KEMMLER KRSPITED. | HI EXECUTION STAYED BY A UNI- TED STATES JUDGE- JHE GROUND ON WHICH THE HABEAS CORPUS WAS GRANTED, NEW YOrg, April 29,—Judge William J. Wallace, who granted the writ of habeas corpus for Kemmler, arrived in town to-night and put up at the Hoffman House. “This writ was granted to Kemm- ler’s Buffalo counssl,” he sald, *‘Gpon the application of a well-known New York lawyer. It was defective in that it did not bear Kemmler’s signa- ture, nor the seal of the Court, but the situation was such an urgent one that I could pot justify myself in stopping to deliberate over technicalities. The man was hable to be executed at any moment, and, having in my mind a doubt of the constitutionality of the Jaw by which he was to meet his death, 1 signed the papers.” This was all that the Judge would say ou the matter. ie tise —— TL.ABOR NOTES. The parade of the working men in Chicago, on the 1st, was about four miles long. It occupied two hours in passing a given peint, and the number ig line was estimated at from 25,000 to 30.000, Many of the trades had “floats,”” on which members of the craft pursued thelr daily occupations. The carpenters led the demonstration with 6.000 men. + At tha mass meeting in Uron Square, New York, on the evening of | the 1st, not more than 2000 people were atl the speaker’s stand at one Lime, In the procession that preceded the meet- ing there were 5 0) men. The threaten:d strike on all rail- roads at P.ttsburg 1s over, the Execu- tive Council of the Federation of Rail- roads baving ordered the men to con- tinue work at the rates offered by the different companies. The carpenters in Boston went on strike on the 1st for the eight-hour day. About 1800 men are out. About 100 firms, not members of the Master Bu'lders’ Association, have granted their men eight hours. About 2000 carpenters in Deiroit, Michigan, went out on the 1st, Itis thought the contractors will grant Lhe demazuds, and that work will be gene- rally resumed in a short time. Ouly one firm of boss carpenters in Lancaster, Pa., on the 1st, refused the demands of the men. The hod carriers received an advance in wages and did pot strike, All the carpenters in Knoxviile, Te: - nesses, aie out for eight hours work and ten hours pay. The sash-door and blind makers 'n 11 factories in Rochester, New York, have struck for nine hours, without re- luced pay. The master carpenters i Massachusetts, have all signed an agreement granting nine hours as a day’s work at the old pay of $15 per week, The carpenters in Omaha, Nebraska, have decided to await the issue of the strike in Chicage. There is a strike among the wood garvers In Grand Rapids, Michigan, for nine hours, At Johopsto »n, Pa.,on the lst, the parpenters, bricklayers and stone ma- sons went out for nine hours and an increase In wages, The impending strike among the members of the Farmers’ Union, In New York, has been averted, the bosses )aving agreed to the terms of the men shat eight hours constitute a day's work. All the journéymen stone cutters in Montpelier, Vermont. struck on the st. A dpsagreement between Lhe manufactur: rs and tool sharpeners in prices caused the strike, The granite cutters in Millstone Point, Niantic, Groton and New Lon don, Connecticut, have gone on strike for the nine-hour day with no reduction in pay. Bricklayers stone cutters and masons in Ottawa are out for nine hours’ work and ten hours’ pay. All the boss masons in Taunton, Massachuseits, but ope have granted the nine-hour day, Most of the boss bakers in Buffalo, New York, ou the 1st granted the de. mands of the men for a ten-hour day. There will be no strike, The reduction in the wages of the smployes of the United States Express Company went into effect on the 1st, Bench moulders in Cincinnatl have asked for a 10 per cent. advance in wages, The German printers in IDittsburg have demanded the adoption of the sight-hour day, and ask an increase of sne cent per 1000 letters for colnposi- sion. The striking trammers and day la. porers of the Atlantic Mine, at Han cock, Michigan, resumed work on the morning of the 1st at an advance of $5 per month In wages, The miners in Clay county, Indiana, except at Clay City, on the 1st decided pot to return to work until a wage scale is agreed upon, At Scottdale, Jeanette, Greensburg and Braddock, Pa. building operations bave heen susp-nded b-cause of astrike of the earpeuters and joiners for eight hours or wn Increase in wages. The stone cutters in Norwich, Con- n Haverhill, strike. saw mills in Ottawa, Ontarto, which employ 1500 men, will begin operations on the 5th, Most of the Unlon earpenters in Philadelphia, Pa.. numbering about 5000, went on strike on the 1st, for an advance in wages from 30 to 35 cents per hour. It was reported that during the day 40 master carpenters, employ- ing 800 or $00 men, had granted the