Bloomington Telephone, Volume 11, Number 25, Bloomington, Monroe County, 28 October 1887 — Page 3
Bloomington Telephone BLOOMINGTON. INDIANA. VT ALTER a BRADFUTE, - - Publish
Bretb Hartk, who ttsb for some .years United States Consul at Glasgow, is very unpopular among the people of that city, owing to his unsocial dis-jxmtion.
When lightning strnck Baxter Yaughan, ol Strother, MoM it cut a
liole like a bullet hole in his hat, ran ground the rim$ then down his back -clear to his heels, tearing off in its entire course a narrow strip of skin, and yet Mr. Vaughan lives to tell his queer experience. Ix 1775 there were only twenty-seven newspapers published in the United ."States. Ten years later, in 1785, there were seven published in the English language in Philadelphia alone, of which one was a daily. CDmparatively here were more newspapers in 1787 tthan in 1887.
More than one hundred children sat -during a thunderstorm in a room of Green's Academy, at Albany, Ga. The sliding doors leading to another room wore open. Suddenly an immense ball of fire appeared in the neighboring room, tore the window sashes from their frames, and threw the weights And splinters all about, jut not a child nros injured. At Monticello, N. Y., a few days ago, a contest between a black snake live feet long and a water moccasin eighteen unche.j long was witnessed by several people. The moccasin had the battle all its own way. It coiled itself so tightly around the neck of its opponent that ridges half an inch deep were imbedded in the flesh. The black snake was choked to death.
A twelve-potted cannon-shot was found imbedded seventeen inches deep in an oak tree in the suburbs of Franklin, Teun. It was evidently fired from Federal cannon during the bloody buttle twenty-three years ago, as it entered the tree on the side next to the town. The fibers of oak are still attached to the ball and are nearly a hard as the iron itself.
Among other relics of the Mound Builders discovered near Devil's Lake, D. T. by ProfL Montgomery, of the North Dakota University, is what he caiis a sacrificial mound in which, seventeen inches from the surface, are wells, easily found because of a lining of lime about the sides and layer's of bark on the bottom. These are deep enough to hold bodies in a sitting posture. Thebe is something curious about the silver dollar and half-dollars of the coinage of 1804. In that year something like 20,000 of the dollars were coined; but it is a singular fact, as is bow known, that not one of them was an circulation. Yet the most valuable of all American coins are two 1801 dollars, which are now in well-known col lections. They are valued at $.1,000 -each. The news that the pope has asked the propaganda to tender forthwith for the contract of civilizing the black iellows of New South Wales, which is tat present in the market, the contract price being 300,000 acres of land, re minds us onoe more how smart a man is now in charge of the Catholic Church. If the Trappists make a success of the aborigines they will deserve their 300,000 acres and more besides.
