If W r Ib4 lit fit Ifri W K1 IV K7X W KJsC l Kfav v Will gi yjjwiw lMwKaMiiMlBBllwallBMI JAMES INCHS DOWNFALL JAMES INCH is one of the MR staid and dignified citi zens of Parlor City He never drinks be never smokes and it is his firm conviction that Hades is yawning for every man woman and child that plaj s cards He is a pillar of the local Methodist Church has publicly de nounced dancing as an invention of the devil progressive euchre and pedro parties as greased poles to the realm of Satan and trolley parties as an even more sinful diversion than any of the other forms of amusement to which he is opposed One might imagine from this that Mr James Inch was an un popular man in Parlor City Such however is not the case The inhab itants point him out to strangers as their model citizen and cant say enough in praise of him That is be cause Mr Inch is a sterling business man and so generous and charitable that his fellow townsmen are willing to overlook his radical views on things in the amusement line Mr Inch had an experience some weeks ago that came pretty near knocking down with one blow the splendid reputation he has built up for himself in Parlor City It was a most unfortunate experience for Mr Inch but it provided amusement for his fel low citizens for days afterwards and some of them are not through laughing yet One bright sunny morning early in August Mr Inch boarded a train bound for Parlor City at a small way station some twenty miles from his home He had gone out there the night before on busi ness had missed the last train back and a night on a corn husk mattress in the local tavern had ruffled him about bs much as he had ever been ruffled in his life Mr Inch had not been in the train five minutes when he heard a frightful racket in the car behind him and on inquiring of the conductor what it meant was told that both of the rear cars were full of lunatics who were be ing transferred from New York to the State asylum on the hill back of Par lor City Theyre in charge of keepers all right said the conductor but they get excited every now and then and I tell you the keepers have their hands full Lor but they do curse Do you suppose I could go look at them asked Mr Inch who immedi ately made up his mind that it was his duty as a Christian man to go and 6peak a few words of admonition to these jnen Dunno was the conductors laconic response Youll have to ask the keepers Mr Inch rose from his seat and start ed back He decided that he would not ask permission to do what was his plain duty He felt that the keepers would refuse him admission to the car so he made up his mind to slide in un observed take a seat and watch his chance to distribute advice to the un fortunate It was not a difficult piece of work as the keepers were pretty busy when Mr Inch opened the door and walked in and they didnt notice him at all He gradually worked his way to the middle of the car unnoticed in the howling crowd of wild eyed men and ensconced himself in a seat beside a red headed individual who was swinging his arms round in most reck less fashion and singing in a shrill voice This is my story this is my song Praising the Savior all the day long Over and over again the man sang the couplet sandwiching it with string of oaths which sent chills chasing each other up and down Mr Inchs spinal column He attempted to talk with the man but he might aswell have tried to converse with a log of wood Others with whom he started conversa tions looked at him so blankly that he 60on realized it was a hopeless task and settling down in his seat he re solved to say no more When we get to Parlor City he figured to himself Ill just wait until they get this crew out of the car and then Ill go out myself and go home Mr Inchs resolution was the result of a little speculation as to what would happen to him if the keepers discov ered that he had entered the car and mingled with this crew of violent and Irresponsible men At the station in Parlor City on the same morning that Mr Inch boarded the train twenty miles away stood fif teen keepers from the State asylum waiting for the consignment of luna tics from Iew York With them was young Dr Blank on whose shoulders rested the responsibility for the safe transportation of the lunatics from the station to the asylum Dr Blank was worried It was the first expedi tion of this kind he had commanded and he was mightily afraid that some thing would go wrong Only a month before he had received his appointment to the asylum and escape or revolt due to lack of proper precautions would he knew mean the loss of his place He was relieved when the train rolled in and a keeper jumped from the steps ot a car touched his hat and announced that all was well A hundred altogether I believe the doctor remarked Yes sir fifty in each car said the ikeeper Well march them out as soon as you can said Dr Blank and