{ title: 'The Turin gazette. (Turin, N.Y.) 1881-1886, July 24, 1884, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054249/1884-07-24/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054249/1884-07-24/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054249/1884-07-24/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn85054249/1884-07-24/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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mmmmmmm**m****mm<!twmmi!t tmm^mM^mmiimfl' 0HAS. R. IEE, Publisher, HOME ,A.K*D' TSOIOTTT\ 3ST3EWB JUSTD ITSTTJBBKSTS. •.T\ \ Wayne L. Collins, D. p. S., .T_EBn>ENT BBNOTST, fTOBHST, N. Y. OS Xli Thursdays andSWdays may be found nthli -,»---—,•,- ~ E< ^j^ ^~-^ TMl&GGHST.AND-EflALlBR IN GROCERIES, JJ Stationery, So, Frescrlptlohs carefully pre- jjareat' : -\ '\ , ' :W. D. Holden. J OB HOSTING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES- ITIrst-ola^s work at falrprices. . Richard W. Roberts. E XPRESS, AND FREIGHT FROM TURIN TO Lyon's Foils dally. Teatotog worli attended to promptly. _______________ INSURANCE AGENCY op jr. i^. OL-A.K,K:. Tho following flret-olasi companies ars repre- sented: ' CONTINKNTAI Now York BOWBRY..W..., , Now York WASHINGTON Boston Bisks placed on favorable terms. 47m8 P. B. MERENESS, PAJMTEB, GRAINER AND PAPER HANGER. '\-EabomlnlngaBpecIalty. AU work warranted TtJBIIf, Iff. \ST. TTOOT, LBWIS CO,, H,- X, M, 1884* $l.St) per Year, N.B. Old Oil Shades renewed and made ag good j new. Give us a trial. W. H. HILTS. W AND G3 suranco Agent, office In Douglass Block, Port A TTORNEY AT LAW. AND GENERALJN- After a little While. Aflto a little .while. ITtangliyflttlEaB b'flfchi. m age is dreary, Vfl»yKom'w.?lKfiStf .oMtfejare^parjr iM^-great In jffiih-gtefttrsBfla'wiu jinsajiwfly, WS\p06r and the MfflK^ns well as they, ' AffiSFalltae-while. After a little .while. Though the tfde3B(gy/egiS«eiess,fibb and flow, AM the soasoDB _ Bn>6, anditho season^ go, YeFwe _ asB'to tl®shadow land. JCh'e Sing will step ffohf his regal throgo To join that throng to the. great'unknown, After a little wfiile. After a little while, Though our lives be sunfihino, or maybe tears, Tot toe end will oome, when the n;ght appears, .AM w.e pass to? the shadow laijp\ Like a wavelet lost on a storm-tossed sea, Tho bard and his song will forgotten bo- After a little while. After a little while The sands of life win bo running low, And the labored pulse beat faint'ond slow, \When wo pass to tho shadow land. Will the olouds roll baok to a world of light, And the day star rise from that darksorrfo night Jjifteralittlowhilo? —J. W. KnrroN. GLITTER AND GLARE. ieydon,N. Y, .,. •na drawing all kinds of papors, Special attontlon paid t> collections Forge House. J BROWN'S TRAOT, N. Y. SITUATED ON THE J Fulton chain of lakes, in the midst of tho hnnt- g and flahlng. Good board by tho day or week. CHAIUESW. BARRETT & CO., Proprietors. Blacksmith & Wagon Shop. Bay your Wagons and Sleighs of PETER McGOVERN, Xh tho shop formerly owned by L. Campbell, Low- Villa. REPAIRING and HORSESHOEING dono In JTJBST-OLABS ORDER. HIJCH HUGHES, Planing Miff wjmpAOTvftm OF Qoors, Sash and Blinds, Brackets and Mouldings. jig In lila Jino and warrant com- fleto satisfaction. SAWING, PLAKING & MATCHING DOrJe AT SHORT NOTICE. 8aoi> supplied -with the best machinery and tho r mo»fc competent workmen. CANADA PINE AND CEDAR SHINGLES jUwuysonhand. toft and Hard Wood Lumber \ohafe my manhood. \Not oven to make my last hour peaceful, Allan?\ \Father It would darken my whole future.\ \it would glorify It, my sonl I have lived many years and met so many women that their hearts have been as open books to me; but In no clime, in no land to which I have traveled, hav e I fotpd the purity, the perfection of Innocence, the warmth of heart, the Qoblllty of womanhood, which is the portion of my ward, my adopted child- I would fain leave to your care this fair young blossom, which / have guarded so carefully, my son. I/ylng upon a bed from whioh I will never rise, Allan, I would fain give to your keeping a treasure beyond aught I can leave you; a noble-hearte'd, true-souled comforter.