Image provided by: University of Nebraska-Lincoln Libraries, Lincoln, NE
About The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 2, 1896)
V n r w - t ;i i B'l U b IL ..- :fl on A; ! i 4; r- ft 6 KKAL KANSAS CRANK. CUNLHAL HUGH CAMERON IS AN ECCENTRIC UEINC. t.lio In I III' llprn mill AIIimtd llnlr Mini Itrnnl In (Jrnw linlntu 'I linl Am-fiihIiiii l)y Sliniilil ltd l(cro:itliil I'T I rilirul Law, (Special Letter.) ossfksfd or con siderable wenlth--nt least enough to ren der him Independ ent of nil things earthly (itncrnl Hugh ('nine to n of ,fv.(r' K II II S II S. WltlCiy ypsaiJ) Kniyvii ax tl, Kan r ' ' " siih hfrnill. makes his bed on an old barn door in the Mill woods noar Ihf historic lty or J.nwietiee. lo liven In the open nlr, and when lie sleeps has no oilier loof than the follttftc or the trees, through which the stars twinkle as ir amused at the eccentricity or the mini, lie has one pet liobbj, which he Is ttiglng on rongress. Me wants Ascension day to liecotne a national holiday liy virtue or a law or the supienie legislative linily or the land. General Cameron would he a pictur esque figure even If he were not ho filled with occciitiicltlcti as to attract attention. Ho N tall, finely formed and straight iih an arrow. In splu or hla ndvanred ycnis. ills white heard and white hair hang down from a nius live head and race, the former reaching hclnw the waist. e.teiidlng forty indie. in length, and the latter descending in n snowy cloud thirty-six Indies. He Is one or the richest men In the Mate, hut lie refuses to live In a house, preferring ihe freedom of the woods to the eon flnenieut or a civilized dwelling. He Is u marked man, hut clear-headed and well versed In the science and folk lore, of this and moHt other countries, lie is not in his dotage, hut he clings to any Idea he einhraces wllh all the vigor of a man accustomed to pushing things to success. (lencral Cameron's Ascension da Idea has hcen advanced by him ror years. He believes that the day on which Christ leturned to heaven after the erticlllxlon should be net apart b a Christian nation such as America ns a day of leJolchiK eipially If not more significant to the people than July I, the nation's birthday. He has com menced agitation In favor of this Idea, nnd will work with a singleness or pur pose toward Its acVoiupllshtnent until he is called to his fathers, unless suc cess crowns his efforts before that Ime. General Caincion erected a pole on Faster day of this car to commemo rate, the resurrection. Imposing cere monies were conducted under his di rection. The site chorien was a suburb of Lawrence, and the old man, now TO years or age. caused the pole lifty feet long, to be raised with ceremonies or "tho most Impressive nature. On the top or the pole Is a cross sjinhollcal of the crucifixion, and near by a liberty cap, symbolizing true Illicit) to all. He bent on an American Hag to the hal yards, and ran the silken emblem to the top with his own hands. Many of the residents of Lawrence were pres tint, for the old man, while queer In many things, is alwavs Interesting. He is called tho Kansas hermit be cause he himself adopted the title. He paw hard service in the civil war, and was severely wounded. In spite of this fact and hla advanced age, he works on hl farm early nnd late. I'nclo Sam hdps Ulni out to the extent of $20 a month. Fifteen yenis ago he threw off tho bans or fashion, declaring that he would bo perfectly Independent- anil he lias been. Since that time he has neither trimmed nor cut his hair or heard. His hair Is three feet long and silken, while his heard litis reached the length of three and one-half fee!. While working he braids both hair and beard, and tucks them Inside his shirt. On his head he wears a close-llttlng cap, and over this either a thick win ter cap or r.traw hat. For years Hermit Caineron litis been praying for a fuller acknowledgment, by the people, for tho divinity of Jesus Christ. As Faster Is the commemora tion of the ascension of Christ, he thinks It should be at a llxul date every year, Instead or as now, arranged necording to tho ecclesiastical moon. "Faster Is ror the rich folks to wear lino clothes," says tho old man. "Two thirds of tho common people -dod's chosim people don't ki'ow what Faster CAMP DF.N HAltUISON. Is. It la the church-going people only who know Its real significance." Ho announces that ho reels convinced that April r Is tho true date or the resur rection. Ho prepared a petition to voiiBrces, which Is remnrknhle as peti tions go. I'nablo to get either Senator linker or Congressman CurtlB to pre sent It to congross, he sent It to Sena tor Pfeffer, and that gentleman pre tented It to the senate a short time go. A full reading was demanded by tht curious senators, It wua read In r'J8F full. 