Evening Star Newspaper, October 8, 1881, Page 3

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xg ss TTERS, jown Dame, connecting the words ‘Pari hour or two about it, and I | that of Mr. Blaine. Iam satisfied that it was | consul. In one of my notes to the President I EMBALMING THE DEAD. HOME MA‘ k GUITEAU. coneulaig! with sty samen on tact an Croulinak | wens ¢9, me aeheee mane Ga be ar eae | Mee nd my attention has been | asked him directly, “Can F have the Paris con- ; : ea —— would remember what I wanted. This was the | I went to tl a ligace tehalicianae it | specially called to it, Because it was the same | sulship?’ and the repiy, as usual, came back, | THE ANCIENT AXP MODERN METHODS—RECENT Wins Magn G 4 Bruny Pre be sure towet the | soiohiosranay of President Garfield's Assassin, | onty time thar’ ra any personal conversation | and read the as Uroal, end { think 1 gentleman that I'raw’ with, the Preedent | “Mr Guten, ‘ee President is very busy and AVPLICATION OF THE AMD, edges of the upper and under crusts and press | AULUOZT@IY with the President on my having the Paris con- | stayed there ‘until 3. o’clock on Saturday, and the night before, and I know posi-| cannot see you to-day them so firmly together that the juice cannot huge sulship. He took the speech and ram his eye |'thenI went out. Ido not remember wi Ij tively that that itieman was Mr. “These interviews occurred several days | From the New York Evening Mail. out, or you will leave the best of the | Conception and Execution of the Assassi- | over it, and there were other people pressing | went icularly; 1 think I went to the Riggs, | Blaine. The President and this gentleman | apart—sometimes a week apart; they all cc- | The office discharged toward the slain ruler ony he (are f * ‘and then have tion of the President. around him, and I left him in the act of reading | the Arlington or the park. That wasafter I | drove up in a plain single-seated cai with | carred during the time that 1 was pressing my | to the end of securing the Iifeless form azainst i ap aimee Sa prnepke= = sya aon tun roe rags | WA te ey. iar tang cana ungated | pang tea Me ec | etl chem swe ng 3 I Mr. D ; ELDaRnerrr JELLY is very nice, and is often | Story of the Tragedy at the Washington Depot. | private secretary's room, and there I saw A RS ee ” bugey. ident seemed and, as I have before stated, I confidently ex- | been, under the circumstances, an extremely Horton, minister to France, and Gen. Tynerand | «f noticed in the papers,” Guiteau continnes, Sooavancracees eterna oh Mice a favorable answer when they had got | dificult as well as an important one. Yet, the Tauch liked by one who is sick. Cook the berries — two or three other gentlemen of that character. | capo the first of the week. 1 Ls gen- | pected a sigs them through | Guitesn's Absurd Defence of His Horrible Crime. | They knew me and | was cleverly recelved, eape- he would be back tleman, who evidently was Mr. Blaine, although | rid of Mr. Walker. I understood, by the | young man called to act in this capacity at the pew bean peaks emo pose Glally by Mr. Morton, | He asked me about iy | watched the papers very carefully to see when | a the fime I did not ecognizehimas itr. Balne. | President's statement that lie could not sce | Fyantjqan cals tact in this'eapa ‘nenibntty Jelly bag. To every pint of juice adda pint of = health, how I was along, &c. This enter- | he would return, but he did not come back that | They sat in the carriage I should say some two | me, that he was trying in some way to get known st the University Medical callers on ee tirde od teen he eerie oad noe-thind | gee New, York Herald, of the 6th, has a long | health, ho te bred bar coc eed chiar thal 7x) wen: teees aia come back on the following | minutes; they had not completed -their conver- | rid of Walker zracefuily, and that as a matter of | cee Ceentty, ie leze take two-thirds of the elderberries and one-third | chapter of Guiteau autobiographical matter. | SY'Stn of March, Monday. The following Mandar wae @ terribly | sation when they reached the depot. and during | fact he intended that I should have it. My get- | a alsh,” very resolutely and success: of green or ripe grapes. The assassin begins with a brief chapter, which LETTERS TO MR. BLAINE. hot, sultry . I remen! I suffered | the interview eas ae ped nated their tine or not etna the en Soro ‘oe = | dometee pomp. oe ee ey e Trench Pee zs ° a rhst that | conversation. During this time they were en- | thing whatever to do with my shooting the Pre: iy cauzhi, he or, Dy on Arrie Warter.—iam seaomnypegs Sims he calls “Introduction,” in which"he seeks to} “I may say here that after Mr. Blaine was ap- apt from ee heat, but notwithstanding that gaged in very earnest and private conversation, | ident-I shot him purely as a political necessity, | the class. he fairiy faced tue Situation’ When Meanes, and | use apple water f inte, | ¢XPiain his crime. “I have not,” he says, “used | pointed Secretary of State I had not much ex- depot again on Monday with my revolver and jas Thave said. The President got out on the | under Divine pressure: and it was only by nervy” asked what persons were present during the When perspirations seems to relieve complaints. | the words ‘assassination’ or ‘assassin’ in this Pectation that Iwas to get the Austrian mis-| my papers, but I did not feel like firing on | pavement side and Mr. Blaine on the other side. | ing myself to the utmost that I shot him any | Process of embalming, he ne Apple water is very easy to make. [roast three | work ‘These words grate on the mind and pro- sion, because I expected that it was to be given | him. I simply went to the depot. I sat inthe | They entered the ladies’ room; 1 stood there | w If he should recover and I should meet oH Me aoe ey on Oe Ae four apples until they a duce a'bad feeling. I think of Gen. Garfield's | to one of the Blaine men; but I did think and I | ladies’ waiting room. I got there ten or fifteen | watching the President and they passed by me. | him azain 1 would not shoot him; and now I = i — the District Attorne them a pint of cold w i at not ssassina- | did feel that I had aright to press my applica- | minutes before the train time, and I waited and Before they reached the depot I had been prom- | leave the result with the Almighty. In ease the tp —— = in what Water and administer it ee seas eee fated. was to: rembveas | tn for tha Paris oonsulalin in view of my hare | thought ie alaver ana wageupianiine that 1 J enading up and down the ladies room between | President Nad saul t ld not have the | did you find the body of the Presid dea, simply stated, w : é ‘ ci K . f sate, “ vate 9 i > epe furthe: ned He w pRSE-Rapisu VINEGAR, nglish.)