PI'S LONG SHOT. HE GOT A “YES” TOO, OVER EIGHT | HUNDRED MILES OF WIRE. i Ee ; HisHied Last Week at Pelham Manor. A man deserves th win a wife who jas the nerve to call tp a girl 800 miles sway over the telephone and ask her to mrry him. That is the way Miss Ethel ary Bishop, the only danghter of the m. James Draper Bishop of London, me engaged to Gorge B. Gaston of ianapolis. They were married the pr night at the residence of Ears T. land at Pelham Manor, N. Y. , (Gaston is the som of a retired ian and is the secreiary and treas- f the Indianapolis Transfer com- 3y. For several years he was associat Bn the electrical business with Thom- g A. Edison and Mr, Gilliland. All of . Gaston's friends had it settled in own minds that he would die a selor. His busines frequently called New York. While in town he yeh of his tine with Mr. Gilli Every time he went to New York jilliland invite] Gaston to make me nt Pelbam Manor. Gaston in- ari refused, saying that the Gilli. id hones was always filled with guests that he hadn't time to play the : gto a Jot of women. Then the from Indianapolis womld picturs old friend what large times the might have if Gilliland would only ¥ with Gaston in town, Break sway, old man.’ be womid “end we'll have somo fun that de- a0 be called fan. I can’t see any- gin talking ones self black in the & honsefnl of women.’ day last Febryary (Gaston arrived York om one of his business #8 two sisters bad been fisting and Mrs. Gilliland for several ‘and in their Jetters home they frequently mentioned Miss Ethel i, & very charming English girl, wk making her home at the Gilli 8. From those letters Gaston had ped that Miss Pighip had been born Bhanghiai while ber father was serv. f the English government there ad sul As 8 child she had Tived in Af 3, her father having been transferred toons of the Sonth African states. Later ¢ had been sent to A convent in Paris, penis she went to Heidelberg, and gre he took a degree in music. Then went to Lomdan te continne ber @ in music and the classics. In §, Giaston heard a0 moch abouy Mise op that, when but reached New York Mr. Gilliland &ttended to him the fnvitation to visit Pelbam Manor, janapolis mad said emphatically, Mnally, on St. Valentine's day, the before he was to return home, (as. sented to go (mt to Pelham Man. a few bours, just to ses his sis a went and staid two weeks He dime for, but he could pot bring mee} to the point of a proprisal As Yo himself said: . * came pretty thee to it several But when J gat just 16 the point * got sonred. I felt wx if it wonld bea mort of sacrilege that 1 vstu't be guilty | 1 tell you, I ever thoug)t a woman 3d blnfl moe out, sod so | went borne. 7 When be retursed to Indianapolis, be n't able to do much business, All he d think about was the English girl the shore of Long Island sound. Two went by and one morning while was sitting in hiy office a letter came cone of his sisters. It was largely d with a description of a german sho danced a fow nights before, and Bow s'} the men had stxoply gone abont liss Bishop. Gaston thought | y moment, and then rashed to the one, Jooked up the number of Gil- i's house telephone in the long dis telephone book, and asked to be sted, Pretty scou he heard 4 femi- voice st the other end of the lioe Hello!" ! Hallo! Whois that?" auswered Gas p “Who! Ob, Miss Bishop? Well, this is Mr. Gastoo, Miss Bishop. Whers ¥ In Indianapclix Yes, in Indian- olie. I thought I'} call yon up to—t0 ask how my sisters are. You'll call one gf thom and Wit ber speak for herself? Oh, never mind, I said ‘never mind.’ {-o-v-e-r pever. Ne, not mine; mind— fp-d. Hello! How are you? Just pir to the city! Theater party to Oh, not going in till the 4 o'clock Wish I were going with you. 1 wish 1 yore going with you. I know w r my sisters would have me or tot. 1 just wanted to you. Don's be foolish? Hello! id you say? Hello! Hello! Bay, i! Don’t cof me off! I'm not gh talking yet. (one at the other Weil, ring up again.” As Mr Gaston sid, he was bound to say somthing thet or die in the at © After waiti|ig some time, he got the Gilliland home again and began talking with Mis¢ Bishop. 4] peat about 'be bush for a long » Le said, “upd then I came out ith the question. She evidently could aot understand me, for this was the an- 4 (lame a little pearer, Mr, Gaston. “Phen 1 moved about coe inch nearer to her in that 507 miles and asked the anestion over age 4. This time it was gfectly underst. ol. I was told that 1 otter wait for awhile, and some more shings like that [said I bad lived to pe 35 years old, and I guessed I knew my own mind. 1 hoally I was told that | she would give rie an answer when she called me op in tw) weeks.” That was on Feb 28. Two weeks aft- or that Misa RE «hop was in Brooklyn one day and stepped into the office of Myx. Gilliland. She called up Mr. (las: st Is that you, Mr. Gaston § , Miss Bishop. Kuvew the voice, thet? Oh, my answer? Was [ to give yon an answer shout anything? Hello! What's that? I know very well I was? Yes, I goes I do. Two weeks have seemed like two years? You say that very niceiv—over the telephone, Well, are yom sure you kpew what yom were talking abont? Positive? And yon don't think you'll regret it some time? Sure? Wall, then, if you want yes, here it in What's that? Hello! What did yon say? Oh! Well, you can’t have that over the felephone. Yom must come for that yourself. Goodby, George” It wasn't long before he went for what he conidn’t get over the teiiphone, and the arrangements for the wedding were mide. Mrs, Gaston is an nnnsuasl ly govd looking woman, perhaps 22 years cid. She has dark hair, large dark eves and & graceful figure She bas a musical voice and speaks with a decided English accent. Speaking of ber engage. ment, the said: “I have traveled over s good Lit of the world spd heard of plenty of ro mances, tot | never dreamed that I ghonld come to America to get engaged by telephone. And shouldn't if George hadn't been such a dear follow, with soch an swial lot of cheak at long dis “tance "New York San. HIT ON THE BATTLEFIELD. General Miles Tells of the Sensations Pro- doesd by Gambot Wounds. “Yon bave been wounded several times, geperal. How does it feel to be shot ¥' “That depends pen where the ball strikes you,’ replied (reneral Miles. *'If it passes throogh the fleshy part of the body without hitting the bome, itis s haif mile away before vom realize that you are shot. If it meets with resist- ance, however, you get the fall foros of the bullet, and it strikes you like a sledge hammer. | was shot in the neck The ball ent along the side of my throat, under my sar and passed on. At Chancellorsville a ball strock my waist belt plate, and then, deflecting, went in- | to the body. The blow paraiveed mae. 1 pomld not moves for weeks from my waist downward, and every one thought Iwonld ale | was taken home to Mas sachusetts, and after a few days I sur. prised the doctors by moving my right foot. They tock this for x sign that the ball was in the opposite side of the body and probed for is, laying the bone of my hip bare. They found the bone broken and took out nine pleces, Jeaving one, which they failed to find They found | the buliet several inches farther down than thesn pieces of broken bone, “A At another time 1 was wonnded in the shoulder by the balf of a bullet I wat holding my sword op to my skool Aer when the bulist strock the edge of the blade and was cnt in two, cone half of the ballet fiying on and the other go ing into wy shonider. At avother time I was wounded in the foot, the ball striking & Mexican spur that 1 was wearing and going off into my foot. By tha wy, I think I bave the spor.” Here the general opened a drawer in his deck and pulled out a big Mexican spur, which was broken on one gids. The break was carsed by the dullet striking the spur. —Bloomington (Ills) Panta graph. : A YA SR SR FRANCE AND ENGLAND. Annihilation of the British Bempire From a French Point of View, Ax a specimen of rabid writing io the French press | give sa passage from an article 1 once read in Le Matin: “The Eoglish empire in Indias is pow a spectacle of extortion, rapine, famine and bankruptcy. All crumble into rains —~towns, villages, reservoirs and public works, temples and tombs; the railways od towns ; the ordinary highways are impracticable—it is impossible to | use a carriage 12 miles outside of Cal- | eutta. The English have made a purely | superficial conquest of these vast regicos | They do pot live there; they are only _snearnped ; their children dis there, sud . with their gross bodies—all flesh and "selves there. India is for them a place | of exile, a tropical Siberia, which they | escape from as soon as possible; they are equally detested by the Hindoos and Muossulmans. The flame of this implaca- . bis hatred poisons the lives of the con- { querors. The day when Russia blows upon this castle of cards it must fall | immediately, and England of the Britiah . channel will perish through India. Asia] will cease to be a marile and withered branch of humanity. Onoe escaped from | the vampires of London, she will revive | and awske to a new existence. The Rus- sian on the backs of the . Ganges will be the signal for the down- | | fall of the Anglo-Saxon power in both . hemispheres. Nothing will remain try, will simultaneously disappear.’ i goew on to predict that 's pew hour will then have struck for the human race,’ eto. —=Nationa! Review A Third Gavel For Speaker Deed. Speaker Reed has received a third gavel with a history. It was pr Rt was made from a fragment of formal presentation to Mr. Reed at the cancns on Saturday, but be observed that Mr. Reed was more or less embar- eased with a riches of gavels aud ao- pom panying remarks on that occasion and withheld the Lincoln gavel and quietly presented it when congress pened. After Eating a Gentieman. Pa Tiger—1 don't think I'd care to be in the midst of civilization Ma Tiger—Why not, love! { forth froan petation would le through deserted villages and di- | standing in the parest conntry—aristoc- racy and church, commerce and indus | | The writer, having thus angibilated | the British empire and distributed boy | colonies ‘among the great powers,’ $ICnIAT evn | quently bave ocomsisn tO as sete : by Representative Hitt of 1llinois, and | the i shopping block nsed by Abrsbam Lin ; {ooln in his rail splitting days. It was | perio ithe intention of Mr Hitt to make a : {ght pot be sure ¢f myself, that I bad | A A ia i LOCKED UP BY WOODPECKERS. phn Ho SAA BE Possession of Their Home. Although the woodpicker is indnstri ons, provident and peaceful, be ju not to be trified with or tyrannized over with impunity, as the following inci i pyen and boss of the ne dent will show: A companion and I dn an Aogost dey ble lands of the ridge dividing Ojal from Abemt the spring In ane of theses ned fur from the tent door | pits om { was warmly diseossad by fhesa Gentry. Santa Clara valley stands & large grove of Live oaks a pair of woodpeckers had for years no doubt made their dwelling pie Some what shy of os at first, the fow days paid litle attention to our privence. It tie to do We had camped thers a week or we beard a commotion of our staid peighbory and the whir of their wings among the branches overhead It pushed back the flap of the tent door and peered out to ascertain the canse of disturbance It sooty became apparent that a little tacalote, or ground owl, at the approach of day had taken lodging in the hollow occupied hy the woodpakers, to their consternation. Bot the retorn of day brought sonrage to the rightfal owners, | ; : | aver ha monnted a stamp 10 develop a or repost with variations In bis fondness for | speechmaiing be stiended all the triads i frequently | walked 15 miles to Booneville to attend ; and they resclotely set about finding They tried | means to eject the invader vlofting awhile about the only aperture to the hallow tree, bat ta little purposs, other than to canse the tecolote to pvk at them when they appearad to be about to throst themselves in At last. finding that neither threats Land sone of Bis prodactions word even | printed throagh the inflneten of hie med | miring neighbors; thus a local Baptist | of i por antreatios wers likely 10 be effent. ‘fre. and recived that if they wera 10 be deprived of their home it wonid be tho last of that frrannial owl, the woodipanzars brought presently from another part of the grove an oak bail of the sige of the aperture, and, driving it tightly into the hols, withdrew to an ather hollow tree. leaving the bird of prey hermetionily sealed up After weversl days, when we etaried to rears to Ran Bossaventars, the ball was $111] in the bole, and the woodpeek- | ers, settled in their new home, Were go- ing aboot their bovine as if thers hal pever been a teooiote — Portiand Pros | THE COLONEL WAS MEAN, With His Car Tickets. Colonel Blank was a big, porapmis man, as it bebonves che to be Who a8 pires to 8 military title without tie | He was | alwars calling people's attention to his drawbacks of a military life marked facial resemblance to Janes (1 Blaine, “the greatest man, sir, this oon tury and this country have prodoced. And peple—iil patared people. that jsthought the cokinel had a vivid im agipatioe, There was a prodigacty ahont his physique that ono SOIMABOW axprcted 10 som repeated Su the nolonel A eharscter. And to hear the eowinel bold th pusophisticated boarder wonid never have donbtad that such a ressanabe ex regi zed ob TioseT sons intanse. What, then. was 1) one's ROThr iss to Lear pel, evidentiv in a with himself say cus day: “Wall, I earned my {ars down town day That the colunel waonid #00 to earn & icke! was regarkabils | that he shoud beat of it was incredibie “Yeon see,” procesded the man of military sepirations, I went dows in the cavetie Gietiing in at Schiller street, the carette was 5 the front and bought a guarter, Then as the car filled ap I was excend sxetihistioad ek 43 git ¥ 0G Biah gat amor Bix tickets for ingly seal to those who sat farther dows, passing their fares op and depos. iting them. An exceedingly polite man they all thonght me. And so lam, sol as. Bot instead of dropping their niek- els in the box I dropped my tickets in eutil T had ased ap my Sve tickets and confiscated five nickels 1 had regained my guarter and paid my fare After that | was not so pedite drop their nickels into the chote which the company provides for that purpose Awful nuisance, that chute Bat COIpAGY '» Bors mean to hire any. And the ocobmel called for another ih : ” ing. when gasped to think of the senalloness of which sucl greatness Was capable -— cop of tea, and the unsophisticated one Chicago Tribune AA Ni DASE ge Doe’t Keep Track of Dates “It’s a peculiar aatter, but neverthe. we ane-ball of the ¥ Dave any ta fhe they were jn fact, the date of any par said Magistrale Jermmon ia Call repurtor fons trae, el pedi foley ws that pr PH NE 3 ER SRE SAR ab tome we solve] women how oid are, amd annus invariably the answer comes, 1 know. | Frequently I ask them bow | they have been married, to wie: the same reply. Hay Vn Ethel—I suppose I shall have to wear this veil, t= the wee T have, Its sy thicx sme oan Lardly gee UY fae throogh if Edith wear ' Eversboly says go P thine halt so | meript Eograngiteid vam Der INR SPEITersSe Witla hats in a t. iy Yn # ww Henpvpeek—iiub The Fate of a Grand OWS That fisd Talan B3 Early Reputation Sa 5 Debuter wed pitched oor camp At & wpring on the ra. | POPE pecatén Was | keen shrewd common sense. It was not Jong before yoong Dinccin became the | Mirds moa froquently amosed ow’ of a sultry afternoon ss we Joanged ape | * that date. an the buffalo robes laid on the shaded i to observe the birds with whose | labors the warmth appearad to have lit. . | er, but he was becoming known as a kind tony | Of backwoods crator. days when before daybreak one morning abomit the home Omar attention was attracted by thelr shrill outories : be conld make a political speach = stir. : bad po sooner grown light enough to see than wa | preacher wes 0 struck Abraham's essate on temperance that | a. where it appeared in teath snd hand pills and medicin end of the hoarding bones table over which be presided the then ne exupty, and 1 went up! {me 1 dropmwdd in the box ; MeRad mwarnlaiiy 1m people : * moan last. it's pet my business to jay conductor if the “i fre et LINCOLN'S ELOQUENCE. Stary Teller. One mun in Gentryville, Ind , & Mr. Jones, thi strrekeeper, took a Lonisville paper, and here Lincoln went reguiariy to read and dieenss fonntents All the (borbocd ath sred there and evvervibing which the sptgerted to. their favorite member of the group and the one eter to most epaeriy, Polits viii @tizens, and it may De that aithing on the sounter of Jones’ grosery Lin coln sven discossed siuvery. ftoertainly was ine of the live questions of Indiana Young Lincoln was not only winning in these days in the Jones’ grocery store a reputation ax a debater and sory tali He comld repeat with effort all the poems AD@PPnchen in his various school readers, he ormld ipvitate to perfection preachers who came to Gentryviile, and ring that be drew a crowd about him every time be mennted a stump. The applsnse he won was sweat, and fre quently he indulged his gifts when Fs | paght to have bean at work —eo thought his employers and Thomas. his father It was trying, po donde, to the hard | the men who | pushed farmers to soa 4 saght to have been cutting grass or chopping wood throw down their sic | Klas or axes to group sronnd a boy when pet theory yasteriay Te sermnn of the neighivehood and somrt. He wren as well as made peaches t With dane ha gent it to Oh ¥ soma local paper. Another articia, “5 pleased a law dnt heat itl M. Tar Hare's Mapayine ENGLISH STREET DOCTORS Le § Al Caring Pills. “Yow, gener, sme on us make 3 gronnd who served asa dranmer boy in | lot on’ mobery at street doctarin, an soma ] a Comoe dont For a Big Man He Fiayed a Soanil Game said a medical practation- chapel rosd. The «trent dowtor in goes tien was one of those who sould afford a horse md trap, decorated with gor af cesistant, who belped to pull oot pare hasiers. something oar of the bosiness. But von plenty of chesk It's cheek ax does 11, and no mistake avaragy durin Whitechapel Jesat £4 a werk tha sommer sad, ID yy at eenntry faire, ot Sesrrtimen 1 minkes much more. At Oldham I once drew £5 | a day. [was silin a compound pi wary ke i evra betiar than this week durin he msde £10 ench day baw. Ive Nay veRTores oat 10 some imes aniy drawn thpeenonon 8 oa day am nll his vip Gua 106 eX{Rles of a wus an tray fo stand | ber cows makin only throws an TWO Weeks rannn rome the business. My pilsarest ax I eel] hem al a DRI each, Jig a Diy, You can see here's plenty © money fo be made in the Huisioess. Landon Correspondent. J ARI 5498 or A shi The Bill Was Fuld McRad asd hi their bakisess ledger one sveniog, ool. know iedping that many Bare to be written off as bad What 11 re dae aboot this ane? 1% amcht Winey. “Weal 1'm no saw sure, ’” replied his | wife. “‘Leave me to try anyhoo” According iv, the next Sabbath morn. Set ical Was wet the sbler's nda the plate, $5 ipet Mrs McRae 4: ft | % #1 ad 4 ball, peatiy foiled up, arsed before the weak wan Over Ls muons was paid Ruma. weoman, | sd MeRad jor ; Hamarsiaow may Be a Wttery, bul : Ta gy ion ge 3 Fes TREKS Ye Pearsons Winkly Araws & Prim ee Haman Life Always Seelin bia Lavel Repran Gifs, whivh x Haid fw Liam (ther level It has aiwaye & past and has not seated ved : ther. It onoe § these Doggie Oo al effext Cow Into LXer, HETEET CAL last the Jarger expanses Dave to: burst their boonds ang the immensnrable level of a siete = Frog “Eanaciy as moviiy, by W 3% £ gonad Lenigry In ali zh EIPAL Cure mt t ford vi Br fuacy obser vec ment, wi 3 ia your Godertas “IHE IS AN OLD TIMER. | Better to Create 8 Gord Home Tham Sh the wandering | very much alive of {who rode beside the Maerguls de Lafay: | atte when that bero touted throogh | : | America in 1534. who eat in the lower | geons tolors and emborate lamps, and | ; snd Linoain before they gained promi. 2 | penow, and in the opper host with Clay 4 : X Load Webster and Benton arid Honston “In my case, [am glad to say 1 make | oo ohh : : : moat of the great political eens of our can't dd anvthing With it nniess FoR Ve | feet hall contory a8 8 repiblie, : ; | Jones ix jnst such a Sgure. ie hax done I guess | makes on an | sketeh them out in a touch and go man | per that cannot fail to charn the pres that time. was a great beljever in the wd to core anything, exespt hyo | Bat 1 knew a man who did | He cove had al the smaamer of 1564 when | A | Kentoeks, in which Jones acted as Cil “War weather ten had hme for ux, a8 {the : bate in “i pet wx {or Uo shoswat as the weal “CH gourse thers is a Jot o' profit in demr, an i | pepEalion that ensued in olpgress and | theorlont the sountry was extonge and | pes ited] eventually in the ensotment of | stringent laws placing dueling on the mame evel as mnrder : | Four days after retiring from the sen. | % ite wera going over | | pointed by President Buchan as nin. tempiating the overdone acciantk which | ta pages revesied, and raloctantiy ao. | of then wonld | ' the Lincoln administration and shortly said “Here's twa punt | ahillings for & cont aad vest been | owin by Elder Doolittle since Martin. | 1m fearin we'll po get the | birthday, when the state of lowa gare 3 ® taken vp, | tle | supreme jmiiciary and the mo © residing al GENERAL GEORGE WALLACE JONES | SOON TO ISSUE HIS MEMOIRS The Oldest Livieg Fx -Semater Was Ju Congress With Ciay, Webster, Benton, Corwin and Polk His Dusting Dups-- An Interesting (mracter. Word has reached Washington that George Wallace Jones of lowa, the old. ent retired United States senator living and the comtemporary of Jumes Monroe, | John Quincy Adams avd Andrew Jack: son, iw about sompleting bis lng ex- pected autobiography and will have it resdy fir the prose in afew weeks The | anponntement will bereceived through out the comntry with lively interast, for the epochs covered are so far back as rs be fresh and new to readers of todey. and Jones is known to posses a greater | fand of personal reminiscences of pub lie men and things of naticoal pote in the jong agy than soybody else pow mryiving Unlike Senator Sherman's new book, dealing with statesmen both living snd dead. Jones’ fortheoming memoin, | which promise to be eqoaliy interesting, will treat altogether of statesman passed away, except himself, and he is still Thengh searly #9 yoars cid, & ‘last leaf’ in point of aye, LT lb i man has ever peally enjored CL | the Beginning ¢f this new Jifs Ce dine is Ve A Xia ENS EXALTED MISSION. lemmas Ereel Tn Any Mier Endeavor. 2 Certainly there 4 wisdom for two young people whe have sworn to Jove pach ther, no matter gistiher thers iy poverty or wenlth. oo Sastier whether the days ave [might or dark. to have a ‘home of thelr own, writes Roth Ash. | morn, disense nip | Bmall Hoos, mm Ladies’ Home Jour pal Boarding honse Jife is bad Lor “hn Mistress of 1h women, and [do pee believe thet any é ied sromted wom te make hranese—io | make homes fon the wen they love suid cht Iron whom God will snd to And 4 hone must be started at I» pot wall for a big lionse and many servants, for the | but make happiness exist in a little homes with ~oa maid as a help It can I inde it can Do pot shrug yoor shoulders and say : yom do net like honsework Work is on. ly disagreeable when it is badly done, and from wasliing the silver and glass to dusting the tric-a-brac and besting op a cakn everything may be daintily done and well doom if you go about it in the right way and with the right spirit. Yor will baw in be considerate, and you will have to bi patient. You will eer tainly make mistakes. bot each mistake in ote step toreird snocess. Burden yoor- self with patience, consideration and | tensclernoms yon will need to make calls | mpan them oftin and often Then you will gain so’ much Yon will be the happy housewife, the lady | &f the bonse who has the right to dis- | pense hospitality and god will, the | mistress, not only of the house, but of | the heart of your husband, becanse for { him yoo bavy created a home And i thet is a worntinly work——a better mon- © pment to vou, my dear, than the paint | ing of a wonderful picture, the writing | of great hivk, or the composing of a i fine place of ousin Prom ont a home | all virtues anid all great works may i SOEs, No mia ever made a home. He | dos not keow how, The woman's brain, | heart and hsbds are necessary, and 3 i heme in swell oa beauntifal thing It { mpeiie TRE, It ivan peste. and it neans PANE Make coe for yonr husband and Sea him fing hess (hirte great JOYS In is GENERAL OROROGE WALLALE JONES : be ia by no means such in health and | i strength, abd his metal vigor 1H quite t oes ! animpaired. They Make 8 Good Living Peddling Their | guey of the sentury to ofinesive that | thers is 8 nations charactor still above | | . : : Jape 5. Mr Blaine rose to 8 question of It is hard fn these latter | tha war of 1813, wh Bad the Sonor of : | naming tw states back in the thirties, | er. a% he styled himaelf, to a newspaper | man who war passing along the White. | who anjoved an intimate soquattitanos with all tha prestdents wizios Madison, branch of congress with Polk aod Ball and Corwin, and who hore a part in Bint ail those things, and in his book be will | #Ht generat ay Jones, like most other pulbdic men of aendint and Sunred in seven different dusls altheongh a principal in only one The most pofabie of theses duels was that wotweaen Cider of Maine and Graves of Jey sn secoard The meeting cocnrmsd on ives of Washington, pear the seand, and grew ant of a de Jos was pminosd to vorcsd by Fraskiin serine Rifles ware amd three rounds Cm the tained magna Cilley fa1) dead with a Dulles in his bean. The Ore Mar hora BME aman iA ne Lilaya Piarce thet 8 otal Hu wip fred ate, cn March 8B, 1558, Junes was ap- | tater to Bogoea, New Grauada (now Coe | Juubias He remsioed thers until No- yomiber, 1961, when be was recailed by aftorward confined as a soxpected seces- | siotiist of great intivence in Fart Latay- | ette. New York Sines then be has lived chief at Dubuque, Ia A sianal honor was sovordad him by 19. 1404, the oocasion of Bis nivetieth him a poblic peception smal banquet st Dey Moiuea, presided over by the gov ernie and winded be teths hones of the lag isintare sxecutive coutwil, thie isis Eo i now Mah, wit Ih moevent iter to ¥ +E go of the wires grisbed citizens Camry Pointe LES one he aes catanel for poaay | Wiens 4 write uy hiography, phady sireaiion, that the play won ma be Laxt Decsnber, how | aver. a vear age I oame have Villa St ; Yeoamn Cir wee Pointe), on a visit my grands sxtractal frog me, iy ns volens, the surnmer of 1565 with Ber and hor has bars in owrilipg my bie they sgresang to furnish me With stepographers, type | writers, readers and ail other fences to that end work and coappieted and wade stvip, I am ia perlfest bean wuce 153% T--Atianta Constitn-- Sy. GRBIry to bast Bithertoe 1 sseinting thanking wari the cali anid TECHN Eee fay High Livense In Massnohusetis. her leave jo versed! the statement Jar cen in the conntry Barcingon, in tarwnd ¢ Gompr walls rik 4 de foRepihner omitted fact | stage. it is stated as a truth thet if, on | the ooesxiog of the young man’s thind | yixit his ippanorats offers him a steond crrespondents 810 | anesgement fs never canosled. —G wiew a : Magazine Epaiad tae conven : Accordingly 1 set to | pow we have pearly 300 pages | riady in proper | health, amd have | THE MULLIGAN LETTERS Biniee's Draspntic Mending In Congress of the Finivss Corvesposidenon, After the uiorning hour on Monday, privijege. Fe began bis remarks by ob Sug thash the investigagion, though authorised Uo goneral term, was aimed solely and only at himself. "The famons witness, Mallen. be sid, had select. od pot of your of cotrespanaenes letters which be thonght wonld be peenliarly | dnessgivi to lim, Blaine, bot they had nothing to db with that investigation, Be, Blaine, dbtaiped them onder cir sumsianoes Kpown to everybody, and defied the bogs to compel Hi to peo duce them. Hid Mr. Blaine topped here his coemies conld have made him Bite the dust. Apparently be had allow. od binise!f 1 be driven into a fatal onl degue. eo Haviog vindicated bis right to the letters be proseeded to us moat dramat- fo manper: “Thank God Almighty 1 am not afraid ww show them. There they are [holding 4p a package of let- ters. Therd iv the very original peek- age. And with scans sense of homilis- tion, «ith & ipartifleation that § do mot pretecud to oiporal, with a sense of ont rage which 1 thiak say man in my po ities would feel, 1 invite the confi. detos of 44.000, 000 of wy conntrymen while I resid those Jetters from this Amik." For the moment trinmph turned to dems, Jiemay to trimuph. The an dices was cipetrified, The stters soem. ad to show Mr $line, (none case st fest, high minded and gineroos Hi as suming the ase of innocent persons wha invested on bis ngs,” —Fram She Plomisd Ruight and His Joost," by President E. Benjamin Andrews, in Sirind Yhn Ln Dettothals In Holland. In certain parts of Hollsnd when a | yong man thinks be loves a girl, be asks her fur 8 matoh to light bis cigar | at the doce if the beloved ope’s hisus, This is dond tu let the parents know | that someth.sg is intended, sod it the visit is repeated and the sane thing oe surs uo doobt ia left in the minds of { the girl's parents, and they immediate i ly procesd (0 investigate the young | man’s character and antecedents. When the people who knew him lest on April py onils & third tine, they sre prepared | go give him sn answer. If his suit is t Jooked apa favorably, be is given a match If refused, he prodooes his own | mateh, Hight his gar and walks away. | It 4 favorable answer is given, he stops forward apd joins hands with the girl While the sngageinent 8 by 80 MENUS 8 sven at this important sigur and he smokes itn the Donse the He Didn't Raft He was ne of those ‘ngraly young fers who pakke fe of a imblc aboci teadder g band ope He was in the primary grade He came wm one with ai Lands apd face Tie grat hy | The tes her looked at Bids severely “Johnny” Tes “Have vim washed vour face and bunds this grorning * Na “Why pot?” “Nome of the folks je bome, an 1 - don’t haft 4. —Syracnse Post. Tie Land of Liberty, Traveisd nest (meaningly —Ii Ea. | rope the cusios of tipping bas been re- i that Haverhill, Mass. pays | i the bail | waiter to § tents duced tO a system-——caetwentisih of Thas 4 $1 check entities the he midst of me — | Pa Tiger—It's: #0 much nicer to civilization be in New York Son. {iver | ] Cos ary ta 3 as ia iis se paws BU 300 and Pus NF aiter— Uns sab, bot in this nad of fol hus pad #2000 for the last six | liberty, aml, every ge men feels res ta gears «Now YOrk Sun. gub a quarter, sah —New York Wieekly, ‘t any mere spurt pow than he bad | Raa % i : i ir whew he was alive, 1% isn worth pay | - £ tr) 2 a . Pipes of tox feg wirontion to ~Lopdon Tit-Bi | on -y, did vou? Your memory for sound is ex- onl To I wonder if it is sx good for , other things. Ope other thing’ What's CERI a0 8 Le -