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OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUN DAY ~TWELVE TUE AUTOMATIC COUPLER, Selections of Railroad Literature from Various Sources. WAILS FROM NURSERY JUNCTION Pecullarities of People Who Trayel A Picture of “Tom, the Railrond Cat"—~An Astonished Conduct- or—Lhe Oldest Rajlroader. Misery Junction. Edward E. Ktdder Oh, wasted hours “put in” at railroad sta tions, With surly railrond “hand. Reading those awful “time card” combina- t Which no one understands! The dirty room, the seats barred off with fiendish mind beneh impossible to lic on, 50 inclined ! If one wer The ron ing fire, when'er it isn't nnwl’r\ "Fhe empty stove, so purposely no \H\ now v, like a demon, all unhee Roars viewusly without! The villago jays.” Tell stories; swe WS 1iF y Send me a “chestnut bell! Th lI before the fire, one desire, [ueer refrosh The bies thit bl The coffce (1) ur handy, As elther llll\l orteal the aged eandy, 3, d to serve at will, quite The frowzy maiden of une Who “riins” these dainty joys, And loves to flirt with m(m- nuly “drum- mers, Or “skyl Ah nm IlI| tain summers, K with the boys! Hcof heattul acenvation deadening to the lh\fl\ there's a welcome tintin At last, it 1 the train Dulation 1 Riding on the Rail, Rochester Democr: In no place are lie idiosynerasies of different people so clearly br ught out and defined as upon the railway one accustomed to trav- eling it is r musing to sitand watch the |lw||)|l' they crowd mm uu- en when the tr t Allis hurry to et o good seat.” The woman with a big hand Wl parcels will_go through r looking for a seat. She will pass id then retr. r 8¢ those she has wdis finally forced n with some one ssed are now filled to be content to crow clse. The old traveler, to whom traveling is part of exister will take the first v cant seat he finds on the shad near the center of the that infaliible teacher, that in a railway car pasily and with |.~~ jar and noise when seated in the center of the car thanwhen seated in the end over the llu(‘k\ and near the door, and, besides, he AWare that the cl t nearest the window, V [0 lun obhivious to all around himuntil he is sure that eve onen the ear h secured a him the sole occu- punt of his little domuin A youny lady enter rved manner. She of her surroundings, the ocenpants of the car. She s cant seat, and slips lightly and nois down the modest, re- tionary ava- lo and gets next to the win- 1\ pretty b border y tas fiu;,rxun.\\uh spring flowe thumbed nuu.l former pecessa kept lmn«l) for” any case of eme while over the other she watches movement of her fello her half-closed eyelask The dude alw form until the train is ready to move ou( and then d Jumping on w e always stands on th ne in Ilwh(m smel ar young lady and I 'y s for nothing els As he g the o tips his hat, and with a smile say Aw miss, I sorry to trouble you, aw, but i engaged?” and,” without further mony or waiting for an answe down, while the young book. The young granger from hi home among the green field bronzed face, hig hands, and r black dingonal suit, will_w. the car and hack with an I before o with the determination to keé louks all about him, gazing in way at sirst one and anoth about in a fidgety manner and cros; Ulh‘lL[,l:‘n\N the otner, never forgetting of his unfortu to make a foot-may seatmate's light pantaloons. Eve the door opens he looks tim, out of the window, to the utter discom- fort of the “‘kn “what’s the ni farmer if he didn’t. Troublesome, indeed, is the fidg, but to the train iien, * l)m other like questions getting to repeat them ever zh the ¢ She forc 1 to shy fifteen minutes @ blessing lonelines not llmlu she is home dawns upon her, Josh,” who has come down to the “keers” to meet her. ‘I poremno monstrosity who alway wants a double seat to | theat ! \l people, who ean h\lknulllul;_' Iml *shop,” D al gambler, whose mission and the on earth is dulhul in ubwunl; ways on board to display thewr pecu ties to the already suflering traveler. 