fef lTT ESara LflJ"' " --,, -.,,-,T, n " . Ha Q , '- ."& J1 ' :lHILADfepiilA, fat)rA'Y 3TOYx A- 1$T' ' '' .y ftj EVENING PUBLIC x LEEiQEB asr :.- m ; (. v WEAT OF SCHEHERAZADE PALES TO INSIGNIFICANCY BESIDE 100,000 SPEECHES OF DR. E. I. CATTELIl Pcfiredr 'isfiraJ I Sii m m i 1 i m m II If Ms $ ififih I I p; Bft 4 1 Retiring City Statistician Estimates He . Has Uttered ,25,000,000,000,000,000 Words Since 1889 -His Published Works Would Fill Library Twice '"' Size of That of Dumas Perc and His Collaborators DECLARES HE IS NOT 100 B Y SEVERAL YEARS AND IS S TIL L EN JO ING L IFE His Plump and Rubicund Features, Flowing White Lecks and Mhite Mustache, an Chester A. Arthur, Make an Indelible Impression en the Vision L i & A MAX who hits made mere .speeches than theie are blades of prnss in I " Independence Square. Whee spoken words, if penned all at once, would exhaust the world's Ink supply. Whose published works, if collected, would fill a library twice the si.e of that created by Dumas pere and his collaborators. Who has shaken hands with mere persons than are represented in the gross birth rate for the City of Natal for the last seventy-six years. Whose audiences, if armed, trained and pieperly equipped, could con quer the rest of the weild within six months. Whose ranee of knowledge ex tends from the habits of the lbe Africanu" te summaries of imports Itnd experts in the City of Metz during the first six months of 1S9T. Who, needing no introduction whatever, has been introduced eftcner than any ether man Such is Dr. Edward James Cattell, who leaves the office of City Statis tician, which in the last twenty-two years has offered such exercie te his vtdem and natural Rifts a te make him the most widely known man in Philadelphia and one of the most widely known in the United States. These are no exasperation. What the Chamber of Commerce has ac complished in engapinp Or. Cattell as "Field Manaper of the Conven tions and Exhibitions Bureau" has been te obtain the services of one whose name, face and catholic ideology aie known te almost every man, woman and child in the city nd te millions outside the preatest publicity coup of a publicity era. Of no ether Philadelphian can this much be said. The preatest doctors and lawyers, and rather meie e the jrieatest artists, enpinees and pro fessors are mere symbols te most of u. And even the Mayers, the Congressmen and tne penucui bosses must remain hardly meie than abstractions te the euik ei men. Dr. Cattell Remembered by Almest Everybody Dr. fnttell. mi Uie contrary. i n vi tally intimnle image l" '" 1(,""'- "f almost everybody Hl plump nml mlu cum! fcntiies. In- flowing white '" k nml hi great w"'" mi'-nich". !"1 Chester A Arthur, milk"1 .1 steadv im press en th" viM-m Hi di-tlnct "". giving feilh curimi- cimipleutlc- "f fncis and figures ha- t nil " the Imagination Hi age and hi- lightlv arcbnii tlre give hi'" something of "background." M' -''"- n sort of In termedin rv between the pn-t and pres ent nml It 1 nlwnv a matter of tniei . esting niv-tcry a- le whether lie is a old n he leek-. Dr. Cattell will -In from in in genileu a question as the date of his birth. In making tin- jel,i that lit- i Mill n bachelor nml that such n fu.'t mnv he used iijtnin-t him He will ''' fess that