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Show LOXDON'SLORDMAYOIi WALTER HENRY WILKEN POPULAR MAN. Indart.J Into A VERY la m Mar ner That Mould Put to Bluah Oar Slt.K h Prrtldratlal Inaujurotlout or Ilia Life. Offl S with coiporate politics dates from 1ST In 18J3 he berted in the office of sheriff of the eity in conjunction with Sir Joseph Renals, aud with his colleague received the honor of knighthood on the occasion of the marriage of the Duke and Duchess of York. He is prominent in freemasonry and a past master of No 1 Lodge, huh is known as Grand Masters Lodge. Among his classmates at Brentwood were Sit Edward Clarke and Sir Henry Irtirg On the occasion of bis inauguration as lord major all Leadenhall street was converted Into an avenue of spieading festoons of or- tginal and beautiful deslgus, the ex- penso of the display being borne by the electors of his ward as a token of the ! esteem In which they held him. At the boundary of the ward a triumphal arch heavily laden with garlands was erect-- ; ed. it was raised on solid pedestals, from the sides of which rose four fluted columns, which were surmounted by the handsomely ornamented arch, whose keystone bore the arms of the citj. At the turning into St. Marys i avenue the four points of the inter- NEW AKE. WOMEN. eon-dlti- - J CONSEQUENTLY THE PUBLIC EYE. ARE ANp IN Dart f Th.m Haw llwl.es Auoihsr Has Flulabml mouth toilet; Kills an Bar lilke Two a 1 0,000-Vil- a tins J globe hot For this she w as to receiveJ LINCOLN. one thousand dollars. One of the was that she was to cover ten thousand miles on her wheeL Miss THE FOSTER MOTHER OF THE Londonderry has till ready arrived ia MARTYRED PRESIDENT, j Boston, some days ahead of the prescribed time. j There wag friction at a Story of IWr Lift m Told bf- - Ttloft recent meeting of the Virginia State Wbt Kutw Her Circa miUdcm Cad Medical Association held at Wthe-ville.-Y- a. Which bht hccamt Tom Ll&ctU'i Second Wife, Among the applications for membership was one bearing the name Prt if Iot mailer. i SABAH BUSH on e to his aunt, who waa then a widow Johnston, she told him that the would be perfectly willing to marry hlm, M she had known him a long time, and felt that the marriage would be congenial and happy, but It would be impossible for her to even think of marrying and leaving the state, as sht was considerably In debt, and could not think ot leaving the state while la debt Uncle Thomas told her that need make no difference, ns be, had plenty ot money and would take care ot her financial affairs; and when he had ascertained the amount ot her Indebtedness and the names of the parties to whom the money was due, be --went hrotind aud redeemed all her paper and presented It to her, and told her, when the showed so much honor about debts, he was more fully satisfied than ever that she would make him a good wife. She said, as he had displayed so much generosity in her behalf, she waa willing then to marry and go with him to Spenrer county, Indiana. This second wife of Thomas Lincoln has a vast relationship living in this (Hardin) coupty, among them the nephew from whom the above was obtained; also a niece, Mrs M. 1L Cofer, whose husband died a few, years ago, and was, at the time of his death, chief justice ot the supreme court of Kentucky. She has also a nephewr" Hon. W, P. D. Bush, at Frankfort, Kentucky; and the past of Mrs. Catheune Chlnault Runyon. HE accompanying month there have Mrs. Runyon - known as one of the portrait of Sarah Bush been a number of best authorities on hygiene la this Lincoln is from new Women promi- country, soys a writer in the Metroin Maguz; m1 possession ot her nently in the public politan Miss h daughter, ej e. though this of new Ada Lew is is qntte'anoi.her kind grand woman She is appearing as a Mrs. Harriet Chapdoes not necessarivery ouch up to date new woman in a man of Charlesly mean that these town, 111. It was particular women play called " idow Jones wore bloomers or lately printed In halt tone in Mcwere so utterly difpulpit and politics... Clures ferent from the reel Magazine, kllala-le- r ot the by of their sex, except In the matter ot CwtWtti,, Mop,. Think. That special permission Hand. a Tak My owner. was born Bush Sarah achievement. To be sure, all bloomer Th Boston Globe recently published in Kentucky, December 13, 1788. She women are new, but this does not imply was a friend and companion ot Thomas symposium of opinions from promithat all new women wear bloomers. anent aien on the question, should Lincoln and Nancy Hanks, and It is who does things The woman of tuat her mother and grandmother be- clergjrmtn go into politics? Hon. Elijah said that Thomas Uncol n asked her first fore her would not have dreamed of A. Morse, M C , of Massachusetts, furn- to marry him, but tnat she preferred ished the follow ing: Daniel Johnston. Her husband died doing is quite sufficiently new to make In answer to your question, "Should before Thomas Lincoln lost hit wife. her interesting to most peope. clergymen go into politics!" If by that In October of 1818. In November, ISIS, A Mias Jane Aird recently applied. In the circuit clerks office In SL Louis, you aiean should they take au active Thomas Lincoln went to Kentucky to interest in public affairs, should they seek her a second time in murrlage. for naturalization papers. She desired to become a citizen, and speak and preach upon great moral Issuesnhich are under consideration by she wanted to go about It in the regulathe state legislature pr by congress, come from tion way. She said she had should caucuses and go the island of Jamaica, and that she to tin they attend the polls and" vote, I answer most cerw ished to become a teacher in the pub tainly, yes. Surely the watchman on lie schools after her rights of citizenthe vails of Zion should love his counAlrd Miss were beyond ship questlonr ihould loe bis flag, should be jealdid not receive much encouragoment try, ous of her honor, should desire her prorperity and advancement. And certainly when gieat moral issues are at stake, as they very often are In state and national legislation, he shoul not fail to imitate the prophet of Israel, and lift up his volte like a trumpet and 'cry aloud and spare not. On the other had. If jour question asks, shall the clergV t '? f men go on the stump during the polit-cfi campaigns, end discuss the tariff and finance and puiely bublmts quesA ft a V tl tiotu? I should say no. He had better' iff t leave that held to public men known as pollti-ian- s. In short, the pulpit and the clergy are not supposed to have to do directly witff candfilatee and with business questions. The clergymans are divided on these questions, and he cannot take sides on them without elving offense, result lug In division and discord in the church. But on great moral questions, like temperance, Mormonlsm, laws wgulating marriage and divorce, the defense of the free unsectarlan pubWALTER H. WILKEN. lic school, laws for the protection of chastity, for the auppresslon of gamwere connected to an streets mediate by law, and wa3 called ARM1DE DEMESIC. the, bar at the cluster ot from the circuit clerk, but she' filed her bling awLlotteries, laws to promote the Middle Temple In 1875. Owing to the overhanging crown-shape- d death of his father and an elder brother festoons rising to a point in the center. papere nevertheless, and she Is In hope eettlement ot disputes by arbitration, the enforcement of law and order, showhe subsequently succeeded to the con- Throughout the entire ward all the ot becoming a citizen of the .United. trol of en extensive business in the city etreets in the line of procession presentSARAH BUSH ing respect for and encouraging public Is Buch a thing as .womIf there officials in the discharge ot their dutle as an importer of yeast His connection ed a picturesque and attractive scene. States, ans rights. ot all these questions the pulpit and An incident ot the courtship Is told in Old Dartmouth College Is losing some a private letter from Mr.. 3. L. Malt, W ot Ita Puritanical conservatism. It has a cousin 'of President Lincolns:'"! ' LOUISE MICHEU Philanthropist and rinanclan lately admitted to its full course Miss have recently apent a few days in Darius Ogden Mills, of New York Katherine Quint, who is the daughter the French Women Who linn Coni to city. Is noted Elizabethtown, the old Kentucky home for his generous contriof a Congregational minister and a of Uncle Thomai Lincoln. While there Tell l'n Blow to Life. butions to many educational and charit of Wellesley. The Rev. Quint graduate I had a long talk with by old friend It is likely that when Louise Michel table Institutions in this country, and la a member of the Ooard ot trustees Hon. S. H. Bush, who is a nephew of visits the West, the actual sight of her is at present contemplating the build- of Dartmouth. His r. He President Lincolns In York New on the platform will dissipate much of ing of a large hotel city. unanimously agreed to receive Miss told me that when Uncle Thomas cams . the halo of romance that surrounds her Quint as a student, although her father back after the death of hla first wife, as viewed by socialist eyes across three refrained from voting. Nancy Hanks, and proposed marriage thousand miles of perspective. She Is Miss Fannie E. Hallock, of Flanders, a most unattractive woman, physically N. Y., and Miss Cora T. Chadcayne, of and tall, masculine and Th. Growth of Population. West Cornwall, N. Y., have Just been even the charm of youth Is absent, for Is doubtful If the lack of employappointed postmistresses in their reIs she is sixty-siAn American reporter ment during the late business depresspective towns by President C.eveland. who tried to find her for an interview Both of these positions were eagerly induced many men npd women to sion six years ego In Paris had a curious exsought after by local storekeepers and for the west. This has probably leave livwas then perience. The anarchist others who were willing to serve Uncle to attributed to the depression in be ing shabbily In the Rue Victor Hugo, Sam. In MIsb Hallocka case there was r outside agriculture. Tho cultivation of the the fortifications of Paris. The bitter competition, notwithstanding the soil ia Its more productive regions has reporter sought her in the aristocratic fact that West Cornwall is only a got largely into a few hands, and the Avenue Victor Hugo, and was disconfourth-clas- s office. young man. whom Horace Greeley so SLIJAH A. MORSE, certed when the servant at the misSome weeks ago a young woman atsturdily advised to go west, has not th taken address slammed the door In his tended a New York theater In bloomers the man of God can and should speak opportunities to make a living on hlj - face at mention of her name, rattled and was at first refused admittance. with no uncertain sound. own account that he once had there. the chain-bo- lt within, and exhibited She threatened to sue for damages, and He may ring his sustenance from the other signs of alarm. was at last allowed to enter. For the Too Fond of Jewelry. soil, but in the market for the sale of rest of the evening she attracted more The Paris correspondent of the Lon- Ills products he is at a disadvantage. attention than the performance on- - the don Daily News says: Diamonded The growth of the nearer western states GrrtraO. Atherton In England. stage. She told the reporters that she Daisy Millers! The is far from being at the earlier ratio, The latest American writer to achieve had come from Boston and was under hotels in Paris overflow with them. unless It be in those states which ensuccess In England is Mrs. Gertrude the impression that bloomers were quite Tens, twenties, fifties of pretty girls in who went to' London DARIUS OGDEN MILLS, gage In manufacturing. Iowa has Just Atherton, the proper thing in New York. In the faultless Parisian toilets, many of taken a census, and report! that her infor the accommodation of young men of afternoon eighteen months ago for a brief resifbe had taken a ride on her them In their teens, one and all dls crease in population dung the last five dence there, and now finds her work moderate means. He is 70 years of. in bloomers, and went to the playing diamonds enough to set up an years is but 0 per cent, and the Mlchl-ga- n bicycle to ' .and herself sufficiently popular justi age. 4 Theater wlthoutTrhanging her costumer jacEressrofteandallspeaklng but no! census atso showi but a small in fy a prolonged stay. The two books name of Grace Harring-toT- i, let me allude to a more genial topic, gavcTbe ls have crease. This Is not up to the gain in time la that has she published A Rank. ramier'a Pal.. but it was after discovered that Many family parties one sees fathers Massachusetts, which Is U per cent, or been favorably received, and she has H. E. Hathaway, a Texas snake farmher real name was Armlde Demesk, and sons dressed according to the last to that in New Jersey, which is 16 per been welcomed in the literary society died recently at Beaver Dam, Wls., that she was a French girl, and also new fashion In male attire, and the cent during the same time. The cities of the metropolis. Mfs. Atherton has er, as a result of being bitten by a diamond that she was an actress and not at all these fellow travel-averamong are responsible for the largest portion to being advertised. But she g is gratifying to witness. I was of rattler while he was giving an exhlbl- this, and the manufacturing towns Hathafair. tion at the Dodge county certainly had the honor of being the j much struck by the surprise of a come nexL Boston Herald. way cut open the wound, letting it first woman to wear bloomers in the Fronch Triend at this trait of national auditorium of a New Tork theater. bleed freely, and apprehended no serij A Hop!. character. After the table dhote ous consequences. The wound, howfresh beginning, a ia Londonderry Is a new woman j ner 0 a favorite hotel the company day Every ever, began to swell and in a short time with a vengeance. She Is a Boston rave for myself and friend, entirely Every morn is the world made new; g the man died in intense agony. Mr transatlantic broke up into cheerful You who are weary of sorrow and Hathaway was one of the early settlers and chatting little groups, laughing of Merrill, Wls., and, being obliged to Here la a beautiful hope for you; oer the experiences of the day, Th his of wifes go to Texas for the benefit A hope for me and a hope for you, Frenchman observed to me; Susan Coniine. health, he was Induced to go into the You would never find such good business of raising snakes by calls own country fellowship among my Senator I'agh. :--,f made on him for reptiles by showmen (fc? people thrown together in a foreign and scientists. ' He had been In the avoid we Instead of seeking country. business about five years and had a each other Under such circumstances. 