2 Tom, the Railroad Cat, 'om,"" the Lowell rai elinch upon the oflic territory of unyul Woburn, Boston (lok and good humor, miration of eve the corpora that Tom w such he w first ina having soveral brothers and siste many, in fact, for any one household, ‘Pom, not then known' by that appella’ tion, was seleeted as the one to go, Ono mos volled forth to me = and challenges the ad- ybody councoted w! for he saw the light of day g, colle nd sty business in the me taking k wher ted for his pl His ob along was todrop him some- red little what becam I ) the waif, as long as he was not under his feet at home. Jumping from the crowded asping the bag which con- along gaily, the ear, tightly ¢ Jained his charge, he tripped thinking only where he could leave Litten and not be seen, when all at or L slivped on the tile floor in the b BEPTEMBER TheMo st YHERY CHEAL, With a small payment down, and the balance on the easiest possible terms. It has ., €njoyed by that and other additions It is what has long been known as the “Sheeley Farm,” and almost joins Walnut Hill. all the advantages, such as churches, schools, Belt Line, et in North Omaha. There is not a poor lot in Grammercy Park and no other property in the city can compare with it, either for beauty of location, prices or terms. grading being required to make anylot as fine a homeas could be desired. Every lot slopas gradually; no A charter has been v THE MICHTY ll\\l I\IIE‘J Political Meteors Flash for a Time, Then Tumble With a "“Dull Thud." SPECIMENS OF RECENT TIMES, “Pame Vapor, Popularity an Incis dent' Elevated by Cironmatanc to Dizzy Heights, They Soon Reach the Proper Lievel, Chicago Ilerald: Tn & recont “‘per. sonal™ note going the rounds of tho press it was announced that ex-Senator Pinch- Lo ek, of Louisiana, was now n profes- sional “bookmaker in England, and might be heard ealling out the results on any prominent race course; yet it is but httle more than ten years ago that his election to the national senate se dignified body in auproar, and me supposed to 1 sent. Elevated by | cumstances to a position beyond his abil- ities, his was the namoe of the hour for a fow brief months, quickly dropping into ral obseurity, and only to bo re- ars later by the transient breath of passing curiosity, Another man in a somewhat similar situation is Henry R. Revels, now doing his plodding duty as presiding elder of & Methodist southern district, but who at the close of the war took Jefferson Davis® old seat in the sen- ate, to be hailed as the liberator of his race by enthusiastic republicans and greeted by a storm of abuse by the con- servative who could only remember the past. For a brief while he was a national figure. With the be, inning of President Ave thur's administration Abraham 8. Crow- ley, representative in congress from the Ninth distriet m New York, filled « largo in_the public pre nd was the ) end and con- fidential adyiser, an engagoment being announoed between his daughter and tho granted for the extension of the STREET RAILWAY THROUGH GRAMMERCY PARK, Work on which will be begun in the next 60 days, six months by purchasing lots in Grammercy park now, while they arz cheap. All These Beautiful Lots For Sale By AARON CAHN, SON & CO0, E.T.Peterson & Co. 8. E. Cor. (5th and TUP STAIRS. You are sure to double your money in the next MM These Beautiful Lots For Sale By T. B. WILDE, 1512 Farnam St., Up Stairs. e — ) Al These Beautiful Lots For Sale By always puu his ind settles down for suglas Sts. {322 Farnam St., Ground Floor. specinlly of lessly l'ul Iluml-hmhL of the station, and would ad not a corpu- t mmdmnt W lm was behind, caught d and the shoutings of men supplemented the frantic exettions of the people t he's the w! hitest m'm m flmw |nn|m|'||n= A TIRE FIGHTING ~BISHOP. Hnw He Gained the Confidence and Support of Montana Miners, the ground b a te umong the repy nd and a well- in her lap. The junct of femininity is 2o, on & brim- in this guleh him with my lop, and you hear ane with their lives from the fiery fur- into which the narvow can) held the hml town had Fj , when many residence. entine who pus i postmas whereby Valontine lo 1him to the front by Hul m the mJ. of falling he lost his at O'Neill, on_the bag, u.u kitten walked out he can do 1t, and Lo is the hoss < hish been converted. did nnL care to (ollow the picked up the bag and wenthis way. This nt occurred 1 the spring of 1858, elis saw that he had fallen in a soft spot, for he was made much of by the emplu)u, and soon grew to command Kitten, hm statement appeared to be uni- Past wo. 3o npopular th rtath ring-loador of the L\\L L;ll, “and lwIpwl to ever, avele slhruu"h made him more combined with ¢ democratic party clect a llvmom afl BISHOP TUTTLE’S EARLY WORK. \uu"h men of tln- mines no man was ever found to —_— Siaatba the large