BE 1 SUBMARINE You Are Greeted by a Deafening Ear Splitting Racket. WORSE THAN A BOILER SHOP To Make Youraelf Heard at All Yoi Muat Shout Into tha Car of a Com panion—The Economy of Space ant the Simplicity of Arrangement*. CUnbing down ten ruugs of un .ron ladder Into the Interior of u sub marine is like going Into ft boiler shop where there 1m one continuous, deafen ing, ear splitting racket like a dozen trip hammers chattering a tattoo amid •a grind and rumble and thump of ma chinery as if especially designed to burst your eardrums. At first the noise In that narrowly confined space is painful and bewilder ing. To make yourself at nil heard you must shout Into the car of a com panlon. So Intense is the strain, says a writer in St. Nicholas, that you mar vel how day in and day out human ears can withstand the ordeal. You fiud yourself inside what seems an enormous steel cigar paiuted a neat pearl pray, a color which is serviceable and does not dazzle the eye. I.ighl comes to you partly through porthole arid In part from Incandescent lamps placed fore and aft in the darker parts of the hull. You have expo.-ted. of course, to land in a tangle of whirling machinery that fills the inside of the boat from stem to stern, threatening with every revolution to take an arm or a leg off Instead the first thing you see is an uninterrupted "working space," ot deck, measuring T by 25 or 30 feet. At the stern, far in the background are the machines and engines. In fact this section of the vessel is nothing but machinery, a rumbling mass of silvery steel and glittering brass revolving at the rate of 500 times a minute, so com pact that you wonder how the various parts can turn without conflicting ot how it Is possible for human hands tc squeeze through the maze to oil the machinery. But this economy of space is as noth ing to what you will see. The Hoot you stand on is a cover for the cells ol the storage bntteries wherein is pent up the electricity with which your boai will propel herself when she runs sub merged. The walls amidships and the space in the bow are gigantic ballasl tanks to be tilled with water that wili these are tool boxes and hinged bunks for the crew to sleep in. The four torpedoes, measuring six teen feet three inches long, eighteen Inches in diameter and weighing 1.50 C pounds each, are lashed end for end in pairs at either side, and directly ovet these are tool boxes and hinged bunks for the crew to sleep in. The very air which is taken along te keep life in you in case the boat sboult be detained beneath the surface longei than ■ sual is compressed in a steel cyl Inde. 2,00(1 pounds per square inch, { pr ssure so intense that were the cyl ider to spring a leak no larger than i pin hole and were the tiny stream ol escaping air to strike a human being ii would penetrate hUn through ani] through and drill a hole through an inch thick board behind him. And yet everything about the inte rior arrangements of this boat is so slui pie that you can see at a glance Its purpose. Away forward, where the tip of the cigar comes to a point, art the two torpedo tubes out of whicfc the gunner will send bis deadly pro jeetiles seething beneath the waters at the rate ol' 05 knots un hour against an unsuspecting hull. Directly under the conning tower Is a platform, three feet square and ele rated three feet from the deck, upot which the captain stands, head and shoulders extending into the tower, sc that while at his post he is visible tc the crew only from the waist line down, and at the feet of the captair and on a level with bis platform i stationed another of the otlicers, ii: charge of the wheel that controls the diving rudders and the gauges that register the angle of ascent and de cline and show how deep the boat is down. The two officers are in personal com munication, so that lu case of hear disease or other mishap cither car jump to the other man's place. Time to Wake. Judge Wheaton A. Gray was one-i harangue by the prosecuting counse on a warm day at the enel of a lout harangue by the prosecuting counse he noticed one of the jurymen asleep As soon as the argument was complet ed the judge addressed the jury In this peculiar manner: "Gentlemen of the jury, the prosecuting attorney has com pleted his argument. \\ al;e up and lis ten to the instructions of the conrt."