has over equalled the oelebiatod KXDX7XTWQ&T aa a onre. Whatever tho oaoae, however obstinate the oaae, thla remedy wiU overcome it.
B|| BA THIS diet wing BOBrlliEiOi plaint la very apt to be oomplicated with oonetlpation. Kidney* Wort atrengthena tho weakened parte and quiokly euraa aU kinda of PUea even when phyatolaaa and medicine* havebeftnvffciled. tWII you have either of theee troublea pmcTTn USE |5ru5»s55sn
KIDNEY-WORT
DESTROY mm
NEST.
I HAD OUSTHJ
I
If your child is alek with flashed checks, give Rlnehart's Worm LMMKM. If your child** breath amelle buU, give Blnehart'e Worm Loaeiurm. ir your cblUt pfteka hlanoae, or *rl«a his Jrth, give Bliwhart'i Worm Loacnm.
If your child Is nervoua, fflretftel, or has lercr, »ive Blnehartl Worm Loaenmu Be rare you get RlneluurtX they are the nlj- kind that destroy the Worm We—.
RGAGG,
9
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55
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