A kecent copy of the London Sporting Life printed this advertisement: "Bird singing, Windsor Castle, Windsor street, Esses road. A free linnet handicap , three pairs of birds, for a leg of mutton, will take place at the above house on Saturday nest, September 3. Birds on the nail at 8:80 p. m. Entries close and draw on Friday night at 9 o'clock. N. B. The Irish giant is now staying with the proprietor and may be een daily at the bar.9 The Ohio and Mississippi construction bands at work on a dump at Oasyville, IxuL, dug into an ancient burring ground. Some of the bodies were found at a depth of ten feet, buried in fine walr.ut coffins. The circumstances point to the fact that the bodies belonged to a civilized race, but the oldest residents seem to have no knowledge of there ever having been a burying ground at that point, and its history proliably dates back to the time of the Fiench settlements. While a circus was exhibiting at the base of Fern Clifi, Massachusetts, two boa-constrictors, something over ten feet in length, made their escape, which wits not discovered for more than an hour. The circus men quickly armed with clubs and started in pursuit. They were overtaken, and with some dexterous work with forked sticks one of them was securely pinned to the ground Ad recaptured. The other one became ito ugly that no one dared attempt the capture, and he was quickly dispatched with clubs. Neab Mount Carmel, I1L, Mr. John Dell and Bobert Nunly cut a turkey oak, and in the heart they found several buHet. The tree was a little over two feet six inches in diameter, and parties killed m woodcraft, after Tiewing the
point where it appeared the bullets had entered the tree while it was a small sapling, estimate that the bullets were fired into the tree some eighty years ago. Counting the rings the age of the tree was 107 years. The distance from the outside to where the first track of the bullets were found was about fou teen inches. The Duke of St Albans receives 065 per year as master of tke hawks, 260 for four falconers, 600 for provision of hawks, and 182 10s for pigeons, hens, and other meats. The office was given by James IL in 1864, to the ancestors of the Duke, and the family has kept it ever since. The Marquis of Downshire fills the post, to which active duties were no doubt formerly attached, of Constable of the Fort of Hillsborough, County Down. The salary of the Constable is a mere trifle, 3s 4d per diem, but he also re ceives an allowance of 182 10s per annum in order to provide the ample number of twenty wardens at 6d per diem each. A resident of Plymouth protects his grapevines from thieves in a novel manner. The supports are of wood, but the cross-pieces are of wires insulated from the ground and connected with an induction coil capable of delivering a heavy spark through an inch of air. The other pole of the coil is connected with the ground. Six goodsized bichromate of potash cells furnish electro-motive force for the coil. Short wires hanging among the vines are secured to the large wires, and when anyone "monkeys" with the grapevine while the battery is connected the neighborhood is apt to hear from him. It works every time, and no one comes for a second dose.
The object of a company recently organized at Owensboro, Ky., with a capital stock of $250,000, is the manufacture of machinery for the purpose of aging and purifying whisky after a process recently discovered. The ma chine, as shown by a recent tost, takes whisky as it comes from the worm and imparts to it all the characteristics of liquor four years old, eliminating the corn and fusil oils as perfectly as could be done by time and atmospheric influences, and removing all impurities of whatever nature. The method by which this is accomplished is that the whisky is atomized by the machine, and while in that condition it is subjected to an enormous pressure by means of compressed air, through which the atomized whisky is passed. Judge Cooler is reported as saying in reply to an inquiry why the Interstate Commission apparently had accomplished so little in the way of redressing grievances against the railroad companies, that "the Commission is laboring under difficulties of which the public is ignorant. The Commission had done all in its power to correct existing evils, and if it did not succeed in giving entire satisfaction it was simply due to the fact that the law was not clear on many of the points raised. Hasty action on some of the questions might have resulted in much greater dissatisfaction than that caused by the slow and careful consideration given to those subjects. Many of the cases brought against the railroads by shippers were not presented in such a shape as to give the Commission an opportunity to act intelligently. Many of the abuses in railroal management and alleged violations of the law, which were continually being ventilated in the newspapers, were not brought to the attention of the Commission by the proper parties, and the Commission could not possibly be expected to take action unles3 proper charges were preferred and substantiate!.
When Richard K. Fox, owner of the Police Gazette introduced himself and then his wife to the Prince of Wales, says a London correspondent, there was an interesting scene. Richard and his better half had been around through the grove looking at royalty taking its annual picnic under the beautiful trees. It was at Goodwood on cup day, the next greatest racing event to the Derby, and England, as seen there, was at its best. Half the aristocracy of the kingdom seemed to be gathered in and about the race course. They were taking their lunch on the greensward in true rural style. The Prince of Wales had finished his repast and walked up to the railing, glass in hand, to take a look at the horses just coming out of the most important race of the meeting. He had taken a good look and dropped his glasses by his side when the American sporting man stepped up, tapped the future king on the shoulder, and said: "I am an American and would like to shake hands with you." The Prince took in the situation, held out his hand and said : I hope you are enjoying your visit to this country." Fox replied that he was pleased with the United Kingdom, and presented his wife. The Prince, always gallant, shook hands with the lady and said: "1 hope you are enjoying the pleasures of tho day." It was a singular episode and a striking illustration of the nerve which some citizens of the United States carry with them. The Prince took it in exceedingly good humor, and Ithonght rather enjoyed the diverson, for he is a thoroughly pelf-poseessed mau, and rather inclined to be liberal in his act and ideas.