wary h were sluled the chief i mountains ruts nhout the plat- An Incident of Early Times in Helena president's. son, “Liko meicors, Inmsolf ad family swept across the Washington socinl horizon, only to sink into darkness 1 uln\kuul\. mds are now trying t him o small clership insome of the public offices in New York. And S neral Garfield’s intim- ate frien 1 10 whom were ad- dressed his pathetic last words. an- other of those once favored ones who have tallen from their highestate. T, C, Murphy, once collector of customs at New York, the chosen counselorof Grant 1 Conkli avor meant sue- cess to hundry nightly walks the streets of that great city too poor to bu, place wherein to lay s head. Belkiap, once net, with a housclold tamed in the liant eirele of ol tirst society, fell in a manner that is known to all, and now, rubicuid and portly, glories in his past honor, lnuding the’ opportunitics that onee we Acro: worla S of fortune, position, quence, once the favori once one of the most promi ing men,” sud lizney, politic: cized.” “Oh, what a countrymen. ty years ago a tory has not yet 108t its vi d inour own country, in whu-ll the pr I performer was o Anron Burr, 2 politician of profound skill, n society mun of wondrous fascination, an orator of merit, a public man with the highest ideas of public honor, and a heartless marauder on the domain of social life, From the most brilliant keight of (power he sank in an instant to the lowest abyss of infamy, and lived out the remainder of n miserable life in_a_solitude uncheered by pity and obscurity beneath contempt, summer the Dilke, & man carcer of by d, socially all was there, my upply | for tl territory, the situation seemed nlcs]n-rulu h.’ The people realized that he last hope, and here the last rally wce was to be made, plains and now lay between llu' peo- ing town and any other necessaries of li In one_moment these e confronted with the | agration to be ing ded by starvation amid the of anorthern winter. su(‘l.ll LU]I\II] ion p](-op]o el ‘The Biggest and Best Bishop and the Whitest Man in the Gulch,"” wecused of being one of the lw S x.pumw.m ticket was btomasiatitiio county. addition to this little scheme, for the pur- pose ul holding the ]n)slulhm' .lumw a dministration, s has l:uvn writing for more than o y r vo columns of editori r in the O'Neill Tri tic paper, o n duulm to L.n seet of the whole corporation. that beauty so neces hich makes them ry households. Politics in Holt County, To the Editor of the Buk: correspondence pulnln n, under date of hl'phmlwl "Ulh “W. D. Mathe: ontier, and until r u'm]\ ]n»lln.htm, as an open candidate for and expected s home delegation wi out much opposition, but he w: by a combination he least expeetod. convention Van Wyekers, luul (ulnnul 1 men on the ted for the platform to (,n]q} a few parting whiffs from a vile- ing cigurette, after which he ha nstily anges his carefully made touet and starts through the car. He sees the In common \mh ny other employes, he has met with There was a time when Tom nd noisy train-house rooms, and one day, r-wheel got the in hands tied up the st |mp hul this did not t uln-wm for not many \\L\'lw nm-rln- |n~t buried deep in vle of that bur Louis Globe- Rt. Rev. Dr. Tuttle, bshop of scopal chureh for the Missouri, is not unknown to rood fortune to enjoy strations in the golden New Orleans Cor. am very this seat those who had the horrors of con the bishop’s mir days of Montana. ago, before the eat deal of which 5 ying Cleveland and 1y blushes m\ll becomes more deeply interested in her um; of his legs b a Van Wyck torial convention ]m-ll-d. Mathews circumstanc |g|n re pul)lu"ll\hlu wilroads had cre Rocky mountains, Bishop Tuttle w 1s a missionary to the northwestern ter- He might hav priately styled Episcobus in partibus in- fidelium, for the rough min taineers who inhabited the country cared hittle for the men or afft The conventionaliti. £ Mmi:ll forms had been pretty and the people in the ) s had come down (u plain e average pre: rge miner was g ¢ nselves at tho “lnlu others are W hen it had been r the town was impo s bent to the work of s visions, and a fow nized a defense vopulace for the last The plan of operations m]:lo enough ccious houses with hI-mlvt\ and keep A xuw daving men were to on' the housctops while the others were to pi v republican for so as state senator with carry his coun! important an off TWas kupt i tholiospital Beveralwoo h a clothes-pin broken limb. Ho finally got out again amon tho disasters which had be- to love him , With his y-made Ik through e-been-there- . He forces the drummer to move along™ and drops into the seat it. He curious v moves L month Ahr the termination of the y but this m . l]unl\ (n.