OCR Text |
Show V 'i , f I F 5 3 were always bright eyes to shine on tain. Jack Tars imthem old days, CLAIMS MUCH POWER. suh-cer-- si. kl f . of a assertions startling MEDIUM. SPIRIT I I I i from Can Transmit Messages White-Cowle- tbs Departed and Asserts tbat Sbe Patrons, Mrs. I A. Has Prominent i Hendricks Among Them, ' ht t - I fellow-citizen- . Ex-Minist- ; , -- ; , vice-preside- - Thomas A. Hendricks died Thanksgiving Eve, 1885. He had his no time (for the arrangement of He or Affairs business. political earthly was in an upper chamber of his Indianadinner. His polis home preparing for on the floor wife heard a heatvy fall reached his side above, and when she a dead with peacehusband found her Great was ful smile on his features. her sorrow because he had left no worcl of farewell for her who had ' been hip Vlce-Preside- nt ' : ; i who, af tef the death of their infant child, ha turned all the wifely and maternal affection of her nature unto her distinguished and ambitious husband. Passing away, as he did, nearly ten years ago without a word, is it strange if his devoted wife should have' yearned for some word, some message from his spirit? A Christian and a believer In the souls im-- ! v. j Ultra-fashionab- le ' signal-- r--who mortality, Mrs. Hendricks felt that somewhere in the realms of space the' spirit' of Thomas A. Hendricks' was awaiting the hour when they should be was it strange that she he was near her in that thought reunited.- - Nor j ! j f mentor in politics f j -- i j it has come pass that fhe friends of Mrs. Hendricks in Indianapolis have for some time back known that she be- to" y , j - j So - I affairs? counseling and guiding them in Such questions have been frequently asked in Indiana for months. Those who believe in spiritualism have been profoundly impressed with the information that th,e spirit of the dead statesman was in constant communication' with his wife and other close friends and Those who are skepparty associates. Mrs.' Hendricks and that knew tical some leading personages whj believe In spiritual phenomena professed to Ipave received on the slate of a medium messages from the spirit land sigued by the Uncertain circles of the faithful there has been no little exciteH . s state of Indiana, . er. snow-cappe- - oftep the spirit es col-leg- : ks I , j , (Indianapolis Correspondence.) S THE spirit of Thomas A. Hen-drlchovering over the Hooslers who were devoted to him in the flesh? Is It possible that the' shade of the dead vice president of the United States converses with .comrades in the ment about if. 1 ; ) ' i - i i ST while the remainder will be placed at her husband," said the medium. The THE OLDEST LIVING. HELIO GRAPHIC CHAT. less messages were not very long at first, lofty points. Gen. Greeiy, chief of the signal-servic- e but as .time went on the conversations depaHment, has us about half he required was while he was at Norfolk and were more extended and always very It promised MESSAGES FROM COLUMBIA TO number of instruments aha we must NOAH RABY A CENTURY AND A Portsmouth that Raby says he heard satisfactory to her. MEXICO. dnd the others elsewhere. Heliographs QUARTER OLD. The general purport of them was General Washington make a speech. are nqt very plentiful. The various' love and consolation, such comforting Raby is not certain what the general words as a husband would say to a have also extended railway was talking about, but there is no doubt d Mountains as Stations courtesiescompanies to us and our eastern friends wife in life or as an absent one would Remembers the Revolutionary War and In the old mans mind that the father from Which the Flash-Uggalled In the Constitution Harriet of his country was indignant and exSignals will have no trouble in joining us at write home. No, I do not remember that ' ' Use much was ever said about politics. I New for the proper time. Several Eastern-Be Will Transmitted of Kansas Has Seen a cited. McMurray ; will be generously represented and remember in one message Mr. Hensaw old I said the Yes, suh, Raby, the Snns Rays Century and Fifteen Years. a number of army officers: will also codricks wrote that he did not care to talk I and was him He talk. heard gineral j operate. about political matters that where he too I oh, gracious, yes! mad, pretty most .The was politics did not give him concern northerly heliograph will (Chicago Correspondence.) shall never forget one thing he said Special Correspondence.) S Noah Raby, of It has stuck to me most a hundred T REGULAR IN- -, be placed at the .summit o Mount Neland that he preferred to talk, with her British Columbia, froth which the on topics concerning their happiness on the Piscataway years now: tervalp the world Is son, flashes will be caught at the summit informed that Edis, earth and the joys to come when they as you poor farm. New . Go right on, of Mount