\ \Father the young man's tones vi- brated with emotion, \you have been BO kind to roe always; you have taught me to discern between right and wrong; would there be no wrong in this?—would I not slay the fairest hopes of my life by consenting? This f i'let'nothing to me—let my heart d its own mate, father! it pains me more tlian T can tell you to refuse your slightest Wish, but I cannot bind my I youth in fetters that would so surely Kept In stock. 1 UNDERTAKING n all Its branches promptly attended to. Keep constantly on band a largo stock of cloth- lovered OASinJTTS and wood-ifiiTshcd COFFINS tad TRIMMINGS. TELEGRAPH ORDERS attended to Immediately Call and get prices beforo purchasing elsewhere. HUGH HUGHES. XII OB TURIN GAZETTE, PUBLISHED WEEKLY AT SI.50 a Year in Advance. Independent in Everything, trot in Nothing, A'ctt- Let heart choose artment order, and all work entrusted tons -with taste- and accuracy. '_«_•_,• mfbr the working class. Send 30 12111 iicents for postage and wowillmaU MULU-you-jWM \»yal valuable bo* of Iw ^mmmwm J am pie Mods ?bat will put yon in the way of making more m6ney UVS few days thnn yon em thought possiblo at any bastaeM. Capital not required. We ^111 start.yon. Yott'cnnworK all the time or in, spare time, only, The work is Sniversaliy adapted to both, sexes, ydtmgandoid, You can easily earn60.cents to & every.evonlng. That oil wliowitit work raaytost tne bnsinoBB.we S this unpakled.*ffori fo all WhMro.notwell, JaWsaedwowllIeend$1 to pay f« the trpublojpf wStlnsnft/ I'ull plotters, dKcdIons; etc.,sent tne. Wtnnea xM bo made by thopO' who give their who» time <U Una work. Groat sucedfis;aSsp. lately euro. Don't delay, 'Start now. Addrogs gttnsou & Co., Portland, JMaine. _______ 25 Ci|rW r POSTPAIi>. A Treatise on the Horse anlflls Diseases, OontainlDKim' Index .of J>:*»W*»_-»M_h_«1_|S the thoHorso, atoets and \antidote wlionn A T«l)la, with (inSneriwInB. of'tho .Mor^i xgm, ttltll Wide ieFtellm_ the age. :iroai feoth ntdltToront _.... WiW:OdpMy_ ISJ ,Xfif1iitmif'o<ii>mt, i?.#i Ono: Hantfraj O.W»_» '- «\, Qm,tmm\ nmem SSS«»««'rooefted. I 'vtiiniif Hums '-I4i.«i. one, tmm\ * HOR&B BOOK COMPANY, , _. ___. ^, „_. liM Leonard Sfc. Waw.York.^ I cannot woo this girl or ask her for my wife! I cannot, father!\ \You refuse ivhat would have been a richer .possession than all the wealth of the Dreemes! But, on the brink of death, I cannot quarrel with my only ohild, Thank heaven that Leoline knows nothing of this! You will be a brother to hep, Allan? Her father was one to me—she will be lonely - alone, when I am—dead!\ \I will promise that, gladly,\ the young ffian answered; \i can promise that, father! Leoline shall have my best and tonderest care.\ From the doorway a slight form darted then—a form which neither the dying man nor his son had seen; and a girl, with white, quivering features, and dark, distended eyes, fled from the darkened chamber. An hour later and Harold Dreeme whispered faintly: .\Allan me your hand. Call Leoline.\ And Allan grew white, as touching a silver bell which would summon his father's ward, he bent over the face on the pillows. Throngh the long hours they watched there, these cwo, and in the gray of the opening day they knelt together over the body of the dead, the girl sobbing passionately, the man shaking in his silent grief. On the .ealm face, of Harold Dreeme lay death'sgray shadow* On the heart of the>girlwho knelt there lay one as dark and dreary, bat without its calm; lor with her whole heart she loved this man who scorned to call her wife! Jieft early an orphan by her, artist father, she bad been taken to this home of luxury by her father's friend, and she had _roWtt to regard the young heir as a sort of hero worthy of her worship-^a knight who would some time stoop to tor and glorify her life withhiS affection. Whenshe left het knees her. girlish face was set and cold—white with her great anguish but calm thriJu^h^woinar^Eridij^^a stooping to gttra the. foreuead -of^er guardian, she left'tHe'father to his son* and glided out. And that night there was excite ment and fear in the^reemeinansion. Leoline'JlUfar could not be found, search as tjjey might. In the light of that summer day she had gone forth, bearing with her naught save the menjgry of Allan's words: \I do not love this girl! its mate!