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1 g^tB^ "T^ APPAL KEEPS IN FRONT I W* BECAUSE: 1It aims to publish all the news possible 2It does so impartially, wasting no words- 3-Its correspondents are able and energetic VOL 22. NO 10. On the Lakes of Killarney the bugle was blowing Its sweet, elfin challenge, so thin and so clear. A fairyland echo with harmonv flowing, 1 hat rang o'er the billows its message of cheer. Through dim, purple glens, over crags of the mountains. The \oice of the bugle still hung on the breeze. And rippling like spray of the murmuring fountains It swooned in the arms of grim, sentinel trees! Who -naked this keen strain of such ex quisite rapture? vvho roused all the echoes and thrills every breast? Rome radiant seiaph such cadence might capture, Twas. an archangel'* summons that _. P^saged sweet lest, ihe fisherman's skiff swayed and tossed on the water, The rustling leave-? babbled and qutv cied in throng. Twas the nymph of the grove, 'twas the fishoi man's daughter, lli.it poured such an exquisite, jubilant song. ttih music on woter sounds sweeter than slumber. It stealg line a sigh or a sob of the past, soothes all the griefs and the troubles tnat cumber It lulls all the woes and the sorrows that hst The songs of the Siren held spellbound the sailor And lurrd the bold mariner to plunge in tho foam To the caves of the sea with the mermaid for jailer To li like an outcast, an exile from home. It is a lamentable factbut one not wholly devoid of humorous possibility --that spotless rectitude, through some wanton trick or irresponsible chance, sometimes finds itself sailing under false colors. There i^ an elderly gentleman, pro fessor in a Western university, who is a paragon of all virtues, great and small. Even in such matter as diet ugut abstemjnoufaness is observed by him. His achievements in his line of woik, excellent in themselves, are the more notewoithy by having been ac complished notwithstanding his deli cate ejesight. To his intimates it is also well known that the professor, in eat'lier years, displayed remarkable will power in overcoming a defect of speech, which recurs now only in moments of extreme perturbation. The excellent professor was return ins home at early dawn one day. soon alter college opened, from the bedside of a sick friend. As he proceeded hast- "Everything looked lovely for about three days and then one of the chil dren went down with the measles. The nursemaid stood by her post and helped us out with the other young ster. Just as the first child was get- "THE ROSE of KILDARE' Six months passed as a single night, dropping to sleep in California, awak ening in a foreign land, thousands of miles across the sea retiring in af fluent circumstances, arising a beg par passing into the "death of each day's life" a happy married man, re turning to consciousness a widower those are the strange experiences un dergone by William S. Smith, special oi^ani/er of the American Federation ot I abor in California, who has just nirived in this city on the liner Si Iterm, says the San Francisco corre spondent of the Detroit News. One night last June Smith dropped to sleep in a railway car on the "owl (MII I" en route from Los Angeles to S.in Francisco. Th next morning, as he thought, he awoke in a strange room Rubbing his eyes, he gazed nhout him. It was a sordid room, un- liKo any be was accustomed to inhab it arose and hfted the curtain. The country he looked on was unlike pitying ^& had, seen in California. Descending tho'stairs he found him self among people as unfamiliar as his surroundings. They talked Eng lish, but with a foreign arcent. "Where am I? asked Smith, ad drpssing ono of the men. Bugle Song of the Lady of the LakeA Faeryl&nd Echo from Glendalough and the Vale of AvocaSong of the Siren of the Meeting of the Waters. The lassie who sang us such tender mances MIJSfD SIJT MONTHS *BLAJVK AJV E'R'RO'R IJV JWDGME/fT I J* TKOWBLE OVEH MEASLES "I have heard of some queer damage suits, but the mess I have become in volved in quit puts it over anything I have ever heard or read of," said the man who always has some troubles to relate, according to the New York Press. "It started this way: W got a nursemaid here in the city who con tracted measles soon after we hired her. My wife got frightened on ac count of our two children and imens mediately hustled them over into the country in Jeisey. She