1, farm of several hundred acres in Texas must say what I have seen tonight devoted to breeding and raising snaaea gives me a very favorable impression of tbo American character. And If ' . v. It In th (fin. lhjse young girls while hers spend their time chiefly in shopping and Now that her honeymoon has reached frivolity, doubtless they, are ready its fullness, Mrs. Kate Douglas Wiggla-Rigg- s tl!h enough to enter upon the serious busihas gone to New York and taken ness of life on their return home. GERTRUDE ATHERTON. up her residence on one of the still streets that lead respectable eminently a greater share of good looks than most off of lower Fifth avenue. Next to Ami Jg. Hrr at Slitf. literary ladies possess. She is pretty, Annie Louise Cary, Mrs. Riggs Is probMrs. Amelia E. Barr is one of the few and a blonde, and still on the sunny women writer of the day whose names the most popular woman in side of forty. She has outgrown her ably which was her to be found on the publishers lists home. are She early MRS. RUNYON, SCIENTIST. Amelie Rives days, and her stories Maine, of thirty years ago. Other names that a quaint, still retains hare more substantial claims to recog- house in one of the country villages wheel woman. Over a year ago sbe were with hers have disappeared, and nition Than formerly there, and continues to spend a part made a wager that she would make a their books gone out of print, but her J title of the summer in 1L While in New circuit of the globe in fifteen months. own still adorns newly-printe- d Vertn.lL York she is busy with her duties in the Bhfe started without money, and it was pages. Mrs. Barr Is now sixty-fou- r . Kindergarten association, of which she stipulated that she was not to beg or years oil, but she has not begun to W Often hear that Jove is blind-Is vice president, and whenever she to receive gratuitous aid from any one. diminish in productivity, and she is Senator James Lawrence Pugh, whose Such are not idle rumors. one 0f the best be to to addition has become was In she said a this to return for on conthe must reading be of one appears platform At least paid picture is printed herewith, from her books It is before a most to Boston with five thousand dollars temporary novelists. She lives nowa - prominent lately by his speeches on To love girt In bloomers. earned by her sole exertions during her days at Cornwall on the Hudson. enthusiastic audience. free silver. Washington Star. ALTER HENRY Wilken, Londons new lord major, is immensely popular, and bis induction into office was made the occasion of a memorable demonstration Sir Walter is the only sunlt-ln- g son ot the late David Wllken, merand Kelvedon chant, of St. Mary-AxHatch, and wan born April 1, 1842. After completing his education at Brentwood he read for the profession of the e, UR1NG I I ; j I - to-d- -- full-fledg- I w al par-tshon- anti-hlaver- y, anti-lotter- y, i fellow-membe- rs step-mothe- LINCOLN. one, Hon, Robert Bush, at Hawssvllls, Kentucky,- - Th -men rank among th Sarah best 'lawyers In Kentucky, Bush Lincoln changed, the character of the Lincoln home completely when she entered it, and there is no question of the importance of her influence upon Abra- the development of her step-eo- n ham. She was a woman of great nat- -' ural dignity and kindliness, and highly esteemed by all who knew her.' She died on the 10th of April, 18C9. Negro Kara Honored. raw-bone- d, x. few ' , James Campbell Matthews was la November elected recorder of the city of Albany, N. Y.. the highest judicial Anglo-Americ- se ,,-- JAMES CAMPBELL MATTHEWS, by a colored citizen in this country. He was born in Pennsylvania 45 years ago. office ever attained Plrtar ot ' Zanwlll din-Ann- le ain-nln- .fvf ,f iftf -- near-sight- .ft f ed 1 Znl!l. i man of th , is pictured as most charming personality. Outwardly he seems an ungainly man, homely, awkward, and careless in dress, but a more genial companion Is rarely to be found. Although Mr, Zangwllla name world has been familiar to for several years he Is only thirty-twAn anecdote now going the rounds of the press, and based on his manner of signing his name as "L Zangwlir relates the discomfiture ot a lady who asked him what hls Christlan name-wa- s and received the response, I have none. y o. - Can foe (allow go.an At the nteeting of 4he American Public Health association at Denver, Dr. Manuel Carmona y Valla of Mexico read a description of his discovery ot a certain cure for yellow fever which he has used successfully in hundreds of cases. His method is to make a subcutaneous injection in the cellular tissue ot the arm of a secretion taken from a yellow fever patient between the fourth and fourteenth days of th fever.-- This effects a cure, but the disease can be guarded against in this way just as small pox is guarded sgalntt by vaeclnnatton. It never hurta truth any to be lied about Ram's Horn, |