advance, About 125 tin-roofers, em- ployed by 15 or more firms, on the lst struck for an advance from $275 to $3 per day. Nearly 100 hod carriers went on strike in Camden, on the 1st, because they were refused an advance in their wages of 20 cents per day—from §2 50 to $2 70. A despatch from Astoria, Oregon, says that three men were killed and two wounded in the recent fight be- tween union and nop-union fishermen on the Columbia river. A party of union men sailed along the river, and wherever they found non union fisher- men they either fired upon them or drove them away by cutting their nets, The nov-unisn wen finally fired into a boat containing four union men, kill- ng two of them, The body of a (iieek, who Is sapposed to have been kided In the encounter, was taken to Astoria the evening of the J0th ult, The non-union fishermen are arming and more trouble is feared. ——— ——— lst GUNG HEESS.==+irg: Sasgion SENAIN. In the U. 8 Senate bn the 28th ult | adiscussion of the Mississippi levee system took place in connection with the presentation of amemorial, Fioally the Vice President ended the dlscus- sion by saying there was no question be- fore the Senate, Mr, Blackibarn inp- troduced a bill for the admission of Arizona. The land Forfeiture bill was discussed, Senate bill to incorpo- rate the Society of the Sons of the American Revo:ution was considered, No quorum voted on ils passage and the Senate adjourned, In the U. S Senate, on the 20th ult,, a concurrent res lution was agreed to, recalling the Oklahoma bill from the President to correct an error, A House amendment to the concurrent resolution relating irrigation of lands in the Rio Grande Valley was agreed to. The Land Forfeiture bill was considered, and, no quoranm voting on a motion to table one of the amendments, Mr, Sherman gave no- tice that hereafter, when a quorum was present and not voting, he would demand that iL be counted by the air. The Land Furfeiture bill was passed without a division. Mr. Me- Pherson Introduced a bill granting a pension of $2500 4 year to the widow General M:Cielian, The Customs Administrative bill was considered, pending which the Senste adjourned, to . of ln the U. 8S, Senate, on the 30th ult,, the Customs Administrative bill was discussed, A resolution was agreed to, correciing the Uklahoma bIL After an executive session the Sepale ad- Journed, In the U. 8. Senate, on the 1st, Mr, Ingalls, by request of the Wage-work- ers’ Alliance, introduced a bill to abolish local taxation, Mr. Vest, from the Select Committees on Meat Pro- ducts, reported four measures: A cone current resolution askiug the Presi. dent to negotiate for the repeal of the existing cattle quarantine resulations of Great Brain; a bill providing ior a pational inspection of cattie for expor- tation; a bill to prevent monopoly in regard to the storage capacity of steam ships carrying caitle to fore'gn coun- tries, and a bill to prevent discrimina- tion by railroads in the earrying of cattle to the East, He expressed the hope that the bills would be taken up and considered at an early date. After an executive session the Senate ad. journed. HOUSE, Io the House, on the 28th ult, the President's ve.o of tha Ogden bill was presented, The Legislative Appro- priation bill was passed. Pending con- sideration of District of Columbia busi. ness, the House adjourned. In the House, on the 20th ult, an amendment to the Senate concurrent resolution concerning negotiations with Mexico for the irrigation of the Ri) Grande Valley was adopted, requesting the President to include in the negotia- tions all other subjects of Interest, which may be deemed to affect the present and prospective relations of the two Governments, A Lill was passed increasing to $100 a month the pension of the widow of Bear Admiral Nichol sou, The Post-oflice Appropriation nl: was reported and placed on the calendar. No quornm being present, an adjouruinent was agreed LQ In the House, on the 30th ull, the Worsted Classification bill was passed ~yeue, 138; pays, Othe Npeaker counting a quoruw. The Service Pen- sien bil was discussed, and, finally, the Morrill Lill was adopted as a sul - stitute, and the Sepate bill thus amended was passed —107 to 70. Ad- journed, In the Flouse, on the 1st, Mr. Me- Kinley, from the Committee on Rules, reported a resolution for the consider. ation of bills from the Judiciary Com- mittee in the following order: Senate bill relating to trusts, House Copy- te-pouse to orders from the union to which they belong. They have no dis- pute with their employers, 8 x'y wood carvers at the ear works tu Dayton, Ohio, went on strike oh the 1st. because the foreman employed good wen whether they belonged to the Union or not. The plumbers in Minueapolls have gone out for mine hours a day, with the #xoeption of Saturday, when they want eight houre, The