Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 14, Number 3, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 14 July 1883 — Page 3
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THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
8und*y ia Hew York (Jity. A recent nnmber of the New York Tribune contains an interesting article, showing how Sunday is passed in tlx great city of New York, with its populntion now numbering a million and quarter of people
The church membership is given at nearly one-half the population, or 600,000 members, of which 500,000 are b% estimate credited to the Roman Cathofics, but of thia there is no actual enroll merit there are 100,000 enrolled members among the Protestant churches. The Catholics have 190 churches, the Protestant, 310, total 600 churches. Th* Protestants have 866 Snndav schools, and 119,000 scholars attend. Catholic schools not given.
As to Sunday amusements in summer about 75,000 persons leave the city foi excursions into the country and the sea shores. The Germans, of whom there are about 250,000 in the city, visit tht b«'or gardens in largo numbers. Centra! Park receives 10o.)0 visitors on Sun day. Only one or two librnri'* are opet on this day, at which the attendance is alxut 2,000.
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for drunkenness and
other crimes, there is a trilling let up on Sunday the average number of dailj arrests is 198 the average for Sunday if 182. Monday, 227. On Sunday evenings there are a few concert halls anc beer song places open, visited, in tht aggregate, by about ten thousand per sons.
A Yonng Lady on Mustaches. You may ridicule a man's nose, hfo hair, his eyes, his dress, but when yot touch his mustache, he is "right there.1' He think.* more of it than a mother doei of her wayward child, and often there is, to the disinterested observer, just about as much to be admired in the ont as the other.
When in the company of young men 1 have seen them caress their deal mustaches, and tho poor articles looked so weak and fragile that I positively trembled lest they should wear them out before the evening was over.
As the pampered and petted child ol wealth often presents a puny appearance, so the petted idol of ayoung man's ambition is many times but a sickly growth. I have often thought that if Nature ever feels ashamed of any ol her efforts, she must blush to see some of the mustaches of to-day. They seem like a faint suggestion of a hope beyond, but, alas! that hope is nevei realized, and yet tho universal sentiment Is, "Cut off my mustache! 0, yepodal
I'd rather lo»"_»ny bond, by odds."
He Blew the Bugle.
A small party of Austin young men were standing on the corner of Austin Avenue and Kebucea street the other evening. They were curiously examining a bugle belonging to ono of them, and as a stranger came along an animated diseus.sion aroso.
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wish 1 could play on it," said one. ••Play on It!" exclaimed another. "I wish I could mako a noise on it." ••It's a nrettv hard thing to do," observed a third "if you haven't got the hang of the thing just right." "Hard thing to do!" chimed in the stranger, halting, and regarding the party with evident contempt, "whv I cou I'd blow a bugle before I was a foot high." "Well, some bugles are different-from other*." said ouo of the. young men. "(iinnno that bugle," said tho stranger excitedly. It was immediately handed him. anil putting it to his lips he made ouo trial trip. There was a subdued splutter, and then tho stranger commenced a kind of war dance, at tho same time holding his mouth in both hands. "Itreat Cleopatra's Needle!" ho yelled. with tears streaming from his eves. "Who in thunder tilled that mouthpiece with cayenue peoperP I'm small, gentlemen," light ami fragile, but 1 can lick the man who peppered the horn."— 2'exw Sijlings
A Hnsbaad With But One Fault. A woman without a grievance is more lonely than a pelican in Nubia, or a gtill without a mate on a stormy night at tht Karrallone rook?. Yet there are uncomplaining females, gentle as the airs which aw supposed to murmur afl round the groves of Thessaly. or mild as the most insipid California cheese whic^. ever disgraced a churn. Such a one speaking of her husband said: "He is absolutely almost without a fault, except that'he does not realize that sometimes I pine for a little relaxation. In ten yearn he has not taken me to a funeral, and in all that time I haven't had one good square cry at my neighbors' expense." This story is "perfectly reliable, and should furnish a four-sided quadrate meat of reflection to many a father of a family who imagines that he anticipates his partner's every wish.— San Francisco S'rw*-
Mr*. S. P. Sales, wife of a prominent citinen of New Concord, O.. has just applied for a divorce from her husband on tho most strange and singular grounds. She alleges that Mr. Sales holds family worship three Um#s each day. and at every service he selects from the Bible such passages as severely condemn all manner of sinful acta, and then in the presence of her children he hurls reproaches on her, making application of the passages read to her ewe. This manner of thus abusing her by means of the Scriptures is certaiulv the height of refined cruelty, and Mrs. Sales, it is said, asks for a divorce to escape such treatment
