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About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (June 12, 1896)
6 THE HEP CLOCD CHIEF, FRIDAY, .IUNK 12, 1UG. $ J? K ki rn A LIVELY PA IMS KVENT. THE SELECTION OI-THEQUEEN OI-" WASHERWOMEN. Ii n Vrnrly I'nlUlly In I'urU (Jnltn nil Iliiiior. nml It Mtuli llilrMl li.v thr Ailriinl - Com luili With druml It.ilL (Paris Itt"i) XK of Hip innHt In teresting events In Hit Parisian worlil yf yl Is :li" election of (kwVII , . the queen of wash erwomen, mini an nffalr occurred about fvo weeks ago In Paris ami was a noteworthy event. To be cIiohlmi queen of washer womrn Is an honor much sought after by the soap-suds artists. Thin year there were seventy-two candidates, of whctii the committee i ejected forty two on sight. In this connection It might be stated that a pretty face Ih not the only point necessary. The aspirant to the throne of soap-suds niiiKt give substantial pi oof of her practical qualifications to leprescnt her honorable craft. The Initiatory exam ination of the competitors for thlH ex alted position Ik very amusing. A Jury composed, an a rule, of one or two ex perts in the mysteries of washing, a student, an artist ami a newspaper man generally constitute the Judges. TIiIh body decides on what amount of work each applicant must perform and alno passes on tho merits of the work done' Tho Jury gives Judgment on the excellence of the reults of the trial. For several weeks before ilie election there Ik a great hubbub In all the laun dries, each of which possess some par ticular star whom lier fallow workers deem worthy of the crown. It must be understood that an establishment that can boast of having In its employ the charming queen of the wish tub re ceives a tremendous boom in Its busi ness. Among the twenty-three avail able candidates who were elected out of the seventy-two uppllnnts for this ycrr'H ciown there was a strong rivalry. All the girls were remarkably pretty and each one was a skllle 1 exponent of her trade. The huge ball In Itue de Savon, where the election were held, was tilled with friends of the aspirant!", and the scenes were as amusing as ex citing. After considerable deliberation the choice of the Jury for queen of queens fell upon Mile. Ilenuctta lie fnulloy, from a famous e. i.iblishment known as Jouyo-Rniive. The young woman Is tnoie piquai" lookln;; than pretty; her features have a port of undellnable sauclness that Is very interesting. She is a nionounced brunette, lull, with u splendidly model ed flguio. Possessing far more grace fulness than Is louiid among leal queens, she Is also the vety picture of animation and gr.ielou3tirss. The two maids of honor, who are second in Im portance only to the qui en of queens, nml are called queens wit limit any ad ditional adjective, were aim) chosen. Mile, .Marie Francois, from the Halm Victor laundry, received tne first place, and Mile, Eugenie Tallois, from the Can fount lots establishment wan de clared second. Each of these girls la n perfect typo of I'arlsl.in womanhood and both are Immensely iiopul.tr. The king on these fesilve occasions Is a man of no particular importance. The olllco Is generally filled by some favorite of the queen, ami his principal duty consists in dancing attendance on her majesty, and looking as well as he knows how. No expense Is spared to make tho costumes of the queen of queens and her two satellites as magnificent as con sistent with the occasion. The students of the Latin quarter, by invitation extend, d to them by their friends, the washerwomen. Join forges with them in the festivity's. After the election of the queen of queens n ball was given by tho students at Bulller's famous resort, Tne glrU from tho laundries were bright and coquettish In their chic dresses and miow-whlte petticoats. They were all fresh-looking and vivacious and the ball was unhampered by petty conventionalities. To relieve the monotony- If there ever could be any In such a place a fancy dance was Introduced for the amusement of the rest of the crowd. Tho music becomes livelier and the .crowd grows more and more enthusi astic, until the frolicsome young woman turns n backward handspring with the MULE. HENRIETTA DEFOl'LLOY. ease and grace of u fairy. The thing is done like a flash, and the spectator has 'but an Impression of a vision of filmy lingerie, with the outline of a shapely black silk stocking apnln.st Its background. Suddenly the air chntip'd to a tar anttile. On the instant the crowd has gone mad; everybody and everything Is dancing, or seems to be. Your hands are