anaheim-gazette 1877-02-03
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ANAHEIM
VOL. 7.
WEEKLY GAZETTE.
SATURDAY...FEBRUARY 3, 1877.
It will yet be some days before that system, so necessary in all well regulated families and printing offices, is reached; and in the meantime we ask the indulgence of our patrons, especially the advertisers.
In a short time Mr. Holly, the well known mechanical engineer, will attempt to heat the entire city of Lockport, N. Y., by steam. The city is divided into districts, and each district is to have its separate boiler. Maints from each boiler are run to the different houses, and all the occupant has to do is to turn a fanet and obtain all the heat he wants.
Our readers will perceive that the new type upon which the Gazette is printed is much smaller than that used herefore. We think the paper presents a much more handsome appearance, typographically; and the type now used will enable us to put in the same space nearly one-half more reading matter than formerly.
A FEELING, akin to that experienced, by a lady engaged in the pleasant feminine occupation of shopping, possessed us while selecting from the well-filled type foundries the material for our office. As the average woman delights in examining the different silkà materials, we find it most useful to undertake the task.
THE FIRE AND ITS LESSONS.
The fire fiend has once more paid us a visit and the result is shown in a block of black ruins where a few days ago stood a block of good buildings. We may perhaps derive some benefit from moralizing a little in this painful event. From time to time since the fire which occurred in the rear of the Planters' Hotel, a year or so ago, we have called the attention of our citizens to the danger which threatened us and to the necessity of making preparations to meet it when it should come, but with small success.
Believing that the magnitude of our danger from fire is now thoroughly impressed upon the people, we again call attention to the question. The first thing that must have struck a cool observer on the night of the fire was the total absence of anything proaching organized opposition to the flames. There was no disciplined fire department; no recognized leader—everyone running helter skelter, here and there; an abundance of energy and good will with no one to direct or control. We have ere now asked repeatedly. Where is our Fire Department? and we repeat the question now. Why cannot we organize as competent a fire brigade as any other town of our size? We have plenty of material for the organization of a good hook and ladder company, who, with a little drill and discipline, could handle material aid in case of need. For instance, timely pulling down of Conrad's building would have saved Mrs. Kuchel's buildup, but there was no one with authority to undertake the task.
OUR NEW A Fine Selection Latest Improved Machinery.
Out of evil there comes the total destruction of our estate, will our patron after the fire which occurred our Mr. Melrose left for result of his visit is the saliently announce to us that we reopen with a latest and very best experience has taught us to fill the wants of our proud to say that a part of the selection of all kinds enables us work entrusted to us that will equal anything San Francisco. We attention to the selection stock of first-class dress procured preceses of all our material is in order. During our vexpected the modius offices there, and then in all the intricate confident that our prices times in every facet that in the new and are now enabled to derive the benefit of vantages of being able
A FEELING, akin to that experienced by a lady engaged in the pleasant feminine occupation of shopping, possessed us while selecting from the well-filled type foundries the material for our office. As the average woman delights in examining the different silks on the counters and in purchasing that most pleasing to the eye, so we fairin selecting our favorite presses and type from the mass of material presented for our inspection.
We have been greatly impressed with the many kindly paragraphs printed about us in nearly every paper in the State, and we feel not a little pride in discovering that our relations with our brother journalists have been so pleasant as to evoke such genuine utterances of sympathy with us in our misfortunes. To the press of this county, especially, we hereby return our sincere thanks for the many friendly words they have said about the Gazette during the past two weeks.
The Los Nietos Valley Courier says: "We are pleased to know that the Anaheim Gazette will make its reappearance next week, bright and new as ever. The fire destroyed all the material in the office. One of the proprietors immediately went to San Francisco, purchased the necessary outfit, and in two weeks from the time of the fire the Gazette will again be a welcome guest in the houses of its patrons and the sanctums of its friends.
The Sacramento Her suggests that no person should be permitted to vote unless he registers his name at least thirty days before the election, thus giving time for investigation by partisan Committees after the printing of the lists. This suggestion is good. It proposes one of the best checks against fraud. After the election there is no sufficient inducement for inquiry and the disappearance of the voter might be accounted for in various ways without the necessary implication of fraud; but the possession of a complete printed list of all the voters in the precinct a month before the election would be a powerful stimulus to careful inquiry by both parties about every voter not known.
