Bloomington Telephone, Volume 7, Number 51, Bloomington, Monroe County, 3 May 1884 — Page 3

Bloomingtoft Telephone BLOQMINGTON. INDIANA. WA1JTER a BRADFUTE, - - Purushkb

It has been discoyered that & citizen of Cincinnati who fell dead ia a railway car the other day was poisoned by 1 tobacco smoke. He was an occasional sufferer from heart disease, and the trouble was so aggravated by the suffocative amrikA.1 iKo tha ha died

after breathing it a few minutes. The car in which he rode had only one compartment for men, woman and children, ami the smokers were allowed full sway in j Two other male passengers were overcome by the tobacco fumes. M. Pastevb has communicated to the Academie des Sciences the results of bis experiments with rabies. The most

interesting of Sub statements is mm ne can sender dogs insusceptible to infection by inoculating them with a modified virus. Hydrophobia is, however, deelining in Paris. According to a recent report there were but 6 cases of it in human beings in 1883, while in 1882 there were 11, and in 1881 the number reached 17. Among the animals there were 615 esses in 18S1, 27C in 1882, and 182 in 18S3.

t Dm Savobt says in the British Medical Journal, that among the chief causes of injury to the health from gambling, is the prolonged mental strain which becomes necessary to the maintenance of self-control during ex- . tended periods of intense excitement. He cites the case of a lady who had lately returned from Monte Carlo much broken down in health and greatly weakened by the severe fits of exhausv tion from which she invariably suffered after an hour or two at the gaming table. She said that her ability to continue the game was determined by the extent of her power to sustain an aspect of indifference in the presence of spectators.

A variety of stories, each one more improbable than the other, about the diamonds presented by the Khedive of Eg vpt to Miss Sherman, now Mrs. Fitch, are afloat For some rears they remained locked up in the Custom-house at New York Congress then passed a resolution exempting thorn from duty, and they were taken to Tiffany! who pronounced them worth' between, $40,003 and $SC,000. With tho consent of Mrs. Fitch, they were divided equally in four parts, one for her, one for Mrs. Thaekara, one for Sherman, and the other for Miss Rachel Sherman. So each one of the general's daughters had a set of solitaire earrings, a breastpin, $nd . necklace. They very seldom wear them, however.

Zola is thus described by M. Guy de Maupassant : "Zola is of average height, rather stout, and has a good-natured though abstinate look. His head, very like thoee which are found in many of the old Italian paintings, without being handsome, shows great power and intelligence. His hair, cut short, stands upright on a well-developed brow ; his nose is straight and cut square, as if by a too sharp stroke of a chisel; he wears a rather thick moustache, and the lower portion of his fat but energetic face, is covered with a betrd cut close to the chin. He is short-sighted, and has dark and penetrating eyes, which seem to search you through and through wltiie a certain movement of the upper lip gives the mouth a peculiar and mocking appearance." f A Dakota paper gives the following description of the approach of a blizzard: "Until about 4.15 p. m. the day was sunny, pleasant, and with a temperature as mild as spring. The streets were filled with people, and ladies were promenading in the enjoyment ef the ethereal mildness. Suddenly, and without the slightest warning, a solid white wall of frost and snow appeared in the northwest. It seemed as though the bluffs in the direction had suddenly shot upward to a height of 1,000 feet, so solid an. compact did this icy wall appear. In a second of time the storm burst with appaling fury, and the window, which had by the mildness of tho atmosphere become clear of frost, were heavily coated with cliugiug snow on the outside and heavy frosted particles on the inside. The air grew terribly cold, and was darkened by flying frcst and snow. The high walls of the hotel directly opposite were not to be seen. All objects were hidden by theflving and rapidly driven snow. P eople on the streets sought shelter, and the stores were temporarily used for protection from the fierceness of the howling bl&st. Darker grew the atmosphere, to such an extent that business in the office was stopped until lights were pro. cured-w Mbs. Fban Lesuk, who is soon to be married to the Marquis de Lenville, is said to bo the smartest business woman in Jiew York. By her sagacity and prudence the estate left by her JiucJjand, who seems to have been an extravagant ben vivant, has been raised f rom

