Bloomington Telephone, Volume 11, Number 13, Bloomington, Monroe County, 5 August 1887 — Page 3
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mMUOSCKCES OF PUHUC USX BY BEN : PERLEY POORE, P. B. S. Pinchback, the mulatto, who figured largely iu national politics dur4he Grant and Hayes administrations, was born a slave in the State of Louisiana about the vear 1839. His father's name was Pinchback, and he held a .number of slaves. Among them wft a female nearly white, of striking beauty and intellect. By this lady old Pinchback had three children, two girls and one boy. These children, with their jnother, he sent to Cincinnati to be educated. The girls applied themselves very closely and learned very fast; but young Pinchback was wild and reckless, and took mere interest in feats of daring and games of hazard than he did in his books. His mother, soon after coming to Cincinnati, formed the acquaintance of a gentleman by the name of Stewart and married him, after which Pinchback was called Pink Stewart. In the spring of 1856, Mr. Alfred Jackson, a barber of Dayton, being in -Cincinnati, met young Pinchback at the Dumas House. Taking a fancy to the boy, who was then about sixteen or seventeen years of age, Mr. Jackson asked him if he would not like to go with him to Dayton and learn the barber business. He readily consented in ase his mother was willing. His another's consent was obtained and he came with Jackson to Dayton Pinchback made an agreement with the landlord of the Phillips House to board and lodge him for his services in waiting on the table. At other times he was to serve Mr. Jackson in the capacity of bootblack, and to gradually learn the barbering business. At first he attended to blacking boots for Jackson pretty faithfully, but gradually dropped off, and at oze time was absent for several weeks. Mr. Jackson, feeling uneasy about the boy, made inquiry of his whereabouts, and found him in a haymow playing "aeven-upn for money. The report among the boys was that "Pinch" had extraordinaryluck, for, in spite of all they could do, he would manage to rake in the stakes. Mr. Pinchback's good fortune was such at cards that he rose rapidly, both financially and socially, and disdained any longer to be the bootblack of any man. Accumulating some means ahead, he concluded to enlarge his field of operations. So he made a trip to Lafayette, Lid., where he opened a faro bank. After relieving the boys of their xeady cash in Lafayette, he returned to Dayton, where he remained more or less for some three years, and then left for Ids old home in Louisana. Soon after his return to Louisiana the war broke out Mr. Pinchback's manly bosom swelled with patriotism, and, true to his native section, he raised a colored company for the Southern cause, and drilled it for the defence of 2Jew Orleans. When the city surrendered to the Northern forces at d Butler took possession, Capt. Pinchtack, with a patriotism rarely equaled,
eadify submitted to the great Ameri
can principle that the majority should
Je, and carried his entire command ,er to the Union forces. It is to be egretted that history is silent as re
gards the dead and wounded that fell tinder his command, both in the Con x&derate and Union causes. Capt. Pinchback was at one time Lieutenant-Governor and acting Governor of Louisiana, and he came within two votes of being admitted to a 3eat in the United States Senate. Lawrence M. Keitt, of South Carolina, who was with Preston S. Brooks when he assaulted Charles Sumner in the Senate Chamber, and who resigned to escape expulsion, made a parting speech denunciatory of Mr. Sumner, which has had few parallels in Congress so far as abuse is concerned: "As the wilderness produces," said Mr. Eeitt, "so must the concave arch itself bear specimens of his rhetorical sprouts. The earth is two lowly a theater for the ambitious reaches of his speech. He affects the 'heavens' themselves for the very pretty diversion of filing them with 'shining towers of religion and civilization.' 'Shining towers of religion,' Mr. Speaker! The towers of Massachusetts religion, topped bp the predominant weather-cock, pointing to the changes of her people, veering with each wind of doctrine, and passing, without concern, from dark religious fanaticism to wild and God-defying blasphemy! 