We are just a little bit proud of the celerity we have displayed in presenting the Gazette to its readers in two weeks from the time the former office was destroyed. On Wednesday morning, while the fire was still burning, one of the proprietors started for San Francisco, and arrived in that city at 2 o'clock P.M. on the day following. By ten o'clock of the same day he had selected a complete newspaper office, and during all that night men were at work packing type, boxing presses, cutting leads, etc. The next day (Friday) was devoted to selecting the material for a Job Office, and at ten o'clock on Saturday morning the entire outfit was on its way to Anaheim, where the major part of it arrived on Monday..."
EOS. GAZETTE: Noah, civilized boy to a greater or less stimulants, and no opposition was made until within the last that even the Puritans ideas of morality, anyone from drink liquors whenever social custom demands beverages. Indeed than fifty years ago met at the ministers affairs of the church glasses, together with tobacco, were placed could indulge in an while discussing nails. But the crusade spirits began, and Sons of Temperature throughout the land dated the watchman from all malt or fc cider; and before munitions, a man waving liquors was in business tramcracised.
to its readers in two weeks from the time the former office was destroyed. On Wednesday morning, while the fire was still burning, one of the proprietors started for San Francisco, and arrived in that city at 2 o'clock p.m. on the day following. By ten o'clock of the same day he had selected a complete newspaper office, and during all that night men were at work packing type, boxing presses, cutting leads, etc. The next day (Friday) was devoted to selecting the material for a Job Office, and at ten o'clock on Saturday morning the entire outfit was on its way to Anaheim, where the major part of it arrived on Monday night. The work of putting the massive machinery in position and in assorting and putting in their proper place the numberless founts of type, took several days. But, notwithstanding the haste with which all this was done, we venture to state that a more conveniently arranged and thoroughly useful office cannot be found anywhere. Many a time and oft have we indulged in speculations as to the manner in which we would fit out a printing office, should the opportunity present itself. The opportunity (unfortunately) having presented itself, we carried out the plans we had so long been dreaming about, and when the foundry was reached, we were able to tell the salesman just what was wanted.
It is only this thorough familiarity with our business and its requirements that enables us to issue the Gazette so soon after the conflagration. In this connection we cannot refrain from quoting the following paragraph from the Los Angeles Express of the 23d inst:
The Anaheim Gazette office was destroyed by fire last Wednesday morning, not an available type having been saved from the flames. Mr. Malrose, one of the proprietors, started for San Francisco the same day, purchased an entire new outfit of material, and arrived here this morning by steamer. The new material reached Anaheim last night, and on Tuesday night, two weeks from the time of the fire, the Gazette will again make its appearance. That is what may be called quick work.
Friend Fisher, of the Santa Monica Outlook himself a thorough printer and capable of appreciating the difficulties of the situation, after referring to the announcement of the spady reappearance of the Gazette, says:
We admire the pluck and energy displayed by Malrose & Athorne which is but another form of that vim and grit that has always made the Gazette a wide-awake local paper. We add our sympathies, gentlemen, for your misfortune, and good wishes for that success which we think you are certain to achieve.
The Course of True Love,
A telegraph was received at the Sheriff's office this morning, from Angheim, describing a young couple named William Clark and Lizzie Alvord, who eloped from that place last night, and asking that they be detained until claimed by a proper officer. Emil Harris was immediately detailed to hunt them up, and succeeded in arresting them as they were about boarding the Wilmington train, so as take the San Francisco steamer at San Pedro. The unhappy pair made no statement beyond acknowledging that they had eloped, and seemed very much disheartened and downcast over their arrest. The young lady, although not handsome, is quite good looking, and does not look as though she had nerve enough to set at naught parental commands and indulge in the naughty, but fashionable romance of running away from home to be united to the object of her affections. They have devoted the day to lugubrious meditation, and the crowning scene will probably take place this evening when they reach home and are brought face to face with the irate father. A strong influence will be brought to bear upon him by friends of the loving but heavy couple, and they will probably be forgiven and taken to the parental bosom, with the customary blessing. —Express, Jan. 27th.