-) have The other mmm s n (Im n'u Tom caused the boy: the better, for he had been baptised in To-day Tom has ali the ele- ments of good s troubles Tom made the waiting-rooms his home, although making (|||l~ nulul s and to all par S deathang idea of getting out of the way of travel- nd will quictly nibbl had gathered the irs of the church. b m«l a mmuu (if“ul( to Holt count independent du ~l m nomummw an anti- tier in Iluh county, a str 1 wmunu Cin 2V C .uul 5 ele until he lunL not \\mk up hnn , ye, prior to CI et an o n-n 4-.mx||v a mugwump forever it into his head that he \\mnhl coln and see how they run things in He must have a ntelligence of the p tto for snfo sol reason to think so liltle im]m- eyes of the av whose business wis to pas: hat or the contribution box been one in the country, and who made his sermons the p t an u])umm did \ who were laboring among the barren wastes of that |mruon ol the aster’s vineyard, but the thirst for gold and the rugged realties of da little inelination or opportunity for listen- round to see if it’s the conductor, and whenever the locomotive whistles he stretehes his neck on a_crumb f there had 1[0:\1“" str ) on the roof 3 opinion of ok in this section of the state, ! lu]t county that ho did not lm\u 4 rulluwnw in llu- mum) convention th: candidate for the oftice of re Out of the 101 d county conyention fr His tail is curtailed and his somewhat the quills of In color he is a mixture between an old army blanket and a rusty 1 around him, Doubtless such vh( of the grip.”” to see e wouldn't be a to retreat \\‘N )'\llll ing in that dw]n-).llu ~uuu‘r Iy the battle w \d come,and with it the sun, 2 over o \Imllllhr of the the porcupine. The Antarctie Ocean, Science Monthly: arctic ocean oceupic i the south pole s yand fussy old maid, not only to the passen- s this £ Mossbacky” “When do we I have to change , but a Kick would Iroad manage adiyidend or missing the weekly pay. we a worse effect milar to that of the tic ocean at the opposite end of the e 1 lllv spuce to the south of the 1t differs vastly, how- r, from its e homologue, of havink land at its outer cie- cumference North Ameri 1 It was a fortunate who stood "liigh on_ the Y building whe: They were th in the contlict, been stopped, chiefs, self-chosen, to lead acknowledged eyed by the populace, whonstimet the county convi the Mathews de! or 20 votes wh \\ vek votes I)_y men who were then the vote Nothung but his ove ition, for by that means ates received some 15 h were cast as i in, A The good bishop might well haye been appalled at the first view of lus diocese. ¢ in extent, but it barely single congregation, ferward, whon no had planted the cluroh inafew of the chief center: ion, he had congregati 8 apart, requi she propounds to the conductor, never for- timo he goes s some lone > the seat with her, and Iater the lone is, An Astonished Conductor. A train on one of the railroads, the te ich is Boston, had got luulu te of speed, L one of the cars, gentleman lu imme- oAl rope, aud the train y somew hat un- acted the attention and as soon as - II Was an_emp T ; ognized n..-u- supr ¢ visages grime with smoke, Ihvu' hafr and b their hands torn and ploody, blown away by the wind, and the m" l.lmrull and awry, and with th in their eyes, and grim and stery lim-~ nf resolution on tl ible, almost ferocious. at the smoking ruins, then at the people below, then llu) turned ch mhur the two at the rding their companion ir in some sort he was tl 1t was at this moment that the rmulr sun_shone upon the trio, gilding ing them, while the mn]mmh- @ great shout, recognizing, as n were, lln-mldnoms Who'were these men? The; known in th <lmtcl) recognized in the dmll"mvm« Illu[ The one on (llL n rht was *Bitter William Bunk- 4 h., who got his en from a daring adventure with 15 in the Bitter Rout wountains, The man on the lefv was ' leading gambler. e 0o, said to be flum <||| arlstooratio Virginin, family handsome feilow of thicty, well cducate d and so well known for his court portment that had crystallized iuAu title, a thous: .mll ng weeks of painful ch them, for m-m:- .u-(mlul by m|u-.m and lhv have I.ul lum for a lllullll m |:. o \|nwl his eame to a standstill, usual proceeding nttr of the reporter, tunity |n-||n\llm| the conductor was que tioned m regard to the subjeet, i “Istopped the train to accommodatea passenger who (h'sll‘ul to get off at the nume of the station was ealled loud umuwh but he s wus huun) u-flul'ul in_conyersin; cle m. lllv All intic n.l he, of course, does , and it is not until the train is ready to start that the idea that when she rushes out and into the arms of U nele of Holt county 1..