'Shining towers of civilization Mr. Speaker! The towers of Massachusetts civilization, which hypocritically nestles the rank and sensuous African to her bosom, thrusting, aside thousands of the children of her loins, who can scarcely draw the support of their existence from an overtaxed industry. Tho towers of Massachusetts civilization, which, not satisfied with its own sickly results, would, pregmatic and intrusive, steal into our borders to force upon us its baleful fruits ! Yes, sir, the towers of Massachusetts civilization, cruelly organizing human muscles and bone3 into living machines, and remorselessly working away the impress of God's image from men and women of kindred stock and blood, doomed to wear out the energies of life to keep up the greed of task-masters who, 'like the daughters of the horseleech have never learned to say 'enough. ' Massachusetts civilization, the mephitic air of whose workshops eats its way through the lungs of the victims of avarice; and when they die, tbey die with their last wishes turned to the free winds of Heaven, with their last words 'babbling o9 green fields " Gov. Seward used to tell a story about Gov. Draper, of New York, who was dining one day at the Congress Hall hotel, where the butter happened to be particularly rank. "Here, John' said Draper to a favorite waiter who was standing behind him, "John, take this plate away; some people like their butter stronger than others." John took the plate, held it up to his nose a moment with the air of a connoisseur, then put it back again in its place, and observed in a firm voice: "Misther Draer, that is the strongest butter ia the house. n "I onee had the honor," said Honrtio Greenough, "of hearing a President of the United States talk of sculpture. He spoke of several works which he had seen, but declared that the statue of a royal governor, still preserved
somewhere m Virginia, was the only work that gave him : full idea of the power of art. 'The wrinkles in the boots, sir, are perfection Lest any man should suppose that he or I were inclined to amuse ourselves at the expense of sincerity and truth, I do declare that these were his words, and uttered with much warmth. " Gen, Butler is merciless when crossexamining witnesses. Once, on a trial in Massachusetts, at which Prof. Horsford. of Cambridge, a compeer of Dr. Webster, the eminent anatomist, was a witness, he used the distinguished gentleman so roughly in his cross-examination that the court interfered, saying: "Perhaps, Mr. Butler, you are not aware who the witness is. " It is Prof. Horsford, of Cambridge." Whereupon the terrible advocate, fixing an eye upon each, replied: "Oh, yes, your honor, I know, a Harvard professor ; we hanged one of them a while ago." What Becomes of Cigar Stumps. A little old Hebrew, bent and shrivelled up with age, haunts the Bowery and parts of Park Bow every day. He carries a dirty little canvas bag under his arm, and pokes around in the dirt and rubbish with a short crooked stick. Most of the people who notice him at all think he is a rag picker, but he isn't If you were to stop and watch his operations you would see hini leave rags and paper alone, and carefully pick out of every corner and pile of rubbish every scrap of tobacco he can find. AD the old cigars and cigarette stumps he runs across are carefully treasured up and thrust into the canvas bag. The old man lives in a miserable room in a back street near the Bowery. The writer followed him up into his quarters the other day, and saw a sight not particular appetizing to smokers. The room was filled with an intolerable odor of half-burned tobacco. Cigar stubs were piled up in heaps in the cornft Strips of dirty tobacco were drying over a hot fire. A dirty boy was sorting the "snipes" into four piles. "What do you do with all that stuff?" asked the reporter. "Oh, sell it to the dealers to work back into cigars and cigarettes. The boy there sorts out the stubs according to their looks. Some will be made into good cigars that will sell for ten cents. The next pile there will go into five-cent cigars. The third pile will only do for the filling of cigarettes, and the last pile will make cheap smoking tobacco. We cut off all the burned part of the cigar very carefully. Then we unroll the stub and put the leaves over the stove to dry. Then we clean the dried leaves off again and furbish them up as much as possible. Of course you can't get all the burnt smell out of the leaves, but this stuff only goes for fillers and such things, and after the cigar makers have flavored and perfumed it, nobody can tell the difference. "Very likely we may have worked over the same stuff two or three times. That's a queer thought, isn't it?" "Are there many in your kind of business in New York?" asked the reporter. "Many? Well there's too many to leave any great profit for any of us. We clean the streets of everything in the shape of tobacco between us all. A few years ago there was money in it. I was the only man in the business then. It will never be like that again. Of course it isn't a very nice business, but I got used to the smell long ago, and it isn't so bad as you think it is after alL If it wasn't for us how would you get your real genuine