Show IIIt JOIIN t WOOUgy TIlE MAN WHO WANTS CtlrtlS TIANS TO OBT TOOETHBII I ItriUiw Hut tw 1511011 lnllen Tlry I mill C anew the wnlry toe Iraht Illon Mj IM the Ienlnllwl Coot d Coo-t at shot 1arOo N lime hl ot the nallonal olDlIltm 11 nO sonnet nol tewr prying II the name ot n 1 Chlelto hUin ca5 I Mhoul1 be I oulllle t all IIIlr the land at a prinldenllil lineS i line-S + tlblllt oily tin rime Hi raid I am nut tn kill the saloon and to clp mm neapa from the temptation nt drink I do not rare wen kill the 1iuor raffle I hnever or whatever I agency undertake work eon count on my support This In the platform upon which John O Woolley olin of prohibitions toro most ni kern Anti moat popular aglla lof hm taken hit stood It It ncnrcel the phUtu ill of the prohibition party und might not milt the tlettt of those on hn beller that prohibition Is n pollll roll IMIIO In be fought for with machine I acllc Mr Wonll hoMi other view I on f the temperance question I for which II in alone It retpontlble nnd which i hole no doubt inntrlbuled large to lit tame at a tiieresuful worker In thn I cause ot reform lie It I known all over the counlr and lint thouiand of or dent Mdmtrem In the ranks of tlm old I miles Ills arqufllntance with the Hung Hu-ng generation lepeclnll lderrnrh Inlt through hit nrthlt upon the lea lure platform In behalf of tho onng = = 11 I l r ii f I t 1 11rl cw f I f I n Allu0lu t I 1 JOHN 0 OOLIUY eoplo Society or Cbrltltun Kndcator and temperance reform Ha hu been a resident ot Chicago since the early part of 1893 Party It I a secondary mailer with Mr Woolley so long at thelcmpcranrecaute It I advanced He consider hit work to bo lee education of lime consciences ut young men that they may lead right lives and belletc the belt way to do thlt la I to atoll partisan method Hoi I Ho-i satisfied with limply urging all person per-son to refuse affiliation with political parties that refuse to deal frankly wllh tho liquor traffic Much ha been written of Mr Woolley lire hit success hit rail through drink bit contcnlon and hit devotion to the cause In which ho It now working lila rather family were nmong the early tattleri of this noun try coming from England In I 1GS3 and I til If i settling at Newport It I Mr Wool I Icy na born nt Colllntvllle Ohio hit father IMnln C Woolle being n prominent lhjsldnn Early In the GOt tho famll mated to fart III stud at tho ago ot 17 tho young man held n prominent position In at tho public i tchoolt Mr Woolle was graduated from the Ohio Wesleyan Collage In 1871 went abroad and on his return entered the law department of the University or Michigan He wai admitted to tho bar In 1873 In the Supremo court or Illinois Illi-nois when the chief jusllco pronounced hit thonlng on examination the most brilliant of all ho bad known After practicing four year In Illinois he moved to Minneapolis where ho entered Supremo court practice becoming Into ntorney and a leading lawyer In criminal cases In 1885 be wag culled to the Supremo court of the United States 1to next engaged In civil practice prac-tice and conducted to u aucceiful lieu one of tho most Important commercial litigation In the northwest In which aa the representative of a Now York syndicate he attacked n trantfcr of 1 property on the ground or fraud and by one argument recover + d j 000 000 for hit cllenlH I Mr Woolloy bccamt known ai 0119 I or the mall successful lawyer In the northwest He It I said tn havo received tho highlit fee of any lawyer In Mill nwota having once been paid 1500 lu gold for u speech of five minute In a iiecMwful plea for mercy ror a con vlcted criminal In 1888 Mr Woolley was offered by General Ilsk and other attoclated with him a largo salary to f Ill OJ 11 or 1 In 11 I York anal ei no hurgr f rlAln con porite li I 1 Ib di Ilo4 I All ofer 10 bl rom n le IIIP aua 1 snr as milnd J r + rs II i li I ells Inl lime tp < hand I u 1 n r nf i offer to It enter in 100 I 01 u lrnfolon 3fr WOIl > Irs etuis i nilb declined tO be U dr inlnull 4 rminngrment or to be held b > nny tarlct church or politic party or to iMie 1 irculan or lithe Irtpliof himself n a lecturer He tin I favorite speaker at Cbrlttlan Undent cenvmtlou and u billeted to have ad rfraHed Itrger audience upon hit ehll1 iiibjeet thin any other speaker Ho spoke 100 consecutive night In Mltmcflpollt thirty nlghlt In New Haven and tiny algid ts In Ilonlon He hit traveled Kngland Scotland and Wall miking friends wherever he went Inn of u vtnri Mnft Among the collection of the micro teoplc objects In tho United Stale Army Meilleal Museum I al Wnihlngton 11 I a upeclmfn of microscopic writing on glaM hleh contain the Urdu Prner written In character no small that tlie > entire 2J letter of that yell lIon are encrtved within an area meaa urlng 1Mlbylllt lit an Inch Vn Inch tenure covered with writing or Ihu name are 1 or counting 227 letter to each or such fractions would contain II rIUIIM tellers Thn IIIUM Ia a book l of which we mo I safely assume that eteryono has nn ap proximate Mea I is regard its general < ilio or extent Someone has actually determined l the number of letter con tained In the Old and New Testaments and finds Ibis to he 3 CCC ISO Hence the number of letters which n square Inch of glut would accommodate written writ-ten out like Iho text or Iho lorda Prayer on this strip of IIIAIIII is I moro than eight I times Ms last number or In other nordi a equate Inch or Kiss would accommodate Iho entire text o t Ihe IHIilo eight tlmeo over written ou t as li the lord Prayer on hit strip o tt glass |