Bloomington Telephone, Volume 11, Number 29, Bloomington, Monroe County, 25 November 1887 — Page 3

Sloomington Telephone BLOOMINGTON. INDIANA

"WALTER a BEADFUTE, - -

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J. F. if cKnight, representing that he had not a dollar in th world, regently begged a railroad piss from Si Joseph to Kansas Cisy. Ka yaa formerly a partner of Bonanza Mackay, a friend of Jay Gould, and at one time could .draw his check for $10,000,000. The foot that he had been intimate with Gould probably accounts for his present impecunious condition. About a year ago Miss Blanche Buswell, of West Troy, N. T., went to Cat ifomifl to visit relatives. While there sho met C. G. Walkerly, a wealthy merchant and manufacturer. Eventually sho. became Walkerly's wife, A short time ago Mr Walkerly died, leaving Jus whole fortune, amounting to be4ween $6,000,000 and $7,000,000, to his wife. Mrs. Walkarly is not yet 25 years of age. Her husband was 60 at the time of his death

Bkoging in Bnssia is followed by an army of 320,000 professionals, of whom it is said 230,030 live absolutely on -casual charity. Formerly, a professional beggwr could obtain about 200 orubies a year, but competition has reduced the amount!: to about forty rubies. This is a pretty severe drain on the charitable people of Bnssia, as at forty arables each, the amount swells to $14,500,000. Between despotism, nihilism, and begging, the outlook for Bnssia is fXather gloomy. The house of B. EL Warder on K rstreet, Washington, is the handsomest private residence in that city. Mr. Warder is a very wealthy man, who formerly lived in Springfield, Ohio. His recently erected mansion at the capital is a palace. When completely finished and furnished the house will -tiave cost over $&00,000l The Uuilding is especially noticeable for the great variety of rare marbles used in its contraction. The dining-room is the most striking festure of the house, and is said to be the finest room of the kind in America. Soke of the peculiarities of the .Boston directory come to light in the oolunma of the Globe of that city. Of comae there are plenty of Beans in Boston, on Egge, eight Pyes, a number of Onions, and one Crumb. Besides these the) are three Bones, also Salt and Jelly. Sever Beers are found, and Coffee, Milk, and Teas. There is one Chicken to three GostisgB and a Hawk. Boston aiao haa a pair of Stockings, ontf Sock, one Craratt, a pa?r of Mittens, and four Collars. Three Butts and one Wigg complete the outfit. As a Georgia train approached a trestle the other day the engineer disoovered a horse on the track, with his tiind les between two cross-ties and hit fore legs resting on the tie, the animal having fallen in trying to cross the trestle. The train hands made a plank platform and got him on his feet, bat in attempting to turn around the home fell, one hind foot catching between the ties, leaving him suspended thirty feet from the ground by his foot. It was no easy matter to get him out safe, and hi leg was cut o$ letting the poor brute fall to the ground. HrcHAEX. McGkart, a farmer of Johnstown, Neb., claims to be the champion snake-killer. He says he has killed within the last six days fiftyfour rattlesaakes of various sizes and ages, ranging from the young ones to those having ten and twelve rattles. Mr. Mc Geary says he has seen but very few of the reptiles around his farm previously, and is of the opinion that there is a den near by in which they are collecting for the winter. A few days ago he witnessed five rattlers attack a skunk, bnt the animal retreated and would not engage in combat with them. A WEix-KHOWjr belle of New Orleans

has a passion for Brazilian bugs, which -are supposed to live on air. She wears them in her hair and about her dress, not only in private but in public. Sometimes, when In a hurry 10 get home, she will patronize the democratic .street car, where she is the observed of all the passengers oa account of the bngs crawling over her garments. Thesa bugs cannot roam at will they 4a go a certain distance and no further, lov they are held by a fine gr id chain, which is pinned to her dress. Some years ago thi used to be a popular freak of fashion, and there is a possibility of it being revived. Tkb Chicago Tribmie sss an army officer in that city asked the other day: -"Do you know where the exact geographies! tenter of the United States sa t Never thought anything about it probably. Well, it is marked by a grave, that of Major Ogden, of the United fetatea Ansy, who died at Fort Biley, m Kansas, in 1855, during the cholera epidemic of that year. Major Ogdes's remains were afterwards reAored to Fort Leavenworth and buried in the National cemetery there, bnt his nenuinent ittill stands oa a knell a Hiitle to th northeast of the post Fort Btley-and it lifts its lfeed toward -the cloud in the exact geographical water of the United States. This isn't fM0tt;itta fact, though probably

of the hundreds of men now at that fort, not one in a hundred ever stops to think about it. Fort Biley is a few miles ea3t of Junction City, Kansas, and is one of the most important cavalry points in the -county." Mb. G. 0. Fbancklyn, who was lately arrested irt New York on the charge of appropriating $3,000,000 that did not belong to him, was one of the most impressive uira-English set of New York society. He was a swell of the most ponderous order. His horses were seventeen hands high, his servants innumerable and his carriages heavy wheeled, big of body, and of somber tint When he went to the theater

footmen attended him .to the door of his box and assisted him with his wraps. In attire he was invariable up to the very letter of the English mode. He interested himself in racing, the breeding of fancy stook, and the other fads of the New York Anglomaniacs. There was an exciting political contest the other day at liake City, Fla., between the liquor men and the tern perance folks, and the former were in a fair way to carry the election, owing largely to the work of a popular young citizen. Four temperance girls determined to capture him, and they did it. One of them asked him to step behind the Court House, that she might tell him a secret, and the others followed with four chairs. In these the conspirators seated themselves so closely around the young man that he could not get out without using force, and, being tco gssilant to do this, he was kept a prisoner until the polls closed, and the temperance people won the day. The brush-maker, Kirchof, at Berlin, Prussia, had one child, a daughter, who, at the close of the summer term, brought home a certificate of behavior and study which was much wcrse than expected. On seeing it the mother flew into u passion, giving the child a harsh blowing up and threatening her that her father, when he got home from his work, would administer to her a severe castigation. Then she proceeded to get dinner ready, and tho girl managed to steal away. She opened the window, four stories high, and precipitated herself into the yard below. Death was instantaneous. Fear of punishment had killed her. The parents are inconsolable at the loss of their only child. A lady in Brooklyn has just had a singular experience. She engaged a Japanese servant to do up-stairs work. He appeared in the afternoou, was all bows and smiles, and at dinner that evening waited on the table in excellent style, The lady thoaght he bad a jewel of a servant After dinner he requested to be allowed to go to New York to see about some clothes. He went, and that was the last seen of Jap No. 1. She tried another, with the same result. A third wat; tried. He staid two days, and then loft early one morning before breakfast. The lady was nonplused 3ver the matter. She told a friend who had been in San Francisco thq circumstances. This friend said that housekeepers there had found that when a Chinese sorvant left a place he didn't like he would put some mark, usually of a churaoter so slight as not to be noticed, on the kitchen walL The next one, of course, would see it, and thus learn what him predecessor thought of the place, and act accordingly. The first servant the lady employed didn't like the situation for some reason, and so left the place and probably his mark, The others saw it and left on account of it The lady says she is through with Oriental servants. In the face of this supposititious science, some miners who have been prospecting in Alaska have returned to San Francisco and report that the Stickcsne ftiver Indians declare that the mastodon still lives there and had been seen by them. One of the Indians said that while hunting one day i$ that

unknown section he came across an immense track sunk to a depth of several inches in moss. It muoh resembled an elephant's track, but was larger around than a barrel. The Indian followed up this curious track, which to all appearances was very fresh, tracking from one immense stride to another a dis tance of some miles, when he came in full view of his game. The hunter av one look, then turned and fled. These Indians, its a rule, are the bravest hunters. With no other weapon than their spear they will attack and kill a grizzily, but the immense proportions of this new style of game both startled and filled the hunter, brave as he was, with great fear. He described it ej looking larger than Post Trader Harper's store, with great shining, yellowish tusks and a mouth large enoagh to swallow 1dm in a single gulp. He said the animal was doubtless sinalar to those which fur nisi, el the immense bones scattered over that section. Since the introduction of American whisky into Alaska the poor savagas will soon be placed in a condition to see all sorts of monsters. One thing is certain there are no snakes there.