'I ids custom is ery rare, usually the nth-k only being read to tho senate. Tho domnient mused no llttlo com ment on iil Miles and here Is tho nub static of It: To thoCongreR of the Fnltcd States of America: Your petitioner, tho un dersigned, rop(ctfull. asks otir hon orable b.itlbs to trial. e the Mil or April a national holiday, it being tho day on which the "king or the Jews," whom l'ontltis I'llate caused to be cruel lied on April if. A. I). .'13. achieved his splen did ictor over the grave. The king or the Jews hits always been a true friend of the I'nlted Slates of America. He was with Washington and hla com patriots during their great struggle for Independence, and was also with the union aimy through the entire war to maintain that Independence with union and liberty. Your peti tioner has an abiding faith that your hoiior.'ibh bodies will cheerfully urant this refiuent, an well on your own ac count as that of the multitude of hhi faithful followers, comprising nil tho Industrious poor people ((iod'ri chosen people), many of whom nre now pray er full.x waiting for the second coming of said king which, It Is claimed, will be to the I'nlted Stales or Ameilca. riiitit m Inutility this king has done more to establish ami maintain freo government on this continent and to make tho i'nlted States of America a icspcctnhlc nation than any other king, and so we as individuals and as 'i na tion ought mil to be ashamed with (!i:X Hl'GH CAMFIION. frnnl.tnss and alacrity to aiknowledgo that we owe him a debt of gratitude which we will never be able fully to liquidate For all these and many other obvious leasons tho undersigned hopes that our honorable bodies will without deltij make rcsuriectlon day a national holiday, for which wo will lontinualiy pray. Respectfully, lU'CJII CAMFIION. Camp lieu Harrison, Douglas couu t, Kan. After the leading the senate referred It to the committee on Judiciary. As will be seen, this resolution, If adopted, would upset the present arrangement of Ftihler days according to the church festival, I'l.i-iter Is a movablo festival. The rule which has been followed In fixing Its date each year Is that It shall he the first Sunday after the fourteenth day (not the full moon) of the calendar moon, which happens on the next nrtcr March 21. The calendar moon Is not (he moon or the heavens, nor the moon or astronomy, but nn Imaginary moon Tor ecclesiastical convenience. Faster may come as early as March 22, or as late as April 2.". Hint year It occurred on prll 11. NAPOLEON AM) EUGENIE. Willi Thrlr I lillil lit lll:ll Mikm Th ri'tilillini. I had a card or admission to n seat Immediately in front of the altar and cbfc to those occupied by tho Imperial party, says lllackwoiid's Magazine. It was Interesting, or course, to bo able at such dose tpiartors to scrutinize tho somewhat sombre countenance of Na poleon 111., the delicate features of his beautiful wife and the fair faco of the box on whom so many Blowing hopes were lixcil till doomed to be quenched in tho dust of death at one desolato spot In far-off Ziiluland. Hut It was the venerable archbishop who attract ed my attention most strongly, from the subdued gentleness and humility of hh. aspect, In spite of the gorgeoiis neis of his cstmcnts, rich in crimson velvet, gold embroidery and priceless lace. The archbishop woreallttleredskull cap over his soft, white hair and tho exptcsslon of his mild countenanco was that of simple, genuine goodness. Ills complete absorption In the rellg. Ions service on which he as engaged was quite in accordance with what I had been told of his pure, devoted life and the appearance of the meek, de fenseless old man would have led ono to believe that he was one of the last persons who could ever become tho oh Jeit of Implacable hatred and brutal violence. Yet two years Inter I stood on the spot where that gentle spirit hnd at last escaped by the tardy mercy of death from tin agony of persecution and torture little known, I believe, be yond the prison walla where the latJ cruel scene was enacted. TIik Slur CIiiiiiiIiit l.orli. The veritable lock and key of the fa mous Star Chamber were sold at Chris He's rooms. London, recently. The lock Is soundly made of brass, and though decorated to ti certain extent Is plain compared with tho key, which Is a wonderful pleco of fretted steel. The metal Is of n betutttfrj temper, other wise It seems Impossible (iUM the stem should not snap off If thero were tht slightest hitch In the turning cf tho lock. On both sides nro portrayed crowned heads, presumably of Chatle I. -' wit i f HMy " THE ltEI) CLOUD CHIEF, THEATRICAL CiOSSU. !OTIiS AND COMMENT AUOJT PLAYS ANO PLAYKRS. Ilnjt .Mlilnlclil Iti'tMlliP f thill ('MMtilt V.'iriniitrr' Mint liiiitjlhihli- l'n,,!iir. 