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About The Loup City northwestern. (Loup City, Neb.) 189?-1917 | View Entire Issue (July 30, 1897)
THE BLIND FIREMAN. IN ACTIVE SERVICE FOR THIRTY YEARS. Old tai«. On* of til* Narvlcor* of Port ChMt**"* Hand Kngln* Crew stick* •a old Machine - I»*clln** t *ln* Mod •ra Apparato*. MIERT Saxe Mar tin of Port Ches ter. New York, Is known as West chester county's blind fireman. Old Saxe his comrades call him, and by that name he Is best known to the Inhabitants of Port Chester. He is 54 years old, and for forty years he lia.t been totally blind. He lost his sight by cataracts. That he did not let his Infirmity interfere at all with his use fulness Is shown In his record of thirty five years In the Port Chester fire de partment, during all of which he has been an active member, says New York Sun, There are only two mem bers of Port Chester's old hand engine crew left, and Martin Is one of them, lint while his old comrades, who worked shoulder to shoulder with him at the brakes In the early sixties, was c intent some time ago to retire, Martin has kept right on. and today he Is found still at the front, and his pull on the ropes does a good deal to help the heavy engine up the steep hills of the county, Martin was 1ft years old when he Joined Putnam Engine No. 2. whieh was organised In I ort Chester In 1852. Among the member* of the company were some of the wealthiest men of the town, and It was by all odds Port Chester’s crack crew. Mar tin used to hang around the engine house, and got to be so well known that finally he was proposed as a mem ber, though It wus not supposed that I " ' ■ ■ ALBERT SAXE MARTIN. he would be an active member. Martin soon showed that his value had been underestimated. When the first alarm tame In he seized a rope and went out with the company to do his turn at the brakes, and from that day to this there have been few fires or inspec tions thet he has missed, and his rec ord is one of the best in the depart ment. Twelve years ago. on account of internal dissentlons In the old Putnam company, old Saxe Joined the Reliance Engine Company, which was a little more modern in its equipment. Martin was welcomed heartily by the members of Reliance, as he was known by this time to he one of the best firemen in the town. Martin goes to a fire hold ing on behind the engine, and upon its arrival at a fire his duty Is to reel off hose. It Is almost impossible to believe that he Is blind when he Is seen working at a flic. He knows apparent ly the position of every man. An Illus tration of the acuteness of his hearing was given when an old comrade named Baker returned to Port Chester after an absence of twenty-five years. The people did not recognize him, and it ■was not until he told the people who he was that he got any welcome at all. Baker was standing on the street the day he arrived when Martin came along. "Hello, Saxe,” he said. Martin stopped a moment. "Why, Johnny Baker,” he said, slowly, "is that you?" Efforts have been made to get Mar tin to Join some of the new fire com putties In the village. It was thought that on account of his age and infir mity It would ho much more comforta ble for him to be carried to the Are by horses, instead of pulling the engine himself. Hut Martin has refused all sue!) Invitation* contemptuously. "I've been In the department these thirty five years,” he said, "and I reckon I'm *« od for at least ten more, and I'll never ask anybody to help me to a hre man or beast." In the same manner he has refused time and time again any of the officei in the Are department. The greatest event in the blind man's life was when he attended a hanging at White IMaln*. It had always la-en his desire to tie present si one. and when his old si him!master. John huffy, was nominated for sheriff Martin said he would vote for hint If he would iavl!" him to bis Ant hanging huffy didn't forger him and stain after his election irvlted Martin to be present at the hanging of a man for murdering a (in ktiddler Martlu was not e intent to stand on the outskirts of the crowd, but Insisted upon being ih« nearest man to the sciffobl lie enjoyed the bunging immensely, and to this day is always ready to tell about it ns one il tbs great event* of bis Ilfs gioueauss rtiiinsw lb N> m t Ufll ft iftfcftlt uf