—Quarter u ing surrendered UPpos tht that I might | would not fire on him that day. I did not feel | the ticket-oftice door and the newstand door, a | Paris msulship 1 in to New Y report ieeaae es tee 5 oe ounce | ®&sily as possible Mr. James A. Garfield, a quiet | have had inretirenes to the aetna inission | like it. “The train came and he came, and Mr. | space of some ten or twelve feet. 1 walked up | or Chicago and open a iaw office and let P eal heen hig ge | and good-naturedeitizen of Ohio,whotemporurily | on aecount of my having called Gen. Garfleld’s | James, the Postmaster General, was there, and | and down there I should say two or three times | yo. Rod recor ert Ale Loraine | occupied the position of President of the United | attention to the Austrian mission in October and | Mr. Hunt, the Secretary of the Navy, and their | working myself up, as I knew the hour was at A LEGAL VIEW OF THE ASSASSINATION, sa + #F py apy pester | States, and substitute in his place Mr. Chester | also in January. I abandoned the ideaof obtain- | lady friends, They all came throngh’the ladies’ | hand. “The President and Mm. Blaine nme tate (“D’shot.the President without malic cue. Lenniag 9 2 = the Austrian mission as soon as I saw that Mr. | room together, and the President's son and a | the ladies’ room and walked right by me: they eabecs ea case Von ie NORE, 8) Mi TORRES OO | retin wamtapiobiad Gamer ae StetestEET | Chicken oe ee ee ee |e not notice me as there were quite a numil m Pe or tober. 2s horse- | highly estimable gentleman. Mr. Garfield I in- | did feet that Uiod er iehe we press my applica- | House to meet the President, were there. They | of ladies and children in the room. Tadish is best thea, and is a nice relish for meat. tended to quietly remove to Paradise, (which is | tion for the Paris consulship. During the} went right to the gate and got the President, HOW THE PRESIDENT FELL. Boston Cook. a great iniprovement on this world,) while Mr. |«eadiock in the Senate I wrote Mr. Blaine | and they all walked together to the President's The unreserved confidence of the was last week “a sentative of the . any narratiye on the subject until | derous intent. I deny any le: In order to constitute t nts must ¢ second, malice able time for public reference t of mor- “There was quite a large crowd of ticket pur- + The = . e first noted experimer Tomato CatsrP.—In a porcelain stew-kettie | Arthur saved the Republic.” And he adds: “Not | several notes. 1 called at the State’ depart. carriage, and they all got in and drove of. 1] junc er Lise canene cick Gere ae Boe OF thE hom Sees an nmediee lexparies aes put 12 tomate mil cook the pass this | @ Soul in the w Knew ot my purpose to | ment several times, but he was generally busy, | stood on the entrance of the ladies. waiting ge s auite | @ePends upon the cu n’s mind ae by DE Sacre camenal peucel re through a strainerto get rid of sk nly use | Femove the President. If it has failed I shall | so I said what [had to bya brief note. I al- | room door, and I noticed James and Hunt there | adjoining room, the depot seemed to be quite | le by Dr. ew EVE at the time ot th | quarrel At that If two men < nd one shoots rin heat or y says that slaughter. The of the shooting from the moment of | hever attempt it again. My motive was purely | ways addressed him familiarly as ‘Secretary | with their families, and the President and his | full of people. There was quite a crowd and return to- | political and patriotic, and T acted under Divine | Blaine’ or ir. Blaine.’ After the deadlock | friends drove up in his White House carriage, | commotion around, and the President was in ed onion, with | pressure. It was the same kind of pressure that | broke Taw Mr. Blaine at the State depart- | and then James and Hunt went, and then I went. | the act of passing from the ladies room to the a Gig led Abraham to sacrifice his son Isaac.” ‘These | ment one day, and he said that he did not think | I got into a car aml cant up toward the Riggs | main entrance through the door. I should sa three tablespoonfuls | nysteric enouzh water to cover half of the Inatoes to kettle; take a three green peppers, chop the tomat ason Wit and he y the prin- a preservative duid of valuable quality is said to understand very thorou its conception fastens the degree of the malice. | Get? sei a i j ntterances are tollowed by what he | that the President would remove Mr. Walker. | House. he was about four or feet from the door | The further vow zoifrom tie concent iS poet = oe en integer poner —— of salt. one and one-half of brown one | call ‘address to the American people,” in | This was the first intimation from either the VIGIL OF A MURDERER. nearest the ticket office, in the act of passing | gnoting the xreater the malice | ion in the case of the deceased Pre and one-half of ginger, one of mns' i whieh he reiterates the declaration that he alone | President or Mr. Blaine that they did not intend e. bey a few hours or a s after the conception the mind has a chance to cool and, therefore, the act is deliber- ate. Malice in fact depends upon the circum- dent except so far as to object to an incision be ing made in the neck, s« and to suggest inst |p : “Wwe jatohiner through the door to get’ through the depot to whole grated nutmes. witha blade of n is responsible. “The President's nomination,” | to ive me the Paris consulship. Iwas surprised, | ¢y, ee i a ona fis Gare) He was abtut tiremoel iene tert ory Let this all cook for fully two hours, then add | je says, “was an act of God; his election was 4a and I said to Mr. Blaine: ‘Tam going to see the | {¥8t week. I'got up one morning at half-past | the Guor. I stood five or six feet behind him, @ pint of good vinegar and cook au hour longer. | act of God; his removal is an act of God. These | President and try and induce him to remove | five, thinking that I might get the President | pient in the middle of the room,andas he was in How SMoxixe Avvects Boys—An English | three specifie acts oF the Deity may give the | Mr. Walker and give me the Paris consulship. | When he was out horseback riding, but he did ifuily marked aiready, i the femoral artery. The sent process, equally with its purpose, isalto~ ae | ‘her different from ki 4 funeral custom i the act of walking away from me I pulled out | stances attending the homicide. Malice in law | & ” : P ‘ z . 18 ae Y : . the people by whom the art was prac: : - s stfeet of | CleTEy a text. Well. if you can, do go,’ sald Mr. Blaine. This | NOt 40 out that morning. Isat there in the | the revolver and tired. He stralhtened: un and is liqui i ase by the facts and cir- | 0nd ze ! re recent Saresinenstngs, thes emece ot 4 CHAPTER IN GENEALOGY. isthe last eonvercation | have had_with iim, | Park for two hours Niinkiug that Laniehe any | threw his head back and seemed to be perfeetly | eqiiustated in this, case. by, the pases. attend | HeU aNd perfected so many axes since, and ee = None He tock Ge We eens | enaeson se ‘any subject | Pers and revolver, thinking that I might get a | (LTGN Dis | . ie He did not seem to know what My full name,” he says, “is Charles Julius | Smee. A few days alter I saw Mr. | Chance at him, but he did not go out that | struck him. I looked. at him: he did not Blai oA porning, go I went back to my room, took | drop; I thereupon pulled again. He dropped his Cases he discovered injurious traces of thehabit. | Guiteau. I have dropped the Julius; I prefer to | ¢, pod the Prasiientie fost Paoater tn ie breakfast, put up my papersand my revolver and head, seemed to reel, and fell over. T do. not him as General Garfleld. ti : In twenty-two there were various disorders of | be known as Charles Guitean. Mv surname is | enee to my getting the Paris consulship. Isent | J¢t the matter drop until night, ‘Ih the evening, | know where the fitst shot hits