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Show L th night. Travel rt and re ldent at th beautiful, demoralizing little principality all heard the rumot that La bell Otero twenty thousand francs a day. . H- -r luck wa phenomenal,' and feverish Interest held surrounding her La Pongy's vanity" waa conquered by her desire for gain. On this particular night she .boldly went to Ihe rouge et Ut fl'r. Sham hm Bii, h, p,, ,.r, , q a common Some of the Magnetic hlrenos Who nolr table where the Spaniard atood reclnol ed,j ! i. n to width he added a peating her former successes, and de(harm Ihe trench (npllsL course Si ti, . ltH Normal College liberately followed ber play. She won ' 4 Id hr in 11 rtnj Lawman College, a great dal, but she gave a triumph t4 A Pvugl ke p. He h" is been ln the EAUTY Is a very Otero before a throng of onlookers " bolbsat, l,i"ib. - CuMiii m since he lft but Xt'hlch the latter very probably valued giunT' thing, cbu d ai ,1 . w hen unaccompamore than her winnings caiiv mg on a gener il eon- Rut La Pongy had her revenge. A nied by magnetism It Is like a scentless night or two following, when Otero da-- " flower. Magnetism, alrd all eyes with necklet, lings, a, and pins In diamonds and however, does exist In her a entered rival simple, and without beauty, nef- black gown, nun-lik- e sweeps all before It, feet bur bn all diamonds unreawere.bimzlng ; invincibly. d the maid who followed her In sonably, mysterious brilliant green. And who Is Diane la dy. This positivism Pongy? Beyond the fact that she IS explains the contl'n-ue- d Oteros rival and has .diamonds more v ln Y Uuilbert ette jiv ndeney of thnn enough for a klpg's ransom (as Pat Ik die la only a muie hull singer, valued in these democratic days) there a cafe iliantunt ski tell artist, but Paris Is but little to telL She has bleached is tuie to her, and now, during her hair, a long, thin, sparkling face and visit to bond m, the English papers art ymcaslonally may , be seen and heard dvtj .qina columns to her praise. She has doing the' usual "turn" at some music as quietdescribed coming always ,r,vv hull pr cafe. This Is all. And with this Vv o'. b.N. dTii ly out In a conventional evening gown. meager knowledge we must be content. sainta with Hinging qui siionnble songs Anna Holder ha len talked of for j' Is' ' 'vN ly alt She doe nothing of that sort. some daring, eccentric dunces at the XVVyv.ve 0 vLirtr a for VI e' Tiue, her gown is modest enough Folios Rergvre7 IkT face la of the mochuri h liaxaur. but the long, thin arm, bile, expressive type. It Is curious, as Nj ;? Ay a bare to the elbow, in these days of bal f- looks among her many photographs, loon rlmies make one aurprlslng note; to see in her like a definite, " eyes a the Holier. bla"k glove another; th celestial aspiration. light It was a technical strvli-oablthe apother; pla.n, slipper ROHBBT V TAYLKP.. OHIO, error for nature to have given those1 He has always been s hool girl simplicity of the loosely-angel eyea to Holder. trading nvnu-of false lock hands the lnsed another; an ardint ltepublnun, t'Ut was never are frequently made in hlta Popular coloring on the undeniably red hair and curloui ways, but pertap never but before a i andidate for offiie. v plain face a last one. You expect little ColumHubert of Lisbon. ner Jn all probability, has a fashion of Taylor biana Count v, t . Representative in the from suih an ensemble. You are spellhair arrangement started a whisper. tlrst Flfty-f.u- n th Counts from the Bight- - bound from the enunciation of her The exceptjanto this rule has been Ds line. Afterward you realise why, when Merode, another of th Paria favorites. you hear critics assert that her power For three years she was one of the as an ac tress la as great at Bernhardts, coryphees st the Grand Opera, Just a unit among lines of human butterflies, angels, or nymphs. Yet In every opera, whatever the coatume, her hair, always the same, always unique, was an emphatic note. All of a length, this wonderful chestnut hair Is always severely parted, down tn low, loose bands quite over the ears; and loosely colled behind.-- " At last De Merode'a constancy to one set coiffure was rewarded. People began to ask who she was; photagraph-r- s discovered that her profile was purely Greek, that she was beautiful; and it an ob was not long before Ject of popular bom age. y her pictures are displayed everywhere ln Paris. Eho Is stilL s coryphee, but is paid extravagantly for sitting before the camera, and for an ex- - . ceptional price has posed for one or two of the best sculptors. Ths oak growing from a little acorn Is not more wonderful than De Merode's fame at a beauty hair. With starting from her T costs but about g thousand dollars fo-- a a fringe or the usual curled locks her profile might never have been discovworking plant capable of handling m ANNA H ELDER, enormous amount of sand per day ered among the back rows on ths big but put to a debasing use a Jewel In opera stage. She has tow several Imidust heap. Gullbert's face ta capable tators among Parisian actresses, and DON CAMERON. of quirt, diabolical expression; even her the De Merode coiffure has had an enmalb'st gesture, wink, or lightest nod thusiastic vogue in Paria Pennsylvania's Keillor Senator Is PreparSAMUEL EDISON A ear's Convention. become somehow blatantly wicked. Afl-- r Next for ing fyes. He was moaning ln hiasDep, and all the chattering, whirling, skirt-tossiher Don Cameron Senator United States now and then calling out for some one, JUST LIKE KIPLING. women are violent and young his intenof declared has - while ln your-sou- l mayhap his 'on the son of whom he tionPennsylvania knew Tss - of Reyou jarring;II to Usees next national into the Timely IensVty go had been so proud. as are the not as half shocking they the PennsylIlls Aatogrsph, You cannot ask a man on the streets publican convention with well mannered, velvet voiced Yvette. of Port Huron if he knows where Mr. vania delegation at hts back. The spn-at- o having recently been Kipling Rudyard Is season this Her mo.it hW song had popular from Pennsylvania has Edison lives without receiving an affor his autohard by requests pressed Grandfamous "Tha poem, Berangers firmative" answer, and If you seem a devised a happy method of has graph, flehu from her lac a mother. Taking strange!- to the place there is sure to throat she places It over her head to f dlow a recital of tTmbld gentleman's there Is no other a represent night-ca- p many striking characteristics. And you no properties, no of costume, change in will at once be corrected your promake-up- , yet In a moment the bands nunciation of the name if you follow the knees seem palsied, the eyes upon the one ln common use. It Is Eeedison dim with age, she recounts her dead here, a very long "e." One man will and gone gallantries ln a crooning montell you that the old man has no care otone, she looks a hundred years old. whatever about his personal appearGullbert's history is strangely devoid ance, no more than did his famous son of romance. Only five years ago she when he wa straining every nerve to was a Paris shop-girusing her wonderand to make investigations, get money her to ful companions at powers delight best his to with was quite willing part her fame world little tVUnhl In her ftXfWl fW IWiysyli fa time. lunch few a could he shirt If thereby purchase to look beyond Its she and began anspread chemicals otherwise unobtainable; limits. She sought the stage. A MART LOWE DICKINSON. other recites some of the witticisms for manager gave her a trial; her 'which the old gentleman has become ah? success waa instantaneous. To-d- y 1852. He locally famous; another tells of the Nov. 26, grad Is famous a shrewd business woman on the Youngstown, O., andidate for Eleetur-at-larg- e to son from father, hats ln olsilk gifts uated at Western Reserve College Garfield ticket in 1880, and was Kate Jordan In1 and very ridu-STl- te the more halt red and rusty the more JCnlted Slates Marshal fur June, i872. In September he con Leslie's Weekly. a suited to the latter's taste, providing school the Western Dlstrjct of Missouri in 1X99. menced. leaching In the high Otero, who danced tn New York five they had only been worn by "Tom," and served until 1894. He Wa elected Lisbon, and was elected superintendent years ago, has been at the Follea . another discuses at length the acume 1874, In to the Fifty-fourt- h Congress as a R- of schools In 1873, and since the of the old gtntleman; another, and From January. 1875, to November, 1876, When she writhed and auapped festlvaj. her finepublican. his uniform Jn State.. be wa 4h many another, speaks of of Missouri editor Dr. Buckeye Joel Hubbard, Muse Eden of the Douglas on the stage ger AV. Har-8. ' I goodness of heart, writes representative from the Eighth District, April, 1877, he was admlited to the bar, she as a beautiful woman, a Spanish wood ln Harper's AVeekly. Samuel Edl- saw the and was elected Attorney was born In the state, and first Prosecuting belle KIPLING. La But JHIBYARD Otero," ln Madonna type. OF CAMERON PENNSYLVANIA, son vvasbojn. so his wife told me, ln Lincoln of Columbiana Count y in 18X0. serving as she Is called, has changed all that. rod set for some light on the day that Abraham and giving it only tn applicants alfting his diad since 1886. Amsterdam, New York, August IS, ISO! presidential lightning Ever until January, was elected PresldenL His medical of hair has gone, and ah The are charitably like severity himself, who, those His father lived to be 104 years of age, time, and as he is in favor of free coinploma was won at the Missouri Sledlc.il mission to the bar he has been actively wears It wild, yefrlxled, like the thouInclined. Musing upon his predicament hts grandfathcY to be 107. With such a age at 16 to 1, hopes to gain many votes Interof his 1883. In an profi took He early Inthe practice Pari who engaged of College theatrical lights sand other one day, the plan came to him. He at d ancestry to look back upon, from Western states. He Is also more or est In politics; was elected County Court slon. lull Jn their victorias in the Bols; the once sat down and composed s brief what years, what marvelous years. may lees In favor of government ownership Clerk of Alorgan county ln 18X6, and reIs replaced to autograph hunters,. The circupure; magnolia complexion not be before the man who so splendidly of gold and silver mines, railways and elected In 1890. He at present comIteklnson thinner, lar he had printed and the Slary by crude red and white; sb? bears the family name! And by tho telegraph. doRl at present he is lookof bines bank the president positions of the PennsylMary Lowe Dickinson was born In and, strangely enough, look am?.i eleetrotyped, soheas to be sure of an unway, Airs. Edison, who Is the step- ing after the personnel (Jfo) Massachusetts, hut, after her marriage solid and Journalist, the Versailles circular declares younger than when New Yorkers paid limited supply!-Tedimother of Thomas Edison, adds sev- vania delegation. That it will be his Statesman being under for some years abroad, and is to see her dane. his signature will be sent aa toon that eral years to the future for him. for she for him, as an Eastern paper nuts it, torial control. Dr. Hubbards cuc- - resided anow' a resident of the rity of New York La Pongy, whose diamonds are as f as he sees the seekers name printed ln "goes without saying. An early experience In life as a teacher th New York Tribune as s contributor to the. Tribune led her io realize th? need for a more - NEVA WOMAN IN RUSSIA. 6f not less than-12.6- 0 stxl wojn fresh-ai- r fund. practical education for girls teach-bettA Femalo A Project on Foot to Edocat en, and she has sought to Accoorheor and Phyulclan. systems of training. Her latest f Where Is Stanley? work of gr-- at Importance waa in Den The council of state in SL Petersburg What has became of Henry M. Stanfull a she profe held where Colo., of a v?r, medical is busy with the project ley? asks the editor of Home and Counsorshlp In English literature. Such an institute for women, in which women reti4 try. The explorer seems to have coster-monge-rs of her on value the was estimate placed will study as accoucheur and physisince th gaze th from public hut as an Instructor, services, not only cians for women and children. The whose vote In th last Engas a social and moral Influence, that course of study Is to last four years, dilish election quizzed him so outrageousbe to first her chair was one of the vided Into eight semesters. Half yearly him at the polls. Redefeated and ly, fully endowed, and Jrhen examinations, on passing from one la preparing to pubhe that says port obliged her to resign this position t1 course to another, will be as obligatory earlier travels, be-tof his a lish history chair waa named for her. and sbe wa as In ordinary universities. After comW wonder Africa. won ln fame he made Emeritus Professor and holds now pleting their studies the students will tf R will be as absorbing as tha narraliterature. Its In to one three fe'Ctureship for Engt'sh yearn have to practice tive which the New York Sun published i She has been secretary ifLhe,Wotnan ln women' clinics or similar hospital on the same subject sbouT a quarter of Bible Society, Branch 25 29 American of to the All women frym years of age a century ago, and whether tt will go the national auperlntendent of who ha"; passed the ordinary htgh-slhominutely Into Stanleys adventures in In the department of higher education examinations. Including Latin and his experience In the AsiaJdinor. Union Womans Christian Temperance and Greek, will be admitted; Those Turks. Very, likely not. of the hands and president 4f the Woman's National who go through the whole course and New In York, after th publicaWhile Indian Association. She conducted for are1 successful In their examinations tion In question, Stanley told some into the devoted !jf a name "feof and years magazine wI gain ihe degree teresting stories about that Turkish adTHOMAS A. EDISON. care of Invalids, and held an associate male physic!; n and can practice both P. venture which even the Sun had J MISSOURI, TRACY, told me what her husband had always In private hnd In hokpttal for women editorship With Edward Everett Hale printed, but which are sometimes rt , by the fact In his Magazine of Philanthropy,- - She contended, that the published state and children, but will nfot be allowed to cess Is emphasized ferred to. at te r s h erry fid . ch arpx9SI''V,i, ntur: were .aJLlj Is.j. the DKtrlfiL, that Eighth .. son's to at-- i eereTa r y ' of- - thetrdev-ef age her, Ig cr as jmpnts js OTERO, 'dirge older newspaper men. opcorrect that he was but 46 years of experts in law cases or for tb army. ally Democratic, and that his and the editor of.ltn mous ln their way. as tue bargains st among the of King's Daughter one Parks Bland, Richard as of Instead works ponent. being, age last February. Her principal literary The Institute will be opened ln 1897. It the Bon Marche, Is Oteros rival. No famous sons, magazine. The Chimes of Trinity. are "Among the Thorns, "The Amber one knows quite what the secret of the has been stated, 6L Hta birthplace was has already a fund of 676,490 rubles, and AlissoutTs o years. twenty-twfor It was had Ohio. When he represented st noon on the Fourth ot two novels; Mlnan. Erie county, Life," Little Promptly "One Star." and these stage variety but ln the course of ten years will receive feud Is, Ever since the formation of the Severn and. In poetry, "The Divine Christ" and with the custom of accordance In 7 years old he came to Port Huron with an outshine to deri17.300 July, attempt of rubles, stars continually mostly Income, I teenth District of Pennsylvania the Re- "Easter Poems. . In 1894 Mrs. Dickinof chimes Old.Trinlty church the his father, and from that day to this, ved-from Monte at were both as well years, as from They eac other. the Tjequests I for Congress h nomination out Womth Inspiring notes publican son In the rang of and was the Broadway chosen brothers of the surging. people have associated him with Port In Schen Carlo president January, generous gift I ' been considered an empty honor, and an! National Council, Rain Doodle." kept away Yankee were of rooms with d Huron. , headquarwill 1C0 grecn-btiestudent gambling duatv pay JawskL Every I Occasion-crow- d. when, a year ago, Monroe H. Kulp was ter ln New York. It la not at all hard to find the an- rubles a Sear for her Instruction, of opposing, admiring the usual crowd of listener, centers the Wob P. S took up nominated to succeed Hon. would y hesitate, brlla a wa. one passer-bcestral Influence which have moulded table at ally Otero the disI toward the steeple, and then renew his had one who him represented of the verton, made and or inventor ln crimson yelthe Tbltars to the lemL California's Great Trait Output. ltant Spanish plctura J trict 0 ably, even the party leaders did the handle of his umbrella most persistent and Indomitable of men. California' fruit crop In ten yqears low, the buttons on her satin blouse- clutch upon A curious raahlon has come into vogu. Later elected. him see to not not of a man been on. expect Turnhas only and as His father eggs. robins pass valfl as Its and sacDhires has large Pmrls. In all the cemeteries metal the as In Increased sevenfold, year the Democrats nominated gigantic physique, but equipped with boxes with a silt In the lid are placed States Senator last year was powerful mentality. The old gentleman, on the tombstone to receive the cards his opponent In a political more than the gold mined ln the state. who Buckalew. R. Charles j monuments shall last when gyp who him known have aay these people of visitors. The relatives of the de- career of half a The experience of California shows that a table near by, where La Pongy stood Her fall. been had tremenwaa of a man century over ceased are thus enabled to see who all these years, diamonds of J sprinkled a It the demand for fln fruit practically with quart 1 Toung, mem' tested but once, and that by the for unlimited. dous reserve force something which among the living still cherish the ry ons hare shoulders, Otero had a v - a . John F. Hartranft hows in the son, whose ability to use ory of their departed friends. Si RK--itl PROM CONGRESS. COMIXf SOX: occasi ih beaut bhowiv't splendii advantage The father was the most of men. and coped little r SOME NEW FACES FOR THE GREAT CENIUS IN THE EDISON nothing for the il, gattcles of life The LOWER HOUSE. FAMILY. r Him where 1 saw him Ftretihet on his , artad.-cnntf Is d was n fallt giant, but plainness itself The whole fious-I- X Tracey of Missouri, Who Came 3 bauiui-- l LOi-o- u, I -- tlicr of (he (.real In tie simplest of place the c mmw A ear's I'toodltde Taylor of Ohio a Giant I11 Ilia lay Hi ills Tcntor, VI of rag tat pets on the That May anea Man a !i Aery Aoung Graiiitfatbrr Lived to the ge of One with little adurnnu r.tr homely r jet deas Ye . r intuits loins rt lifetime such low!) just loot-thenj llumlretl ami lighted the owners heart In the 'parlir' of the little li .me. new s th MONO fr on whiih mil hear the m n as-,- r HE purp' fifty-- f, the k in it s ti of a fats slf tnking n 3 Ivi.ar in tv-.grill con giesS will of the old u.au Hp St pt nthe; air the spasmodic breathing 1 I bo found that of vlian uinii r tho King upon Ins bid of s'okness, mul f' mu d John Patrick Tracey pilturts of the s m, pevtlv final oaks and jMiei See I who will represent whu It sto hI bn ul-- 1 and hung on the wail, .111 then w.ii tl.e seventh Missouri t a eh tuM- -r on stvtiad fat albums CouLumus pistU-o- Y. f dis:nctJtn the lower bith htamhib of the ftmily On the wide t Xp 111.' t f ' Air Tracey tw house ' slender ihe in table wire rnhii 1 ui.kt nipt lav. 11, as came la on the flood-til- e the walked ftaitt the the famous "hats hats which both d to t last November, lei ti it.-- trama ay up father and h n have 1 i.tt'ihui 5F f tut at the same make famou bald r d affair to the 1 el w I time ,he bad long the pin s, fied tdack, nivir too old f r the pr siie to wear A 1 ibinet oigm ill ti ligure in na prominent dim a In win re was Ijlng r amt in. (band added the last touih of to polite deltitum th f ith-- r of one of the coim-ln bom f li He home of ciiele. the i gone country I dajs to of ntui the mosi Rundiif tip Beared 18,16 a ion in me wanted have to ohm, "Tiny of hcl gone out ti (his Miburoan part n a f.i r 11 he seeuied 'ber-- f tt al wide as we s' rimary t'l-- l P'flo 1 f loit Hut m. Mu hi-- r said the b t At an carl) at n . i si lend ar bide the in a old of the man, j w t i.ilK in, al to Icoac to be so near lor my iv t d tih'i his patents t) Ine t t'n r he to ram tin tit tge t n Ho 0 a n Samuel KJian, tie diana while he attend d a country k hut he wi.n b t mivlm.iv f a t tu of Thima. A Edt- - m, tJ fi it. ter tovage he At tie age of Igliteen. after him but me He had tievui b n toluol 1 l iri.1' tf the eatja!rhlstjty of siik at nJ law In his life unil seven )i us . Lathing gan lading thi m. blonds s high am 01s at twenty-vvwhen he had a fi ei and s.pi t. u n'libiti moved to M the lilt inlets f the age. Enand married at tw he has nevir Inn so well " Fir twent;. two yeais "Toni's father time v When I left the litlte ) e listing as .1 pi Iv ate In the Uni u Army u's had here ettiyhixiy roils Hm "Tom" he vva muttered out with the ! the trees the purple asii is he-- ii lnmg in this some yellow 1 ittage among tank of Fjist I.ienh nant in 1865 He s im thing tin oil I knew of his ix'reme age he was 90 did me a giod-hvwas (ommistlor d Iaeutenant-Colone- l last August anil j et I had he 11 J before man 1) Ing in the low be wits and enrolled In April. 1865. After the 1 rwsse .ver hands parchment I went to c.oi on him how spry of foot war he settled I11 StuiM n and engaged bhrunker. couhl not vomh bieast he wai. liotv kitn of mind, how quick at n the practl e of law. but removed to rue. humble reparo e So I had hojied to find In 1X74 and engaged ln JourSpringfield this quite n markable man both an nalism as the editor of a Kepubliean NOVELTY IN MINING. study and an encycl jjiedia of newspaper. He was on the Grant elec-- t information. I:ut Instead 1 saw a long, iral ticket in lxsx. Hepuldlcan candiMeans Is y of Magnets Separating gaunt frame lying upon what seemed date for Ttallruad Commissioner ln 1878: to me must be his bed of death, the (really kluiplifleil. In the great West ntineis often dal faded from the keen aid lignt of reat-irivera that have their beds filled will enormous deposits of peculiar Ida k sand. This sand contain large quantities of gold dust, which, however, it is extremely difficult to separate from tin sand owing to the fact that the band has very much the same specific giav-itas goh! anil mttKs In abiut way as the precious metal Tips sand contains Iron, and It has been found profitable, to a limited extent, to have the deposits melted, but this is not a very paying busiress, there foie a new process has been tried with maik'd success. By means of magnets the iron particles are drawn away from the g dd. leaving this substance quite clear Aft passing through the apparatus devised for this purpose it is found that fort) tons of saftd yield one ton of crude sand and ore, worth about fi ur hundred dollars a ton. If the machine that is now being tested does ail that is claimed for it, it will be of very great value, as it a a m-i- -t 1 Cuheritu KJ inriil it.air. r.ut the cam- - B E AeY-AI KN I U S. f !i wed was so vigorous when t h, result was announced U W nunj that ihe splendid Democratic THE. EELLES OF THE PARIS majority of nearly six thousand In 1x9 hadbe-- n MUSIC HALLS. and nrr:.lpmt, that ilr Kulp. leading te State ticket by 1.S58 votes, of 89t ''uted by Mr Kulp Wli8 j, rn ln majoHty in tteauty Without Talent Due Not Count ,.nnsvlvanla IMr-bu- t for M4.I1 with Parts Theater Goers sp. nt most of bis life In N that was-winn- ing wd spell-boun- d. . dwn-ou- 1 1 ut-fi- ed 1 sun--bur- sts sap-phtre- tr high-neck- red-face- hoa-.-amo- 11 VI 11 I di-ti- ht vv edu-.ite- Hj S. v Wo-ii- 111 1 ' . m 1 I . V V j 11 . vV- o, v - 1 , nty-fou- 11 IP' r. lu-- -e le'Ki 11 e, - 1 1 y To-da- low-dra- l, good-temper- ed Ber-ger- es 1 -- long-live- cir-cul- ar type-matt- er A or ol nt -- lt -d -- 1 150,000.000-410,000,- soldier- -statesman i , 000 i: |