JOHJi WILKES BOOTH.
A Talk with the Man who Captured HIuci Lippincotf a Magazine. Oapt. Edward Doherty, the man who commanded the expedition which cap tured John "Wilkes Booth, has latelj'' received a government appointment as ladian post-trader in Dakota. He is a tall, straight, broad-shouldered man of 46 years. He has a dark complexion inclined to be florid, abroad, open face, a high forehead, and hair as black as n piece of cannel coal. He talks well, and chats very entertainingly about his experiences at the time of the assassination. He told me tho story of Booth's capture not long ago. Said he, "Twenty-one years ago! It does not seem as many days. The scenes of that time are photographed on my memory. I was sitting in Lafayette Park talking with a brother officer. It was my day off, and I was rejoicing my soul in the bright rays of the spring sun. The trees had begun to leaf. The first flowers were out iu the park, and the grass was of its greenest. My friend and myself were talking to a couple of ladies, when an orderly came up and gave me a message. It was to report to Col. Baker immediately. When I reached Ool. Baker's headquarters I was directed to take twenty-five men and proceed on the track of Booth to Fredericksburg. A very short time after this I had my detail" at the Sixth street wharf at Washington ; there I found a steamboat, the John 8. Ide, re ady to carry us to Belle Plaine. Here we left the boat, and landing our horses, we struck across
to the Bappahannock at Port Conway. At the house by tho port we questioned the people, and finally got them to admit that the men we were in search of had passed onward. They had been met there by three of Mosby's men, Brainbridge, Buggies, and Jett, and had gone with them on to Garrett's and Bowling Green. The keeper of the house told us that he was accustomed to guide people to Bowling Green, but that Jett was in love with the daughter of a tavern keeper there, and he offered to guide them, as he was going that way. Harold was a friend of Jett's and he told the men that Booth had killed the President and wanted to get on South. In a short time Booth came up on his crutch. It seems that he had not been with Harold at this time, and he acknowledged to these men of Mosbj's that he was the President's assassin. The party then went on towards Bowling Green "Between Port Conway and Bowling Green lies the Garrett farm. Its buildings were not far from the road, consisting of an old frame house with a barn and out-bnildings. When the party reached this house Bocth stopped here, and was allowed to remain over night, while Harold continued on to Bowling Green with the rest of the party. We left Port Conway and rode on towards Bowling Green, As we did so we passed the Garrett house, and I learned after that Booth saw us as we passed. He was looking out of the window as we came up, and he snatched his carbine and yelled to Garrett to bring him his pistols. We passed on, however, without knowing this, and reached Bowling Green. I found there that Harold had left, but that Jett was sleeping in the tavern. I went up to Jett's room, and told him I knew all about his doings during the past few days ; that I was going to catechise him, and if I found him lying we would take him out and hang him. He was badly frightened ; confessed that he had be on with Booth, and consented to guide us back to Garrett's farm, whee Booth had stopped. We then started back to Garrett's, and reached there in the early morning. We surrounded the place, and I went up to the door and knocked loudly upon it In a moment the eld man Garrett appeared, in very light attire, carrying a candle. He told me that the man I described had been there, but that after the cavalry had passed he had taken his crutch and hobbled off to the woods. In the meantime men had been hunting about the place, and one of them called out to me that he had a man in his corncrib. I went to the crib and found it was Garrett's son, who said he was there to watch the men in the barn, fearing that they might steal the horses. I thus found that Booth and Harold were in the barn. Harold had returned from Bowling Green to Garrett's. We surrounded the barn, and Boston Corbett was stationed at a place where there waH a hole in the boards about two feet square. As we surrounded the barn we heard men moving about in the hay. "I told Booth that I knew it was he, and we carried on a short conversation before ho was shot. He first asked: "'Who are you? You may be my friends.' "On my