imported Havana cigar for ten cents? The most common use for the stuff, though, is in the all-tobacco cigaret tes. Besides selling to the dealers, I make a kind of smoking tobacco myself out oi some of the leavings. Sailors buy it. They like it because it is strong. The license I have to pay, though, knocks all the profit out of it. The tobacco isn't so bad as you think it is. Won't you try a pipe-full ?n The writer hastily excused himself and withdrew. New York Paper. Freddy's Earnest Appeal. Little Fred did not like Sunday. He never had thought much about it except that the bells rang and big folks went to church; that mamma told him Bible stories, when he somenow felt very good and peaceful, and that papa was home all day, and in the afternoon, if it were clear, took him out for a walk. That is, until he lived next door to some children and discovered that on Sundays he could not go to their house to play. From this time Sunday was a great trial, and frequently for days before he would talk of little else. "How many days till Sunday, auntie ?" he mournfully asked one morning as he sat by the register, vainly trying to button his shoes. "Why, three whole days, Freddy," cheeringly answered auntie. "Only free days?" wailed Fred, in tones of deepest woe. Then energetically, "I don't see why you hate it so often for!" "Why, Freddy, Sunday is one of the days of the week. It is God's day." "God makes the Sunday," said Fred. "Yes," said auntie. "He has a kind of wheel," soberly explained the little fellow, "and turns it 'round till he turns out Sunday. It just comes; but I don't see why he has it so twick, and" he added, after a moment's thought, "if he is going to have it so twfck all the time, I'm just going into Crowell's to play anyhow." This idea appeared to cheer him, for he vigorously reattacked the buttons and began to hum a tune. Presently he began to talk to himself, and auntie, who was just going out of the room, heard him softly sav: "God! God! Don't make Sunday come so twick!" Then, after looking expectantly a moment at the ceiling, he slowly and in the deepest bass he could command, answered: "No, I won't; I won't !" Again, as shaking with laughter auntie started toward the stairs, she heard in accents of the most earnest entreaty : "God! God! Please don't make Sunday come so twick?" Then in stentorian tones: "No; I won't; I won't" How noiselessly the snow comes down. You may vsee it, feel it, but never hear it. Such is true charity
THE MOON AND THE WEATHER Some Scientific Facts Ilegttrdlng an Old SujwrslHion, Of all surviving pseudo-superstitions that of the influence of the moon on the weather dies the hardest; and the belief that the (so-called) "changes" of the moon are accompanied or followed by changes in the condition oi' the terrestrial atmosphere is still to bo found anion ; a very laTge number indeed of otherwise educated and enlightened people, A recent writer in the Ewjlish Mechanic has examined the grounds of this belief and attributes it to the weather predictions in the almanacs of the early part of the century. As to the moon "changing," one would imagine io hear the majority of people talk, that a "change" of the moon is in some sense cognate with a conjuring trick, in which ttie performer, after showing that he has nothing in his hand, instantaneously produces an egg, an orange, or a ball from it. Now nothing could well be further from the truth than this, the fact beiug that the moon is always changing .01 second before conjunction she is waning, .01 second alter it she is waxing, and so throughout her monthly path. When her (celestial) longitude is identical with that of the sun she is said in the almanacs to be "new;" when such longitude differs 90 degrees from the sun's toward the east she is iu her "first quarter;" when they are separated by 180 degrees the moon is "full," and when she has truveled to that point in her orbit in which she is 90 degrees to the west of the sun she is said to be in her "last quarter;" in each case it being assumed that she is viewed from the earth's center. The use of the word "charge," then, in connection with her position in these four points of her orbit is a solecism, pure and simple. "But," people are heard to say, "a3 the moon influences the tides, why should it not affect the atmosphere too ?" To which the immediately obvious reply is that the tides are a semi-diurnal phenomeon, so that, on this principle, the weather ought to change twice a day also a conclusion too absurb to be entertained. Nevertheless the moon does influence the atmosphere by causing the production in it of tides so minute as, under ordinary circu instances to be masked by other fluctuations. The existence of these atmospheric tides was first definitely established