\ Allan sought vainly for a trace o her, and wondered as vainly why she had fled. * * * * .* • \All gaslight and glare!\ thought Allen Dreeme, half wearily, standing among the guests in the |rich salon of Madam Riviere. The ocean, which laved the rocks below Dreeme hall, rolled between him and his home; but wider, darker, drearier, was the divis- ion between him and the youth In which he had refused to wed his father's Ward. His hostess, noting the look of wea- riness upon his face, tapped him light- ly with her fan. \There is one here who will not bore you,\ she said, laughingly. \You have not met the beautiful artist of whom we all talk because we find no subject so agreeable? Then I will give you a new delight,\ and, laying her jeweled hand upon his arm, she led him across the wide room to where a regal woman held hor court. -Where had he seen that face, he wondered bending low before the stranger, who received him as a queen might. It was dark and calm, but tho great eyes, all gloom and power; the red lips, with their delicate curves; tho white brow, from whioh flowed baok a mass o* dusky, unrippling hair, struck on him like the memory of a half-forgotten dream. \Have I met you before?\ he asked her, later in the night And he fan- cied that tho <1ark eyos saddened as they turned on him. \Would you have forgotten mo?\ she asked'with a slow smile. And ho told himself, with a new thrill ot his heart, that ho never would. Once looking on that lovely face would leave it engraved on bis heart forever. For three months from that night Allan Dreemo suffered tho agony of an uncertain love, tlia heart was filled with the glory of her beauty, filled With hope and fear. So many beside himself sought tho smiles of this regal, dark-eyed woman, whose brush had made her famous. And ihen, one night, when he found himself alone •with her among the bloom and perfume of a conservatory, again at one of Madame Riviere's balls, where, amid ••glitter and glare,\ he had first seen her, a beautiful queen, he laid his heart at her feet and trembled, because she was so long silent Within the music swelled; the laughter of tho guests reached them, soft, sweet mirthful. He beat his proud head in meekness, waiting for her answer. She lifted her drooping eyes and laid a fair hand on his arm, a tremulous joy touching her warm lips. \Allan she said softly, \when I went forth from the home your father left you I had no hope of this. I loved you then, Allan, and I heard you say words which I have never forgotten. I heard you tell your father to let your heart choose its own mate. Are you sure—sure, Allan! that your heart has chosen Leoline Elmar?\ \Leoline!\ he cried, shrinking, \yon are not Leoline!\ \I have not been called so since that summer day, when a heart-sick, hop,e- less child of seventeen, I knew I loved you, Allan, and you gave me no return! But, if you love me—I am doubting still, Allan \ \Oh do rot doubt my love!\ he whispered, taking her hands, arid draw- ing her toward him; \I was then a thoughtless youthi and ray father's wish to bind rae seenied cruel. I am a man now, and my heart has spoken! Is not the man*s love more Worthy in your sight than that of the boy could be, my darling? If you loved me then, do not tell me that I caused that love to die!\ \Does love ever die?\ she questioned, gently laying her beautiful head on his bosom; \rio Allan I have not forgotten; it was that love which drove me from Dreeme Haft it was that Which kept me strong, when,I found the world so cold and hard to me! It was that for TERRIBLE .GLYCERINE. ».when I had gained friends a»d fortune, . I refused a coronet! T*en years st|etch drejtrily between to-night and that summei day^A^Eim on which Itoba; my young heart from Dreeme Hall and bore it far from, you, with the hope that I might teach it to grow calm; but I could not calm it, my dearest; it would quiver and thrill at thought of you, at the sound of your name. You will have to love me well to erase those sad, sad years, Allan!