Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 13, Number 51, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 16 June 1883 — Page 3
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*.
1
Portland. Ore., is to have this year a §1,000,000, bridge and railroad workshops costing $5,000,000.
Princess 8ara Winnemncca, of the Piutes, thinks that Indian Agents ought to be army officers.
The returns from NoVa Scotia mines lor 1882 show that 1,365,811 tons of coal were produced, 42,135 tons of iron, and 14.107 ounces of gold.
The eight railroad lines having their termini In Boston have carried over forty million passengers the past year, with only eight fatal
One of the latest Parisian schemos is a tunnel between that city and Rouen, to be over seventy-threo miles long and oosting $25,000,000.
Glass images of Hindoo deities are manufactured in Birmingham and shipped to India for worship by tho devout ldolators of that country.
The two last descendants of Amerigo Vospuoci are living in poverty in Italy. They have petitioned the Italian Government for a pension of $10 per month.
A Cincinnati dry-goods man won't advertise because so many other dealers do. He hasn't made a dollar for the last ten years because so many other dealers have.
Yon ask what a libel suit is. A libel suit, my son, is where a man pays a lawyer $10,000 in order to get $1,000 out of another man he thought was a fool and is now sure of it.
Tho ashes of Geo. Whitfield, the famous preacher, repose beneath the old Soutli Church, Newburyport, in which venerable New England edifice he delivered his last sermon.
England has two good agricultural colleges suited for Uie education of the more wealthy class, but beyond the reach of the great bulk of tenant farmers.
Timothy Keating, 80 years of age, has been in the employ of a gas oompany in Philadelphia forty-seven years, and* in all that time has not lost a day.
The discouraged silver-miners of Virginia City, Nov., regard the return of a pair of gray eagles to one of the basalt cliffs of Mt Davidson as a good omen. They had been away since 186ft.
Mrs. Elisabeth Stone has given a large lot of land in Washington and $25,000 in money for the erection and maintenance of a home for needy widows of tho Protestant Episcopal Church.
New England Baptists propoee to establish a Summer watering place at Crescent Beach, on the shore of Long Island, about seven miles west of New London.
Washington is not the only city in the wnei An parlors of homes as well as at the club
'*-4.
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
E A N 3
Cornell University is to have a professor of physical culture. Philadelphia has two base-ball clubs [composed of colored women.
James A. Harris, the orange king of Florida received $63,000 net for lib orange crop this year.
In Hudson, Columbia connty, N. Y. is the largest apple orchard in the world —30,000 trees on 800 acres.
The dressy young man, to be in tone now, must have a narrow stripe of braid down the side of his pantaloons.
Jeweled bracelets, worn on the left foreleg, are the latest novelty for aristocratic dogs.
A white squash can't be sold in Boston and a vellow squash can't be sold in New York.
Some unpatriotic scoundrel has daubed paint upon the Soldier's Monument in Saratoga.
Syringing
apple trees with a weak
solution of soap and carbolic acid will kill lice. In twenty-three years the wheat acreage of Colorado has increased from ten acres to fifty thousand.
accidents.
From a flock of sheep purchased three years ago for $200, a fanner has realized $2,100, his farm 200 lambs.
"ulpepp X), and
er, Va. has on
The American Tract Society reports rthat it has distributed 77,000.000 pages Of evangelical literature in the past year.
The importation of cattle from Europe to thia country promises to be more extensive this year than in previous seasons.
It is the belief of the Gentiles in Utah, that within the last year plural marriages have been more numerous than ever before.
In Fiance and England a scaffolding is erected complete in advance of the building a practice which much diminishes the c.:anoe of an accident.
Mrs. Booth, mother of tho actor, lives in Philadelphia. She has a kind, sad face, and #he loves to talk to her birds.
In view of the immonse number manufactured, tho wonder is what becomes of all the pins, doctors and lawyers.
August
Bartholdi, who designed the
statue of "Liberty Enlightening tho World," for New Xork harbor, is almost fifty yours old.
ere men are rained by ^wkar And the ruin is worked!
country plaring parlors rooms and at hotels.
Herbert Herkomer, the great English artist, is described as "a lithe young man, with ooal-black whiskers ana smooth black hair, parted in the center."