he hauled out a notebook and prepared to check off the men as they were hand ed over to his keepers They took the last car first and Dr Blank drew a deep breath of relief when the fiftieth man stepped to the platform Now for the other car he said cheerily and the keepers commenced to Hustle the unfortunates out Mr Inch crouched low in his seat and was passed by Mr Blank notebook in hand sang out Forty nine just as the keeper escorted a man to the plat form and called Thats all There must be another said the doctor nervously You counted wrong said the keep er No Im sure Im right but Ill count them again said Dr Blank and he did so with the result that his first fig uring was correct One man was missing There could be no doubt about that The car had only yielded forty nine men Search the car called out the doc tor and the keeper proceeded to do so The first man he encountered was Mr Inch who having made up his mind that sufficient time had elapsed to ren der it safe for him to leave the car had risen and was making for the door Hello exclaimed the keeper how did you get here I just walked in from the other car replied Mr Inch with dignity Didnt see a man hide himself around this car anywhere did you Now it happened that some minutes before the train reached Parlor City the red headed man who sat next to Mr Inch had slid to the floor and cud dled himself up under the seat Mr Inch had seen him do it and had mar veled at the mans ability to stay in one position so long To tell of this inci dent however was to admit that he had been in the car for some time which would scarcely do so he simply said in a tone of mild astonsihment See a man hide himself How ridic ulous and the keeper impressed by his tone passed by and started search ing at the upper end of the car Mr Inch continued toward the door reached the platform and stepped slowly down Mr Inchs personal ap pearance was not what it usually was A night in a country hotel with neither hair brush nor comb in the morning showed on him Contact with the elbow of a lunatic behind him had put a most disreputable looking dent in his derby His appearance was altogether bad enough to justify Dr Blanks ex clamation of Ah here he is This way my friend which he made when he saw Mr Inch descending to the platform Mr Inch heard the remark but paid no attention to it Instead of obeying he quickened his pace toward the other end of the platform but before he had gone a dozen yards Dr Blank was alongside This way my friend said Dr Blank swinging Mr Inch around by the arm What do you mean sir said Mr Inch Keep quiet now keep very quiet said the doctor soothingly Itll be all right if you keep quiet Why should I keep quiet when a loafer grabs me by the arm and swings me around as though I were a log of wood cried Mr Inch indignantly Get back into line said Dr Blank Get back into line and lets end this nonsense and he grabbed Mr Inch by the collar and proceeded to drag him down the platform Mr Inch lost his temper then and swung his right around toward his captors jaw with vicious violence The blow landed and so did a second and third sent in with equal precision Dr Blank hung on though slightly dazed He couldnt hit the man back There is a State rule forbidding keep ers or doctors to strike an insane per son no matter what the provocation The doctors have but one mode of de fense It is the hypodermic injection and each doctor carries a syringe load ed with a special preparation which will take all the life out of a man in five minutes cause him to sleep for several hours and bring him around after his slumber in a decidedly weak mental condition While Dr Inch was banging Dr Blank on the nose and jaw the doc tor was maneuvering with his free hand for his syringe While the strug gle went on the keepers kept their eyes on the other insane men They couldnt leave them to go to the doctors assist ance The struggle was apt to excite them and a general outbreak was to be prevented above all things Dr Blank was was getting played out when he managed to reach his syringe haul it out and jab it into Mr Inchs neck The effect of the injection was instantaneous Im stabbed yelled Mr Inch slap ping both hands to his neck and drop ping Im d n glad of it remarked Dr Blank Youre the toughest one I ever tackled and he motioned to a keeper who was coming toward him on a run to come faster Weve found the other man said the keeper when he came up Of course we have said the doc tor with sarcastic emphasis on th we He was under a seat in the car went on the keeper Youve made a bad break here he went on in a low tone Come up here and leta get away Great Scott roared the doctor isnt this one of our men No said the keeper Hes a zen who wandered into the car Lets cut this quick said the doc tor Tell the boys to march around to the north of the depot and Ill join you there and away went the doctor