lie l- "several fnr- less than n hundred." or putting another waj. "T was horn uitliin .1 milt iunn' or wlirre the liit hiti child in I'hllailfl phln wns bem. lint -einenhat miIisi' iitenth ' A -ten cei-- ilint In- was dlxtj-fivc la-t I) niber. but If n It hs'net hlmlcri'd an intimali- acqiiiim tsnceshlp with evi-iils much eldfr I linn thnt Thn hii thnlii 0 leffiieil '" n rrent and I'lne strf t: a local tj of wn different chnracterNtii's llft. .eem or ninety jenrs age Ili laniilj en both lililen ci e leunt'-d tiinens the ht-t pen .pie of 1 lint lime Mi- mother- faiiuU fand had an inrlninte liand In the earlj development of Philadelphia, had In deed, a- I r Cattell sitjs. sailed their own -hip- tip 1 lie Delaware " His fatliei bem In Sew .len-ev a a biiHlnes, man of preinlneiice and a ' brother of I'nlted States Senater ("at ttll. TliroiiKlient his life Dr Cattell linx maintained a mere ihan u-nul de votion t" liU mother and theie Is i-el. dem a (onveriitlen in v lilcli he docs net miiUe some mention of her She bus been dead for tlurtj-Mx .ware Tt wns cluetlj thiengli her inllnence and tralnitiB thai he became a speaker speaker Mrs. Cattell Believed in Distinct Enunciation "Hhe believed in spenklm;," leceurif Dr. Cattell. "and in tub thliut. as dlhllnet eniinciiitlen. lnllelen. tern mmluliitlen and till the line-sc of spin no often neglected in thl- ttiimtry Krem the lime 1 besan 10 talk which I Mihpcct wn- timiMiiillv eatl she unllt ine te be I'lltefnl of them. She nrtitiniKPn mr and trnineu me in nink- nr recitations' acinic Miiimay senoei atlierinits and children- tnterinln nientH. "One time I was asked le make 11 1 mltatleu hefeie a little concrcealien lit New .lerhey. then cnllnl Ilethel CMiurcli. My mother drilled me care fully In (lie piece, n little hemil en I fillinlsin w lib It ended ; a love that had been implanted very earlj and ha- ever since been one of the ctrnt Ideal- of hi- life. "Outwitidlj," he -ajs. "It was 'a et) dlfTeicnt elt tliellgh I like te be lieve that Its spirit was- the -nine a a new a belief In doing inther than njltiK: however odd thnt imi.v sound, mink' from me. l'he Ml eft enrs at night entiled eiil.v one lamp mid Ihl- wa- nlwn.vs smoking. The -lyhl nml smell of these smoking lamps, however, cairied -nine pungent suKe-tlen nml I believe Hint 11 was untitling them, 11 - I did vet') often, that I lent tied te smoke. "In winter these -licet cai- were vcrv Intere-tlng. It was a game et fteee-ent. Twe row- of half ft oxen iltipcns. calf tleep in vile -melllng stiaw, fought le pri'-ei ve sanity dining the ritlier mere tlinii nil hour's ride from We-t Pliilndelphiii te the 1 enter of town, riiMpienth Iheie were u inn n v iim thlttv pnssetigcis in one int. a great imposition en the two liorcc liercc vvbii were ecpecled te pull them, 'l'he ueeessitj f,ir passenger- te get out lit steep grade- and help push the car occurred net at all rntelv I icineiu her once having te get out of n Mniket stteet cat Just beyond whele the Cieft A. Allen facteiy is new. mid helping te push the car all the wav ever the Schujlkill bridge Thl- sort of thing was mere upt te happen when there wn- snow or slu-h te one'- ankles, "The sticets, wheiever Iheie bad been illiv pretense t,f pmlng lliem. weie of cobble- and a tilal le the tle-h and soul. l'he drinking walei. mile privately oiled nml tilteied In the households, a- the 1 olei of coffee. 