Fort Worth Daily Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 206, Ed. 1, Monday, February 21, 1887 Page: 5 of 8
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FOREIGN AFFAIRS
Emperor William Writes a Personal
Letter to tho Pope Thanking Him
for His Electioneering
A Subsidence of War Humors as the Cer
man Klectlona Approacn Cardinal
Gibbons at Rome
Germany
THE COMING ELECTION
Berlin Feb 20 There Is a pause in
the intensity of the electoral conflict
pending Mondays polling Committees
everywhere continue active but there is a
momentary lull in public agitation There
is also a significant subsidence in war
rumors The opposition say it is because
the government no longer considers such
excite electorates
a course necessary to
torates Although official circles are
sure of victory they are much
less confident that their majority will be
large Their most sanguine estimates in-
crease the number of Conservatives from
seventyeight to eightysix and the Na
tionalLiberals from Ufty to sixty and re-
duce the Freisinnigen from sixtyseven to
fifty leaving the other sections about the
same as before The Septennate major-
ity is dependent upon the split in the Cen-
ter partv in which it is calculated there
are sixtynine Triennists against
thirty Septennlsts If this esti-
mate Is realized and the government
fails to obtiin a submissive majority for
all its purposes the new Reichstag will
vote for the military bill but will be
equally as ready as was the last Reich-
stag to resist the Bismarckian preference
for securing permanent supplies The
Socialists hope to re urn thirtyfour can-
didates an increase of ten over their
numoer in the last Reichstag The
Progressists arc the only party with
moderate expectations They will be
gratified if they retain their former force
The lesults of the elections will be known
definitely Tuesday night It Is reported
that Prince Bismarck desires to convoke
the Reichstag February 28 and will de-
mand urgency for the military bill
iENKKAI SEWS NOTKS
Bnrux Feb 20 The ministerial or-
der issued yesterday relative to the call-
ing out of army recruits for 188788 pro-
vides that the men who rtceive permis-
sion to discontinue active service and
enter the reserves will be dismissed at
the latest on September SO while be-
tween November 1 and > new infantry
recruits will enter the ranks for army
drill
The search of houses in Alsace and
Lorraine for suspected adherents of the
French Patriotic League still continue
have been arrested
and numerous persons
rested including several prominent
manufacturers of Mulhausen and mer-
chants of Strasbum A journal of Alsace
documents
sace says no incriminating
have been found but that the order of
the chief procurator sending a number of
prisoners to Leipsic for trial charged
with high treason is based unon evidence
obtained from the police lists on mem-
bers of the League from orders issued by
the Alsatian committee and from other
papers
A conference of the railway military
commission on mobilization has been
held at Welsbaden which was attended
by delegates from all tne German rail-
ways and numerous army ollicers hx
haustive arrangements for a scheme of
transit were completed Absolute secrecy
is maintained regarding the plans formed
It is reported that the Emperor William
has sent an autograph letter to the Pope
thanking him for his intervention in favor
of the Septennate
IltiMln
PKErAKING VOK AN AIIVANCE
London Feb CO The Governor of At
gtanTurkstan has advices from the Amer
saying that Russian ollicers and a compa-
ny of Bokharan troops are surveying for
the purpose of bridging the Amoo Du
rianearKulupla and that a Russian ad-
duce is threatened between Kaduz and
Balkh
Italy
NKWS KUOM THE VATICAN
iiiMK Feb 20 Casdinal Gibbons has
been very busy since his arrival here No
definite Information ot the business of
the propaganda is knowu but it is cer-
tain that the great questions touching
Catholic interests in America will be con
sidered carefully Cardinal Gibbons is
expected to express an opinion on all
questions submitted for his views be-
cause of his great acquaintance with the
present American questions and his
strong love of American institutions It
is difficult to believe that the conclusion
reached will be of an unfavorable char-
acter Bishops Carr of Melbourne nnd
Keane of Richmond Va congratulated
the Pope in the Vatican today upon the