answering, he replied: 'I am a cripple, and alone. Give me a chance for my life. Draw your men up at fifty paces, and I will come out and fight you.' "I replied that I did not come there to fight. I said, came here to capture you I have lift' men, and propose to do it "About this time he said, 'There is a man here who wants to surrender awful bad,1 and with that the boy Harold came out. As Harold left, Booth made a movement as though to raise his carbine, and Boston Corbett fired. The ball struck Booth just behind his ear, in about the same place where he struck the President. The bullet lodged in a vertebra; of the neck, and this part of Ins anatomy was afterwards cut out, and the bone with the ball in it was kept in the Medical Museum at Washington. Just before Corbett fired the straw at the back of the barn was lit by a detective, and as the blaze leaped upward I rushed up and seized Booth, throwing my arms around his waist under his uplifted arms, and dragged him out of the burning barn. Wo carried him to the porch of the Garrett farm-house, and he died within a few hours. "We sent for a doctor, but he could do nothing. Booth's intellect was clear, but he was in great agony. He did not deny his crime. The only expression, that he made was, 'Useless! useless!' He did not nay, I died for my country,' nor, 'Tell mother as has been reported. At one t ime I ottered him some water and at another time brandy. He refused tho brandy, but took the water.
He could not swallow from a cup, and I soaked a towel and gave 'it to him to suck." Polar Bears Hunting Seal. The polar bear has quite a varied diet, depending on the season and his whereabouts. If near a country where waters abound in seal this is his main sustenance, and the cleverness he displays in catching them is wonderful ; for the Esquimaux considers tho seal the wariest and slyest game in his country, and especially in the summer time when the polar bear secures the most. When a seal comes up through the ice on a pleasant summer day, he is quite wary at first as he stretches himself for a comfortable snooze on the ice so close to bis hole that the slightest motion of his body will send him over the slipperyedge, and with a stroke or two of his fins and a splash of his tail he is out of sight beneath the ice again. Having kept a sharp lookout in every direction for a number of minutes, and seeing nothing suspicious, he allows his heavy bead to fall on the ice to take a nap but they are short naps indeed, and every two or three minutes he raises his head and surveys the surroundings for probable mischief. The polar bear, seeing these movements from the top of Home hiigh hummock of ice,, crawls stealthily on his prey, taking advantage as much an possible of every littlo piece of rough ice to conceal his figure, already well protected by his white color on the ice. Haying gotten as near as he possibly can by such methods he lies flat on the ice and commences "hitching" himself along by short, spasmodic actions, watching the seat
keenly all the while. Should . it look up from its slumbers the bear remains motionless as a piece of ice, for which he hopes to be taken by this ruse, until the seal, throws his head down again, when he once more commences "bitching" forward. By this series of very slow and laborious creepings he manages to get within ton or twenty feet of his victim, when, watching his best opportunity when the seal is in the midst of one of his short slumbers, he makes a quick rush, striking it over the head with his paw, and grasping it by the neck with his teeth. A single miscalculation in this scheme and the seal is below the ice through his hole, dashing a mass of spray in Mr. Bruin's face with his pliant tail. Should the seal have crawled up on the edge of an ice floe from the water and attempt to escape thereto, the bear beiag close upon him, the latter will not hesitate so the Esquimaux say to dive after the seal, and, although in the water the seed is his superior in activity, occasionally the bear is rewarded with his prey by a lucky snap of his paws. The polar bear is credited with killing walrus, but 1 think he never attacks any but the smaller ones in a fair combat, so much larger is the walrus than his beamhip. The Esqimaux claim and I think their story is true that the polar bear has been known to take a stono or huge piece of ice in his forepaws, and, from a favorable attitude the side of an iceberg or the top of a cliff hurl this missile with such certainty as to alight on a