in one direction while the keeper went down the platform So much interest had been manifest ed in the crowd of insane men that few people on the platform had noticed the struggle between Dr Blank and Mr Inch The few who had seen it went away when the insane men were marched off and so a little later when a station hand came across the re spectable Mr Inch asleep in a pile of freight his clothes torn and dirty his hat ripped through the middle and minus his collar and necktie he threw up his hands in astonishment He called other station hands and the men in the baggage room came too and their eyes nearly popped out of their heads at the sight of James Inch Parlor Citys respectable citizen in so deplorable a condition They were a heartless crowd those station men for they called a policeman and the police man hauled Mr Inch out of the freight and started dragging him toward the station Mr Inch the meanwhile sleep ing innocently on Half way to the sta tion the policeman gave out and Mr Inch was allowed to take a short doze on the sidewalk pending the arrival of help It happened to be on the main street of Parlor City that the policeman left his prisoner and as the afternoon was as bright and sunny as the morning had been the inhabitants were out in great numbers Any attempt to record here the comments of the- people on Mr Inch and his condition would be futile Suffice it to say that the downfall of James Inch the model citizen of Par lor City the pillar of the church and the greatest philanthropist in the coun try was known for miles that night And the next day there was more to talk about Mr Inch slept for five hours at the station house and then went home and refusing to recognize his wife proceeded to destroy the fam ily china He hurled plates around un til he was tired then smashed win dows and mirrors with a poker for a time He went to bed after hacking at some furniture with a carving knife and the next morning woke up with out the slightest recollection of what had happened He recalled the strug gle at the station but that was all His wife pretended to believe the story of his having been stabbed in the neck but she didnt at all For several days the cold glances of former friends and acquaintances an noyed him They all said Yes yes when he told of his remarkable tem porary aberration but he could see that they did not believe him Nevertheless the truth came out in time and Mr Inch of Parlor City is as respected and honored as he ever was Dr Blank made a statement in the local paper of the matter over his signature and that more than anything else exonerated Mr Inch As for the doctor he was suspended but at Mr Inchs earnest solicitation the superintendent restored him to duty and he and his victim are now the best of friends The doctor doesnt carry his hypodermic syringe except in the asylum wards now and he has declared that hell never take it out of the building again New York Sun Where Men Jbail as Lovers It is a question with me writes Lilian Bell in Ladies Home Journal whether a woman ever knows all the joys of love making who has one of those dumb silent husbands who doubtless adores her but is able to ex press it only in deeds It requires an act of the will to remember that his getting down town at 7 oclock every morning is all done for you when he hasnt been able to tell you in words that he loves you It is hard to get a letter telling about the weather and how busy he is when the same amount of space saying that he got to think ing about you yesterday when he saw a girl on the street who looked like you only she didnt carry herself so well as you do and that he loves you good by would have fairly made your heart turn over with joy and made you kiss the hurried lines and thrust the letter in your belt where you could crackle it now and then just to make sure it was there Nearly all pice men make good lovers in deeds A great many fail at some important crisis in the handling of words But the last test of all and to my mind the greatest is in the use of words as a balm Few people be they men or women be they only friends lovers or married can help occasionally hurting each others feel ings Accidents are continually hap pening even when peopxe are good tempered And for quick or evil tem pered ones there is but one remedy the handsome honest apology The most perfect lover is the one who best understands how and when to apol ogize She Knew Do you know said the Sunday school visitor to the little children what hell is like Papa says replied little Susie Brownbread mammas bill for new tires is something like it Buffalo Ex press The Benefit Algernon For a long time I was in doubt whether to kiss Miss Maude on not Alfred Well what did you do Algernon Gave her the benefit of the doubt Washington Times THE BOOMING CANNON RECITALS OF CAMP AND BAT TLE INCIDENTS Survivors of the Rebellion