A New Haven coroner's jurv, in thrilling language* acqt three fishermen of not helping a dro\r^. e***rade while •had fishing: tind -.* if the man who carriee the shore end of the boat did aot leave the boat till it had pasaed the *eek it would have been impossible for such an to hm*» occurred." This w» McoMpUsbed within eight of Yak College. $
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& Our Glorious Country. There arc old men in Detroit who couldn't, if put upon the witness stand, swear to within thirty days of the time when corn and potatoes should be planted, when grass is ready for mowing, what weather is favorable for wheat, or iudeed any other point about farming, and yet these are the men most solicitous about the weather and the farmer. On the Woodward avenue car yesterday was a pair, and they began:
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••Awful storm, wasn't it?" *,• 2-V: "Yes, terrible." ••Thev say it has ruined the wheat "Don't doubt it, sir. Wheat was just in the right stage to be ruined." "And it has killed the fruit, I presume?" "It probably has. I don't expect to see an apple or peach this season." "Must have rotted the corn?" "Oh, of course. Corn was just in the susceptible state. We shan't have any corn this year." "The farmer must be disc&ttftfjgfcd?" "Entirely so. My hostler was telling me that the milkman told him that the owner of the dairy had seen a farmer who said he should plow up his orchard and try to raise a crop oi late potatoes." "Indeed! Still, if we have a late fall, so that wheat can hold on to October, it may ripen." "Barely possible. I understand that the hay crop fcas been frozen up." "Do tell! Seems to mo that our live stock could be taught to relish frozen hay, but I dunno. I think we may confidently expect a drought" "And a famine." "And those will probably be followed by an epidemic which will sweep the countrv."
With this they settled back to enjoy themselves, anl neither one betrayed the least interest when a passenger rose up and inquired: "Won't one of you gentlemen please arrange for judgment day to come between this and the 1st of JulvP I don't want to live in this vain world over six weeks longer!"—Detroit Free Press.
iegraph or Telephone.
Despite the fact that recent experiments have demonstrated the possibility of telephoning over long circuits, it is to be uoubted if the instrument will be used otherwise than locally. It is too sensitive to induction, to atmospheric electricity, and to grounds for circuits exceeding afew miles in length. The exerimehts have been tried under the not under the worst conditions, and through a complete metallic circuit in other words, a double line. It is hardly possible for the telegraph business of two'large cities to be conducted by telephone by tho senders of messages themselves, for five hundred wires might not suffice to prevent a block in busy hours, and merchants could not and would not wait
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To operate telephones as tho telegraph is now used would be equally impractible. Even wero the instruments as little liablo to disorder as the Morse, the greater danger of errors would weigh against them. There is no system of signals as clear as the present Morse code as interpreted by the "sounder." Each letter of a word is given, and ordinarily err in the recor sound of a word consonants, which the operator receives, and a mistake can easily happen even under the best conditions. It is to be doubted, too, if the rapidity of transmission by telephone, wiiere the message had to be written down at tho receiving station, would oven approximate that oi the Morse system. Proper names, scientific terms, and phrases in a foreign language, etc., would have to be carefully spelled out, and even then would fall wide of accuracy.
By tho Morse system good operators will recoive at the rate of forty-five words a minute, which is almost the limit of rapid penmanship, and will often take a 2,000 word message without once interrupting the sender. The lines, too, will work in the heaviest weather, and are only interfered with by serious electrical storms, or by actual accident to tho wires. Again, by the quadruplex system, four messages cau go at once over one wire, while the long distance telephone requires two wires for one message. All in all, there seems to be but little prospect of the present series of experiments resulting in a practical good, however gratifying from a scientific standpoint—N. Y. Sun.
Plantation Pleasantries.
Ef it's a sin ter b'leve dat its wrong ter pay stout young swells two dollars a day ter *ponge 'roun' and beg money ftir de church from men dat perspires ten hours a day fur fifty cents, an has families tor support, I 'specfully ax ter be 'memIK?red in ver prars.
I ain't 'posed ter tfese voung doctors 'sperimentin' wif dead folks, but I dunno but itmout be'visible to stop em fum projec'in wif de live uus.
Who ain't hit a big snake on de head 'fo' now an' kilt a little one? No 'lociped peddlers needn't 'ply at dis cabin. When I straddle a saddle it ain't wif de 'spectat-ion ob makin' my ole legs do ae canterin'. Ef I ebber take a fool. notion to ride an' walk at de same time, ycr'll see me harness up a bean pole an' play circus wif de chllun.
When I hear a nigger wif sonn' teet say he like mush 'cause he don't have ter chaw it I feel dat I man enough ter tote all de rails dat he'll split in one dav.
Po' manager dat bankrup' in dis country ef he know bow ter tan dog skins an' make gloves.
Ter can judge de farm by de fiel' dat l*vs next ter de big road. "Ef ver frien' can't stan' prosperity
Tine him to go akurity fur somebody. When a Jew offers ye" a forty-dollar coat fur four dollars mad a ball, ye'd better *tep 'roun' de corner an' ax de doctor what it cos' a man ter git cared of de smallpox *fo' yer jump at das bargain.
N ebber too bad a night for a partv ot a prar
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ye* km *pres« *5 on African min' dat eWry bottle I roun ain't boon' ter hab whisky ia it. re'll less hi de papers "boat Cc genttman# a suicidin demselres.— JCXO* Sifti*#*,
TERRE HAUTE SATURDAY EVEISTDSTG MAIL
Tbey Were Both Mistaken.
Biff! Bing!! Whizz!!f And Bill and John had banged each other in the nose, and were rolling one another about on the floor. When they were separated it was found that John's fist had telescoped Bill's nose, and John's head had been used as a bumper for Bill's foot Just then the friend who introduced them said: "Why, you overgrown boys, don't you rememberP Itwas Jim Peters of Pittsburg, who invented that pistonrod and put it on the "Howler while you were running her." "Well, I'll be danged," said John. "So it was. Bill, here's my hand." "That's all right John, let's water up
And they watered.
Tenant Houses on Farms.
The question of hiring help on larger farms is a vory important one, and aeserves more attention by the agricultural press. There are two ways of looking at the subject the right and the wrong. The farmer who looks upon a hired man in much the same light that he does upon his horses or oxen, as animals out of whioh he is to get the largest possible amount of labor at the least possible outlay, is not taking as high a view of human labor as he should, and will find it difficult to solve the problem of economical help upon his farm. The person who hires should hope to get a man as well as a machine, when he secures the services of any human help.
The best method of securing such help is the important question that is presented to many farmers in all parts of the world. Anything that will tend to make the hired man more interested in his work should be fostered. To this end let us consider the subject of tenant houses.
By tenant houses is understyood dwellings upon the farm in which the hired men, and their families,find comfortable quarters and a pleasant home. In the first place such houses secure married men, and this is an advantage. It is necessary to discourse upon the unsettled condition of the unmarried agricultural labors as contrasted with those that have families depending upon their wages. A single man is, in a certain sense, independent, and too frequently feels that he can do about as ho pleases so long as the last payment for his labor holds out Such men are transitory, and pass from farm to farm, not staying long enough in any one place to get interested in the work. Aside from the roving disposition of the unmarried farm laborer, he has other characteristics that unfit him for filling the important position on large farms. I do not mean this is the case with all, but fre* quently so.—Prairc Farmer.
The Indians of Zoni.
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Along time ago, in the East was the 4calp of a great priest This our fathers nrought with them when they came. It was as full of hairs as my own head. Eight hundred years after they came the world was filled with water, and they went into the mountains for safety. They carried the scalp with them, and each year they sacrificed a hair. More generations ago than I could count on all my fingers, the last hair was sacrificed. Then my people thought the world would turn over, but it didn't turn over. In comparison to that time it was only a few days ago that the ancient Washington came here and asked us to show them the roads to the springs of the Navaioes. We passed over the plains and the hills covered with pines to a canon filled with sage brush and yellow tops and flags- It was a little country like a bowl, and in the center was a spring, and we called it the country oi flags—I mean cat tails. Then the Americans sat down, and thev held a coun cil and built a town—Fort Defiance. The Zunis returned, and the Americans knew whither they returned—here. But I remained behind with them one summer, one winter, and summer again till the ripening of the peaches, and then 1 returned, and the Americans know whither I returned—here. Since the*. the Americans have visited us and have teen as, and have seen us here in fact, as long as we have known the Ameri* only chronicle the eventsof the day all cans, and as long as the Americans have I fae world, as it now does, but bv known its, they have known that we tfe, combined aid of the telegraphy and li^«d here. Dlntomobr will daily present its read* of the most striking
The Panther's Leap.
An amusing incident was noticed at A gentleman of tenth said this to^ me: the Rail wayExposition in this city, says "I was in Canada some years since, the Chicago Herald. While a "whit©- The family had just finished the usual haired mechanic was examining one of slaughter of hogs and a beef, and had the old-time locomotives, a friend ap- hung the beef against a pile of lumber proached and introduced another old to cool off or freeze. A catamount (the man, when, to the astonishment of the Indian name in New England) crept out spectators, both mechanics fell upon in the night to get a piece. In polling each other's necks and nearlv wept down the quarter of beef he upset the Such a hand shaking and a holding off pile of lumber, which came down with and looking at each other. Then they a frightful noise, and he made three treexplainedHat they bad worked togeth-j mendous leaps from the spot I saw cr, thirty years before, on that same the tracks in the snow there was not a identical locomotive. Then they sat down on a bench and for some time regaled each other and all those about them with memories of early railroading in Pennsylvania. They asked for old acquaintances, long dead, or old toddlers like themselves, and told of the escapes they had had from death at the switch or by the broken rail and bridge. At last John mentioned about an improvement he had applied to the old engine, away back in 1858. "John, said Bill in wonder, "you must mean the patent piston-rod that I made—" "That I made." said John. ••ThatI made," said Bill. 't» "i "Why, Bill," said John. "Why, John," said BilL "You must be mistaken." "Never." "You never had a good memory." "Better memory than vou had." "I remember making it as If it were yesterday." "Nonsense you were there, but I made it" "How oan you say such a thing?" "I'm astonished at your stubbornness." "And I at your impudence." "Me impudent? Well, Hike that" "Why do you want to rob me of the creditP" "I don't it's you who are doing the robbing. I'm astonished at you. At your time of life, too." "My time of life? Why, you are old enough to be my father." "And you lived in Mauch Chaunk before the mountains." "Oh, don't make a fool of yourself." "Oh, dry up." hi*'/.!!!
mark between them. I did not measure the distance myself, but a man did, and I believe correctly. The first jump was up-hill, thirty feet the second horizontal to a large rock, fifty-four feet the third, down hill, seventy-two feet"
A leap of thirty feat perpendicular to the branch of a tree, or a forty foot plunge after a fatal shot and falling dead almost at the hunter's feet have been repeated until the veracity is not questioned, and after making all possible allowance, we must acknowledge there is not a creature living whose leap compared with it
The question then comes up. How is this superiority over other animals attained? The key we shall find in the coiled wire spring. This spring, pressed down on a base and liberated, leaps ahead further than any other form. The reason is very simple. Every movement of substance must start from a base, unless moved by an outside force. The coiled wire spring, when pressed down, becomes a solid mass its entire length. When let loose, the^ first turn jumps from its base, which is the second the second adds its force to the first jumping from the third, and so in succession to the last which adds its force after the whole coil is flying from the outside base of all. And this is precisely the case in the panther's leap. The forelegs and head are shot forward from the shoulders, the powerful muscles of the back straighten the curve of the spinal column from the hips, while tho great posterior muscles through the achilles tendon and over the longest lever in the animal economy add the last impetus to a body already shooting ahead like an arrow.—Forest and Stream.
Ladies' Biding Habits,
Ladies' riding habits retain the English stylo, with the narrow scant skirt that is so safe for horsewomen, the closely fitting trousers, and the neat postilion waist Broadcloth is chosen for the bask and skirt, but a more elastic cloth, similar to Jersey cloth, is preferred for the trousers. The colors aro black, dark blue, dark ^reen, brown and olive. The simple little postilion bask is lined with silk, interlined, and well padded to give a full bust It is single-breasted, with hijh standing collar, and the crochetea bullet buttons that fasten it and fasten the tight sleeves are its only trimmings. It has two short darts, and its front edges curve outward on the bust it is only two or/ three inches below the waist line in front, and is still shorter on the hips, until it curves down to the shorn square basque, which has now no pleats, but is linecl and interlined to stiffen it, is left open up the middle seam, and lapped an inch across from left to right at the waistline there is a short side form on each side, and these aro slightly lapped toward the open middle seam two buttons define the waist line a cord edge of braid is tho finish which is preferred to'stitching or galloon. The habit skirt is two and a quarter yards wide at the lower edge, and is sloped perfectly plain at the top to dispense with gathers for this season elastic cloths are used that may be shaped to the figure smoothly, and thus avoid all clumsy flulness in the saddle. The tailor's rule for the length of the habit skirt is to let the front just reach the floor when the wearer stands, and add to this ten inches for the greater lengths. This skirt is peculiarly gored to fit smoothly when the rider is seated in the saddle it is opened on the left side, and there is a pocket in the placket-seam the top is faced instead of having a belt and there is a row of hooks around it to fasten it to loops inside the postilion basque. The edge has a stitched hem two inches wide, and instead of being weighted to keep it down when the horse is in motion, there is now a tape-strap or loop on each side, and when a foot is passed through each of these loops the skirt is well held in place. The trousers may be short Knickerbockers if the wearer likes high boots, but are most usually long the ribbed cloth of which they are made is like stockinet on the wrong side, and is smoother on the right but without luster they are made to button in frant a cord is in the waistband to adjust them properly, and they are strapped under the feet Such habits cost from 990 to $100.—Harper's Basar.
Photography.
Question—"I supose a grei has been made in the art during the past few years?"
Answer—"We think we have made some advance, but then we thought so ten, fifteen and twenty years ago. I can remember when we thought we bad reached the top of the ladder and were doing perfect work, but when we look at that work to-day we are ashamed of it and well may be. The photographs which were taken twenty years ago are old and faded, and cannot be compared in any respect with those of to-day. I suppose twenty years hence those of us who are living then will smile as the^ look at what we now admire in photography. We are constantly making advances in the art, and while tbey are not perhaps so noticeable as those made in other branches of science, they are none the less advances, which become easily apparent when the work of to-day is contrasted with that of a score of years ago. I anticipate still greater advances Yn the future, and I believe the time will come when the press will not
fers with
The latest agony Is for a voung lady»events of the day, taken on the to hare a dog to match her dress. We'd «ad tran»miUed around the worii like to see a crashed strawberry dog— telegraph."—Tran*cr?L ia fact any kind of a eroshed doe* -zr
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Hea*- \i hai tae ^.iailMSP On tu# iirol'i sion regaining the sci» trJfK* preparation of a brother member.
Mil. DAWLEY lifts been in the drag business in the city of Providence Vweuty-flve years as cleric and proprietor in good standing, and knows whereof he affirms. ED.
Mr. D. says: For many years 1 have suffered, intensely at times, with what is generally called rheumatism. When first attacked I was confined to my bed and could not walk a step, 1 could not bear the weight of the bedclothes, so excruciating was the agony I endured. I always noticed that before these attacks came on my kidneys were affected before there would be any pain in my limbs or any swelling of joints or limbs, the color of the secretions from the kidneys would be very dark and the odor strong and feverish. The last attack was very severe, about five .years ago, and I was confined to the hou*e several weeks, and was unable to attend to business in three months, louring the time I was confincd at hom«? and the time of my convalescence 1 employed four of the beat doctors that I could obtain, but none of them gave me permanent relief, for they did not go to work at the cause of the trouble. Having been acquainted with the proprietor of Hunt's Remedy a long time I was induced by him to give it a trial, hoping that it might reach the seat of the disease and after taking one bottle I found myself very much improved, and after taking the second I was feeling bettor than 1 had after any previous attacks. During many months previous to taking tho Itemed}- my hands and flngerrf would be much swollen and stiff every morning my left side, in the region of stomach and spleen, was very lame and sensitive at times I would be taken with severe cramps over the spleen, and be obliged to apply muastard or cayenne for temporary relief I was very nervous nights and could not sleep I was obliged to ba very particular in my diet, and my physical system was sadly demoralised.' Since 1 have taken Hunt's Remedy systematically all these things have changed I have no swollen bands or limbs, 110 pains or cramps in the side, can eat all kinds of food, sleep soundly and get thoroughly rested, and my kfdnevs are active and perform their functions promptly, thus taking out of tho system all the poisonous secretions whioh contaminate the whole system where llio kidneys do not act efficiently. My friends, what Hunt's Kemedy has done for me it witl do for all of yon. 1 believe it to be the only sure cure for all diseases of the kidneys, liver, and urinary orgaus.
Respectfully, E. R. PAWI.KY, 43-1 ltmnd Stret t."
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Tlie underslghed has opened Receiving Room, No. 18 south Second street, where he is prepared to receive Rough Tallow and Grenae of any kind, Pork and Beef Cracklings, Dry and Green Honen, for which ho wlu pay the Highest Cash Priced. Ho will also Buy Dead Hogs by slnglo or car load. IIogH received at the Factory, Houthwest of the City on the Island. OlTlce No. 13 nouth Second street, Terre Haute, Ind.
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