Ex-Queen Isabella, of Spain, has commenced to attend the bull fights at Seville than fifty years ago met at the ministers' affairs of the church glasses, together with tobacco; were placed could indulge in an while discussing rite. But the crusade spirits began, and Sons of Temperature throughout the last stationation the watchman from all malt or fruit cider; and before these munities, a man waving liquors was in business tramway ostracised.
These societies present time. Zionization is the Gno no desire to disemperance quiet adult that too lants is injurious every now known some one and sapping thistle situation through appetite for such called tempera in their way at.
Indigestion use of alcohol different are to the knowledge is suffering from indigestion if from intolerance. Yet on other. Brew over-indulgent investigate to pride ourselves from one even bosoms sins e
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA: SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1877.
OUR NEW OUTFIT.
A Fine Selection of Material—The Latest Improvements in Printing Machinery.
Out of evil there comes good. So out of the total destruction of our stock, machinery, etc., will our patrons reap a benefit. Directly after the fire which consumed our entire office, our Mr. Melrose left for San Francisco and the result of his visit is that we can to-lay confidently announce to our friends and patrons that we reopen with a complete outfit of the latest and very best class. A long and varied experience has taught us just what is wanted to fill the wants of our customers, and we are proud to say that a personal superintendence of the selection of presses and material of all kinds enables us to guarantee that all work entrusted to us will be done in a manner that will equal anything obtainable out of San Francisco. We have given most careful attention to the selection of a large and varied stock of first-class designs in type. We have procured presses of the very best makers, and all our material is in keeping with the machinery. During our visit to the city we inspected the machines operated in the best job offices there, and thoroughly postal ourselves in all the intricacies of the art. We are confident that our patrons will find us up to the times in every branch of our business, and that in the new and superior class of work we are now enabled to turn out, they will derive the benefit of our loss. The great advantages of being able to purchase an office
ANAHEIM'S BIG FIRE.
The Progress of the Flames—Herculean Efforts to Subdue them—Estimated Value of Property Destroyed, Amount of Insurance, etc.
On the morning of Wednesday, the 10th inst., as the employees of the Gazette were about to go home, a little after twelve o'clock, they saw a strong light burning in the rear of Enterprise Hall, and the alarm of fire was promptly given. The citizens turned out with their usual promptade, and almost all the alarms beaded fawn in town were quickly on the scene, ready and willing to aid, by every means in their power, in the subjugation of the flames. The wind was blowing lightly from 'the south-east, but fortunately not enough to materially aid the fire. Commencing
IN THE REAR OF ENTERPRISE HALL,
The flames quickly spread over the entire Hall, which soon became one burning mass and continued until Judge Bailey's office, the Chinese laundry, and Conrad's Saloon, were entirely consumed. The flames then crossed the alley-way, and Mrs. Kuchiel's building occupied by the Messrs. Plato and the Anaheim Gazette, also succumbed to their powers.
The entire block between the Old Fellow's Hall and the store formerly occupied by Calisher was razed to the ground. The Old Fellow's Building was for a considerable time in great danger; the window sills being burned completely out, and all woodwork on the side fronting the fire was destroyed. Thanks to the moment the express came round the curve in the Cold Spring cutting, a dummy engine was backing two freight cars and a platform car over the crossing—the flagman having omitted to go back to the curve and stop the approaching train. He says that seeing the train approach without warning from the depot, he called to the engineer of the dummy engine of the freight train to "go ahead."
"The engineer, who says he did not hear this order, instead of going ahead, backed his cars, and the express dashed clean through them at the speed of forty-two miles an hour, according to the estimate of the employees on the train. The engineer of the express first caught sight of the freight cars at a distance of about one hundred and fifty yards from the crossing. He immediately whistled down brakes and pulled violently at the cord running through the cars and
Temperature, Alcohol, Tobacco, Opium, Etc.
[ FIRST PAPER. ]
Eos. GAZETTE:—Ever since the days of Noah, civilized beings have been in the habit to a greater or less extent, of using alcoholic stimulants, and no very strong or decided opposition was manifested against the custom until within the last half century. I find that even the Puritans, with all their strict ideas of morality, made no rules restricting anyone from drinking beer, wine or distilled liquors whenever inclination prompted, or social custom demanded, the drinking of those beverages. Indeed, I am informed that less than fifty years ago, when good, pious people met at the minister's office to talk over the affairs of the church, the whisky bottle and glasses, together with long clay pipes and tobacco, were placed on the table so that all could indulge in a social glass and smoke while discussing matters of importance.