Baker, Washington and be wizard of should be united in the spirit land. son, the Jersey! the oldest have been going on, am! I assure you ' on sent d down the line of Menlo park, and man In the world? that we shall have the devil to pay in Gray, who was minister to Mexico. till reach Mexico when he died, came to me,, she peaks they If the story of his this republic and no pitch hot!' Eesla, the brilliant said, life which he tells While I was in Brooklyn navy yard No he did not care to converse with be true he has I got leave one day and went out to & . the spirits of any political matters, but jf f ft f-his 123d see a monstrous pretty burying ground passed with the sjpirits of two sons who had and have startled Greenwood, they call it now, I hear. birthday. been dead many years. was about A man who came to see me two or three delighted mankind, It James Whitcomb the poet, has are at work on the eighty-thre- e years years ago told me that they bury a had a sitting, and youRiley, know he is some- to problem of telelot of folks every day there now that ago. according v .v5! t without his recollection, that Noah Raby, ordi- the bodies go to that burying ground graphing ' use of wathe wires. nary seaman, received his discharge pa- just like an everlasting stream of J pers from the stanch frigate Brandy- ter. Oh, my gracious! what big cities Impossible! is the first mental exwine, which had just finished a cruise New York and Brooklyn must be if clamation, and then, Nothing Is impossible 'with such men, is the thought of inspection of the various ports of the thats true. that forces itself upon the mind" and United States and was then docked at was afraid I left the because I finds an abiding place. While the pubto the Brooklyn navy yard. The day after thered be a navy want war, and I didnt lic Is v. ifS. he left the naval service he betook himI patiently waiting for the coveted and, fight. Well, there was a war, self to New Jersey, where he joined didnt see no fighting, only on the sea, Invention the fact is. apparently forTlx1 'V y himself to a farmer and for money and then I was on land and a good ways gotten that telegraphy without wires is agreed to serve as a hired man. Since off. Ive lost my discharge papers and already an accomplished fact, (consethat time he has never stepped outside I'm sorry. If I had em 'maybe I could quently considerable interest will atthe boundaries of New Jersey. For get a pension, and, anyway, I could tach to the preparation now being made for the transmission, July 10, of la mesmore than half a century, with more or prove my age by them.. from. Mount Nelson, British Columsage less steadiness, he followed the occuPrevious to the recent municipal elec- bia, to twenty-eMexico, a distance of about 1,800 pation he had chosen, and then, tion at Wichita, Kan., Mrs. Harriet Mc- miles, as ight the message and response are years ago, being full of years Murray, a colored woman, appeared be- to be handled without wires, and decidedly averse to earning his own fore the city clerk and desired to be reg- j Ages ago, long before Franklin disMISS FAY FULLER. living any longer, he settled down at istered. covered the of, electriqty or the the poor farm in the township of PisWhat Is your age, auntie? asked Morse had existence message has been completed ah thought of hie code, the bea- answer cataway, not far from New Brunswick, the head of the registration department. con fire will be flashed bafck along the ' telegraph wastfsed, and matters cowles of snow to Mount Nel3on. and there he has since remained. Law me, capn! Ax me sumpm Of We, salvathe! great importancemeaning All I Mors use will he old the his is the easy, ejaculated telegraph Today lady. regular tion or ruin of nations, were adjusted totally blind, but of dots and dashes fynd accordeyes, though sunken, have the sparkle kin tell you, sah, is dat I wuz in the by the lighting of alphabet mounon fires great of one who can see perfectly. His body resolutionary wah. My ole massas tain tops, from which the flame' or ing to my calculations we Will have sent befo is bent and his shoulders are contractBible was dun buned by de Jfiah Smoke could be seen at Immense dis- a message and received a reply within. ed ..but the muscles of his arms and he sold mammy and me and Sophy to tances or two hours. desirable giving information, MRS. HERBINE, THE MEDIUM. legs are firmer than those of many dat dhh Runnel Robison. dreaded, as flame after flame sliot upa - FAD. man ot yet thirty. His jaws are toothThe clerk with listened THE DOCKED-TA- I curiosity city Lieut-Goward, of a medium himself. reddening the sky. It is said that thing less viewed and a old and the his with are words uttered the skeptically. lady a sys- Its Day Is Said to He Fans lag Away- wonderful race of Aztecs Nye.and his wife have both been here, I want ter vote for Massa