Semi-weekly Express, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 28 July 1896 — Page 6
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A LYRIC OF LOVE,
dearest, whoa Fin Wf at bct^ is And all my world goes ill, riOae wwift thought charms the mood :v' Dear bear y«a 1°*°
ns
still!
You know sot what sweet faith it brings, •••l Wbon days are sad and drear, •Co that God hath given me you
Tb love and live for, dear. For what if skies be gray and cold, And clocds shut oat the bine, ,r:nk And toil eoexns wrought in vain, sweet on*.
And loyal hearts be fewf The sunlight warms, the air is soft' •,. As spring, when yoa are near w, There's such a joy in living, for
I know you love ta», dear. ^nd, love of mine, your pure eyes' shine Shall light me on the way. Your shy, sweet kisses, dear, shall breathe
A blessing o'er ray day. O'er path* th&fe load through fiow'r and thorn. As changing seasons fleet, One teadar thought shall guide my life— *Tis that yoa love xoe, sweet I —Boston Transcript.
BREAKING A RECORD.
The manager of the London and Glasgow air line railway, Mr. Swipes, sent me on invitation marked "private," saying that he wa» bound to beat the record made by the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern r^nivMni now that they had oome out into print about it.
He added that when the New York Central broke the English record they did so with their Empire State express, which any one oould have traveled on who had the money to pay his fare. This, he rfflajmari, was the right way of breaking a record if you are going to write about it afterward.
Nevertheless he was going to follow the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern fashion, Just to see what his railroad could do, and ho invited me, as a person owning an American watch, to come upon the trip, bat begged me to say nothing whatever »bout it, for, hd said, instead of breaking the record we might perhaps break our necks.
I was to meet him at the London terminus of the London and Glasgow air line at exactly 12 midnight, three weeks ago. There was some little risk in going out at that hour, for it Is well known that one of the most obnoxious and oppressive laws, made by King Edward himself, is that every man In London must be in his own house a/t 8:40 o'clock and have lights out and be in bed a* 9.
Any one out after that hour is liable to arrest* so I stole up and down through the streets and dodged the policemen until I came to the terminus. Here I was amazed to find an Immense locomotive and one flat car, with two camp stools on it. "What's this for?" I said to Swipes. •"We're going to break the record with this train," he replied. "I want to have it as light as possible, for any ordinary carriage meets with such resistance in passing so quickly through the atmosphere that I concluded to take a freight ear, and if we have a smash up it won't be so expensive. "But you dont expect mo to sit on one of those stools in the open air from here to Glasgow?" cried aghast. "Oh, that's all right," he said. "The stools are fastened to the floor of the car, and I have shawl straps with which you can fasten yourself to the stooL There won't be any trouble on that score."
Where aro the other fellows?" I asked. There aren't any,'' he answered. When you are going to break a record, the fewer you have on board the better. Watches differ, and it would be bad if there was a quarrel about time. Your watch shall be the only official timepiece in the company. Mine, as I think I told you in the letter, generally loses 2 hoars out of the 24, so I think we had better not trust to it."
I strapped myself to one stool and Swipes strapped himself to the other, and at 12:15 we pulled out of Marylebone torminus. It was agreed that we were not to begin the reoord until we passed Highgate, and were thus Safely out of the influence of London.
The dlatanoe from London to Glasgow is 401.6 miles. We had for engineer Peter McGump, who was a Scotchman, and therefore knew the road to Glasgow well, and Billy Jones of Whitechapel did the firing.
We had no brakeman/because, as Swipes Baid, it was not on the hrakes we were going to depend for breaking the record.
The engine was known as the Mary Jane and familiar to all the operators on the road as "Her Golden Hair Is Hangin Down 'er Back." She gots this nickname from her great speed and from the fact that the smoke with sparks in it trails out behind like a great banner.
After leaving Highgate Peter gave her more steam, and the speed began to be something appalling. "Oh, it's nothing to what we'll have by and by," said Swipes, as ho watched me making an ineffectual grab at my hat, which disappeared in the darkness.
Swipes counted the milestones while I ticked off the seconds on my watch, and before long we were going 70 miles an hour. We had the advantage over the American road in the fact that there are rawly any grade crossings in England and that one railroad is never allowed to cross another on the level.
By the time we passed Toad-in-the-Hole wo were doing 85 miles an hour, but as the Lake Shore train had attained a speed of 92.8, Swipes yelled to Peter as well as he could to give her more speed, because if she didn't put in her best lioks now, what oould wo expect when we came to the high grounds and the stiff grades of the midlands?
This shouting of Swipes, howover, had no effect, because we were going so fast that his words never reached Peter, who stood with his hand on the lever, watching grimly the track in front. As Swipes continued to shout out the mile posts I cried: "Hold on! It's the telegraph poles you are counting." "No, isn't," he replied. "It's the mileposts." "Nonsense," I cried. "In that way wo are going at the rate of 108 miles an hour." "A hundred and eight it is, then," he •aid. "Stoke her up, Peter."
I then called the general manager's attention to the fact that it was not etiquette to tell an engine driver to -'stoke up," as that duty waa performed by Billy Jones. He apparently learned for the first time that engineers do not do their own stoking, and he thanked me for the information.
At last the milestones passed so rapidly that Swipes oould not keep track of them •o we abandoned the attempt to count them and took only the stations, as we had.a record of the distance between them.
I saw now by making calculation between two stations that we were going at the rate of 180.45 an hour, and my hair Would have stood on an end were it not for the foot that it was standing straight out behind.
By this time the stations passed us in one continuous streak, as if we were running through the suburbs of a big city, and I was wondering all the time when we would come to the town, but finally I realized that it was impossible to keep time with my excellent watch, and so we would have to lump the thing by calculating how long it took us to oome from London to Glasgow.
The lid of my watch, which I now inadvertently exposed to the breeze, snapped and blew away, and I saw that the gold of the hunting oase was beginning to flake off, so I put it in my pocket to save the rest of it.
I knew it was not yet two hoars since we left London, and to my astonishment I •pied the spires of Glasgow. I recognized the place beoanse I was bom there. "ffhtli Mil't ho Ckunn
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SIS
V'*' A Telephone Idyl. He was one among a number of clerks in a bu§y office. Hp, was at work adding up a long row of figures. Just in the midst of his work he was called to the telephone. With an ugly epowl on his face and muttering quaint saws, ho went to the telephone and yelled savagely, "Well?'
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Swipes, "if it is, we have traveled something like 200 miles an hour, and the Lord only knows what speed we attained in making up for the time when we were crawling on at 70 and 80." "That's Glasgow all light enough," said Swipes. Then he yelled to Peter. "For heaven's sake, shut off steam. Dont you see where we are?"
But Peter was struggling with his engine, and all at once he yelled back at us: "I can't stop her, sir!" "Heavens and earth?" said I. "What is to be done?" "I don't know," said Swipes. -It's my own fault. I told Peter in the hearing of the engine, and she is one of the cutest engines on the road, that we were bound to break the American record, which is 510 miles. You see,'it's only 401.6 miles to Glasgow, and I'll bet you that brute is bound to do the other 109 miles tonight, even if she has to do it on the highway. The railway stops at Glasgow, and I don't know what's going to happen."
As he concluded the sentence there was a crash and a bang, and the next moment we were in the principal street of Glasgow tearing along the rails of the street car lina Luckily, the same law being in foroe as was in London, nobody was out on the streets, and so we went at the rate of 84.75 miles an hour up the main thoroughfare of Glasgow and finally struck the north road for the Highlands.
When we got about 50 miles on the main road from Glasgow, sometimes slowing down to 68 miles an hour, on the hills, Peter, with a white face, turned to us and shouted: "My God, sir, we're on the Craigenputtoch Loch road, and the Craigenputtoch loch is at the end of it, about 50 miles ahead." "How far is it from London?" yelled Swipes, putting his hands beside his mouth to make the sound carry.
The'middle of Craigenputtooh loch is just 510 miles from London and it is over 1,000 feet deep in the middle," shouted Peter. "That's where she's making for," cried Swipes'unbucklingthe straps and clinging to the stool. "Jump, Peter, jump," cried Swipes as ho threw off the straps.
Peter did so, and I cut the strap that held ma Instantly we were all—Peter,, the stoker, Swipes and myself—lying on iihe hillside on the heather. The doomed train plunged right into the center of the lake. It had completed its 510 mile race and used up the fraction by sinking 1,000 feet to the bottom.
Luokily none of us was hurt in the slightest, with the exception that Swipes sustained a compound fracture of the thigh. Peter had both arms broken, Jones had all his ribs and one ankle smashed, while I had my veracity Sprained so badly that no_ one has ever been able to believe a word I have uttered since.—Detroit Free Press.
A Bat With Every Hair Cut. It Is not often that rats are permitted in a barber shop conducted under union sanction. Yet there is such a shop oh State street. The rats are white rats, and they ere put to a most fanciful use by the enterprising tonsorial artist who conducts the establishment.
One white rat given away with every child's hair cut," is tho enticing sign swung where it can be easily read. Not only Is the sign literally true, but the barber gives a pair of white rats to every youhgster who brings him seven customera "I give only one rat in each family," the barber explained, "and I have to keep hooks so's they won't double up on mo.'' "You don't often give away pairs, do you?" was asked. "You promised that youngster a couple awhile ago.'' "Sometimes I give away a pair, but not often, as. they seldom send me seven customers."
I Suggested that if he gave away many pairs the neighborhood would soon be overstocked, and that his white rats would cease to bo a drawing card. The barber smiled sententiously. "Perhaps so," ho replied, "but you see I used to play poker, and I still remember that two of a kind make a pair.Chica go Times-Herald.
As if by magic the scowl passed away and a happy smile took its place. AfttJf trf long pause he said in a gentle voice, "Wis."
Another long pause and another "Yes, Then, after a long wait, he said, "All right I'll be thero at 8 o'clock."
What Is it, dear reader, that will thus so suddenly change a man? We know not!—London Answers.
Imagination and Judgment.
Dr. Eaton, president of Madison university 40 years ago, was beloved by the students and his good opinion courted above all things. One commencement day the student who had delivered the valedictory approached tho doctor and timidly asked him what he thought of the effort. The doctor looked at him a moment and theni said slowly, "Edward, if you wouitf'ftfiMK a few of the feathers from the wings of your imagination and stick them in the tail of your judgment, yotl would make better speeches."
Power Minus Knowledge.
"Wot nonsense growed up people talk^JJ, ruminated little Willie. PskoldJijo t'other day that knowledge ist^fewejKjJIt may be so w'en you're growed up, but it don't work with us foilers." W'y only the other day Ragsy, the bootblack, came to our school for the first time in his life, -hn he hadn't been there two hours 'fore he'd licked every boy in school."—WeSt Medford Windmill.
Three Kinds.
There are three kinds of good—the kind jthat feels good, tho kind that looks good bnd the kind that opposes evil. And the first two are good for nothing.—Ram's Horn.
Wales Not a Fashion L,eador. It is not true, one now learns, that the Prince of Wales is the leader of fashion. The heir apparent, in fact, is not allowed to be aggressive enough to be a leader. One of the proofs that he does not lead fashion is that he wears silk hat with a sack coat. It also proves that he does not follow the fashion. _TM, real swells who-do set the male fashions once resolved to make an innovation during Ascot week. Sporting men were dressing in light clothes and white hats, whereupon all the men in the swim appeared in black hats, black frock coats and dark trousers. For some reason the prince had not been notified of this change, and was caught in the paddock in a snuff colored suit.—London Tit-Bits.
"i -A Poisonous Proc. People in general look upon all species of the frog as being perfectly harmless. Should you be traveling in New Granada (United States of Colombia), however, you would do well to let a certain little tree croaker severely alone. He secretes a poison equally as deadly as that of the rattlesnaka It exudes from his akin in the shape of a milky liquid and is usee
by the natives as a poison for their arJUonis Republic
TERRE HAUTE EXPRESS^ TUESDAY MORNING, JULY 28,1896.
FORTY EARS
OF STJP^IIRING FROM PILES.
Remarkable Cure of Popular Major Dean, of Columbus, Ohio. *-i.
People who suffer from that annoying and obstinate disease will be gratified to learn that science has discovered a safe, convenient and simple cure for every form of piles, as the experience of the popular Major Dean, of Columbus, Ohio,- atiiply attests The Major says* I wouldlike to add my, name to the thousands Who have been cured by the Pyramid Pile Cure. I know from experieiDce-tbat it is the pnly ^emefcly on earth that will effectually cure piles plenty of remedies give relief for a time, but as for a lasting cure I had tried all the salves, lotions, etc., without success. Six boxes of the Pyramid Pile Cure entirely removed all traces of a case of piles of forty years standing.
You may rest assured that the Pyramid .Pile Cure has no stauncher advocate than myself.
I feci that it Is my duty to allow you to use my name in any way you may see fit, in order that other sufferers may thus be directed to what I feel certain will be a speedy relief and cure. a--"
The Pyramid Pile Cure^gives instant relief and- a permanent cure in all kinds of blind, bleeding, itching pil^f^^
It is absolutely free froto dpfates, cocaine and similar poisons, so pile
The Pyramid Pile Cure is sold by drnggists at 50 cents and $1.00. A book on cause and cure of Piles will be sent free by addressing the Pyramid Co., Albion, Mich.
SOCIAL EFFECT OF BICYCLING.-"
Increases tbe Bound of Pleasures—Knocks Oat Rooted Castoms. The skilled cyclist who has developed the proper muscle and has got rid of the sense of -fatiguo which haunts the beginner, just as it haunts and daunts the man who is teaming to swim, can keep on his bicycle all day, and if his frame is not shaken by a fall or his temper tried by the pricking of those infernal tires he will return in the evening with his nerves in perfect order and his limbs as little tired as if he had been strolling for the same time up and down A terrace or a lawn. This means that ho can choose Mends or do business within half a county instead of within two villages, and that his powers of locomotion at will are multiplied at least fivefold, or in. the case of tho really skilled and healthy eight or ten fold. That is anew freedom, a great multiplication of power for men, and especially for women, who, we notice, enjoy it much more than men do, and contrive somehow to avoid the look of care which is the special mark of the bicyclist, and wG shall bo curious to note, when time has been given for the change to operate fully, what its precise effects ara. They will not all be good.
They will probably increase tho general happiness, for, let tho cynics say what they lii:.e, friendship is a great sweetener of life r.nd pleasant conversation one of the few really enjoyable occupations, but they will impair neighborliness, which rests In a degree we none of us like to formulate upon the sense that we must not quarrel with or avoid or even sharply qriticise those among whom it is oar lot to live.
Tho constant habit of the bicycle dissipates the mind just as a constant immersion in society does and for the same reason—it renders reflection less frequent and less enjoyable. Why think when you can reach a pleasant circle five miles off in half an hour and with no perceptible fatigue? Let those who doubt that this effect will be produced in tho country note the curious increase tho cycle is causing in the habit of meeting at lunch, and indeed in the substitution of lunch for dinner.
You cannot cycle back on a dark night with your wife or sister in full dress, but you can lunch at 2 o'clock and cycle back in the coo), of tho evening with great enjoyment and no danger.
Cycling, in fact, will increase the scattering and movability of country society, to the increase of its pleasures and the loss of much of its steadfastness and quiet. The ancient "rootedness" of the countrysides will bo greatly diminished, and wo ore old fashioned enough to believe that- in that quality was much not only of charm, bujt, of utility.—London Spectator.