T’ aimed at the “Ineverhad the slichtest idea of removing | ¢@balmer subject to being pursued by the the cireciation and digestion, palpitation of the | spelt G-u-i-t-e-a-u; it is pronounced Get-o. It isa | in my card and the doorkeeper came back in a | @fter dinner at five o'clock, I went up to my | hollow of his back: Tdid not aim for any par- | yf, Blaine oben wesubes ontis aceinmeratan | friends of the deceased with stones and curses, heart, and more or less taste for strong drink. | French name. My father's ancestor, two hun- moment and said: ‘Mr. Guiteau, the President | 700m and got my revolver out and carried it | ticular place, but I knew if I got those two bul- | yy only ule ree to remove Mr. Garfield in his | D@balming there signified cleansings with palm In twelve there were frequently bleedings of the | dred years or more back. was a physician con- | says it will be impossible for him to see you to- | i1 my pocket. This was either Wednesday or | Jets in his back he would certainly zo. I wasin | Stitt’ teh pst of the United | Wines oF with syrmma and like substances, with Rose. ten had disturbed sleep, and twelve had | nected with the royal family of France. Ido day.” I therefore sent him a little note and told | Thursday, I do not remember which, but I | a diagonal direstion from the President, to the | States tot ican party and save | SU>Sequent steepings of seventy days’ duration slight ulceration of the mucous membrane of the | not know much about my genealogy. There is | himv about the pane consulship. Inever had a| think it was Thursday night. He went out | northwest, and supposed both shots struck. the Republic from goints into the control of tke | 2 citron or natron and with other multiplied Tobaeo Toren usappeared on ceasing the use of | a John M. Guiteau in New York who belongs to | personal interview: with te Predera | Tiding that night. Twas in Lafayette Park oppo- Tits ARREST. rebels and democrats. ‘This was the sule idea |Yetiations of medicaments. Tn sone cust, tobacco for some days. The doctor treated them | our family and who lasts genealoar: Henie @ subject of the Paris consulship except once, and | site the White House watching for him, andabout | - acre i «| that induced me to remove the Precaicat 's | We are toid, there were injections of cedar-tree all for weakness. but with little effect until the | lawyer and a man of considerable wealth 1 | {it cue when T handed him my speech andtold | b&lf-past six the White House carriage drove up |__ “I was in the act of putting my revolver back STeGunIS Site moe can sentiment and | Pitch, and in costiy modes of embalming much ing was discontinued, when health and | Ge He has lived in New York abont| him that I would like the Dart consulship, jto the White Honse and waited a few moments, | into my pocket when the depot policemanseized ree eenabays 4 with io removal: no one can | US¢.¥88 made of asphalt wax: sometimes bodies strength were soon restored. twenty and formerly practised | which was about the 7th or Sth of March. He | 4d the President and some gentleman, and ‘a| me and said, ‘You shot the President of the surpass me in this, but T put away all sentiment | Nete Immnersed in moiten bitumen, and in some A Prerry Vive.—One of the neatest, most | tw at Cincinnati, Ohio. There were two | was inaugurated on Friday, and it was about {red man eighteen or twenty years old, whom | U Fee sae Doe ec aely Gxited: he | Sided my duty-to God and 46 the Apericen [ereresigelen gga ae ommr ea pres Bi} : 9 g brothers named Guiteau, who came to this coun- | the middie of the following week after his inau- | { Presume was the President's son, got into the | hardly knew his heed fren hin feet, and I said, | MOO an | devices again were resorted to for corpo desirable ornamental vines is the Ampelopsis | tre ast understand! from France. a goodmany | guration. ‘The time that Iwas pressing the | CMTiage. The young man sat with his back to | ‘Keep quiet, my trond. keen quiet, my friend. i | People.’ —_ preservation among the Greeks, where, as every Veitehti. This isa comparatively new species and | years ago—my father's ancestor and the ances- Paris consulship began about. the first week in | the driver, and the President and his gentleman | want t go to jail.’ A moment after the police- INTERVIEW WITH MR, CONKLING. one has heard, the corpse of Alexander the comes from Japan. Its leaves are much smater | tors of John M. Guiteau. These are the only | March and terminated, I should say, about the | friend (whoever he was) sat.on the back seat. man seized me by the left arm; clinched me with | The fourth chapter in Guiteau’s autobio- | Great was embalmed in hor i than those of the American Ampelopsis, and | two branches of the Guiteau family in America | last of April. During those weeks I was press- | They drove out the entrance nearest the Treas- | terribleforee. Another zentieman—an olderman, | Staphy contains little that is of interest. He | el all pone considered uisite with ua, overlap one another, forming a dense sheet of | that I know of. My father's family settled in | ing it and expected to get It. I have never had | ury building and passed right along theeast side | I should say, and less rebust—seized_me by the | gives his impressions of men in public life whom | & few hours sultice fur the embaluing of the lovely green. While young this plant isa little | central New York; John M. Guiteau’s ancestors | any final answer either from the President or ve fayette square toward the Arlington. | right arm. At this moment the ticket azent and he casually met; whom he bored for office or | cc “i . susceptible to cold winters, but requires only | Went to Ohio. My paternal grandfather was a | from Mr. Blaine Ii secre te my having the | Th drove down bythe Arlington and out on | a great crowd of people rushed around me, and | money. It is a record of intense egotism. His la e telegram summoning him to this lamenta- simple protection with leaves, straw or some- | Physician and a very prominent one, at the be-| Paris consulship. It did not have the slight bn ee : walked out of the park | the ticket agent said, ‘That’s him; that's him; speech, “Garfield against Hancock,” he used | te yr. ered = was received by Mr.Walsh thing of the sort the first winter after being | iming of the century, near Utiea, N.Y. My | influence on me one way or the other ini pretty rapid aa aan saw them from the corner | and he pushed out his arm to 8 me around | everywhere as his letter of introduction. If a. iy gee the ni Presi Planted out. | So soon, however, as it gets well | father was born at Whitesboro, near Utica, | ence to my removing the President. Sane ak in or . went ont pon the street on the | the neck, and I says, ‘Keep quiet, my friends; public man failed to recognize him out came lane ns = the necessary preparations, inc established there is no further risk, and it be- | N.Y. in 1810. He died in August, 1880, at Free- G@isceorion aw (nb adeuausxsTow: cast side of thesquare and I looked and saw they | I want to go to jail;’ and the officers, one on | the speech, He tells how he was snubbed by | IM hat of securing a new set of instrament Comes as hardy as a tree of the forest. It grows | Port, IIL. having lived there for about forty | st conceived the iden of