- Sau Francisco Argonaut. One Was Enough. "Dad." said the White faced lad "how many cigars does it take to hur o boy?" "How many have yon smoked?" "One." "That's the number," said dad, nnd taking down the strap from behind th< door, be soon convinced tho boy tha he was right—Cleveland Plain Dealer Common. "They are quite oreliuary people /tren't they?" "Yes—keep their engagements, eai plain food, pay their bills and all thai sort of thing."—Life. The world has not yet learned the riches of frugality Cicero. A Great Way Off. Mr. William Miles, late verger of Rochester cathedral and the original of Mr. Tope In "Edwin Drood," was a great favorite with the late Dean Hole. On one anniversary of the ver ger's birthday, after a pleasant greet ing, the dean asked: "How many children did your moth er have?" "Oh, I am the eldest of twelve!" re plied Mr. Miles. "Then," said the genial dean, "you never saw your youngest brother." "Oh, yes, I did!" answered Miles, "What! With ten miles between vou?" said the dean chaffingly. ANDREWS PUTS LIFE IN THE FIGHT Pennsylvania Republicans Busy All Along the Line. MANY MEETINGS SCHEDULED Capital and Labor Concerned Over the Situation and Will Co-operate to Bring About the Election of Taft and the Full Ticket of His Party, Locally, and In the Ctate and Na tion. I Special Correspondence.] Philadelphia, (let. fi. There have been very busy times about the Republican state headquar ters during the last week. Colonel Wesley R. Andrews, chair man of the state committee, has been almost overwhelmed with callers from the different counties, eager to con tribute towards the success of the ti( ket. He has been in touch with the county chairman, and his reports all indicate that there will be a very t-atlsfactory outcome of tin campaign. He has arranged for a number of speakers of national prominence to come into Pennsylvania during the closing days of the canvass, and there is no doubt that there will lie an en thusiastic wind-up of the campaign. Vice President Fairbanks, Leslie M. Shaw, former secretary of the treas ury; Representative Nicholas Long worth, the president's son-in-law: Sen ator Julius Caesar Burrows, of Michi gan; John M. Thurston and other prominent speakers have accepted in vitations to deliver political addresses in this state. A large number of Pennsylvania orators will also be on the stump from this week until election day. Mr. Shaw will deliver four speeches. With Lieutenant Governor Robert S. Murphy, he is scheduled to address a political rally at Johnstown tonight. His other engagements have not yet been arranged. Mr. Shaw is one of the most elTtctive speakers in the coun try. For many years he has been in demand for service on the stump in every campaign. He will attack the fallacies of Bryanisui and emphasize the aangers of the bank guaranty sys tem which Mr. Bryan is advocating. Representative Longworth and Sen ator Burrows are booked to address a meeting in Pittsburg this evening. Mr. Longworth's speeches in this cam paign have attracted much attention, and he has received invitations to speak in every state. Senator Bur rows is a veteran campaigner and elo quent speaker. Vice President Fair banks will make two speeches at points to be selected later. Republican Meetings Planned. Ilenry F. Walton, chief of the speak ers' bureau of the state committee, has announced these assignments of ' speakers: October 6 Middlesburg, Snyder I county, James Jl. Yeager. of Scran ton; Clarence F. Huth, of Shamokin. October 6—Roulette, Potter county, D. E. Murray, of Perry county. October 7 —Austin, Potter county, D. R Murray, of Perry county. October 8 Titusville, Crawford ! county, Congressman James Francis I Burke, of Pittsburg; W, 1. Swope, of j Clearfield. October B—Erie. Erie county. Major j Alexander McDowell, of Sharon; Con- 1 gressnian Arthur 1,. Bates, of Mead ville. October 9—Galeton, Potter county, j D. E. Murray, of Perry county. October 9—Shingle House. Potter county, P. Murray, of P-rrv rounty. 0< cbt-r 1 —Kail". il'-Ki- mi ny. Con;-'. .an J. Hampton . . . ci Philadelphia. October 11 Sraethpirt, .'