bankruptcy into a condition of grea prosperity. She is a wondroualy charming lady, of handsome, dignified presence, varied accomplishments, aud re-, marbablo conversational powers. Tho Marqais is younger than Mrs. Leslie, and is said to be a most engaging gentleman. He has great wealth, and is osely devoted to literature and art. Not long ago he published a volume of meritorious poems. Last fall he overheard a foreign nobleman make the slightest remark about Mrs. Leslie, and the result was a duel, fought in Belgium. It is believed that this iucident had much to do with bringing the fair widow to terms. The Marquis has the reputation of being one of the best pistol-shots in the world. The announcement of his early marriage to Mrs. Leslie is by no means a surprise, although it has been variously hinted that the lady was enamored of Joaquin Miller, the poet The truth is that Mrs. Leslie has always admired Miller, but whatever she has done for him has been done purely from a desire to encourage a man whose gifts and powers she deemed worthy of encouragement. Whatever they may say, said Bear Admiral Ammen to aNew York reporter, all that they are doiqg at Panama looks to the construction of the canal that must have 124 feet lockage, and will then cost $200,000,000, in addition to the $100,000,000 called in on stock oi obtained on bonds. About $20,000,000 has gone to the founders and sub-founders ; about as much more for the purchase of the Panama Bailroad, and 10 per cent, in advertising and extra fee to ba&ers; and as much more to contractors as a bonus. I have from an engineer, conversant with the work, that every cubic metro of hard ground excavated costs $2.50, which is five times what it should cost even there. But the difficulty, even for a lock cana, s to get rid of the excavated material. An enormous amount of evcavation will be required to get proper slopes in the Calebra cut. This is almost wholly in earth, and the summit level of the railroad is a mere "hog's back," that is to say, it has very steep grades On both sides. Tho cnt was made only twentyfive feet deep, because of the tendency of the earth to slide. In fact a train was caught iu this gap by a slide, and it required days to dig it out. The earth had to be carried oif in buckets and it was like putty. If the canal has a lockage of 125 feet then the deep cut will be at least 200 feet. So you sve what a cut in width it must be, and what the land slides will be after heavy rains. A Russian paper publishes a pen picture of the mother of Turgenieff, which is anything but flattering. Th lady was proud and vain to the point ofj folly, ruling her children as despotically as her slaves. She was as proud of her noble descent as of her inches, and' after she became a widow her arrogance knew no bounds. She ordered her household like to a royal one; her serfs bore the title of office in use at court. Thus her postboy was called postmaster general ; her steward, chief of the gendarmes, and so forth. No one might speak to her unless addressed. Not even her sons might appear in her presence unannounced. And when her eldest son, Nicholas, married without her consent, she withdrew from him all pecuniary aid, and let him suffer the most cruel privations. When, in 1849, the cholera broke out in her district, she happened to hear that the infection was spread by means of bacteria that pervaded the air and were breathed in with it. She thereupon ordered her. steward of the household to construct for her some contrivance by means of which she could see objects when going out of doors without breathing the pestilential air. She therefore caused a kind of sedan chair to be made with a glass roof, which had the appearance of one of those cheats in which in the Greek church the figures of saints are borne abroad. Thus it came about that, going out iu her machine, a pious person who saw it pass fell on his knees according to cnatom, crossed himself, and offered the bearer a penny for tl a good of the church.

The Immortals. Theophile Gautier used to say that it was destiny, not Hterary merit, which conducted men to the honor of admittance to the French Academy . "If you are to belong to the Academy' lie said on one occasion to M. Bei'gerat, "take no trouble about it an Academician you will be without writing a single book; but if yo;i were not predestined for a fauteiiih 300 volunes and ten chefs d'emtvre will not open the door of the Institute to you. A man is born an Academician, as one is born an Archi bishop, a cook, or a policeman. The last time I offered myself I had a formal promise of the vote of every one of the members. When the day enmc they all voted like one man. The thirty-nine vofcirg papers all bore my name. Of that thero was not a shadow of doubt; and for my own part I am convinced of it to tlrs day. Nevertheless, the rival candidate was elected unanimously." Man's duty is more important than rights. A man true to his duty i but insuring hk rights, and his lights will be respected by his fellowmnn on account of his faithfulness to duly.