1 lie body of 11 pei son getting into a balhtub a- ipilik Iv let 10 sht. The gas -ulilih, by 1 the wnv. cost l a theiis.ttiil cubic feel had te be hunted for with a match, and the liht it gave was se unier taiu and luadeiiuiite that nearly every bed went te bed vcrv eailv "Still, sickness was lelativel.v mht,i 1 1 was, mi the whole, 11 haiipv and pro--peien- town Alens the Delaware wa ll line of gieat 1 limiting house- and ethies fi em which were controlled the' near Thirteenth, where Mich lecturers 11- Cliatle- Dlikeiis. Henry Ward Iteeeber. Iliet llatte. Itnlpli Walde Em Em erneii. MaA Twain. William l.lejd (iiirrisen, William Mnkepvnee Tluuk cin.v and O-car Wilde could be heard, the -lock theatres te which Daven port. MiCulleiigh, the Diew-. Vanity Davtnpeit, llaiiv llecket and later en Snlvinl. Man-Held. .Iiilln Miulnwe. El len Terry. Irving and Sheridan, whose l.nuls- XI was .-aid te be belter than Irving'-, came le pla.v the lead-. "It was a pietty time for 11 .voting iiiiin te grew tip In. The great thing lit leurt-hip- wn- for the j tiling man le take hi- lady dilvlng. and, 011 Sunday afternoon Iheie wa alwa.vs an nil nil bieken line of earrlnge- ftein town out te the (iieen sheet cntiaucc te the Pink. Almest nuy young man in Phil adelphia could dtlvc 11 heise or a pair with one hand. Se 11 would etiu that he wa- at greater vantage than the veutig motorist of today, who usually ionic te grief when the.v tty driving one-handed. "Tlieie vcie many ilanie-. frr the jellllg people eigailied themselves into 'seiliilx.' or. as the.v weie sniintiines called, 'senium. ' after a sort of inlll inlll Ien in which evetj pair bj tuin Inlro Inlre dtii ed a new ligiite. Ihu liitieduciug nil of the ilanie then known, llig rooms weie l lit 11 the fashion nml in the purlin of almost any of the larger house- liftv person could dance togelher comfeitahlv "The 'gel mans' vvete given at the hollies of the young ladles who belonged te the club- ami often the favor given at these cntcl tiiliiliients were vcrv ex pulsive The fashion was te have the favor- plated upon a table, from which the Indies would select for l he men and tin men for the Indies Theie wn- nlse 11 sin ics-inn of brilliant tempt ions, dinner pai tie-, miiMcitlf- and mi 011, nml dur ing the season tunny young men were in full ill ess everv evening. 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' vaaaaaaaaaa3Mnt&i.''K7rs& i tps&fi-jsejem '.''&. aaaaaaaaaaaaacaanQai i "aaLaaaaBwwi.; &&? nSssaafcw --' .BaaaaaaaB?jJB?f -;:--x v--5 &&mmm&&m$m. 'J-,'-. BBBBBBBBBaasBni i tiiea i would n..v,.r mmm''j!mm.jm' WBBmmmm. Mmmymmmm f p-n - "bbbhbbbhi i I bHHUkLh mBSb WSBfk'Ac 111 i T BBBLBlHHHKiHPsl Htem$nwttti0M RMmttMWi ;: HiP ' aBBBaHalBBBiHBWillata KJsbSt JM isllSSi . - M X aHBaWHO aaBBBBBBBBBalBaiaBBBBBB4BBBansVB& 4 SM- -V?IiaBaWPf4aB351 3&MK&&SkV , 5 mMMtmmrFm U V aBBBBBBBBBBBBHHHBVaBBaHBBmBBpBHKBBB Jb ViTTlBBPfyiaalBBBta 1ix'Z?rhsW.'MZSrh,y jA taHaHKBBVMaBfXM ar A l wBllURBmtiWimM'yfBM Jml WMm v!iaJaMiMiWl KayK7 V . , f l I i)r- Cattell bclicvcH Keepinp himself BBbVbBBbBiSMRSPBM 4MMMMBBKMIWMM,Mrv'y t,, ;, bowler IU ! BBBBBBBBBBBHBBBBBBBI?r: vaB ' IBaBBBBHBBMULr41 ' ' '" eiljlllli lien Willi u ItOii: coal vBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBBJBDy9?'MBH , 'BBBBBBBBBBBBWm f jl I ...,. u'' MbZTl4IS'''v' 1bbbbVW the I npllel VBBBBBbWbU!: SiBHyBu.. '7B "lli'-ll hills wen. lh.. vm.,,,,1 ,.f ),,. 