Bloomington Telephone, Volume 7, Number 33, Bloomington, Monroe County, 28 December 1883 — Page 9

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m Telephone tiaQOOBONGTON. INDIANA. ft ; IHl&DPUTE, - - Ppm.thhi h" . led cr4ralte iwhich he thinks is better than any other now in use. IP says that it can stop a freight-car BBniagattherateof ttdrty-five miles ;aa honr in fifteen feet, lock the -wheels .'lead in six or eight seconds, and stop a rioeomotire running at the rate of forty ules an hour before it has moved twenty-five feet. He has been offered f75,000 for his invention; A Georgia newspaper illustrates the .Average Southron negro's poor business . jabflity by telling of one who asked the price of coats in a store. The store- : keeper offered him various garments - -cheap for cash, but the darkey would ot buy, and finally the merchant picked out a coat that cost him $1-65 and offered it to the negro for $10, agreeing to take $2 in cash and trust Trim for the balance. The customer .jumped at the offer, and, without even trying on the coat, paid the $2 and went away happy in his ability to owe $& The store-keeper will not worry if lie does not get the money. The brothers, Tony and Robert Hill, 'who killed each other the other day -near Atlanta, Q&-, although singularly Affectionate to each other when sober, liad an inexplicable aversion to each -other when drank. About two hours tiefore the killing Tony Hill met Dr. pincknev and went to his house with 3bim. "While there he asked Miss Kate Pinckney to play on the piano, but the onng lady declined because there was no fire in the parlor and Tony said: '"Well, Miss Kate, if you will play for me it will probably save Bob's life. No attention, however, was paid to the Remark, as Tony appeared to be about hall drunk. The day before Tony met Miss Mamie Johnsonin the hall of the itonse where the tragedy occurred, and ' aid: "Something will happen to Bob or to me some of these times. Well 4get drank and kill each other, see if we -flon't v- i . . ;-iJWpn. Villi reilli I, l9agl jwu., uwu(ju septnagenstrian. One of his most t v;2pvttending jokes was played upon an one' of the kind to whom everything P: iwMm wt luiatlTn and "haA form. " ITnole Larry contrived to sit next to the ;,i,1inisAing his soup uncle ijarry "' simdeed him cautiously and privately voalueft his attention to an upper set of .false, teeth which he had fished out of jns own soup with his spoon, remarking Hie same time that "the cook must :Nhve had an acddent," Larry had K$bf&ht the teeth that morning at a rdentist's with the guarantee that they i.itv mmrrrvm'j " fcad slipped them surreptitiously into : -$e soup plate. The gentleman from flknufcm shewed no enthusiasm for the iensoing courses. f:y)A Pabisiaks in search , of novelties are promised a treat in the shape of a new fpant as b as any of the tall monsters i the Great Frederick. The new Goliath vJs an Austrian named "Winkelmeier, beut eight feet six inches. His feet are! SO centimeters, or 19.69 inches, and ,.hjs hands about fourteen inches long. He hails from Friedburg. and his parents are of ordinary height, he himself only commencing to sprout after he had attained 14 years of age. The owners of the hotel where the gigantic lenomenon has put up have abandoned the idea of providing' him with ordi nary furniture, as their chairs are too small .and their beds too short for a youth of his stature. To enable the son of Anak to stretch his limbs in a comfortable manner, four beds were requisitioned by his friends, who were obliged to arrange them in a position which would enable him to go to sleep Tqpr were opposite neighbors, and they were both seated on the steps of their respective houses, when a man rode by on horseback. When he had disappeared from sight, Shrewsbury shouted to Duxbury: "That was an wfol black horse that man was riding. " "Black 1 you must (be dreaming," re tamed JuVury; "it was- perfectly whites "tjfuess not," was the impertinent answer, "you must have been taking too much aeid phosphate, and re now enjoying a rush of blood to the head." "Not at all! Not at all!" was -the reply; "Pll bet you a hundred dollars that he was white. "-"Ill take you," , . was the response, and wallets were pTodteeed. Just then the solitary horseman reappeared. "By Jove, you were rhtf" they both exclaimed simnl'taneeosly, and they rushed toward each .other and met in the middle of the -street -to discover that one-half of the horse was whito and the other black. H they had not found out their mistske: of what value would their evidence be 4n court?. They would contradict each aether, and some wiseacre would say thafroneiorthe other had committed L.frary vThis shows the unreliable " Oharaeter of circumstantial evidence. . -Bfemrj M. Staxlott, who is back in CbfitQMli again, recently deliv-

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eied a lecture in New York. His subject was "My African Travels, Explorations, and Works. w Rev. Henry

Ward Beecher introduced the lecturer, who was greeted with enthusiasm. He said that when Livingstone's body was on its way to be interred in Westminster Abbey he was traveling along the west coast of Africa. He heard of Livingstone's death through a cable message. He at once determined to complete Livingtone's work and find ont what river it was that lured the latter to his death. It was either the Congo or the Nile. The lecturer went onto describe the agreement of the owners of the London and New York newspapers to send him to finish the work. He told of his arrival at Zanzibar, his journey to Lake Victoria Nyanza, and his explorations. He met five pirate crafts and put them to flight by setting off an explosive under one of them. His sufferings and those of his men were depicted. He introduced the Bible among the natives, and his request for missionaries from England was promptly granted. Speaking of the Congo, the speaker dwelt at length upon the obstacles in his path and the frequent skirmishes with natives. The numerous tributaries to the Congo were described at length. . He humorously related how, after all his work being completed and when he was ready to return to England, he found that the left bank of the Congo had been token possession of by the French. He told of his plans-to prevent them from seizing the right bank of the river. In conclusion, the speaker referred to India and said its romance was ended. White people inhabit it, 235 miles of railroad are used, 12,000 miles of river are used by the steamers, and a cable sends news all over the world. It is reported that 600,000 tons of steel rails have been bought for delivery during the year 1887, says the Chicago Journal. At standard weight, 100 tons of rails are required to lay a mile of track. It appears that provision for the construction of 6,000 miles of railway next year has already been made. The years in which the most miles of railroad have (been built in this country have been the years of greatest general business activity. Competition among railroad companies in extending their lines for the purpose of seizing new territory, or to divide the business of other territory with their rivals, has led to periodical spurts, or booms, in railroad construction. During such periods more miles of railroad have been built than could be sustained by the business of the new country that had been penetrated. Reaction followed, with periods of serious business depression. The amount of money distributed in a season of aetive railroad construction is enormous. It is probable that the railroads of the ceuntry recently constructed and in process of construction cost an average of $10,000 a mile. At this' rate 6,000 miles of railroad will cost $60,000,000. To build railroad lines to that extent will cause this immense sum of money to be diffused among the people. The money will be paid for materials and labor, and will go to farmers who raise grain and animals for food, to dealers in all kinds of groceries, to the owners of forests who furnish railroad ties, to the operatives in the iron factories and mines, and to every other dealer or worker who draws wages and expends the money for the comforts and necessities of life. This amount of cash, flowing through all the channels of business, industry, and commerce, will produce lively times and general prosperity. The periods of reaction following these periods of strained activity are in accordance with a law of nature and humanity. Torpidity uniformly succeeds too great a- degree of animation. There must be rest after labor. The depression of 1882, 1883, and 1884 followed the remarkable prosperity of 1879, 1880, and 1881. After the present era of wholesale railroad construction shall close- when the rival companies shall have extended their lines into all the territory that they desire immediately to occupythere will be a lull in their operations, and general business will again suffer from temporary prostration and inactivity. A future boom will succeed the era of dullness. Qneen of the Quill Wa She. When Mrs. Stowe was ia England, Queen Victoria sent her word that a certain day she would be pleased to see the author of "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Mrs. Stowe replied that she had an engagement for that day. But the Queen would see her, and sent a lady-in-waiting a personal friend of Mrs." Stowe to make the necessary arrangement for an observation. There was to be a pageant of some kind that day in which the Queen would take part, passing the hotel where Mrs. Stowe was residing, and the royal messenger had agreed to place her hand on the author's left shoulder to distinguish her from those with her on the balcony as the procession passed. So Queen Victoria and the distinguished American gazed at each other a few moments in silent recognition, but Mrs. Stowe was not pleased that she was outwitted. No Tariff on That. "Name something we export," said a teacher in a public school in Baltimore the other day. "Beef," yelled one of the boys. "Yes, we export beef. Now, name something which we import. " "Pauper labor," shouted the same lad, and he went jo the head of the class without being toEL Wall Street News.

AN EDITOR'S TOUCHING FAKEWELl.

Ho JoyftUly Salntatorlcd, and Involuntarily Valedlctoried. In the last issue of the Buftalo Wallow World, writes Bill Nye, we find the following: "With this number the time seems to have fully arrived at which to cease the publication of this paper. Many of our subscribers will not even get this issue. To be brief about it, we were not permitted to remove our priut paper from the Adams Express oflice this week, although we have never, in these columns, said aught against Mr. Adams or his justly-celebrated express. We have paid many a dollar into the C. O. D. department of this man's express company. Before we came West our phvsician told us we could not live without cod liver oil, and, indeed, he was right, for have we not been a C. O. D. liver oil the time since we started this paper? "This remark is offered as a gratu itous insult to every unpaid subscriber. Paid-up subscribers may omit it. Or we will go to them personally and apologize. "But let us seriously review the past two years' history of the World, What have we not done to aid and encourage our infant industries and advance the flagging commerce of Buffalo Wallow ? "Let our files show whether we have done what we say or not. Let re luctant capital paw over our pages, covering the past, and answer if what we now state be not accurate. "Have we not, at the instigation of leading citizens hero, boomed the con dition of trade, when tramc was dead, and currency nothing but a hollow memory I "Have we not, through the columns of the World, asked that a bank be at once established here, when, as a matter of fact, for a year the postoflice here has had to sell stamps and take the pay out of the store? "Have we not been gay and frolic some in these columns that the world at large might not tumble to the woe within us? Have we not joked and punned and frolicked in print, when the shrill north wynd was whispering abroad with his icy breath, jxq hath no underclothing whatever? "We have ever been loyal to the town in which we lived, and this last act in our career shows hw loyal the town has been to us. Other newspaper men. with fewer brains and in better towns, have grown affluent Lowbrowed journalists elsewhere, in towns that are populated by human beings, have done well while we, with a fatigued and vapid constituency, have thrown awav our two best years and now go forth only with what is exempt from seizure and sale. "We kept quiet when the convention made its nomination for member of Assembly last year, and assisted in his election because he was a Buffalo Wallow citizen, well knowing even then that he would be the first man to put himself on the 5-cent counter. We knew then that he would take anything from a pass to an unguarded watermelon. But everybody said we should-stand by the nominations, especially so long as the nominee was a man who lived here. So he went to the Legislature, worked for the better protection to muskrats, and downed his neighbors on every corner. His pay was $250 for the session, out of which he succeeded in paying $300 board and $600 whisky bills, after which ho found by a system of rigid economy he had still enough left to purchase a twomoment horse and evade the grand jury. "More than aH that, we have sat up nights to edit and correct and revise and punctuate the alleged speeches of this man, so that his fellow-men would not think him the . intellectual blight that he is. All through the campaign his imitation brains floated about in a pool of red-eyed rum, like the specimens in a doctor's office dancing on the bosom of a jar of alcohol. Then he would emit a speech ! To-day, as the result of our toil, he is gay and free in Canada, while we go forth to begin life's battles once more, with the bitter memory of having assisted an intellectual angle-worm into a place where he could market his moth-eaten soul. "We have stood by the people of Buffalo Wallow in every way while we have been running this paper. We have maintained that good order prevailed here night and day, when the facts would hardly warrant this statement. We have pointed with pride to our peaceful record as a town when the low refrain of the six-shooter, cooing to its mate, oame stealing through the quiet night. We have asked the pious and prudish East to come and dwell with us, when we well knew that no stranger ever walked the length of our street in a ping hat and lived to tell his friends about'it, unless