ALLURE RS. When find by Whom tlie NumetaH Vfero Invented Remarkable Propertied -of Some Numbers. Troy TimeB. The Brahmins aro said to have inrented the numerals 1 to 10 sometime before the Christian era, and the Arabians to have introduced them iuto Spain, whence they spread all over Europe. They did not come into general use in England until the beginning of the seventeenth century. In olden times there was a belief in the occult power of numbers, which were thought to express the harmonies of nature. Divination of numbers came from this belief. In a well-known song, liorv O'More declared "there's luck in odd numbers had luck for some. In the numeral Hebrew cabala two was said to be the most imperfect. Cornelius Agrippa wrote that, therefore, on tho second day of the creation, the Almighty did not pronounce tho very work of his hands to be good, and llabbi Akkiva asserted that hell was made on the evening of the second day. In modern times a great many princes, second of their name, have been unfortunate. For example, in English history, William II., commonly called Kufus, from his red hair, whe was accidently killed by an arrow shot by Sir Walter Tynel while hunting in the New forest; Henry II., who was humiliated as never was monarch before, on account of the murder of Thomas Uccket, and was peculiarly unfortunate in his family; Edward II., brutally murdci'ed in Berkeley Castle; Uiqharjl IL, dethroned, imprisoned, and murdered iu Pontefract Castle; James IL, dethroned and exiled, and a number of foreigners. It is also noticeable that princes who have been the second of their name, even when fortunate in worldly matters, have almost all been immoral and irrolijjious. Take, for example, Henry II CnarlesIL, and George IL, of England, not to mention, before the conquest, Edward the Martyr, Ethelred the Unready, and Edmund Ironsides. To these may be added Peter IL, of Bassia; Charles IL, of Navarre, and Isabella IL, of Spain. The number 3: When the world was created we find land, water and sky, sun. moon and stars; Noah had but three sons. Jonah was three days in the whale's belly. Christ was three days in the tomb, Peter denied Christ thrice. There were three patriarchs. Abraham entertained three angels. Samuel was called three times. Daniel was thrown into a den with three lions for praving three times a day. tihadrach, Meshech,and Abednego were rescued from the dames of the oven- The ten commandments were delivered on the third dav. Job had three friends. St. Paul speaks on faith, hope and charity, these three. Those famous dreams of the baker and butler were to come to pass in three days ; and Elijah prostrated himself three times on the body of the dead child, damson deceived Pelila three times before she discovered the source of his strength. The sacred letters on the cross are I. H. S. ; so also the Roman motto was composed of three words, "In hoc signo" There are three conditions for man, the earth, heaven, and hell : there is also the Holy Trinity. In mythology there are three graces; Cerberus with his three heads; Neptune holding his three-toothed staff; the Oracle of Delphi cherished with veneration the tripod, and the nine muses sprang from three. In nature we have male, female, and offspring; morning, noon, and night. Trees group their leaves in threes; their is the threeleaved clover. Wo have fish, flesh, and fowl. What could be done iu the mathematics without the aid of the triangle ? Witness the power of the wedge; and in logics three premises are indispensible. It is a common phase that "threo is a lucky number." The number 9 possesses some remarkable proprieties. If the nine digits, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, bo added together the sum will be 45, which is equal to 5 times 9, and the sum of the digits of their sum, 4 and 5, v 9. If any number is subtracted from another having the same digits in adifierent order, the remainder will be divisible by 9, and the sum of the digits of the remainder will also be divisible by 9. Subtracting 2,9(57,04 from 7,364,42'J there remains 4,41(5,795, which is equal to 9 times 490,955. The sum of the digits, 4, 4, 1, 0, 7, 9, 5, is 36. which is divisible by 9. If any number be multiplied by 9, the sum of the digits or figures of the product will be divisible by 9. Nine times 43,789,135 is 394,021,215; the sum of the digits of t he product is 27, a multiple of 9. If a number be subtracted from another having the same digits in a different order, and one of the digits of the remainder erased, it can be found in the following manner : Add together the figures of the remainder that are left, divide the sum by 9, subtract the figure that remains after tho dividing by 9, from 9, and the last remainder will be the digit of figure sought. If there is no remainder, 0 or 9 was erased. Ask someone to write down a number and subtract from it another composed bf tho same digits in a different order, without letting you see either of them. Tell him you want all the figures of the remainder but one. By the above rule you can soon find the figure you have not seen. The feat will appear quite mysterious to tho uninitiated. Here is an example: Subtracting 15(3,324 from 231,456, the remainder is 75,132. The sum of the figures 7, 5, 1, 3t is 16. Divide 16 by 9, we have a remainder of 7. Seven from 9 leaves 2, the other figure, 9 What conception can we form of a billion? We may say that a bi.lion is a million of millions, and easily represent it thus: 1,000,000,000,000. But how entirely the mind is inc&pflble of conceiving such numbers. If a person were able to count at the rale of two hundred a minute, and to work without intermission twelve hours a day, ho would take to count a billion 0,944,444 days, or, 19.325 years 819 days. A Billion of billions a quadrillion can easi y be represented thus : 1 ,900,000,000,000.000,000,009,000; but to count a quadrillion at the rale of two hundred in the minute would require all the inhabitants of the globe, supposing thorn to be a thousand millions, to count incessantly for 19,025,$7D years, or more