\.- record too well, uml since he came to Holt umut y lnm support for anything. himselt more s candidate for tor has been looked upon ludicrous circum politics which sometimes occur wey his own precinet nor lives tor the ~I|mllvs( office \utlnu the mfl ul the peo- mpuml' to repres the state senate was looked and the sequel proves He was defeated v nlll~, more uml no less bloodthirsty, in- uss through which the Inuri of travel INL But never was nature and by g Of heroie stature, i AN among men, v fate and a courage and resolution equil to any demand, as a gmnts was soft and white as a woman’s, and more made some i brute feel its might, bm far oftener 1t ]ms They, looking Hiferain having rece tention from the \\mlll at 1 the aim of innum months ago g 2 man better fitted by ol and saluted extremes reg: the center as vable. oxpediions for ph\fl(unluquu ud o heart for mnlln\ul pas " to rescue some unfortuna crew from a horrible station or hear tho name ecalled. bLmn- it was my fault,’ he should bé made'to ) ried to the ne: told Ilim L would stop the t the first passenger who was his station who did not blame the con- ductor or brakeman commodate a gentleman any time, but I will not stop a train for a passenger who has sowme feel- ing, and knows when he is well treated. 1 was brought up to be ])ullll' and I've ys found that it pays who are themselves often mumr would be honest enough to acknowiedge'it, they ¢ railroad men would ap- ppointments and deavor to help thn instead of taking no notice ui them."” l'uxlml.llhll v and his ¢ i fate, and while thousands of dollars has lnu-n expended, i id, ‘and I'm arn a_lesson than_once he has that such was llu' case. aken beyond xpoditions which hay t nations of the world t watery expanse lemul and brou"hl comfort to the dying, to rough men in lonely cabins » wild mountain gorges bereft of He entered into the lives of the |u-u|)lu and made at least their his own, and when the rude mountaincers, as they pre to know this strong, 1, his fame went through the moun- o the beloyed bishop na, if 1t could be callod )bie of houses, srowding a guleh betwe of n glant peak and slopes to perch on y ledges and platforms, was the metropolis of the northern mountains, One winter i i night, fire broke out among some shan- ties in the upper end of the ad cat, has a s, stronger than the latter can cver lmpn to have on the its rivals, writes a spondent of the . Tom is a model of sobriety by no combiation, but by the almost un- ‘n.\ mous voice of the re public lull county mul had nut (Iu sent ont by the g I'm willing to ae- Root lhl] " otherwisi wl). a noted duspn counted on the of one ha uul all the ships whicl explorations be _\nm! ¢ might be counted on the of two hands. “widhin the periphory of the A conductor ently did, came and gentle ¢8 nor the con packed with Van Wyoker said_correspondent, It is hard to believe s once o petted kitten, but but (hu \ an \\3. L penly aud fairly di. throughout the county, 10 city of H a city, with its r buts'and ten two high shoulder climbing up the st would find ti preciate their d Y, s included an drea equal in ox tent to one-sixth of the of our plunet. pretty suburb of this city, bt oo ind canvassel :h procinet Most of this immense 1 is as unknown to inhabitants of |)uv arth as the » nterior of one L lm nu,l.,t mun ars ok issuo was raised with but one or two e l)IlILh \\hu had V. e chief, was no 1 In the dn:pu e heroic-looking than greeted him as theil than Bishop Tuttle. turmoil these three .men had gr to each other and had risen to leadership ‘T'he good bishop was soon at the h Pl mounts m-uu hml The Oldest Railroad Man, George L. Perkins of Norwich, Conn., is undoubtedly the oldest llmn in active vice in the wunu) was sent to the g in spring, when the buds the sunshine, the proprietor of the house placed Tom n a 1 the mouth of the bag in of tin not a stronger Al mn as iur the Wy Tha ut Ms |\)w\v~4 ml o Van Wyck delegation exploration, 1al head of the Norwich & \\mu Iroad, working as regulurly now as B0 did twenty-five years ago, of his popularity. tested his manhood and they w to love and seust him for the fl.