KUHMH (D41 purchase a "growler 1 of user and drink it la bread daylight on the stresi while la Harrisburg sorb a tains siuld result I* tb# immediate arrest Of the Offind—'». No »vw*d»r real* are m high in New York Harrisburg rwlhel ELEPHANT NOT CLEVER. Popular Heller Contradicted by an English Writer. The elephant possesses very charm ing characteristics and makes a very pleasant companion. For one thing, he Is not easily mislaid, and he Is very obe dient to the slightest hint given by his mahout, says I.ondon Sketch. In speed he Is scarcely a record-breaker, but he can get over the ground In his shuf fling way at the rate of fifteen miles an hour when he likes. There Is one thing that he Is not—he Is not a really clev er animal. In spite of all the tales In the ' story books to the contrary, other wise he would not suffer himself to be so easily captured in the khed dahs, the huge forest Inclosure Into which the hunters drive the herds of elephants for the purpose of capture. All the actions which are apparently spontaneous on j the part of the working elephant are | really performed at the bidding of the mahout. The driver on his neck di rects every movement by pressure of the knee, and as the man’s knees are concealed under the elephant's cars It is very easy to Imagine that the ele phant thinks for himself. When the mahout elects, for a change, to sit on the saddle, or pad, he drives with his feet, and the dullest eye can detect how a rub of the heel on the right shoulder turns the elephant to the left and vice versa. After his tractabillty, his gen tleness is the elephunt's most marked characteristic. The mahout takes cruel advantage of his disposition sometimes; he thrashes him on the toenail with a billet of wood, or—If free .Ul/ /.f A luonv asp l.ir Mu Is'iii'rt. pean master -pricks his trunk with a spear till blood flows. An elephant has rarely been known to retaliate, save when It. must; when that curi ous madness comes on him, no one dare approach him In his pickets. In a su burb of Rangoon nil elephant belong ing to a firm of rice merchants was one afternoon taken down to the river for hie usual hath after work. He had, the mahout said, been "dull” all day and seemed out of sorts. He seized the mahout and tossed the astonished man Into the water; then he ran Into the "go down” close by, and, with one squeal, dismissed some 200 coolies at work there. The "go down” was a huge palisade shed, covering over an acre and was full of loose paddy (unhusUed rice) and stacks of bags and grain, l-’or two nights and two days that, elephant en joyed himself among those stacks; sea men posted round the palisade wall kept him In and one might have sup posed forty elephants, bqpt on mis chief, had been there Instead of on<i mad one. At last he was made prison er with the aid of two idg tuskers and chained up till such time as he should recover himself. AN "IMMORTAL" NEAR DEATH. Onn of tlis Fatuous Freucli Forty Will Soon No More. Francois Edouard Joachim Coppee who is critically III at Paris, has been ranked since the death of Victor Hugo as the greatest of French poets, but he has also won distinction as a dra matist and a romancer. He was born In Paris In 1842, being the youngest child of a poor clerk in the war de partment. His father dying, he took the modest clerkship In the war depart ment at the age of 21 and became the head of the family. He was not an apt student as a boy but began writing verses early in his youth. Coppee burned his juvenile verses, but made bis literary debut In 1866 when a vol ume of poems published at his own expense under the title of “Le Hell qualre.” A second volume was entitled •'Lea Intimites,” but less than 200 cop ies of both works were sold. The first golden gleam of fortune came to him in 1869. “Le Passant,” a little one-act comedy In verse, was presented one night at the Odcou, and Francois Cop pet- awoke in the morning to find him y KRANCOI8 K J COPPER. self famous. H« iouituiioii to wilt* |>l«ya with »u io*a. and guiuod anon* to tho Commit* Krwuratiie. (luring th* KrauHi-PruMian war bo did hi* duty tu tho rank* of tho army, llko many i anothor artist la letter*, and with th« htuah. II* wruto war aouga during and e»*n after tho short coal let, *omo of I whlrh wot* very popular II* was ole. trd to membership In the Kroagh j Academy in l*M t»|»r«a Ike Meat. An aval hello bear that dam e* for a jilting lu England *a* trudging along tho road hi triad It* master near K*u rlntuni and had paid u> a'tenttou t>. | the me.t and women in shirts ih i w looted by When a (at woman In hi oarer*. h»w« »er. appeared riding g i hhy.dk the hear broke awar front it* mam .