by the observations of the late Prof. Daniell, but if these minute tides influenced the weather in the slightest degree it must change twice a day a supposition too ridiculous to merit notice. The "moon on her back" as a weather sign would appear to be a good deal like the old woman's indigo test if the dye was pure " 'twould either sink or swim, she disremembered which." In many parts of the country, and uniformly in England, the belief prevails that when the young moon is "lying on her back" in other words, when the line joining her cusps is nearly or quite parallel to the horizon, she is "holding water," and that rain will certainly follow. How either belief arose it would be idle to speculate, but the explanation of the phenomenon itself is sufficiently simple. In the outset the moon is never much more than 5 degrees either to the north or south of the ecliptic, or apparent annual path of the sun through the Heavens. Now the line adjoining her cusps (the sharp points of her crescent) is always square to a great circle passing the sun and moon. Two minutes' study of a celestial globe will show how variable is the inclination of the ecliptic to the horizon, and consequently that of the line joining the cusps of the moon also. Finally, the most elaborate comparisons of meteorogical records made in France and in England (where the Greenwich observatory for forty years were carefully collated with the moon's phases during that period) have sufficed to show that no connection whatever exists between them. The solitary observable effect of the moon upon our atmosphere was believed by Sir John Heischel to be exhibited in the tendency to disappearance or cloud under the full moon, and this he attributes to the heat radiated from her surface. The Modern French Estimate of Napoleon, It has not been difficult of late years to collect contemporary prints of the First Napoleon. It may have been otherwise under the Second Empire probably it was but since the establishment of the Third Republic it has been easy enough. This history of Napoleon's prestige in France may be told in a few words. Napoleon's personal force was so great, and he had so identified himself with France, that, in spite of the reaction consequent on the Restoration of Louis XVIII. , the French people, as a whole, accepted him and glorified him as the national hero. His fame, and the magical influence of his name, suffered little even from the recollections of Leipsic and Waterloo ; his reputation, in fact, increased steadily all through the period of the rule of the returned Bourbons, and at no time was more potent than in the reign of Louis Philippe. In his clay Napoleon's remains were brought back from St. Helena, and interred, with great pomp, in the Invalides. The shops of Paris were full of pictures of his battles, of portraits of him and of his marshals. Up to the Revolution of 1848, Napoleon's government and policy were always, in the popular mind, opposed to the policy and government of the Bourbons. He stood for the principle of the national will; they the older branch, of course, more particularly---for the principle of divine right After the deposition of Louis Philippe, the tremendous influence of Napoleon's name carried Prince Louis into the chair of the President of the new Republic by an overwhelming majority, in spite of everything that the Government could do to prevent it. But from thai moment a new chapter began. Napoleon was now no longer, in the minds of the French people, placed in contrast with the Bourbon Kings, but with the Republic. The coup d'etat of December 2, 1851, embittered the
Republicans against the uncle almost as much as against the nephew, for it was by the uncle's nttme that the nephew had won. Hence came a systematic effort to write down the First Napoleon, with the view ti1 weabmiug
tho hold of the Third Napoleon upon the popular mind. Lnnfrey'a History is she best illustration of a work of this kind. The fall of the Second Empire, wich all its mortifying incidents and terrible disasters, did much however iilogically to lower the prestige of Napoleon the First; and since 1871 Republicans and Bonapavtists have been always at swords' points. In France to-day, whatever may be iu fact the strength of tho veneration felt for tho First Napoleon, one sees ami hears little of him. There are, of course, many prints, busts, medals, statuettes of him to be found in the shops; but they are not so highly pnzed, I fancy, to-day as they wero forty years ago. From "Some Illustrations of Napoleon and his Times," by John C. Hopes, in Scribner's Magazine. A Fall in Watches. "Do you see this old watch?" said a watchmaker to a reporter for the Pittsburgh Dispatch. He held up an article that looked more like a mantel clock, and proceeded to opeu it up. By some twist of tho thumb nail that only a watchmaker k:aows, he opened the outer case and it looked much like the shell of a cocoanut. The interior portion resembled the kernel. The thumb nail got to work again and the glass face was raised. Again the thumb nail acted, and the works were turned out on a hinge, and they looked big and coarse enough to run a rolling mill. 'That watch doesn't look as though it was worth much," continued the watchmaker, "and yet its owner, who
