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Show L L Very r CILLAMS PICTURES WERE MILIAR TO EVERYBODY FA- - Me THE MAN WHO WANTS CHRISTIANS TO pET TOCETHER. ciUzeus who have The for Ihpd UEied ss r!ls!g inetrudor at 'gn-bor- ' !W 1Ur- of Otir Taeec liouil KLIrre. - Mri; vjj-iut4- s ruling r-- LooW in uni ' (rry llrllsvea (list by Ic.ltcU Aiiloo They the t uaulry for Probl Could tiliioo May ltr il.a lrnidrntial Can- -' ditUtc uf md New York end elsewhere have in Uhj: uWparaping e4 . I'wL ' cotllf-eAmeri an ijvativ. says i Juili;r to the J root the Rid i and timer V Lite the 1nited Oi i Slates does noiboee of a large Matid-lfcG1L- ev ERNII VItU in sayarmy, we have iioshe-itam- y laui. the great ing that the few regu.HiU of (avof Judge. ail y that hate been r it r tSu the plains who died recently v ill ot only favoraWj with at the home of his tlie mounted men of other nations but fattier-li- ! law. Jaw. that for the purtitular kind of work tiJ Arkell, at Uanajo-harl- which they have been trained they are Y N'. has without equals' in the world. We have been the mainstay had no reason to keep uieu In naming; of. IuukU auccesa-fu- l .but if pul to the teat we could certainly lhal in the taise a magnificat army in a very short comic journal ficl 1. time I'nlike days of the re-- I In 18m. Mr. Gillani, a born cartoonist, cent rebellion, thearly we would have plenty of ' ent .r.to partnership with W. J. horsemen to call upon. Arkeb and bought Judge From tlio Whereas In earlier days equestriatixtedsoue containing a colored cartoon nism was unknown, comparatively ft am the brubh-o-f Glll.tui the illustrious speaking. It haa In latter day s become Neipkr knew that lie had a giant to so general as a medlis of exercise, reere- of at ion and health that old and fight. Mr. Gillani proved worthy young are his premise, and he hjs home Judge fairly good riders. The various sports on his shoulders foi ten yesrs now. of polo, hunting and racing have served This infusion of talent was hacked up to stimulate interest In equitation. The ou tollateral lines, and the paper militia themselves and the best troopa it Is' on a par militia troofis formed throughout the foiged ahead until with its older companion. Gillam was country, notably squadron A of New a humorous arlist. He Fby York, are also factors. etched his art education In England All of these sources would he drawn and, like all men of genius in tar upon for officers, rather than for private funny vein, had early ambition to shine soldiers. They do not represent a large as doer qj divine things- - Hi greatest number In comparison with the force necessary to cope with a foe, but they would certainly prove a valuable nucleus on which to build. The argument Is used against us that the citizen soldier would stand no show with the trained and disciplined soldier of Great Britain. We must admit that the odds would he against us at first in the samp ratio that maintains In any contest where the amateur meets A the professional. However, we may find consolation in the fact that the general average of intelligence would prove a ; weighty advantage in our favor when once we had BPt our minds and bodies to A the task of becoming professional. Itnn of the Artiete .rrv- - Work ou l - kcl-l- t 1 ife Hi 1 be-iu- nt j re-ent- er Ttt rrtj i g ' iake np the prictice of law In New York nd assume charge of certain corporal Interests. He det linej an otter to be corn. temperance agitator without any ensured ea'ary, ami has since that time declined even aiore flattering otters to thy kgat profession:- - Mr. Woolley ha persisiently declined to be "Under anybody's management or to' be held by any soriet), church or political party, or to l.sue circulars or lithographs of himse.f as a lecturer. He Is a Tavorite speaker at Christian Endeavor invention,, and is In lleved to have ad- - JIB. JOHN G. WOOLLEY GREAT CART0dMSrI1HAVECOOOliVMATER,AL . 4 st ek-- e. the heat of the national campaign it would not be aur- Pi ming If the name of a Chicago man should be sounded all over the land as a presidential possibility. says the X a l Twres-Heral- x"l - d. - am ou( to kill .V? ! chosen s'uject than any other speaker. He spoke loo consecutive nights In Minneapolis, thirty nights In New Haven, and sixty nights In Boston. He bras traveled in England, Scotland anij Wales, making friends wherever be went. ' ot ( Among the scopic object Army Medical Is a specimen World', Marvel. collection of the microin the United States Museum at Washington of microscopic writing on glass which contains the Lord's Prayer, written in characters so small that the entli 227 letters of that engraved within an area measby of an inch. uring An inch square, covered