settled down in a little place within safe commuting distance, picked out a decent boarding house and hired a nursemaid in the neighborhood. TO MAKE JOWRJiALISM ?Ay i There is at least one journalist who one which has often been very much makes $50,000 a year, and there are lacking in some of those who had the many who make $15,000 or $20,000. Hence innumerable young men and women would like to know how to en ter into a profession so successful. A young man just back from Lon don asked W T. Stead, a most suc cessful newspaper man how to be come a journalist. Mr. Stead answered thoughtfully. "There is only one way to enter journalism, and that is to do work th at is wanted just when it is wanted. "You think you have a gift for writ ing. Well, you may have, but it does not follow that you have the gift for making people pay you for writing, which is another sift altogether, andJ tmm, mm M,JM Was fair as the foam of thneagrey surg ing sea, As pure as the billow thatl crouches and^aged dances She son Byron, S erTUl An S l th d6a Ws1ir The bugle is pealing out chivalric stories, Of stern ancient battles, gum, daunt less forays, Of the knight's fearsome quest of stoul cavalier glories. Of the ivy clad castle that crumbling decays From the mouth of the lassie flow tender romances. Inspired like Cecilia, who caioled ol ore, i On the crest of the mountain the run shine still dances. And the grey tumbling breakers still ciouch on the shore. JAMES K. KINSI3LL.A. Rogistrv Dh ision. Chicago Postoffice. "Where are you?" reiterated the stranger. "Well you must have been among good company last night. You're in New South Wales, of course. Where did you expect to be?" "What month is this?" was the next question Smith put. Th company gazed at him in amazement. "You look sane enough," was the re ply, "bu you ask idiotic questions. This is December. Would jou like to have it altered?" Half a year had elapsed since Smith closed his eyes in the California train. In that time he had crossed half the globe. When he told his story his audience was convinced of his insani ty. When he asked them for money to travel to the const, he got laughter for his pains So be tramped to Syd ney. In the capital he looked up the la bor council and narrated his experi ence to union men. They investigated and found he was what he represented himself to be. They arranged for his return to America, securing a passage for him on the Siberia. The fiist letter Smith received from his home at Los Angeles contained news of the death of his wife. ily across the campus, his thoughts busy with his friend, he stumbled although he managed to recover him self, his spectacles became detached and fell. Quite helpless without these aids (o vision, he so down on hands and knees and began to feel carefully in the grass. While the search went on there ap proached a young man, a freshman not yet acquainted with all the fac ulty. him the disturbed professor appealed for aid. "Young man, he said nervously, "will you have the k'kindness to help me locate my g-glasses?" The .youth gazed indignantly down at the scandalizing spectacle of a red faced, elderly party violently pawning at the earth. "It appears to me, my elderly friend," he said severely, "that you've already located about all the glasses jou need!" ting well the other was stricken. Then the nursemaid caught the malady and had to go home. She was sick for about two weeks. The other day her mother came to the boarding house and demanded damages because her daughter had caught the measles from our children. She thought a month's wages and payment of the doctor's bill would be about right and threat to sue me if I don't come up with the cash. "I came to town to stay for a while just as this demand was made, and here is a letter from my wife saying that our landlady wants us to pay damages forth loss of her only oth er boarder, who left because she was afraid she would catch measles from our children. I've heard a lot about 'Jersey justice/ but if it puts th at sort of notions in persons' heads you can excuse me from future contact with it." greatest gift for the other kind of thing. "Editors are only too glad to take any copy they can get that will help them to sell their papers." "What kind of article should the be. ginner try?" asked the young man. "He should try the kind of article which is most likely to be accepted." "But how can he find out what sub ject the editor likes." "The editor will think to-day on the same lines as he thought yesterday, and what he thought yesterday you have spread out before you in this m0rniDg,spaper^4l#ff^ Russell roThat, for 89bar^s As chaste as Diana she uttered her warn- work. has been successful at it, ing, In fairyland echoes that rippled along. The sibyl wlio sang us this exquisite par himself.i wishes to live 100 She sat? with the fire and the fervor of' Her message caressed us like tinkling of. vam. She sang of th* past and its grey crum bling glories. Her clarion chorus still rings in ourday, ears, Of the stanch chevalier and the lassie in stories And the tales and the legends of chiv alrous ears. Defective Page Sag* e 0 the In'an year has been his life As a financier imt has been, part of the policy ofe Russell Sage -of Ne York to purchase stocks and ot*er a jubilan i Pa 8 abition-to reach a th T&^^^J^S^FZ Pl he nS the morning, industriously to bring them up to par. S0 and has rolled up a great many mil lions of dollars. Bu now he is en- ears an air to meet with the same success in his venture as in his many others. There is no man on Wall street "to- no man of his age in active busi ness, who is so well preserved physi cally as this aged millionaire, lie is as proud of this fact as he is of his ja foCoNON&oA.H-jrewvoTCK. business successes. lie boasts of it, flaunts it in the face of men jounger in years but weaker of body. "Yes, j'oung man," he said, on a re cent birthday. "I was born in 1816. Lived quite a while, eh Entitled to a holiday, eh. Well, honestly, I really considered for a moment taking a holi day off, but then I am a director in twenty-sey en railioads and I can't yery well neglect the public's inter ests. They all of them have directors' meetings to-day, and I feel that I ought to attend. Then, I get $20 for each meeting, and a lunch thrown in." Russell Sage expects to reach the par of liie by the same methods he has pursued in bringing to this mark railroads, steamship lines or mining venturesby hard work, by frugality, by system, by rigid obedience to the laws of health. "I take every day as it comes," lie sajs. "My theory for a long life is that temperance lengthens the days of all. Plenty of sleep, and escape from worry as much as possible Worry and lack of rest break down the strongest men. I get up every morning at 6 o'clock, and get to my office at 9. I leave at 5 p. m. I go up to my house and take things easj for the test of the daj." He accounts for all his successes by this regime. I Good habits in living" he says, "result in good health good health increases a man's ability and gives him zest for industry and industry, intelligent industry, leads on to pros perity. It is a very simple recipe, but the great majority of men con tinually ignore what is so plain. It is perfectly obvious that dissolute habits can end in but one thing tailure. Reverses are bound to come at some period of the life of a man of evil ways. A crying sin of to-day is profligacy. Th wasting of money en tails a vast amount of suffering for some one and often leads to actual crime.*' The man is never idle consid ers idleness is not only expensive, but a detriment to good health. "Because a man is rich, there is no reason or excuse for his being idle," he says. "A slothful man, be he rich or poor, is not a desirable member of society. presents a bad example. The rich man is not expected to toil with pick and shovel, but human soci ety places upon him the obligations to give his best thoughts to the use of his wealth, so that his accumula tion may bestow good upon otheis as well ,as himself." The veteran keeps pretty closely to his office, at No. 31 Nassau street, and, regularly at noon trudges to the Western Union building, at 195 Broad way, lo luncheon. Of recent jeais, since the Norcross adventure in which the dynamiter lost his own life and severely injured I^tidlaw in at tempting to kill Mr Sage, he is very careful as to whom he admits into his office. But his eye tea bright as ever and the passing yeais do not seem to alter his appearance. A man who met him recently thus describes him "Ho is almost 90 years old, and does not look to be GO. He is tall, thin, but not wasted. His body is that of a man who is aging without excess. His shoulders are a bit stooped. His forehead is not the bulging dome of so many successful Americans. It slopes backward