\ His eyes were misty as he. held her to his heart and laid his loving kisses on her beautiful faea \My love! my love!\ he said • sadly; '•was it btit a memory of my coldness, my blindness, that you could take with you? How can I ever win your com- plete pardon for the past?\ \By loving me well,\ was the- low- *gned answer, \Had you but remained!\ he whis- pered, \my blindness could not have lasted long. \ I would have wakened to your worth; would have sought your love, long years ago, my peerless darling!\ \Allan she said gently, passing her jewelled Angers through his hair, \we seldom realize the truth of the poet's words: \ 'That Is best whioh lloth neareit.' \ But Allan Dreeme, looking down lovingly upon hor faee, told himself that he must have been blind in his youth to have looked with indifference on beautiful Leoline Elmar.— PJiila- delphia Call. A Jnpanoso Barometer Stone* A curious reminiscence of Japan as 't was thirty years ago is incidentally furnished in tho story of one Zeniya Gohei, a merchant, who, in tho days of tho Bukuf u government, was guilty of the heinous crime of engaging in unli- j censed commerce with foreigners. | Zeniya, for this offense, underwent a j term of Imprisonment, and on his re- j ease disposed ot any property that re- j miiined to him to procure tho means ot ivolihood. This, howovor, is not tho pisode fit Ids career that tnade him a ubjootot interest to tho vernacular pross, but the faot that among his be- longings was a celebrated chattel called tho \barometer stone\ (See-i- Sekl). This piece of rockis naturally of a jplnkish white color, but it iins a chamelionllke property of altoring; its hue whenever ft change of weather is imminent, Should rain be overhead,!!; j .fe^rioJ^i^^ he3rd t ho exfllo- begina to look wnmv much as two j slon mtm WS g m . ^._ afc » a ffi^ doys beforehand, endahouid astorm be | lftgt Mpjf Theglycerteo had expired about a quarter of a mile from the well. We walked down there. There was the usual cellar that a few. cans of Itsl'ower. o f 4nuIhjjffitlonB« proved t>y Marty i>jreo<lf.»>itn«t«>iees. 'titten^njjthofiiMliealdSaths tha so frequently follow the handling of nitro-glycerine/ in the ojl regions,\ said Myron & %#%$> formerly an oil operator in'Pennsylvania, \there is one feature, the mysterious nature of which is startling. It has puzzled scientific observation and study, and I do not believe to-day that any satisfac- j tory explanation can be given of it. This singular feature is the almost complete annihilation* of matter, es- pecially of the human body, which, in\ a majority of cases, results from a fatal explosion of this deadly com- pound, \I had a teamster once in my em- ploy—poor Hank France. Like all men of his kind in the oil country there was nothing either above, below or on earth thathe feared. He was in the habit of carrying nitro-glycer- ine to any well where I wanted to use it, and he and his companion, Warren Jack, actually got so reckless in hand- ling tho stuff that the other help I had would not stay at work when they knew Hank was coming In with gly cerine, but went to a safe distance until he had deposited the explosive they required, and had gone away. \Hank and Warren actually used to unload the stuff the same as they would a lot of bricks, Hank standing in the wagon and throwing a can to Warren some feet away, and Warren oatchlng it and placing it on the ground in time to oateh the next one that Hank tossed him. As it takes a man with a good set or nerves to even ride in a wagon when he knows there is nitro-glycerine under the seat, this manner of handling a compound that the slightest jar fre- quently explodes, will give youan, idea of tho sort of nerve these two menhad. Each ono knew that if Warren ha_* pened,to miss catching a can, there would not be enough left of them to cover the bottom of a. snuff-boxi but hoy had tho daring to