with writing of the same sire, or counting 227 letters to each of such fractions would contain i the saloon, and to help men esiate from the temptation I do not rare whd kills the of drink. Whoever or whatever liquor tiafilc. agency undertakes the work can count on my support." This lathe platform upon which John G. Woolley, one of prohibition's foremost woikers and most popular agitators. haa takeu his stand. It Is scarcely the plttfoim of the prohibition party, and might not suit the views of those who believe that prohibition la a political Issue to tie fought far with machine tactics. Mr. Woolley holds other views on the temperance question for which he alone is tesponsible, and which contributed largely to have, his fame as a successful worker in the cause of reform. He is known all over the country and has thousands of ardent admirers In the ranks of the old parties. His acquaintance with the rising generation is especially through his activity upon the lecture platform In behalf of the Young j to-d- peti-Jlon- re 29431,458 letters. Tbs Bible u a book of which we may safely assume that everyone has an approximate Idea as regards Its general size or extent. Someone has actually determined the number of letters contained in the Old and New Testaments, and' Duds this to he 3,566,48(1. Hencs the number of letters which a square inch of glass would accommodate, written out like the text of the Lord's Prayer on this strip of glass, is more than eight times this last number; or, wide-reachi- 'Jk TWO NEW SENATORS,! how !o OF WELLINGTON AND MONEY OF MISSISSIPPI, nf frbe 'i 'll 1, " '' WASHINGTON 1' V WEL-llngto- n, wolf-catchi- ng , ONLY BERNHARD GILLAM. effort in that line, a historical painting of vast extent, having produced "inextinguishable laughter" from ail aorta of critics, Gillam wisely look his cue, and by his gpniiia, directed In the right champ, he became the foremost cartoonist of the age. In 1880 he made portraits for the Haipers and afterward through many phases of artistic life In Leslie's and Puck, which, wore preparing the way for his final and "complete triumph us a double page cartoonist in Judge. Mr. Gillam was only 25 at (he time of Ills death. Many of his cai toons were classic and fetched a big price. His work had given early copies of Judge a distinct value In the 'ecned-hBn- d market. pas-.p(- l Thi CLADDEN. 111,1 semi-publ- MODEL" Story Which Hroimht ru, to Mr, AUrt SENATOR WELLINGTON. He taught Milton and Shakespeare. himself Latin and became acquainted He with Cicero, Caeaar and "Horace. gained aome knowledge of the law in hit reading of Blackatone and Story and In many other, waya stored bis mind with information that tn late life helped him to climb the heights bis ambition marked out for him. lie first essayed finance, and at 17 waa a clerk in the Second National Bank of BaltiJ more, where he gained the friendship of Lloyd Lowndes. In 1876 he entered politics and became a power aa a stump orator In English and German. He waa county treasurer In 1882 and in 1881 and 1888 waa national legate, supporting Blaine and Sherman- - lnT890 President Harrison made him subtreas.On urer at Baltimore. He waa In 1894 a V; successful candidate for congress. Hla J political 'advancement baa ween-vapand be promise to be a prominent fig y ure In the national politics ot the future, He la a gold standardlte. Hernando Do Soto Money, of Mississippi, who has succeeded, by the Joint democratic ballot at Jackson, Miss., United States Senator J. Z. George, was born In Holmes county. Miss., Aug. 26, JOHN G. WOOLLEY. 1839. He la an alumnus of the law school and waa a student In the literary deof Mississof tbe People's Society of Christian Endeavor In other words a square inch of glass partment was a Universityof the forty-fourtmember and temperance reform. He has been a would accommodate the entire text ot ippi. He 'forty-seventforty-sixtforty-fiftMR3. AUCIA RAMSEY, resident of Chicago alnce the early part the Bible eight timee over, written out h and fifty-thias is the Lord's Prayer on this strip of like tbe Garrick, tbe Green Room anl of 1893. to the the Savage, and Mr. Ramsey soon congresses and was , Party Is a secondary matter with Mr. glass. He served has congress. cause learned what It meant to he a famous Woolley so long as the temperance Rrwrs Charmlna - Diufhllitn. with distinction during all bis terms of and successful dramatist. Collaborat- Is ad vaneed. He considers hisw ork juatlce Brewer'a two unmarried) office.