and gets narrower toward the top. ,Hi face is not a strong one. In years gone by it may have been stern, or it may not. It was covered with a beard, but is now smooth-shaven. It is a farmer's face, with healthy brown complexion. Hi eyes are sharp and bright, lying in a nest of little wrin kles."i Sometimes he winks one eye to emphasize what he says. Winking is his only dissipation. When he dis sipates, he gives his mind to it. drops his eyelid with great delibera tion, sending it down with all his strength. Hi wink says, plainly as words, I, Russell Sage, am winking. Am I not real devilish?" His nose is a good, strong nose, but it does not overshadow its fellow feat ures. Hi cheek bones are as high as an Indian's. 'He has a queer way of working the muscles of his cheeks.J He draws $0* cln%Pd ST. PAUL AN MINNEAPOLIS. MOT: SATURDAY HAJtSH 10, 1906. -nMrv* *w^. toe mus- Mm Admits iAmbition to Round Du Century of Life cles of the lower part of his face, and at the same time lifts those of his cheek bones. No other living man can do it. Mr. Sage's way f laughing is to twitch his mouth, shut his eyes ti^ht, slap his thin hand *on his Knee and double up his bodj. Resentless, b^ut igot relentless, he hardly has an enemy never indulges in luxury always cplls you 1VI\ son." He is everybody's papa, healing them by the laying on of paternal lunds. My son." he sa^s, Sho! Sho! I must get in my st^iy bets. My son, I've got a million and a quarter of them puts and calls out now. Sbo It'll never do, my son" Bv this time he has lovingly fastened on to join rib or armpit, or "crazy bone," and when he says Sho'* jo feel like a chicken chucked up j,o be counted aud fed on meal. The youngest and' the oldest clerk in Wall street laugfis at Mr. Sage's clothes, thereby profmg that he will never become a RussjMl Sage. The mil lionaire once declared under oath that he had two suits of clothes once at' the same time. His shoes are thick and stout. He goes about collecting money with the same emotion, and as much of it. as an ant-eater shows when it licks up ants Speculation based on imagination or anything but a suie conviction of profit is unknown to him. I He has twice beer! in Congress, but he never cared to distinguish himself in politics. is fond of a good horse. Fo the past few years he has driven every morning and evening, excepting Sunday, in| Central Park. is generally out before other people have finished their breakfasts. is an expert driver, an% his chief ambi tion now is to le^in to manage a four-in-hand drag. He eats very litfcle, and always lunches at the Western Union build ing, where the small amount of his check has often excited comment. never reads a novel He is a religious man, a pillar of the West Piesbyterian church. He loaned -Talruagc $125,000 to rebuild the Brooklyn Tabernacle but at 6 per cent. I The man doesn'f take to himself much credit for whit&she has accom- lWb EU"ttT^SS CATCHER plished in the way of accumulating money. claims that any one can doj it. "What I have done," he says, "others can do. The path to succeed is thorny, it is true, but any young man who makes up his mind to do it can accumulate money. must at the start make cast-iron rules to practice self-denial, regularity and temperance, love for work, a rigid regard for the minutest details of business, and, abo\e all, choose the loss of every dollar rather than a single act of dishonesty. Failure is most frequently caused by falling by the wayside Young men become vic tims of the desire for immediate pleasure rather than puisue a long and courageous struggle to permanent success. "My mother taught me the rudi mentsreading, writing and spelling. That was the only schooling over had. I was a simple farmpr boy and woiked on my father's place until I was IK years old. Then I got a job in a retail grocery store in Troy. I did not receive moie than $7 a month. Before I was 21 I went into business for myself. By that time I had saved up enough to enable me to buy out the entire business. In 1863 I came to New York. "If I were broke now I should go to work with the same desire to climb 4jp that I had the first day I ever put my shoulder to the wheel. Just what my first step would be I don't know. That would depend on circumstances. But I am sure that by hard work I could win A friend or Mr. Sage was asked about Jhe oft-published statement that no man can command so much money at instant