The aspirations of the race for further ic higher development nerve the arm which strikes down the barriers of an ignorant paftt. All is but lip wisdom which wantb experience. Sir Phillip Sidney.

REMINISCENCES OF PUBLIC MEN, BEN : PEKLElf POORS. When it was asserted that President Hayes would listen to recommendntions. for oilioe from Congressmen when he had made the appointments several days before, the following Indiana story was told : "A rural justice of the peace, Squire Edmunds, a cousin of tho Senator from Vermont, flourished amid the chills and fevers on the banks ot the Wabash. A case of great local interest was being tried before him, without a jury. The attorney for the plaintiff had spoken for two hours and appeared as if just getting started in Ins oxordiuiH. The defendant's counsel, with a huge roll of manuscript, sat near him taking page on page of notest. Tho court-root was crowded. As the hands of the chJk pointed to the hour of noon Squire Edmunds arose, motioned to the attorneys and said: "When the learned counsel have concluded theiir able argument they will find :my decision in this drawer; I wrote it out last night The Court is going to dinner.' " Hawthorne came here during the war, with his publisher and friend, W. D. Tickr.or, of Boston, and they were constantly together, occupying the saute room. Hawthorne was about five feet ton inohes in height, rather broad shoulders, but slender in person. His hair was turning gray, his eyebrows were heavy, his eyes were blue-black, and he were a full beard and mustache. He was a good pedestrian, and it was difficult for Mr. Tieknor to keep up with him on their daily walks to and from the Capitol, or their exploring tramps around Washington. He called on Mr. Lincoln one morning, when Mr. Dawes presented a whip made in Western Massachusetts, and wrote a very amusing account of the scene, which appeared, emasculated, in the Atlantic Monthly, although James T. Fields, the editor, afterwards printed what he had stricken out. At that time there were not many of Hawthorne's Democratic friends in Washington, but he and Tieknor had a jovial time, paying morning and afternoon visits to Hancock's "Old Curiosity Shop," to enjoy the fruit punches made there. When Mr. Lincoln heard of the scattering of the Confederates under Hood, by Gen. Thomas, he was reminded of the following anecdote: "Out in lower Illinois, in a little village, there was a butcher named Sykes, who had a large, wicked, mischievous bull-dog which ws regarded as a town nuisance. Fowl were killed, clothes were pulled from the lines, meathonses were robbed, children were seared, and 'Sykesf dog,' was blamed for all and bls-med justly. Now there was a man named Henderson who hail a fine turkey killed by this dog of Sykes', and he swore revenge. So he took about a quarter of a pound of powder and did it up in a piece of buckskin, tying up a piece of punk so tnat it projected out of the littl6 bundle of powder. Then he put the bundle in a large piece of corn bread, and had it in readiness. It was not long before Sykes' dog came trotting alonjj, and Henderson, lighting the punk with his cigar, threw te bit of bread to the cur, who gobbled it at a mouthful. The next minute there was an explosion. The dog's head was blown over the fence into the creek, his hind legs and tail were sent up and lodged on Henderson's porch, his forelegs were thrown across tho street, and tho rest of the bow-bow was laid about in small pieces. "WhorraP exclaimed a looker-on, "you've rather used up Sykes dog, haint ye, Henderson V" "Yes," replied Henderson, "I rather think that as a dog Sykes won't find him of miich use." "And ao of the rebel army," added Mr. Lincoln, with one of his sad smiles, "as an array, Hood won't find it of much use." Thad Stevens was emphatically "the leader of the House," and he exercised despotic rule over his followers. No Republican representative could impose his imperious will without receiving a tongue lashing that terrified others, if it did not bring the refractory member back into the partisan harness. Rising by degrees, as a telescope is pulled out, until he stood in a most ungraceful attitude, his heavy black hair falling down over his cavernous brows and his cold little eyes twinkling with anger, he would make some ludicrous remark, and then rising up to his fuh height, he would lecture the offender against party discipline, sweeping at him his large, bony right hand in ungraceful gestures, as if he would clutch him and shake him. His brows would contract, his eyes would glow like live coals, and ho would use invectives which he took good care should never be printed verbatim in the Globe. John Randolph, in his braggart days, was never ro imperiously insulting as was "O ld Thad" when he was the leader of the House. Stevens was a firm believer in the old maxim ascribed to the Jesuits, "The end justifies the means," and while he set morality at defiance, he was a faithful champion of the equality of the black and the white races. There was an undercurrent of dry humor about him, too, that often disarmed his political opponents. When Keitfc, of South Carolina, was once enlogizingthe institution of slavery, and talking aiout a pious deacon on his own plantation, Stevens grimly inquired what the price of deacions was in the Orangeburg District of South Carolina and! whether a negro would bring anv more on the auction-block been se he wan a deacon? When the invading rebels burned his iron foundry near Gettysburg during their raid into Pennsylvania, he expressed regret that Lee did not order the burning of his liabilities' at the same time. Arid the rnling passion was strong in death, for when his doctor said one day during his l&st sickness: "Mr. Stevens, I think your appearance is better to-day!" old Thad dryly responded: "It isn't my appearance