But the crusade against the use of ardent spirits began, and soon Tectotal Societies, Sons of Temperance, etc., were formed throughout the land, having for their foundation the watchword of "Total Abstinence" from all malt or fermented liquor, wine or cider; and before many years, in some communities, a man who indulged at all in intoxicating liquors was looked upon as unreliable in business transactions, and was socially ostracised.
We are confident that our patrons will find us up to the times in every branch of our business, and that in the new and superior class of work we are now enabled to turn out, they will derive the benefit of our loss. The great advantages of being able to purchase an office perfect in every part will be realized by our customers. If the latest and most improved machinery, the best and most elegant type, the finest materials, combined with the most careful personal supervision of work by experienced printers, can give satisfaction, our patrons may confidently anticipate it since that is what we offer to them. Everything in our office has been purchased by Mr. Mcleoge, personally, after careful investigation of the various designs in machinery and type as seen in different offices in actual use. No better way of judging of the merits of an outfit could be found than inspecting the work similar ones turn out. This careful selection can have but one result, and we fearlessly challenge competition in Southern California. In the future, as in the past, we shall use every endeavor to give satisfaction to our numerous friends and patrons. Need we say that we trust they will continue to give us in the future that hearty encouragement they have always accorded us in the past? We do trust that our promptitude in again coming to the front after so severe a blow will meet with the encouragement we anticipate. If our friends show us that they appreciate our efforts, we shall feel it our great pleasure to continue to develop and improve our facilities, so as to keep up with the progressive spirit of the age.
Temperance, Alcohol, Tobacco, Opium, Etc.
[ FIRST PAPER. ]
Eos. GAZETTE:—Ever since the days of Noah, civilized beings have been in the habit to a greater or less extent, of using alcoholic stimulants, and no very strong or decided opposition was manifested against the custom until within the last half century. I find that even the Puritans, with all their strict ideas of morality, made no rules restricting anyone from drinking beer, wine or distilled liquors whenever inclination prompted, or social custom demanded, the drinking of those beverages. Indeed, I am informed that less than fifty years ago, when good, pious people met at the minister's office to talk over the affairs of the church, the whisky bottle and glasses, together with long clay pipes and tobacco, were placed on the table so that all could indulge in a social glass and smoke while discussing matters of importance.
But the crusade against the use of ardent spirits began, and soon Tectotal Societies, Sons of Temperance, etc., were formed throughout the land, having for their foundation the watchword of "Total Abstinence" from all malt or fermented liquor, wine or cider; and before many years, in some communities, a man who indulged at all in intoxicating liquors was looked upon as unreliable in business transactions, and was socially ostracised.
We are confident that our patrons will find us up to the times in every branch of our business, and that in the new and superior class of work we are now enabled to turn out, they will derive the benefit of our loss. The great advantages of being able to purchase an office perfect in every part will be realized by our customers. If the latest and most improved machinery, the best and most elegant type, the finest materials, combined with the most careful personal supervision of work by experienced printers, can give satisfaction, our patrons may confidently anticipate it since that is what we offer to them. Everything in our office has been purchased by Mr. Mcleoge, personally, after careful investigation of the various designs in machinery and type as seen in different offices in actual use. No better way of judging of the merits of an outfit could be found than inspecting the work similar ones turn out. This careful selection can have but one result, and we fearlessly challenge competition in Southern California. In the future, as in the past, we shall use every endeavor to give satisfaction to our numerous friends and patrons. Need we say that we trust they will continue to give us in the future that hearty encouragement they have always accorded us in the past? We do trust that our promptitude in again coming to the front after so severe a blow will meet with the encouragement we anticipate. If our friends show us that they appreciate our efforts, we shall feel it our great pleasure to continue to develop and improve our facilities, so as to keep up with the progressive spirit of the age.
Temperance, Alcohol, Tobacco, Opium, Etc.