walrus' head, and so stun it that its capture becomes easy afterwards. Lieutenant Schwatka. Wtiding-ring Romances. Jxx speaking of wedding rings we learn that these important symbols have not always been manufactured from the precious metal, gold. Wo are told that in lieu of a ring the church key has often been used ; and Walpole tells of an instance where a curtain ring was employed. The Duke of Hamilton fell so violently in love with the younger of tho celebrated Misses Gunning at a party in Lord Chesterfield's houte that two days after he ent for a parson to perform the marriage ceremony, but as the Duke had neither license or ring the clergyman refused to act. Nothing daunted, Hamilton declared "he would send for the archbishop." At last they were married with a ring of the bed curtain, at 12:30 at night at Mayfair Chapel. Forgetful bridegrooms have been reduced to greater straits than this oven ; in ono iastarice a leather ring had, on the spur of the moment, to bo cut out of a piece of kid from the bride's glove. A tragic story of a forgotten wedding-ring is told in the "Lives of the Lindsays." When he should have been at church, Colin Lindsay, the young Earl of Balcarres, was quietly eating his breakfast in night-gown and slippers; when reminded that Mauritia of Nassau was wciting for him at the altar, he hurried to church, but forgot the ring; a friend present gave him one, which he, without looking at, placed on tho bride's finger. After the ceremony was over the Countess glanced at her hand and beheld a grinning death's head on her riiig. She fainted away, and the omen made such an impression on her that, on recovering, she declared that she was destined to die within a year; a presentiment that probably brought its own fulfillment, for in a few months the careless Colin was a widower. Jewelry News. k Traiyj) Who Paid His Board. "Dc you know it is a funny thing, but we have entertained many an angel unawares in this way. Not a great while ago a very impressive looking mau come to the desk, and, Baying he was in hard luck and a perfect stranger in the city, asked us to pive him his breakfast He said he had just landed from Australia and was awaiting a remittance from England. Well, wa took no stock in that part of his story, but he got his breakfast all the eame and was most profuse in his thanks, It must have been nearly a month before we saw him again. Then lie entered the hotel very modestly, recognized tho clerk who had befriended him, and asked for a suite of rooms on the parlor floor. At the same limo ho asked the clerk to take caro of about 422,000, mostly in English money. It turned out that ho was the young son .of an English lord, who had been trotting around the gIobes and had simply missed connections when he reached New York. He was with us for three months, and before he left had knocked a large hole in that 2,000. New York Sun. Trtjk glory takes root, and oven spreads ; all false pretences, like flowers, fall t the ground; nor cau any counterfeit last long. Cicero
WHERE THEFT WAS UNKNOWN. Remarkable Condition of California 'When Gold Wi Discovered. A remarkable state of affairs existed iu California for the first year after the discovery of gold, says H. H. Bancroft in "Popular Tribunals." The iirst miners were made up in a great Pleasure of men already living here; A-hey were honest men, and had deserted the towns to dig gold, and not to defraud their neighbors. Many,
were known to each other, and few '
were wholly unknown. Peaceably and in a primitive way each for himself picked the precious metal from the river-beds and crevices, washed it from the sands that lined the streams, or sought a place of his own to cKg for it, with no desire to encroach on ground chosen by another. Rights were respected; theft was unknown. A pick or shovel thrown upon the ground, sticks ilriveu into the earth, or a written or posted notice that a certain spot was claimed was suflicient to secure it against all comers. Miners lived much in the open air, in cloth tenements or rude huts, leaving their gold-dust in bags or bottles unguarded in tent or cabin. The merchandise of the trader was secured only by walls of cloth, which could be easily cut through with a pocket-knife. Goods stacked up by the roadside, miles from any camp, remained undisturbed for weeks and months. Horses and cattle were safe to roam at large. After the winter rains had ceased and water for washing gold had disappeared, in certain localities piles of rich dirt were thrown up