.lfKfan county. C n-i. J. llanip i.n Moore, of Philadelphia. October 14 Bradford, McK-nn county. Congressman J. Hampt >n Moore, of Philadelphia. October 15—Pittsburg. Allegheny county. Adjutant General Thou as J. Stewart. October 1G Allentown Lehigh county. Adjutant Genera! Tfc>a::is J. Stewart. October 27—Altocn?, Blair county. Congressman James Francis Burke, of Pittsburg. A Question of V/agss. In the mail of Coh n°l An lrews a few days atro was a ! tter 112: m an of ficer of the National It ]>r Bearing company, of Philadelphia who stated that a notice ha I been r ;t d in the factory to the effect that, the It per cent reduction which had been made in the wages of the employes of that corporation in the midst of the panic of last year, would be r tore 1 to all employes in November ii Ta.'i. s:hall be < !• cf« d president. T. Increase would amount to $lO- 1 00 (1 n yen r. In com in nting upon tjis announc ■- ment. tae editor of the Philadelphia In- j quirer said: "We have not the slightest doubt that should Mr. Bryan run across that notice he would tell his hearers that ! bribery had been resorted to; that i here was an attempt to influence the workingmen. But we doubt very much If his hearers would agree with him. "It is prosperity, the pursuit of hap piness ami liberty that everybody ' Beeks. ft is good wages that the work- ' ingman is after. The government, the ■ policy that gives him good wages. Is the government, the policy that he be lieves in and supports—if he knows where his interests lie. "Bark under the Cleveland admlnts tratlon the country was plunged into j a depression that closed the mills and produced the free soup kitchens. Mr. Bryan was a member of the Demo cratic house that insisted upon a tariff bill that brought disaster. Today he is a candidate for president and Is stand ing upon a platform which. If enacted into law, would again throw the coun try Into a commercial panic and again close the mills and manufactories. "The comoany above .mentioned Baseball, the National Graze txcltlnq Contests for Champion- Great National Sport In Which ships In the Two CMef Millions ol "fans" Are Leagues. Interested. By FREDERICK R. TOOMBS. WHEN a wave of baseball fren zy over the United Stales, the most momentous affairs of life and statespeed lly are thrust aside. Nothing riiust Maml In the way of the American clti ten who hungers to hear the resound ing crack of a home run hit. A little thing like a presidential campaign in tills greatest of all baseball years Is ridiculous to contemplate. Many a big j league game in this record breaking I year has been attended by upward of 80,000 people. Who ever heard of a presidential candidate drawing such an , audience? | On the day John \V. Kern was noti fled of his nomination for the vice presidency and Sir. Bryan delivered a i much heralded speech on trusts the J New York Nationals won both games of a double header In Pittsburg, thes« two clubs being associated with Chi cago In a sensational three cornered | race for the pennant. ! What happened in the newspapers? | The big failles spread the baseball story acre s the front page, and Mr. Kern and Mr. Bryan were pushed back among the advertisements. Mr. Taft and Mr. Sherman have suffered in much the same way. Their lengthy communications to the public are fre- J qnently shoved back In juxtaposition j to the "lls>lp Wanted" column, and in i the choice spots of the papers appear | stories relating how "the Chicago Cubs | will capture the National pennant pro vided they win enough games," or j "Pittsburg buys Hod Splnks. (he won- I derful young pitcher of the (las House | league," or "Larry Lajole of Cleveland ! almost has a headache." Campaign managers may fume and fret, but baseball is a necessity; politics Is a luxury. j In faer. whoever Is elected to the presidency the defeated man will be HANS WAGXEII. [Shortstop, Pittsburg Nationals.] fully Justified in laying his downfall to the nerve rucking races In the National and American leagues. A season llko that now drawing to a close has never occurred before. The National league race, with three close ly ranked tlag chasers—New York, Chi cago and I'ittsburg—and the American, with Detroit, Cleveland, St. Ixiuls and Chicago hacking at each other's throat, have carried the game t" heights of popularity hitherto undreamed of. The New York National team, for instance. Will close the season with almost n.