the hat was made of boiler iron. "We have also boomed our glorious climate when it had nothing to warrant indorsement. We have written page after page about our pure, bracing mountain air, when we had been living on Italian sunsets and ozoue for two days. We have written about remonetization and bi-metaltism and bond calls, when old man Gastric was clamoring loudly for a meek and lowly pickled pig's foot. "So it has gone on. One hundred and four times the World has gone forth from this office to beg for a church festival, to praise the feeble song of a young lady who resides here, and hasn't the manhood to buy half a dozen extras containing the puff, to congratulate the groom and to sympathize . with the woman, to say a kind word for the man who had painted his front fence, to Bay pleasant things of people who did not deserve them, to whoop up the county fair and the Fourth of July celebration, only to be badgered and bullied and sat, upon by people who were unworthy. "Subscribers who do not get their papers hereafter will know why it is that way. They will understand that their subscriptions and the puper, also, have expired. Those who think that a publication is a public trust will dc. well to apply elsewhere. "Beaders of the World who fine! a large red cross and a notice of sale on the front door of this office vail know that their subscription has expired. "We resign here to accept, the port

folio of biscuit shooter in a restaurant where food is an every-day occurrence. "Two years ago we joyfully salutatoried. To-day we have involuntarily valedictoried." Rabbits in New Zealand. Thinking that the animal would be profitable in the new country, some speculator introduced seven rabbits in 1860. Since that time they have increased so rapidly that between 1875 and 1884 55,000,000 rabbit skins were exported, the supply of 1884 being 9,800,000 skins, the contribution of the previous year having been about the saline. At first sight these figures seem to represent an enormous profit, but in reality they represent a considerable loss, the sum paid for killing the rabbits and dressing their skins for the market far exceeding the money for which they are sold. Could they be let alone the land-owners would be only too glad, but they continue to increase to such an extent that unless their numbers were kept down every sheep farm would have to Ue abandoned, as, indeed, has been the case in more than one instance, many small farmers having been ruined. The rabbit is utterly destructive to pastureland, not only eating the grass close to the ground, but even pulling up the roois when the grass is finished. Wire fence, sunk deeply into the ground, affords the only hope of checking the animals, but after awhile, finding that they cannot force their way through it, they burrow under it. Miss Gordon Cumining mentions that a well-known sheep-breeder Mr. Campbell was forced to abandon a "run" of 250,000 acres. Various methods of exterminating the rabbit have been tried. In December, 1885, 300 stoats and weasels were sent to New Zealand for the purpose of being turned loose into the rabbit burrows and destroying the inmates. This was the sixth consignment within two years. What success this importation may produce seems rather doubtful, as the introduction of a new animal is always a dangerous experiment. In fact, it recalls the wellknown experiences of the Laccadives, where cats were sent to eat the rats whiah destroyed the crowns of the palm trees, but preferred to stay on the ground and eat fish, which were plentiful on the shore. Then some snakes were sent, but only frightened the inhabitants. Then mongooses were sent, and found that it was much easier to eat the poultry than climb the palm trees after rats. Lastly, owls were sent to drive the rats to the ground, w&ere the cats and the mongooses could get at them. The result was that the interlopers were destroyed, the inhabitants preferring the rats alone to the rats plus the cat, mongoose, snake, and owl. Australia suffers as much as New Zealand from the depredations of the rabbits. In Queensland, which the rabbit has not as yet reached, great efforts are being made to keep it out of the province. In the Scientific American it is stated that tenders have been accepted for 2,250 miles of fencing-wire and 450 miles of wire netting of small mesl The order will be shipped from England forthwith. A route has been laid -out,- running for a -distance of 