-rand made * rmk for her *m*>!> tag th* wheel, hat being taught b*l .* It hurt th# rider H« t awOlt** t* 1 relate Ml*. II* had lingered until far |*«i g,, ho«r for trtldcf In oa* of gu di» m r'aibdo" m rtkgi and economy g* remarked “I always par *a I gw * , 1 th. you want a rmelpt * the Ingmit I BROWNS PRESIDENT. DR. E. BENJAMIN ANDREWS A GREAT SCHOLAR. Has Lately llrtn Cenaureil liy the Troe teee for III. Vl.»» on Keouoinlc Nubjccta-Krho of Iho latte l*re»lden tlal Campaign. R. K. Benjamin Andrews, president of Brown Univer sity, who has been warned by the trustees to sup press his views in favor of free silver and protection, Is a man of great learning. He Is the son of a Baptist clergyman who lived at Montague, Mass., but preached In the adjoining town of North Sunderland. The fath er's salary was $200 a year. The son aided In the support of the family by working Saturdays and holidays In a mill, lie also bent bis energies and his lurk to the care of a garden patch near thp family residence, lie had a great fondness for reading from his earliest youth. Ho was sent to the Powers Institute at ltarnardston In 186$ and remained two terms. He con tinued his education at the Wesleyan Academy at Wilbraham, Mass,, and laid the foundation for a notable ca reer leading up to bis present position, lils rebuke by the trustees is a result of the into presidential campaign. Dr. Andrews wrote a book on the financial question under ‘.he title of "An Honest Dollar." The sllvwrltes used some of his arguments, and an Impression got. out that he was a 16 to I free silver opinion wan fought out, an old end established institution only yesterday censured its hi ad because, forsooth he had the courage to think for him self, and, still worse, to speak what lit thought. This censure, ordered to be administered by a committee of trus tees, Is a blot upon the history of that honored college which a century ol pros pet tty will not wipe out.” SECRET DRAWERS IN USE. Call far Them llrfnre failures Van ilerlillt'N I’mlnrgrouml, Kill. It Is not alone In stories that seerei drawers,hiding places In furniture and private passages beneath houses are ic be found nowadays, says the New Yorl Press. They are to be found ulso Ir modern New York. According to u < ttlr luetmaker, orders are frequently rc reived by him for pieces of furiiituri made with bidden receptacles. He koepi the designer. In fact, whose specla work consists In contrlvinK falsi le t toms mid secret drawers for divks ihalrs and tables, “Itlcli women," he declared recent Iy, "are the most frequent customer! I for this sort of work, and I liavt in | doubt that It Is because they catino i trust, their servants, or that, If honest | t heir'servants son too curious about j their mistresses’ affairs." Interesting coincidences have come to hls notice ol the sudden failure In business of tin husband of some woman who bad Just received from hls shop an Ingenious cabinet. The cabinetmaker bus no doubt that valuable securities were bidden therein from the creditors. An odd thing, too, In the furniture trade Is the fact that most of "the ICngllsh oak settees,” chairs of the reign of Anne. <t.c,. supposed to lie antique, are maim factored in (Irmul Rapids. As for the underground passages there are more of them In New York than In a media 6TEWAHT L. WOODFORD. Stewart Lyndon Woodford was born in New York city September 3, 1835. He studied at Ya'.e and Columbian Universities and in 1857 began the practice of law In his native city. In 1 SCO he was chosen messenger of the electoral college of his state, to con vey to Washington Its vote in favor of the presidency of Abraham Lincoln. In 1861 he was appointed assistant United States district attorney for the district of New York, holding the po sition for eighteen months, whin ho entered the Union army as a volun teer. lie served until 1865, becoming in six cession chief of staff of (ien. Julncy A. (Jtllmore In the Department of the South, and military commander of Charleston