COx, con- tem of telegraphy by meansused whistling accompaniment, but his voice nor are they skeptics. which of Nothing to Commendjllt. gib messages were sent from one mountain 'Syhile this conversation was going on is strong and full and his laugh is as tinued Aunt Harriet, for he dunwork off horses tails still seems His Dick, my daughtah Cha'itys man, top to another until the news traversed toChopping there was a sound of scratching on the hearty as it was a century ago. lux-a be needde : in streets de when fad(am6ng somfe the distance meant to be covered! poo niggah slate,, as If visible or invisible hands long hair is white, but thick and people. Among the, horse jflfin, The United States army and the were writing a message. Mrs. Herbine uriant; his whiskers are iron gray, his ed it. men even women for that matter and service historiThe the and are mathematicians almost still drew the closed slate from under ' the heavy, bushy eyebrows now use an indepartment admire the noblest ot brutesj, sit ans the of the solid a of bureau can he and plied strument called the. heliograph, by jet black, table. . dispose registration is believed that the sun, of the d Alas, the; writing Was scanty enough. drink of good rye whisky with a sort old lady with questions, and finally means of which flashes of sunlight are tailed horse, is setting n2Yer to rise There was av short message: am here of smack that betokens the heartiest gathered enough data to put her down reflected 100 miles as easily as ten miles. cruel and ex relish. Though he believes his father at 115 years of age. The Indispensable feature of the sun again.' The practice is seWes and am glad' to be with you. ntf us and I 'spec' I be that ole, anyway, said telegraph is a mirror, large or small, tremely barbarous, The name signed was one that had to have been an Indian, his skin is the not ful .deprives only purpose. It to thedistance the sun ray been written on the jslip. white, and his features' are of a pro- Aunt Harriet, and maybe mo. according means also of Its its of horse but beauty. Ten days afterward Auntie Harriet Is to be reflected. It is a simple instruMrs. Herbine Insisted that the spirits nounced Caucasian type- enewere slow to respond at the first sitting, ment, little more complicated than the of defense against its persistent a has the The flies, mies, general public and after a few more short messages fude beacon fire, and its practicability Idea the law the that vague rphibits has been thoroughly demonstrated by of no special Import a message appeared horses tails or on the slate saying: No more the sending of messages short distances. practice of docking seeks! to prohibit This was signed by the control. Now; it remains for the heliograph to' rather that the law law has the The the that fact practice.1 ' be used in transmitting dispatches The correspondent was invited to not done what hoped altogether jwas accome the next day and did so. This time across vast areaS, and this is to be It is the do would by plainly shp'jvn he placed upon the slip the name of a complished or attempted, with a deter- number of horses with decked tails friend who Is very much alive, and was mination to succeed, by the Mazamas, a which are seen daily on the streets. astorilshec a few minutes later to get a society of mountain climbers which was Shorn of their beauty, with tllelr stumps spirit message signed - by the name of organized less than a. year ago at the of tails elevated In the air, the poor this living friend. A- vain effort was summit of Mount Hood, which raises Its creatures with aj along general apmade to get a message from Thomas A. majestic form in Oregon. Eligibility to pearance jog of depressioni aaj if utterly in this society consists in Hendricks, whom the writer had known membership are few of ashamed themselves. Tpere in life.-- There was no responses. Inthe candidates having immersed his cases on record of dock-tklle- d horses beinboots in the snow that mantles the crest stead the living friend persisted in a! fiors'es tail away. Docking running g-dead of the mountain on- which the .associa- will and in1 writing messages osout of the all the take proud spir tion was formed. This means that he animal in almost tensibly from the spirit land: But per- -' ibstanaSE A every mismust ' have climbed to an altitude of dock-taile- d haps Mrs. Herbine can explain the A safe makes horse prdbahlva names of friends really dead take. The nearly 12,000 feet. j a or a timid for animal young girl, Soon after the Mazamas society was appeared on the slate signed to short nerves man whose .have been young a andOrganized it had simple sentences, membership of 200, weakened byi cigarette smoking, to all of whom attended a banquet at the answers, were written In response to drive, There' are few fulUgrown men Was' allowed which the writer Snowy summit. The