Relate Many Amusing and Startling Inci dents of Marches Camp Life Forag ing Experiences and Battle Scenes Hoaea Brown Oldest Soldier Hosea Brown of Grants Pass Ore gon is one of the six survivors of the war of 1812 When Mr Brown was born the French revolution was at its height and the United States was a mere baby of a republic He is a na tive of Westmoreland Cheshire Coun ty in New Hampshire and is just 105 years old His father fought in the revolutionary war and was wounded in one of the early engagements near Bos ton Hosea is one of thirteen children and the family is noted for its lon gevity One of his brothers lived to be 90 and another to be 93 years old A century ago the people of this country had not the same facilities for educa tion they are now blessed with and young Brown had to be content with what learning he could get in an or dinary log schoolhouse of the early miSlfS vim Wtfml llllwllfw HOSEA BKOIVX times Three months of the winter he attended school and the other seasons of the year he spent on the farm When he reached the age of 20 his father gave him a little money and Hosea went to Jsew York and worked on a farm in that State for 12 a month About this time the United States en tered upon its second war with Eng land and joung Brown became a pri vate in the company of Captain Bur giss New York Volunteers and march ed to the defense of Sacketts Harbor Lake Ontario When the enemys boats began to come into view one of the American commanders who had spok en of eating the British at sight talked ess valiantly and as he sawT the ships coming at him in a swarm he doubted the ability of the American force to withstand the red coats ne said he thought it would be advisable to re treat As the boats approached the shore this militiaman said to his sol iliers I know we shall have to re treat and as I am a little lame Ill start now And away he went The United States commander Brown by name too was ashamed of his compatriot and tried to stop the cowards but could not The command to which Hosea Brown belonged refused to run with its friends and stood its ground unflinchingly The battle was against such odds however that a retreat was necessary- The United States generals pent word to the flying militiamen that the enemy had been repulsed This lit tle trick had the desired effect and back came the boys who redeemed their lost honor by converting almost certain disaster into a glorious victory When his term of service expired young Brown returned to his old home At the age of 24 years he married Miss Hester Smith who bore him two boys and three girls In 1823 he went to Cataraugus County New York and with no money made his real start in life He built a cabin for himself working upon it at night and earning a few cents by thrashing grain for his neighbors during the day In this place he lived forty years and in that time lost by death his entire family In 1S57 he went to Missouri sold out his property in New York and for a time stopped in Worth County Tiring of living alone he finally removed to the home of his grandson Orr Brown with whom he now resides Notwithstanding his great age Mr Brown retains all his faculties His head is clear his memory good and his nerves steady But he has not walked for three years He lives in a comfort able chair and cordially receives the visitors who call to see the old soldier of the war of 1S12 Under the original pension law Mr Brown received 8 a month This pen sion was increased ten years ago to 12 and in 1S91 Mr Brown was granted a special pension of 40 a month Last vear in consideration of his extreme age his stipend was further Increased to S50 a month Me xs the oldest sol dier receiving a pension and the clerks in the office take a special pleasure in preparing his voucher and remitting the money before any other old soldier is paid During the past year a most remark able change has come to him For fifty years his hair thick and soft has been perfectly gray Six months ago it began to turn black and now there is not a gray hair in his head Leathery Pies President Lincoln who greatly enjoy ed stories about the humorous pranks of soldiers once told Mr Noah Brooks the following At the close of a severe engagement a soldier badly wounded was being carried to the rear when he espied a sutler woman hawking some very tough looking pies I say old lady--called the soldier who may have come from a MassachuJ setts shoe town are those pies sew ed or pegged Happy with Her Rainbows I warm up my little den with orignt little pictures and rainbow glories from prisms suspended in the wiadows I am amused twenty times a day with their fantastic variations Snnetimes the portrait of Charles Sumner is trans figured by the splendid light and some times the ears of my little white kitten in the picture opposite are all aglow The moss on a stick of wood in the cor ner suddenly