take tho chances. \No one ever knew what caused It, and no one would ever have known who It was that y^ts wiped out, except from the fact that they know who xt was that would ha coming ^bafc way with nltro-glycortao Ju3t about that time, and from ono or two things wo proyed by'ano.ther^nroet melancholy occurrence in „Aliegha»y County, SJtf Y., two' or three years; age. Thisf cas$ was not characterizfen by such utfietf annihilation as others. Charles Berr ridge, awell-fcnown oil man,was blown, up by ^itro-glyceriue, Tlie gr6und' around was covered with spotless, new* fallen snow. On either side was a high and abrupt hfll, only a few rodsT apart, Berridge was a very large man^ of perhaps 180 pounds weight. The* remains of the poor man were searched for earefully x and long, for he was <a good man and a popular one. Tha coffin in which they were borne to thft grave, contents and all, weighed but fifteen pounds! Kow for the atomiza» tion theory. The greatest force of a nitro-glycerine explosion is always tip- ward, If the matter had been reduced to atoms, however infinitesimal, in falling back upon that spotless snow' some trace of them must have been seen upon it. But it remained as spotless as before.\^-jy\ew Hork Stm, brewing it assumes a dark aspect. So ar as We are a-ware, no mine rol record ed in Occidental catalogues exhibits this wonderful sonslbility to atmos- pheric influences, and if Mr. Zoniya's stone be a veritable affair, it is indeed a curiosity. The YomUuri 8/rfmbun, torn whioh we quote these details, says that after Zeniya's mishap the stone came into the possession of the House of Mayeda (in Joshin), and that it .is to be presented to his majesty the emperor on the completion of the im- perial palace* ! Big Wordj. It is never welj -.to use big words when small ones will express the same meaning. A lady who was making a call on some acquaintance observed that the furniture had been changed, and remarkod to the lady— \You have been metamorphosed; haven't you?\ \ Y-e-s,\ said the other, hesitating* ly. '• You mean calcamimed, I sup- pose; It looks much better, .doesd't t?\ Another ladyjwas showing a visitor around her grounds which were un- der the care of a landscape gardner, and she inquired of her friend how she liked the work. «• Why, I think,\ she said, \ that you like symmetry.\ \ Why,\ said the other, \ we don't intend to biiry any one here. There is a good cemetery quite near.\ \ What caused yonr little boy's sick- ness?\ asked a plain mother of a mother Whose little son was very ill. \ He was climbing a ladder,\ said theiudy, \\and lost his equilibrium.\ \JPpor little fellowj\ said the sym- pathetic woman: do buy hint another; he'tybemore careful next time!\ \ Did you find the people indigent?\ asked a clorgymen of a wealthy mem- ber of his church who hau been calling on some very poor families. \Oh. dear, no,\ answered the lady! ««they were respectable, but as poor a poverty,\ the stuff always digs when it goes off and the usual lot of timber felied Three hundred feet off to the right of the road, in the woods, we found a wagon tire. We found the tail of one horse, and portions of the body of an- other. In another part of the woods a man's knee was picked up, and, al- though we searched over an area that it would have bees impossible for any of the wreck to have been thrown, that was all we found except Hank's greasy old cap lying by the side of a stump, and his watch hanging on the limb of a tree. \As thoroughly as that does nitro- glycerine do its work. All who have had anything to do with it In the oil regions have had illustration after illustration of its annihilative power. The iron frames Of wagons, and even nitro-glycerine safes, have been re- moved from human vision hy an ex„ plosion as eiiectwally as if they had never boen N formed. Look at that poor reckless devil, George Eoran, who disappeared at Red Jtook a few\ year ago. . He wae walking along with two or three cans of glycerine sliing over his shoulder in a bag. To rest him- self he slilf ted the bag to the other shoulder. In doing so he