The remains of the Buss family, composed of three people, have already been
exhumed. The town is visited daily by hundreds of strangers and none are
disappointed, as the apparition is always on duty promptly at 9 o'clock. The
strange figure was at once recognized by the inhabitants of the town as a young
lady supposed to have been murdered several years ago. Her attitude while
drifting among the graves is one of deep thought, with the head inclined forward
and hands clasped behind.
THE BAGGAGEMAN'S GHOST
"The corpses of the passengers killed in the disaster up at Spuyten Duyvil
was fetched down here and laid out in [Transcriber's Note: The original is missing text
following this mark]. The room was
darkened and I could just make out the out that storage room," said a Grand
Central depot baggageman. "That's what give it the name of morgue. Some of the
boys got scared of going in after that, 'specially in the dark; and a lot of
stories was started about spooks. We had a helper (a drunken chap that didn't
know whether he saw a thing or dreamed it), and he swore to the toughest of the
yarns. He says he went in to get a trunk. It was a whopper, and he braced
himself for a big strain; but, when he gripped it, it come up just as if there
wasn't nothing in it more'n air or gas. That unexpected kind of a lift is like
kicking at nothing—it's hurtful, don't you know?"
"I should think so."
"Well, Joe felt as light-headed as the trunk, he says, but he brought it out.
When he was putting it down he was stunned to see a ghost sitting straddle of
it."
"What did the ghost look like?"
"Joe was so scared that he can't tell, except that it had grave-clothes on.
And it went out of sight as soon as he got out into the daylight—floated off,
and at the same instant the trunk became as heavy as such a trunk generally is.
Some of us believe Joe's story, and some don't, and he's one of them that does.
He throwed up his job rather than go into the morgue again."
DRUMMERS SEE A SPECTER
(St Louis Globe-Democrat, Oct. 6, 1887)
[The last man in the world to be accused of a belief in the supernatural
would be your go-ahead, hard-headed American "drummer" or traveling-man. Yet
here is a plain tale of how not one but two of the western fraternity saw a
genuine ghost in broad daylight a few years ago.—Ed.]
Jackson, Mo., October 6. At a place on the Turnpike
road, between Cape Girardeau and Jackson, is what is familiarly known as Spooks'
Hollow. The place is situated fours miles from the Cape and is awfully dismal
looking where the road curves gracefully around a high bluff.
Two drummers, representing a single leading wholesale house of St. Louis,
were recently making the drive from Jackson to the Cape, when their attention was
suddenly attracted at the Spooks' Hollow by a white and airy object which arose
in its peculiar form so as to be plainly visible and then maneuvered in every
imaginable manner, finally taking a zigzag wayward journey through the low
dismal-looking surroundings, disappearing suddenly into the mysterious region
from whence it came.
More than one incident of dreadful experience has been related of this gloomy
abode, and the place is looked upon by the midnight tourist and the lonesome
citizen on his nocturnal travels as an unpleasant spot, isolated from the
beautiful country which surrounds it.
DR. FUNK SEES THE SPIRIT OF BEECHER
(New York Herald, April 4, 1903)
While he will not admit that he is a believer in spiritualism, the Rev. Dr.
Isaac Funk, head of the publishing house of Funk & Wagnalls, is so impressed
with manifestations he has received from the spirit of Henry Ward Beecher that
he has laid the entire matter before the Boston Society for Psychical Research,
and is anxiously awaiting a solution or explanation of what appears to him,
after twenty-five years' study of the subject, the most remarkable test of the
merit of the claims of spiritualists that has ever come within his
observation.
Although he has resorted to every means within his power to discover any
fraud that may have been practiced upon him, he has been unable to explain away
not only messages to him from the great minister, but the actual appearance to
him of Mr. Beecher in the flesh.
Dr. Funk and Mr. Beecher were intimate friends, and it would be difficult to
practice deception as to Mr. Beecher's appearance. When the apparition appeared
to Dr. Funk at a séance a short time ago Dr. Funk was less than three feet
distant from it, and had plenty of opportunity to detect a fraud if it was being
perpetrated, he believes.
"Every feature stood out distinctly," Dr. Funk said yesterday, in describing
his experience, "even to the hair and eyes, the color of the skin and the
expression of the mouth. [Transcriber's Note: The original is missing text following this mark]
lines of the
body, but it was still light enough to make the face plainly visible. I had a
short conversation with the embodied spirit, and then it appeared to sink to the
floor and fade away."
MYSTERY OF THE COINS
Dr. Funk was especially anxious to have an opportunity to see and talk with
Mr. Beecher, in the hope that light would be thrown on the mystery which
surrounds a previous manifestation. Through the spirit of one "Jack" Rakestraw,
who says he used to lead the choir in one of Mr. Beecher's churches, but frankly
admits that he cannot remember exactly where the church was located—even spirits
have a way of forgetting things, spiritualists declare—Dr. Funk was informed
that Mr. Beecher was troubled because the publisher had failed to return a coin,
known as the "widow's mite," which he had borrowed some years ago, from the late
Professor Charles E. West, a well known numismatist, to make a cut to illustrate
a dictionary. Dr. Funk supposed the coin had been returned a long time ago, but
upon looking the matter up found it in a drawer of a safe, among some old
papers, exactly as Mr. Rakestraw maintained.
When Mr. Beecher appeared to him in person, so far as he could determine, Dr.
Funk asked him several direct questions, to which the replies, he admits, were
somewhat sublime. Although Dr. Funk has found the long-lost coin—which, by the
way, is said to be worth $2,500—he is not certain to whom it should be returned,
now that Professor West is dead and his collection of coins sold. Should the
"widow's mite" go to Professor West's heirs or to the purchaser of the
collection? is a question which has as yet remained unanswered.
"That is a matter I am leaving to be determined by the Society for Psychical
Research and Mrs. Piper, who ought to be able to learn from the spirit world
what disposition Professor West wishes to have made of the coin," said Dr. Funk.
It is at any rate a matter that does not appear to concern the spirit of Mr.
Beecher.
MR. BEECHER APPEASED
"When what seemed to be Mr. Beecher's embodied spirit appeared to me," Dr.
Funk said, "I asked that very question. He smiled and replied that it was not a
matter that concerned him especially, and that the whole thing was in the nature
of a test, to prove to me that there actually are spirits, and that it is
possible to have communication with them when all the conditions are favorable.
He remarked that he was glad the old coin had been found, but seemed to consider
the disposition of it a matter of minor importance. He told me he was glad I was
taking interest in the subject, as he believed it would result in good for the
world, and then, excusing himself on the ground that he had an engagement which
it was necessary for him to keep, the apparition disappeared."
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