[ FIRST PAPER. ]
Eos. GAZETTE:—Ever since the days of Noah, civilized beings have been in the habit to a greater or less extent, of using alcoholic stimulants, and no very strong or decided opposition was manifested against the custom until within the last half century. I find that even the Puritans, with all their strict ideas of morality, made no rules restricting anyone from drinking beer, wine or distilled liquors whenever inclination prompted, or social custom demanded,the drinking of those beverages. Indeed, I am informed that less than fifty years ago, when good, pious people met at the minister's office to talk over the affairs of the church,the whisky bottle and glasses,together with long clay pipes and tobacco were placed on the table so that all could indulge in a social glass and smoke while discussing matters of importance.
But the crusade against the use of ardent spirits began,and soon Tectotal Societies,Sons of Temperance,ect.,were formed throughoutthe land,havingfor their foundationthe watchwordof"Total Abstinence"fromallmaltorfermentedliquor,wineorcider;andbeforemanyyears,insomecommunities,amanwhindulgedatallintoxicatingliquorwaslookedupasunreliableinbusinesstransactions,andwassociallyostracised.
We are confident that our patrons will find us up to the times in every branch of our business,and that in the new and superior class of workwe are now enabled to turn out,they will derivethebenefitofourloss.Thegreatadvantagesofbeingabletopurchaseanofficeperfectineverypartwillberealizedbyourcustomers."Ifthelatestandmostimprovedmachinery,thebestandmosteleganttype,thefinestmaterialscombinedwiththemostcarefulpersonalsupervisionofworkbyexperiencedprinters,cangivesatisfactionourpatronsmayconfidentlyanticipateitsincethatiswhatweoffertothem.EverythinginourofficehasbeenpurchasedbyMr.Mcleoge,personally,aftercarefulinvestigationofthevariousdesignsinmachineryandtypeasseenindifferentofficesinactualuse.Nobetterwayofjudgingofthemeritaofanoutfitcouldbefoundthantinspectetheworksimilaronesturnout.Thiscarefulselectioncanhavebutoneresult,andwefearlesslychallengecompetitioninSouthernCalifornia.Inthefuture.asinthepastweshalluseeveryendeavortogivesatisfactiontoournumerousfriendsandpatrons.Needwe saythatwetrusttheywillcontinuetogiveusinthefutureheartytowarenesstheyhavealwaysaccordedusinthepast?Wedo trustthatourpromptitudeinagaincomingtothefrontaftersoseverea blowwillmeetwiththeencouragementweanticipateIfourfriendsshowusthattheyappreciateoureffortsweshallfeelitgreatpleasuretocontinuetodevelopandimproveourfacilities,sоastokeepupwiththeprogressivespiritoftheage.
Temperance,Alohohol,Tobacco,
OpiumEtc.
[ FIRST PAPER.]
But the crusade against the use of ardent spirits began, and soon Teetotal Societies, Sons of Temperance, etc., were formed throughout the land, having for their foundation the watchword of "Total Abstinence" from all malt or fermented liquor, wine or cider; and before many years, in some communities, a man who indulged at all intoxicating liquors was looked upon as unreliable in business transactions, and was socially ostracised.
These societies are kept up at the present time. The principal organization is the Good Templars. I have no desire to discuss this phase of the temperance question. Every one will admit that too much alcoholic stimulants is injurious to anyone, and probably every reader of these articles knows some one who is wasting his life and sapping the foundations of his constitution through the indulgence of his appetite for strong drink. The so-called temperance societies are good in their way and as far as they go.
These articles are written to demonstrate that temperance does not consist in the abstinence from alcoholic beverages; that there are other species of intemperance as pernicious in their results, and which have a greater number of adherents. For one thing, I shall try to prove that there is as much injury or poison in a pound of tobacco as in a quart of whisky; that the individual who smokes or chews a pound of tobacco in a week is as much of a drunkard, and as much under the influence of stimulants, as he who uses two quarts of strong drink in the same period. I shall also try to prove that he who staggers from the dinner table with an over-loaded stomach and indulges in two or three hour's sleep to recover from the effects of his intemperance, is as much to be despised as he who staggers from a grog shop.
Indigestion and intemperance in the use of alcohol are diseases; but how different are the feelings excited by the knowledge that some acquaintance is suffering from one of them. If from indigestion he has our sympathy; if from intemperance he has our contempt. Yet one is equally as sinful as the other. Both are brought about by over-indulgence. It is time we should investigate these matters, and not pride ourselves so much on abstaining from one evil while we hug to our bosoms sins equally revolting.