-Aftservlng Jive to be the education Of the consciences are extremely! attractive flee he declined to accept further hon- wrote a four-aplay for Mr. Campof young men that they may lead right daughter to bell, who waa ao much impressed with women and are aa popular In ors, but in 1892 politics young to do best believes the and way Hves, society as they were In gratlfy the wishes of bis friends and the woman in It that abe suggested, this is to avoid partisan methods. He Washington one-aMlaa Elizabeth was again elected to congress, defeating they should give her fe special Is satisfied with simply urging all per- their Kansas home. waa one of last Frank Burkett, tbe Populist candidate, which was presently tvrned out play, sons to refuse affiliation with political Brewer, the younger, debutantes. 8he Is a charming by an overwhelming majority. Mr. under the suggestive title, 71 bom the parties that refuse to deal frankly with year's young woman, highly educated and Moneys election is very gratifying to Gods Lore. Mr. Robertson was dethe liquor traffic. y ," prob- lighted with The Vigil of Sleur with the advantage of much European his many frlenda and be 1 Mr. of written been Much has' man tn Mississot readimost children trsvel. all the one the after It popular Indeed, and ably accepted Woolleys life, his success, his fall Justice and Mrs, Brewer fall within ippi. He la a clean cut, practical man. ng1. In tact, the stars and the gods, through drink, hla conversion, and his this remarkThey are seem to be lifting the new dramatist devotion to the cause In which he Is able inscription. linguists and converse In six or up Into the very heaven of her pronow working. His father's family were seven languages. Miss Elizabeth, or Mrs. Ramsey Inherits her cafession. coun-lrof this the settlers among early . artistic a has Her pronounced Betty. for constructing plaj-s1633 and pacity coming from England ln amateur wrote talented 0 plana comedy motherrMrs. Rcyston, I. at R. Newport. settling - ' She turns her taste to a practical ish many year ago, No Irish Need Apley was born at Collinsville, Ohio, his account also, and the she frocks at done was pretty which successfully ply," father, Edwin C, Woolley, being a wears are of her own designing. As a the Haymarket Theater, London. She prominent physician. Early in the COs Is the wife of the amazingly talented the family moved to Paris, 111., and at and versatile young English actor, Cethe age of 17 the young man held a cil Ramsey. the in public prominent positionschools. - Mr. Woolley was graduated NhiIsUw f ialphnr. from the Ohio Wesleyan College In 1871, A. Ooodbe, the Ensenada banker, has went abroad, and on his return entered recently returned home after a trip the law department of the University by way of Yuma, to the great sulphur of Michigan. He was admitted to the Cocopah t- in the - southern deposiIlli1873 court in the Supreme of bar In of mountains on the eastern side range nois, when ihe chief justice pronounced of Lower California. He was accomhis showing on examlnatlon lhe most panied by Judge Maaterson, of Yuma,brilliant of all he bad known. After I MONEY. Mr, SENATOR Fay and a party of Cocopah ladlI practIclngfour years in Illinois . he as ana affair of situation guides. They went in an open nulck to grasp the' moved to Minneapolis, where he entered time I boat down to tbe mouth of Hardy Col-in and unhesitating fearless and . Supreme court practice, becoming to action He Is for free silver coinage. orado, thebce op that river the neigh-state's hnrhood of the sulphur mine. in criminal cases. In 1885 he was called - j - Qoodb describe these deposits as Dimianiwe Altec. - to the Supreme eourt of the United feminine direct descendant of J sulphur, which U 87 per cent pure, and Tbe States. He'next engaged In civil practhe famous Artec are tiny creature, refined sulphur 1 only 88 per cent pure, tice and conducted to a auccesful Issue fea- - All that la necessary to do is to shovel exquii'.tely formed and refined In one of the most Important commercial the bead with tbe J (he sulphur into sack and ship It away carry They tore In- - (0 the market for ordinary ue, ELIZABETH BREWER, litigations In the northwest. In which, grace of the ar as the representative of a Ne w York consequence she is more handsomely upbearing not are but red, aims their peclally for the manufacture ot e- -r A tbe one shicet syndicate, he attacked a - transfer of gowned than the majority of Washingthat deposit point smooth phurio acid. ' ' property on the ground of fraud, and ton girls. in the run; their hair ia coarse rises as a bluff fifteen feet high and like gold $2,000,000 by one argument recovered " and black a deny, and they are deco- - fuiijr 150 feet wide, all of pure sulphur, for his clients. fotlertlnf llrmt Cr Mckita. feathers and gay or- At the foot of this a shaft has been with bright rated I Heinrich Fellmeth, professor of comMr. Woolley