300 miles to the intersecting angle of Queensland and New South Wales, and thenceforth northward for a hundred miles. The Queensland government has voted 50,000 for this purpose. Longman's Magazine. The Editor's Friend. Some supposed friends of a newspaper have peculiar ideas as to what kind of items a paper requires. Not long since a gentleman came into the sanctum of a Texas paper and said to the editor: "Look here, you miss a heap of live items. I'm on the streets all day. I'll come up every once in awhile and post you." "All right, fetch on your item, but remember we want news." Next day he came up, beaming all over. "I've got a live iteni for you. You know that infernal bow-legged gorilla of a brother-in-law of mine, who was in business here with me?" "I believe I remember such a person," said the editor, wearily. "Well, I've just got news from Nebraska, where he's living, that he is going to run for the Legislature, Now, just give him a blast. Lift him out of his boots. Don't spare him on my account." The editor shook his head and the newsgatherer retired. Next day he came up again, "My little item was crowded out. At least I didn't see it in the paper. I brought you some more news," and he handed in an item about a cat as follows : "A Remarkable Animal. The family cat. of our worthy and distinguished fellow-townsman Smith, who keeps the boss grocery store of Ward No. 13 (beer always on tap, yesterday became the mother of five singularly-marked kittens. This is not the first time this unheard-of event has taken place. We understand Mr. Smith in being favorably spoken of as a candidate for Alderman. " The editor groans in his spirit as he lights a cigar with the effort. It is not long before he hears that Smith is going around saying that he has made the paper what it is, but it is not independent enough to suit the public. Many readers will say that this sketch is overdrawn, but thousands of editors all over the country will lift up their right hands to testify that they are personally acquainted with the guilty

party. Texan Siftings. A Life of Patronizing Neglect, Every one is familiar with the sensitive, spirituelle girl who marries a masculine animal, only to lead a life of patronizing neglect, in which all ae springs of a noblo nature are diied up aH the possibilities of a great womanly soul are turned in upon themselves to feed upon their own misery. When to this is added the additional and terrible fact that this woman finds herself reproducing types in which her own nature is not roneeted, liU-rally adding to the aggregate of qualities in her children that she has no spiritual communion with, and in spito of which toward whom she is drawn with an organic devotion that makes her a slave, we begin to get a glimpse of the terrible under miseries that are shut up some times in matrimony, Nym Crinkle,

Cement the Cellar A correspondent of the Western Rural writes: The cellar under the dwelling-house is not a desirable institution at best, so far, at least, as the wholesomeness is concered. And a cellar that is forever damp, moldy, and foul is certainly a prolific breedingplace for malaria. The location and uses of the cellar naturally tend to this condition of things. The constant exhalations of moisture from the earth and the exudings from green and decaying vegetables stored therein keep, the air heavy and impure. It is so heavy that it will not pass off by the ordinary means of ventilation, to be replaced by pure, fresh air. And the cellar being kept at a low degree of temperature, cold air admitted from the outside does not readily displace it, as is the case in upper rooms heated ever so slightly. Foul air will not pass out of a well of its own accord, nor will it pass from the cellar, for the same condition of things exists in the common earth-bottom cellar, only in a less degree than in the well. In protecting the cellar against the entrance of frost all means of ventilation are usually cut off during the cold months of the year. The exhalations from the earth constantly go on during this time, and ite cellar not only receives its proportionate share from the cellar-bottom area, but it serves as a sort of vent for tlie'arth immediately adjoining it, which is Ndenied its usual vent by reason of the frost-locked condition of the surface. Wttch impurity thus works into the cellar f ronT-the surrounding premises. It may not always be in a visible form, in fact it seldomls.