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'"QHH Z,..i'W l.'"'...'.'' mhS.1 ' lawvers. gieat Jeuriiallsth, gieat nd- I HMV' , '"' 'WWHBera f "'M'' Often he had te take her melher , entl-th and gnat tinaueieis here thnn I fBfalalalaBBfalalafalalalJt , ' ' tfBHBJKilf I or some ether t Impereii in the hargulii. I "This elt, of iiiv cLdhoed was net EHBL "$ -Bf SV ,ZlVnX ,n?X ' iiievliicial nor wanting in iiiiiuaiiitnnte- I'Hn. ,- 'i-V'v . ,.)HflBC c... . ,. 1..1.. ....... 1. .. ... 1 A . Ij.l.ll' ll f I lBBBBBBBlBBBBBBBBBEBBBt ' ' v K"f'Y ' V iVa raiAnIBBBBBlP JBBT I "I II " 'Ml nt (ir-t( 1 II ' llf IIM II II NIL I 10 uitn fln I in ar h 1 u iinriiL'( of bbBbbbb1b-u. X ,,,:' ,n mtAMfrJMOe.Jf .. "Ml , uhure was , a. leas, as high as fMHk WMHMi WW "f fimr' e' m ?Zl WaS - arlH 'I he bigger ImilseH were tilled BBBBBBb1VbHbTv ii1r . ,i.ei.e one liml h or "tv'r'Amv of Music. HUP Willi mmry a.ji hi.h tame such Miis-rs a .Icnnv WmMMmM&Sfbi MBSf ." Vi'.' ..t ....:.. ,i ' v "'""""" sn ami Aileliiiu 'M&iiaiBL--,'X However nearly every betlv innlei . In the ienise of ii s i i .......i ,i.i i il-ll'IMl Mil' I in i"'l llll". II llll llllll'll bitter for Philip te pay Ms ,.h inav n,.. ... v, .v slightly drunk than for Philip net le pay oft them was te pay them at u watched veiy cnicfullv tiny uml quietly saw yeiius man who failed bis social obligations te (hopped ft out the lists. "I '.don't knew what bus led te the dropping of thl- New Year's cus tom pet haps laigely, the overlnilitl everlnilitl gente in drink, t eupled with the gen eial icliixtit'iiii in maiinei- that came about the beginning of Ibis century. I think that the ictnllet tien et ll.e ifinietis Hiovvsteim that eecurictl one .New ear's eve had xiiuethlng te tle with leading up te it. 'Hit It wn netessjn-i te Mnpfeni coiners anil te the house heie we leiiienibi n neck i with weie her in at the street way by feet eweil calls. "Tin! sidewalks were coveted haul. gllMming ice, and I1 sevei.il m liens injuries I turn l ne.uiv hreke my ew liitlenlieuse Stiunre.'' ' Had te Quit Princeton Because Health Failed The young Cattell of this period wa- ter a time a student nl Prince Prince teii. I'ti'lde eve sight i (impelled him ti give itp, Vfter a pnitial nciipcia t leti he went te WiMilngten ami been me through bl urn le s liilliicncc privale secretin v in llenj.imin Helm ISilstew, who bei aii'e Secretaiy of the Ticismy under Piesidenl (itnnt. lie spent, lie sny, ii -jicit deal of his time lMen lllg te tlebate- III the Semite. I he hostess mm. The title is mi allusion te Hit en New- car si win, N f Ulalne concerning the raur raur te It that any deiei (iarlieltl When he at length ictitrned In Pliih. tlclphia te live, he found the city settled tiniler.il kind of pall nf pes-iiniMii, "Warwick, whose career his enemiw hail tui'ece'lril in Mnmiinc shin I In tlr" tiiidille, was just Reing out of office. All' of the great lenders had died or were tee old ami th' younger bleed wi- liefltmit t and iinder-cenlldent. Tiade wn-slip, liing iiwn.v