and Savannah, and at tained by brevet the rank of brigadier general of volunteers. From 1866 to 1868 ho was lieutenant-governor of New York as a republican. He was defeated as a candidate for governor In 1870. In 1872 lie wan elected to congress and was also presidential elector. From 1877 until 188.7 he filled the office of Halted States attorney for the southern district of New York. Since leaving that office he has been engaged In the practice of law. In which he lius become rich. Mr. Wood ford is an old friend of Senator I'latt, and the two have been on Intimate terms since tliey were colleagues In congress a score of years ago. The Incident In the early eighties, when Mr. Woodford refused to support for governor Judge Folger, late secretary of the treasury, saying he would not supiKirt a Republican nominated on a "forged telegram," put him at odds with the Republicans of the state for some years, but tie finally went back Into the fold. Senator Hiatt vigorously urged him for a cabinet position, try ing to hnve him made secretary of the Interior. man. The tru*te"» appointed it e.»m- j nilttee to wur't the pretddeut to aup preta Ilia opinion* in the future. In ; PH IS M ANONKW*. l.u k4<t«taur«4l* •*fi«iuu «i (hr t ut. wrattjr ul I'rwUnl lUiprt ihUiIuiimnI ik* irtMtr** uf Hun In dbtwaiM ik* rlaki is ikink k» wbl >*f Ifcr Hru*k l'kU*r*t»jr tM.Ukli I ’ K«*k ik* m r*4 ir«U uf ik* uki**r kilt, »h«t* if kkt*k*r* ik*r* *kukU W ukanfikkiiy iu ikikk ak4 iiyuM •Ml IfcMUakU kul lkfr«|4*kUk U fWI ik* iruk k*k4 uf *kiku*lir. «m>«*4 k> iM^IrbM kk4 **lf-lkl*i**l la In* •*4 fair N»» 1‘wiUk.l Ik* *r> u,4 ok ' | *kuk ik* kirkaau fu ir**.t«.*k ,.f val town. They are not all secret, but under up town mansloua built within leu years there are some which only the owner und the builder know about I'uder Ihe Vanderbilt chateau at the pluia there Is one which runs from a point lieucath a rear room out to the edge of the street, where Ihe exit )» concealed by a slab, which looks like a l«art of the pavemeut. In case of rob bery or any other dancer within the bouse escape could tie mad# through the passage to the atreet. where an alarm could lie aounded. Hoards at the doom would thus lie caught at their poets, not knowing that any one within the house had paaaed out of It, H , - , ___* As UonUM "We might aa well make up our minds to accommodate ourselves to tow conditions 1 ml th« ttrwek a.d dler. thoughtfully Our old Ideas of generalship are absolutely large, tual That's true." was the t*p4> Kvery> things done be ntmhinety nowadays ul we ought to hate dune was to fur, »t our wostden hotse reputation sad get Up I scheme to surprise the Turks with a Holley *»»"- Washing log iltf * I'sWIe The Trsnek emhaasy tg load ot whose yearly salary is lltws u the beet pgld ambaceattor In the Wcrtd THE SUM)AV SCHOOL. LESSON V. AUGUST 1, ST. PAUL AT CORINTH. Holden Teiit “Kill./ Foundation CM No Man Lay Hal her Than Thai Laid, Which la .leaoa Chrlei ’—I. lor Inthlan., Chapter 3, Ver.e II. K have for to-day'» leaaon verge* I to II inrlualvc. from the eighteenth chapter of the Hook of Ada. Time. A I). Ml Place Corinth, the political capital til tlreece arni real dence of the Krmmn proconeul. It wa* the chief city of Achala, one of the two great province* Into which tlreece was divided hy the Roman*, th" other be ing Macedonia, Though deelroyed hy th" ItumuiiH uImuii the game time that Carth age waa deatroyed (It. 14*). Corinth Hue rebuilt hy Jnllue <'aeear, and wae. wtien Paul entered It, In a tnoet flourlih Ing condition. It wae the meeting plat" of nation" for traffic, and awarmed with a trading population. one uf our beet elylee of architecture "prang from Cor inth, and carrle* He name through all time It waa alao noted for He "lalhiidan gam#*" and for He pre-eminence In vice. Keen among the pollution" of heathen lent hletorliine pronounced It "the moel llcentloue of all clllee that are or tiave heeii." "To jday the Corinthian" wae a proverbial egpreaelon for being a man ad dicted to dleaipallon and debauchery, Two H-aeone may have Influenced Paul In Me lting tide wicked city fur apoetollc la bor; J. It aloud In Immediate connection with Home and the weet of the Mediter ranean, with Theeealoulca and Kpheeu* In the Aegean, arid with Antioch and Alegandrla In the « aet. The Oo*p*l pro claimed In lla market" and aguaree would epreod rapidly throughout the world 'i. Itelng one of the world"* great center* of merchandlMe, Jew* were there In great number* What JcruKalrm wa* to them rellgtouely Corinth wa* commercially. I' I* now a el niggling, uncouth, and rather unhealthy town of right thoueaiul Inhabl Uhl*. 