ninth anniversary of his pontificate The
Pope In his discourse described the Bal-
timore council as an honor to America
and to the whole Church Bishop Keane
alterward thanked the Pope
Arrested for Cattle TJicft
Special to the Uaictle
Houston Tkx Feb 20 This after-
noon Zach Jacobs a prominent stock
raiser of this county was arrested on an
indictment found at the present term of
the grand jurv charging him with theft
of cattle from B Beynstleld two years
ao Jacobs had twelve indictments
pending against him for similar offenses
but they were dismissed for want of
proof
Ilrynn > ot <
orrcsiiondenc of the Gazette
Buyan Tkx Feb ll > The negro
who was shot by Martin Willman on the
17th inst died this morning about
oclock A coroners inquest was held
over the body today returning the ver-
dict that he came to his death in the
manner before stated
Another line rain fell here this morn-
ing and it still contfnueifthis afternoon
1u
v
Having triumphed jssj all competitors
st Jacobs Oil sund3 wKnatf a rival
i
THE SOUTHWESTERN BLIZZARD
The Loss of Cattle Appalling Many Natal
ities Exptcted
Lincoln Nkh Feb 29 The damage
to telcraph wires has made the task of
the collection of details of the late storm
In Colorado and Western Nebraska very
slow and tedious As news comes in
it shows that the disturbance was the
worst in the history of the re-
gion affected by it The storm
rsed in the mountains and descended
upon the plains The air had been free
from moisture for so long a time
THE GAZETTE FORT WORTH TEXAS MONDAY FEBRUARY 21
that dust and sand long with snowj
rushed in such torrents that neither man
nor beast could stand before the blast
This compound filled shallow cuts level
and effectually blocked the tracks
The
roof of the Burlington roundhouse at
Akron was blown off West ot Mc
Cook two men were picked up
dead and another so badly froten
and exhausted thct his life is
despaired of Many ether fatalities are
expected when reports come in from the
territory distant from the railroads As
trains came in today passengers and
trainmen saw cattle in the draws buried
io their heads in scow and as hardly a
cow was to be seen elsewhere it is evi-
dent that many are entirely covered
Most of those seen will perish in
fact all except a few that can
be found and dug out by the
small force available for that
purpose Losses of cattle will be some-
thing appalling The storm covered the
entire range on the east 6ide of the Rocky
Mountains from the British line to New
Mexico eastern edge and lapped over
into Nebraska to the N rth Platte and
McCook East of those points no dam-
age was done Unless stories are greatly
exaggerated not less than 25 per cent of
all cattle in the range are wiped out
PASTEURS MANY CURES
Some of the Opposition tho KmlnentBlolo
Ki t Han to Contend With
Paris Feb The gentle and genial
Dr Pasteur as modest as he is shrewd
as benevolent as he is erudite is just
now so to speak suffering from the
bites of several enraged critics Not to
consider seriously the angry attacks of
certain lively journalists of whom Henri
Rochefort is one attacks more remark-
able for their literary vims than their
scientific soundness the great philoso-
pher has had of late some hard and
stinging blows from certain physicians
especially from Dr Peter a wellknown
professor in the Paris College of Medi-
cine Dr Peter in the most public manner
in the presence of a great array of his
academic associates and on the basis of
a large category of minutely observed
and carefully recorded facts has declared
and attempted to prove that Dr Pasteurs
supposed antidote for rabies is not only a
delusion but a snare
Dr leter was very pungent He did
not mince matters He spoke like a man
who had been goaded to anger He said
pithily
The socalled preventive inoculations
instead of being efficacious and curative
on the contrary develop a new sort of
raoies which may be called experi-
mental dog rage or the madness of the
laboratory
Dr Peter on being asked to explain
went on to state
The virus used is the virus of the rab
bit Now madness in the rabbit is para-
lytic but madness in the dog is covulsive
If you inoculate with the virus of the
raboit a man bitten by a mad dog you
create an intermediate kind of rabies
And this is not a cure On the contrary
it is iiself a danger
This is in substancethe uncomfortable
and dbcouragiag theory which Dr Peter
has ust been exploiting btfore a conclave