and none seemed te have tlif Initiative te iccaptiiie it. The nM ( I i ue country was uey:innitig te rrguiii uv i conieiuptueiislv. I icsli from hureiie mid in touch next tiny s tariiage oemil down and iin tin mcieer Hi i eyes were swimming nml I fell thnt inv Utt'e panic w.u lueBking her hentr (ted knows hew. but the mini i.iiiie te me then, and I went thie'igh witii tin m taultlessh te the iiilji ' If I had dunked have spoken ngnm." Peer heal h made hi hey bneil inther tliffeient from that of me-t ethers. though he teiiiHmliPr- plliving "thtee ole cur ' .ind homing and slutting ever tin Schuylkill Sickness ftequenth illlei . ruptfd hi- sm,i,.s iind this he tompen tempen sated for by ilcwninng such varied lit erature a- hi fn'her's libran ,ind ethpr semces reiiltl alTert lie traveled exiensiveiy Mini snent iniirh tune in Washington with Ins uncle, the Senater He was allowed the privilege of the Heur and was spoken te n-unllv as Senater" hv the doei men ami incmbei- It was during thl phase of hi- life that the episode which left the most vivid of all hl lmpieieiis eceiirnd -tiie linpiaehment tilnl of I're-ident u tlrew .lohiiseu Kept Vete of Senators en Little Slate He Had "All through the trial 'he gnllerie were pinked with people." he rem but en the mottling of nil et all the iniiiiier- in .lust tietere the votes w ,. e inKeii I came lu with im iini le .mil -a I down at his side As the veling began I kept tellv en .i little -late t liar I bad Iteside the voice- of the Senators a they gave their vote of 'guilty' or 'net guilty' in low tone- or loud and the riislle of the ilerk's paper- there was nothing but dead silence "Theie 1- nothing tlui win ieciihe the tenseness of that place The voles swung evenly f i ti in one side te the ether nnd the result hung doubtful until the It'u'were rent bed and Senater Ke-s, of Kansas, lese and voted for acquittal. Thut morning he hud piunilsed his col leagues te vole 'gtilltv ' After that day Senater os never re'urneil te Kan sas At I hi end of bis term he s(.ttetl lu Texas mid some time afterward he .nine (Sovcriier of the Suite "There was great indignation against lilin nt thut time among the extreme Republicans Hut year nf terwiinl men who had themselves- voted te remove Jehnsen told me the.v were thankful te He for having done whnt he diil Te have turned Jehnsen out of enicp would have rendered the pres idency an unstable institution, would have reduted it h prestige uml power, nnd perhaps have paved the wav te the downfall of the constitution " Mere He Saw of Other Cities Better He Liked Phila. Hshingien wlih tiiaUc ones with I.urenenn ideas mid cnnilitinin. I where one i saw it i limit e In end this Mtuntinn. I I icali'eil that nothing mere wa- iieeileii than te make us nwaie of ourselves nml lour genuine stiength. mid I but persist- I cut pieachmeiits would go far toward iKcempllshiiig It. I ei it tir.st step I bellied te nrennlze the li'ink tleik- nnd wrote fur tliein a sciiiw of article ealleil ' 'Keiinil tlu iWeild Papers,' which gave fads con cen feiiiing hanking and trade lendltinns In I Kiirepe. nml this little oigiiiibntien vvbii h had only twenty members le begin with litis grown into the AiiieiUiin In litllte of Hankers, which lias new a ineinbeiship of .'