1 he only remain* of the city known to Paul are seven massive Doric columns, each consisting of one gigantic stone Nome twenty-on** feet high and six feel in diameter, surmounted by portions of the architrave which once formed the front and pari of the side of it temple. This massive temple, which even then had survived the changes of probably seven hundred years, the great apostle must have scan. Connecting Links. Paul's mission to Athens had failed. Its proud philosophers had greeted tils messages with a cold dis dain which to one of Ids fiery faith wa* harder to hear than the stories of the ng#b or the lie tors’ riels. Wordy discouraged, he started for Corinth, which was dis tant forty-two mile* by land or some five hours' sail hy sea. Competent critics af firm that Paul earns hy sea, that It was winter, and that one of the shipwrecks mentioned in 2 ('nr. 11. 2a may have oc curred at Ibl* time. He earn*- unattend ed and alone. Fortunately he found there a certain Christian .few named Auuila, and his wife Priscilla, fugitives from Italy, and tent-makers like himself. With them he lodged and wrought. On Hat» bath days he repaired to the synagogue and there reasoned with the Jews, prov ing that Jesus was the Messiah. The same result followed as In other cities; h« was expelled from tho synagogue and betook himself to the ({entiles A church was organized In the house of Justus, and thus the first formal separation between Jews and Christians look place. The work progresses, as Timothy and Hllas arrive and unite their labors with Paul's, At rimes the apostle's spirit falters under the. hale of Jewish foes, the hardness of Clen tile hearts, and the burdens of a sickly body. In his darkest hour, at midnight, his drooping soul is die oed hy a sight of that Havlour whose face he saw years before at the gate of Damascus, and again In the court of the temple. He I* comforted as he learns from the Mas ter's lips that his work Is not In vain. For more than a year the labor goes on, during the week with the Hying shuttle in the tent shop, on the Hahhath with the growing company of Christian worship era. Lesson llymn Tha cross! It takes our guilt away; it holds the fainting spirit up; It cheers with hope the gloomy day, and sweetens every hitter cup. It makes the coward spirit brave, ami nerves the feeble arm for fight; It take* Its terror from the grave, and gilds the bed of death with light; The balm of life, the cure of wo**, the measure and the pledge of love, The sinner's refuge here below, the an gels’ theme in heaven above. —Thomas Kelly. Hints to Teadier*. The teacher should keep the route of Pauls Journey constantly before his class, reviewing it upon the map, and I'ViiiMNK out aim i ui ri ii-Haon mo auc ceeelve KtatloiiK. In thlx Itaaon we find the apoatle I'uul In live u»pe, t*. I. i'uul In the Home. Veraeu I. 2. Call attention to the friendship! of I'uul; hla power to win uii‘l to hold the love of men. Tell the alory of hlu relation with Aitullu and Priscilla, and notice how of ten they ure mentioned both In the Acta and Kplatlea. l>ruw a picture In worda of I’uul In the huuai of Aitullu und Prle clllu hla life, convetautloii. Influence. It. I’uul In the Wnrltahop. Verae a. (live u picture of Paul weaving tent cloth In the little ahup of Aitullu tin preua leeaona regarding the tumor and dignity of labor, and Ita < umputihillt y with the hlgheat type of i Itiirucler The nobleat uml ittoet Influential mutt of that age waa ttila tent mulit t ill I’uul In the H>nagugue. Veraes t-C Raplain the pur pom ami methoda of Ilia ayituu eue Paul alwaya aoughl out the nynagogue am! begun Ida work there. Iiot only tieceueo there he cgwie in ion tact with the ••meat, Wurehlplng Ji wa. hut more repevlully I venae. there In found atao the thoitghlful tirntllea who Were tired of Idolatry Notice hie meth oil of teaching, the nature of hta teen, •nuny. end the reeull of hta wurk MUM A NO THISTLK*. Yotl tabttui foul deal with a piptb id lores The Aar le hot trier bnritir m h*t • Uet • I elite V little eth l*a. a. tout ft death ,g || ae 4 big one The a tigttgg w| the feucel u the d. «ll • delight t.MAINW ti|> UtttO, flt*d ne'er made a cod that ga«« with petdeh Kterg drunkards dife bduwe that there It a dei it tie fore de au Ute fight, de Meet •tel lute ugh petfe, t pt<« ht a’way a the rewatt ot perl'*: tfttel id IM Clfbl did wot a title id to the tern h fdlortd It, tat to gi«« u hu own Ufa VOW OF SILENCE. Hhe Maid She Wouldn’t for Fifty Yrtint. And Hli© I>l«lu t. The people In the eouLhern part of Hancock county, Maine, are deeply In tcreated In & peculiar malady which hi* Dicta Mlaa Experience Guilford, an aged womnn, who ha* not littered a word or any audible sound for hfty years. The original reason for MIhh Guilford's speechlessness was anger because she could not marry the man of her choice. When she wub 10 years old she fell In love with William Simpson, the village schoolmaster. They were to lie married on June 18. 1X47. One of Miss Guilford u rejected suitors told tales about the schoolmas ter, ami Miss Guilford's parents slop ped the wedding. Miss Guilford there upon said: "I swear I will not speak a word, though I live for fifty years, unless t marry this man.” ,, She kept her pledgp. Her parent* died, and she went to live with her married brother, When lie died sbo made her home with a tsler, and af ter the sister's death she went to a camp In the woods and kept house for a brother, with whom she Is now liv ing. All this time she performed her share of the household work uud did not show any regret for having mado the vow, When the Hfty years of *1 Icnce expired, ten days ago, she was visited by a large number of relative* and friends, who went to the camp for f 11 * fiiirrt/iaf* at lif'ltiu tit's* . 4' 11 f wild! ah« was at liberty lo speak, Hood after the midday meal Mlaa Guilford dressed herself In the gatmerits which she had not worn for half a eentury. At 2 o'clock ahe stood up before the people, smiled and opened her mouth lo apeak; hut though ahe tried hard and got red In the face in trying, she could not ut ter a sound, Her vocal muscles hahl become atrophied from long dlausA and refused to work. When Mlaa Guilford found that ahe mild not apeak, ahe sent to Hangor for a physician and took to her bed. The doctor gave no hope of recovery, hut suggested that sh< he sent to a Boston hospital for treatment. As soon aa Mlaa Guilford gets strong enough to take the Journey she will make another effort to regain her speech. Her father left her a good sum of money at hta death, which haft been growing every year Into a savings hank, so she la well able to obtain tho treatment she requires. GRASS WIDOW AT 14. HIju I'u//.!«•« fli« Court Who Trll* liftr Mlir Ought to III* NpitnkiHl. A pretty 14-.vear-old girl, with liquid blue eyes and golden hair and all that, appeared In the Police Court at At lanta the other afternoon, and beforo the case waa over a most remarkable story of young wifehood and grass widowhood was unfolded to the re corder. The child, for pretty Jessie Pearson la scarcely more than a child, was arraigned for quarreling with her old aunt, Mrs. Henley, and It was shown that she had been guilty of the shocking act of throwing a skillet at the aunt's head. The recorder pon-w dried well and long before he spoke, and then he decided to give tho youthful grass widow a lecture. He said; "Jessie, you are too young to try and whip your whole family. The truth Is, you ought to he spanked ycurself, in spite of the fact that you have a husband somewhere. The next thing you know I will have to lino you. pretty heavily, and then you may not he able to pay it. and will have to go to the stockade. I will let you go this time, but you had better lake care in the future and behave yourself, and not presume too murh upon your mat rimonial precociousness." About two months ago Miss Jessie appeared in the Police Court as the prosecutor against a Decatur Htreet merchant for trying to kiss her. The merchant was heavily lined at the time. "That Is one of the most remarkable. / /’Mir' MR* JHSftlR I'RARHON ' <•'»» cvrr com« lufnr* m*.** ■**«• rarordar whan ...urt adjooru • d "Tlur* air errtutnljr him Hlruimn !•«In iht. world, and lb* frmku of hum.uiiy will turn up in ikia court." Ji lin M. 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