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Show WILL WED A REDSKIN. The story that Elaine Goodale, the poetess, is to marry a full-blooded Sioux Indian is coufiment by the lady herself. But her Indian is educated and has proved himself every way worthy of his new honors. He is Dr. Charles A. Ea-puan, twenty-eight years old, and a splendid type of physical manhood. Ho belongs to the Sioux tribe, and grew up amid the surrouudings of comparative compara-tive savagery until he reached the age of fourteen years. His preparatory instruction in-struction was got at a reservation school, and he passed from that, for a little while, into Beloit College, but soon traveled east and entered Dartmouth. Dart-mouth. Here, by his own pluck and energy, he made his way through the full course, and then studied medicine at Harvard. Worcester Spy. The announced marriage of Elaine Goodala with a Sioux is likely to attract peculiar attention. Miss Goodale is a LjieJjve of the western part of this state, TueTVitfT-T r nifSher and sister, came into notici severfal years since as a young won o of. considerable gift in tho writing of poetry. She has been interested in the Indians as a school teaoher. Her expected husband is an educated man aud a graduate of Dartmouth Dart-mouth College. The affair will make a sensation in literary circles and will receive large comment in other quarters, quar-ters, but it is hardly likely to set the fashion of this kind of amalgamation generally. Boston Herald. The report that Elaine Goodale, the poet and teacher, is to marry an educated edu-cated Indian of full blood is to be take n for the present with a grain of Salt. Yet there is a good precedent prophesy disaster. A thoroughly civilized and Americanized Indian would be apt to make abetter husband than a Chinaman China-man or a purse hunting European nobleman. no-bleman. And Dr. Eastman, the alleged bridgegroom, is a gentleman ami a graduate of the Boston medical school. Brooklyn Times. The happy bridgegroom is known as Dr. Charles A. Eastman, who was graduated grad-uated last year from the Boston University Univer-sity and who reoeived his professional degree from Harvard medical school. Miss Goodale has devoted her life to the cause of the Indians, and her long residence among them has doubtless, educated her to the point where marriage marri-age with a man of that race seems entirely en-tirely right and proper. Newark advertiser. ad-vertiser. The report that Elaine Goodale is to marry a full. blooded Sioux Indian will cause something of a flutter in certain circles. Miss Goodale is a literary young woman whose philanthropic tendenoics, lod her to engage iu the work of teaching the Indians. Her lover is said to be a graduate of Dartmouth Dart-mouth College, and a man of sense and ability. Boston Herald. Miss Elaine Goodale, if the reportt of the matrimonial bureau are true, is to givo emphatio indorsement of her opposition op-position to the no-good-Indian-but-a-tlead-one theory. Her engagement to young Eastern, the Sioux just out of Boston University, makes lot of talk. Eastern is evidently an impetuous Siouxtor. Boston Record. It is announced that Miss Elaine Goodale, a teacher among the Indians, is about to wed a full-blooded Sioux. This is, of course, upon the theory that wo first pity, then endure, then embrace. em-brace. New York World. |