'lonii -Mnrlr of 'I o I'lxjrri Mimn 4liic Uliliper,. M I II M 0 II T HFLL." Is one of && -JIL J ,l10 ,"'st ",,,KH -Mr-f;t"Sf Hoyt has taken at j impmiecien niera- G!ture. The human element Is sympa I I 1U iVWfii thetically present nnd covers much of the Hoyt eruileness and trite it e h s. Hovt's wakeful fac w ulty of observation Is next of kin to etentivo ability and although nothing particularly Inventive is discoverable In any of his literary carpentering, there is that pleasant famlllaiity and truth to commonplace scenes which are vnstly more agreeable to the Idle majority than wise disclosures or the vivacious magnet or surprise. Charlie Hoyt never thinks out novel proposi tions but he reproduces actual occtir lencts, real characters and dialogue copied from overheard conversations with a certain degree or tippieclatlon which passes ror fine humor. What real people and real incidents have not rurnlshed Mr. Hoyt, he has taken from shelved comedies written by moderate ly clever story-tellers, and HoytV act ors fill out the measure of tho author's SrI""5:. -'" -'- ' "' "-" 'mr4'm-l7i p-'-.r ''" vf '' C's" " 4 ' EMIL.Y JORDAN. Incompleteness, so there is scarcely anything vital to amusement lacking In a Hoyt entertainment. Thero must bo song and brisk move ment nnd continual ripple of small talk gingery with harmless slang up to the hour, occasionally a smart paragraph political or sociological, and the photographed human beings col ored exactly after living patterns trick listeners Into n lively recognition of Iloyt's talents without worrying them about the exact quality of the play wright's work. Nothing on earth Is so lifeless as a Hoyt farce once the public In thiough with It, hut there la so little substantial or necessary to one of these literary alarms that so long as the title remains Intact and tho skeletons of the characters, changes Inteimlnable and unnumbered may he made In the farce, so that If the public will have It at all they will ac cept It Jubilantly as something perenl nlly new. And undeniably Charles Hoyt Is a shrewd caterer If he Is not a creator or a literary giant, and his farces mark an era which, strange to say, they will not live In except by titles. As written things they will sink with the popularity of musical farce, hut tho fun they have made and the fleeting enjoyment they gnve every where will be remembered If not per petuated. IIoiy to ll-ciini tin Act rem, Fmlly Jordan, who In private life Is Mrs. C'arr, was borrj In London, Fng Juno 2!, 1872, and came to this country In September. 18S0. She lorated In Jersey City, N. J where she met Mr. Carr, whom she married In September, 1890. Although her husband wtut a professional she had no Inclination for the stage, nor did she ever attempt to entertain her friends by singing, r.nd In fact tdio knew but parts of sonic of tho popular bnllads or the day. Several years after her marriage, having grown weary of the lonesomenes3 of life, con sequent upon her husband's profession al tours, she resolved to fit herself for stage work that she might bo nblo to bo with him. Finding that Bhe pos sessed a sweet nnd sympathetic voice she studied the nrt of singing for about six months with some of tho best mas ters In Now York City. 3ho then Join ed nn opera company In which her hus band was engaged In order that she might acquire a knowledge of stage de portment nnd of acting. At tho term ination of that engagement sho played the Ingenue role In a farco comedy, af ter which she Joined her husband to present their well known ukctch, "A FRIDAY, 0vl 2, 181)6. ! "- '"y ihoh.i.