to be washed out when rain (thould come again. And though these heaps were often the result of great labor and contained much wealth, they remained undisturbed during the summer, and when autumn came fell to their rightful owners. Differences of opinion were settled by "leaving it to the crowd." And so it was the first comers, found less discord existing here than anywhere else in Christendom. Vessels arrived bo 'fast in San Francisco that they could find no accommodations for their cargoes on shore. Great quantities of merchandise of all kinds were discharged and piled up along tho beach. All of it was wholly exposed, although much of it was valuable. Yet all this time there was scarcely a lock on the door of any dwelling, store, or warehouse in San Francisco. During this truly golden ago of integrity it never seemed to occur to those honest folk that there were any persons in the world who would wrongfully take their property from them. It is said that there was but one case of tbeft iu San Francisco prior to October, 1849, and this was a Mexican who stole some blankets, for which he was publicly whipped on the plaza. During the autumn of 1648 there were no such things along the slopes
of the Sierras as government, judges,
siienns, lax coiieciors, or ocner omeers of the law. All were absolutely free and were thrown upon their good behavior. But in good time it seemed to dawn upon the criminals of the world that a gold-yielding wilderness without jail or gallows must be the very paradise for thieves. And with the multitudes of honest and order-loving men came crowds from the purlieus of crime convict colonies poured out their villains and cities emptied their slums. In a V King's Grave. His feet were turned a little north of wo st, as if iic was laid to face the direction of the setting sun, for several vertebrae oi: the back lay continuously along the center and beyond these was the left thigh bone. He had worn a woolen surcoat, edged with a beautiful frilling of gold, and buckled at the neck with a golden clasp, for some traces of a woven woolen fiber were found adhering beneath a fragment of decayed wood, and numerous shreds of gold tissue, sometimes ten inches in length, gathered up to a fringe of an inch in width, were scattered for some two yards along the middle of the grave ; and above these was a buckle four inches long, made of four ounces of pure gold, richly chased, and set with garnets and with ornaments of colored enamel, which still retains its brilliancy. He wore also a belt of stamped leather, fastened by two gold buckles, of only less beautiful workmanship than that which clasped his mantle, for the buckles were lying at about the center of the body and a fragment oi' the leather remained in one of them. Over his lap was laid his shield circular, two feet in width, its under side of wood, strengthened with a ring of iron, its outer side incased with bronze, and portions of this were found, the central ring lying three feet
from the brooch buckle and giving an idea of the hero's stature. His hands were placed across the shield as he lay, as if to clafip it to his breast; and, attached to his sleeves, he wore bracelets or armlets of bronze, with serrated edges and rims of gilded silver for these were found, with traces of the woolen fabric of his undergarment still adhering to the rims, lying above the fragments of the shield. His large, two-edged sword of iron, thirty inches long, in its sheath of wood, was laid at his side, and close to his hand was the .scar, or dagger of iron, and a barbed javelin lay near; for all of these were found, soma in the last stages of decay,
together with laauy lesser fragments of bronze and iron, which may have been portions of his armor. To the right of his feet was placed a bucket, such as the Saxons commonly carried iu their war-ships ; and though flattened by the pressure of the earth upon it, this bucket was sufficiently preserved to show that its materials were of the same character as those of the shield. Blackwood's Magazine MauiuKm Serving Two Masters. " Money, remarked the President, as he deposited a roll, the fruits of judicious combination "money is power in the concrete." "And also in the abstract," added the treasurer a. few hours later, as he convoyed the ame roll to where the Ottawa hears no sound save its own O's and A's. Burdette. Even reckoning makes lasting friends, and the wey to make reckonings even is to make them often. Soutlu
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