OCR Text |
Show MEN YOU HEAR OF. Jay Gould has lioon a resident of New Ynrlr ninm 1K."i! uovernor Northcn, of Georgia, refused to meet Jay Gould at tho recent Atlanta banquet A grand-nephew of John C. C.!houn, Kirtland Calhoun, is acting with and managing a dramatic company. Col. John Cockerill, of Tho New York World, is confined to his house, being seriously troubled with his eyes. Mr. William R. llalch. the man who captured Chostino Cox, has been made tho managing editor of The Philadelphia Kecord. Kossuth nsnally finishes the day with a game of billiards, ami though ho is !) years old ho plays with a stendy hand and usually wins, Frt'd Madison, a yripman on tho ?nn Dit':;o (Cal.) fiililo road, is J,i yews ol, etantls 7 feet 2 inclK's in hfiarht, and has to rtuuain in a stooping pa-it uro whilu ru:hin for ttw brakes. James .Storey, of I'arsous, Kan., is oiia of tho prouiiucnt inventors in thu west. His latost tlYort is a process by whieh ho juanufactures iv'tjs whieh defy detecuou trom tho genuine article. 'The Aiwlus," fillet's eek-hr.ated painting, has be 'u safely delivered to its new owner, M. Chanehard, and hung in its allotted itiaco in his gallery in tlia 1 Avenue Vela,'ip:t'7., Paris. Charles IJi'.idiauich owed liiueh of hs sneeess us uu orator to his lino starw piesenee. Uo was six feet two kuehes iu height nud tnanitieenrly projiortione'l. His gestures were most dramatic. ilenrik Ihseii was a little luxir iu his boyhood, and even his brothers and sisters sis-ters disliked him. In revenue for his lueannt'ss and unsocial ways they nd to pelt hiia with stvies aid snowballs. |