seized nml you find youmelf whirl ing, too. Can't dance? Then just & o s jtA- w vy Cfrjnf' i 1 TTT- Tjr j Jump, and v'rn jou catch your breath , let out n ytll. In ending ihe affair tho queen of queens mils Iter maids nml everybody departs. A TITLED CONVICT. tt.irnn inn lliiiiiint rutrlii of (irrmnny Cnnltl Not rmliire lionet I'rixperltjr. (Merlin Letter.) Baron von Hammersleln. formerly (he editor o' Krcuz Zoltiim: and a leader of th" conservative party In Ger- in.inv. was sentenced the other day to thiee years' penal servitude, to bo de prived of bis civil rights and to pay a Hue of l.r.Oll marks for forucrv. fraud and breach of trust. The baion's dls giare Is almost as much of a sensation In Get ninny as was the downfall of Hacon In Eniiluiid. l-'or twenty years be was the all-nowerftil leader of the conservative nartv In (Jerman nolltlcs. Ho was dlsfovered by Bismarck, who was the llrst to recotuilzo his energy. courage, persistence tin. I his magnetic power over men In his own station of life. Originally tin Impoverished nobleman. Hlsmarck nut wealth and nower Into his hands bv nlaclnc him at the henil of the K rents fitting with an annual salary of 50,000 marks. This miner was tbr organ and mouthpiece of the conservative party. Tho baron be came an eloquent speaker and his words were applauded even by his political enemies. Even last year, when many knew of his financial troub'es, he re tained his coutiol of thu eorservatlvos and was vociferously applauded lu the reichstag as the spokesman of hl. party. At last came nubile discrace. '1 lie affairs of the Kreuz .fitting were In vestigated and It was found that the baron had llunr: away 1,000.000 mnrlui. He had stolen the pension fund of the paper, forged drafts for immense sums lu the name of Count on Kelrstein nod was literally overwhelmed with all minnier of bad debts. This money, It was ascertained, had been stiuandcrcd In a wild, dissolute Hfe. In which figured chnmnautif orgies, high hottlnc and desperate gaming. Just before tho Sturm burst he fled to Switzerland The sentence of llaui:iiertiln endi s,&m,?xs if ill szzQ .- I JSffi &3;W HAIiOX VON IIAMMEILSTEIX. one of the most pculiar .itoties of Euro tiean political life. WANDERINGS IN JAVA. CIIiiiIiImk die Mncnf iIiih to (let a Vlen of ii ('ruler. Long befoie sunrise we weie In our cart, drawn by three ponies, and bowl ing .iong in the cool night air under a bright nionu and cloudless nky, says the Westminster Review. The early Ftart was necessary lu older that we might make the ascent and reach the crater befoie the gieat heat of the day. As wo drove along we passed crowds of natives, tolling along under their hejivy loads or testing under the old eovered In biidges, by which we cro-:M d streams. All along the valley our dilvei cracked his whip and made his little ponies fly along between tho j shady palms lining the way side, so that wo arrived at a small bungalow, situated at the foot or the mountain, Just when the ilrst silver streaks of dawn crept Into the eastern sk. Hero we were to take our breakfast of clici 'e, sandwiches and cold lea before com mencing the ascent of the volcano. Wd got off at wtlii, accompanied by two coolies, who actetl as guides and car ried our provisions and my camera. For the first two hours we followed a beautiful path which, at the com mencement, led us through avenues or banana tices and tall scarlet erotoiiB, then diverging round a shoulder or Ihe mountain, we entered a wide, tangled Jungle, where the feathery fronds of the tree rents and the delicate green leaves or tho plantain formed a lovely con trast to the dark vistas of tho forest. Here orchids nestle in the thick. moBsy undergrowth nnd oleanders shed ihelr delicate blossoms on a carpet of tiny reins. The last inlf-liour was stiff climbing, very trying to the eyes on ac count of the sun striking on the white, volcanic soil, nnd terribly hot, as tho sun was already high In the heavens. The crater consisted or an arena or yellow sulphurous lava, while a huge blowholo occupied tho center, emitting clouds or steam and causing tho whole summit to quiver. The surrace or this lava mound was honeycombed with small steam holer, and dangerous-looking hollows, which suggested prudeneo lu lt3 exploration. Indeed, tho earth, literally trembling beneath one's feet, gave little confidence of security from t"u risk or suddenly breaking thro.igh the thin crust that lay between tho miles of one's feet and the Infernal regions. Higher mountains and peaks sur rounded the crater, whLii gnvo ono tho Idea that the mountain must