puinters, plumbers, bricklayers and masons in Youngstown, Ondo, were granted an advance in wages on the 1st, and Steroytne will work but nine hours a day. The brewers and bakers in Toledo, Ohio, have had their working hours re- duced to ten daily. such other bills as the Committees may call up. The resolutions was adopted, and the Anti-Trusi bill taken up and passed with a slight amendment. The International Copyright bill was cone sidered, pending which the House ad- journed * - «Thee slight sarthquake tremors were felt at Saratoga, New York, on the evening of the 27th ult. Five young men, members of the “rag gang,” in New York, are under arrest on charges of Lighway robbery and a murderous assault on a polices man. It required a squad of police to make the arrest, At a convict eamp, gear Black Jack, Texas, on the 20th ita four ics made & beak. In A were upon Hens. One vas killad and one fatally “Al Jabor organizations in Bir. aiogham. Albers, took part in a wounded. The other two esewped, & | — Representatives of nine of the seventeen nations participating in the International American Conference on the morning of the 28th ult,, signed the agreement drawn up by the Con- ference for the settlement by arbitra- tion of differences and disputes between them. ~—A boat on the lake at Newport, Vermont, was capsized on the evening of the 20th ult, and Edward Foss, Edward Green and Joseph Robitaille were drowned, ‘The boat was capsized in the attempt of two of the men to change positions. ~ A furnace at the Edgar Thomson Steel Works,at Braddock, Pa, exploded on the morning of the 20th ult. Four Hungarians were burned, Jacob Khronl, it is feared, fatally, The cause of the accident Is not known, ~A telegram from Paris, Texas says that the Red river is higher than it has been for 40 years, There was 31 feet of water at Arthur City on the morn- ing of the 231 ult. The occupants of houses had wo move oul in boats, — Anton Foraker was chopping a tall pine tree at Marengo, Wisconsin, on the 29th ult,, and as 1t toppled and fell to the earth, his two little boys ran directly under it and were crushed to death. — Adolphus Roberloy and Frank Wells, aged 17 years each, were drowned at Schenectady, New York, on the 20th ult, They were returning from a fishing trip and thelr boat cap- sized, —A Swedish woman who arrived at Boston on the steamer Cephalonia on the 28th ult , was found to be ill, and the attending physicians think she is suffering from leprosy. — Edward English, a brakeman, fell from the cars at Negaunee, Michigan, on the 30th uit, and was kiiled, — A telegram from Davenport, Jowa, says that damage to the amount of §30,000 or more has been done LW prop- erty at the Rock Island arsenal by an overflow, A new water power dam is being butlt, and the high water made its way around the upper bulkhead. —Iin the Yolice Court of Memphis, Tennessee, on the 30th ult, “Jake” Ackerman, “*a well-known thief, high- wayman and train robber,’ was shot and mortally wounded by his wife, who stood beside him, She suddenly drew & revolver and shot him in the abdomen, and then fred two more shots as he lay writhing on the floor. Mrs, Ackerman, It Is asserted, ‘has been for years an inmate of various bagnios throughout the country, bul always a staunch friend of ber hus band, notwithstanding his cruel tres. ment of ber,’ She says she killed him “because she was afraid he would mur- der her if he got out.” ~At Harveysburg, Ohio, on Lhe evening of the 28th ult., Berry Ward, aged years, was shob dead by his stepson, Danie! Washington, aged 13, Ward was bealing his wife at the time, im «0 i is chard Soitke, a farmer Rochester, New York, shot and kil ed his 3-year-old boy on the evening of the 29th ult,, and then commiited sul cide. Domestic and financial troubles caused the act, Frederick Sehmidi, a leading citizen in Eau Claire, Wiscon- sin, died on the 30th wil, from injur- jes inflicted by two tramps who Leal and kicked him, The tramps are In jail, ~The public debt statement issued on the 1st shows that the reduction of the pabiic debt during the month of April amounted to $7,630,901. Total cash In the Treasury $632,254 790, —Enginesr Foulta, at the Skeleton Cracker Factory In Fort Wayne, Indi ana, on the 1st, left the even open without an attendant while he want to dinner. The natural gas went out, but continued tn flow and soon filled the building. When he returned and attempted to light it an explosion fol- lowed. The plate glass front was blown to atoms and windows in all parts of the building were demolished. Foults was badly burned about the face and body and is very low. — A freight train was wrecked at Castroville station, Cahfornia, on the 30th ult., by a misplaced switch. Fire- man Uurmoins was killed, and J. H. Ross and W. W, Craig were badly in- jured, — Two men went Into the Jewelry store