becomes iridescent and then the ashes on the hearth look like glittering soil where the metallic gnomes live I am childish enough to find pleasure in all this and to talk aloud to the picture of a baby that is being washed But you must not infer from this that I live for amusement On the contrary I work like a beaver the whole time Thus cheerily wrote Lydia Maria Child to a friend during the second year of the war and she followed her little burst of enthusiasm for her rainbows by an enumeration of recent labors in behalf of soldiers hospitals and con trabands such as may well have kept her busy as a bee or a beaver Long after the war was ended and the slaves set free Mrs Child then living alone in Boston received a call from her old friend Mrs Fields who brought with her Elizabeth Stuart Phelps In a recent chapter of hert reminiscences Mrs Phelps Ward gives a touching account of this visit We climbed the steep stairs of the boarding house thoughtfully Each one of them meant some generous check which Mrs Child had drawn for the benefit of something or somebody choosing this restricted ui a as the price of her beneficence She received us in a little sitting room which seemed to me dreariness personified Everything was neat re spectable and orderly but the paucity of the interior contrasted sadly with the rich nature of its occupant I par ticularly remember the tint of the car peta lifeless brewn The room was so devoid of color as to seem like a cell and the winter day had been a dark one As we sat talking the sun battled through the clouds and then we saw that Mrs Child had the afternoon side of her boarding house and knew how to make the most of it She rose quickly and taking a little prism which she evl dentlp treasured hung it in the window so that it caught the southwestern ray Instantly the colorless room leaped with rainbows The sweet old lady stood smiling in the midst of them She directed them this way and that and threw them all over the empty spaces and plain furniture She had I thought a little in her mind the consciousness o my companions own beautiful li brary and richly endowed life It was as if she said You see I have not much to offer but I give you my best The visitors drew on the lovely old lady to talk of her anti slavery experi ences and among other questions Mrs Phelps Ward asked her how in assist ing fugitive slaves she was able to guard against fraud to know just whom she might safely trust and help Oh she replied there was a pass word Jt carried any escaping skive through the underground railway to safety Sometimes it was written on a slip of torn soiled paper Sometimes it was only whispered for dear lifes sake But any colored person who came to us with that password was re ceived and passed on without a ques tion It carried him anywhere and gave him every chance that we could command She paused and looked at the rain bows in the lodging house window dreamily Her heart had gone far back What was the password we ven tured to urge 1 was a stranger and ye took me in softly said the old abolitionist So impressed was Mrs Phelps Ward with the bare walls and the beauty-loving soul of the dedicated woman who lived there so poorly yet so richly through her own noble choice that she has always kept a prism hanging in her own study windows in memory of that of Mrs Child It did me good she says and I do not want to forget it It was a beautiful and strange coin cidence that when Lydia Maria Child was borne to her rest in the late after noon of an October day just as her body was lowered into the grave a glorious double rainbow appeared in the heavens and remained spanning the burial ground with Its arch of glow ing beauty as the funeral train turned homeward from the place Brave Boy Sidney Wright of Sand Lake is one of the bravest men in Michigan At Petersburg Va July 30 1864 although a mere boy he pushed forward in the storm of bullets and won a gold medal for personal bravery July 31 1896 thirty two years after the act was performed the War De partment wrote him a letter forward ing him a gold medal suitably en graved In a foot note the commandant of the division at the time says This boy not alone showed great personal bravery in going In with his comrades but when they fell back he still remained refus ing for a time to retreat and only did so in the face of the enemy and amid a perfect storm of shell and bullets Mr Wright who is a small man and does not look his age attended the re cent brigade reunion in Jackson He is very modest It will be worth some thing to my relations to look at 100 years or so from now he said He was a member of Company E First Michigan Sharpshooters Meat is much but manner ts more LAUGHTER A GREAT TONIC Keeps the Fpirits Buoyant the Heart and Fare I presume if vie laughed more we should all be happier and healthier writes Edward W Bok in the Ladies Home