(10,0110. "When I took the nfliie of CilJ Siatlstii ien I saw a chance te prove I what ever since inv return I hail hew teiilendlng; Hint the best we teiiltl de ! ler the city wn te yive publicity te the i.n..i t i 'i i. The caliber of Hint Senile. Dr. Cat- I ' .'". .'"... "" " . 'V' ,s."" '". " "l ,ll ,i,i,,i, i,.lt i ,, . . ,., , i '"ii "iimi'i v ere me none m nn in tell thinks, lias never been or is likely ,. i.n.,,,. k.h 1 .',i, 1.1. ,i..,i. imci: XTcr ; & S !?: mlZ nT,n,Al,,,",, ,,,,n " Mnr- --".'it arm, ' 7 nu! ,,,i,2n ,m. A.IU.,. agnin. vo,,n,f7'.her. irt"'.''''."' '? K.E ,..,,, ..ii ,,!, i : : l i .' v7 ,l"' i. "no i it, ue sn .en in 1.1 hiij uttell quit III- job and went abroad. .,.,.1 ii..,..,i .i t...i..'.t .1... .. In time he visited nil of tl... V. ,,.1 '' ..'".'.". ." .V"" ,l. V" 'V'fJ ceitntyies and made intimate slides ' . . 7 '."".. ' Bl KIVBn " of tnelr industtial and ce.,ne,-,.!l ,"":.'.' " S... ,'" "".... ... .... ........ .,m,.i,i;.., i.... ...,. , .ii i :"," 'i "its i wini cijuicii i ue iiinisr. problems, but most of this phase of Hi ti... v..i.p. .; i'....i,.i, . .ml wa spent in Knglnnd. He ,, ' .. . , .V ."' ... .V l f" ' "'.r". ' V ": ami made the tic-1 1 ,1,,,,, t ,i,n tP,i, ',i,, im.ii. ..IbIiiMi most of the eelehrltli'H! .i i u.i ..e'.i.. ,r ,,,,ii,i,.;.,,, 'ii ,. ... i . ,, . him-, i. inline ciiiiiiiiei ue 1 11111 Miiwim il politicians, ike t.lndstene. Mnrlnv ' 1.1..1.... . .... ... ... n ... ....,. IWnii,. .....i n..i 1 V" ."'. '" "" "" "i" e "-"",: " "... ill, I. I'll- 1 rill IW1H1 .in. ..lie iiviiiik.,1 nf Mil!. tV ife well iiitieiliiei piliilltlllice of Salisbui.v. Pnrnell inend : of journalists, like Stevenson nnd Henley : piiinleis, UK,. Whistler. Hesnttn uml II0I1111111 Until, mid of neurit all nf the gi cutest generation of Knglish let It r. "I met Sv inhume while everv one was still tulkiiig of Alnlantn'.' uml Meveiisen in the imly llqli ()f his fnttu. Stevenson Most Charming of Englishmen He Met "tlf all the individual- that I met in Duglaiid. 1 think that .Stevenson was the most dimming .1 tut wlinlesimif, not net vviiliMiinilins that lie ilicsseil as it sulttd 1111. wmuetl as he these te. tnlke.l wluileve;- was in hm miml nnd upolo upelo upole gieil te noheilv for it I met the 1111. feituiiate O-citr Wilde stueml lime mid was in Londen tin I he tlav of his iiinvlctleii. Shaw, tee, I met uml did net like. I ficquently saw mid admired ninth William Kinest llenlev. who, f thought. tnnii-he,l bis yenius'a iitlle'bv writing sinli UKh iiriicbs at'iilnst iiii'ininiii, .eiiii'iiiuei-, 11 mi. I em.n Il.irrit The (oniparisen of ether cities that he jeiing CnttcH's love saw stieiigthenetl for, Philadelphia ; te w iml, Curb Paul, mid year neatly all the given; Concert Hall great epeia were en Chestnut street wnyic, ttii .viiiuiler mid was ju-t then 1 inning tun "I wn- inliediiKil le Jeseph Cenrad though haiilly any body knew- him ihen I leiueniher. some time later. ill-cllsH. ling hi first novel, 'AlmnveiV Vellv I think, with some fellow h in the Mull ' elhei' and the possibilities f,,r l( writer. ' I think the censensu wa- that he 1 weuitiii 1 1 tune 10 veiv nun h During Ihl lime Cattell published novel hiiuself at the suggesei, ,,f I .lames I'nyne. for whom he had done sevetal slnilt stories and cssinN, jt s 'tailed "Mill- of the (Soils." IIMI M wriiicn uu.ier ine name "riancis II Huidv." 