Iteeir have onco possi'ctl a peak, which has, .jeen blown off. probably In ronie great erup tion. Mm lt ll Wit inn. John Carter, a wenthy farmer, aged iM, went to Peru, Intl.. recently and asked to have a comnilsitloti of lunacy appointed for himself au ho feared ho was going cravy, on account of lib 111 health. It was not done, however, and a few ilayr alter he ended his llfo by shcotlni; hlrxaif tbraupii the neck. wm -V a " ' LJmmk - - - - v- m?ss.' !Mfc-T il AvX' MONSTKIlSOFJrPITOR SOME WONDERS OF LIFE ON THE GREAT PLANET. Mrn Mtty I'rnf 'lull hiiiI IU:iy In l'ro porilon (iurrult I'. Sirtl, Hip lnni mi Aiitroiitiiiirr on thr Srlnitlllr riiriiomriiit. Prtiumvizn lifts up his ees to Ou st a r r y heavens these evenings must be struck by the appearance of the great planet .Jupi ter, outshining all the fixed stars, and glowing with a rich yellow light, high n the southwest. near the twin stars Castor and Pollux, of the constellation Gemini. Happy the man who has a telescope with which to view Ihe giant planet and to behold Its immense belts or alternate rosy and polden clouds, and Its broad polar le gions, shading to the color of blued steel. Put the earth up there In the place of .Jupiter and the naked eye would with dlfllctilty be able to see It. Jupiter is II0O times larger than the earth In bulk or volume, and its surface area exceeds that of the earth about 10 times. It would seem as If ihe ancients must have had some inkling of the fact that that planet Is the largest of all tne worlds that revolve around the sun when they bestowed upon It the name or the gieatest of the gods. We have almost no evidence what ever touching of the nature or the ria terlals or Jupiter. The spectroscope cannot aid us, because Jupiter dois not Bhlne by Its own light, and the suullghi rellected from It comes from the upper surface of Its dense clouds, and conse quently makes no revelations concern ing what lies beneath. Hut the telescope shows that Jupiter Is covered wth wonderful clouds eon initially changing in shape, and more or less In coliw; that these clouds float In an atmosphere of great depth, and that they form perhaps successive In w i lC:.' ? ""... H'ltbSlitfMf r t- w. $,..... So- A. a!Ss&!'ji 1HL STRANGE MONSTERS THAT PEOPLE JI'PITEU AS THEY WOCLI) LOOK TO THE EARTH PEOPLE -THE LEFT-HAND CORNER LONG ARMS TO OVERCOME OllAVITV-SEE Jl'Pl TER'S FOFR MOONS IN VARIOCS PHASES. eis or varying density, which may w separated by comparatively viar spaces. Appearances have been noticed on Jupiter such as would he produced by the shadows of gieat clouds, as broad as some of our continents, fnlllng upon other clouds floating hundred. of miles beneath them. If these appearances are not decep tive Jupiter's clouds evidently iloat at, proportionally, a far greater clevu'lon than those or the earth. Tin highest of our clouds are, perhaps, ten miles above the eattb: the loftiest elouds on Jupiter may be a thousand miles high. And these tremendous clouds are swi'pt along by belts of wind that are no less wonderful. Jupiter turns very rast on Its axis, notwithstanding Its enormous size. It takes less than ten hours to tnnke a complete rotation, whllo the little earth requires twenty four hours, On the equator of Jupiter everything Is flying around at the inte of -IM) miles in a minute! The resulting centrifugal strain Is so gnat that the equatorial parts or the vast planet bulge and swell out thousands or miles. Jupiter Is more than .1.1)00 miles broader through Its equator than through its poles! All things must there experience n powerful and resistless tendency urg ing them toward the tquator. If the planet turned about three times faster than It does, objects would wel.-h noth ing at all along the equator. The effect of this fearful velocity of rotation Is shown by the streakti nnd lines or clouds that the telescope re veals surrounding Jupiter. At one place In the southern hemisphere there Is an Immense, mysterious, llery-lnok-Ing mass, as large in extent ns tho whole surface of tho earth, which dur ing the past eighteen yenis has been thrust up nmong the rushing and tum bling clouds In one of the great trade wind belts of Jupiter, Hy actual ob servation tho clouds uro hurled against the western end of that mysterious oh etnelo until they pile up there in vast Blowing masses, and are swept past It In gyrntlng currents and eddies Infin itely wilder and grander than the leap ing waters In the Niagara whirlpool wrge. Swifter and swifter fly the streaming clouds as the equator of tho planet Ib approached. Great globe-shaped masses, gleaming