Cortland Evening Standard, Monday,
October 14, 1895.
F. L. POPE'S SAD DEATH.
Slain by
the Fluid Which Made Him Famous.
FOUND
DEAD IN HIS CELLAR.
His Body
Had Been Penetrated by an Electric Current, Causing Instant Death
—Was
Well Known as an Electrician and Inventor.
GREAT BARRINGTON, Mass., Oct 14.—One of the
saddest accidents that has ever occurred in this vicinity and one which strikes
to the heart of every citizen, happened last evening when Franklin L. Pope, an
electrician, whose skill has made him prominent throughout the electrical
world, lost his life by means of the mysterious fluid that has made him famous.
He went into the cellar to remedy some
trouble in his electric lighting apparatus. Hearing a noise below, members of
the family hastened into the cellar.
Mr. Pope was found lying beside the
converter lifeless. Dr. Large and Dr. Camp were
hastily summoned and did all in their power to resuscitate the unfortunate, but
it was all to no purpose. Three thousand volts had passed through his body.
He was born 56 years ago in the same house
in which he was killed. He was well known almost the world over as a great
electrician and inventor and to his energies in his chosen life work, the world
owes much. He was for some time in the employ of the Bell Telephone company and
his articles upon electricity were published in some of the leading science
journals of the country. It was largely through his instrumentality that Great Barrington
obtained its electrical plant.
Mr. Pope was one of the first telegraph operators
in the country.
He leaves a widow, one son and two
daughters.
LETTER
FROM WALLER.
The Imprisoned
Man Full of Confidence In His Government.
CLEVELAND, Oct. 14.—Charles T. Maxwell, a
colored medical student in this city, has received a letter from ex-Consul John L. Waller. The letter is dated "Maison Ceutrale du Clairvaux, France,
Sept. 8."
After thanking Mr. Maxwell for expressions
of sympathy contained in a letter he had written to the imprisoned man, Mr.
Waller says: "It gives me great pleasure to know that I have the sympathy
and support of the American people who are using every honorable means and
endeavor to secure my liberty, which to an American, is dearer far than life. I
am a victim of circumstances and whether I shall finally receive justice at the
hands of the French people or perish in a foreign prison, by virtue of a hasty
conviction rendered by a court martial in the excitement under these
circumstances, rests with God and the American people, in whose action and
righteous judgment I have the most implicit confidence.
"That it is the desire or the intention
of the French as a government to do me an injustice I do not for a moment
believe. I am also consoled in the knowledge of the fact that the American
people, true now, as always, to their long established creed and numerous
precedents touching on the protection of American citizens abroad, will not
permit any injustice to be inflicted upon one of their citizens by a foreign
nation, no matter how humble be that citizen."
PAGE
TWO—EDITORIALS.
The Iron
Trade.
It is a popular saying that as goes the iron
trade so goes the prosperity of the country. If this were true, then the
industries of America would be at present enjoying one of the greatest booms on
record. The general course of the iron trade, both pig iron and the finished
product, has been something remarkable this year.
In January, 1895, the price of iron was at
its lowest ebb. It did not begin to pick up materially till March. Then the
boom began. At the close of September the price was 53 1/2 per cent higher than
in January. It is not often in the history of any manufactured article that it
half doubles its price in six months. In September the price increased 5 1/2 per cent. Hundreds of fortunes have
been made by iron masters and speculators in the past few months. Those who
think of investing in iron at present, however, would do well to think twice before
doing so. The price at the end of September was higher than it was in October,
1892, before the panic, when everything was lovely.
Apparently rates cannot rise much higher. If
they do, then it will pay to import iron. Indeed some slight importations both
of pig and manufactured articles have already been made. The boom is at flood
tide.
There must come a time before long when
people will be supplied with all the iron machinery they want. Then there must
come a lull. The blast furnaces of the country now in operation are
considerably over 200 in number, and they are turning out 200,000 tons of pig
iron a week. The Iron Age says this is more than was ever before manufactured in
any country.
Communication
from President Higgins.
To the
Editor of the Standard:
SIR—Will you kindly allow space for a brief
statement of the position of the board of trustees in the matter of the
extension of the electric railroad on Elm-st.
After patiently listening to the various
arguments presented for and against granting such a franchise by the parties
interested, the board has reached this conclusion. They will grant a franchise
for the extension, with the single proviso that it shall not be used for
hauling freight cars switched off from the steam roads.