of medical brethren a theory which if
true will fling a sudden shadow on all
mankind and eclipse the gayety of na-
tions
But on the other hand Professor Yul
plan took un the cudgels in defense of
Dr Pasteur and quoted with great effect
the magnificent array of statistics of ca
ses treated iuccessfully in the Pasteur
laboratory These statistics it may be
noted are growing greater and more con
vincing day by day They are the logic
of facts These triumphant facts were
actually addirg to their own impressive
oulk and value during the very time while
Dr Peter was haranguing against them
for Dr Pasteur was then engaged in
working his happy cures Up to the
oresent writing the statistics may be
summed up as follows the cases treated
by Dr Pasteur now nnmber 2fiS2 the
deaths number only 2 These figures
are more telling than Dr Peters rather
spiteful speech
LINCOLN OWE HIM A 150051
How TenderHearted Abe Ilescuort Senator
lllackbnrn from Defeat
Chicago 3cws
Senator Joe Blackburn of Kentucky
tells a story of Abraham Lincoln that was
never printed before He says When
I was nineteen years of age I located in
Chicago and commenced the practice of
law One of my first cases was in the
United States Court which was presided
over by Justice McLean of the United
States SutJremc Court and Judge Drum
lnoud of the Illinois circuit The oppos
ing council was Isaac N Arnold then at
the head of the Chicago bar who was
subsequently u prominent member of
Congress and the author ot the first biog-
raphy of Mr Lincoln I had filed a de-
murrer to Mr Arnolds pleadings in the
cause and when the case was reached on
the calendar I was quite nervous at hav
ing such a formidable and experienced
antagonUt while the dignity of the tribu-
nal and the presence of a large number
of lawyers In the court all aided to in-
crease my timidity and embarrassment
I was young inexperienced and naturally
felt diffident and nervous in fact I was
willing that any disposition should be
made of the cause so I could get rid of it
Mr Arnold made an argument in which
he criticised my demurrer in a manner
that greatly tended to increase my con-
fusion
However I had to make an effort I
said but little and that in a very bewil-
dered manner and was about ready to sit
down and let the case go by default as it
were when a tall homely loosejointed
man sitting in the bar whom I had
noticed as giving close attention to the
casearose and addressed the Court in
behalf of the position I had assumed in
my feeble argument making the points
so clear that when he closedthe Court at
once sustained my demurrer I didnt
know who my volunteer friend was but
Mr Arnold got up and at empted to re-
buke him for interfering in the matter
when I for the first time heard that he was
Abe Lincoln oi Springfield
Mr Lincoln in his goodnatured reply
to Mr Arnolds strictures on his interfer-
ence said that he claimed his priviltge of
giving a young lawyer a boost when
struggling with his first case especially
if he was pitted against an experienced
practitioner Of course I thanked him
and departed from the court as proud as-
a > onng field marshal I never saw Mr
Lincoln again and he died without ever
knowing who the youngstruggling lawyer
was he had so kindly assisted and rescued
from defeat in his maiden effort before a
United States tribunal
Uii woflir
The Finest Baiarti
At Anderson
rffiS
POPULAR SCIENCE
Recent Dljeoverles and Other Thinca
Talnn to Man People
A new incandescent lamp manufacture d-
in Austria is remarkable for the form and
material of its thread and the method of
carbonizing it II is of cloverleaf shape
is made of manila hemp and is car-
bonized by a bath of mineral oil The
ends of the thread are afterwards gal-
vanized and soldered to platinum wires
which pass through the bulb the ends
of these platinum wires are previously
turned spirallike by means of a very
simple machine the electrolytic deposit
is a copper deposit and the soldering is
made with silver For obtaining a
vacum they resort to a Geisler merenry
pump The vacuum is made in several
lamps at the same time generally seven
and they take care to render the threads
incandescent as usual during the last
part of this operation Their duration is
estimated at 1000 hours
Experienced wood workers have always
contended that a glue joint properly done
Is stronger than the wood itself And
yet joints often give way at the surface