H. D. C.
GAZETTE.
Y 3, 1877.
The Turk.
The Turk ever has been, and still is, only an animal—a magnificent animal once, an inferior one now—and as incapable of adopting our Western civilization as the African negro in the Eastern and the Indian savage in the Western hemisphere have proved themselves to be. While other and newer nationalities have advanced, his has retrograded; and when his empire shall have passed away, no traces of his occupation of one of the fairest portions of "God's footstool" will be left behind him, save the domes and minarets of his mosques, and turbaned gravestones. For he has originated nothing, improved nothing, spared nothing that could be destroyed. War and the harem have equally divided all the time he has spared from sensual sloth, and the fumes of tobacco and hashish. To all modern improvements save the most material ones, to the forward march of the rest of mankind, he has obstinately shut his eyes and sealed his ears. Reading and thinking are equally alien to his habits. Hence the humiliating contrast he now presents to the descendants of those rude soldiers of the Cross with whom his ancestors waged such equal war; even in that lowest game of thinking beings—the art of international murder. A savage beast of prey when first he descented on the offenate descendants of the men of the Greek Empire, the Turcoman found his Capua at Eyzantium. Steeped in the sensuous delights of that garden spot, and lapped in Greek luxury, so new to him, the shaggy shopper-warrior from the Asian wilderness grew as sleek and slumberous as a petted panther, but long retained much of the old fur-city burling still beneath his smooth exterior. It took almost three centuries to eradicate most of the strong masculine attributes of this sturdy race, and even now there linger some sparkles of the earlier fire, some flashes of original manhood. But in most instances the once terrible beast of prey has become a patient beast of burden "like a strong ass."
Rapid Writers.
The biographies of authors furnish many interesting facts concerning the time occupied in the preparation of their works.
From the number of works prepared by some of the ancient, we judge that they wrote very rapidly. Livy wrote one hundred and forty-two books. Pristole wrote four hundred books. Cicero prepared three or four important works in a single year.
Byron, we are told, wrote "The Corsair" in tour-days; Fenelon, "Telemaque," in three months.
Walter Scott wrote a work, for which he was paid one thousand pounds; in two days.
"Rab and his Friends," by Dr. John Brown, was written, it said, at a single sitting.
Dear Shipley said to Heber: "Suppose you write a hymn for the service to mercy." And the hymn "From Greenland to mountains," was written and printed, and used in the missionary service of the following day.
Baxter, in fourteen years, wrote and published nearly sixty volumes.
Chalmers being asked how long it took in the preparation of a sermon, replied: "That depends on how long you want it. If your sermon is to be half an hour long, it will take you three days; if it is to be three-quarters of an hour, it will take two, or perhaps one, but if you are going to preach an hour, then there is not much occasion to think a great deal about it. It may be done in an hour."
When Robert Hall was consulted on the same subject, he gave substantially the same answer.
Both the great men believed that the shorter the time of composition, the less value the production possessed. But Dr. Johnson, who prepared forty-eight pointed octavo pages at a single sitting, when he heard that it took Blair a week to compose a sermon, remarked: "Then sir, that is for want of the habit of composing quickly, which I am insisting one should acquire. I
The engineer, having threw himself into the express train went on a manned and fifty yards to move freight train right by carrying a bed beam and wreck along with it, but tracks on either side of embbling the cars, none to pass through the way.
Manfully at his post room and thus obviated the ring of the boiler. The cow catcher, head sand chase, and one of the wre broke; but other uninjured, and the pass was shaking up. Had the been less, and had the brick instead of the body of life would in all assured.
A precisely similar account lucky escape of the at this crossing. It is a case for all trains coming very carefully flagged and handled.
Glove Company of another feature to their one of the great drawbacks of moltair on this coast was lodging up a hurl of native were found to be useless the breeder. There was meat, but not enough nothing. The organization of Glove Company created a series of the wetthers and more profitable. But slaughter their goats for another great waste in which, although containing healthful meat, they were away. To prevent this Baildy, President of the been experimenting this goat's flesh for the market, several thousands of cans and for it at remunerative enterprise turns out as well works on an extensive network, and the canning of made a specialty. Thus held in the raising of Angora which is bound to be featured in the resources of share no doubt that the wetters can be made to grading up a hard to the many engine of the freight says he did not hear of going ahead, backed exposes dashed clean speed of forty-two miles to the estimate of the man. This engineer of the night of the freight cars met one hundred and fifty passing. He immediately runs and pulled violently through the cars and patted Creamer brakes. The train, seventy-one in formation.