The Homer & Cortland Traction company
came to Cortland and bought the property of the horse railroad, proposing to
operate the road by substituting electricity for horses as a motive power. They
have no rights that the horse railroad did not have. Extensions on other streets
were asked for and properly granted on the ground that while monopoly rights
were given the company by the village much concessions were warranted by the
benefit coming to us in convenience to passenger travel.
This spring an additional franchise for an
extension on the lower end of Elm-st. to cross the river to the park and
McGrawville was asked from the present board. While the avowed object of the
Traction company was profit to themselves and not philanthropy still we did not
hesitate to give up to them the use of our streets because we were at the same
time benefitted by the road. If there is any other proper motive for giving
away a deed to the center of our streets to
gentlemen in Scranton than that the benefit is mutual it does not now occur to
us.
This fall there is presented an application
for a franchise on the short piece of Elm-st. between Church and Pendleton. The
avowed object of the officers in asking for this piece of road was to straighten
the line to McGrawville and the park thus avoiding delays and danger at the
railroad crossing. The danger does not appear to be greater at one crossing than
at the other. The delay, however, is undoubted and to obviate it we are
perfectly willing to grant the franchise and have offered so to do. We
stipulate only that the company shall operate the extension as they have been
operating their road on other streets.
On inquiry, however, at the time of the
application it appeared that it is further proposed to use this extension and
so much of the remainder of the street railroad as the company may desire for
the purpose of transferring freight cars from the E., C. & N. and the D.,
L. & W. railroads to McGrawville or any other points to which their road
may extend.
Thus far the board has hesitated to grant
such a privilege.
To be sure the company claim that the
franchise given them last year allowing them "to operate their road"
includes the right to haul freight cars through the streets. To us who are not
lawyers this does not seem certain. If it does do so it appears to us an
unfortunate mistake on the part of the village which should not be repeated.
The switching of freight in balk through our
streets to McGrawville or to any other point is of no apparent advantage to the
village and it is plainly perverting the streets to uses not originally intended.
The property owners on the street to some extent have also claimed such use to
be detrimental to them.
The privilege to run freight cars through
our streets would undoubtedly be an advantage to the Traction company as is so
plainly set forth in the letter quoted by Mr. Dunston to the last number of The
STANDARD. It might also be an advantage to McGrawville in giving them two
competing roads for their freight. But your board as yet fail to see wherein
the advantage to this village accrues and
why under these circumstances such an unusual right should be given to any
company.
The present board has the kindest feelings
toward the Traction company and realize that the road is a benefit to the place
so long as they confine themselves to what we consider their legitimate
business.
If by carrying freight was meant what many
of us supposed when we first heard it mentioned no serious objection would be
raised. If freight meant simply a baggage car in which express matter or mail
was carried the advantage to the public would seem to warrant giving the right
to use the streets for such uses. But an ordinary freight car, cattle car or
coal car seems to come under a different category. Now that it is planned to
operate important lines of railroads by electricity the mere fact that a road
is an electric road does not distinguish it as a street railroad to be granted
franchises from an ordinary railroad which is allowed to run only where it has
purchased a right of way. Indeed the only distinction remaining that I can
discover is that one may carry freight in bulk while the other may not.
The attitude of the board is that they are
willing to pursue their former policy of granting any reasonable extensions for
travel but that if the company desire to inaugurate a freight, coal or milk route
with other towns they should acquire their own land on which to build their
lines and switches.
It is said that this franchise would have
been granted at once if it had been asked for when the road was proposed and
that the granting this short line franchise is a matter of small importance
now. But would any franchise have been granted if it had been clearly
understood that the company proposed to run freight trains through the streets?
Possibly, but it seems to us that it is a question that has never before been
clearly presented to the village and might now properly be made a referendum.
Again, it is very |true that the arguments
against granting the franchise have been brought forward largely by the friends
of the proposed steam road to McGrawville. My own position, however, and I
think I may answer in the main for the rest of the board, has been taken not by
its effect upon that road which may in a sense be looked upon as a rival
company which should ask only for fair field and no favor but upon the
propriety of ever giving away rights to use the streets for railroad purposes.
It is proposed by Mr. Dunston and
practically by The STANDARD in last Friday's number that we grant that
extension unconditionally, leaving the question of carrying freight on the
whole line for the courts to decide.
It seems to us, however, that if we are sure
that we as a village do not desire the company to do a general freight business,
it is better to make that condition now than to try and obtain it through the
courts.
This opinion of the board is only
provisional. In view of the fact that no trolley road of which we yet have any knowledge
is hauling through freight over streets where they have only franchise rights,
and the importance which the subject may have in the future the board have felt
justified in withholding the franchise until further light on the subject could
be obtained.