where the glue is used which is ac-
counted for by bad material A similar
reason is frequently the true cause which
few artisans wish to acknowledge It is
merely that skill is lacking In gluing
wood it Is asserted by competent author
ity bad work is produced by applying
glue to both surfaces A good job is se-
cured by applying the glue hot but not
extremely so to one surface which
should be cold while the other surface
should be heated at the stove but should
have no glue upon it By this method the
glue will permeate the wood and bind the
surface together more firmly than nature
binds the fibres
Careful experiments on the Sfnse of
smell in dogs have been made by George
J Romans who has communicated the
results to the Linnean Society of London
He finds that not only the feet but the
whole body of man exhales a peculiar
or individual odor which a dog can recog-
nize as that of his master amidst a crowd
of other persons that the individual
quality of this odor can be recognized at
great distances to windward or in calm
weather at great distance in any direc-
tion and that even powerful perfumes
may not overcome this odor Yet a sin-
gle sheet of brown paper when stepped
upon instead of the ground and afterward
removed was sufficient to prevent Mr
Romans dog from following his trail
It is now fairly established that the
common wart which is so unsightly and
often proliferous on the hands and face
can be easily removed by small doses of
sulphate magnesia taken internally M
Colrat of Lyons has drawn attention to
this extraordinary fact Several children
treated with three grain doses of Epsom
salts morning and evening were prompt-
ly cured M Aubers cites the case of a
woman whose face was disfigured by
these excrescences and who was cured
in a month by a dram and a half of mag-
nesia taken daily Another medical man
reports a case of very large warts which
disappeared in a fortnight from the daily
administration of ten grains ot the salts
The Medical Press
An English device for preventing down
draught in cnimneys consists of a number
of grooved rings of metal or clay placed
over each other with spaces between
The grooves are so shaped that when the
wind strikes them it is deflected upward
thus tilectually preventing any down
draught An equally effective and simpler
plan for accomplishing that object is the
one suggested by A J Downing namely
buiding up with a single row of brick at
the back of the lireplace to a point a few
inches above the top of tho opening The
wind which in descending always follows
the surface of the outer wall of the flue
strikes the shelf thus formed and is de-
flected upward as in the other case
Manufacturers of kerosene oil say that
all lamps are safe with good oil and that
the quality of oil can be ascertained by
the following test Take a pint tineup
All it nearly lull of water warmed so that
an ordinary thermometer immersed in it
will show 120 pour a small quantity of
oil on the water stir it a little then pa s
closely over
This throws an extra weight upon the
right side and mokes the right the more
reliablelimb The use of the right arm
situated directly over the right leg tends
less to the disturbance of the center of
gravity than does the nse of the left arm
But how will the Doctor explain left
handednes6 Medical Record
That milk is not always a good thing
for adults is well known but it seems
that an exclusive milk diet may even
bring on dilatation of the stomain ema-
ciation and many other distressing symp-
toms A patient illustrating this face was
recently shown by M Debove at the
Societe Medicale des Hopitaux The man
had had alcoholic gastritis and lost
thirtysix pounds undtr a milk diet
The very best way to prevent scale in a
steam boiler is to use a feed water heater
that will deposit scale by raising the
temperature of the water in the heater
high enough to liberate the soluble mat-
ter before the water gets into the boiler
Nobody ever heard of bagged sheets on
a heater Wc see one every day on
boilers Dont let the scale in and it
wont trouble you Milling World
The art of washing hands is not an
easy one according to Dr Haffter of
Trauenfleld To Insure absolute surgical
cleanliness of the hands they must first
be carefully washed with potash soap and
water as hot as can be borne aud then
with a 5 per cent solution cf carbolic
acid oronepermillesolution of corrosiev
