Saturday Evening Mail, Volume 16, Number 8, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 August 1885 — Page 4
THE MAIL
A PAPER FOR THE PEOPLE.
P. S. WESTFALL,
EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR.
XtmjCATKOr OTYICZ,
A5-
Mos. 20 and 22 Booth Fifth StreeC Printing Horns Square.
TERRE HAUTE, AUG. 15, 1885.
SINCB the outcome of tbe Jones investigation tbe question ia whether Hen dricks is not a bigger man than old Cleveland.
FROM statistics of population in Ohio it appears that there is a constant de crease in tbe ratio of marriage*, and a relative increase in tbe growth of cities over the country. That is, tbe tendency is towards unmarried life and to life in cities. These indications are far from hopeful ones.
IT is said that Col. Fred Grant will take charge of a railroad as civil engineer as soon as he gets bis father's affairs settled up. This sounds well. Now let all tbe Grant boys settle down to some useful employment and do some honest work for bonest pay, and tbe country will respect tbem for their own sake as well as for their father's.
THK Emperor William and tbe Czar of Russia are to have a conference early in the fall, and every precaution will be taken for their safety. They will be surrounded with soldiers by day and locked up in burglar proof safes by night. In contrast with this, tbe President of tbe United States goes off on a months' tour into tbe heart of tbe wilderness, unattended even by a servant.
REV. MYRON HERD'S eulogy on Grant was the finest of tbe many delivered throughout tbe country that have come to our notice. Just and true, without being exaggerated, it estimated thecbaracter and worth of tbe great soldier at its true value, neither extenuating evident defects nor unduly magnifying his virtue?. It was such an estimate of the man and tbe soldier as might mave been expected twenty years from now, and it will read as well then as it reads now.
NRW YORK appears to be inclined to be as slow in offering money for tbe Grant monument as it was for thestatue of liberty pedestal. As yet tbe Wall Street millionaires have not been beard from to any alarming extent and tbe fund grows but slowly. There is a general feeling tbat the great and wealthy metropolis is well able to build tbe monument without assistance from abroad, and tbat sbe ought to be generous enough to do it for tbe honor of having the hero's grave. But New Yorkers will not probably see it in tbat light and will piggishly insist ou having the bat passed around.
THK great engineering feat of blssting out the rock at Hell Gate, New York harbor, which has been under headway for ten years past, is now approaching completion. The vast mass of rook, comprising some nine acres under water, has been honey-combed with blasting holes and the charges of powder are now being put in. When all are placed the submarine chambers will be flooded and the charges exploded simultaneously by electricity. The cost of clearing out the obstruction will be •bout one million dollars, but if successful it will be well werth its cost, as tbe rock bas always rendered navigation in its vicinity extremely dangerous.
THK chloken business has reached auch proportions that it is not to be uneesed at. It is no longer a matter of an old ben sitting tor three weeks on a doaen of eggs in the country barn yard, but a seleutific business involving artificial incubators and brood-bens,chicken yards and bouses constructed with the nicest regard to light, beat and ventilation, aodthe investment of thousands of capital. It has made fortunes and will make many mom Its combined product of poultry and eggs now exceeds iu value the entire wheat production of tbo country and tbe end Is not yet in night. It seems tbat the^market for eggs and poultry cannot be overstocked. Like Oliver Twist the national appetite Is continually calling tor more and refuses to be satisfied.