call as he. "It is tiue," he said, "and I doubt if any of the other millionaires could produce $r,000.00 of his own money within thirty minutes of the, demand. In my opinion none of them has as much readv cash wulun instant reach as Russell Sage." He is a man in whom financiers have the greatest confidence He has integrity and fair dealing back of his record. Tn spite of the general impression to the contrary, Mr Sage is philan thropic lie docs not personally dis bui.se chanties the actual giving is lelt to the discretion and judgment of Mis Sage. Although the possessor of a great many millions, he maintains no gorgeous establishment, his home being luxuuous, but simple in all its appointments. This method of life is not with him a pose. is plain to Pmitanism he is old-fashioned he is intellectually a wonder, and though long past the allotted threescore years and ten, he shows no impairpient oJ mental or physical abilities. But will he accomplish his, new am bition, and reach par? That remains to be seen, and will be decided within about ten years. If simple living, out-of-door exeicise and don't-wony rules will do it, there seems to be uo reason why he should not be success ful. At any rate, he is nearer it than any other man to-day in Wall stieet Boston Herald. WANTED CHANGE I N HUSBANDS Posfably Reason Why Divorce Courts' Are Busy! Mr. Macfarland gleaned from some conversation of two colored women which he overheard in the street cars the other day some new light on the dhorce question. "I heah jo leff your husband that so "Yes?" "Why jo lca\e him did he beat on?" "No "Was he mean to j'ou?" "Then why did you leave him?" SpecialuCoi 1 "O. I jess nachally los' my taste for him." Not long ago a colored woman here explained to a housekeeping member of congress that although she was married, she did not know the where abouts of her husband, proceeding to contiast the sedate ways of the rural region fiom which she had come with the rush and tuimoil of this great city, concluding: "You see its mighty hard to keep a husband in this town." Boston Transciipt Senators Make Jokes. Senatois are not above cracking jokes at the expense of each other when chance offeis. Ex-GoAernor Murphy, of New Jersey, was. a visitoi at the Capitol recently, and with Rep lesentative Wood, of the Trenton dis tiict, on one side and Senator Dryden on the other, enjoyed a half hour's study of the most dignified legislative body in the world. Soou Senator Kean was seen to en ter the galleiy and make bis way down to the Governor's seat to shake hands with him. "Dryden." observed a Senator who was looking at the party, "ha got Murphy to take a policy in the Piu-city dential by this time." "And now," said another, "John Kean is going to 'sell him kis^cflpy' of* 'Fads and Fancies His Modest Request. 'The great pianist at the drawing room function arose tiom his instru ment and held up his band. When the hubbub of voices died down he cleared his voice and spoke. '"T do not ask." lie said, "that you moderate your conversation to the point where you can hear me play. I don't rare whether you hear me or not But in order to do myself justice, I must request that you allow me to hear myself" In the silence that ensued he broke three strings and a plate glass win dow. Wise Cow. The cow was about to jump over the moon. "By the way," paid the cow. "I think I'll wait a moment." "What for?" asked the little dog. "Why, perhaps I can carry a sign on my back stating that I wear Jum sem Bouncer's rubber heels." Which goes to show that the wise cow was imbued with the modern ideas of progressive advertising. -Y** V- A WASHINGTON but the applause irom the galler,wa^ boisterous It seems that the galleiy, was filled with deadheads who were placed there to yell when the cue *as given and one ot the boves contained what was evidently a paid olaqiu\| During the intermission Dixon th* a J} f enty-seyenth birthday, and Simda., ih thnlv-sixth anmvew* of entrant The City of Magnificent Dis= tances A Collection cf ILvents Occurring Among the People of The Capital of This Great and Glorious Nation and Condensed for the Hasty Perusal of our Many Readesr. respondence THE APPEAL. Clansman is on the boards he -e and the gallery gods are happy The peo pie on the ground flooi did not receive the play with expressions ot appioyal into the Senate has served in that bod a longer consecutive period mmi Tiv othei numb er now on the roll.