Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 July 1879 — Page 7

"THE "WORLD" BALLADS.

Result of a?- Enterprising Medium's Fashionable Spirit-Wodding.

From t"e New Voik World.

It was a city Wicdltim Had an Klea BrandTo marry and in ifliurmge give

Shades In the Snmmtr Land: Tbe infant

SOB*of

Freaitlents

That wore in teething dead With female babes and nucklings gone Before, he used to wed. EkLgreat became the medium's fame

Who marriages thus made— In seances and messages He drove a roaring trade Nay, foreign ministers at night

Would feknlk into his area,,/ In ample cloaks disguised, to seek News of dear Lady Mary.

II.

It was a rnralmedium Wa-i fired with emulation ,.y When ho beheld the greatm:cce&B

Of his brother's innovation, "What man has doneihatmaa^ando," They say. lie aid construe Jtthus: "IIow men have once been dc*ne

That way you men can do," "Now," said the tural medium, "Ihe spirit marrying In, in the words of Swedonborg,

The biggest kind of thing. The Summer Land is full of folk Were from their paren'.s rift Ero yet they could their dexter Land

Distinguish from their left. Old bachelorb'boys arc not so brave Nor old mnidb' gfrls ao fair As the gilded youth of the Summer iand

To surviving payonts are. I wilt hie me to the old churchyard And copy sicli names as be I.!(scribed upon thetombstones 'Aged

One year,' or two, or three 1 will look through the newspapersWhen notices 1 find Oi tbo Beared Wlllio-thou and Uone-

To-aiect-hls-cousin kind, So I will careful write them out They shall be in marriage given Unto the great ones of the earth— 1 should say of the heaven. And thus my business shall increase

Till I can afford to got More spirits and better ones than now Throng from my cubinet. will take to me a Byron then

Who nonsense will not speak, A Bonaparte that can talk French, A Plato knowing Greek For now I can materializa

But paltry spiiits two— igg.A Katie King that rustltesand sighs And an Indian that says 'Ugh!'"

III.

It was a well-to-do old man, An old man excellent, Belu ver in the spirit faith,

To whom the medium went, "The spirits'hare to me disolosed That they through me will learn you, And you will come to the next scance,

Something which does concern vou The old man gibled up h.'sloins .And ek asar.y mouso Ho

followed

that

bold

medtiun-8 steps

To tbat!oWvnoaiuia!3.dKrt»«+ ,f They placed him In a clrcle-tbcrc, They t.irnod the lights Jown lo

11

And they played, of coarse, "Sweet JBy-and-By" On thejin^Ung pi-an-o An 1 they bade the spirits toappear.

And show frhatthcy had to show.

IV. ~,,v,

"Behold, my friends, the iBCdlum said. As tbe curtains up were furled, "A fashionable ,wcdding that

Takes place in the Spirit NVJorld. The officiating clergyman Is Swedonborg the seer, And, to your dim anddsubtlng 6yoa

Though they may not appear, llosts of distinguished witnesses

v-

E'bn how are hovering near. Thero Washington an.] William Tell,, And Jefferson and Byron, And Franklin I'icrce and Nathan Hale

The happy pair environ. Ho, Mister Jones, do Nature's tones Unto your heart not speak? lo yc not know that splrit-brMe

Who stands the spirit-groom beside With a spirit blush of maiden pride 3 Upon her spirit chetk? W That rare and radiant maiden whom

The angels still call Sail}*, Ytu laid away At the age of two, 'Neath the clods of yonder valley. She is your spirit daughter, and"

Democrat was Jones)

"Has mated with the grandest house The Summer Kingdom owns, This very hour she doth tspouse,

His name to her name taela on The Bon of a great ex-PresUlent, Of Ueneral^ndrew Jatkson

Is

O.d Jones a moment gazed upon The tableaux moved and awed. Then he^ftid unto that medium, "My son. thou art a fraad. Lo. I havo had a firm l?lief

In Bplrlts,but Dewray me '.» If that thou canst bamboozle me Or for a Pierrepont play me. If thou hadst read lliy history

Even as thou shouldst- have done, Thou wouldst have found Old Hickory Did never have a son. If aay spirit daughter has wed his child,

Acrjss his child's escutcheon A bar sinister must bo drawn, Good cause have I for dudgeon. My daughter's life shall not be curst-

Let the bans forbidden be— will liek the spirit-bridegroom first And afterwards lick thee."