Journal True we are a busy and a very practical people And most of us probably find more in this life to bring the frown than the smile But nevertheless it is a pity that we fin nrt 7nnrli mnra rrn i vt bring ourselves to the laugh if need be For we all agree that a good laugh is the best medicine in the world Physicians have said that no other feeling works so much good to the entire human body as that of mer rirneiSt As a digestive it is unex celled as a means of expanding the lungs there is nothing better It keeps the heart and face young It is the best of all tonics to the spirits If lsr too the most enjoyable of all sensa tions A good laugh makes us better friends with ourselves and everybody around us and puts us into closer touch with what is best and brightest in our lot in life It is to be regretted then that such a potent agency for our personal good is not more often used It costs nothing All other med icines are more or less expensive Why said an old doctor not long ago if people fully realized what it meant to themselves to laugh and laughed as they should ninety per cent of the doctors womu have to go out of busi ness Frobably when we get a little less busy we shall laugh more For after all the difference between gloom and laughter is but a step And if more of us simply took a step aside oftener than we do and rested more we would laugh more By laughing I do not mean the silly giggle indulged in by some women and so many girls There is no outward mark which dem onstrates the woman of shallow mind so unmistakably as that of giggling There is no sense in the giggle no ben efit to be derived from it It makes a fool of the person herself and ren ders every one about her uncomfort able But just as Eieele is the outcome of a small mind the hearty laugh is the reflection of a healthful nature What we want is more good laughers in the world not more gig glers Story cf a Dog In the fiush days of steam boating before the war the captain of a Mis sissippi river boat had a dog that could distinguish between the passen gers if once he had heard their names The matter was mentioned one night in the saloon and a passenger sneer ed at the idea Bet you five hundred dollars the dog cant do it once in three times he said Done rejoined the captain Write a note to your wife and I will write one to mine Both are in the ladies cabin We will give the notes to Snip at the same time and if he fails to deliver them properly the money is yours The passenger wrote merely his wifes petname inside aslip of paper which he folded and addressed The captains missive ran Dear Wife Send me word at oncer what Snip does when he comes into the cabin He delivered both slips to the dog saying as he handed over the passen gers note Snip this is for Mrs M who sat beside me at supper Give it to her then take this other note to your Miss Catherine Snip ran away The men sat smok ing and chatting Very soon a waiter brought a scrap of paper to the pas senger His wife had written What does it mean your sending me a note by this little dog Shortly after came this note from the captains wife Snip came in and ran about sniffing at all of us then jumped in Mrs M s lap dropped a bit of paper there and came to me with the other one The passenger offered one thousand dollars for Snip saying luck would not go against him if he owned so wise a beast But the captain would not part with Snip who lived and died a river dog John P Hales Pleasantries In speaking of the Mexican war Hale referred to the Western man who said he got caught by opposing the last war and he didnt mean to get caught again he intended now to go for war pestilence and famine Not less amusing was his reference to President Polks backdown on the Oregon treaty in which he said The President exhibited a Christian meek ness in the full scriptural degree but he didnt inherit the blessing of the meek he didnt get the land The Congressional records abound in such examples of Mr Hales pleasantries They always embodied some truth which could thus be more imperssive ly told than in the form of a serious argument Century A Remarkable Echo One of the most remarkable echoes in the world is that produced by the suspension bridge across the Menai straits in Wales The sound of a blow with a hammer on one of the main piers is returned in succession from each of the cross beams which sup port the roadway in addition to which the sound is many times repeated be tween the water and the roadway at the rate of twenty eight times in five seconds Hendricks Say if we cant get this crowd in front of us out of the way we are going to miss our train What shall we do Carr I have it Lets start a discussion on the coinage ques tion Cincinnati Enquirer The trouble with making a confidante of a friend is that yon do not dare to b anything else but a friend uf terward 1 V tJL M 4 Hi e e s r erf ii i M