-,. He took his seat Maich 4. 187?.. and since then has been re sleeted fi\e times Senacoi Hopkins who has been in Chicago lookin, aftei some business matt JIS has tetuined to Washington Mr Robert Douglass one ot the prominent young men of Washington has been appointed to a clerkship un der the Distiict government Secretary of the T.-easurj Shaw op pose the coinage of the one million t\ dollar siher coins to be used as sou venire, of the Jamestown exposi tion He advised company to make the e^ent a big naval display. .Tudson W L.vons, Jr, is the name the latest arrival at the homeT oft Hon. ciation with many tnends or the ization, was held Saturday evening at into effect in the matter of educating) between 600 nou and 800,000 illitciato I white \otcrs in the south many ol them being unable to sign fheii nam The plan is to have one bundled thou sand members ot the association and to raise a fund ot $100.00J with which to can on ,the .work In contiast to the rscent lace wai at Spimgfield, Ohio, was the action of the Ohio Republican Association at its meeting Monday when the members listened with interest to an addies-, made by Hon. John P. Green ot Cleve land, a "black Republican," as I styles himself. In speaking of to disturbanc'3 at Springfield, he said lowed the e-cupation cf bookkeeper.! $2.40 PEU YEAH. i and started out again to look for the1 TTT enemy. He found them very near Washington. March 7Tom Dixon si wher th ftrst skirmis afte a mander Ge wa & eleete 1 yS the Mephistopheles that he is On th first night Dixon came betore the r-' tain without being called aud m"'i a harangue in favor of his play. The' vJausinaii is a dangerous piay, toi it appeals to the race prejudice of the low unthinking classes. i Delegate Kalanianaole, ot Hawaii.. has introduced a bill to pa Quten Liluokalani $200 MM ^ansl.n tmn ot her claim against the United States .Senator William Boyd Allison ol O -H v,ho Sauirnav rejPbratM his se\ eate hoefI ie. c, i ft' the place. It is thought however S-easmv 0 RealstC A meeting ot the members ot the Southern Industnal Educational Asso- wol "Contraiv 10 the" charges whioh a ej fonitixiit requisition in the effort *o made ibj class of yvhite people in that solve the multitude of perplexing prob- is good, and so are the nathe|em presented. Mr. Cullom was an Afro-Americans. It is the Kentucky] 'ccntiaot n^gices' that caused tlvej trccble When I was in Springfield "was taken to the besfhotel in the I cln ed yvith Webb C. Haes son of th Pi^t-ident and then at the .lead of a ocession we ,went to the city hall wn re I was given lespecttul attention. 'Here in Washington an Afro Am can may not even go into a restaurant 'vt Fcfuir a restived seat a th-atc We iom to be in the country but li'ii of *he coi.ntiy, here. That is the iea-! vil'c, Clarke Countj, Dan Robinson, a'* son I am so lond of Ohio.' old \froAn.?naii WAS SOK s'lloon to W A. Harford & Co. Cci.ipulaory education in the DistrK-1 was stipulated in The bill cf sale *-,fc i ommended, b.' the Senate Dis i that Robinson was to be included in t"i. CcmL-irtee vesterday. Th bill. the purchase. No such transaction is on'-idercd by Senatoi Dillingham, was recorded in Virginia since slavery i ay ci ali' i eroi ed beeause from 1.000 duy H0 c'uldie" of school age in the Di'iiiirt do not attend school. CHANGED HIS MIND. \nrhoi'v MIel.alok, who has been de Congressman Hardwtck Did Not Lick clared entitled to his seat in Congress p i.LT committee No 1 of the House' mvirg de ided tl.at be is a irizen an 11 hot hi, rathe-as a citizen, was bo-: I i? by his parents. rccohed his edu R-hemH in 1878. and when but *orgio sma thepn "or^hs old vra, lvourht to this ri th Scions of 1904 Mr Michalek iPfesied C. Vopicka, the Democratic!' Bohemian bloed in America to be e\oni ""1 to the national House of Represent alive?. P*pie=entativ Keifer of Ohio father Mx the reduction of representation bill carries a limn ^'hich rf-j*"" fr'*~ served all thvough the civil yvar without injury, and got a bul'"*- leg after Lee's surrender. In April. 