- h,,w we Pill' nill-CCCUCIl ir llllNIM'Jll III III) wuu nave seen then refined comedy erea- tlon. to the presentation of wheh hf renders such able assistance. storr if mi .li tor. j William S. Clifford, the actor, was born at Frhniia. Ohio, Jan. 23, 18C!) j and first appeared upon the stngo In his , native city, In January, 1S81, with an amateur minstrel company, doing a snare drum specialty, His ability lu that line attracted the notice of Man ager Hi Henry, who signed him to play the snare- drum In the hand and work In the big eight song nnd dance, with his minstrel show, during the neason of 18S2. During the summers of 1&83-SI he traveled with the John Hohlnson circus, playing the snare drum In the female band, (leorge Fuller Golden and Mr. Clifford formed a partnership for the purpose of playing variety houses. In 188.", nnd for three years they toured I the West and South, Mr. Clifford going with Miles Orton'H circus during the ! summers of 18S.V87. When Hlngllng I Ilrotherri made their circus a railroad ! show, lu 18SS, ho was with the show closing In the rail to join Sim Williams ! in nn act, lu which they appeared . through the West during the next two years. He joined Al. G. Field's tr.ln , strels Tor the season or 1890, ns ,i fea , turc of the regimental first part, doing ' his snare drum specialty. On July 2S, 18111, at Hurrah), X. Y., he married Maud I llutli, and In September, 1832, first nt , tempted a sketch with his wire, appear ing later In the same year at Tony Pastor's theater, then making his llrst , appearance berore u New York mull I ence. They visited the principal varl- ,ll ;v iWip 'z j? jjl, wtcjueew,.,, . & mmaw .1W'' IV"- ety houses during the remnlndcr of that season, and in 181U signed with Manager Pastor for the fall tour of his road company, continuing with that show during Its spring and fall tour of 189.". On the 10th or the current month they opened with Mnnnger Pastor at Long Uranch, N. J., for the fall road season of twelve weeks, at the expira tion or which they will join llarrj Williams' Own company ror the re mainder or the current season. Clifford and lluth are too well known as per formers to demand nn extended men tion of their excellent act. but it would seem appropriate to mention that Mr. Clifford's portrayal of the "chapp" character Is not excelled on- the vaude ville, stage. Miss lluth. In her line singing of negro melodies. Is equally proficient, nnd tdinrcs the honors gained bj their performances. Apart from hla WILLIAM S. CLIFFORD, ability as a performer, Mr. Clifford Is possessed of keen business instincts, turning his earnings to tho best pos sible ndvantnge, and adopting meas ures, at all times, to further his Inter ests in tho profession. An Instance, of his enterprise was shown Inst slimmer when he rented from Mnnnger Pastor n largo bill board, near Union Square, In New York city, maintaining thereon a stand of bills advertising hlsopeclal ty. Ho recently purchased a valuablo farm near Paterson, N. J., where ho spends his leisure, his brother-in-law and his wifo's mother maintaining tho property during tho team'j nbsenco upon the road, nnd also coring ror Hilly S. Clifford, Jr., who was boru Fob. 2. 1S9S. Sutton Vane Is writing tho llhrftto ror a musical play based upon Robert Cromble's story, "A Plunge Iato J Space," if L mm - 7 y HUNTING FOSSILS. rMtEHISTOniC QUADRUPEDS I ROM THE ROCKIES. (Iniif, of (iUnt Mintcr Hint lUUtrit Cotintlra AfM As" l!ri'orrnl ftrr I, one "nil llrraiiinr orurrh An i:i clllnc Oiifl. It OF. HFNRY FAIRFIFLD OS HORN. Curator of Vertebrate Paleon tology in the Amer ican Miineiini or Natural History, contributes n paper on "Prehistoric Quadrupeds or the Rockies," to a cur rent mngazlne. The article Is Illustrated by drnwings by Chtules Knight, giving careful recon structions of these strange beasts. Prof. Osborn sayn: llefore describing the nnlnials themselves, we may stop to note what our present knowledge of them has i ost in human skill and endurance. Fver one or these pic tures is drawn from a complete skele ton hewn out of the solid rock, and each or thene skeletons represents years and years or arduous exploration In which Wort man. Hatcher, Peterson and others sent out by the American Museum, by Princeton, or by Yale, have become famous. Our party found the Tltanothere in a broiling alkali canon of South Dakota. Its head was protruding from ti hard sandaton" cliff, and the chest, limbs, and trunk were chiseled out by the men under a rude shelter which lowered the noon temperature to lOli degree. They were encouraged to think that the whole beast had been mired in a stand ing ponltlon. This was probably the case originally, but suddenly they came across a fault; it appeared that