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THE Cincinnati Commercial Gazette thinks there is no likelihood of tbe national capital ever being removed from Washington, as suggested by Mark Twain. The multiplication of railroad and telegraph facilities renders a central location for the capital less and less important. Any part of the country is easily accessible now from any other and tbe small expense of going and returning is of slight consequence to tbe class of persons who have occasion to visit tbe capital on business. Besides WasbiBgton is now the most beautiful city in the country and is growing more beautiful constantly. It is rich in historic associations and is situated in a portion of tbe country tbat the people of every section desire to visit—namely, the oldest ^settled portion and containing the great cities of New York, Boston and Philadelphia. The occasion of visiting tbe national capital therefore, whether on business or for pleasure, affords an opportunity for vlsting other places in the East and obtaining a pleasant and grateful change of climate, scenery, etc. The great East and tbe great West can never be disunited. New York is yet and probably will always continue to be, tbe financial and commercial metropolis of tbe nation. Her railroad magnates and money kings bave interests snd investments in every section of tbe country, from tbe Pacific to the gulf and it is to New York tbat men instinctively look for help when any enterprise requiring vast capital is proposed. Business men from every section of tbe country visit New York for tbe purchase of their principal stocks. Thus tbere is a constant going between the West and the East which seems to bring tbe two sections nearer together and to cement them in friendly and commercial intercourse. Tbe country is now as large as it will ever be, territorially considered. Representatives from tbe Territories and the Pacific States now go to Washington without making any objection to tbe length of tbe journey and they will never have any more reason to object than they have now. For these and other reasons there is little probability thac Washington will ever lose tbe national capital. So many associations are now connected with the beautiful city that there will be no desire on the part of tbe people of any portion of the country to locate the capital in a new place. And besides, if they should want to do so, there would' in all probability be so many places ambitious for the honor, and such pullit at cross-purposes among the friends of the re-location tbat the entire movement would be easily defeated.
IN spite of a great deal of adverse and hypercritical criticism we think that American architecture is at present making splendid advancement as a whole, particularly in tbe direction of the magnificent buildings being erected iu our large cities. Tbe variety both in materials and design is almost infinite. Tske Chicago for example. The profusion of form, color and design in tbe later buildings, both public and private, is almost bewildering. Tbe earth seems to have been ransacked for varieties of stone and you see it in the rioh luxuriance of red, brown, green, white, cream and bluish tints, contrasting in many Instances most beautifully with tbe other materials with which it is combined. Tbere are granites snd marbles, limestones and sandstones, in colossal blocks of uncouth roughness and in the finest state of lustrous polish. There are bricks of many sizes and colors and terra cotta ornaments of exquisite beauty. These, with the superb panes of crystal plate glass which fill the windows, are certainly noble materials for the builder, and the architect who could not make something grand out of them bas missed bis calling. But it would be captious and unjust to say tbat nothing noble is produced. Such buildings as tbe new court house, the board of trade, and tbe Potter Palmer mansion, and scores of others equally worthy of mention, are likely to be long notable for their architectural beauty. And perhaps nowhere Is tbe taste and skill of tbe architect better shown than in th? smaller bouses of the cottage style, many of which extort an outburst of pleasurable admiration from tbe beholder as he first looks upon them. Doubtless there are many sins yet for which our architects will be held accountable, but while we condemn their faults It is but fair to give tbem praise for their virtues.
SENATOR SUTTON, of Iowa, has written a series of letters to tbe Chicago Tribune upon prohibition in the South. Georgia leads in the movement sgainst whiskey selling and really comes nearer to being a prohibition State than any other, North or South. But this is accomplished by means of local option. Each county bas the right under tbe constitution to prohibit tbe sale of liquor if the people desire It, and nearly all tbe counties In the State have adopted either absolute or partial prohibition. In the 101 counties where total prohibition prevails tbe law is effectually enforced and tbere is prohibition in fact as well as in name. There is a marked difference in the treatment of the question North and South. In the North the Prohibitionists generally favor making it a political question while in the South it is carefully kept out of politic*. There Is no sympathy with prohibition as a party (Movement and St, John received only 153 votes for President in the whole State of Georgia, of a Utile more than one to each county, etrong as the prohibiUoa sentimeot in that State Mr.
THK New York World bas raised the full |100,000 required for tbe Barthuldi pedestal and now announces that it will receive subscriptions for the purpose of erecting a monument to General Grant. The World waited long enough to give the other New York papers an opportunity to undertake this last enterprise, but as they did not seem inclined to do so, the World had the pluck to make tbe attempt. How well it will succeed is for the future to show, but the prestige of its first success will be an important aid in an undertaking that will apneal more strong!y to the popular heart than the building of the pedestal did. !fhe new life and vigor which has been in* fuied into an old, moribund paper of New York by its new proprietor is only «n»tber evidence of the spirit and pluck of western enterprise leaving a ?pleudld record of succew in St. Louis, Mr. Polluter has won even a greater succe«s In the wider field of New York Journalism. At first his jealous contemporaries twitted the World a* being the New Sutton writ** that at. John, while is York paper edited in St. T-uia, but their Georgia, tally indorsed ihe non-partisan satirical shafts f«U havo.an and tbe method In operation them, aud gi*es in-, World went tight oa in its |w$e«sa» dubttabie a^^oftbetrotb of his .career. 'statement.
TSRKE HAUTE SATURDAY JTVTENING MAIL
NKVKB were the illustrated papers doing better work than now. They keep right np with tbe current of events and furnish to tbe millions who cannot see the things themselves most vivid and correct pictures of them. The scenes of the death and burial of General Grant were so well presented to the public through the pictorial newspapers tbat to look over all tbe illustrations of them was nearly as good as being on tbe ground. It is quitean education for the people to see the pictures week by week given in such journals as Harpers' Weekly snd Frank Leslie's Illustrated Newspaper. While it costs heavily to prepare these illustrations tLe large circulation of these periodicals makes them handsomely remunerative.
THE Century for August bason interesting article on the Indian Territory which is full of information, both past and present, respecting that much talked about region. The writer is not inclined to estimate as high as is generally done the lands of tbe Territory. While there is some fine land there is a great deal that is indifferent snd much tbat is very poor. Before tbe war some of tbe civilized tribes did well by raising cotton and cattle with slave labor, many of tbe Indians becoming rich and owning large possessions, but the war swept away all they had and since then the opportunities for making money tbere have not been so good and tbe Indians generally are not making rapid progress in accumulating wealth. He has up sympathy for "the boomers," who, be says, pass over better lands, which they could get for a song, than can be found ia tbe Indian Territory. "if
ONE of the oddest traits in human nature is its relic-hunting proclivity. A new illustration of this is afforded by the death of General Grant. Tbe little old house in which he was born at Point Pleasant, Ohio, worth two or three hundred dollars probably for its own sake, is likely to turn to gold in the hands of its thrity owner, Michael Hirsch, who has already refused an offer of |5,000 for it. Mr. Hirsch thinks he could do well by tearing the house up into bits and selling them for keepsakes but his conscience rebels against such a course. Doubtless tbere would not be wanting customers enough for such a traffic and the prices realized would be fabulous. But just why an intelligent person should want a bit of old weatherboarding, or a wiudow-lateh or a nail to remember General Grant by is inexplicable to the average mind. Yet, foolish as it is, It is not so bad as the keeping of a piece of rope that a criminal was hanged with.
THERE IS a growing belief on the part of business men that better times are ahead and a brisk fall trade is confidently expected. There is no apparent reason why this should not be the case. The wheat ciop, while not equal to that of some years, bas yielded better tbaa was expected, and the promise for oorn never was better. Agriculturally tbe country is rich and the good crops will put money into circulation. Tbe depression in tbe manufacturing industries is not so great as it was. There has been a gradual resumption of work by tbe mills and factories throughout the country. Tbere are not nearly so many men idle now as was tbe case some months ago. It must be said that the present administration has made a good record so far and bas satisfied tbe business interests of tbe country. If Congress when it meets in December shall give assurance of a settled and safe policy regarding tariff legislation tbere is every reason to hope and believe that capital will begin seeking investments and tbe wheels of the commercial machinery will move briskly again.
OPPOSED 10 BATHINGV
A PITTSBURG MAN WHO FOLLOWS KATURE AND DESPiBES CHOLERA, ______ A.«. a[Pittsburg Dispatch.]