sublimate or chlorine water British
Medical Journal
In lecturing before the Society of Natu-
ral Histoiy at Berlin Professor Strieker
has employed with much success an elec-
tric lamp of 4000 candlepower for the
projection ot microscopic sections upon a
screen employing a magnifying power of
C000 to S000 diameters It is stated that
the definition obtained is very satisfac-
tory
Woodite is the name of a new mate
rial which possesses the elasticity of rub
ber without being either inflammable or
injured by salt water It is proposed to
use it as a fender on wharves to prevent
injury by collision with ships and to
protect the unarmored parts of war ves-
sels
A now spirit lamp that is said to be per
fectly safe has been introduced H is so
made that there is no danger from over
fljwing and a shield is arranged to pre
vent htating the spirit reservoir
Boldoglucine is the name of another
new hypnotic It is given for nervous in
somnia in doses of from twenty grains to
two drachms
EXCHANGING EYES
Removing a KnbbllH Eye and Plactcg It In
a Unman Helngs Head
Nkw York Feb If There has just
been tried in this city for the first and
probably the last time the experiment of
tranferring the eye o a liviog rabbit to
the head of a living human being Mr
Charles A Williams city editor of the
Minneapolis Tribune lost his right
eye seventeen years ago by the
explosion of a lirecracker A few
months ago the left eye began to trouble
him nnd the doctor told him he would
have to have the extinct eye removed to
save the otDer Mr Williams had read
accounts of experiments made in
Paris in transplaming rabbits eyes and
also of those made more recentlv by
Dr May of this city Dr May be-
gan a series of experiments in trans-
planting living eyes from on rabbit to
another and in live cases ont of twenty
four was successful Mr Williams who
had read of Dr Mays experiment came
to New York in the latter part of January
and offered himself as a subject on which
to perform the experiment
The operation was performed on the
morning of February 1 in Mr Williams
room at ll i East Fortyninth street Mr
Williams was in fine physical condition
and is a man of much nervous vitality
and force With Dr May there carne to
Mr Williams room Dr Grutning
Dr Wilmer h lf s dizm medical
students and a professional nurse The
i animal which was to contriouto an eye
for Mr Wi liamiacioroinent was a very
11 J V f 1
a lighted match quickly but
m ehed Mr Willies in color
ex
the surface of the oil ence if it i nie
tnat
the oil is unsafe If purchases be made
of from three to live gallons at a time and
this test be made people can protect them-
selves
A boiler furnace in combination with a
grate bridgewall and smoke chamber is a
newly patented invention There is a
pivotally suspended rearplate providing
the only communication to the smoke
chamber from under the plate which
latter is provided with a rod for swinging
it rearward An air channel through
the base of the furnace communicates
with the gasduct through an opening di-
rectly below and opposite to the depend-
ent plate which channel is furnished
with a valve to regulate the admission
of air
For some time past says Industry gss
water has been applied directly to agri-
cultural land as a fertiliz r with satisfac-
tory results An average strength of
about 0 Tw U employed and at this
strength a gallon of the water is equal
to about one pound of sulphate of am-
monia The former will cost about 2s
per thirtylive gallons It is applied to
the Kud from a barrel by means of a pipe
drilled with holes just in the same way
as the streets of large towns are watered
The quantity used is about 100 gallons
per acre
In the extensive oysterculture experi-
ments of the United States government
particular attention is being given to
methods for preserving the young Wire
baskets three feet square and six inches
deep are used for collecting the spat
which adhere closely to the sides ami
bottom this device enabling the operators
to prevent the accumulation of mud the
great foe of the oyster industry by fre-
quent shakings of the baskets An aver-
age oyster is expected to yield 10000000
young
A new method of securing veneer to its
base consists in spreading glue or other
adhesive matter between the veneer and
the base passing the two secured parts I
under a heated roller to melt the glne
aud cause it to enter the pores to the
wood then finally passiug the connected j