the hind limbs had been swept away; and It required two years' more search ing before bones of an animal of a cor responding size weie seemed. Kvery other skeleton has Its own story of de termination, disappointment, ami Mtr wise. The old lake ba-dns, once on sea-level and enriched by the moist, balmy winds or the Pacific, are now elevafd from four to Ihe thousand feet. The only redeeming feature of their preent aspect of absolute barrenness is that the absenie of vegetation leaves the old Knives nnd burying grounds bare. Fossil boiiiM and skeletons are not plentiful fill Ironi it; but a trained eye sees a great distance along the bare gullies, cliffs, and canons, and your daily scramble of fifteen to twen ty miles enables you to prospect over a vast stretch. You tire off lu the morning stiffened by a frosty night. You know by sad experience that the Ice In the btisinn docs not piomisc a cool day. Yohr backbone is still freez ing wiille the sun begins to broil and blister your skin, and you are the liv ing embodiment of the famous dessert served by the Japanese a hot crust without, an ice within. Your trail ln gius on the upland, which may be the actual level of the old lake bottom; and as if walking through a graveyard, you never look for bones until the bind breaks away bj erosion. When you reach the edge of this upland, you look off into a nea of rock, sometimes wild beond ileseiiptl.in, and you plunge down the slope to a cer tain level. Then you follow this level round and round ami lu and out. Here you are on a seam which bears fossils. Above and below it arc other similar fossllirerous seams, anil between them nre barren scams where you will not find a bone If you nearch till doomsday. This level, perhaps, represents the delta or a groat mountain river which swept tho animals out wtlh coarse sand, peb bles and debt Is. Sometimes you walk miles and miles, up and down, day after day, and see nothing but com mon turtle bones, which nre so deceit tlvo and tempting at a distance tha' the foswil hunter profanely kicks them aside. Turtles are found everywhere because they swam out, basked lu the sunshine in the mid-lakes, and occa sionally sank to the bottom, while the carcasses of land animals were burled In the deltas or nearer shore. In such fosidl-barren land the heat seems twice as torrid, on the biittes your muscles and back ache doubly, your tongue lies parched from the last gulp ot alkali water, your soul abhoiw a rossll, and longs for the green shade of the Fast, and the watermelon, when, all of a sudden, a little project ing hone strikes your wearied eye, Yn.i fall on your knees, and breathe gently on tho loose sand; a llttlo scraping, and you see the signs of a skull per haps of some mlrislng link. The thrill of discovery spreads like an elixir through your frame, and two or three hours later, after carefully cutting out the prlzo, you walk vigorously back to camp, ovcry Inch a man. Thus fossil-hunting Is u life or vic issitudes and emotlono. Tho fossil hunter Is predestined to his work, like tho sportsman. Ho returns Ktut In the autumn, vowing he will never go back to tho Had Lands; but ns the favora ble months of spring come round ho becomes more nnd moro restless until ho Is off. The country that Is as hot us Hades, watered by stagnnnt alkali poolB, Is almost invariably the richest in fossils. Here, In fact, as you find the greatest variety and number of bones, you enjoy the most delightful (lights of tho scientific Imagination; when pnrched nnd burned, you conjure bofore you tho glories or theno ancient lakes. Sir Christopher Wren built forty-two churches In Ix)ndon. His greate.it work Is St. Paul's cathedral. 01 VHOUOHT IT WAS A HORNET. Wnw n tirorarjr Clrk'a Turn fur CurU it StontltiK ViorUnl. eotintiy store Is the scone of man' rurloim happenings, says tho Phllad'l phla Times. One of these occurred In a small village lu the upper pait o' DuchcEs county. The clerk was a blight, smart, active country 1ml who was equal to all emergencies. He found that u certain denizen of the pine", named "Jake Hrown," always found convenient sitting on the counter In the farther part of the store near tlu cracker barrel and that when tin clerk's ojes were not upon him the old man's position allowed him to pi! fer a number of biscuits. The clerk soon grew tltcd of this nnd ho ai ranged a good-sized needle with a spring In a hole on the counter tmdirr the oilcloth covering, with a long string, which could be pulled at any point in the store. One extremely ho: day In June the old man entered tin store and took his position as usuxl on top of the counter near the tracker barrel. The clerk was apparently en gaged with a customer, but had h. eye on "old Jake." and when ho w.i1 reaching for the crnekcis the strliis was pulled. "Jake" went up In the nl landing on his feet lu the middle o! the store. He felt for the object e' attack, he wearing only overall.