He laid down a package which he had just finished tying uo and wiped his band on tbe front of his vest. He stood behind tbe counter of a Southside grocery store. His face was broad and red. and overflown with good nature ana perspiration. He looked as though be might weigh 200. "So you would like to see a man who is opposed to bathing, would you? Well, here he is take a good look at him. He is never sick and never had a cold." "You don't look as though you would go into a rapid decline soon.'? "No, and I don't feel like It. I am 45 years old and weigh 195 pounds. I am opposed to bathing. If a man wants to open up the pores of his skin once or twice a week and lay himself open to tbe attacks of disease, let him do it." "How long ago did you discover this principle in hygieneT" "If you mean when did I stop bathing, about ten years ago. Not entirely, mind you. 1 take alight invigorator twice a year, just to keep my skin fresh, you know. May be ibis is too often, but I find it agrees with me best. I get into a tub on tbe 1st of January and again on ttk« 4th of July. Now you are laughing, but remember, young man, I am older than you, and bave bad experience. Did you ever see a cow bathe No. I thought not. A cow refrains from bathing by instinct, yet they are as dean an snknal as lives. I merely take a rough towel every night and rub myself down and change my clothes often. If the cholera comes hew this reason I think I am defy it. I never bad a contagion* disease in my life, yet I have attended to people who had smallpox, and have been among contagions diseases of all kinds.
BALMY BLEEP.
The Tnfirtaarian of Mount St. dements Odleae, Hdteater, Maryland, writes that R«J Star Cough Core has given much satisfaction in that institution. Is a severe case of consumption It gave great relief, and after its use restless nights and night sweats disappeared.
Oscar Wilde is said to be a father. The baby is a daisy, not a son-flower. Sullivan will go into training at Cincinnati. He will use a brewery for a sandbag.
Millionaire Flood is going to bave one room in his new house finishedT in ivory and gold.
The expense attending General Grant's sickness was about f400aday. One of tbe doctors received |100 a day.
General Potter, colonel of the Twentyfourth Infantry, is tbe only class mate of Grant on the active list of the army.
Stanley says tbe native African edngs himself to sleep. We bave lots of people in America who can do better than that. They can sing a crowd to death.
Sam Utley shot Jacob Smith in Oregon for asking him for a chew of tobacco. It was easier for Sam to shoot than to feel in bis pocket.
Thirty commisson houses at Kalamazoo, Mich., are engaged in handling celery. The result of last year's crop was |165,000 to the producers snd $200000 to tbe dealers.
Georgia papev "A Lamar street lawyer gives as a reason for not going to Europe this summer that a rich client has just died and he is sfraid the heirs would get the property."
Governor Curtin says that of the nineteen governors of the Northern States when tbe war began only three are now alive—Kirk wood, of Iowa Sprague, of Rhode Island, and himself.
The publishers of General Grant's book have even received an application for the right to sell in South Africa. To a South American bookselling agent the answer was returned, "All gone but Patagonia."
The Turks are buying great numbers of Krupp guns. This ignorant people know little of destructive weapons. The American toy pistol, where real carnage is desired, is the real weapon for warring nations.
When the telephone was taken to England by tbe agent of Dr. Bell all the patent rights connected with it were offered to tbe Postoffice Department for ^150,000. The offer was declined, but not long since the same officials offered 12,700,000 for the exchange in London alone.
A young couple from Louisiana are making a bridal trip through Kansas in a cart drawn by four bull yearlings, and an Ohio couple have started on their wedding tour in a two-seated tricycle, while an uapretentious Dakota bride and groom have started on foot for a two hundred mile walk.
He was in the bsblt of coming home night after night at 2 o'clock in the morning. She grew weary of this and rendered his latchkey useless by looking the front door. He was obliged to ring the bell, and was horror-stricken when his wife appeared at the window and murmured: "Go away, George, I expect my husband home every moment." He has become very domesticated since.
A correspondent of the New York Evening Post urges tbat a monument to Grant be built of all tbe cannon used in the late war on land and sea oy both sides, thus improving upon the famous vendome column to Napoleon which was made out of cannon captured from his enemies. It would be, he urges, at once a tribute to Grant's valor and a sign that the country was fused and blended together forever.