base and the veneer under chilled rollers
to harden and set the glue and prevent j
the warping or shrinking of the veneer
consequent upon the gradual cooling or
drying of the glue
and 2 2 > smaller Air Williams left the
room and the ra iit was placed on a ta-
ble and subjected to the influence of
ether Mr Williams was then
brought to the room aad laid
upon a sofa a few feet away
Irom the table on which lay the rabbit
When Mr Williams was also under the
Infiucuce of ether the first step in the
operation both upon the rabbit and upon
Mr Williams eye was to cut loose the
conjunctionl s cfc from the muscles which
control the movement of the eye and as
they were cut their ends were caught
with a ligature of silk thread The
optic nerves in the rabbits eye and in
the eye of the human being were severed
at about the same time and the transfer
was then made as quickly as possible the
optic nerve joined and the muscles ir
ths human head attached to the conjunc
tional sack of the rabbits eye which was
then put into its place Tne entire oper-
ation lasted an hour aud a quarter Both
eyes were tightly bandaged and Mr Will-
iams was placed upon his back in bed
On the second day when the bandages
were removed there was observable a
slight haziness upon the corner of the
rabbit eye and the fourth day Mr
Williams was able to roll his
eyes naturally and simultaneously
proving that the muscular attach-
ment had been perfected On the
evening of the eighth day there was a
slight discoloration and moisture on the
bandage which indicated a rupture of the
cornea This enlarged and on the next
day nearly all the coloring matter of the
iris had run out Nothing was left then
but to remove the rabbits eye and Mr
Williams will in a few days have a glass
eye pot in and go home
An accouut of a prize light in a certain
newspaper of this city the other day said
that the principals stripped to the waist
and then rolled up their sleeves This is
a reminder of the Irishman who wrote
As I am writing this letter I have a pis-
tol in each hand and a sword in the
other Philadelphia Call
A Boson paper says It is never weary
j of reading a good epitaph one which
indicates the work of a lifetime in a few
Ice water enemata are nsed with sue short crisp words Here is one for in
cess in the Birmingham General Hospital stance which needs no explanation It
in cases of collapse often seen during I was inscribed on the tomb of a cannibal
diarrhea in young children It is claimed
that one injection two or three ounces
is very soon followed by sleep and that
by the astringent effect on the congested
vessels of the Intestines the diarrhea is
diminished It is further claimed that
no depression or other bad effect have
resulted
He loved his fellowmen
If every business man in Fort Worth
would send the weekly Gazette for a
year to some friend in the oldBtaJesfit
woe Id do more to boom immlgTatfohthan
any other means ryafr the tost is
nothing and jpafmaT get a valuable prize
fdisi
The cause of righthandedness accord In thj iprir distrioution of Gazittes
tng to Dr Oscar H Allis is the liver
ftpr T r
s t rf 7
5 J W vV Ot WRPIf
SECOND DISTRIBUTION
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SECOND
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and attest the impartiality of the award
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ley Songs Sacred and Devotional Swin
burne Tennison Tnackeray Thompson
Tnpper Virgil Whittier Willis Words-
worth
THE LONG RUN
17
By Rose Elixal > etli Oleveland
We have seemed 25 copies of MISS CLEVELANDS NOVEL bound in
cloth and embossed for OUR PREMIUM LIST
Every Person Subscribing or Renewing their Sub-
scription to tlie Weekly Gazette or to
the Sunday Gazette
FOR OWE YEAR
Before the 31st of next March will receive a ticket in the April Distribution The
paper can be sent to one address and the ticket to another
CJOSOI I3PTIOIV PRICE
Per Annum I Per Annum
Weekly Gazette 150 j Sunday Gazette 2
All subscriptions must be paid in Advance
Address
Democrat Publishing Co
FORT WORTH TKX
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Fort Worth Daily Gazette. (Fort Worth, Tex.), Vol. 12, No. 206, Ed. 1, Monday, February 21, 1887, newspaper, February 21, 1887; Fort Worth, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth85358/m1/5/: accessed July 7, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; .