VI.

When they had stopped that stout old man Who was like a raging bull* They took up of the cabinet

About twelve baskets full. The spirit husband he had kicked...

In spiritualistic circles Brooklyn, July, 1879.

THE WAY OF THE WORLD.

MACD TO HUGH.

Dear Cou»m Hugh: I'm hom#figal«" Amtng the dear old hills and val^s s, The stormy music of tbe pines

Comes rushing down on all the gales The blackbirds' liquid melody Comt8 bubbling out from woodj wiya, And all the sounds I hear bat seem

An echofrom the dear old days.

l'veseen the sunset* burn and blush Behind the dark wood, as ofypre The morning's bud and blossom bright

O'er dusky purple heights once more I've walked the still gre* lanes, between The blossomed hedges, sweet with dew, But all tbe olden sights and sounds

1

And beaten black and blue— He proved to be the medium's son, And the Indian that said

l-Ugh!"

And as for ihe old man's spirit-girl,

y'

she was a no-such-tbing She was the medium's servant girl And the spirit Katie King. Ana tbe graphic local reporter writes (In his own choice vein—not Srcles') "The sad event has cast a gloom

Will, somehow, make me think of you.

So in the garden, quaint and sweet, Beneath a tent of lilac trees, Jarritetoyou. All round I bear /?».

The boom of countless golden bees, This deaa? old garden, running wild, Brings back a l»ng-l©st sense of caljn It sleeps a shadowy 80lita.de

Of leaf and blossom, breeze and balm.

Just as he used, the-catblrd sings Amid the laurel's emerald gloom, With glow of wine and gleam of snow,

Xeroses spread in seas of bloom. 'Twa^rtre we played In Auld Lang Syne—

I SJJPB

to see the picture rise

01 barefoot little boy atdgirl Their flaxen hair about their eyes.

Across the fields and pasture lands I took along walk walk yestei day, And came upoa thooldsteuc wall

Where, hours and hours, we used to play Uai' buried nor iu breaks and ferns It stands, as long ago it stood The crickets^chirp beneath the stones,

The cuckoos call along the wood.

Their golden ritehera, touch-me-ncta Held for the time of summer dew, Amid the muljain's velvet leaves,

Shine daisy stars of tander blue. rest edneath the old birch tree, And thought upon tho Long Ago. Till memories, lite rising tides,

Back on my heart began to flow.

Witb bare toes clinging to the stones 1 seemed to see you climb the wall To reacli for me some berries bright,

While I implore you not to fA'JI And once you helped me to the toil— Ah, what a dizzyheight ibseeuied! And so I stayed till twilight fell,

And of the Past and Futur^ dreamed. 1'ou know we mot beside the aaa Last year well. Cousin liugn, I'll own That 1 was weak and giddy then

But now I've wiser, graver grown. The spell of childho»u's lovos and Joys Is on me now oh, cousin, come! And we'll revive the happy Past

Amid old scenes. Dear Hugh, como home

HUGH TO MAUD.

Dear Cousin Maud: Your letter came Tohan I last night how very kind Of you to keep your Cousin Hugh,

With othor humOle thlHsrs, in mind. You know that when we met last year You blushed at what you termed "my way 8 Well, Cousin Maud, they're awkward still

They haven't men .ted since tloee days.

And when wc walked alone, one night, Beside th«^ quiet, starltt sea, And I reminded yon of vows ypa-toipghad-at *»,«•""**- And called my llfe-longhope absurd.

No, Cousin Maud. I can not cojne, For I was marriod weeks ago, Ana think I'd ratberstay at Home, |Carrie F. Whteler.

RKK ARK ABLE FACTS.