i: was in here a few moments ago, said
he must have it fixed at any price. I found a couple of pivots broken, several teeth bent, and other damages. I told him it would cost $1. 'Fix it up,' he sa:id, 4I don't care if h cost $10 to fix it. That watch belongs to my father. Ho has had it for many years, long before I was born. I don't think it could keep time enough for a pawnbroker, yet he wants it fixed and it must be done." "Now," continued the watchmaker, "t'uafc is a very old stylo of watch. He could buy a far better one for the price he would have to pay for repairing it, and one that would be much more suitable, too. It is a burden to carry such a watch. But men liked them when they plowed, hammered around trees, fell into rivers, etc. This old watch survives such m: shaps, though it doesn't keep decent time. It can't. Its machinery is too rough and too old to ke ep good time, "Yes, there hits been i great change in the style of watches. Years ago biij watches, with all the flowering that could be got on the cases, were the style. Then came the opposite, and plain watches Mere the demand. The lady's wach came, a neat, delicate little thing-, and the men thought the little watches were the ne plus ultra. And the jowlera begun to bedeck the cases with pearls and other stones, and the articles brought big prices. After a
i time the neat silver watch began to get I J 1 ! 11,,
ns. nooKs in, ana it was an tue rage. "Prices for watches have fallen remarkably in t be last ten vears, I remember when people paid $250 and $300 for a hunting-case gold watch that ycu can get for :50 or $00, and sometimes for less. The change in price is due 1.0 the fact that the makers, after a time, found they could make cases m aeh cheaper than they had bean doing. The works were " made much cheaper by the ise of machinery, and of course the price fell, being helped along by competition," The Limekiln Club. In view of the recent disastrous explosions and conflagrations in different sections of the country, the Committee on Personal Safety and Non-injury have recommended the following rules to members of the club: wDoan scratch a m&tchon yer leg onless prepared to jump ober de nighest fence. "If you know dat a biler am gwine to explode, drap down on de ground an kiep yermouf shut, "Any pussun who smokes a clay pipe in bed should ki.verde bowl wid a piece of ole boot-leg: an hire somebody to keep him awake, "There should be no smoking in tho viciuity of the club wood-box. Woodboxes am liable to explode at any moment, an when dey does de scene of ruin an desolashun am 'nuff to apall do stoutest heart. "Paradise Ha 11 am liable to take fire any evenin' when a meetin' ar' in progress. In case a lire ar diskivered de outer guard should notify de inner guard. Dis latter gemlan should quietly notify de Keeper of de Bed Doah. Dis pusion should softly menshun de fact to de Keeper of de Sacred Belies, an' he iu turn should enter de lodge room an' place o.e matter befo'de President. "We recommend dat seben two-gallon jugs, each one full of water, be placed in de au nty-room as a precaushun. "Also, dat de nsura:ace on de hall be increased to sicl 1 a tigger dat, in case it burns up an' Samuel Shin, Pickles Smith, an' Judge Chewso ar' consumed w:id it, deir loss will be our gain. "We would furder recommend dat de janitor be supplied wid some sort of h&nd fire-extinguisher. We doan' mean any thin' costly an' elaborate, wid a picture of De Sott dtskiverin de Mississi pi River painted on de side, but sunthin9 combining untility an1 cheapness." Detroit Free lress. Eclipses iH 1888. Three successive eclipses are a very rare occurrence, still it happens sometimes. On December 1, LS80, there was a partial eclipse of the sun, followed January lb by a total eclipse of the moon, and on December 31 another partial eclipse 0!' the sun occurred. Exactly the same happened 1884 on March i27, April 10 and 2b If tho predicted end of th j world doesn't come inside of a year, and we live long enough, we will ie able to see a total eclipse of the moon on July 22, 1888, which is preceded and followed by partial eclipses cf the sun. It will not
happen in this century again. Okeat possessions may bring great misfortunes. Some men are punished by prosperity.