It is usually in the form of noxieul"K gases. The evils of the underground cellar may be vastly mitigated by an imhervious coat of cement. Cement offers about the only means for reclaiming a damp, foul cellar, and the cellar that is made useless at certain seasons of the year by the entrance of considerable quantities of water is completely protected by a thorough application of cement. The smoothly-cemented cellar may be thoroughly cleansed and purified, while the uncemented cellar can never be. The cost of cementing a cellar is slight. Water-lime and plastering sand are the best ingredients for the manufacture of such a cement. Two parts of the former to three of the latter I are the usual proportions. Water lime : J 1 i.i.x ' treatment other than mixing with the sand and wetting to the proper consistency to spread with cold water. The lime and sand should be thoroughly mixed in a dry state and thoroughly worked over after the water is added. But two or three bushels should be mixed up at a time, as it soon hardens into solid stone or at least becomes too stiff to spread well. A skilled mason is not needed in applying it. It may.be spread upon stone, gravel, or even earth. Two coats are usually necessary. The first may be roughly applied, but the second should be given a smooth, even finish. A common trowel is the only tool needed. A Room in Holland House. One crosses the threshold of so historic a building, as. .Holland House with feelings of no ordinary interest, for the little world on which he enters seems still to retain the voices and associations of other days, as a shell retains for the eair of childheod the far-off murmur of the sea. Stepping inside the Sreat entrance hall, which by reason of a reversal of construction is forty feet wide and only fifteea feet long, the visitor has before him a succession of more than twenty rooms on the first floor alone, such as the breakfast-room, maproom, journal-room, Turner-room, white parlor, and princesses-room. But as these call for no special mention, he ascends the broad oaken stairs to the floor above, and, crossing a landing, enters the gilt drawing-room. This is so generous in its dimensions that it is more like the audience-room of a palace than an apartment in a private dwelling. Its wainscoted walls are panelled in medallions separated by basso-relievo columns bordered with blue and gold, the medallions being alternately decorated with silver fleur-de-lis on a shield of blue, and a gold cross on a shield of red. Its furniture, though somewhat antique, and showing the effect of time's fading-out processes, is still well preserved, and helps to recall the magnificence that oace held sway within its ample walls. Two noble fire-places heighten the effect, and suggest warmth and comfort. The entire room is rich in suggestions. Here is a ohair in which Talleyrand or Macaulay has sat, and under the arch of the broad bay which overlooks garden and meadow have gathered such illustrious guests s Madame de Stael, Canova, Humboldt, Mackintosh, and Washington Irving, to talk, in their time, of travel, science, literature, . and art; while Burke, Sheridan, James Monroe, Louis Philippe, and Metternich have discussed the weightier matters of law and government with as much relish and wisdom, perhaps, as statesmen of this later day. The list of visitors who at different times have shonef at Holland House is a long and brilliant one, and might be extended almost indefinitely. M. C. Wilson, in Brooklyn Magazine, Where the Apostles Rest. Church authorities state that the remains of the Apostles of Christ are now in the following places : Seven are in Borne namely, Peter, Philip, James the Lesser, Jude, Bartholomew, Mattluas, and Simon. Three are in the Kingdom of Naples Matthew at Salerno, Andrew at Amalfi, and Thomas at Ortano. One is in Spain James the Greater, whese remains are at St. Jago de Compostella. Of the body of St. John, the evangelist, the remaining one of the twelve, there is no knowledge. The evangelists Mark and Luke are also in Italy the former at Venice and the latter at Padua. St. Paul's remains are also believed to be in Italy. Peter's are, of, course, in the church at Rome which is called after him, as are also those of Simon and Jude. Those of James the Lesser and Philip are in th3 Church of the Holy Apostle; Bartholomew's in the church on the Island in the Tibejr called after him; Matthias' are in the Santa Maria Maggiore, under the great a,ltar of the renowned Basilica. " ; '

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