that troubles me, dootor, but my disap

pear ance.

Manufacture of "ItamaseM" Blades. A German paper avjrs that there is no longer any sword-making industry in Damascus. What was once known as the sword trade is now occupied with converting the blades of old saws and pieces of ordinary iron into daggers, and cheap swords ani riHosof Solingen

and Bir.ninghani make are brought up, finished, and decorated in Oriental style, and put upon tho market as weapons of Arabian and Damascus origin. New York Tribune. The Story of Irene Alstom. Some there are, borne to poverty, yet endowed with the instinct of insatiable craving for knowledge and truth and ligk; laid these are urged irresistibly through privations dire and over obstacles impassible to common folk, on to the goal of gratification. Such a one was that poor Finnish girl, the first woman of her race to obtain the degree of Ph. D.f the story of whose trials and triumplis is told in a recent book by Frauleiu Sohr. Ire no Alstom. as she tended her

father's, cattle in the "land of a thousand h.kes," dreamed and pondered over all the marvels of science and learning which seemed forever a sealed book to her poverty and ignorance. Yearning to be wis?, yetBeeingnohope in a gray life of toil and struggle, at last sh prayed to tide, that she might reach a sphere -where her cravings would be satisfied. A humane pastor, divining her longing, sent her to a good school, where she passed as fourth among forty-six young girls at the age of 18, though only prepared by her own