CURIOUS FACTS
An American syndicate has obtained the exclusive privilege of using the telephone in China for thirty years. Scales are now made so delicate that a signature on a j.iece of paper with a soft lead pencil can be weighed. A jcuy in New York city lined a house owner 2! cents for entering a teuant's house with muddy boots to collect the rent. The first letter the new postmaster at Kenroton, lib, had received for six years was the one containing his commission. Bkouklyx Bridge is to be painted to preserve the metal, and 40,000 pounds of paint will be required to do it in the most economical manner. An Alsatian who tattooed himself all over with "Vive la France" was imprisoned for six months when he came to be examined for admission to the Gorman army. STKEKTsin old Asiatic countries mean what are called courts in London, and carriages are unknown. En the principal streets of Jerusalem, Cairo, Bagdad, etc., two camels can scarcely pass one another. A New York book-keeper has succeeded in writing on one side of a postal card seven ooems, containing 3,120 words. It took him nine hours to accomplish the task. The letters are about the size of "diamond type." Near Oakvilie, W. T., is the burnt stump of a cedar tree, probably the largest on record. It is s. hollow shell, fifty feet high, eighty-seven feet in circumference one foot from the ground The cavity is twenty-seven feet at its largest diameter. A young woman of Beaver Falls, Pa., is so charged with electricity that a hairpin which she wore in her head all day was magnetized enouorh to hold up si:cty-nine needles by their points. When the young woman's hair is stroked in the dark it emits sparks, and to touch her is to receive a shock as from a magnetic battery. Chabi.es Deueler, of Dawson, Ga., lms a shepherd dog that drives his dickens up at night About sundown the dog begins his rounds over the premises, and never stop? until every fowl is driven up and is in the henhouse. If a chicken she ws a disposition not to retire to its roosting-place, the dog drives it to the henhouse and stands guard at the door until the chicken takes a perch on the roost. The streets of Canton are only three or four feet wide, paved with stone. The inhabitants throw their garbage into the street, the effect of which may bi3 imagined. Above the streets are covered ith matting or bamboo network, reaching from one side to the other. This excludes both light and air, and tends to make the street odors empiratically stronger. Looked at from an eminence the whole city seems to be roofed. Man a "Bundle or Habits." A certain writer declares that man is only a "bundle of habits." An inspired writer inquires: "Can the Ethiopian change his skin or tho leopard his spots? then may ye-do good who are accustomed to do evil." A man told the writer that he formed the habit of drinking a glass of water every morning on rising, as a gentle cathartic, but w hen he wished to drop as simple a habit as this he found i; difficult. But how much harder to abandon any habit which has intrenched itself in some abnormal appetite. Especially is this so if the habit is formed in early life. Let a young person form the habit of over-eating, especially of rich food or confections, and he has a demon which may buffet him through life. We cannot over-rate the danger and damage from the drinking habits of this country, especially of the foreign population; but it is a serious question whether the habit of over-eating does not really induce more diseases and death than strong drink. One writer affirms that ten persons die from over-eating where one dies from drinking, from the simple fact that every one eats and most people eat too much, while only a fraction oi: the people take intoxicating liquors. At any rate, Solomon places the drunkard and the glutton in the same boat, and unless they take heed they will go over the same fatal cataract together! Our hired girl, who recently came from the north of Ireland and has not yet formed the habit of heavy eating, requires only about two-thirds the cimount of food that an average American woman would consume. Candies are distasteful to her; cakes, pies, and padding she cares little for, and eats very little meat. And yet she is a large, well-formed, healthy woman, with teeth us sound as flint, and muscles as strong as a man's. In France only about twothirds of the people eat meat. In Scotland, but little meat is eaten by the working classes, and that of the cheapest kind. In Ireland there are many families who only see meat on Christmas! The American teeth tell the sad tale of gorged stomachs, with acid formations which destroy the enamel of the teeth. If we saw a herd of cows with such teeth we should know that their food must have been at tault. Wo advocate no vegetarian theory as a gen
eral rule, only let us eat that quality of food that we can properly digest. Different constitutions and callings demaud different kinds and qualities of food. Let each judge for himself, but to form a morbid habit of gormandizing is a sin next to intsmperance in drinking, and is a habit almost, in some cases, as hard to relinquish as liquordrinking, Boston Journal. X Boy's Idea of a Tluinder-Sternu A little boy about 4 years old, living in a New Jersey town, ran to the window one evening lately during a heavy thunder-storm. As he locked out, long, glittering lines of forked, zig-zag lightning 4 ran across the black sky, then came a broad flash, lighting up all the west and northwest. "Oh, mamma! mamma!" sobbed the little fellow, "God's house is all on lire! Will He be burned up in it?" A few moments later, hearing the rain pouring in torrents, he ran to her, crying exultantly: "Mamma! mamma! God has turned on Flis hose. Now His house won'- burn up ' Harper' Maga
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