- GOO in profits. When the Duke of Wellington said. "The battle of Waterloo was won en the cricket fields of Eton." he con veyed an authoritative opinion of the tremendous influence which may be exerted on a nation, a hemisphere or a world by a form of sport, n mere pastime. Inferential!}- one may well say that, according to"the Iron I>uke," 1 had it not been for the strength giving 1 finalities of cricket Napoleon would have won at Waterloo and become be- j yond question the arbitrary dictator of all Europe. Baseball In America holds l the position that cricket has in Eng- i land, and the influence of the game on the American people is of even greater Importance and significance than ever I known of cricket in Britain. A National Success. While for England cricket mnda * success of u titanic war, In America a titanic war made baseball a national j success. It was the soldiers of the ; civil war who learned and playad the game In their camps, who, returning to their homes, formed teams and thus j scattered baseball from ocean to ocean. 1 Baseball today, in the sixty-third j year of its career as a regularly de- : fined pastime, has attained not only ' national and international but world wide sway. It is the world's greatest : game, played in this country alone by upward of 3,000,000 men and boys, j whoso contests are viewed by over I 12,000,000 people yearly. In England pnd Australia, to Japan, the Philip plnea and Cuba, the game has spread. Yankee soldiers played the game in the shadow of the great wail of China. Every evening cables carry to the cor- merely speans ior every uuio j facturlng concern in the country. It ! represents the existing sentiment among employers of labor. They have not forgotten. They fully understand what would bp the result should Mr Bryan bo electel. They are waiting for the decision the people. A Re publican victory m- ins the restoration of wages and the mills running at full time. A Democratic victory means uncertainty and depression. "It Is for the voters of the nation to determine what they will do. "It is for them to make the choice between certainty and uncertainty— between Taft and Bryan." ners of the enrth the wore* In the lin portnnt games of the |>P»»nn»t*T«< ftr»Mi«m* ninnrrmmit * mn#> public, hut this .rottr nil TfitfiS nro In the* firot'pid of ilomoli tlon. Tho nviTnpo ynirltr rxp«>nf n ten in. pitchers Inking pre eminence. Men l.ke Brown. Itenllinch nnd Overall r»f rhlctipt, Mathcwson nnd Wlltse of New York nnd Maddox, WHIN nnd I.eever of Pittsburg, practi cally tin- cream of the Nntlonnl league twirling talent, draw thousands of spectators merely through the magic of their names nnd till the youth of the land will) t' »ry ambition to some day nils likewise heroic. <'hristy Matliew ■on, nn ex-college student, nnd Morde cnl Brown. once a eonl miner, have long been rivals for the pitching su premacy. Mnthewson on his work of this year mnst be ranked nhove Brown nnd as the greatest pitcher of the day. "Matty" gets nbont $10,00(1 n year largely because of his famous "drop." This drop curve, or down shoot, of ills Is one of the most disconcerting curves ever faced bv batsmen nnd may well be termed Mflthewson'H "breadwin ner." The ball breaks its course sharp !y directly lu front of the plate nnd drops from twelve to twenty-five Inch es nlmost perpendicularly. Brown's most effective curve Is his Inshoot. 11l- curves apparently do not Rtiffer from Hie serious handicap nris lug from his mangled pitching hand. TYiirs h. roiiii. [Right fielder, Detroit Americans.] ; which is minus a finger nnil 11 half: hence the appellation "Three Finger" Brown. Phenomenal Batter. 1 A man who is nearly as important to his team as its best pitcher, as shown | by his work this year, is Hans Wag- I ner, the famous shortstop of the I'itts j burg team. Wagner is the greatest j ail around player in the world. His batting is not sensational; it is phenom- I enal. Experts consider a man who ; makes one hit in every game lie plays j to be an unusually good batsman. To j Wagner the making of three hits in one contest is an event of only or dinary importance. In two games played against New York in July Wag ner made seven consecutive hits, three of them being two baggers, constitut ing a new and novel world's record, lie scored five of the hits in one game in five times at bat. making three con secutive hits off the delivery of the great Mathewson. Strangely enough. Wagner bats better against Mathev son than against many pitehers readily acknowledged to be vastly inferior i:s j abilty. I.ike "Three Finger" Brown, Wagner was a worker in 11 coal mine in his earlier days. Tyrus t'obb of I>etroit and Captain Lajoie of Cleveland are two of the widely talked of American league play ers. Cobb, a comparatively new big league player, is a mighty batsman, leading his league. Lajoie, once a hack driver In Worcester, Mass , now earns SIO,OOO a year playing second base nud running the Cleveland Blues that recently forged to the top in the pennant race. More baseball teams have made mon ey this season than in any other, an undeniable evidence of the progress of the game. The attendance throughout the country has broken records. Club statisticians agree that at a National or American league game 2,">00 people must pay admissions each day to meet the club expenses. When paid attend anco runs below this number the club loses money. In the Amerlciui league the pennant race, while not so continuously close ns the National, has afforded plenty <>f excitement. Detroit, St. 1-ouis, Cleve land and Chicago have set the pa e most of the year. The "world's series" contests and their probable outcome are leading topics of the hour in baseballdom. The world's championship in the world's greatest game is a prize for which millions of dollars are spent each year, and the team that secures it makes for Itself and its meml>ers a shilling place hi baseball history for as long as the game shall last, and that means as long as the stars and stripes dominate the western hemisphere By Inference. The magistrate looked severely at the small, red faced man who had been summoned before him and who returned his gaze without flinching. "So you kicked your landlord down stairs?" said the magistrate. "Did you Imagine that was within the rights of a tenant?" "I'll bring my lease in and show It to you," said the little man, growing still redder, "and I'll wager you'll agree with me that anything they've forgotten to prohibit in that lease 1 had a right to do tße very first good chance I got."—Youth's Companion. ALLISON Of Ml, Storie* That thi> Srna tor's Markori Traits. MAN WHO TOOK NO CHANCES Anecdotes Told About Hi* O'xl C*u tion—Known ** a Mediator *• Col lege--Siimpl* of Hi* DiKllf IWWI l-i Annwering Some Pointed O ie*tion Konntor Wllllftm Hoyd Allison .!• of thr senate. who freentlj died nt til homo In l>iilnii|iii\ lit., hiil the ri putu tlon of being the most rniltlf.ns tnmi li public life. I took no rhnnees, llttt always ipintifliii h1« statement* Thi wan never more clearlj shown thai w hen n citizen of 1»111111■ jll o made nl that ho conlil force the senator to sir "Yes" tn n iliriit pMpHMn llnll' n dozen friends wont nlottft to seo tin miracle perfortiml. They entered Alii son's office ami chatted on v:irlous t-- les. I'hufiitlj- n flock of shoop, newlv sheared, came bj "Those whoop tiave just lioon f-honri-il, senator," said the man who had i ule the hot, winking nt Ills companions Senator Allison gazed earnestl> at the sheep. Then lie softly replied, "li looks like it on this side " One day 111 the senate this anecdote was (iuiillonteil after a fashion had been discussion a I unit the wisdom of appropriating a lump sum annuals for keeping the sidewalks and streets of Washington free from snow and ie< Mr. Allison was drawn Into the discus ! slon. "Snow lias been fulling on the strcei and sidewalks of Washington for tnau.- years past," observed Mr. Allison. ! "And will for tunny years t • onvic," Interposed Senator Spooner. ! "As to that." replied Senator Allison, "i will not prophesy." At college some of the traits of cliar rcter which have since been observe;! In Senator Allison were conspicuous. An old classmate of his once said of him; "Allison was a born politician . He never gave offense. I was nt »-•!- i lege with him and in his class. 11 ' was known then us the mediator If ; there was a difference between stu dents Allison was the arbitrator. He always commanded the respect of his teachers nnd the confidence of hi* I classmates. He was one of the few young men 1 have known who had in a very remarkable degree the power of I reserve. lie had very many cordial friends, hut nc special Intimates, and I eveu to the select few he pave no un limited insight Into the workings of Ills heart nnd mind. lie was even then self reliant nnd discreet." "The great pacificator of the senati' was the name given to Senator Allison by his colleagues, and the history of some of the misunderstandings wlii li I Senator Allison smoothed away tm-l some of the compromises he effected j shows that the title was deserved. If there was one senator handier at j coucealing his position on public rjnes. ; tlons than Mr. Aldricli of Rhode 1* land it was Mr. Allison of lowa. One day he dictated a long letter to his sec retary In answer to some very pointed I questions of a constituent. When h had finished he asked, "What do v.;; think of that reply?" The secretary thought hard for a t n ment nnd then, in halting tones, r:i swered, "To be entirely candid, senu tor, it Is difficult to gather exact] i what you mean." "Admirable, admirable!** c\e]aif--.l Allison, with almost childish glee "That's precisely the Idea I wished t.i j convey." The late Senator Hoar of Mussachn setts In his "llecollections of Sevent• J Years" has this to say of Allison; His chief distinction has t-eon gained ; by a service of thirty years in the sen ! ate. furlns all that time he has done | what no other man In (hi country, inn v JudKinent, could have done so v. 11. He i has been a member of the committee ot appropriations for twenty years, most o' the time as chairman, and fir merit- * ! years a mPlnber of the nsnsMH , n j finance. 1!.- tins CHUaWtiM MR tl any other man—indeed, more than .• * | other ten m- n—the vast and constant Increasing public expenditure, am. to mure than a thousand millions a: 1 ly. II tins been an economical and v. expenditure That is a knowledr i: which nobody else in the senate e\ Sena; r Hale of Maine and Senator v k roil cf Missouri can compare with him He has by his wise and moderate conn drawn the tire from many a wild and dans-rous sch* which menaced thr public peace and safety. He is like a naval i nglneer reflating the heed of st.-am. but seldom showing himself on the deck. I think he hus had a #:>.•».! «• of Influence tn ».i» peril, His times it; elding whether the s'.ip should keep p ;■ ly on or should run upnn a rock and go , to the bottom. Senator Allison had more sides to his character than the average publh man. ll<- was fond of liooks, art and travel. He knew the jiolltlcs of En rope nearly as well as the affairs of bl own eouniry. Mr. Allison was social In his tastes and was one of the con spicuons lignres in Washington society. He was very dignified, very kindly and gentle in his manner, nnd he possessed a very market] sense of humor that in flueuced his whole life. He never took himself seriously and had one of the egotism and vanity which so often be long to men la high positions. Archery by Mail. Playing chess by cable is a thorom.: ly familiar feature of that game i i the United States, but the playing . active outdoor match pimes liv m; is a new thing In the way of sport;;:, contests. Out In Atchison. Kan., 1 lie; la an archery club that recently jilaye 1 a match game with the Chicago Ar 1 cry clnb by mall, each team shooting on Its own grounds nnd mailing the scores to their opponents on the fol lowing day. And they found It exclt tug at that. Using the Fire Buckets. In many business offices fire buckets are placed, filled with water. In readi ness for an emergency It is seldom, says the Scientific American, that in structlons for use are pinned near the tuppiv. The wrong way to tackle an Incipient fire Is (usuallyi to hurl the whole contents of a bucket on the spot Most of tho water Is wasted by this means. A heavy sprinkling Is more effective. The water may lie splashed on the blaze by hand, but a more use ful sprinkler is a long haired white wash brush. One of these should hang beside every nest of fire buckets. A WALKING GALLOWS The Horrible (Verts of lieutenant Hepenslatl. HANGED MEM FROW HIS NECK Thl* Hindmnf bu< O mi «# »h« Wit Ho* ttn »H» **«•» CelH Blrmdfcri «nd IT tion»r Thai Hn* tvir Among the pnmpm ntwl ywiwn of RrttMi tymnny during the terHlili yenr ITlts there Ik none mope e*tm«r •llnwry, according to a writer In mi rncllftli mninrlne. than that of l.len I'Minul Bilwnrt llepenstaH, known by IMr ntektianw of ••the walking iral ! »«■*," for mc& he certainly wn«, Itt- ITBIIJ* nml practically. Thi« notorlon* IndlvMnai. who hnd been brought np as nn apothecary In 1 Mihlln. obtained a commission ft> tbe Wieklou mil It I*, In which ho attained to the rnnk of lieutenant In IT» was n tinin of splendid physlqne, ellion, when tbe common law was suspended and the stem martial va riety flourished in its stead, Lieutenant Hepenstall hit upon the expedient or hanging on his own l>ack persons whose physiognomies lie considered characteristic of seditious tenets. At the present day the story seems almost incredible, hut it is a notorious fact, revealed by the journalism of the pe riod, that when rebels, cither suspected or caught red handed, were brought be fore him Uepenstall would order the cord of a drum to lie taken off and then, rigging up a running noose, would proceed to banc each in turn across his athletic shoulders anta the victims had been slowly stranded to death, after which he would throw down his load and take up another. The "walking fallows" was clearly both a new and simple plan and n node of execution not nearly so tedious or painful as a Ty burn or Ola Bailey hanging. Tt answered his majesty's service as well as two posts and a crowbar. When a rope was not at hand Hepenstall's own silk cravat, being softer than an ordinary halter, became a merciful substitute In pursuance of these benevolent in tentions the lieutenant would frequent ly administer an anaesthetic to his trembling victim—in other words, be would first knock him silly with * blow. Tlis garters then did the duty as handcuffs, and the cravat would 1* slipped over the condemned mail* neck. Whenever he had an unusually pow erful victim to do with, Hepenstall took a pride in showing his own. strength. With a dexterous lunge «T his body the lieutenant used to draw up the poor devil s bead as high as his own and then, when both were cheei by jowl, liegin to trot about with his burden like u jolting c.' he-- *- the rebel had no fonjer «*... about sublunary affairs. It wa> after one of these trotting executions, v tnek had taken place in the barrack yayfi adjoining Stephen's green, tha: Hep penstall acquired tbe -surname of "tbe walking gallows." He was irvesrei with it by the galiery of Crow tsnwet theater. l»ublin. At the trial t.f a rebel in thai -cfty the lieutenant, undergoing cross exam ination. admitted the af in-m'.mxißDei details of h. i;. thud of hang.ug. and Lord Norbury. the presiding Inclge, warmly eonjjiliinenled him on iiis Icg"- alty and assured him that he ha.; !<~«n irnilty of no act which was not : turn] to a zealous, 1. yai and dficKSft < >"ic«r, Ueutenant Hepenstall. liiwfrnr. did not long survive his hi." • ins pre:-: me. He died in Owiuff la tin- <». in which be was universally held, tie authorities arranged that bis I.:'iesnß should take place -secTWly. while * Dublin wit suggested that la- >:nb stone would be suitably iitscri:> -d tc the following epitaph: Here lie the hones rt? JhygiuEtnl. Judge, Jury. *?a:iows. tqjw ana *1:. A Slight Difference. The glolie Trotter was telling about the wonders of India. "The scenery in some por:ions cC Hie country." he said, with etirhn- iasm "Is incomparable. Fai. tar away, the mountains pile up toward the-sty anfl stretching off TO them are bwinrlftii valleys, while close at ltand you get in sic!:: of n man mating Tiger' "1 lieg year iiaTdon." is.TerrujiTei an eager listi'i-er. "bin did you -say lnsidti of a man *at::ig tiger or h *igh: if one?"—Ne\. Tark T*ress Vellcw Ftra The tlrst JifHiUTtln -i .* yeTl.Ternr is SjJd to have been Ti;- -so diers of Colomlius tn suss in: A Reliatol* TO SHOP r*r all kinfli vfTln Spout Int -m«J Onwm JO# W»T*L, Store*. Haran, ir>m—, •RICK THE lwesi: (11LIT! Tfit iEFT! JOHN HIXSO.N »• at £ isorr wl