In tho sunlight, roll nnd pitch In the mighty onward cur rents. Through the comparatively elrnr spaces glimpses are obtained of other eloudlnnds deep bent nth. fll'nl with other strange hurrying shapes, all whirling madly on as If lacing for a goal. Whatever else may or may not be said of Jupiter, at any rate, It Is pre eminently the world of clouds and winds ami tempests. Can we. then, Imagine Inhabitants lu such a world of turmoil and unrest as Jupiter !s? It depends entirely Mfon what we mean by Inhabitants. It Is evident that such beings as we are could not live there, unless It Is true that dtep beneath Jupiter's world of clouds and cyclones Is hidden nnothcr globe resembling the earth. On such a globe, so placed. Inhabitants more or less like those of this earth could live. The great many-storied dome of clouds above them would, perhaps, be Just what they nettled In order to ob tain a comfortable degree of heat In their far-away planet. I'or we must remember that Jupiter Is about five times as far from the sun as the earth Is, and that, consequently, the sunlight and the sunheat on Jupiter are twenty live times less effective than on alio earth. This Is because the Intensities of light and heat vary Inversely ns the square of the distance. With a comparatively open nnd cloudless atmosphere like ours the heat from the sun would quickly be lost by being radiated away Into space, and the Inhabitants of Jupiter would shiver and freeze In a worse than Arctic climate. Hut with such an atmosphere as they have surrounding them It Is not Im probable that the effect of the greater distance of the sun may be compen sated by the capacity of th" atmospheie Itself to retain and. so to speak, entrap the heat for the benefit or the Inhiol tauts. Hut all this argument proceeds upon the assumption that such Inhabitants must be framed of Just such materials, possessing Just such denBlty as compose our bodies. Manifestly that assump tion Is purely gratuitous. As we have alieady seen, the average density of things In Jupiter Is much less than up on the earth, ami we are not eeitain that Its constituent materials may not be as widely variant in nature from those of our planet. We have perfect JustifUatioii, then, for assuming, If we choose, that the In habitants of Jupiter are shaped from substances very different from, and much mote etherial than, those that t ompose our bodies. That argu ment would not In any manner affect the sphltual or Intellectual side of their nattiie. There Is no demon strable leason why an Intelligent being might not be made out of something else than the water and carbon and other elements comprised lu the human frame. If we accept the view that the spirit of man. which Is the real essence or his being, Is or a nature and composition so line ns to transcend all the coarser laws that govern the visible world, then Is there nny reason why upon a planet like Jupiter such a spirit may not be en closed in a body as tenuous as vapor even, or as light as cork? Grant that, and It Is easy to see that, no matter how much greater tho force of gravity mny be upon Jupiter than upon the earth, mortal beings could be fotmeil, even out of the range of mu tual elements known to us, who might be suitably proportioned to gravitation, even though they should attain a com parative stature as gigantic lu relation to ours as tho stature of Jupiter him self Is when plated' side by side with the little earth. Not only Is there something far more satlstartory to the lmaglrtlo-i in conceiving or gigantic inhabitants dwelling upon so stupendous n world, rather than In thinking or them as mere pigmies, but lu thus coiiBldcriug them ns giants amid gigantic surroundings, we tlo less violence, to the general order or nature. Let me, ns a kind or apology ror thus venturing Into tho fields or imagination that liu glittering Just beyond the farth est outposts of science, quote what one of the founders of modern science has said about the possible Inhabitants of another great world, only leas In size than Jupiter, nnd which now alno adorns ' our evening skies, Saturn. These are the words of Sir Huhphrey Davy, in the chapter called "The Vis ion" In his beautiful "Consolation In Travel, or tho Lnst Days of a Philoso pher." Conducted by a guiding Genius ho Is hovering nbovo tho planet Saturn: "1 Baw moving on tho surface below me Immense masses, the forms of which I find It Impossible to describe. They had systems for locomotion similar to those of the morse or sea-horse, bul i saw with gieat surprise that the.' tno.cd j fiom place lo place by six extreme! ' i.i i. i.i i nun liieunuiuii, which iney useu r.s wings. Their colors wete varied and beautiful, but principally azure and rose color. "I say numerous convolutions ol tubes more analogous to the trunk of an elephant than to anything else 1 can Imagine, occupying what I supposed to be the upper parts of the body, and my feeling of astonishment almost becami one of disgust from the peculiar char acter of the organs of these singula. be lugs, and It wns with a species of tit ror that I saw one or them motmtli.g upward, apparently flying towards those opaque elouds which I have be rore mentioned. 