-~m1 .md he proved to be, and the popu- t was suh pimly announ kerly when he dec sled and eighteen ka a better gantleman l]mn Joe small rivalet which meandered among the rocks was locked inice, while a biting blast blew down from the mountuins, and, sweeping through the goi fanned the fire into a conflagration. Men rushed to the scene wi Thoere was no is noweworthy, too, n. at in the which have been made not a ship nor lite has been lost south of the cjrclo, does not appear, said corre ,,.m.m nt eredit for making one atement in his article Ve e mmn _spes Wk for |In other counties in th bat from What We are able to Jut the somewhat conflicting repor lution, Van Wyck every county i ' says one write A voyiges would be tegrco of dang di"vuh)r\\:l condition of the stomach, in the system, will produce you can agreeably s buckets and ire brigade and upparatus for fighting the Everything was confusion, and the u\ ing of the gale, the roar of thefire \\ ith any excessi sicl L headache, this tu.uhl« by takin, and Kiduey has carried nearly X distriet, solid, and will have more or less strength from riers are impel ertainly not as yet h..»;u \I\:m @ « llets, 23 cents per uti- er wore & black gown and A similar stutement would be true of Benedict Arnold and Charles Lee, the two prize traitors of our ro In 18, count U|Il‘l]|l|<'fl|l' PAeRIDaL the present time, roused by the 1u-|Iorm- ances of Paul Morphy, who conquered the chess champions of the world, play- ne : gume without seeing the The Inst twenty years of his life ssod New Ofleans, harmlessly demented, and with but two marked ideas—an intense aversion to the game and a tho 'I|l that he would be it of $100, which com- passional hants alwi ngreed to end him, but for which he never catled. In the lives of soldiers we continally see proofs of the bubble reputation, Arabi Pasha, who once filled the world with his deeds of violence, 1s now an un- noticed school teacher. Buell and Sigel, rained for whose achievements a nation onee waited with bated breath, have accepted xumnmn]vl nd Beauregard “stool pigeons’ for the State Lottery, Ex-Premier son, once holding the destin 1ce in the hollow of his hand, i a provineial gentleman farmer, and who now he of Catac the late well- known Russian mmhh , who crstwhile filled all W with his deeds? Hyacinthe, Irawal fmm llo Roman chur ligious s tion of 180, ‘the sma |l| J n spite of his eloquence and “Adivondacks’’ Murra of Boston's v on 'Toxas pl rant keepor m Montreal, two ago “mountain ¢ Barne with w eflect conve (IH" even bers of congress resent address? And the sixties a brilliant tie clergyman, or cle _hx\ created a furor by his editor- hip of the New York Independent, ;llulu d amid the uncertain pathways I'he Life of Mrs. \\mnlhull " beeame the aggrieved party in the most famous scandal of the time-— but who knows Theodore Tilton’s whel abouts now? And Anna Dickinson, once a most noted figure on th -lnvl!llu]ll m, with her en, and vivacious bri liancy, oring to change it for tl L “Crown of Thorns’ of herself in “Hamlet,’ appearcd from pub- lie view com l @ 1mist of failure When Martin Van Buren was pr sident of the United States his son John made a trip to Europe, and, dancing with the then newly erowne pd Queen \u(un.n wis dubbed “Prinee’ Joln ever afterward. Of such ason of sucha father great things were expected, but expected Tn yain, A fow months ago the papers were filfed with the name of Martin Irons, whose prominence in the labor troubles of May and June was very g Now u threo- line item tells us that he is avenigned m & police court for drunkennoss, pleading “innocent, but without the means ol proving my defense.” Jdust after the presidential clection of 1581 John Elkins, the cattle king, was traveling viest, A8 they slackenencd speed to halt at o small station & companion inquired if he were any relation to “Steve” Elkins, the polite ical manager. At the station fivst news vas received of Blaine's defeat, and, O ascertan lh 5, .lu'm 10 Way (‘\uluu' now, bt Truly A vaper, popularity an tent, ood old Horace Grdcley 1, und his own nalf-forgoticn mewory is o strikimg and melance |u.., proof of the trith of bis words.