London Three Hundred fears Ago. It is with difficulty that London life 3CM) yeafa'ago cr.n be imagined, and Londop itself has changcd as much as the life at her peopla In those days it was no exaggeration to speak of "silver footed ThamesSis." Tho river was a place for bathing! fishing and boating. Hundreds of watefc4« men plied between the city and the southern bank. Old St. Paul's dominated the city and provided a recognized but unsuitable meeting place for business men an$j pleasure seekers. It was the customary promenade for citizens and courtiers, soldiers and poets, the fashionable and th6 disreputable worlds. The citizen lived oyer his shop with his family and apprentices. The city was the center of an animated and gayly colored life. In afternoons there Were the performances at the theaters on tho banksido, the Globe, the Hope, the Rose,"tho Swan and Paris Garden, all of whiah.fwero in the neighborhood of Southejvark, and 'might be reached either by oliLbadon bridge or by taking one of the crowd of small boats that were in attendance. The traffic between the city and the theaters was the mainstay of many of these Watermen, and WhSn, owing to tho prevalonco of the plague, the playhouses wero closed, the loss of custom naturally affected, them severely. There is a. curious petition extant at Dulwich college, in which .the "servantcs and plaiors" of Lord Strange beseech tho privy council to withdraw. tho restriction upon their theater, and this is made one of their pleas: "And for that tho uso of our plaiohowse on tho Bancksido, by reason of the passage
to andfrome che same by water, is a greate releif to tho poore Jf?aterjiiiiji {JLearo, ard our dismission theaoo, jnows ,ip.this longe vacation, is to those" j^6bre men a greate hindraunce, t.nd in. manner an lindoeingo, as they generall ie jiqniplainc, both our and theiro humble petition and suite theareforo to your goodo Honnors*? ig? tpaft you wilbc pleased, of your speciall favolir, to recall this our rostrainte, and. permitt us tho uso of the s&ide plaiehowso again."—Gentleman's Magazine.
Facta About Colors.
According to information given by a German offic6r, ah experiment was recently fftade in E'uropo to determine what, color irt a. skltiiec^s. uniform is tho least conspio-1"ejector. Uous to an enemy. Of ten men two were dresse^ fill Jfight green uniform, twd i^ dark gfcay, two in green, two in dark bluo and two:in scarlet All were then ordecqjdl to while a group of officers remained watching them. The first to dteappcar in the landscape was the light gray, and next, surprising as it may seem, waft tho scarlet. Then followed the dark gray,! while tho dark bluo and the green remained .visible long after all the others had disappeared. Experiments in firing at blue and red targets, according to the same authority, proved that blue could be more easily seen at a distance than red.—St Louis Post-Dispatch.
Slaking Bed*
The practioe of havln^fieds made in the early morning, though exceedingly tidy, Is one which should not be encouraged, for It is bad. Constantly wo see a bed made half an hour after the sleeper has left the room, wherefore all the exhalations from the skin daring .the night Mftopaflned bonoath
sheete aad aralnhaifid again when the bed next used. It an excellent praoticeand one which ou|ht tobeenoounged ini all young people to turn off the ciothm of the bed immediately on rising. The maUw, too, should be turned back, so that all may bo properly aired aftd qoito bcM before being remada
CURIOUS ABOUT* THE BABY.
Xt Wm a Iftae Ohilji, tat Mjrtaloaa Until tk« Old Lady explained. Sbewae one.of the curious women who
are always to be found everywhere, and wh£n the young ooople, accompanied by tirebaby and the old lady, enteand the ear sl*e ,turned her afcteaflon to them at once. Presently the baby began tocry. and ahe raw1 her opportunity. She waited, hawever, until the poot young woman had trieid^ vainly to olet pie baby, end then, when she yielded the battle and delivered it over to the older lady, the curious woman opened fire.
She began the campaign inj offering the child a flower, and when the young woman, thankful of the oeaeatlon of the cries which had attracted the attention of all the passengers, thanked her gratefully, she commenced to ask questions at onoe: "Howold is your baby?" she asked first, and the. young woman blushed and looked desperately at her oompanion* "I dont knoiw," «he answered at last' "Do you, Edward?" "No," was the brief response of the man as'he glared at theourious woman man fashion, "I don't."
The young woman looked as if she considered the matter settled and sighed comfortably as she leaned baok and began playing with the baby, but the inquirer was not yet satisfied, and she returned to the oharga "Has your baby any teeth?" she asked, Rmfifng cordially, and again the young woman blushed. "I—I—really don't know," was the answer again, and the young man rose hastily and went out upon the platform. "You don't know, either of you?" ejaculated the curious woman in astonishment*. "Bow funny!"
But no explanation was offered her, and she tried another tack. "Is this your first bahy?" she said, with an insinuating smile, "or how many little blessings are there at your house?" "Fiffc" answered the old lady shortly, seeing'ieat the younger one was helpless with embarrassment, and the curious woman felt back in her seat in astonishment. "Why," she gasped, looking tho incredulity she felt, "how can that be possible?" "I'm the matron of an orphan asylum," explained the old lady icily, "and these kind young jpeeple are helping me to take this baby to the lady who has adopted it" —Chicago Times-Herald. rwr --^i
A STORY OF BLACKlE.cn,
Dow the Old Intellectual Giant Treated a Hardworking Student. A correspondent who was a fellow student of the professor's in 1865 tells a story of the late John Stuart Blackiewhiohwell illustrates the way in which this famous teacher, who could sometimes be very severe, could also be cordial when he came in contact with serious students.