became known as one namenta. These women mat? tbe moat gunk into pure sulphur Btxty feet deep, of the most successful lawyers In the mercial science at Munich, recom- wonderful pottery that comes to n j He declines to estimate the total quan- northwest. He Is said to have received mends the collection of street car tick- from Mexieo, for they have kept the old tlty of sulphur, but simply says there the highest fees of any lawyer in Min- ets. He hss founded a monthly bulle- Aztec Corns and decoration In their Is "plenty." His plans are to put the Trambllletsport," the object ot nesota, having once been paid $300 In tin. art. and they also weave wonderful product on the market immediately. gold for a speech of five minutes In a which Is to give pictures ef tickets used baskets and do exquisite embroidery. San Diego Union. successful plea fof mercy for a con- for ear fare in great cities, and furnish It ia estimated that the Irvlng-Terr- ofy In 1888 Mr. Woolley detailed information about them. ,Jle victed criminal. Too many men regard home aa a halt tour will yield a profit be to American was offered by General Fisk and others wishes to establish a society and Blare where they are privileged ' mllllon'dollars. a Pres York to New tramblllet bourn. a him associated with large salary disagreeable. ct ic n, c 'MV- A a THE LATEST IMMORTAL Chosen to t France Wlio lUi French Academy (lisle. Jacques Auatole. Thlbeault France, the celebrated author who has Just been plectcd to the French Academy, was born in Paris April 16, 1844 His father was a bookseller, and he sent the son to Stcnislaus College, where he completed his studies. He early devoted himself, to literature, and In 1876 was atta-heto the senate library. For a considerable period he contributed largely to the various periodicals, magREV. WASHINGTON GLADDEN, azines and newspapers ot bis native orator. Dr. Gladden has ynjoyed much DeDrs Journals the city, including on economic quesbate and Les Temps. Later he was vogue as a writer adminiscalled on to succeed M. Jules Claretle tions and on laws and their The tration. Hla labors for the purification on the last named publication. reformShave M, A , Rsmwy. .Fortunate, Indeed, has been the literary career of Mrs. Alicia Ramsey, w Through the merest accident she rote a bit of a one-adrama, "Only a Model," which waa produced anonymously at the London Vaudeville about two years ago. In less than a twelve-mont- h Beerbohra Tree, Forbea Robert-aoMrs. Patrick Campbell, Arthur Bomhier and other notables In tbe were theatrical world of at the ladys doors begging for her work. Her splendid power as a playwright was the common talk at club u rrr on Sacred liigultlietl I and Religious Question. Rev. Washington Gladden, D. D., of Columbus, Ohio, is one of the hardest men. In preworking of paring sermons and lectures and delivering them, writing books and newspaper articles, he finds employment for from fourteen to sixteen hours dally. His writings Bnd addresses, while on public questions, are strictly not of the class denominated as sensational. He has never been abliged to withdraw any of his more forcible utterances or explain hla more radical statement. This is an uncommon record for ao Tli Kol Kfpeod Their rewder oq tfae lUftnAQi Creetarc the Denver Field and Farm.) northern Indians, particularly it) I the Hudson bay region, and the Eokl ..T T7!I ingenuity in Recently t'hoeen ty the igutataree ef j nios possess a fiendish TbeirReepecivve stnte - the o7n.er ftheir method ef capturing game, and U--tU a fttwer-t- o IHMaat their way of applying it for killing wolves is horrible. They lake a fiat Urjr 'lew. piece ot flint a foot or so long, an4 clipped to extreme thinness at tho edge. EOR&BI This they fasten to a wooden stake, who haa been elected United which they drive Into the ground firmly, so as to leave the blade of flint projectStales senator by above the surface. Then they cover ing the Maryland legisblade all over with a good-size- d lature to succeed the ot fat from seal or other such anipiece Charles H. Gibson, which freezes. Now, the mal. has been a leader in Is complete, so that apparatus Maryland politics the sets who the trap has only person for fifteen years or come back again in n day or two and more. Mr. Welling' to trouble. ton is a young man gather his prey without any for wolf has Insatiable aa The appetite and deservea the new honor conferred ot this weakness the on him for his able management ot the blood, and It is hunters take advantage. A little while campaign that elected his friend, Lloyd after the trap described is set along Lowndes, governor of the state. His and career in politics has been as remark- comes the wolf. . It Is hungry so