If it should appear by petition or otherwise
that our business men and citizens generally do desire to give an unconditional
franchise, I feel warranted in saying that the board of trustees will
immediately take such action.
Yours respectfully,
F. W. HIGGINS.
PARTRIDGE
GALORE
Sitting
on the Backyard Fences, Under the Bed and in the Hall.
Cortland partridge hunters who carry a gun
around all day without getting a sight of a bird, who start an hour before
daylight for Truxton and return at night tired and muddy with never a shot at
one, had better start by first train for Walton, N. Y. The Reporter of that
place says:
This is a great town for partridges this
fall. If a citizen feels like bagging a few birds all he has to do is to take
his gun and go out in the door yard. One citizen found five sitting on his back
yard fence one morning recently.
A week ago Thursday morning, Mrs. John Olmstead
found one under her bed. As G. E. Armstrong was turning away his cows he shot a
partridge out or a tree in front of Geo. A. Colton's.
It was rather hard on Mr. Bagley, Mr.
Colton's father-in-law, whose bedroom was close by. He was sleeping with no
thought of it being 7 o'clock until bang went the gun. He jumped from his bed
with the impression that it was the sound of Gabriel's trumpet, and he thought
he wouldn't wait for the second call. The way he got into his clothes that
morning was a surprise to himself.
Later in the day as Mr. Armstrong was going
in the wagon house another partridge was sitting beside the door. It flew and
lit on one of the windows of Mr. Mead's residence and had it not been for the
screen door it would have gone in and got right in the kettle instead of under
the bed like Mrs. Olmstead's.
J. H. Bronson caught a partridge in the front
hall of his house, corner of Benton-ave. and Griswold-st., Sunday morning. The
bird was kept alive for some time.
BREVITIES.
—The Cortland and Homer Traction Co. have
to-day discontinued running the cars to the park, but will resume it again
temporarily if suitable weather comes.
—The prizes to be given away at the fair to
be held by the Emerald Hose Co., Oct. 28-Nov. 2, are on exhibition in the windows
of the Garrison building, 17 Main st.
—The fall opening day at the Grand Union Tea
store Saturday was largely attended. The idea of having an orchestra in
attendance was a new and novel one for Cortland.
—Helen Eloise Watrous, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. E. M. Watrous, died yesterday morning, aged one month and two days. The
funeral will be held to-morrow at 2 o'clock P. M.
—There will be a special meeting of the
Republican League at their rooms this evening at 8 o'clock. An address will be
made by George S. Sands, Esq., chairman of the county committee, on the ballot
law of 1895.
—The regular meeting of the Grover Relief
Corps, No. 96, will be held to-morrow afternoon (Tuesday) at 3 o'clock sharp. A
full attendance of all its members is desired, as this will be the last meeting
held before inspiration [sic].
—It is
expected that 150 Odd Fellows of Cortland will go to Marathon to-morrow
afternoon to attend the dedication of the new lodge hall there. They will go
down at 8.07 P. M. and return on the late freight. Reduced rates have
been obtained on the D., L. & W.
—About twenty men under direction of Highway
Commissioner E. C. Rindge are to-day building the new road which leaves the old
riverside drive this side of the house of Hon. O. U. Kellogg, crosses the E. & C. N. Y. R. R. grade
west of the trestle and connects with Port Watson-st. near River-st.
—Work on the sewers is rapidly nearing
completion. Madison-st. was finished last Friday night. The manhole at the
corner of Madison-st. and Homer-ave. will be completed to-night and, if nothing
unexpected hinders, North Main-st., which is the last, will be finished by
Wednesday night of this week.
—Mr. N. A. Bundy told a STANDARD man this
morning that he expected the bridge over the Tioughnioga river would be
completed by the end of next week. The work of laying the rails on the east side
will be pushed hard at once and he expects to have the road completed to the
mouth of Gee brook [Cincinnatus] by January 1.
—The dispatches this morning announce a
runaway trolley car at Pittsburg, Pa.,
last night with three killed and ten injured, and a runaway trolley car at
Syracuse last night with nobody hurt. Both accidents were caused by the
breaking of a brake rod. In the first case the car was overturned and smashed
to kindling wood, in the latter it was only slightly injured. Both these
accidents were on the steep grades. Cortland people may congratulate themselves
that there are no grades to amount to anything in the local trolley line. The
park grade, which is the steepest, is quite a gradual one.
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