VACCINATION THE GREATAST MISTAKE AND DELUSION IX THE t-CIENCE OF MEDICINE.

[M. D. Conway's London Letter in Cincinnati Commercial.) There is steadily in this country a rebellion against the compulsory vacci nation law, which is not unlikely to seriously involve the general faith in Jenner's discovery. By prosecutions and punishments of some respectable and intelligent families the authorities have been the means of constituting an antivaccination society, with two newspapers (Inquirer and Anti-Vaccinator,) and the country is flooded with facts resting on high authority which cannot fail presently to produce ^panje. Peier Taylor,

P., who was one of tho Parliamentary Commission which nine years ago considered the subject and signed the unanimous report in favor of compulsory vaccinanon, has been convinced that he was in error, and on a bill just brought in by the Government to extend compulsion to Ireland made a statement which convinced others of the impolicy of the law—notably. Professor Fawcet John Bright has already opposed compulsion, and Gladstone has ex pr» sstd himself as suspicious of the law. Since Mr. Taylor made his speech on the subject, I have had an opportunity of conversing with him. He informed me that the bill will be strenuously fought on going into committee, and he was good enough to let.me freely examine the fi.cts and evidences on which he means to resist the new bill and urge repeal of that existing. It is hafdl}rpossible that 6uch facts as the subjoined, selected from a larger mass, can fail to excite alarm

Dr. W. J. Collins, for twelye years vaccine physician in Edinburg and London writes: "If I had the desire to describe one-third of the victims ruined by vaccination the blood would stand still in your veins" Dr. Stowell, with still longer experience, delares vaccination "not only an illusion, but a curse lo humanity." Dr. Hitchman, of Liveipool, says: "I have seen hundreds of children killed by vaccination." The Medical Times and Gazette declares that "consumption has widely spread since the introdnclion ot vaccination." The physician of the great London Cancer Hospital declares that many of the cases of cancer which have come under treatment in that institution have originated with vaccination. The appearance of facts appearing more and more confirmative. I accept the possibility of this made of transmission—I ought to say with reserve, even with lepugnance. But to-day I hesitate no more to proclaim this reality." Dr. Hutchinson has testified before a Parliamentary commission that out of thirteen children whom he vaccinated with lymph from a public vaccination institution, eleven exhibited the primary sore of syphilitic contagion two months after. Dr. Brudenell Carter declares that "a large proportion

of the casejri* apparentlj inherited nre in realityf"va and lhat "the syphilis in these cases does not show itself until the age of Ifiteg* eight to ten years.,' Dr. Thomas WJilson, Officer of Health to the Akton Union, writes to the Lancet (and it is significant that so conservative-^ or^an should have printed his comtnffffication): *It is useless to deny that vaccination by human iTpjpb involves danger of scrofulous, syphilitic and erysipelatous inoculation." Dr. Edward Ballard, Medical Inspector of the Local Government Board, one of the most important medical offices in the country, wrote a pamphlet of the utmost importance on va.~lnatipn. The Government, when appoifiting him, may not have known of this pamphlet, and since he was made Inspector his essay has suddenly disappeared from all book-shops. Diligent search for a copy failed to finr1 one except in the British Museum Speaking of some case at Acqui, Italy, Dr. Ballard savs:" "Put the case how we will, we cannot escape the inference that child Chiabera had become constitu^My syphilitic at the lime when his vac "lien was performed. Forty-six other children wereva xinated from him Of these thirty-nine became affected with syphilis. Among these thirty-nine v/as Louisa Manzone from her seventeen other children were vaccinated, of whom seven became syphilitic. She died the nurse who suckled her got ulcere in tiisi|||teast, and from the various othe|j1ch§dren who were, syphilized the diseskie -jjfpread by contagion to eighteen mothgii| and nurses and to their other children." In October, 1856, M.

Marone got come lymph in the tubes from Campobasso. A large number were vaccinated, of whom twenty-three, whose parents were known to be healthy, were infected ^?ith syphilis. "The nurses," says Dr. Ballard, "were infected in their turn with ii durated chancres on the brea«t. The mother imparted the disease to the fathers. One of the twenty-three infected served for new vaccinations, eleven infants" were, fcontaminated, and they infected others Several of the children dieif. Eleven nurses infected by the vaccinated children infected in their turn other children which had not been vaccinated, ^several of the contaminated woman were Confined either permatnrely or at full tefci, of children dead «r living, but in every lipase bearing marks of congenital syphiljs.'' Dr. Ballard further says that a latent

€ef

syphilitic taint may be roused J?r.to activity by vaccination. The effort tqf up press this pamphlet will be in $ain When the bill to extend compulsory vaccination to Ireland is fought, the Govern ment will have to meet these statements, made by one of its chief medical officers.

One of the most remarkable facts is that since vaccination was made compulsory, the death-rate oy small pox in London ha« increased in 1849-53, before compulsion, and when only ten percent, were vaccinated, the death-rate from sinall-pox was 292 but since compulsion 1S69-73, the death-rate from this disease was 679. Since the agitation began, the support which it has received Irorn .eminent authorities abrc ad ha been remark able. Dr. Joseph Hermann, head physi cian of the Imperial Hospital, Vienna writes:

My experience of small-pox during these past six years of bed.sida attendance has(igiven me the right, or rather has imposed" bti me the duty, of-taking part in the bold and spirited onslaught on vaccination, which is now being carried on in Switzerland, Germany, England and other countries. I am convinced that vaccination is the greatest mistake and delusion in the science of "medicine a fanciful illusion in Ihe mind of the discoverer a phenomenal appariation, devoid of scientific foundation and wanting in all the conditions of scien tific possibility.'.

At Leeds a surgeon named Carrie cer tified that a child had died from vaccination. The Coroner refused to accept the certificate, saying, "Vaccination is not a legal cause of death." He therefore ordered the jury to return verdict of

Died by visitation of God.'?r" But illegal and. improper as it maty be for a babv to die of vaccination, the cases aie now so numerous that the false returns which have been made |so as not to alarm parents are no longer possible. And this especially as itis ^pnefded that vaccination does not entirely protect.*,,

Between 1870 and 187S the^ tlutnbtr of small-pox patients in the great hospitals of Liverpool, Glal^ow, Homerton, Dublin and Metropolitan (London), aggregated 22,465 of ttuspe the number that had been vaccinatea was 17,056 Thest figures are startling enough if read beside the life of Jenner. According to the statements of jenner, and oi main medical authorities in his time, persons who har« been vaccinated were, again and again inoculated witn the^mall pox and without any cfiect whatevefi Tiwaseex periments led to the belief that vaccination was a preventive. That has been proved a fiction and the plea for compulsion now is that vaccinated suffer more lightly when attacked. But since this medical tcnedt follows an ancient orthodoxy ot' inoculation (now penal) and a modern orthodoxy ot complete immunity, no new theory has any right to claim infallibility. This latest theory appears also to be mistaken. The London deathrate has increased since compulsion. But even if it were otherwise, the policy of coercion cannot be sustained in the absence of any possible security (the matter beitig unanalyzable) from the accompanying perils. But it is an interesting question—even a puzzle—how Jenner's reports can be made consistent with contemporary facts.

A Partial Blockade.

Of the main avenue for escape of refusafrom the human system is utterly subvere.ve of regularity among the other organs. Let constipation become chronic, and, leaving out tbe imminent danger of inflammation of the bowels and their total obstruction occuring, jaundice is almost certain to ensue, the liver is liable to become engorged, the blood and urine are poisoned by the bile, which also vitiates the juices of the stomach and other unhappy consequences fellow. Hostetter's Stomach Bitters, a prime tonic alterative, prevents or remedies these resnl's and their eause. as the ease may require, and is also signally efficacious in overcoming flatulence, heartburn, and variable as weu as constipated action of the bowels. It renews ner re power, Improves the appetite, stays *he progress ot early decay, relieves the inflrmltie of age, and Is a pleatant appetizer.

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