At the engineer, having threw himself into the express train went on a manned and fifty yards to move freight train right by carrying a bed beam and wreck along With it, but tracks on either side of embbling the cars, none to pass through the way.
Manfully at his post room and thus obviated the ring of the boiler. The cow catcher, head sand chase, and one of the wre broke; but other uninjured, and the pass was shaking up. Had the been less, and had the brick instead of the body of life would in all assured.
A precisely similar account lucky escape of the at this crossing. It is a case for all trains coming very carefully flagged and handled.
Glove Company of another feature to their one of the great drawbacks of moltair on this coast was lodging up a hurl of native were found to be useless the breeder. There was meat, but not enough nothing. The organization of Glove Company created a series of the wetters and more profitable. But slaughter their goats for another great waste in which, although containing healthful meat, they were away. To prevent this Baildy, President of the been experimenting this goat's flesh for the market, several thousands of cans and for it at remunerative enterprise turns out as well works on an extensive network, and the canning of made a specialty. Thus held in the raising of Angora which is bound to be featured in the resources of share no doubt that the wetters can be made to grading up a hard to the many engine of the freight says he did not hear of going ahead, backed exposes dashed clean speed of forty-two miles old, whom a lady found walking on savage age of prey when first he descented on the offeminate descendants of the men of the Greek Empire, the Turcman found his Capua at Byzantium. Steeped in the sensuous delights of that garden spot, and lapped in Greek luxury, so new to him, the shaggy shepherd warrior from the Asian wilderness grew as sleek and slumberless as a petted patter, but long retained much of the old fertility burrowing still beneath his smoother exterior. It took almost three centuries to eradicate most of the strong masculine attributes of this sturdy race, and even now there linger some sparkle of the earlier fire, some flashes of original manhood. But in most instances the once terrible beast of prey has become a patient beast of burden "like a strong ass crunching under bardens," taxed and robbed illimitately by and for the benefit of his rulers, high and low, from the Sultan down to the pettiest official who oppresses and rabs for the benefit of Constantinople first and himself afterward. For the rule of the Turk today in Europe, in Asia, in the great cities whose names are Biblical and historic, as well as in the outlying provinces over Mauselman and Christian Rayah, is simply the rule of rapiñ and wrong, revenged occasionally by rebellion and murder when the opression becomes intolerable. And that is perhaps, not so much the fault as misfortune of the Subline Porte, whose intentions may be good enough, but whose power is a waning shadow outside of the gates which gives its name, and whose representatives are wrong-doers and robbers chiefly. — Frater's Magazine.
Method of Destroying Counterfeit Paper.
Counterfeit paper is destroyed in what is known as the "macerating house," a large brick building south of the Treasury Department at Washington. The counterfeit notes and stamps are brought down in large chests, which are opened by the committee, the packages broken, the paper examined in detail, and then thrown into the hopper, which conveys it to the macerating cylinder. The macerating cylinder is twelve feet long and five feet in diameter, weighing 4,800 pounds; its inner periphery is studded with leaves, which cut the paper into pieces, and is rotated on its axis by a steam engine of heavy power. After the man-made door is locked a powerful alkali is added through a cock in the cylindler, consisting of two pounds of soda ash to every hundred pound of paper to be macerated hot lime-water in run to distribute the soda ash properly through the mass, the stop cork is then closed, the steam is turned out, and the cylinder is rapidly rotated.
The macerating process usually takes from thirty-six to forty-eight hours, when the pulp is drawn out of the cylinder into a large bin and shovelled thence into one buckets on an endless apron which carries it upstairs and empties it into a large circular vat filled with water, in which a spinule armed with buckets is rapidly rotated. These buckets empty the water above the pulp, which falls to the bottom as fast as it comes in the vat. In this way a stream of clear water enters the vat continually and leaves it charged with alkalis until the pulp is perforously cleansed. The pulp when thoroughly cleaned is removed from the vat, dried, and held by the government, for sale to the paper manufacturers. The alkali used in the process is for the purpose of neutralizing the acids used in this ink with which the notes are printed.