'I know what your f pil ings nre,' said the Genius. 'You want analogies and all theelements or knowl edge to comprehend the scene berore you. Jim those beings who nppear to you almost as imperfert In their functions ns the zoophytes of the polar sea have a sphere of sensibility and Intellectual enjoyment far superior lo that of the Inhabitants or your earth. Each of those tubes which appear like the trunk of an elephant Is an organ or peculiar motion or sensation. The have many modes or perception or which you are wholly Ignorant and at the same time their- sphere of vision Is Infinitely more extended than yours and their organs of touch far more per fect and exquisite. Their sources or pleasure are or the highest Intellectual nut me. As I r:m not describe to you the organs or these wonderful beings, so neither can I show you their modes of life. Hut as their highest pleasures depend upon Intel lectual pursuits, so you may conclude that these modes of life bear the strict est analogy to that which on the "arth on would call exalted virtue. If I were to show you the different parts or the surface or thfs planet you would see marvelous results or the po.vcrs possessed by those highly Intellectual beings and or the wonderful manner In which they have applied ami mutinied matter.' " Inspired by the enthur.lasin of Sir Humphiey may we not Imagine that the Inhabitants of Jupiter might sur pass even those of Saturn on their 'n tellectual side, shedding a spiritual Il lumination among their aerial mm- sions. which would be the grouted of all Jupiter's marvels to the wandering visitor from our dim speck, the earth'' GARRETT P. SERVISS. Knnnliii; In Wimtr. "The best tiling about these now waists," began Dora. Then she dis covered David's arm. "Thnt Isn't what 1 was going to say," she murmured with a blush, "but but," she added softly, "It will answer." hints for women. ir soot Is dropped on a carpet throw down an equal quantity or salt and sweep off all together. Fruit stains can be eradicated by oxalic acid, and should be seen to at once whllo the stain Is fresh. Always put the utigar used In a tart In the center of the fruit, not on the top: It makes the crust sodden. Frying pans should always bo scoured with salt dlrottly after they have been used, and wiped clean with a cloth. Pastry Is lighter ir mixed with a knire Instead or tho hand, and rolled with a glass bottlo Instead of a rolling pin. When an Iron bedstead creaks with each movement of tho .deeper tako out the laths and wrap the end of each in a newspaper. To prevent lamp chimneys from cracking put them Into a kettle or boil ing water, gradually heat It till it bolls, and then let it ns gradually cool. It is not generally known that rate cannot resist sunllower seeds. A trap halted with these seeds Is tho moJt efficacious method of catching rats. Milk will take out Ink stains from boards, cotton and other fabric.'. If used bororo dried In. Soak In a little milk and then wash In tho ordinary way. To remove scorch caused hy an over heated Iron, soak tho article nt onco in cold wnter for half an hour, then rub gently betweeu the hands and rinse In clean water. Paint stains on clothing are dilllcult to roinovo when onco they havo dried In but with persistent use of benzlno and spirits of turpentine obstinate stalna aro removed. Stoves and ranges should bo kept free from soot in nil compartments. A dirty, clogged hot air passng will pre vent nny oven from baking well or tut water from heating, THIS CLORIOUS INDEPENDENCE Slmtilil llo Apprprlntrtl hy Amrrlr.in 1'athrr nml Mothrr. "Hello! Yes, It's 1. I've Just this minute waked up," said the girl l negligee, according to the San Fran cisco Examiner. "You lazy thing." said the girl in street clothes, at the other end of tho wlie. "I tried to call you up half an hour ago, but I couldn't get any answer." "1 was dreadfully sleepy," with an audible yawn. "We were up till day light." "I'm nil upset about our