than three thousand times the period during which the human race has been supposed to be in existence; 'Troy Tim es. Drunk in a Hug Hat. This world is filled with woe everywhere as you go. Sorrow is piled up in tho fence corners on every road. Unavailing regret aud red-nosed remorse inhabit tho cot of the tie-chopper as well as the cut glass cage of the mil lion aire. The woods are full of disappointment. The earth is convulsed with the universal sob, and the roads are muddy with tears. But I do not call to mind a more touching picture of unavailing misery and ruin and chaos than tho plug hat that has endeavored to keep sober and maintain its self-respect while its owner is drunk. A plug hat can stand prosperity, and! shine forth joyously while nature smiles. That's tho place where it seems to thrive, A silk hat looks well on a thrifty man with a clean collar, tmfc it cannot stand dissipation. I once knew a plug hat that liad been respected by every one aud had won its way up by steady endeavox. No one knew aught against it till one evening, in an evil hour, it consented to attend a banquet, and all at once its joyous career ended. It met nothing but distrust and cool neglect everywhere after that. Drink seemed to make tho man temporarily, unnaturally exhilarated. During the temporary exhilaration he desires to attract attention by eating lobster salad out of his own hat aud sitting down on his neighbors. Tho demon rum is bad enough on tho coatings of the stomach, but it is even more disastrous to the tall hat. A man may mix up in a crowd and oarry off an overdose of valley tan in a soft hat or cap, but the silk hat will proclaim it upon the housetops and advertise it to the gaping, wondering world. It has a way oi getting back on the rear elevation of the head, or even the bridge of the nose, or of hanging corruettishly on one ear that savs to the eagle-eyed public, "I am chock full." I can not call to mind a more powerful lecture on temperance than the silent pantomime of a man trying to hang his plug hat on an invisible peg in his own hail after he had been watching the returns threo years ago. I saw that he ay as excited and nervously unstrung when he came in, but I did not fully recognize it until he began to hang his hat on the smooth wall. At first he laughed in a good natured way at his own awkwardness and hung it up again carefully ; but at last he became irritated about it, and almost forgot himself enough to swear, but controlled himself. Finding, however, that it refused to hang up ho put it in the corner of the hall with the crown up, pinned it to the floor with his umbrella, and heaved a sigh of relief. Then he took off his overcoat, and, through clerical error, pulled off his dress eoafi also. I showed him his mistake and offered to assist him back into his apparel, but he said he hadn't got so old and feeble yet that he couldn't dress himself. Later on bo came into the parlor wearing a linen ulster, with the belt drooping behind him like the broken harness hanging to a shipwrecked and stranded mule. His wife looked at him in a way that froze his blood. This startled him so t .iat he stepped back a pace or two, tangled his feet in his circingle, clutched wildly at the empty gas light, but missed it, and sat down in a tad majolica cuspidor There were three games of whist going on when he fell, and there was a good deal of excitement over the playing; but after he had been pulled out of the American tear jug and led away, every one of the twelve whist-players had forgotten -what the trump was. They say that he has abandoned politics since then, and that now he doesn't care whether we have any more November elections or not. I asked l.iinj once if he would bo active during the 18S4 campaign, as usual, and he said he thought not. He ad a man couldn't afford to be too aotivo in a political campaign. His constitution wouldn't stand it. At that time he didn't care much whether the American people had a President or not. If every public-spirited citizen had got to work himself up into a state of nervous excitability and prostration where reason totterd on its throne, ho thought that Ave needed a reform. Those who wished to furnish reasons to totter on their thrones for the National Central Committee at so much per tot could do so; he, for one, didn't propose to farm out his immortal soul and plug hat to the party if 60,003,000 people had to stand four years under the administration of a setting hen. Bill Nue.

The First Prussian toronation. Sophia Charlotte died iu 1703. The kingdom Avas established in 1701; and it is recorded as significant that the Elector himself placed the w-rown on his head, as if to convey tho idea that he owed it only to his own efforts, and not to any earthly potentate. But he had found it prudent first to obtain the consent of the Emperor, for which a long course of negotiations was necessary; and Frederic had to pledge support to the Austrain petensions in the war of the Spanish succession before the imperial scruples were overcome, Tho Pope protested, bat to no effect. The new King took his title from Prussia instead of lraudenburg, because ao Duke of Prussia he was already inde e ulent, while as Margrave of Brandenburg he was a vas ud of the Empire It in worthy of mention, t,o, that after this first original coronation all of the succeeding kings dispensed with the ceremony, except the present king, Williaii', who in 1 Mil revived "it Herbert Tutil in Harper's Magazine. Mou. Cavei, savs: "Mv views on the marriage tie are, hriel'y, that women were made by God Almighty to boithor married or bome nuns, and that there is no such Minte as old maid recogui; able. My fujvice to all yount women is io accej tnmn -iago proposal instead of rejecting thm Nothing is so eredul us as vanitv, o: so ignore nt of what becomes itself.

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