jairett the cans together and disappeared, with a goodly portion of Bed JRoek. That man weighed all of 200 pounds. All that the most thorough search ever re- covered of that 200 pounds of flesh nh# bone was ft part of one foot—less thjn one pound! ... \Some savants have attempted to explain the mystery of this characteris- tic of nitro-glycerine by the theory, of instantaneous vaporisation ot mat- ter. That might be true fts to flesh, but could the great masses of bone itt the human body be vaporized itt the twtoktingof an eye? Could,iron U re- duced to vapor in an instant? It doesn'f; aeem so to ihe, \Others offer the theory <>f atojatea; thwof ~ ' \ \\ I The Number Nine.' The number 9 possess^ some ro» markablo properties. If the nine digits, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8,9, be addSd together tho sum will be 48, which i 3 equal to five times nine, and the sum of the digits of their sum, 4 and 5, is nine. If any number Is subtracted from another having, the same digits, in a different order the remainder will be divisible by 9, and the*sum of, the digits of the remainder will also be di- visible by 9. Subtracting 2,967,634. from 7,364,629 there remains 4,396,995. The sum of the digits. 4> 3, 9, 6, 9, 9,5, is 45, which Is divisible hy 9. If any number he multiplied by 9, the sum jl the digits or figures ot the product will he divisible by 9 f Jffinetimeaj\ 780,135 is. 394i0^iii2J5ii the Bun^Qf/the, dlgitSOttMSBrodijc^isaV, a mlutiple of 9. If a number he sub'tracted front another having the same diglti in a. different orOer and m&s ot the dlgita of. tho renjalnSor er«4eoi Vf eao. k« .tetrad. in, the following jnanner; ££&' ,fcor gether the figures 6t th* reminder that are lef fc, divide th6 sqm by % mk> tract the figure that remains after: dl* vidlng by 9, ii$ra 9, and the Jast re- mainder will fee the digit or flgaxo sought BE there was no remainder 0 or 9 was erased. Astc some one to writedown * aflat- ber and aabtrisefc from:» another com* posed of the same digits in a different order, without lettingyottseeeitheref them. TeirhiBtyou want; ail the %* ures of the remainder bhfc ehe. By the above rale you can soon find the>, figure you have hot seen. The feat . will appear quite mysterious to the *&_. initiated, Here Is aft examplei Suh. tractinglS6,824from 23ii456, the re- mainder Is 75,182; $he: sum of *^e figures 7, 5, 1,3, is 10. plvtde 16 by • 9, we have a re»ainder of 7, Seven from 9 leaves 2, the other figure. .Petrified Foresig inthfci 1QMtgrlSi4tes» Stone forests are injnany pftrts\of the world. A number of: stony treea'' have been received alt the Smithsonian Institute from the West In many cases they are hardened hy the peculiar atmosphere as they stand, and in others they are buried/the parts being re- placed by minenftl matter. The Little Colorado river, in Arizona, has long hqen a famous locality for such finds. At ono place more than fifteen hundred - cords of trunks and sections of logs were found by government surveyors. Most of them wore sllicified. Many are Sdvenfeet or more in diameter, and from twenty to seventy feet in height The greater part of them have probably been covered in the marl that originally was one thousand feet thiok. Some of £he trees are changed to jasper, assum- ing numerous hues, while others re- semble opal, and, when hroken open, the core is often found lined with crys- tals of the most beautiful tints. Louisiana and Ohio are noted localities for fessii tree3. In the former state* Several years ago, in turning up the ground an ancient forest layer was tut- earthed, and 'in succession two others below jt; and scientists judge, from the size of the trees, that from the time of the first layer to the last, sixty thou- and years must have elapsed. In the %«ains of the glacial drift in Ohio old fprssts are often, discovered.* gome have been buried beneath tho water hy the sinking of the land. Some of the Ohio trees are not Entirely changed into stone, being yet soft, while others jure found In all stage* &&» *«* & ihJB theory :0k •*&.ifttWW S » 0Q 8* ttmtte *'- n •\,