— Washington Chronicle.
A Little One's Love.
The Poughkeepsie Eagle tells an affecting story of a little child between two and three years old, whom a lady found walking on savage age of prey when first he descented on the offeminate descendants of the men of the Greek Empire, the Turcman found his Capua at Byzantium. 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A Little One's Love.
The Poughkeepsie Eagle tells an affecting story of a little child between two and three years old, whom a lady found walking on the street, evidently lost and crying bitterly. Taking her by the hand, the lady asked her where she was going.
"I am going to find papa," was the reply of the child, between sobs.
"What is your papa's name?" asked the lady.
"His name is papa," replied the innocent little thing.
"But what is his other name?" queried the lady; "what does your mamma call him?"
"She calls him papa," persisted the baby.
The lady then took the little one by the hand and led her along, saying:
"You had better come with me; I guess you came this way."
"Yes, but I don't want to go back; I want to find my papa," replied the little girl, crying afresh as if her heart would break.
"What do you want of your papa?" inquired the lady.
"I want to kiss him."
Just then a sister of the child came along looking for her, and led her away. From subsequent inquiries it appeared that the little one's papa, of whom she was so earnestly in search, had recently died. In her loneliness and love for him she had tired of waiting for him to come home, and had gone to find him and greet him with the accustomed kiss.
Dr. Crane is just now engaged in an enterprise that is new to this part of the country: the building of a house especially for the manufacture of sherry wine. He proposes to go extensively into the making of sherry, by what is known as the "baking" process, that is, keeping for instance, ordinary white wine subjected to a certain degree of heat, long enough to convert it into sherry. The building is of stone, 28x32, and 15 foot walls. It is made without winlows and is, as nearly as practicable, air tight. It is divided into two low stories for the storage of casks of wine, the second not having a regular floor, but merely joists and slats enough to keep the layers of casks in place. This is to admit free passage of heat. A furnace is provided, and around the room runs 224 feet of flues, to conduct heat. It takes a steady temperature of 150 degrees of heat, dry and night, for three months, to develop the full sherry flavor—St. Helena Star,
Dugging for Treasure.
We cut the following paragraph from an exchange-newspaper:
"A gentleman in Seattle, who is said to know where there is a deposit of gold and silver hid away on some island in the Pacific by pirates has been sent for to go to San Francisco to lead an expedition to the plains he to receive a most handsome reward for his service."
This Seattle gentleman is coming to the right market—the kind of popular creditability in treasure buried by pirates on the Pacific islands. Not more than twenty such expeditions have been sent from this city, and as none of them ever found any treasure, it must be these yet. The first vessel for Cocos Island from San Fransisco sailed in 1835 and it returned empty because the right guides was not taken, and after every return there was some plausible excuse for failure—plausible in the opinion of food—and so the same was played over and over again, "with most handmade "immigration" for some dishonest manager in every case, serious loss to the contributors generally."—S. F. Aller.
A Cure for Scarlet Fever.
The London Lunet, high medical authority, publishes and endorses an article from the pain of Dr. Henry Pigroom; an eminent English practitioner, which has been reproduced in this country, and is commended to general personal. In his communication, Dr. Pigson says he has found sulphur almost a appetite for scarlet fever. He anoints the patient twice daily with sulphur ointment, gives from five to ten grains of sulphur in a little jam three times a day, and burns sulphur in the room of the patient twice daily. He says that he has given this treatment extended trial for over two years, and that under it not one of his patients was more than eight days in making a complete recovery, although the cases were well marked; the surface skin on the arms coming away like the skin of a snake. The insensiveness of sulphur, and the ease with which it can be procured renders it possible for the poorest families to avail themselves of its use. When the disease appears in a virulent form and the immediate attendance of a physician cannot be procured, a trial of the benzoyl; under proper conditions as to air in the burning process, can do no harm, but may accomplish all that inscribed for it.
MM. do Rothschild and Montalefors have a number of schools, a hospital, and other philanthropic institutions on Mount Zion at Jerusalem, and have now added a printing office from which a work has just been issued treating of the Holy Land. This is the first book which has ever been printed in Palestine.