of Michie Bros,, in Clacinnati, o~ the lst, and while the salesman turned away to get more diamonds to show them, they dashed out of the door with a tray containing stones val. ued at $50), and escapad, An accom: piles, who grasped the door knob and tried to imprison those in the store, was arrested. ~Whils driving across the Lehigh Valley Railroad tracks, pear Linden station, New York, George Webber and his wife Minnie were struck by a passenger train, Mr. Webber was in- swantly Killed, and his wife suffered a fracture of the skull and will probably die. Webber isu farmer 65 years of age. A Monster Tombstone. The largest tombstone in the world {monuments erected to distinguished persons excepted) is, probably, thal of the late Henry Sear st, of Upson County, Ga. Scarlett was very wealthy and noted for his misanthropic tenden- cies, He led the life of a hermit, Why, no one knew, but it was stated that hie wasa victim of disappointed love, Several years before his death, which occurr d im the spring of 1888, he selectad a monster bowlder, a miniature moun tain of granite, 100x250 feet in di- mensions, for a tombstone, and had appropriately lettered by a marble cut- ter. A cave fitted up as a roomy tomb wus excavated under the huge bowlider, Searfett himself superintending the work, After his death, neighbors, re- Jations and friends carried the remains and deposited them under the rock ace to-day the mortal parts of H Scar. leit repose under the most tombstone in the world, CHERISH YOUR IDEALS. Genuine Intellectual Life Must Always Be a Personal Matter. Iu every community there are to be found men and women who are steadily moving ahead of the rank and file of their neighbors and companions; every year reveals a wider separation and stamps them with a more aspiring per- sonality. ¥ven the most unobservant begins to feel that there is something unusual about these marked men and women; something which defines {hem from the mass of commonplace sbout them. There are men and women who are born to rise by the possession of some spiritual quality, some aspiration which by its own impulse lifts them out of their surroundings and sets them in a new world of thought and feeling. It is not necessary that one should be born amid the surroundings of refine ment and culture in order to attain the very best results which these things have to give, It is an advantage to be thus born, and to absorb in childhood, by the unconscious process of early education, much that must otherwise be learned; but this is an advantage which sa good many strong natures have missed without apparently suffering any real loss. The making of an intel lectual life is always a personal matter. 1 lie within the reach of almost every one 11 that come from these attainments this country who gets a clear vision of what he wants, and willing to work for it. in There is something very noble and inspiring in the spectacle, presented in f or girl of punmunilies, American o« a boy who, by some finer jnality of character or mind, is steadily ving away from commonplace lif and achieving that personal distinction which belongs to those who lis panionship with the finer mi world. Such an aspiration ognized by those 1 18 who stand nearest p most; is often mism nted as an ambition better than one's lows or one but those can well have the real afford to family: who quality iy al kind genuine om this A wise 1 terpretation, pever other mn poble and i, even when 1t draws ope away fron he natural compasionsiups of lle separates one, il the sud Hp. live in sympathy or in tants compan: barn t HER, UAL In No a con ectoal need ife I bere 3 5 sy ork he hig HAN Or woman 3 i Roe I BIWAYE Ah ez of livin y take iL £3 ¢ * % iy path tot JET TrUng oa w hi are ish your aspirations sud live by them A } are your read guides; they embod the divine ileal of vour life H+ { nion, WHAT IS REALITY? A Simple Thought Which, theless, Is Not Easily Explained. Every body knows what reality is, or to vary that phrase when things acting, what actuality is. Of al i . say of percephions, it is perhaps the diffienlt to explain or even express does not admi: of analysis ; 18 has n there i8 no geuus or which fo place it Species The only way ol ample of it. Wo look ou the wall of to be real. We see that bird flying. and kpow it to be an actuality. We are conscious of ourselves, as in pain, and are sure that the pain has an exist ence. They may be realities which we can not discover ; we not know whether the planet Jupiter is inhabit. ed. But there are things which we do know and know to be real. It is thu we know body as it is presented to us, with its essential quaitities as extended and exercising power or properties Thus in self-conscionsness we know self in its varions exercises, say as fecling, knowing, willing, It is thus that we know the manifestations of