- Nf being rewimled in his search, b mounted the counter a eccond tliii' ami was about to make another at tempt ut cracker raising when he fcl another thrust which lifted him in tie' air again. He started for the attt above the store. Ills prolonged ab sence caused the clerk to go up to tin tittle, where he foil ml it as hot as an oven, to see what was going on. Hi round the old man distracted nnd ncn ly disrobed In the middle or the floo' shaking his oveialls furiously. Tin sight was laughable. The clerk askeo him what wad the matter. He replleii "This morning, while mowing in tin meadow, I struck a hornets' nest, tin i one or the pesky things has crawie . up the leg or my overalls and h.i struck me twice, and I'm hunting for It." The clerk wore a smile. Hope for ii 'I'lrr. wheelman who happened to be u man of resources hnd his tire pum iiii fit while on the way homo from Coney Island a few days ago. He t' moved the tire, substituted n piece ' heavy rope in Its place and rode i his hon.e. a distance of about e's'nt miles, without discomfort. The rlii! of which he Is a member Is so prmin of his performance that it has bad :!iv rope framed. N'ew York World. ilii" Vlilow" Mi'lwlriiii. Unscrewing the cover from an id-", locked uielodeon. that tile ItlKtlUtneii' might aid the choir at the funeral of . childless New Fngland widow win ded last week, the decedent's relr. lives came upon $12,000 In Fnltf States bonds Mowed away inside. In I In l.lclil "t l.'iiorlrni-r. The Newlv Married Man (on liMfi.' night oil', sadly) I wonder what nr wife will say when I get homo? Tin Other- When you've been married ti long ns 1 have, old man, ouil knov beforehand. Tiuth. THE CHURCH MILITANT. The meetings lately held at Foil Dodge, la under the ministration and preaching of Dr. L. W. Munhall, wen a splendid success, It Is reported. Hlsliop Stephen M. Merrill, of tin M. F. Church, Is prostrated by a stroke which Is believed to be paralytic. Thn Is the second attack of a similar na ture the Rev. Dr. has lately suffered. It Is said that the Rev. Samuel D Merrill, now of Rochester, was tin llrst white child born In the territoi.v. now slate, of Nebraska, when Ills fath er was laboring as a mlu.-dnunry union:. the Indians. Reports from ihe various e;ini,; meetings, that have been held all ovit the country, indicate that this yeai whatever may betide in the other af fairs of the nation, the open air wor ship of the living God has been wrll and fiultfully attended The Fvangellcal Lutheran Chinch of the I'nlted States and Canada held it-' annual conference nt Fvansvllle, lnd lately. Ofllcers for the ensuing year were elected as follows: President Rev. John Ilailiing, Milwaukee; vie president, Rev. Peter Hrant, Pittsburg Pa.; secretary, Prof. John Schallei New rim, Minn.; treasurer, Chris Yan seu, Detroit; chaplain, Rev. C. (" Schmidt, St Loulri. Tho sum of $18,000 has been raise, for the semi-centennial in honor of tin Rev. Dr. Rlchurd S. Stores, pastor of tho Pilgrim Congregational church. Hrooklu, and the sum Is constantly growing. The special committee hopes to complete the full amount of $2u,000 by Novomber 19, when It Is proposed to celebrate the scml-ccntennlal or Dr Stores' pastorate In the Church or tin Pilgrims by speclnl services In tin church, nnd in all probability n great mass meeting In tho Academy o Music. An Immense crowd or people partic ipated In the twenty-sixth annual Methodist camp meeting at Pitman Grove, N. J., under tho charge of Rev D. II. Harris. Tho closing days of the last week were married by tho prostra tion of Rev. Dr. S. M. Vernon, who was overcome vvhlln delivering a sermon. Tho speaker had been discoursing for about ft half hour when his auditors were startled by seeing n pallor spread over his race. Fvangellst Hoswell, detecting hla condition, supported him to a chair and ho was urtervvnrd re moved from tho platform, and, after n quiet rest In the ministerial roora, hi revived. -ii & 1W f k'1 1 i' r--cn- UMgJMg-Lfo; , - -. mm ,,!,-.-". Mh4.l "-mr -. rfrj