THE FOOLISHNESS OF BLEACHED HAIR.
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[St. Louis Post-Dispatch.]
Of all tbe insane fashions this strikes one as tbe most ridiculous. Nature, who must know better than her vain and foolish children, arranges tbe color of tbe hair to suit the 'face tbat it surmounts, and if nature d»es not know best, it Is a strange thing. A woman with blue eyes and black hair and lashes has read a novel, in which Geraldiue. the heroine, has blue eyes and golden nair. Instantly sbe is seized with a raging desire to have golden hair, too. Itls so delightful to sit in a wooded copse (a la heroine), tbe sua glinting on the heavy masses of golden sheen, etc. So. sbe posts off to tbe hairdresser's and expends seventy-five cents in a bottle of peroxide of hydrogen (that's the stuff tbat does it). One bottle, did I say? It needs twelve of them to effect a transformation. So she buys a dozen and uses them up in two or three days, and changes her beautiful black-brown hair into a sickly pale brass-colored sheenless yellow, which looks hideous to every one save herself, and transforms her from a healthy, attractive, piquant-looking girl (for what can be more piquant than black-brown bair and lashes snd blue eyes) into a sickly, sentimental, artifi-cial-looking creature, who looks like a second-rate actress beginning to fall off.
A SEASIDE WALTZ. [Ocean Grove Letter.]
A curiou* couple caught my eye down Ocean Grove the other day, and just about tbe same time tbe parents of tbe female member caught tbem. They were standing on tbe sbore of Wesley Lake, which is little sheet of water separating tbe great Methodist resort from Asbury Park. It was evening. An awning screened them from casual observation. The music of a waltz came across tbe moonlit lake from a ball tbat was going on in Asbury hotel. Tbe young man's right arm encircled tbe maiden's waist, and his left hand clasped her hand, while their tuem were dose together enough to touch, if they didn't* "Hi, there, Sophy,"said the father.
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But they didn't let go. "Ho, there, Sophy," said tbe mother. SUU they remained entwined. "We're Hiring no harm," coolly explained the girl. "This a still wall*. Tbe law of Ocean Grove forbids dancing but it doesn't say that a couple sba'n't swam* tbeAltitudd of willttrawd utAod moUonlesstotbethuaacacrosstbelake."
OLD papers—large rises—for potting under carpets, bouse-deauing, ete, can be had at Tbe Mail office.
PERSONAL AND PECULIAR. THE SIGNAL "GRANT IS DEAD"
THK FALSE ALARM THAT STIRRED A LITTLE INDIANA TOWN TWO YEARS AGO.
[Lafayette Letter in New York Sun.] The story of the message "General Grant is dead," sent over the wires as a signal for tbe strike of the Brotherhood of Telegraph Operators a little over two years ago, is a matter of common information, and pretty generally revived at present but there is a singular piece of history connected with it that has never found its way into print. Its soene was at Corwin, a little place about twelve miles south of here. Corwin is atypical country town, with about one hundred and fifty inhabitants. It has one long, straggling street, with a few "general 8 to res," where are supplied the simple wants of its people and the scattered population of the broad vista of farming land tbat forms its background. At the end of the street is Its sole link with tbe outside world—a telegraph office, presided over by au old man named Samuel Givens. He has been in the employ of tbe Western Union ever since itB origin, and his duties are light, for notmng ever happens at Cbrwin, and its busier neighbors generally overlook itt§ existence. Givens learned telegraphy before the modern system of reeding by sound was in vogue, and the instrument be uses is the old-fashioned "Morse register," a very few of which still remains on the Western Union lines in out-of-the-way places.
On the morning of July 19,1888, Givens was droning over his instrument when it suddenly called. To save the paper ribbon on which the brass point of the register recorded its message he slways kept closed until he heard his call. It was the letter D—two dots, a dash and a dot—and it rattled out its staccato warning with an energy this time that made him open it with unwonted sudden ness.