see ne aN Prost: | the fark about naiuont avenue. Thungaround | each side of mie, rushed me right’ off to | Mr. Conkling, whom he styles “My Lord Ros- | Feuuired several hours, +0 rney Very rapidly after it gets started. Without any | Years. He originally was a merchant. He was o a OF removing id at nef aut half an hour or so, and they | the police headquarters, and the officer | coe,” and who nearly always seemed to him to | the quualmer with his two carboys of scida, tying or other fastening it clings to walls of | Clerk of the cireuit court of Stevenson county | dent, teau declares, “pending the answer, | did not return and it was very warm, and I con- | who fitst seized me by, the hand says, “This | be on his “high horse.” Mr. Jewell was always | Was delayed un’ tye the next morning. brick or hammered stone with the tenacity of | one term. After that, for about” twelve years, | and as far as the Paris consulship had any influ: ¢ludedto let the matter drop for that night, so |man has just shot the President of the affable and appeared to iike him. Mr. Blaine | He, however, reached the Franckiyn cottage the ivy. The foliage is very attractive in sum- | be was cashier of the Second National Bank at | ence on my mind at all it wouid have deterred | Mat, after sitting in the park for some time, I | United States,’ and he was terribly excited. | he met two or three times at the State depart. | 40d was in readiness for his task aa soon as its mer and changes to a pl t é - ts : 2 z 2 bes he went as usual to my home and went to bed.’ I | And I said, ‘Keep quiet, my fi Keep quiet: | me: e describes one i Ow ii | performance was needed. When the work of a Oe ae ce Tene Gant ARTE eae ta e Eunected, as a matter | went to the Riggs House and took a room tn | Stocs ot coe panes whch will expec Saacagy regent eared Mies Bleuse carn vere embalming was about to begin the room was prssieel hom eeotemeper Ube hnaintin Waar tall oF re teem oeatey nee eererm aparece the | Arter I conceived the lise Of gem eae uD: | the afternoon of Thureday, and the event mer: | weave eet eo They let go of me and they held | headed “Garfield azainst Hancock,’ and he im- | leared of undertaker, assistants, and all per- he eee te a ee cc ee a tlie | inant t Glaaae gy dest Mr ees ag, | tioned in ehis preceding tale hammenea’ ren | wove ae up—one policeman on one side and | mediately recognized me and brightened up | S0nsexcluded from it except those who were pertain to te Avicvican for the oria- | pablications of JohnH. Noyes, Od wan | Prasident to ree, He arnt ee eee eH? | quite certain, om Thursday uients We rec eheee oneonthe other—and they went through me,took | and was very clever to me. Iimet him inthe Tightly privileged to te present, at this rad sean Seacsdations teen oe | cae te eatioue ates he oe ee GE EPO Cee Se ke ate OO | On: Wednead Mat rnc positive | away my revolver and wiat little change had. | elevator one day about that time—probably | Scene. ‘The first part of the operation, was yee THE GARDEN Ix AUTUWN.—Itis is a good time, | HT Petiod. I used to hear him talk about the | ailed at the President's when the doorkeeper S that it happened on | my comb and my toothpick, all my papers, and I | about a week later aud. he wae very cordial | Vlous to the autopsy, which it was intended to Community a great deal in his family, and I be- | Gide sar carte microsite Ymeht after] gotmy | gave them my letter to the White House; told | and said he remembered me, and. seemed to be | facilitate. This consisted of injecting an asacnie in the pleasant fall weather, for arranging beds | came interested in it in that way in my early RU ee ee ee dinner at the Riggs House Twent up to my room | them that I wished they would send that letter very glad to see me. My ‘standing with Mr, | Solution which causes no discoloration, but fills of herbaceous plants, such as hoifyhocks, del- | boyhood. My mother died when I was seven | that T'concelved. the idee iy coin ee | and I took out my revolver and Féput ieineory | ceam tat | wished they wou and the officer be- | Blaine ran along in this free and familiar way | 40d cleanses the blood-vyessels, leaving all phiniumns, ponies, etc. Roots can be divided sold. I know very little about my mother. | during which time I was waiting patiently for hip pocket and I had my papers with me, and T | gan to read iny letter to the White House, and | until he fold me one day that he did not think | the tissue structure clear. To further this ais SORE “a ot t! | the President would remove Mr. Walker. Since | Object the extremities of the fingers and toes thirty-eight boys, aged from nine to fifteen. and when, as sentimentaily viewed in Egypt, the carefully examined them:—“In twenty-seven ct of ening th bud: nit it but the best of feelings, personally, toward the | “GU fF opening the body and filling it with u | odoriferons spices and drugs was held to be President; Talways thought of him and spoke of | Such desecration as to render the patent | ing the removal of the President. Lhad none n t Y understood she was » woman of fine mind and wileh L wi ct, Thavenever | {houznt I possibly might get a chance at him | in this envelope containing my letter to the without injury, and generally wi hay Ea et S i and | myanswer,which, as a matter of fuct, Ihave never | {0 a y poe che t a thls D taining my letter to Reroony morn aos mith great Lee a lady in every respect. “Ihave heard her very | wetroccied than Gon tor of uct, Thave never night. Iwent into Lafayette square and | White House was my speech, ‘Garfield against Miglile apakow oc sat there, opposite the White House, Hancock.’ He glanced hi CEST ee Le ereioge Sioa Pe yep orion verbo Paapentaeg aac iol a highly spoken of. and Mr. Blaine foran answerand I thought that it ; GUse: MT Tans tote euanced his eye over the letter | saw one day in the Vice President's room at the 7 aaa Ppgserr dig J hecpendrraloorndss te ee Gy rosea HIS VAGAROND CAREER. would be better for me to keep away froin them, IN THE SHADOW OF DEATH. and I was telling him about sending it at once | Capitol. The ex-Senator was in conversation | Washed out by the injected acid. ‘The body re- somewhat tender in the north, such as tritomas, | He gives a long rambling account of his career | They had my address, and [ thought if th “T had not been there a minute before I saw | t?.the White House toexplain the matter and he Fauptas grass ete and any other fender plants | which seems to have been, for the most part, | coueiuded to zive me tive Paris consulship. they | the President walk out of the White House. . ‘i 1 ” ae m puld seq announce- ong) yself, 4 7 eS ‘ali 3 ; ? 