thing to night." went on the girl In street tiothey. "Malsle's mother won't let her go, so that gives us a man too many." "Won't let hr go!" with symptoms of waking up. "How perfectly funny! Why not?" "Oh, she's got some crazy Idea about It'a not being a respectable place." "The theater or the cafe?" "Roth, I Imagine." "How absurd!" said the girl In negli gee. "Why, everybody goes now. You see half the people you know." "Of course, and you don't need to have anything to do with the others," answered the girl lu street clothes. "I think It's rather fun to go among real lloheminns once lu awhile. You get so iiiinow, nl ways moving in one little set." "Yes, It really Is broadening," said the other, seriously; then both laughed a little at some afterthought. "Hut Imagine your mother not letting you go," she added. "Why, I simply say I'm going and that's all there Is about It." "As long as we have a chaperon and don't forget the latchkey that's all my mother cares," said the girl who had been dressed some time. "Malslo wants to get her parents In training If she Is going to have any fun," said the girl who was Just up. "I wouldn't stand being treated like a child, anyway." "We are old enough to Judge for our selves." said the veteran of 1!L "Now uid then mother says, Til rather you wouldn't.' and if it Is something"! don't care anything about I often don't." "Oh. of course, If it isn't any fun," said the sage in the bath-wrapper. "And sometimes when I want to get out of things I say that mother isn't will ing. It sounds well ami people are too polite to say: 'Hother our mother!' Hy the way. you don't suppose Malsio is tr.vlng that, tin you?" "Ob, dear no! She is simply wild about it. She almost wept when she told me. You know she was going to have Will, and he'll be so disgusted. I'm afraid he will back out of going." ' 1 suppose wo can ask somebody else," the girl lu negligee said, tllscon solateh. "but It won't be the fain.'. I don't know what I'd tlo If I had a mother like that." "I wouldn't have." said the other de cidedly. "I'd begin with her young. I sippo.-c the little simpleton said: '.May I go?"' ' Thai's fatal." said the girl In negli gee. "You'll never go anywhere In this world if you Hied to gel permission first. Say, I'm freezing. I must go and dress." "Wait -Tom wants to speak It) you a minute." said the girl who was dressed to go out. "Tell him he can't." said the girl who most decidedly wasn't. "I'm not re. liv ing this morning." "He says he will shut his eyes." "Don't you dare let him." crouching away from the telephone. "Do what you can about to-night. We'll go, any way." "Indeed we will. Let's start a so ciety for the huppiessiou of unruly mothers." "And rathers. too." said the girl in negligee. "Dot's rather gives her an allowance antl expects her to pay her own hills with it. She is so in debt that she doesn't dure go down-town she makes me tlo all her errands for her nnd her father won't help her out." "Henst!" saltl the girl in street nlnthes. "I know; he's the kind that al ways thinks things will be a lesson to you. Still, parents here nre pretty good on the whole. They don't need much suppression." "That's so," admitted the girl In negligee. "Thank heaven, I was born In America." NOMS DE PLUME. Bab was Ihe pen name of V. S. Gil bert, who first came to prominence as the nuthor of "Bab Ballads." Hans Hreltman, whose dialect narra tives are even now popular, was the name chosen by Charles G. Leland. Tho "Sllngsby Papers," by John F. Waller, llrst camo out with tho pen namo of Jonathan Freke Sllngsby. Tho Et trick Shepherd was no other than James Hogg, whoso business and placo of residence supplied the name. J. Fcnlmoro Cooper began to write under the pen name of A Traveling Bachelor. His travels and soclnl condi tion probably inspired tho selection. John Rusklu published his early writ ings under tho pen name Graduato of Oxford, tho selection bolng obviously Influenced by hlu placo of education. Francis Maboney was- long known nmong his acquaintances as Father Prout, his best known book having been entitled "RellqueB of Father Prout." Edmund Falconer was the namo chosen by Edmund O'Rourke to bo placed on tho title pages of his dramas. It Is said that tho namo was that of an old gentleman ho had known when a boy. James Kcdpath wioto "Tho John Brown Invasion" under tho namo Ber wick. It 1b saltl that It was suggested to him by an acquaintance when Red path "i- -Hltatlng about his Blgna ture. J... f l & i si . v' JtU. m tf4 SiJfu , , 4jg ',r"y "" -I'f.1 .;. ii'iu'liB fiWttMKis. !idL IfcH, km-jx ?