body, thus that we know the manifestation ol self, as dasire, affection, resolution, All these are real, as is also all that we ol» serve and what we desire from our ole servations by a logical process. The qualities which we perceive in our- selves, specially such as love, ben.vo. lence, justice, are actualities. All these differ from imaginations, say a fairy, & ghost, a mermaid ; aad commonly the two can be dustinguished. We call the one real, the other unreal. We can ex- plain or even understand the facts of which we are conscious without calling in two cognitive powers, the external and the internal senses. These ean not be resolved into any thing else, say, as is often attempted into sensations, im- pressions, ideas ; for none of these con- tain cognition and ean not, therefere give us knowledges by accumulation or combination. Nor can knowledge be drawn from them by reasoning; for not being in the premises they cannot reach it, except by falling into the acknowl. edged fallacy of having more in the con- clusion than in the premises In soquiring a knowledge of internal sensations are involved; feel. ings in the organism by all the senses; but these not having knowledge ern not give it to us logically. Tn looking at the table before us there is the exercise of coats and humot do I al” db — | aud of the optie nerve; but we do not notice these in vision; their existepoe has been made known to us by the phy- the hammer, the stirrup and auditory of giving an exact field to our percept ions, but are no part of the rer | y rectly perceived by us. With ly transparent glass upon the tree with. out noticing the medium. I believe we ean determine precisely what know intuitively and directly by various senses. Theeye gives ored surface, nothing more. we " In smell we have an affection of the nost: ils, affection of the palate, er, or feeling, an affection of the from which the to be undulations. afferent nerve comes. have resistance offered implying power. which are noticed by self-consciousness; legitimate we other knowledges, also real, as derived from processes rear what is real. By spontaneouscognition, we know realit es withont us and within is, | scious self exists, that his body exists, drinks, in the staff and it. what he eats and on in the Of t whan 1 y which he le SIA, which he strikes and decisive, is self First, it We know the object at once on 1o In he convi n Bev. Dr. Ju: wdent, nes MceC N. ¥V. 1 fe pre - —— OTHER WORLDS THAN OURS. A Wont Hoespec fe rful D scovery Made the . ting Star Sirius. By means of i wonderful discovery pect Asts i that this star wae Ce h Hg Mrius ng EpAce, as Hy ir 11 wa the heavens, VOaArs a space iinmeter of the n tian twenty mal md. Of course, by actual capable of being de auld be that {bo thie Dine { the only motion Cclod w which was sgn; § Sirius appears fo us to m | heave ns, he may really be traveling in direction, No i pace d to be able | Was approsciing a lang either toward or would ever have ex- fo { from us one tell whether a star to or receding from us, yet even this insolvable i probe m has of late years been accom by the Dr. Huggins, our greatest authority on this seemingly plished spectroscope, | subject, having indented certain lines 1 { in the spectrum of Sirius those of that Aas wwdrogen, found on comparison licate that the star was recoding It has been { this recession, combined wit} tion of gives as the actual movems i As 10 In us, estim im twenty miles pot id, ut of Sirius | in space a speed of about thirty-three miles per second These, then, hie! items of information about Sirius i present within onr here seems to be no reason knowledge. to doubt { that, in common with other suns, he has Lis system of planets ciréling round him after the manner of our own sun, and what a system! Vast as ours ap- poars, it is dwarfted into insignifi- pance compared with a system whose ruling orb is 5000 times larger than that which does duty for us. There wemnes, also, no reason to doubt that these planels are intended to be the abode of Jife; it may be that at the pres ent moment none of them present any signa of life, but 1 think we may safely infer without improbability that each one of these worlds has a destined period in its development during which life, similar to that which now prevails on our planet, would be in existence Wht a world such a one would be in size, perhaps, not inferior to that of our sun, himself a million times larger than our earth; and it may be that as this Sieizn world is so vastly saperior to ours 1n size, its inhabitants wouid be on a scale in proportion to its dimen- sions, a race of beings of such intellect and civilization compared with whom we are but savages. — Chambers Jowr nal. ~The modern military rifle has its peculiarities, Ita calibre is small, but its killing power Is great, and it is more effective