it It ot and likes the fat, piece able as his success, and hit story Is an interesting one. He was born in 1351 thawed by the warmth ot his tongue; it Presently Its tongue ot parentsjpho had come from Germany tastes better. In contact with the sharp edge comes eduonly three years before, His early It tastes the cation waa meager. At the tender age ot the flint and Is cut. la his own, and. of 13 he went to work after only a year blood, not knowing It Eagerly it and a halt of Instruction at a Lutheran the flavor drives It wild. Its mouth school In Cumberland, Md. But young licks and licks It, lacerating more frenzied In Us deand becoming in not robust Wellington, although for Its own Ufa fluid. Meanwhile, physique, was unconquerable In spirit sire and have and his nights were devoted to bard other wolvet have come up liter- begun to lick at the fat, cutting their work in the study of history-an- d In their ature. Thus, unassisted, he became ac- own totiguen nnd becoming taste. Presently the quainted with Goethe. Schiller, Burns, turn wild nt the bait J surrounded by a pack of ravenous and crazy creatures, which soon turn 4ipon one another and fall to devouring each other, until the merdlese flint la the center of a struggling mass of ferocious combatants fighting for very life. 'At his leisure the hunter appears upon the scene and skins the The skis wild beasts for market. cost him nothing save the trouble of removing them and the value of the hunk of fat The stake with the first blade la ready to be set again for other . (0 kill wolves. INDIANS lln T(7rftributIon8rw'hrch"""1ieTurnished oLaocletyantLmunlclpal been of the utmost value. His latest weekly to this paper, were entitled La Ruling Ideas ot the Vie LUtraire. They were always noted work Is entitled are BurnOthers . Age." preeent for the crisp, bright, newsy and yet Wrote the Who iboughtful manner In which they were ing Questions, Man and the Tools Bible?" heavier the Besides writing, written. Their and EmployWorkmen Anatole of which he was the author, and the Man is a comFrance has written numerous poems, ers." Tools on Industrial and of lectures pilation bhtprt phlcal sketches, studies, literary Much of Pr. Gladcognate subjects. den's best work has appeared In the magazines. ConrcrntBC Scbombarck. An interesting fact In connection with the famous Schomburgk line, which has eicaped obaervittonls that the man who provided the British government with that boundary came to this country from Germany when he' waa 22 years old, and after working for some time as a clerk in Boston and Philadelphia became a partner in a Richmond, Va., tobacco manufactory tn 1828. The factory was burned and Schomburgk drifted to the West Indies, where, after unsue-cfsafventures, his botanical work the attention of the .London Geographical society and be secured means to explore the unknown region of -- the Orinoco. He remained there from 1833 to 1839 and disco vered thS M. FRANCE, These Victoria Regia lily and many other critlclsma and several novels. work led the British govlatter, as with' hla other work, have plants. This " always held high rank among French ernment to commission him to suggest boundary literary men. Guiana and to make further explora' , tions. The line was drawn and be was Rmm R(or4 by rsry. Horace Tetlow of Philadelphia has knighted by the queen for his services. been restored by a surgical operation Philadelphia Press. He uttered the other day to reason. Old English Co b. Jais first intelligent words since the first -- Gold coins were Introduced In Eng-f the Conemaugh flood, Friday, day In 6 shilling pieces, III. Edward land by was skull hla when May SI, 1889, to the modern sovsize in equal nearly crushed by a piece ot falling timber. Nobles followed at S shillings ereign. Imbean been be haa lime that Since 8 pence, and thence the lawyers fee; cile. Last week a thorough examinaafterward there were quarter and halt tion was made of the wound In his skull. nobles. Edward IV. .coined angels, The decided was upon. Trephining with a figure of Michael and the operation was performed on Tuesday, a ' bono button, the size of a Fnfflhth Gold t remove. The patient, upon opHenry VIII. coined sovereigns and It comes from ening his eyes, said: His mind Is a blank aa to half sovereigns of the modern value. the dam. Guinea sere of the aame size, but bethe occurrences of the last five but he recalls the events of his We pr1 ing made of superior gold to sovereigns for 21s and In 179S at ceding tbs accident that rendered him guineas passed 30s, speechless . imt ul nrn h, h, h, h, rd forty-eight- - fifty-four- th Jn-tl- co er ahe ct ct to-da- Ercll-doune- y, of atcraey-and"Wdeadi- Bk sul-ole- per-col- or " -- 1 |