7 “hic! tee ° ma bemee miler aaloiee Venn that ofa “vagaborrl dead beat.” In 1874 he | mentof the appointment In the paper; aad: eg T neath, Hee Ae ee firey locked the door med wg Pat me into a cell; | friend 1 stepped up to him and said “Good morn- | cneaanirenas actor pyr ya cry hosp ees 0 1 ae Cale Ne cricclty while operat- | have stated. after conceived the idea of remov- | Any one acount anes ene eter re an one re (aoe and went off, and {did not | ing. Senator,’ and he said ‘ood morning’ Xl suseotion is torsenion Cate toes Geek Slereaaee feet. over whieh is placed a hot-bed frame and | NZ 888 collecting lawyer by holding on, to | ing the President Tid not. go near the Trost | SEY, oNe a equare and down 1 street parties came atnd teak ead tien one or two | said, “I hope to. get an appointment, Senator | injection is repe the natural @aid ao ne sash. Even boards or mats will answer for eov- | SMe Money he had collected on a claim. ‘The | dent or Mr. Blaine. | My conception ot the ite me's: Ho Parties came and took look at m occas toe they were | and Thope when the matter | well filed as t Give air during fine weather. Genenal | Ne¥ York Herald made a publication of the | of removins the President was this, Mr cee | wed h Hea o dee niaine’s. Hon! policemen and detectives and said, “I don’t know | remember me,’ and he simply embalining em witha gentleman. “I sat withina few feet of | mains thus for several hours, with the prelim d; “We will put you into the White House!” | him,” says Guitean, “on the sofa. I eyed him | Mary absorption in prowress, after witch the ‘o I said nothing ‘after that. They took me | and heeyedmeandwhen he gotthrongh with his | Suid designed for preservation is introduced, The means this day ; pal a - 1th street. He walked and wh Y 5 5 marl : oi apes gag) ve been considered w me care on the pi improvements in, the garden shonid be now | Toyvun” Guitues enterey ee a onecting | ling resigned on Monday, May 16, 1881. On the dewalit opposite Mr. Blaine’s house 2 ceuu iow Wish mats “never saw hlatbe-| and 1’ bowed and ze eveL ent wees ten ef eel ceaerir caveat shite ond made, for our sprinzs are short and unp he Herald for $100,000 ae ec! suit against | following Wednesday I as tm bed. Tthiuk T | he looked up, as if he did not know the place da few moments longer and a gentle- What Time Is It? ments result unfavorably to the employment of Dig up and put in order every va ‘as it u coeds damages, but did not | retired about 8 o'clock. I felt d ppressed and per- tly, and then he saw the correct nu detective who proved to be Mr. | From the Liverpool Mail. carbolic acid, which is*used with much will not only facilitate sprin; » the iene tones rept on mevectas and walked in. I followed him along, and | was and he was very polite and attentive. What time is it? satisfaction among the Freneh. The soil zood. | bien that enime apo uiia aa there (ieee than eatied | about half way between H_ street and Mr. | T told hea lence ee yer ‘and why I did itz Time to do the art appears to m1 j oe He upon him as theresuit | in Toe a ash tee h ey bed about 9 | house, on the opposite side of the | that] had some papers at the newsstand; that I ‘Time to live better— account ofthe medic: ter d in autu me ETE oe o'clock and [ was th r the political sit | when he entered the house. I went | wished hin to wet thone papers and take them ve upubat grudge— season, when the stud ure assembled, a great the: aie ie s,” he writes, “in great distress. T could | uaton, andthe idea flashed through my brain | ailey in the rear of Mr. Morton's | upto Byron auch sad the ads Answer that letter— ot botliee ens poabed Car te buf plants that ‘{ | Rot get money enough to pay m: ‘d during | that ifthe President was out of the way every xot out my revolver and looked at it | the pargre wens a he. at Kind word, to sweeten a sorrow; room, and were not as many # | the summer, and I oy les for | thing would go better. At first this was a mere | wiped it off and put it, b: Ap COMMU Hint Pete eee pod deed om: wos Soave ll tna | Te a ee oe at eee r name on the black list there at || came ts tie wet my pocket. over to the H street and he came in and put the handeutis on Time to try hard the morgue or the hospital t ise beat, and it was circulated | bezan to read the paper: 5 P, py’s, and I waited there half an There were five or six policemen and de- In that new situation— be wholly insufficient for this pur a ers.” possibility thi a our, ior, the President to come | tectives with him when he came in to see me, Time to build upon extent of the matter numerically, s x A solid foundat and set up his re [ saw the comipli- and he went aw me b; in a few = seas sted by a single instane Last 5 T the; He f ing up neediessly, eh: nd driftin; igh ca perien 2 field as a lecturer the more wasl impressed | 41 : Pipi ees " ee aad il de ided to take Leaving the quicksauds th: ‘ace shifti reaper — “ome ae nical agro of econd Coming of Christ, but he appears | w necessity of removing him. This thing | stroot nthe east si yette square sa eae 2 Ana dst ee watt What time is it? poli ge edie ri pborgrosd | § Proved as ureat a failure a8 a theologian | continued for about two weeks. kept reading | Sgcry aden the ee ilies tren E ate and hist s took me Ae rica pan j mains couree st As tate paps ‘ as he did asa lawyer. apt Bb Baas 3 Treasury out into the room and down the stairs Time to be thrifty; dent four parts for ¢ ied as a @ranghts like beer, or other fluids, which ¢ he yer. t sand kept be 1, and the | building and into the White . Biai t and he and three other Farmers, take warning— head and neck to a trank, an teens tt chen: If we consider the use of THE assal AS A POLITICIAN. a Kept bearing and bear id bearing down | and the President seemed to be talk nd drove me rapidly to the Plough in the springtime— arm in its upper ext taking ite A Guitea: ré given his experience z upon me that the ouly way to unite the two fao- t Mr. Blaine 0 , ori othe Sow in the morning— : ere a milk in the phy eal). ti uiteau next gives his experience as a po tong of the republica’s party and ie rept Blaine . I met Mr. Russ, the deputy warden, | s eeplives are blowing: pwer extremity. The from the morgue that is. of it, we find that the suckis ‘T was,” he says, “in New York from | jig trom going into the hands of the rebels-and few tu euies looped in the | fresh told him that T had shot the President | Heaven will attend fo the quickening and vrow- | ate allotted to the ditter $ proportion- é a ag 4 t a p street a y h ratte ¥ | atel » the ver of students, the — sniall mouthful ie setuved, be | Jy 22 1850, until the Sth of March, 1881.“ Dur-| democrats was to quietly ramove the President, | (estteet; Bl jereengarredin the | Sorte ote i there ‘yer kines, exesnt Timo to count cost— | tion being naar tee controler a eats edort, and slowly presented to the ustric | the national commitee oe sere neers Of pe oe rheads werevers | when'Thiave been to the warden's Toor te be Lesson ¢ mittee. ° mueous surface for the pi res. | the bile. ate tipi tha Nh Ne st “Two weeks after I conceived the idea my | Close toxether. Blaine was striking the a interviewed bya correspondent of the New York Time to Jook we an ayers jc { “-| the republican state committee, at the Fifth |__ ag ion to | @W moments and the President was drinki < To the g: athe tees; perce Itis thus regularly and gradually reduced to | venue Hotel. I wasin the habit of going to | Mind was thoroughly settled on the intention to ifall ing. and ootasionally. the renee eg | eral Malingand mending Kersshould; | embalmed to a de; of their reten- fund, and the stomach is not_oppres al with @| those places. “During this time I made the per. | remove the President. I then prepared myself. atrtke out. his hand therety Erne PURCHASE OF THE REVOLVER. BhulicIng ontevit and keowing tim good.) (/] Up Ste eres mocesia, as the cone eae SOeeam: apie should be Teranied in the coon tas | ie ty had tm eenting men of the re-| Tsent to Boston fora copy of my book, “The | what Mr. Blaine was sayin, Ghee Gulteau bought the revolver before the Prest- What time is it? coine what It now appears, the preservation Waa t buld be rezarde e cas * | publican party. I had my speech, entitled ‘Gartiel r * S| veek ji sparing ig Hilarious atatel i vent to Long Bi « ’Mea- = — ° adait. Milk should be slowly taken In mouthe | PUbcan party. ied oa entitled Garfield | Truth,’ and I spent a week in preparing that. | be in a very hilarious stave of mind and delig’ t went to Long Branch. “I called at 0’Mea- = Time to be earns ying up treastire: e to be though Choc short interv: and thus it is @ealt with by the gastric juice. If milk be taken after other food, it is almost sure to »’ printed on August 6, at the | cut out a paragraph and a line and a word here ful fellowship and in perfect accord. T s, corner of 151 ite a a 5 ne y ner of 15th and F streets, opposite the time the republican conference was held at the | and there and added one ortwone ‘w chapters, put | made a stri ie ae ion on me; it confirmed | Treasury, about two or three weeks Mpelore the Fifth Avenue Hotel. I gave or sent this speech | some new ideas in it and I greatly improved ie, |e a , ri 5 to all the leading men at that conference. This | I knew that it would probs Naren must Thad fo With theE the Pepe ct | Femoral. 1 stepped up to the show case and limited to a few days at the most. This service was for many years performed tn ey Bellevue Hospital by an old man, who at last ben saetd Si : had the boy-janitor, James Walsh, fo assist him, 1 ach,” 3 : - large sale | for a long time—to wit, that the President was | said, “Let me look at that. 1 saw it was a | Loving stern jus pooped “ pextre burden the stomach, and to cause dis- | was my first introduction te thew ‘Afterward | on account of the. necon es a long resident was . i a ‘| Making your word just as good as your bond. The old man becoming extremely old, the young pad tndig yy fits . Afterwar otoriety that, the act of re- | entire y 1 eee : ; ea zy K y | comfort and _ prolonged patidigestiou, | and | ast met them 1 introduced inyceif and caine ing the President Would cive mer quay | cutirely under Mr. Blaine’s influence and that | large bore, and he pulled itout. Isaw it marked 3, fo e obvious reason that’ the assistant succeeded to his lugubrious office. It Time to be happy. their attention to that speech. They seemed to they were in perfect accord. Imay have remained | ‘British Bull Dog,’ and saw that it was au -unu- hed the book to go out to the public in| inf hey way have remained ung ; THe ere hes as nll Dogs and saw that i yee aun boing your best was while simply the hospitat janitor that young Rnd the Detter tie arate renct £0 dispose of It. | be hizhly pleased with it, and that was the be | prover skicen wat Wee co preparation for it, | hour, and thien I went. down to and meee ae tae | eee em Ge said, Tha There were Leaving the rest, Rober ge mroce venlbon ninemsn vere the discomfort will be under these cue | Zimming of my personal acquaintance with | Another preparation was to thin the sentor sti Rigas House. I took a towel bath in my room | two just alike, except that one had an ivory han- | Knowing in whatever country or elime, sarasuli Senterta. Cease aeomamee tions. Milk is insufficiently usee ia taken nc | them. “I sent 1¢ to General Arthur ‘and | out in detail and to buy n revolve caer ce Pre- | and went to bed and went to sleep. I woke up | dle for $10, and the other a plain wooden Randie | Neer cin we call buck one miuuteor tne, Tks tan we Gar of © enceh hen le puddings of such farinaecets fomene fit | Senator Conkling, and General Logan | pare myself for executing the Wen Tiere, about 4 o'clock Saturday morning and felt well | for 9; I’ got the best one for $10. T EE ee ae Eh phoubles_eumenened) i aoane wear Tipibes and sage peruaceous foods as rice, | and Senator Cameron, and all that kind of men, | quired come two ce three weeks, and I gave my is H . t : with a shoulder dislocated in se sae | e o 0 in mind and body. My mind’ was perfectly | was very timid in holding it. I knew Changes of the Earth's Surface. a sed Fg ea Se ae fag fneen- | | wanted to take the stump for General Garfield | entire time and mind in preparing myself to ex- | clear in regard to removing the President; I had | nothing about weapons at alle I. looked siete | According to Lombardini, the Po now trans- | believed interesting, and) the youth, of all stinted in making them, or poor skimmed iilk {12 AUsUst, and I wrote Mr. Blaine (in Maine) | ecute the conception of removing the President. | not the slightest doubt about my duty to the } in an unsophisticated way, snapped it, and | ports three times as much sediment as formerly, negro in order to prepare him for the use of the os Abundance of new iil, cheat | about it, and called Governor Jewell’s attention | 1 never mentioned the conception to «i ng | Lord and to the American people intrying to | I said, ‘that will makea good noise,’ and he said, | the increase being chiefly due to the destruction dechars. Tun latiey wk seating: thd ease ena neta J, and more milk or cream should be | {04% Wish, but there was.a great pressnre on | soul. I did most of my thinking in theparkand | wordy eat! Fresident, and I want to say here, | ‘oh, yes, that will kill a horse;’ he said. ‘Inever | of the forests, and the consequent increased the janitor finding his embalmed negro a bur- ‘added when they are taken. In Soottink by Mr. Blaine from their quarters for speakers. | on the street, and I used to go to the Arlington | as emphatically as words can make it, that,from | want a bullet like that in me.” Isaid, ‘Perhaps | denudation of the Alps. French engineers esti- den, and constantly in the way, gave him to the holds this matter is well understoce pe ‘ pe Not having a national reputation he did not use | and the Riggs House daily to read the papers. | the moment when I fully decided to remove the | I may get that some of these days. Three or | mate that the delta of the Rhone has- advanced keeper of Wood's ptracincemh where he stands yet tinct’ pudding-piate, like ‘a small soup tlate ia | Ze 12 Maine. Governor Jewell was very kind to WATCHING AN OPPORTUNITY. President, I have neverhad the slightest shadow | four days afterward I stepped in there and se- | at a rate far greater than it did previous to the in perfect state. This embalmer appears to pos- used for this course. The dry messes commonly | Me Personally. The disability I labored under | «after 1 had made up my mind to remove him | 0M my mind; my purpose has been just as | lected the revolver with the ivory handle and | cultivation of its valley. In the eastern United sess peculiar skill of hand and insight quite served as milky puddings in Eueland enon md was this: I had ideas, but I did not have a na- Tiaa-wlienT should hi 4 clear and just as determined as anything could | got a box of cartridges and a little penknife, | States, wherever a mountain slope has been apart certainly from any manner of learnt porborgh y ‘hat ‘should bes | Uonal reputation. The state committeemen | the Se aR O EO ee lite. I balleved that T was acting under a special | and he said he would give me the entire | stripped, incipient ravines quickly form and and to have very greatly prided himself on na most excellent and delicous pate ir wid be ® | wanted a man that would draw a lange crowd, | and I was omewhat confused on that. I knevy Divine authority to remove him, and this Divine | purchase for $10. I did not have the money | enlarge with such rapidity as to excite the atten- success in preparing nice bodies for the medical peal Manes tox beth chiens ee] rk ee oO. So, asa matter of fact, I only delivered that | that it would not do to go to the White House | pressure was upon me from the time whenI | when [ first went in; I got it from | tion of geologists. This is especially the case students. At present he has no less than sey- Duckicorth, in Popular Science Monthiy, | SPech once, and that was at a colored meeting, | and attempt it, because there were too many of | fully resolved to remove him until T actually |@ gentleman in the interim. He loaded the | with the sandy soils of Maryland, Georgia and enty or eighty harvested from the summer Dyce cor’ s onthly. Tthink, on 25th street, one Saturday evening. | his employés about, and 1 looked around for | shot him. It was only by nerving myself to the | revolver and said, ‘Put that right into your | Alabama, previously covered with pine forests. | ind in readiness for service of the coming ses- ConcrRNING MoNoGRams.—Scarcely anything | I was the first speaker. and delivered a portion | several days to try and get a good chance athim; | utmost that I did it at all, and 1 never had the | pocket.’ Said I, ‘Is there any law here against |The Black Earth of Russia, one of the chief ion. Seems so easy as to design a monogram, yet we | %F,!tand gave it to the reporters in print.” | and one Sunday (the Sunday before he went to | slightest doubt as to the Divine inspiration of | carrying a revolver? He said, “Yes, there is, | Sources of the agricultural wealth of the empire, ‘ After the result was known in November Guit-| Long Branch) 1 went to hischureh in the morn- | the act, and rel they don’t enforce it exceptagainst drunken | is quickly cut up into huge ravines, and the 5 see very few successful ones, the most of them | cau wrote to, Generar eo rela rte Git oes) ne frame building, and {okey | Lue Act, and that it was for the best interest of | but they fo) pt n | is q ip ze How to be an Expert in History. re ing. eri eople.” “Whi can I shoot this?’ said I. He | finest soil in Euro is being rapidly carried being a mass of mixed-up letters and ornament | have cleaned them all out Just as T expected. | (2% she Aulcticanipeople: pag fate dowite th faerie f 4 tite Vols. tno ates ny Sates acl have cleanes there af the door a moment. 1 wa little lacs a eee says, ‘Well, you can go down to the foot of 17th | away to inetease the deltas of the Volga and the | Trough knowledge of one period helps to which we can find neither the beginning nor | Thank God! the services had progresse ut one-third. 2 ; “ street and tire it off into the river.’ In the course | Don, and to silt up the sea of Azov. During the | the mastery of another. No man can read all fhe end. There is a law regulating the design-| “Very respectfully, Cuartes Gurreav.” | noticed the President sitting near am openwin-| “Having heard on Friday from the papers, | 8 two or three days (I remember it was the | great floods of 1866 and 1868 in France and Swit, history—no man, one would think, can read all ing of everything, and it is this law which the THE AUSTRIAN MISSION. dow about three feet from the ground, and | and also by my inquiries of the doorkeeper at | Saturday night after I bought it) I went down | zerland, the wooded soils alone escaped being | English history—from the beginning to the end, true designer keeps in mind and applies to his Immediately after the Indiana election Gui- | thought to myself, ‘That would bea good chance | the White House, Friday evening, that the | about seven o’clock in the evening and I shot it | washed away. The immunity of the provinces |in minute detail, from original writers. He $ForE: ihe effects of obedience to this law and | oan began to think it was time to look around | to et him.’ T intended to shoot him through | President was going to Long Branch Saturday | off twice, that is 1 shot off tog cartiidges, Atthe | of Brescia and Bergamo from damage by the | must trust second-hand authorities and modern its violation are seen as clearly in the design for | the back of the head and let the ball | morning, I resolved to remove him at the depot, | first shot I was about ten feet from a sapling | great doods of 1872 was chiefly due to forestal | commentators for a large part of the story. But & monogram as in the desizn for a cathedral. | for something. Hewrote to the President-elect, pass through the ceiling, in order that |I took my breakfast at the Riggs house about | three inches in diameter, that was stuck into | improvements. During ten years the depart- | he who has thor ly mastered one or more First, there should be harmony of composition— | suggesting that he might be a candidate tor the no one else should be injured. And there | eight o’clock. I ate well and lt well in body | the mud, and I pulled and struck the sappling.| ment of the Lower Alps lost dxtycone thousand | periods by original research gains a certain tact that is, the letters should so emphasize, subdue, | Austrian mission. Early in March he went to could not possibly be a better place to|and mind. I went into Lafayette square and | and it trembled like a leaf and it SAY ee E acres of cultivated soil from the effects of tor- | which enables him to deal almost as a master, or control each other that the composit H ele ei he ae for the purpose of getting remove a man than at his devotions. 'y | sat there some little time after breakfast, wait- | hollow; I was terribly excited at the noise and | rents; and the clearing of the forests of the | even with those periods on which he has not should impress us as compact, appropriate, and, | an office. He had nothing to do in New Yor revolver in my possession when I first went to | ing for nine o'clock to come, and then I went Reyes of the weapon; thought I, ‘that isa terri- | Ardéche has resulted in the cove up of | brought original research to bear. He acquires being so, beautiful. Second, there should be | except solicit for some insurance companies. He | the church, having purchased it about ten days | to the depot and I fot there about ten minutes | ble weapol it hollowed like a little can- | seventy thousand acres of good land barren | a kind of instinct, by which he sees which sec- Bo unnecessary ornamentation: there should | says: “I addressed a letter to President Gar- before the President's going to Long Branch. | after nine. I rode there from the park in a ‘bob- | non; it startled me. I fired ten shots, and they | sand and gravel. ondary and modern writers are to be trusted be a quiet and peace t the design | field and to Secretary Blaine some time in| This was the Sunday prior to his leaving for | tailed’ car. I left the car, walked up to a boot- | went off with tremendous effect every time; it It is thought by many that vegetation ele-|and which are not. He does not profess to hears Ringo dod fini truly artistic. | March, reefer [Rapa tet sctention to | Long Branch on Saturday. During that whole | black, got my boots blacked, and inquired for # |) made a terrific noise. One or two men came | vates the surface as much as water depresses it, | know detail of the periods with which he nS, we xe ¢ impres- | ny serv! e canvass and to my earl read carefully. thought it | mannamed John Tayilor,w! 4 weeks before, sions. that ornament was so plentiful’ Gop tee | a eeryices during the canvas Mentor. in Octo. | Wack, tead the papers, carefully ‘dt ae ae around, hearing the report, and on the way | This, however, can only be the case when natu- | deals in this seco! way, as he re , : all over in detail. I thought just what people | I had spoken to about taking me out toward the | back I’ noticed a colored woman and p Bake} detail of the period he chooses speci: ; designer saw no other means of consumption | ber and also in January, touching the Austrian would talk, and thought what a tremendous ex- | Coi ional cemetery. They told me that | other people. “Did you hear that noise?’ They for hisown. But he can than that of burying his design in it, for we see | mission. I heard nothing about the Austrian | citement it would create, and I kept thinking | Taylor's carriage was not there, and there were | said: ‘Oh, yes; it madea terrible noise? eticaag bef the story; he can, 80 to speak, 3 that there is amass of curves, angles, shad ‘ion until I noticed in the paper that Wm. | about it all the week. I made up my mind that | three or four hackmenthere who were veryanx-| “I went down again the Saturda, morning take place, forth hands and pick out the — : and leaves, but nothing else. Third, simplicity ter Phelps, of New Jersey, had been given | the next Sunday I would orien shoot him if | ious to serve me, and finally I noticed a colored | that I intended to remove the it when Secu peeers 3 effect being lost denudation is en of lettering is an important requisite, as there | the mission, and of course that ended it. I he was in church and1 gota good chance at | man, and I said fo him: ‘What will you take me | he went to Long Branch, and Mrs. Garfield de- relatively from this cause alone. thorough master of any should be no possibility of mistaking an E for a | then sought’ the Paris consulship. I spoke to | him. Thursday of the same week I noticed in | out to the Congressional cemetery for? Hesays: | terred me. I got up about half-past four that tt aj that one result of man’s period cannot do.—The Academy. Gof 6 and the boundaries or outlines of the | General Logan about it, and he said that he | 1m paper that he was going to Long Branch, | ‘Well, I will take you out there for $2.’ “All morning, and I went right down to the same yxe WRaNGEL IsLaxp?—The Otta letters should be well defined. Fourth, the ula speak to General Garfield and with Mr. | ana ew the following Saturday he did go to the | right,’ said I, ‘if I want to use you I will let you | place. I got down there about five o'clock It has Weatuia thee wtke nee order of sequence of the letters should be care laine. He told me that he did peak to Gene- | Branch for Mrs. Garfield's health. I went to the | know.’ At that moment these other hackinen | Was a bright, splendid morning, I remember, ho’ eB bat hs a fally Attended to. The common idea is, that a | ral Garfield, and that General Gartleld aired 10 depot all prepared to remove him. I had the | were pressing me to yet my business, and I sald | and I shot it off twice, using ton cartridges. Te the Son oe ee yt erage et certain number of letters are given with which | leave it with Mr. Blaine. T saw Mr. Blaine about | revolver with me. I had all my papers | to them: ‘Keep quiet; you are too fast on this,’ made a terrible noise, as usual. Those are the | transport o y Lieut. Hooper, of the United rapa wg Bete hp |e a ae ata | ea PUG tn yee ea |e eh a ys | i a alli sc | Sere : ot te oman nang” saa Sa is Tight; but there is something beyon * = ‘aid that they had not got to ie | wanted his services in n took it to the and-wiped it the There is the art of so placing the letters | that yet. He was very clever nt that too: ¢g | Scaitiage to take me, as I told him, over nearth 1 would let een Lane SO ish government d Mr. i i el vi ‘101 emetery. He said that he would | few minutes. Ithen went into the de} t and 1d took the cartrid; and rubbed ferred by the Britis gor % that one can distinguish at a glance the first, | stocd well with him and with General Gar- | $qugressional com €2, and seeined to bea very | took my private papers cae inte ee Of andvT: loaded’ 18 saat pata ie = MoKenzie's regime. the central, and the last letter. Now therule to | field, an by iad every reason to ex) that | clever fellow and glad to get theJab. I got to reas Cneinding ey Tevised edition of my book, | drawer in my room, and was in that SERIES Sir fellowes the las lettes at the ogee ae ae | iene uenaes a8 toon as they got tole, to give| the dauok, ahontilns Gece cot iied tee | ie Companion tothe Bibie,”)and | condition when Iused it onthe President. I wind Harry (Ixvens. follows: the last letter of the monogram must be | itto me. | Mr. Walker, the present consel, was | Gn tie President’s White House carriage drove | stepped up to the news.stand and asked | took fhe principal feature, and must be the largest, | from New York, and had been appointed by Mr. | up: About twenty-five minutes after nine the | the young man in charge if; I could leave the boldest, and the heaviest letter; then the | Hayes two years ago upon the recommendation President and his carriage and servants and | those papers with hima aes ts, and he letter must be the heat in size, but the | ER ieee tip ete bog titeel that Mr, p. tie got out of his carriage. I | said, ‘Certainly;’ and he took tens ani placed iN outline and color; then the central ror the ladies toot. about ak dp sonia ee must be the smallest aud of an intermedi- | office,as the men who did the businessdaring the | so04.a, We; ladles Foom, about the middie of | ther up wall oméaosta. same oth they m rs. ‘This was about ste tint. If the monogram is of four letters the | Canvass ought to be remembered. And I have face: ie . and walk ladic , and I went into th | waiting room two intermediate must be the same size and the an impression decidedly that at this time Gen. | and the Beak taker around, a there.-were ‘quite a gecond letter lighter in outline and color than | Garfield and Mr. Blaine felt asIdid. Well, I good many le there in the depot and car- the third. A few words may be sald about the called at the. White House to, see Gen. “Gari oe outlier eoloring of mon The first letter shor Logan I Bedright, light, and clears the second of 2 sold and he had to leave the to Seere- Blaine), but I was unable to see the Presi- eet faker see we renininie | cout Teak calla im troienteetentrets eolor the G. B. D. in the followit the matter nee ae that was within two or 3 brtcht, clear tint manner: G yermillion; B of a three days after I reached Ws I gave Detween Prussian and French blue or ultrama-| the President my. §} ‘Gartiela | vine, and D of a warm chocolate. There | against Hancock,” which I delivered tn New York | | are many ee ee es | eae I marked at the head of the Cn keyring alee nascar Rome Na Sag line

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