self-help. She took work in earnest here, often sitting ip all night thinking over the day's tasks while her compariocs slept all round her, and afterward when as a day pupil she had to provide her own meals, she sometimes went to the classes fasting save for the fresh snow she picked up and ate on tho way. For her fathar was totally ruined, and she must soon leave school and begin earning. For awhile she bravely suppresssd her longings, and submitted to the drudgery of teaching, yet never losing sight of the goal she had long had at heart her matriculation. At last, having saving 4, with tho scantiest of luggage she journeyed to Helsingfors, and in defiance of opposition, chiefly feminine, such as a more advanced society can form no conception of, Irene prepared for her ordeal. She paid her lodging in advance for the whole winter (3) and invested in four loaves of the hard round rye biscuit of Scandinavia and Finland, which keeps many months, dividing them methodically so that she had a piece for each day till Christmas. In the depth of winter she worked without a fire, at a temperature of 30 degrees. Celsius, a kind professor, taught her Latin, moved by her assurance that unless sho learned it she could neithar live content nor die happy. Her progress was most rapid; she matriculated, taught awhile again for the sake of her family, renewed her own studio, took a brilliant degree, and, at last, recognized by her nation for what she is, the dauntless pioneer of woman progress, sho now lives honored and appreciated, still educating her brothers, still thirsting insatiably afcor truth, Bow the Nation Grew Rich. The American colonists imported sheep, forbade their exportation and encouraged and even -enforced the spinning and weaving of woolen cloth to be worn by the people. William Penn fostered and protected varied heme industries and productions, while England, on her part, did what she could to discourage and suppress colonial manufacturing; so the colonies were kept permanently poor. The Revolutionary war acted as a high tariff. In 1787, Congress saw the right to levy duties on imports. George Washington showed himself in sympathy with the protection idea by delivering his inaugural address in a suit of woolen clothing manufactured in Philadelphia. It was against tho natural course of things, "from England's standpoint," when America manufactured anything which England wanted to sell her. In 1828 America had her fiirst adequate protective tariff. The tariflf of 1862, the best the country had ever known, produced a period of unexaiaiplei prosperity. Reductions of tariff created financial crashes. The tariff of 1862 was l;he work of statesmen. Under it we have lived substantially for a quarter of a cenuury and enjoyed a season of unparalled prosperity. Henry Diston sella his saws in Sheffield. American women now wear American silks, the best in tho world. More carpets are now made in Philadelphia than are made in all England,, and a good American watch can now be bought for $25. American manufacturers employ American labor. Free trade would bring Amorica down to the condition of Ireland. The nation must always be in a condition to provide for all its necessities. Pro. Thompson. A Distressing Possibility Ini these days of artificial teeth, borrow ed hair bustles, and other accessories belonging to tho mysteries jot the toilot, not to mention the laying on of powder and pigments, one is not altogether startled by the announcement of a London firm which proposes to mold the form of a woman to almost any degree What with the "make-up" and "get-up of the gentle sex, and the numerous so-called aids to female loveliness! now in use, it is indeed hard to tell whether we are to believe our eyes or not. What are we to think of a corset possessing such power that "words cannot describe its ertect on thinnest or other bast?" Soft patent "regulators, M we are told, delightfully comfortable, laced more or less closely, regulate any desired fullness aud roundness of "ideal" beauty, so exqnisi'!ev perfect and natural as to defy detection. We are further informed "thousands have worn it with perfect eeerecy some yenifs, and will never wear any other." Thi3 is terrible. Modem Society. Honk Kno w N othiuh m. lut American It seemst to me that we are acquiring a very objectionable foreign population. Und ditto That's what I think; if I had my way Pd restrict foreign immigration. "How would you go at it?w "Every immigrant should be required io reside in the country five years and learn to read and write the English language before be would be allowed to lond're-wtf Hi flings. A. helping hand at the right moment would save maav from ruia.

MUM

What Stunted the G rowtii of the Town, "You vranter know what's holdin' this country back, d'ye?" said a man in Green River City, Wyo., who had a beard like a woven-wire mattress which had been struck by a cyclone and rolle d together ati a scroll "you ask what's holdin' it down," he continued, as he led me over by a faro table which was not in use; "you desire information as to what's retardin' its develojMnont an' causin' it to languish by the w.iyside, as it were? I can tell you, stranger ; I can sum it up in two words an give it to you at one dose. It is Eastern detectives bloodhounds of the law that drag away our most successful cit'zensl "What can you expect of a country where the Eastern detective comes in and demands requisitions for all the leadin cit'zens? With thy icy hand of the detective laid on the Mayors of our principal cities, how can our country develop? With the Pennsylvania Sheriff sneakin' up behind the President of our National Bank and identify in' him., how can yon look for progress ? "Aa long as one of Finkerton's men can come into our otherwise peaceful and an' prosperous communities, look at a photograph, an' then adjust a pair of time-lock handcuffs on the principal of onr schools, how can you come among ua an' ask us with a holier sneer why we don't boom? "Stranger, wha1; is there to induce us to git up an' whoop an' develop the country, with log-irons on the pastor of the First Baptist Church? "Why should we invest our money in business with a Sheriff from Massachusetts an' a detective fro;n Ohio each with separate warrants an9 each on a fast boss chasm our Probate Jedge acrost the divide? "Why should I feel encouraged an cheerful with the City Attorney bein triod in North Carolina? Would you yourself feel like settlin' down in a country an' makin' a home with the Superintendent of tho Union Sundav school gittin' onto the east-bound train chained to the editor of the morning paper?" "My friend, I don't think you would; I am pos'tive you would not, 'specially