banquet was not who questions would risk making the jnselves look an elaborate affair, though the oysters ridiculous to ask through the medium! by holding the Jlihes over a were rock, saddle rock and crater rock, dock-taile- d Whatever may be the belief, it is a horse. Ex. while for fish the banqueters had sarfact that Mrs.. Hendricks has in ten dines in oil, flounders in snowbank, pike years doubled the property left her by Familiar Lot. i II on staff, sole hand sewed, soaked and her husband, and in the meantime she is no perlp so pleasthere Perhaps has dispensed to charity and in pid of strained.. At the conclusion of the re- ant g, all the in pleasant periods of relatives nearly $70,000. Not only hsQ past the gentlemen found smoking in as the in which that intimacy , the crater. she attended to her own charities, but Is assured, and the lovers the between she has carried on her roll of pensioners Among the members of the Mazamas coming event ' so near, , ass to produce NOAH RABEY, AGED 123. are several ladies, one of whom. Miss and all the needy relatives and impoverendure conversation abimt the orTawoman a ished political friends that her husband of Fuller, newspaper Fay When Raby was 21, he got away from rode down to the polls in Alderman coma, is . the only woman that ever dinary little matters of lifej what can was In the habit of hiding at the time Mr. Mills Fields plantation, in Crates Mellingers carriage, bearing herself as reached the summit of Mount Rainer, as be done with the limited mtans at their Hendricks Of his death. N. disposal; howj that life sha.lt be begun, C., where he was born, and, proudly as a peacock. And she voted. Seattle was in his life charitable almost to a county, people call it, or Mount Tacoma, which they shall lead together; what was She In fashionable the to Out find started arrayed employment. died he fault When the It is known the people of the North- idea each has of the others duties;.. of a century. She wore a as I hired out to the Widow Penelope, was a director in the Hecla Silve Minern collapse. Another woman, her Mrs. Pacific Raby, to be her overseer, for $200 shawl that her old missus gave cenV. McElvain, is the only rep- what each' can do for the Ida ing company. Mrs. Hendricks promptly said of a will renounce for the a year. I stayed there almost five years, in Tennessee her sex to remain over each resentative of a was a true sense of the de white cap, and then I left to work for her daughter-in- tury ago; quaint looking at the summit of Mount Hood, night -law, In In of a the girl who declared that she wealth ruffiles, the Widow Sarah Parker. resplendent hut this shq did in spite of the bitter macy loved her lover ffeo well as never had She was well Off, too, but not like the which her ybung missus had given pold, nose. which her bit nearly anold widow. When the young widow her as a wedding present, and an Mr. W. G. Steel bf Portland, Ore., is when she had told him howj many pairs wanted me to be her overseer ihe old tique cloth cape, brilliant in glass beads, president of the Mazamas, and is now of stockings she had got.) jit is very widow offered me $50 a year more to re- which had fallen Into her hands at the in Chicago for the purpose of consulting sweet to gaze at the stars together, and main on her farm, but, you see, 1 death of an old maid sister of her last with some gentlemen of scientific at- It is sweet to sit out amopg the hayabout twenty years, she thinks, tainments who are Interested in the un- cocks. The reading of poetry out of thought maybe I could marry- - the master, ' before the era of freedom. book, with brows all close and young widow If I was smart, and then dertaking, and also to secure all the some arms a all mingled, is very sweet; the old Harriet sensible is Aunt very her plantation and the niggers and the heliographs- he can find lying around. one but has she pouring put of the whole heart. In writdominating big house and the tar kilns would he woman, ten words which the writer knows to is be in touch and that mine. Well, my plan would have worked weakness, be ridiculous to any one but the de she would estimation wif her In quality. yes, suh, if I hadnt fallen in love. No, dear one to whom they are pent. Is very not with anybody else, but with the reached the apex of honor when she swee but for the girl who has made a widow herself. I was all tangled up, rode In the carriage of an alderman to shirt for th man she loves there has heels over head. In love with her. Why, the polls and had Mayor Cox, who was cotoe a moment In the last stitch of it the ground where she stood looked, running for tip his hat to '' sweeter than any stars everij produced. and I crooked, "T suh, get her. But that ride that triumphant ride her. of afraid No, I ' suh, Ancient Kggs in Chita. didnt have the brass to tell her I was may cost her her life, far through vannot think an of do egg anything They In love with her, but if I hadnt been ity she discarded her woolens to .wear sis about until seeems, it it In THE HENDRICKS HOME. China, of bygone days and dead in love with her I could have told the ancient finery 100 years of age, old eggs ;bing worth a bad has developed which sure. was cold, in My the caught her, and has In the directory as much in that country ja old wine took his place into the grip. been every year. .The Hen- navy, and says hea to me; elsewhere. They have a way of love scrape, Noah, No, sah, she said in reply to a quesIf youre in dricks home faces the capitol of Inthe eggs, and It takes jaout thirty keant jus tell how ole I am, to render a pickled egg fit to eat. diana. The housewas built by Senator there aint but one thing to do, and tion. I town days clerk done figured me out dat of the old eggs have become as Smith and bought by Mr. Hendricks that is to come with us and go on a but115. Some He told me I was ole enough to at as Ink, and one of (the favorite when he moved up from IShelbyville. cruise. black So I got right out, that very night, vote, and the old lady laughed heartIt is so near the business center that dishes for invalids Ip made up Chinese Mrs. Hendricks has often been urged without settling up or saying anything ily at her own wit. which are preserved, in jars of of eggs, How far back can you remember T to sell it at a profit. But, no. She feels to anybody. red clay and salt water. was at Portsmouth and Norfolk, she was asked. the spiritual presence bf her dead husIt De f urtherest back I ken remember band in every room of the old mansion. suh, that I shipped, the old man conMRS. IDA V. MELVAIN. MUCH IN LITTLE- Is the on and I resolutionary wah. I was den He Is so thoroughly addicted to ' the the Constitushipped tinued, suh.- - She had a little tot, but I remember heahing the mountain tion the . Habit. , habit that he has In Berlin sheet music by vessel a once, been but then she guns flahing neah Baltimo, and the rs established climbing great his residence half ' way up weight. was done Few have sufficjlnt respect for habit was bid and used for a receiving ship. bringing akernal dat side of Mount Hood, so that he can England and Wales ligh1 something the ease witiTwhich it may be formed; Well, I worked for a year on the Con- shot tro de bowels into dadys cabin and the as to summit his the stroll 300,000 lamps nightly. Rke morning the difficulty with which it can be stitution, going up and down the rat- mammy nusing im till he died. My constitutional. British handle most bij the trade The broken; the magical power with which lines to the top on the mast, but no massa was Kernel Desplane den, but When conceived I first of the idea and Porto Rico. of Cuba it smoothes the rough path of duty and further. I never got to be anything but he died soon an my y6ung missus sending a message by heliograph from A. W. Rudisill pfjthe Rudi-sil- l Rr. Rev. enables us to look with Indifference up- an ordinary seaman. I didnt. want to marry one of dem dar Irishmen dat British Columbia to Mexico, said Mr. Memorial Publishing Iloluse of the on the allurements of the world. It is be an able seaman..1 1 didnt want to go was in de wahl He done run through all Steel to the writer, I was about Methodist-Episcopchurch in India, a kind of shield, which the fingers of a higher up the mast than the top. That the poo' chiles property, and in de to agree with my friends that ltready was that bricklayers work In Madras, says child may, at first, weave of threads was as near heaven as I ever wanted to break-u- p mammy and me and Sophy too visionary for serious thought But India for 10 cents a day, afld do good was sold on de block to Blunt Robson the more I studied it the more firmly work. as light as gossamer, and which yet go till my time came. '! of steel. the lobster-hous- e on been into By the taken to Tennessee. strength an' After Constitution a of Id the McDonald grows Louis was convinced I became the that plan are accom- year I went on the Brandywine on the Did you ever see General Washing- feasible, and my view Is now shared its aid the greatest things by at Portland Pier, Me., has an albino habof cultivation The proper Do I ton? crufse. remember the Inspection plished. many scientists who will experiment in lobster preserved In alchohiplJj It Is the the see he young. upon You when done Genl bet Impressed name? do. I should I Washington its It was captains the big experiment. It is something only specimen known.. Vj massa let mammy an' us chilen go Wholly Isolated acts are of little comparative Farragut. He was a fine, portly, spent five years new, and I am losing no opporSergt. OKeefe, who a correct habit see In to short, to on and PikeS down suh, man, another granddaddy. man Alexandry eak, says of importance. tunity to profit by the counsels of able In the observatory of living is principle, without which no the same name was a big captain after- Genl Washington was sitting in, a big college men and officers of the army that the lowest temperptikra observed one can ever hope to be happy. ward. No, I was never flogged, but Ive red rockin cheer in de porch. He had and signal service, who have made ex- was 50 deg. below zero; the highest 62 seen lots of others punished. Once I ruffles all up and down his short-froperiments on a practically "'mall scale above. substitute jurors sit hair .and silk near was come and but it bestocking with powerful being, the heliograph. Such a great trial In Mexico two just The Name IJroker. In a trial, j If one of box trie'd to hair. cause I as the one we are to make has never near the Jury get away when some white a substitute takes ill falls were old then? was How In you London who one else been undertaken and the result will he the regulars being punished. Which of There lives a man to those who the ports we visited did I like the best? Law me, boss, I keant tell you. I awaited with no small degree of anxi- his place and the trial .proceeds, makes his living by selling to comem. considable of a girl, for befo gwine ety for those Interested in scientific mat.One of the natural curiosities of Stan-woofloat was I could have All of 'em, suh; all pf are hard up, or who want Wash., is a blowing op breathdone I see a a made to use addresses of three times leave shirt ters. We will have week when for about fifty shore granddady panies, the namesIIi3and which exhales immense quancharge is 1 a we were in port, and we could always for him. I spose I was 15 yeahs old heliographs, thirty of which will be ing" well, wealthy people. j noxious of gases . find ways of having goodtimes tHue 5ea, or mo. operated on the tops of mountains. tities thousand. .I 4 to-da- y.. . - ; - non-commit- tal ; j , 4 love-makin- MRS. THOMAS A. HENDRICKS, lieved in spiritualism, or at least in the transmission through mediumlstic power of messages from- the departed. Gradually it became known to a select and chosen few that Mrs. Hendricks was receiving messages from her1 departed husband-messagmainly on topics - -- Vice-Presid-ent vice-preside- concerning themselves alone, but occas-sional- ly referring to the political conditions and events most interesting at the time. Mrs. Hendricks has been counted a sincere believer since aboiit the time of her. husband's death. In the first few months of her widowhood, when grief crowded upon loneliness, she went to a medium, hoping, for a few words from the soul of Thomas A. Hendricks. She went to Lottie Greenrod, a slip Of a girl, who had been considered a wonderful medium at the age of 7. At that age she received slate writings from spirits when unable to read or write herself. She was. 12 years old when Mrs. dricks first called and is a comewoman was ly of 22,i who married cently to Mr. Herbine, a dry goods clerk. Lottie Greenrodf as a girl of 12, knew nothing of Mrs. Hendricks and had no conception of the high and honorable place in politics, held by her departed husband. Evidently the first slate writings must have been of satisfactory tenor to Mrs. Hehdricks, for in ten years she has been a constant yisitor to the same mediums house. Under Mrs. Hendricks eyes the girl has become a wife and .nmther, with a black-eye- d baby boy," who sits and crows while the parent holds the slate and receives messages from the spirit land. In the Her-bin- e home, a, few squares from the Hendricks mansion, can be seen a splendid Photograph .of Mrs. Hendricks and beneath it her visiting card. Mrs. Hendricks has been very kind to me outside of her patronage, said Mrs. Herbine. She is a woman greatly . , !j - ay re-electi- on, half-broth- Con-sti-tu-tio- ! . -- al ' folded, Mrs. Herbine obvious and extra pains to preventtaking herself from seeing the list. It was put inside the book-slat- e, which was then held by Mrs. Herbine under the table. Keep your mind off the names, she said. Or, if you are skeptical, look under the table to see that I am not ! ' i , good-looki- ng . doing the writing. Then, while waiting for the spirits to come Mrs. Herbine nt f 1 , of the little table. I have had some very sweet and touching talks for Mrs. Hendricks with n, so-Je- wanted weather, of her baby boy, was just pushing his little toes .against the table,' and then of the celebrated people who had sat at the fcame er , re-elect- ed correspondent a message from his friends. There was nothing unusualspirit about the Herbine method. The writer was Seated at a small table with the medium and instructed to write the names of dead friends on a slip of paper, with his own name beneath. This done the slip was Ted who rs . . to be admired Of course the ac three-quarte- j to-d- nt bric-a-br- es ! ! I d, : L |