A colored mother dreamed beneath the stars of Geoqfia that she was beating a pone. When she rose next morning she found her baby dead. The oor-
oner said that •wj k»e to bodj intentions of the framers of the act was broken. 'ate fully carried ont it will effect a sav**8hall we wear a aQk hatf was the lag yearly to these farmers of fully ooesubject of a lecture by a Brooklyn 41- fourth of the Irish rental, and wiu, it is vine recently. That Is a qoestkm believed, give them an eqoi which no man can answer. Erery- farms equal to half the thing depends on which way the •tovvntoa.
"There is not a cuspidor in the whole of the House of Commons, or in &ny of the hotels of England," says Joseph Mr. Cook. No WQnder Americans return to to
their country and say there's no place like home. A gentleman's card is engraved in small, distinct script with the name in the center
and
address in the right hand
corner a member of a club may have the name of the club engraved in the left hand corner.
According to the United States Commissioner or Education, $61,475,000 has been given by private individuals for educational purposes in this country within ten years. This does not include the recent gift of Slater and others, amounting to $8,000,000.
An Oil City man, who lost a leg in the army, settled the pension agent by saying he never intended to apply for a pension, as he bad been more than renumerated for his loss by his wife eloping with another man while he was in the service.
In 1823 Daniel Baun, a 20-year-old
Jently
routh of Huntingdon, Pa., became vioinsane and was chained in a room, from which be has never emerged in all these sixty years. In all this time his two bachelor brothers have taken care of him.
Officers and clerks of the Railway Mail Service are to be required to write the names of States in full in directing mail matter. It would be a good thing if the public would follow the rule, especially where the abbreviations are nearly the same or liable to be misleading.
Lightning struck a Florida man the other day in the side, ran down his leg to the knee, forked and burned two streaks to the sole of his foot. After leaving him it hunted up a can of powder, which it exploded and then knocked a
sick
man out of bed. The
latter found himself cured of the chills when he recovered from the surprise and the other fellow is none the worse for the lightning trick. The house, however, is a total wreck from the powder explosion.
A Great Magnetic Storm..
The next great display of sun-spots accompanies by auroras and magnetic disturbance—if we except one or two of minor importance, and a remarkable one seen in Europe, which will be de scribed hereafter—occurred in Novem ber last, culminating on the 17th ol that month in one of the greatest masr netio storms on record, which crippled the telegraphs almost all over the civ ilized world. In Europe fine auroras were observed on the 12th, 18th, 14th, 15th, 16th, 17tli and 19th, accompanied bymore or less magnetic disturbance. During that time a tremendous sunspot, exceeding in size tho largest of the April spots, was advancing from the edge of the disk to the center. In this country the principal auroral displays wore on the nights of the 17th and 19th, and the chief force of the magnetic storm was felt on the 17th. On that day a storm of rain and snow prevailed over most of the Union, and simultaneously with this storm there raged hurricane of magnetic forces. The effects were similar to those witnessed during the April storm, but more in tense. As in April, some wires were worked without batteries, while other* could not be worked at all. Cable com munication was interrupted. Somt startling phenomena ocourred. Sparks of fire leaped from the wires and in struments. In the West, switch-boards were burned and keys melted. Operators received severe" shocks. Practical telegraph men said they had nevet known such a powerful disturbance ol the magnetic elements. In the evening, when the sky cleared at Chicago, a most magnificent' sight was beheld in the heavens. The brilliancy of the aurora far exceeded that of the April display.
A singular feature of the aurora, which was also noticed in Europe, was a splendid luminous arch spanning the sky from east to west, and nearly through the zenith. Another feature that added brilliancy to the spectacle was the variety of color visiole. The prevailing tints were rose-color and green, but in some places streamers and
[ight
atches
of violet, yellow and orange were seen. On the night of the 19th and morning of the 20th, the sky having cleared here, a splendid aurora was seen in New York. The magnetic disturbance also continued.— "Recent Magnetic Storms and Sun-Spots," by Garrett P. Serviss, in Popular Science Monthly.
Wanted Excursion Bates.
The Cincinnati Drummer says the following is gospel truth: Good morning," said a bard looking customer to Colonel Dave Edwards at the Bee Line office the other day "air you the railroad man?" "Yes, sir. What can I do for yon?" replied the Colonel. 'I don't know as you can do nnthin', but I jest want to see if I couldn't git a deduction on travelin' expenses." "Got some people to go on onr line?" "Well, yes, sort o1 like.'* "How manvP" "There's five of 'em in the lot." "Where do they go? "Pennsyhranv. "Where are they "Well, they're down to the deepo. Yon see as how I've been ont in Injianny a takin' up the remains of my wife's mother, my old man and three ol oar kids, and thought if you'd give me excursion rates, for the party, Fd Jest as leef patternise your road as not, and save a dollar or two on express charges. Express rates is powerful high, and I hain't lost my family pride enough yit to want'er send 'em by freight"
Hie Colonel held a consultation with the boys in the back office and the excursion party was made up.
One year's operation of the Gladstone he was confident he could kiss ber land act, has kept in the pockets of the getting through the tunnel if the Irish farmers some $30,000,000. When
ity in their fSS slipls
mm
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVENING MAIL,
Whittier Burns His Lettem ANew Yorker who recently visited
Whittier at Danvers says in a letter a friend: "Mr. Whittier usually leaves Boston for Amesbnrv about the 1st of April and then retires Danvers for the summer. His countr. me is abont a mile from the railroad ition. I found the poet in a small room tired from the mam part of the house andsurrounded by his books and papers. His tall form is slightly bowed with age, but he retains all his old-time courtesy to strangers. He alluded to his correspondence, which was so large as to make irksome drafts upon his time and patience. 'Since Longfellow and Emerson died,' said lie, 'Dr. Holmes and I have received much of their fugitive correspondence, which, added to our own, sometimes proves a serious burden. I receive letters daily from Portland, Me., to Portland, Ore., from misses in their teens, to boys in college. They send me their verses with a request that I attend to the publication and remit them the proceeds from time to time. The most, however, under various dials, entreat my autograph, a request would grant more willingly if I knew them. As to my health, I cannpt complain I have never been able to do protracted work, owing to severe neuralgic pains in my head, rrom which I have suffered since I was a boy. Unfortunately. I have promised considerable work to the publishers, and this promise, unperformed, weighs like an incubus upon my spirits.' In discussing the recently published correspondence of Mrs. Carlyle and of Carlyle and Emerson, Mr. Whittier said: 'Carlyle seems to have had none of the milk of human kindness in his veins. His letters show aside of his character which none of his intimate friends suspected. It would have been better for bis reputation if they had never been published. In fact so strongly have they affected myself that I have set to work and destroyed the major part of my correspondence, covering a period of over fifty years, lest it should be published after my death and bring suffering to any. I wish all the letters that I nave written could be treated in the same manner.'
Proposed Change of New York's Hame. "Now or never," we may say with regard to the final controversy as to whether we shall continue to oall the metropolis by a name intensely provincial or adopt the beautiful name given to this island by its native lords and owners. If ever the change is to be made from "New York" to "Manhattan," it must be in view of the inevitable consolidation of New York and Brooklyn, which has become a more and more prominent topic of talk since the recent magnificent Detrothal of the two cities. There is no reason why the names of "New York" and "Brooklyn" should not survive the union of the two cities under the name of "Manhattan, just as the old local names survive in London—as, for instance, Kensington with 283,153 inhabitants, Lambeth with 208,342, Marylebone with 159,254, and Islington with 218,778. For the 600,000 people of Brooklyn to accept the name of 1
Jew
York in place of that to which
they are attached, would bo to turn the bridge into a highway for the conquest of Brooklyn by New York, the conquerors imposing the name of their own city as a permanent badge of superiority and subjugation.
Let the names of Brooklyn and New York remain in common usage, endeared by peculiar associations and memories, and let the much more beautiful and fitting name of "Manhattan" covet the whole of the great metropolis that shall extend from "Manhattan Beach" hetic designation—to the highlands of Westchester, the Switzerland of our great city, that is to be the pride of the continent and the envied of all the rest of the world.—N. Y. Mail and. Express.
A Signal Defeat,
'Are you the man who said I owed everybody and paid noneP" demanded a little man of a very tall one, as they met on a Fulton ferryboat yesterday.
Wasn't it true?" asked the tall man, laconically. "Don't you owe everybody who will trust you. and have you paid me the ten dollars I loaned you a year agoP" •But that don't say I can't pay!" growled the little man, seeing that the big one didn't weaken. "The way I heard it, you said I couldn't pay, and that is untrue!" "I don't believe you can pay a cent on the dollar!" retorted the tall man, contemptuously.
I can't, can't IP" roared the little man, enraged beyond his self-control by the coolness of his antagonist 'Tve got friends I have, and don't you forget it! I can borrow money enough in an hour to get out of debt in a minute! Understand that!"
And the big man walked away, while the bystanders smiled softly at his defeat—Brooklyn Eagle.
May Mashes January.
The veteran editor of a popular journal of Central Kentucky came down (says the Cincinnati News-Journal) to see that the dramatic festival goes off all right. A party of lively and lovely bicegrass belles were on the train, and of course he was soon in their midst, and in less than an hour he was flirting desperately with the prettiest of thelot, she mischievously encouraged the venerable gentleman's advances. It is the rule, on approaching a tunnel, for the brakeman to light up the car, and on nearing the one at Grant's Bend, Craddock went oat to the brakeman and begged of him to omit that duty for once. Failing to persuade the man, be grew anxious and eager, and finally offered $5 to back his sst The brakeman became curious insisted en knowing his purpose, when Craddock confessed that there was girl in the car that he would freely jive $5 to kiss just oooe, and wfaflto be knew she wouldn permit it in the light.
were not Hi. The brakeman was obdurate, and so the amorous old sinner did not kiss his miss, but missed his kiss.
Tbe insuraaoe statisticians now mj that men live two years lotiger than they did thirty years ago, and wo—g jears and four months
A WOHDERFUL DREAM.
An Incident in Beal Life Disooimts Fiction.
"One of the most remarkable occurrences I ever heard of was related to me this morning," remarked a State street broker yesterday. "I have heard of a good many wonderful dreams, but this nas some features abont it which border on the marvelous." "What is the story?" queried another broker, whose business was apparently dull enough to allow plenty of time to study the miraculous, since he had almost forgotten how to buy and sell. "Well, replied the first speaker, "I was told to-day by a leading City Hall official, whose trustworthiness is undoubted, that a daughter of the late Harvey Jewell (who was so well and favorably known in Boston in legal and business circles, and was a brother of the late Marshall Jewell) had recently a very queer and unusual experience, and one calculated to make a deep impression upon the strongest mind, me weeks ago she had a dream in which she distinctly saw an undertaker drive up to her residence with a hearse. He was a peculiar looking man. His shaped nose, which looked as it had been broken and was twisted to one side, gave his countenance an expression which would have made identification easy and certain. He came directly towards her, and, as he said: •Are you all ready P' she suddenly awoke. "The dream seemed a peculiar one, bnt did not attract very much attention in the household until, a few days or a week later, it was repeated with exactly the same characteristics, down to the 'Are you all ready?' and the awakening. "And now comes the strangest part of the story. Some little time afterwards the young lady was visiting in Cincinnati, and went to an apartment hotel to call upon a friend. She stepped into an elevator with others, and was startled to hear: 'Are you all ready P' from the man in charge. She was still more startled on looking around and beholding the exact picture of the man of the dream, even to the misshapen nose. It made such an impression upon her mind that she requested to be let out of the elevator at the first landing. She stepped out, and the other occupants went out at the next landing, and the man remained. The elevator machinery gave out suddenly the car went up. and then down, and the man was instantly killed. "You have all neard of the warnings of dreams. All I can say is this is the first well-authenticated case I have ever'' known, and if it does not border on the supernatural I do not know what does. It was a good way to restore one's peace of mind, but a most remarkable sequel." "Send it to the Olobe," said a listener "it may bring out many somewhat similar eases from among the thousands who read that popular paper."—Boston Olobe. .....
pn SO
How a Woman Uses a Hammer. The Boston Herald is responsible for the following description pf the way a woman wields a hammer:
She wants to hang a picture on the wall. She gets a nail, a hammer, and a tall chair to stand upon, and calmly surveys the situation.
Then she measures distance and scratches a spot, always an inch too high or too/low, and paepares for action.
She takes the nail in the left hand and the hammer in the right, and gently taps, like the drum accompaniment of a musical box.
Then she lays herself out for a big blow, raises her arm and strikes, and yells like a captured Comanche maiden on the boundless prairie.
She goes about the rest of the morning with her thumb done up in a breadpoultice. Yet she never learns from experience.
The next time she wants to drive a nail in anything she will hit it exactly in the same place.
JCaking those Things We Strike at and Don't Hit, The iron is received from the rolling mills in sheets from three inches to twelve inches wide, and fronA three feet to nine feet in length, the thickness varying, according to the kind of work into which it is to be made, from oneeighth to one-thirty-second of an inch. These sheets are all cut in about thirty
ese
inch pieces, and by immersion in acid oleaned off the hard outside flintv scale. They are then chopped into strips of a width corresponding to the length of the nail or tack required. Supposing the tack to be cut is an eight-ounce carpet tack, the strip of iron, as chopped and ready for the machine, would be almost eleven-sixteenths of an inch wide and thirtv inches long. This piece is placed firmly in the feeding apparatus, and by this arrangement carried between the knives of the machine.
At each revolution of the balance wheel the knives cut off a small piece from tbe end of this plate. The piece cut off is pointed at one end, and square for forming the head at the other. It is then carried between two dies by the action of tbe knives, and tbe dies, coming together, form the body of the tack under the head. Enough of tbe iron projects beyond the face of the dies to form the head, and while held firmly by them, a lever strikes this projecting fece into a round bead, litis, as we ave said before, is all done during one revolution of the wheel, and tbe knives, soon as the tack drops from the machine, are ready to cut off another piece.
These machines are run at the rate of about 250 revolutions per minute. Tbe shoe nail machines, for cutting headless shoe nails, are run at about 600 revolutions per minute, and cut from three to five mils at each revolution.—MeeManicol Engineer.
Tbe oyster growers on the coast of France have discovered that oyster shells which are thrown back into the sea produce thirty to forty fold in two year*. The theory is that the taeh
young oysters at-
thcnaeiiw to the old shells in to any other obfect oath*
team ad fidtkftal gnrdlaa of «v
koMM sad property nwud from IflUfttDSMfc pttflo rat popular and well-known member of oar police force, who has performed doty twelve years at the Union BJS. Depot, on Exchange Place, in Proridenoe, R.I., gives his unsolicited testimony. Hear him:— "1 hare been dreadfully troubled with disease of the kidneys and liver daring the put six months at times I vu so severely afflicted that I was unable to stand on my feet, as my feet and lower parts of my legs were very badly swollen my urinary organs were in a dreadful condition, my blood was in a wretched state, and it had become so impoverished and circulated so poorly that my hands and feet would be cold and numb and so white as to appear lifeless. I could not rest nights, but was so distressed all over that 1 could not lie still in bed, but would keep turning and rolling from one side to the other all night, so that 1 would feel more tired and exhausted in tbe morning than when I went to bed. My condition became so serious that I was obliged to stop work, and for thirty days 1 was unable to be on duty. I oonsultea the best doctors, and tried the numerous medicines and so-called cures, but rapidly grew worse, and was in a sad condition every way when a long-time valued friend of mine, prominent in this city in a large express company, urged me to try Hunt's Kennedy, as he had known of wonderful cures effected by it. Upon his representation 1 obtained two bottles of the Remedy and commenced taking it as directed, and greatly to my surprise in less than twentyfour hours I commenced to feel relieved. I was in an awful condition when 1 began to take the Remedy, and had no faith In it therefore, when 1 found almost immediate relief, even in one day's use of it, my heart was made glad, and 1 assure you I continued to take the Remedy and to improve constantly frcm day to day. I took it with roe on my trip to Maine, for I was bound to have with me all the time, and the result is that I improved speedily all the time I was away and ever since my arrival home, which was several weeks ago, I have been on duty every day. I feel first-rate, and the swelling of hand, feet, and legs have disappeared, and the terrible backache, which used to bother me more than ail the rest, troubles me no more, and I sleep splendidly nights, and surely have very excellent and forcible reasons for speaking in praise of Hunt's Remedy. for it has made a new man of me. I don know what I should have done without Hunt's Remedy it is the best medicine that I ever took, audi very gladly recommend it to all who are afflicted with kidney or liver disease, or diseases of the urinary organs.
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