Tho correspondent was preparing for his degree in classics and was spending a little time at Breemar. He*had gone up to the Lion's Face and was lying beside a path reading the third book of Virgil's "iEneid" aloud. Suddenly he felt the touch of a stick on his shoulder, and, turning about, saw a tall, lean man, with shepherd's plaid thrown loosely around his shoulders, by his sida
Ye'ro reading Virgil, laddie," said the man. "Yes, sir."
Then the two walked together down to Castleton, the stranger talking eloquently and most instructively of the writings of the Greeks and Romans. When their ways parted, the man said: "I suppose you don't know who I am?" "No, sir," the student answered.
3"Well,
I am Professor Blackie of Edin
burgh. I dare say you have heard of me?" ^'Oh, very often indeed."
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"Let me hear you translate this," ho continued, and in a wonderful way he rolled off a dozen lines of the poet, chosen at random.
The young man did his best to render it into English and then parsed and scanned the lines in a faulty way, he thought. But the strange man was pleased to commend the student's effort.
s:?
r'1 Aye, aye,'' said tho professor slowly and thoughtfully. And I dare say ye've heard, that many folk think I'm a woo bit cracked," tapping his forehead with his finger, "but never forget, laddie, that, as Tam Chalmers once said, a crack often lets in the light."
How to live to Great Age.
,The latest fad in England is to Insure longevity through tho use of a special diet The promise is held out to thoso who implicitly follow out the prescribed regimen that they may attain to the age of 110 years. This, among the most melancholy peoplo of the globe, and to whom one would fancy that life wero tho less worth living, has aroused considerable enthusiasm. Cooks and kitchens are to be abolished meat, bread and vegetables are forbidden. Existence is to be maintained exclusively upon nuts and bananas. If we compare this with the dietary system of Dickens, which represents that of his peri od, his comparatively early decease will excite no surprisa According to English standards, he was an accomplished gastronoma Beefsteak pudding was his ideal— a horrible concoction, only fit for a crude or debased palate. His highest conception of a dinner was a baked leg of mutton, with the bone removed and tho cavity filled with a stuffing of oysters and veal. This was accompanied with gin punch, in tho making of which Dickens took especial prida It was made as follows: A brass kettle of water was heated over-a spirit lamp. When tho water came to a boil, it was poured into a jug, with a bottlo of old gin, lumps of .sugar and chips of lemon peeL The mcuth of the jng was then closed with a napkin and the mixture allowed to brew for a oertain number of minutes.— Exchange.
Shotctuk Canes.
The shotgun cane has tho appearance of a smooth stoiit cane with a buckhorn handle. The cane, however, is but a rattan shell covering a 44 caliber steel tube—tho shotgun. The gun has a metal stopper at tho'muzzlo, held in place by a spring. The stopper looks like tho ferrule of the cane. Under the handlo there is a button which serves as a trigger. It is a breechloader, the handle pulling back from tho body of the cane, and it has an automatic shell
Tho shotgun cane is carried by
taxidermists and others who wish to have the means of shooting upon occasions, but .who do not wish to carry about an ordinary shotgun. In the course of a year a 'considerable number of shotgun canes are sold. They cost $10.—New York Sun.
Lawyers are fond of shooting at each thcr with verbal squibs. When two or three spendthrift barristers, friends of %bief Baron O'Grady, were made commissioners of insolvent debtors, the faoetious judge said, "At all events, the poor dobtotrs can't complain of not being tried by their oeers.^
I
A 6ma Graaa Ball.
If you want something pretty for the children to look at, buy a cheap sponge, aamfnn gpHnkln grass or flaxseed on it and hang by a long string in a sunny window. In a few days yon will have a beautiful grass haU. Keep the sponge very wet, and when tb begins to ftfnll ttaU off-qpd'tsoeattln.
,1"
THE
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