1 I hat pen inline was 1 Im r,. ciiiIeii ii'iisim Mv milt In.,' ,,. ether ihihl te wliniii she had given the mime Vriinei Hardv, and win. .liml some yearn In fine I wa- liein. J !!,, myself, he wns 11 1 hlhl of old ni;e, mi mother never fully K() ever bei w ,t She spoke of him se often and sneci.' 1 a I ed of much that be vCoeM I...... .1..... I nnd been like had he lived glow, that ' ue eeiniiii' 11 vcr living It. ill.' 11 lllllllK Wlllll I toil 1 III keel, 1,1 memory and le nil of the tlt-tleii a geed deal else I gave his name." Returned te America in 1899; riwusnea ineuier Nevel Cattell I elm lie I lii America m y,i nnd muni uflcrvvaiil puh'lshe,! imniliei I novel, called "Healing of the Sen " re clement A. CJiIh- nei'hen ... ..... When I tiined te vviite. Hilu bin , In nil lines of iitniluctien is mlilcvH nowhere else, and thnt we hnve here the titifst bndy of skilled labor en enrlh. Recitation of Mere Figures Failed te Impress People j "I soot, learned that this messaij could net be put into the nilnils of' people by mere leciln linns of figure, no matter what the figures might slieff j nor hew indisputably. ' ' "Te say that Philadelphia turns out 1 'se many million yards of inrpel ln venr mentis iinthing te people. Whw I mentioned il, it jiiism'iI elT without i iinpres-lens. Hut when I had meaMirw the Heur in the toininene-t type of Plillndelphiu's tlwelliugs, multiplied it I by the number of tmeses mid had reel' tilled the answer with the ligures tjf pre jiliietieu, striking intnnH everywhere, 1 i was able te sUy 'Why. if our t ariet I mill weie moved alongside velll' house. I they teiild carpet it from lop te bottom Mil tweiiiv-twe seconds' ev tribady ' who ( inipicssed mid teineinheied. , Speke Frem Same Table With James M. Beck "All in one evening net long !' I tiddi esfd u spiiitunlist convention, went te mi lilhti iiuiss-nieejlng. after speaking iheie went m a dlnn of the St. (leerge Society and s10"; fiem the same table with .Iiimet , Heck, a delicate job. hill 1 ,"n'Jj net only net te cniiipiemie the .Mn)0 but te give eat h audience something would take away. ,,,. ,wi "I 1 ..! ,,,,,. thnn "II, I"" . in... ii..,..i ...., . B I sp, hes Mine 1MMI. I will innke I ..,,,, f.,,ti..i, i .,i. t iinin never nctn ally tried le count hew mimy wetw , i.... i i , ... 1 1,.,,,, i. must have i m 1 1 ..ii , i ii,-.'. , in iinin, . ,t .. i been nt least lr..OOI.lIM.00l.l1.000 lt I thai lime. Sometimes the vveik i"--ine as far it way as Seuth A.1110"1,! "I keep saying Thnnk .M I('r , life' and I mean It. I enjoy IU llieuilh I never expected te IjaM " much of it Manv yenis age I wrnie a story tailed 'lOL'O,' u sort of pre phetie phantasy, mid my chief ''""J acter (nu actual person I I mane .i." dent of a New Yerk-Chicago nerlH j tiniiNpei tiitien ceinpany. Net I"1"5"'. this story HiiilileiiH ei-iiried t ' n,J the fact of lis fulK V1'1" '''"'.''.rf,. II piiifeuml shock llM ''ied "" ,, eMlaiini'd te inyself. 'I have mill i mv prophecy !' I can't le'l "'', ?.,J this though ilisiiiilieil me. ''."'".ivink later I was able te say : 'Well. , (ied for it',' " A ptHwutpy :. v...t t. rW.jfe.ttVft.t ;A$!,iP?"
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers