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Show n DEPEW TIIE YOUNGER JARS. HOWARD COULD. This CHAUNCEY THE BUSTER FATHER ALL OVER. -- HIS ttouan May let Answer -- to Hint Howard flould, s. n of the late millionaire. Is said to be engaged to Hath-ortn- e Clemmons, the American actiess M in Lon 1 n Katherine Clemmons Matte Hi tint Among Hu b the fascinating girl who captured Politic Men at the Keren Harmony j some years ago as an expci t in 1 Dinner In Nr Fond of England ork lie horsemanship and pistol shot while with Book and IoUtir. Buffalo Bills show Of late years sue has been studying for the stage and living In grand sty le. appearing occasionalHE YOUNGEST ly in Mr Gould s company at puhlad w as not guest at the recent functions Katherine Cl- nint-n-- he WtTttfWtty feJT fears a Ca U furajits cv-.-. .,fertu..n, of Mr Ikpew has on the coast under the name of Ml thus far eseapeTt though ft Is really hers the notice of the Clemmons is descended from 'an oil chi qniders military family for generatl ns identieager who guessed so fied with the histoty of the country. much regal ding the 'After the North and South had ceased significance of that warfare Captain Clemmons was sent to mem'iraJRe fum tion. a frontier post, and with him went his Ipon And yet he may be wife and two baby daughters one excursion the captain took Kathera presidential future states- ine, the younger child, leasing the man is Chauncey M. Depew. Jr, once, mother and older daughter at the post. his but no longer, known as Muster, and Old Sitting Bull s warriors surprised of the men this a as his first appearance at a state command, butchered many fore. Bufscattered the dinner Young Mr. Ivpew is a tall, and entirely was then chief of the tnited trimly built youth of seventeen, who falo Bill' may be said to have deserved this to the assemblage of statesmen by his on researches in lines political. The dry lumber of preslden- tlal messages and party platftrms has not escaped his studious attention, and he has even made a comparative study of the McKinley and Wilson tariff acts "When his distinguished father needs a d quotation from either of those bits of legislation he can get iSB ' ft from his son much quicker than from consultation of the documents themselves. Moreover, young Mr. Depew has a taste for the personal element of politics and has studied with interest the careers of men of prominence. For this he has found unlimited opportunity In the periodicals which burden the ample study table where his father performs his inofficial and most fruitful work. He has also found time to maRe himself familiar with the history of this AS .. and other countries. The picture of Chauncey M. Depew, Jr., which is pubMISS KATHERINE CLF.MMONS. lished herewith, shows a youth as much like his progenitor as sevtnteen can States scouts. Leading a column oser look like He was boin July the Deadwood trail he came upon the the 6, 4 STS. Every suinm-- r since his fifth, scene of the massacre, and from sur-pi Busjer,'' as his father used playfully wreck of an army ambulance was Ised to hear a childs wall. That child to catt- - him, has made the voyage to The scout Eurojie With the family. These trips was Katherine Clemmons. and the instruction of foreign nurses cared for the little girl most tenderly, and governesses have made him very and a short time later restored her to precocious in Ida knowledge of othei her mother. Mrs. Clemmons went to tongues. He speaks and reads French California, settled in Oakland, and after and German as lluehtly as English, and some ears married J. W. Dayan, then head of the stationery department of. he hag made considerable acquaintThe girls were the Southern Pacific. ance with the classics of the c .ntin-nt- al He has always been a given all the advantages that education languages. studious boy, apt to learn art4 swift to and the best society could furnish, and assimilate. Despite his polltldal, lin- the elder married Charles B. Overacker, gual and historical qualifications, a prominent orchardist of Niles. The which are quite beyond the list's of younger girl, who had been romanticalqualifications required to enter Yah? ly thrown upon the protection of the College, he. is pursuing the usual course great frontiersman, dreamed of success at Browning s classical school, and will on the stage, and studied with that cacenter the venerable blue ribbon unlver- - reer in view. Her 'first appearance was at thfetlrand Opera House In San Francisco. 'Realizing after that performance that she fcgs Illy prepared for the highest mark in Jrama she went to London to seek Instruction In the best schools .eraure - i CTem-ffTon- i can-Th- is - -- ' much-debate- - HEROES. BACHELOR be-h- TUI. - Dul that u must he taken by surprise. callel ine general court, and as a pntfimmar required the astounded members t take an oath of secrecy e REMEMBERED WITH A TUSCAN ,uld lay before them hi They yielded to the COLUMN. and then the Governor revealel T'S'"1 lS lAn taking I. uiburg "fet was t.Ki gieat for one of the On. Hundred and Fifty 'ears Hn. l lauU-bur- g Poa nihulera to lfear alone. In his Elapsed Mace thn Capture anil) de,uini he was heard to burst from I lie trench Uom. Shirley i rih wish a f. rvent praer that the Hold K'btwtk essing of Heaven might attend the en- rprise Thus the secret leaked out. ThLeg,sl.ure was a! first stoutly opposed to the Governor s plan, but it was E event commemorated by the un- - nnally carried hv a majority of one. at once sent to theu it.dlf- w0u circulars iv A riki'g &tX TP weje I e ; ami a mn Tofittd mnt at Uuuiishurik --L'teat wvn-n-r, .! u n t eer would offer them- ('aiw'XirCEvar'Jt1 than w ere needed. The- - chief IT, the one hunwas to find a man competent dred and fiftieth aimeulty to anniversary of the ductcommand so large an army and conthe siege of so formidable a place surrender of that famous fortress by as Loulsburg The choice finally fell on William Pepperrell, a wealthy the French to the and withal very papular , wit h. ! EngHrhjWes-- great event of colonial classes. The sarcastic Dr. Douglass, . One hundred and fifty years thea living at Boston. Bald that "the expedition had a lawyer for a contriver, a ago Gov. William Shirley, was busily engaged In fitting merchant for a general, and farmers, out the famous expedition under Gen. fishermen and mechanics for soldiers," When the William Pepperrell which was destined expedition reached Cape the G- Breton in April the ground was covered to capture that stronghold with ice, Pepperrejl disembarked his ibraltar of America Loulsburg. on the east shore of Cape Breton. Thirty years troops on the evening of the 28th. The later came the war of independence and surprise of the French was unbounded. the glories of Loulsburg were eclipsed It look some time under the greatest and almost forgotton. By the treaty of difficulties to land the troopa and the A mSQ CtrefTil In ITU Cape Breton was ceded- - heavy gunx. But Pepperrell to Fiance and Nova Scotia to Great who never saw impossibilities and did Britain Frgnee Immediately began nil understand the word discourageBesides, he had under him men fortifying the cape In the most formid- ment. ho had been accustomed to the severable manner. She built a walled town In the southeastern part, with gates and est trials of frontier life untlf they had moat and drawbridge, as In feudal become men of sinews of iron. The times. The rampart were of massive siege lasted forty-seve- n days. On June 1 negotiations for peace were begun, stone, and from 30 to 36 feet high. A ixteen the entrance to the harbor was a little days later Pepperrell entered COLONIAL sr OF LAWS YOUNG BOSTON WOMAN GETS A HICH DECREE. F. Acton Has Became a Lawyer of Renown In the llmfet Uy The Only Woman In Her Claoa A lluil Itng-(l- a Amy to I ana. MONO the member of the claa of '03 of the Boston Unlvera chool t L , ouug la'Cy, lai'Amy FTACTonr j I; v Yt - Ally vh cam hereafter place an Die B-- after her name. Mi Acton ha already nailed up her shingle as a lawyer, for ehe w aa J mitt ad la the bar last December, and since then she has enjoyed a lucrative practice. Mis Acton 1 an attractive young lady, with whom tt 1 a delight ti converse. She possesses a sweet voice, which, no doubt, makes due Impression on the learned Judges who sit on the bench. She Is rather amatl of stature, with a fair complexion and an abundance of black hair. Atjber office at 88 State street. Boston, she I a busy worker, and her number of client i growing every week. Although MlsaActon was born In Sydney, New South 'Wales, she la now thoroughly Imbued with the true spirit, having lived In Boston for the past seventeen years. She Is a graduate from the Shurtleff grammar and girls high schools. Miss Acton was a bright scholar and an Industrious worker. After graduation she entered the law office of E. P. Gilman, and during the four year which she served him as clerk she acquired a taste for law and lost no opportunity to Improve her mind with legal lore. She determined to prepare herself thoroughly for the profession. and with that aim in view she entered the Boston University taw School three years sgo, although ahe continued to work TOP Mr. Gilman nd studied under his direction. A bashful girl would have been 111 at ease among sq many young men students, but Miss Acton, by strictly attending to her duties, won the respect and admiration of her classmates, and her popularity resulted In her election as class secretary. She was proficient enough In law to successfully pass the examination for admittance to the bar, and since her formal admittance ahe has continued to practice with excellent success. She won her first caae, and that was a good omen. She has appeared before Judges In the civil courts with able lawyer for her opponents, and Jias never failed to attend mer-Ci'lh- L a hifi. mi .I.,--., fifty-seve- NEW YORKS BIO MASON. Jolia Stewart Recently Fleeted Cnad Matter 1 the State. Grand Master of The newly-electe- d Free Mason of the State of New York. John Stewart, la a representative Mas-o- n. Few jmen in that order have risen to that high office, and the number Is still smaller of those who have been thn complete embodiment of It principle. Grand Master Stewart was mad a Man on In Albion Lodge In 1874, and at once , entered Into the spirit and work of the lodge, filling various station, and became It master In 1883, holding that office six years. He Is an accomplished served as Assistant Grand LecUiref for three years; also, ay'-- '' DIstrlcrTicputy'' Grand'MaSrer." tee and treasurer of the Hall and Asylum Board, where hi sound business Judgment proved of great value to thn a member of the advisory craft; board to examine and setect plans for the Home for lndigrnt Mason, at Cllca. sail In nlhsE.oapanittea, where fie haS displayed the- - highest efficiency and ' life, i. JOHN STEWART, fidelity. One year ago be waa elected Deputy Grand Maytef.' , ' WILLARD VSiV 1 PARKHURST. ttUlsr Itss Locked Horn tbs Mer York Preeeker. Dr. Parkhurt Is a bold man and not at all afraid to express hla opinion on any subject, however It may antagonist the views of others. No clamor of politicians has terrors for him, says Harper's Weekly. No assurance of th hopelessness of sny effort or plan has Mias A B.g Spider, spider about 4 Inches long and nearly as wide was sent to the office of the Board of Education In Kansas City by Miss Virginia Lewis, a teacher In the Switzer School, who captured it In the country south of the city. The repulsive creature was secured In a large glass tumbler covered by a tin top. It Is designed for Prof. N. A. Harvey, of the High School faculty, who takes a professional Interest In such things. A number wf spiders of this kind live In a cave that underlies that portion of the U by lie Does Kot Like th Indianapoand Thirty-nint- h city between Thirty-fourt-h lis Monnnsent, streets for haTT a mile west of LUCY STONE BLACKWELL Troost avenue. They cling to the sides Lew. Wallace, who waa appoint-on- e Gen. Lucy Stone Blackwell, the and roof of the entrance to the cave. oT aboardlo flnish a iaio.ooO iot-- l lnence as a and aa This entrance is an arch in the solid American reformety waa born Aug. H- an advocate In public speaker dlers' monument at Indlanapolla, baa of the Individbehalf West 1818, gradat Mass., Brooksfield, "l rock on the grounds of H. W. Spangler, ual liberty of her own sex. She waa not accepted the appointment, because a dairyman, who live west of Thirty-sevent- h uated In 1847 at Oberlln college, andlee-atIn procuring the organlza-ture- r of his dissatisfaction with the monucareer aa a . CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW. once her conspicuous entered JR. upon and Harrison streets. The spiment as far aa It has gone. He And all 's of tlon Woman's the beinf her Suffrage and reformer, specialty sorts of faults with it; says It was de:slty two years hence so well prepared, ders are said to be venomous and are. Gon of United the ero 1848 has and was States, In she rights. if prognostics are verified, that his known to have existed in the vicinity signed to be a military structure, and In slsted of of editorial y the management the society by course there will be as easy as he for years, but no naturalist ha thus far public-varioisn't; want to take down the bronte Woman the la Journal and other to lecture deliver Massachusetts chooses to make It. Young Mr. Depew given them a n aims'. or genus. statue of Indiana from the top of tt; advance-an-d tlons In Interested woman's states easterrt of the point has not a wide acquaintance among of Canada. She was married tfe ment and occasionally writes for the wants to substltut statue for most '"boys of his own age. Too much of his Latest Portrait of the Postmaster Genera). those selected; denies Governor Morof Cincinnati, Ohio, monthly magazines. H. B. Blackwell time has been devoted to his favorite ton's effigy a place on the monument, is the latest portrait of William studies and Intellectual pursuits for L. Here and desires other change. He ha of General the Wilson. Postmaster the town while the ships of hla expedihim to have won standing as n athlete Island scarcely a quarter of a milt definite Idea of what such a monuNever ment as Indianapolis aspires to should on the river, diamond, cinder path or across, on which the French erected a tion sailed out of the harbor. waa a place more mauled with cannon be, and wishes to see them carried out, which gymnasium. He, however, Ilke3 tennis, battery of thirty and Is especially fond of horses, and he they called Island Battery. The light- and shells, 'wrote Pepperrell to Shir- HI criticism and suggestion have rides and drives well. He enjoys a joke house stood In the northeast part and ley. Neither have I read In history of atlrred up much opposition and some renear it were the magazines. The towa any troops behaving with greater cour- sentment. Without venturing any opinalmost as keenly as his father, but has of Loulsburg was regularly laid out la age. We gave them about 8.000 cannon been so much the companion of his ion on the merit of them. It la Bate to that he is rather a receiver than squares, with broad streets. Around ball and 600 bombs." say that ha baa done good service In a purveyor Of the quips and whimsies the west entrance, where there was a When the news that Loulsburg was bringing the monument under discusthat make the salt of life. What with drawbridge, the French erected a bat- - taken reached Boston at Wight an up- sion and making the Indianapolis peoroar of bells and cannon proclaimed It ple consider what their aoldlers monuthe young man's Inheritance of blood and breeding, the unusual acquireto the sleeping city. Before the sun ment ought to be. Usually such matters are left to a committee, the memments which have already yielded to rose the streets were lined with shouthis ambition and the exceptional opporing crowds. Ned York and Philadel- ber of which ar very meagerly qualtunities In which It may find a field. phia hailed the news with lllumlna-tlons- ,' ified for their Job. Some Incompetent IntherO Is no budding career, perhaps, ells,-and ringlng-ofiring --of Impose hi design on them, and which he American public may watch cannon. When the Intelligence reached trusted with the work! with painful and Whether General with livelier interest or more promisLondon the lords of regency ordered afflicting results. the guns In 'the tower to be fired. At Wallace's idea about the Indianapolis ing auguries of a success which shall be conspicuous. Not many of the forenight London end adjacent towns were monument are carried out or not, the most Americans have hid sons able to ablaze with bonfires. Never did any monument. If not too nearly completed to be a gainer by hi Jive up to the full family stature in great victory cn the continent fill Eng- already. likely the following generations. But nobody land with more tumultuous Joy than criticism. If more men had been willwill be disappointed to see the youngest this conquest of Loulsburg by the pro- ing to say disagreeable things to their neighbors about soldiers' monuments, vincial troops. .guest at the assemblage of public men great army of military mewho gathered about the table .of Dr. The monument unveiled is a Tuscan perhaps th which the land la dotted with morials ' Depew take a foremost place In future WIiLlIAM L. WILSON. column, about thirty feet high, sur- might be more worthy of the dead and. convocations of bodies of equal prommounted by a cannon ball and standUnited' States. It is said to be the only more creditable to the living, aays Harinence. ing on a pedestal In the old King's true one of him seen in print since he beon which are Inscription which per'' Weekly., came prominent in affairs of the naTHE LOUISBURG MONUMENT. The Latest Mall Box. commemorate an event so tion. , which com- suitably Gilbert L Bailey, of Portland, Me., Tbs Atlanta Ezpmltlon. tery of thirteen famous In colonial annals. The die, a street box the letter which has patented pletely protected the city gate. At The "Cotton States and International and are column, all .ball polished. Mrs. Llkea I.an Fa. try bottom of the harbor stood the grand embodies several marked improvements exhibition," which opens at Atlanta on Mrs. Langtry declares herself so much royal battery, frowning with Its twenty-eigover thpse In use, and which has met gept. 18, Is to Include n art gallery States that shk and two Ruffians on IV heels. the approval of the officials of the Post pleased with the United put among Its allurements, as every modId-her daughter Franee had been twenty-fiv- e has determined Office Department Among Its best feayears, at States That have Whipping-post- s or ern exposition must. ProvIslun has been 13 years old, at a cost of $6,000,000, In building this al- us flogging aa part of their penal sys- made for the erection of a beautiful tures is a dial which records automat- Jeanne, who Is now ically the hours of collection, enabling school In New York. Mrs. Langtry says most invulnerable position. It was still tem are fortunately equipped for the renaissance art building, with a large one to tell at a glance If the collector that before she became am actress she unfinished when war broke out la U44 treatment of bicyclist who run over at each end, and floor space In has been there; also, a new locking e. hesitated whether to go on the stage or between Franc , and England. Th People and then Scurry off on their gallery Horace for sculpture.. center the She had a French-- at -- Loulsburg attacked Nov Wheel without It Is so arranged as la furnish to try market-gardenin- In os confession Bradley has charge of the department apology er and wealth-famous Scotia had the Lane, from unpreof Jersey sconce. Canso, garden of Identity. Such persons, when caught, of fine art In connection with the exwholly the best protection to Us contents, and mall matter Is so an aptitude for that sort of profession. pared for such a movement, surrendered might be materially benefited as to position and aailed for Europe a fortBut what Interests her most now, even at one without making any re- their manners --directed as It falls Into the receptacle by a few timely lashes night ago to look, after ita interests. more than the stage, is her racing stable sistance. Gov. Shirley of Massachusetts well laid on. that it is emptied with great eqse. the sort of punishThe development of the south a "a and stud farm at Newmarket, and wher Immediately sent reinforcement to An- ment which It istheir ofsuits market for pictures Is still in Its Incontemptible g ahar-lntwo to In contrives she to In time save It from spend England napolis fense. The newspapers tell of creatures A Valuable Manuscript. and It 16 very reasonably exfancy. fora week or same there. the three days fate. Soon after the who run over little children, leaing pected that the fine arts department While Julius F. Sachse, of Philadelwa mal declaration of war by England he came them they fall, and- whla wy of the Atlanta fair will db much to phia. was abroad last summer, received in the provinces and It pro- withoutwhere Gladstone's First Chip. across and purchased the diary of Joa word. It. A. means of evadTh A Gladstone relic was sold at auction duced the greatest excitement han Heinrichs, Staff Captain In the Hes-la-n on ing responsibility for carelessness the on French one hand and Indians was the a the other In It London under day. chip Knyphausen, bicycle beats legs, horseflesh, or sny Jews st Tlsibsrtim Jager Corps, war. -- The of the first tree felled by Mr. Gladstone the other caused a great deal of alarm, contrivance hitherto though- -. Invented, during the revolutionary from the Sahara, which and called effort most Caravan forth the after announcement vigorous at Hawgrfien case are recorded, and not Infrequentmanuscript is of unusual historic value, BenchazL report that a reached was for have 18T meant to Greenleave revoIn Loulsburg that he ly. where the bicyclist Is the victim and number of Jewish merchant since it gives the progress of the from fortified Gov. Shirley, that strongly the standpoint of wich and seek the' representation of is knocked down by careless boors In lutionary war from first hla heart waa set upon capturSouthern Morocco have arrived el entry is dated Midlothian. A silver plate had been though the Hessians. The who straightway whip up thetf J buctoo ,na intend to sett! there and attached to the chip by its owner, with ing It, moved very cautiously. He de17TS, during at Philadelphia January and dUappear.-E- x. cided that no regular alege would avail. tablish warehpuaca. an Inscription. chut British occupation of the cltr. A Assocla-woman- Antt-Slaver- us -- 1 f ' weight enough to dissuade him from 1L When th tempest bursts upon him he merely wrap himself all the tighter In' th cloak of determination. He does not often need sympathy, but he has" lately brought down upon himself n critic of such gentle and sagacious methods that he may find himself In an unaccustomed condition of embarrassment. Writing recently about womankind, ths doctor recorded his conviction that whatever certain adventurous women may think about It, nature hat constructed wpman on such a plan that any feminine attempt to mutiny against wifehood, motherhood, and domestic limitations' Is a hopeless Imbecile attempt to escape the Inevitable." This deliverance came to the knowledge of Mist France Wlffard and she has written him an open letter about It The doctor must blush when he reads Ells Willards reproaches. It ahe had abused him It would have been nothing. But she so sorrows over him as it good man gone wrong and so laments that such a champion should of such a misaphave been the prehension of the progressive woman and her alms In life that sny leas resolute doctor than Dr. Parkhurst must have shut himself up In ths cellar of hla church and taken to bread and water' and repentance. AU that the progressive woman wants, Miss Willard says, is to wear clothes as comfortable aa men's clothe and toliave an open path before her to such development, such opportunities, and auch right and protection aa can only come to those who have a Voice In making the lawa by which they are governed." , It appears, then, that bloomenr (if she likes them) and the suffrage are all ths progressive woman asks for. Bloomers she can step Into nowadays whenever it suits her convenience, so that ths real Issue between Miss Willard and Dr. Parkhurst Is whether women shall vote. If Dr, Parkhurst believes In woman suffrage he can easily appease Mis Willard, but if he doesnt he must teavs her unconaoled, sore trial as that must be to him or to any good man. snd-rath- there. I er vl-tl- m MRS. OLNEY CORDIALLY LIKED. ! Topnlar f the la Capital Society. Mr. Olney la so cordially liked by society generally that on every aide are heard expressions of pleasure and Interest in her. That she will adorn her new position Is a foregone conclusion, for she bring to it not only a gracious- - OccoBd Ldy 1 -- baa-tlon- , , -- ikf m ' ' de-vlc- g, -- ad-an- -- n. -- - I. , MRS. OLNEY. ness of manner that would Insure success on sny fines, but she has besides enjoyed valuable experience In the past two years, which will be of an immense Mr. and Mrs Olney are advantage. gifted In the most admirable and de. lightful accomplishment, dinner-givinNona of the official householders have entertained more frequently and handsomely than they have by dinners as well as In other ways The one exercise and sport to which the new secretary of state 1 most devoted la tennis All last summer he spent his evenings oa the court adjoining hla g. home. , . r |