Out rolled the ribbon bearing on itB surface tbe words, "General Grant is dead." Givens was not a brotherhood man. Living in tbe issolated village be did not kuow tbat bis profession'was on the eve of a great strike, and the message to him had no import save tbat of its face. He had been a soldier in tbe army of the Tennessee, had laid down his arms at Appomattox, and be regarded General Grant with that solemn reverence tbat is found among his followers alone. He seized the tape with trembling fingers, and, bursting into sobs, rushed out to spread tbe news.
Corwin is settled large by soldiers of tbe late war, who have taken farm land in the vicinity. No news to them could bave been more startling, more deeply moving than this. Instantly tbe village was in such a stir as it never saw before, and will probably never see again. All crowded around tbe old telegrapher, anxious to hear him read and reread the message. They were eager to learn more, out tbo instrument bad stopped after those four words, and was silent.
Some one suggested to toll tbe village school bell, ana a dozen men ran to put tbe idea into effect. Grant at that time was sixty-one years old, and for an hour and one minute tbe slow notes of tbe bell eehoed through the town. This tolling was heard for a long distance through the stilly air. aad It, togeher with the farmers who happened to be in Corwin at the time and left immediately on their wagons, sufficed to rapidly spread the news.
Had a stranger passed through the village at about noon he would have been surprised to see every store and house draped in mourning. There was little crape to be had, but the blaok call00 at the store was pressed into service at tbe suggestion tbat every one display some mark of grief. Meantime the farmers from the surrounding country bad hurried in to town, and a strangely unwonted crowd filled tbe street. Givens had suddenly assumed Importance, and tbe ribbon, with its cabalistic dots and dashes translated into English with a pencil, was eagerly passed from hand to hand until its message was obliterated. Every one, however, bad tbe few words by heart, and many were the surmises as to tbe details of the old commander's death.
In early afternoon it was thought well that tberesbould be some formal expression of tbe sentiment of the town, and a meeting was accordingly held in the largest store, owned by a man named Wright. It was not, however, nearly large enough to held tbe crowd, and a tbroDg was clustered about, tbe door. An old farmer, who had been a sergeant in att Indiana regiment and whose name, 1 believe, was Andrews, was chairman of the meeting, and it was opened by prayer aud song. Lincoln's favorite. "Why Should the Spirit of Mortal be Proud?" was chosen. Many was the speech made and many tbe reminiscence told by those who bad carried a musket in the great Captain's legions. The people of Corwin will never forget that meeting, because all participated in it. At its close a series of resolutions were adopted, expieesing sorrow snd sgreeing tbat no more labor be done for tbat day. A copy of these resolutions, written in pencil on a sheet of legal cap, are still at tbe store where the meeting was held.
It was not until next morning that tbe little town learned of its strange mistake. A few copies of tbe Indianapolis papers reached it then, containing news of tbe strike and tbe story of tbe signal, and great was tbe rejoicing there at. Old Givens was still at his obsolete instrument day before yesterday, when tbe secord time the ribbon bore the message of death.
A NOVEL RELIGIOUS CEREMONY. ANew York church congregation recently made quite a ceremony of tbe burning of a mortgage which, "In the order of Providence," they had been enabled to pay off. After tbe sermon tbe pastor stepped down from tbe chaocel and took from witbin his vest a folded manuscript. "This,"' said he, "is mortgage. Until now I've never seen one. Have yon sny idea what tbe holders of tbis bond could do Tbey could turn you out of your church, but. thank Heaven, they can't do it now, for it ia paid." He then tore tbe paper into slips, snd crumbling tbe pieces into ball,
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laced it on a tray. Lighting a smaii be ignited the ball, ana while the congregation sans tbe doxology, tbe mortgage paper of $6,000 was burned to a»be*» When tbe services ended, tbe trustees assembled snd held a second cremation. Upon the same traywhicb held tln» mortgage the note wan horned. During tbe service many of tbe older members were moved to tears. Tbe ashes are Dow inclosed in a sealed envelope. but will soon be placed in a silver urn, which, with tbe lamp, will he inctoeed in a glass case snd hnng in tbe parlors of the church.
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