if yon didn't know but what it might bo

your turn next, at) you prob'bly would

"This count rv could never become

thickly and permanently settled as long as the Eastern ofiicer who has raked up

some old charge agin a prominent mem

ber of the community can walk in an

ply his vocation unrestrained "by the

strong arm of the law. As long as it is possible, while a meetin of the leadin' cap'talists is bein' held .to devise means of establifthin' a woolen factory, or to raise a bonus for a new railroad, as long as it is possible on such an occasion, repeat, for a paid spy from a rival town to sneak in the back door of the hall an' yell ; 'Eastern detective cominM'an then stand and watch the President of tho Bavin's bank an' the Circuit Jedge break their legs as they fall out of the winder an' subsequently git tramped into the, ground by the crowd; as long as this is possrble, I aia say, jes' so long will progress languish. "While a man can stand in our theater an holler Tire P an not cause anybody to look around, an' another man can stampede the audifence acrost the stage by pullin' out a paper an' a pair of handcuffs, jee so long will cur nat'ral resources remain dormant, as it were, "That, my friend, is about all Ifve got to say. That is about all there is to say." Dakota Bell Thackeray and the American Girls, There's something simple in the way these kind folks regard a man; they read our books as if we were Fielding, and so forth. The other night some men ware talking of Dickens and Bulwer as if they were equal to Shakespeare, and I was pleased to find myself pleased at hearing them praised. The prettiest girl in Philadelphia, poor soul, has read "Vanity Fair" twelve time!. I paid her a great big compliment yesterday, about her good looks, of course, and she turned round delighted to her friend and said, tlAi most tallut," that is something like the pronunciation. Beatrix has an adorable pronunciation, and uses little words, which axe much better than wit And what do you think ? One oi! the prettiest girls in Boston is to be put under my charge to go to a marriage at Washington next week. We are to travel together ail the way alone only, only, I'm not going. Young people when they are engaged here make tours alone ; fancy what the British Mrs. Grundy vould say at such an ideal There was a young Quakeress at the lectriro last night, listening about Fielding, Lord I Lord, how pretty she was ! There are hundreds of such everywhere, airy-leaking little beings with magnolia no, not magnolia, what is that white flower you make bouquets of, Camilla or camelia? complexions, and lasting not much longer. Thackeray letters in ScribyHfs Mag atine. Herr Yager Won't Help "Gonceudrate," "Otood morning, neighbor Yager," Ugh." "Are you going to the church consecration Sunday?" "No sir-e, Bop. w "And why?" "What I .gare fur a scnuroh gonoendrate? I don'd no schurch go. I don'd vaai some hybocrites. I gone mit main frau in schurch vonce times lfcsd year yit, und der f Irsd feller vhat lays mem eyes on vas a feller vhal; sheat me a huiinur b and f eunf ty tollar oud ; und he he make long face like he gone deidt next miinit penfore und vas c.schleep mit deir arms ion der Lordt all arounlt. Und den I got mit meinsellef so tan:, mad I schwear ic mein pelly like tor teufel; und I say meinsellef to: 'Dot vas no blace fur me mit hyl critea1 Und den I got me oop und righd avay walk gwick oud uud a lager peer saloon in. I sooner hellup gon.endrate a lager peer saloon as a

feller vat scheat me, und don'd ft)r fougot you." Kentucky State Jmxr ITl

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