at long range than at close quarters, An English railway company has set apart a special fund from which t) re. ward sols of bravery on the part of its employes, Tue news that the Cherokees of Ine dian Territory desire Lhe establishment of a United States court in their midst, at Vinita, should bo encouraging to hose who have faith in the Red Man's development, There will be lander : - | THERE IS NO #LACE LIKE HOME. The Spelis of Home. *Homs of our childhood! how affection <i And hovers roend thes =ith her seraph wings! | Ph, happiest they, whose early love unchanged, Hopes undissolved aud friendships tranged, Tired of their wanderings, still shall deigu to 8 | Love, hope and friendship centring all in thee yr es 141 Upon this subject there is lillie di- | versity of opinion. and we have citations | innumerable, gleaned from the words uf the many who have mude it their theme. Bays one: “It matters little where our phy falls, since our planet 1s but for a century at the utmost, our inn | for the night; yet the heart loves to as. geogra- our post | sociate itself with some spol, ancestral | and dear, and call it home.” This presumably refers Lo Cin never Le become Lue the $1 our early heme, whose associations we { effaced, even though denizens of another soll-—as eri | grant's 18 ever *‘the Fatherland. Alas, how unappreciated until | rated from us by land and seal ! Holmes { traveller's jot sepa pathetically deplores Lhe when, in his own terse | style, he asserts: **The world may have | a million roosts for a man, but only ons | nest,” It was less ‘‘the ancestral | its associations which Charles Dickens | #0 regarde', as the present, living roof- i tree, or would he have writien: spot.’” and “The man of high descent ¢ halls and lands of his iu trovhies of his birth and Le holds, which strangers siru ueh {iver goid or precious Blot | no property but in the alle wn heart, and when they { floors and walls, de n has his love 1 his ’ ma Ane rude hut place.’ Other writers of Dickens bt ave sentiment ure—penned rather to popularity than as their own bell We may feel le suburban « {we have | ( | sweeps the free f sliare and un i while we love our poor ompe led Ly stern necessity here, Let Mrs, uel Sherwood’s re us not omit ing marks, breatl own thought! EHO CTNIONS, “Home, is 1" alever y wherever and Ww be, sacred. Unhapg it may may be, poor it may { but we do not wish ers to speak fit. Very few of us wish | up, although it may be our sad busicess It is an inclosure for wi sacri | It is the one education which has fully for good or ev.l What our fathers taught us, ' mothers sang to us, we shall never for- i gel. Aa) | \ be, sordid it De, g Owl it broken {lo leave it, {we are willing to make vast eS, { Juenced us power what our a A Pocket Typewriter. A pocket typewriter iz shortly to be sffered to the British public. Type | writing instruments now in the market | are of considerable size and weight lat least a person could scarcely think | of carrying one about with him regular- The one under notice is not only | inexpensive, but it is so small that it | may be carried 1n the waistcoat pocket. | The retail price will be under ten shal | lings; it measures 34 inches by 3 inches { and weighs about four ounces. Thoagh | 30 small it is not a mere toy. The 1n- | ventor claims for it that it will torn out | better work and be found more useful {than larger and more expensive ma. { chines, | With reference to its construction, {all that can be seen when superficially {examined is a disk about the the face of a gentleman's waleh, in | which the type is fixed, and one or two small rollers, It will priot a Line from an inth to a yard long, and paper of any size or thickness can be used. {Any one can use it, though, asin the | case of other instruments, practic required to enable the operator to write quickly. Another advantage: is that by means of duplicate types the writer can be used for different languages. Patonis have been obtain: od for most of the conutries in Fo- rope as well as for the United States Canada and Australia. — Monee al Star, ly. sige of is ROI Chance a Great Factor in Life, Exper ence shows (hat chance, on what we call chance, is the most active agent In choosing a profession, thouzh this should not prevent the young mau from faithfully considering what he is going to do, In very many cases he will find that he hms mistaken his ealiing; but he has not for this reason necessal- tly wasted hus time in seeking what proved not to be available to him. He has been adding to his knowledge aud his experience enables him to act more wisely in the future. He has devel. oped lils powers to a greater extent, and thus discovered what he Is fit for. Ou | thing almost always leads to another if We candidate has stability and “push.”
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers