Terre Haute Weekly Gazette, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 24 June 1880 — Page 7

Hf,

A TERRIBLE CYCLONE.

A Church Crushed, and twenty-three Persons Injured.

From the Cleveland Plain Dealer. A terrible calamity occurred in Orange township, Findlay County, on Sunday during the terrible wind storm that swept over this. section. The little Sabbath School, numbering about sixty person*, belonging to the English Evangelical Church, commonly callcd the Nonnamsikcr Church, had assembled at 10 o'clock yesterday morning and had nearly com-

1juilding

)leted the services when suddenly the swayed like a ship at sea and the eastern portion of the roof was caught up by the wind and hurled through the air a considerable distance. At the same time the south gable of the church, which was of brick, fell in with a crash, completely buiying from sight the majority of the persons present find causing injuries to no less than twenty-three, six or more of whom it is expected will die before morning.

The scene at that moment is described as perfectly horrible. The air was full of dirt, which the wind caught up and dashed into the eyes and mouths of the helpless, suffering beings pinned fast by the fallen tiniters and bricks, while the frantic screams for aid were appalling and made the bravest tremble. By herculean efforts the unfortunates were finally rescued at a great risk, as the bricks •were constantly falling from their jagged places to the ground beneath. The sufferers were removed to the houses of neighbors, where they received every attention from kind- hearted Samaritans. Doctors from Jilull'ton and other places hurried to the scene and did all in the power of mortals to alleviate the suffering. Following is a list of the injured, the six first being those who are not expected torecover: Mrs. David Nonnamaker, Mrs. Susan Graser, Eli Nonnamaker, Mrs. Warricko lVpple, Harvey McKinlcy, LucindaNonnamaker, Abraham Couitright, Mrs. William Warren, Catharine Nonnamaker, Miss Drady Cook, Mrs. Stephen Cook, Willie Pepple, Monroe Graser, George Graser, Rev. Henry Strancli, pastor of the church, Miss Lizzie A. Vermillion, Miss Maggie McKinlev, Andrew J. Nonnamaker, Conrad Arnold, Arnold, a five-year-old child of William Warren, Mrs. William Dieffendorfer.

SIR BOYLE ROCHE. From Chamber's Journal.

The most notorious buli-perpetrator •was Sir Boyle ltoche, who was elected member for Tralee in 1775. He had a a regular blundering reputation. ^11 was known on the occasion, afler a withering exposure or patriotic denunciation of government, to say, with solemn gravity: *lMr. Speaker, it is the duty of every true lover of the country to give his last guinea, to save the remainder of his fortunes!" Or, if the subject of debate was some national calamity, he would deliver himself thus "Sir, single misfortunes never come alone, and the greatest of all national calamities is generally follcvweil "by one much greater."

Sir Boyle Roche belonged to the' mcient family of De llusse, of Lemcy ?R Was created a baronet in 1783 and wr.«| married to the eldest daughter of Sir James Cad well, but had no heir, lie used1 to account for his lack of progeny by saying "that it was hereditary in his family to have no children." Another of Lis blunders was made when speaking of the fish hawkers. "They go down to Hingsend," he observed, "buy the herrings for half nothing, and sell them for twice as much." A letter supposed to have been written by Sir Boyle Rocfye during the Irish rebellion of 1798, gives an amusing collection of his various blunders. Perhaps he never put so many on paper at a timA but his peculiar turn for "bulls" is here shown at pne view.

The letter was first printed in the' Kerry\Magazinc now out of print: "Dear SirHaving now a little peace and quiet, I sit down to inform you of the bustle and confusion we are in from the blood-thirsty rebels, many of whom are now, thank God, killed and dispersed. We are in a pretty mess can get nothing to eat and no wine to drink except whiskey. When we sit down to our dinner we are obliged to keep both hands armed. "While I write this letter I have my sword in one hand and my pistol in the other. I

concluded from the beginning that this would be the end and I am right, for it is

not half over yet. At present there are Bach goings on that everything is at a standstill. I should have answered your letter a fortnight ago, but I only received it this morning indeed, hardly a mail arrives safe without being robbed. "No longer ago than yesterday the mail-coach was robbed near the town the bags had been very judiciously left behind for fear of accidents, and, by great good luck, there was nothing in the coach, cxcept two outside passengers, who had nothing for the thieves to take. Last Thursday an alarm was given that a gang of rebels in full retreat from Droghcda were advancing under the French Standard, but they had no colors nor any drums except bagpipes, immediately every man in the place, including women and children, ran out to meet them. We soon found our force a great deal too little, and were far too near to think of retreating. Death was in every face stud to it we went. By the time half our party were killed we began to be all alive.

Fortunately, the rebels had no guns except pistols, cutlass, and pikes, and we plenty of muskets and ammunition. We put tiiem all to'the sword not a soul of them escaped except some that were drowned in an adjoining bog. In fact, in a short time nothing was heard except silence. Their uniforms were all different —chiefly green. After the action was over we went to rummage the camp. All we found was a few pike's without heads, a parcel of empty bottles filled with water and a bundle of French commissions, lied up with Irish names. Troops are now stationed round, which exactly squares with. my ideas of security. Adieu. I have only time to add that I am yours in haste. B. R.

THE REASON WHY.

The tonic effect of Kidney-Wort is produced by its cleansing and purifying action on the blood. Where there*is a gravelly deposit in the urine, or milky, ropy urine from disordered Kidneys, it cures without fail. Constipation and Piles leadlly yield to its cathartic,and healing power. •f

.. Mr. E. F. .lordon has accopted a travelog agency with White & Wright*

:,% innpr

?T

SOONER OB LATER.

[Found in the purse of a young lady who lately committed suicide.] Sooner or later the storm shall beat

Over my slumber from head to feet Sooner or later the wind shall rave In the long grasses above my grave.

I shall not heed them where I lie— Nothing their sounds shall signify Nothing the headstone's fret of rain Nothing to me the dark day's pain.

Sooner or later ihe sun shall shine With tender warmth on that mound of mine Sooner or later in Summer's air Clover and violets blossom there.

I shall not feel in that deep laid rest The sheeted light fall over my breast, Nor ever note in those hidden hours The wind-blown breath of the tossing flowers.

Sooner or later the stainless snows Shall add their hush to my mute repose Sooner or later shall slant and shift, •,ib And heap my bed with their dazzling drift.

Chill though that frozen pall shall seem, Its touch no colder can make my dreamThat wrecks not the sacred dread Shrouding the city of the dead.

Sooner or later the bee shall comc And fill the moon with the golden hum Sooner or later, on half-poised wing, The bluebird above my grave shall sing,

Sing and chirp and whistle with glee, Nothing his music can mean to me None of those beautiful things shall know How soundly their lover sleeps below.

Sooner or later, far out in the night, The stars shall over me wing their flight Sooner or later the darkling dews Catch the white spark in their silent ooze

Never a ray shall part the gloom That wraps me 'round in the silent tomb Peace shall be perfect to lip and brow. Sooner or later oh, why net )w?

•TEN GREAT GALS.

[Journal of Education.]

At the age of sixteen, before we had discarded our "roundabouts," we had contracted to "keep school," in District No. 5 for $12 per month and "boarding round." Wp knew very well the little red school-house, standing at the exact center of the district, on the borders of a mighty swamp, the farm-houses scattered about the hills, and we also knew the nuisance of that particular school, a squad of half a dozen rough fellows who had emerged into "tail qpats," and would hardly relish the discipline of a boypedagogue in a roundabout. After the first flush of elation at our election the reflection came back like a return wave of ice-water, that in all human probability ere onr seventeenth birthday should dawn, we should have been seen vanishing head foremost out of the school house window into a snow drift, propelled by Class No. 1 of big boys. In our anxiety we applied to "Aunt Anna," the general oracle of the household.

Aunt Anna was a stalwart maiden of GO summers, gigantic in proportions, but 'ivery inch a lady in her dear old heart, ohe had nursed half the children in town through measles, mumps and chickenpox, and was the mainstay in all family emergencies. There were sly rumors that the occasional attack of "fidgets," .which overcame the good old lady at night, had some relation to a mysterious black bottle which she always carried in her-work-box, but Aunt Anna plus the "fidgets," was worth' a regiment of ordinary feminines for the home-made uses of country life. "Well, now, you are really going to keep school in District Number Five," said Aunt Anna, smoothing down her big checked apron and raising her spectacles for a good, long look at the incipient pedagogue seated at the opposite corner of the fireplace. "Yes Aunt Anna, I have promised to keep that school, but, between you and me, I am dreadfully afraid to tackle that crowd of boys. You know what a rough set they are, and one of them has already 'given out' that there will be no. board wanted in District Number Five after the first week." "That's a serious matter. Now, let's see if we can't think of something to help you. Now, you see I don't knrfw anything about book learnin'. No doubt you can cipher that back seat of boys into the middle of next week. But they can fling you over the roof of the schoolhouse in a jiffy, if they have a mind to. I know every family in the district.' I have nussed in every house, and taken the measure of every youngster that will come to that school. \V

There's one thing in "your favor. Ther^ll be ten great gals in that school, and most of em are good gals, too. 'Now, some area head taller than you, and two or three of them are right handsome,'too. They can twist that crowd of great, bashful boys round their little fingers if they want to. Now, mind what I tell you do you go right to work and gain the affections of them ten great gals, and they'll manage the great boys while you keep school."

That sounded well, and, armed with this panacea against rebellion, we opened school the Monday after Thanksgiving. It was a rough looking set up on the high seat—that row of villianoua looking fellows, any one of them Jig enough to throw me over into the big swamp with one hand.

Happily our first boarding-house was with two of the "great gals." Never did we "lay ourselves out" to gain the good graces of the lovely sex as during the first week of that boardin' round. We rode on the front of the sled with the tallest girl, played checkers with the second, got all snarled up in a "cat's cradle" with the pretty visiting cousin, and put in a word of explanation for the "hard sums" of all in the long evening? at homo.

THE TERRE HAUTE WEEKLY GAZETTE.

The first crisis came at the beginning of the second week, when a big lout "sauced" the new schoolmaster. Someaow it crushed us, and for a minute the schooi-room swam round, and the idea of seizing our fur cap and making for home flitted across our vision. Just then the patter of alight footstep was heard down the long slope of the narrow aisle leading up to the seat oi- the "ten great gals.** The taHest glided down, ostensibly to ask the explanation of a hard sum but as we leaned over the slate, with a dimness in the eye, we heard a whisper in our ear: "Don't be cast down! We girls will shame that seat of boys into good manners before another week."

Alight broke in we were gaining the "affections of the ten great gals." So things drifted for six weeks, when dawned judgment day. We had gone to Iward with a good motherly woman, whd loved us as her own son. A big fire in the parlor greeted our arrival, and a supper fit for the parson himself. After tea our hostess appeared in her best black silk, in her hand a mighty black "ruler.'1 and sat down before us with the air ot a Minerva "Now matters have come *to a point In your school you have been trying to gov* era that crowd of rascally boys by love, but that has come to an end. Tomorrow they will try to put you out. Take this ruler, and don't come home tomorrow night unless you have used it up over the head and shoulders of some^y"

There was no appeal from that. A greater than the whole class of "great gals" had spoken, and we felt in our souls that fate was standing at the schoolhouse door.

Were we endowed with the epic rage of a Homer or a Pope we might possibly depict the scenes of the coming day. How the ugliest loafer in a frock coat, kicked in the door at recess how, when the trembling young master asked,

Who did that?" the big boor lifted hid thumb to his nose and executed that significant gyration with the little finger which would make a savage of St. John himself how, fired with the courage of despair and a vision of our farm-house Minerva, we seized the big oaken ruler, rushed up the inclined plane, upsetting several small children, on the insolent scoundrel, tore off the collar of his frockcoat, snaked him down the area before the fire-place, and beaf, him over the head and shoulders till he roared for mercy how at intervals he cast a glance at his accomplices, and took in the situation the "ten great gals" had spiked the guns of all but this wretch, who slunk and begged under our hand how we wound up with an eloquent address, and gave the whipped ruffian his hat,with instructions to go home how his sensible father took off what remained of his dilapidated frock-coat, and trounced him till he yelled again, and sent him to school the following day with a compliment to the plucky young master. All this might be sung in heroic verse.

But, if the truth were known, it was not we, but the "ten great gals" that did the business. They had so demoralized the attacking columns by the magic of their charms that only one had the heart to defy the little master, and he dare not lift his hand when the day of battle came. And from that day we crowned dear old Auut Anna Prophetess of Love.

Gain the affections of the "ten great gals" in our school-room, "and all things iihall work together for good." irl /A««'!»i

Bnglisb Capital Coming Over. [New York Sun.] In the course of the next five* years a Vast amount of British capital will find its way to this country, where branches of English business houses will be established, while in many cases the main business will be transferred here. We may see this to-day in New York, where Bhops are constantly being established by Englishmen. The great dry-goods houses are largely represented by tnem. The English capitalist, feeling an absolute security in our public finances, will more and more pour those hoards which he is at his wits' end to know how to invest into associations conducted by his own countrymen here, and the benefit will accrue to both countries. The present trouble in England will thus tend to bind even closer the commercial interterests of the two countries. Englishmen already own large possessions in the West, and every year will see the number of such proprietors increase. Within a very few years there will be a daily mail steamer to England.

High Salaries.

[Boston Commercial Bulletin.]

An old Boston merchant says: "Speaking of salaries, the highest one I ever knew paid to a salesman was $30,000 a year, This was paid in war times to a dry goods man, and he used to boast that he and the President of the United States were the only persons in the country receiving so much fOr their services. I know a man who for years received annually $17,00) for his labors as a salesman. I think it would puzzle him to-day to pay his board bill regularly. Within a few days I saw a man who received at one time a of $io,ooa He was well up in1 his,trad* but to-day he is simply a beer drinker.

Caution About Smoking. [Burlington Hawkeye.]

George William Curtis says no gentleman will smoke in the presence of ladies. No, he will not. And, George, no lady will smoke in the presence of gentlemen, either. You forgot to say that. George.

I

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The oldest engineering school In America. Next term begins September 18th. The Register of 1880 contains a list of the graduates for the past 54 years, with their positions also, course of study, requirements, expenses, etc. Address Jri DAVID W. GREENE, Director.

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for tne slr.u

l'u 11 of valuable notes, by rr. K. B. Foot*, on 8eroMia, Diseases ofthe bre.

athing drgans Difoases of Men Diseases of Women aches ai«l pains HeartTronlilo* and a pro«t variety of chronic diseases, with cvuliiuo tliti in most cases these diseases are cur able. Sent for a three cent I stamp. Address, Ml'itKAV HILL PUB. CO. No. 129 ll*« Vth Street. New York

BOOK.

•. 1 t/r.airo, 91111 frr.va'*, *n«i Spov. l»,,N»cn.4torrhe*. fnif»uteaey(

j" Dr. K'-rii.

Van.# Dims Me oti*

ptrrm+h' by letter, !, 50 eis- Fiu«i( iUo*-

wi nxuiit. 500 pafes. poM-paklf SL onlv phrsician in tfecH^wfeu) WHTMBb Aii

NEWSPAPER ADVERTI SING AGENT,. PAHK R0\r

{TI3ISS

BTTII,DI\0 NBW TO BK

Is authorized to contract for advertise ment in the GAZHTTE, at ourbet rate I

I N O I N I N CUHCS FEVtR* AND AGUE

PHY

IClAiN** it is a Per/eot Snb^titn for tho fculphate quinine. Superior in tonic properties, and produces no disagreeable effect.

Dose the same as Sulphate Quinine

5

Sold by all Druggists or sent by mail. Price $1.50 per oz. BIL-LIN8S, CLAPP &, CO..

OllOTlij 1, '{.MS

STOPPED FREE MarbrMwtmeceti,

ValiBni. 'curtfor Fit*, EpiUpty and JStrvt AffecUmt. IirrALtiBLX if taken as -directed. Ao FtitafUr firttday'iute. Treatise ami 93 trial bottle frMt» Kit patients, they |iaylngexpre»si^c. Send name, P. O. and express art-wts to IiR. Kl,INK,Ml Arch St.

Philadelphia, 1 'a. Sat rtrin ci*. -.Idruayix'i.

Alexander Bayr

Manuiacturfer of

Ht Bcots and Shoes, ladies' Boots and Sboe#'mare to erder. at Holsnd's store, sea Mam street.

NERVOUS DEBILITY

Vita! Weakness and Pto. tration from orer-work or is radical fr cnredl

and Been in use 90 yean, —it the most success-

me inw nmw ,.„IFCKo,28. ftti remedy known. PriMnj^ Tutors vials and Marge rial of powder for $5, sent post-free on re-

TRY

Old Dominion COfTee.

Best in the Market!

OCA LOR Teayellag late «im ereftrreA

»*UAYHL*-ft. An EXPENSES WAtfta n—Ur pal*. SLOAN ACIiINSnhi at. ClaeiaaaiL