1865, while scouting at the head of a small column of cavalry on the out skirts of Richmond, he had a brush with a wandering fOx-ee of confeder ates, and would have been killed had it not been for the intervention of the confederate commander. returned 'o ctmp, and after having his woun} dressed got orders and reinforcements a -Moi in the r.blic schorls and 1,1 I V occurred, and engagement their sow Tucker, surrendered and Kelfe tfM hi &wm Congres |becam Joh sen ln ke i acquainte tiv witsh Represe-itah9ehn7e8h1Wn ^a^ au( Tueke on yn-Iaia W toget her relateM thils incidentlunching Repru tative Tucker was very sawgiy omio Iba lh raander wa a eonte^ratP inLs brother, and, a Ge, iaap *u' yvas the case author was seen in theHxf lobbly0 surround- eifer's request, ascertained defln. fi S 01 Whe^oi,-int the general yvent home lor the holiday re cess he hunted up the old sword, i ought it to Washington yvith him and through Randolph Tucker re stored it to its original owner Senator Shelby M. Cullom of Illinois who has been at S Augustine, Fla.. fo near tw a month th clt wil j^ retur a restore A stringe men to hea th i provisl on prohibiting the I employment in any executive depait gove ploy ove ni ent of any em sixt y-ftve years of age a ga tha $lf00 tonsideratio wjl he st the Washington Publu Libraiy sn* W MarthaS Gielow the piesident ~ene al ot the^ssociation, was present, and Congress, made an argummt in iavor ot ths wo.-k which the members of the association aie at uies^nt lavm- oi^s ed is undei Hous on appiopnationst foran committereli inclusion th legislative, executive judK'ian ap propriation bill. It is reported unoffi cially that the provision which will find its way into the bill may be oven more stringent than outlined aboyre. Congressman Lorimer ot Chicago did not waste any words on his canal bill which he introduced in the House. l provides that $21,000,000 be "appio priated to complete a fourteen foo yvater yvay trom Chicago to St. Loin in conformity with the survey just completed by the Wa Department Congressman Lorimers constituent", are well pleased with his work and will return him to Congress. The administration is said to fa\o Representative Tawney of Minnesota for Chairman of the Congressional campaign committee. I is acknowl edgeid be the best man tor^th place but he does not seem to eare that ithat is madies to Mr Tawy i that the party cannot hope to succeed x! i 'without his aid he will finally put hi feeling ,enuous a 1864 I 0 Ho active and aggressive meinour h.u..jn m3 the fourteenth and fifteenth amend ments to the Constitution and the le ccifl' tri'f-ien legislation. SOLD WITH SALOON. Afro-American Included in Inventory of Wh'skiec at Berryville. Va. Winchester, Va. March '.).mvenioi- icd y\)T rn the wine-* and whiskies in th *-floon I" N Cnstleman, at Den ans sc traveling a Pullman car notf Congressman Hardwie h:I lg a S 4ii|x an devol( interests. Th- but Congr e^ onderS -H Shelby M. Cullom was elect, Partner of the ,a Congiesst, was twice reele hand fJ(1- wiving is the Iyiwe Hous wa lllueiate white people in einu. K'ongieshs tor six yearb tions ot the South i A8,6the time ot his election to Co.if/c. The sj-ak er asse.ted rhat ihtre a.r 1 4 Milton Hay, a great Illino., law yei, the un.-ie oi the late Secietar./ oi State John Haj. and the firm of Hay & Cullom enjoyed the lsrzest law prac tice in the capital ot the btat and probably the largest and moi 'u, nerative practice of any lllmoi: li-.-i outside oi the city ot Chi^aac. On being translerred trom 'hcLc,' lature to Congiess, M/. Cullom realized the fact that he had tnteieu upo.. broader field of action, involving largei duties and higher responsibilities He s"ived in Congress du/ing that imie'esrmg neriod ot reconstru-cti'iu, when the best thought ol the ablest men ct the Nation was brought inl' fellomapna sser ^"^apd quiet-looking Afr Afro America i Thisa^ WlM Gcov noitc agreeabl.et ian who was further nl el'!h tU {H a 0e,n 1 1 ^andidsls 8S5 ve'es. reor -oit*. the fifth Illinois district, and it ^''"f said that he is the first m*m ol! T'' Lx-iol- Ameran mt i r2ii-ned to the Pullman about th -,am pn' and then Mi. Hardwj"!: r,io conductor and assked that i hf "re 7 out of the car. "W can lhat i-ir," conductor answered. 'Weil, if that Iresh niggar gets nr'a' me I'm .gen2 to wine up the car with h-m denial el the Georgian. I woi't have him*around me. Wh is the T",sc TW 'ens champion light-weight pugilist," an syvered the conductor, and Mr. Hard iuri-'i not to "wipe up the car" with his quiet-lookins i pissengei The House of Delegates aL Rich mond, Va., has passed a bill approp iat ing $12,500 for the founding of a State institution for the education of the Afro-American deaf, dumb and blind children of the State/^V&^ia&i*^