U asREWU S2E TSjsmwfaaiamfwiuimmm MnsagSggs jlw ahntine jglemocmt successor to CHEKKY COUNTY INDEPENDENT ROBERT B GOOD - Kditok PROP VALENTINE - NEBRASKA A New York lawyer has been over come by gas He wasnt 6aying a word at the time either A New Orleans contemporary says that Chicago doesnt pack anything worth while except pork Arent pri maries worth while A young and pretty girl in Minneapo lis has been holding up the boys late ly The new woman evinces a dispo sition to reverse things everywhere A New York scientist says he has made an analysis of love Some day a dear girl with no scientific training whatever will make a paralysis -of his theory The Kansas City Journal is quite right in spirit when it sajs that Miss Frances Willard could illy lie spared but that word illy -would easily be spared without a regret Thieves threw a hook and line througli an open window of a house at Monterey Mexico and stole the bed clothes under which the owner of the house was sleeping An Abilene Kan1 clergyman is preaching a series of sermons on the1 general subject Making It Hot for the Devil This would strike the un prejudiced layman as unnecessary trou ble A caflegram from Bluefielfls Nicara gua says that the newly elected mayor -of that place is a lawyer and his full name is Marks The whereabouts of the rest of the Uncle Toms Cabin -troupe are not -given however A Michigan young marite mind Is a blank because of cigarette smoking and the report -calls it a strange ef fect There -is nothing strange about Itexcept the imbecility of parents who permitted According to Editor Murdock there are but four women in Eldorado Kan who know how to cook a pot of beansj In an artistic manner and from this fact he -proceeds to point a moral and adorn a tale by declaring that no girl Is fit to marry until she masters this ac complishment Some idea of the magnitude of the great Siberian railway now in course of construction by the Russian govern ment -may be gathered from the fact ithatby changing the route a thousand miles were -saved It is expected that through trains will be ran over the road within twoyyears A Massachusetts man has discovered Ihatby using sunshineduringthe day tnQ electricity during the night he can raise several crops of onions5 in one sea son Atthe same time it may be ap propriately Temarked that there has been mo crying demand for several of onions in one season Many people could get along withseveral sea sonsand one crop of onions -Several Boston boys broke mp -a bo igus -spiritual materialization recently ana exposed the fraud captur ing all the spook paraphernalia The boys who exposed this swindle how- ever1 have been fined 50apiece in po ilice xmrt for disturbing a religious meeting Boston must delight in be- fingt humbugged The -citizens of Topeka having tried theKneipp cure for rheumatism with indifferent success are now -trying a course of fried salt pork which is said tobetmuch more io take Some of the youngHaflies -of that city find boiled bacon and a pleasant variation frormthe reg ular course of treatment with -just-as good results Itlhasibeen discovered which adorn theirearofithe Speakers desk in the Assembly -Hall of the New Jersey State House mre maide of white pine andcovered The bases are -marble There are Cisco these colunras from twelve to fourteen isnehes intjgiameter -and ten feet ihigh They wore supposed ito be of wiirtenaarile andiihe discovery has made auite a- sensatfcan The jmerican peaisait the goober pea of South in tie muneMngof wbieh -the aristocrat aa I the plebeian alike find solace is rising into comxmer cial ianportance maore as 3 more lercary year Its oil is highly valued m Eu rope sad rfully u000OOG -worth of the nutsaineSQat to Marseilles France if or the masiufaeture cf the all whick is used far toilet soapu and fox other ptir poses Peanut flour is also extensively used in Europe for the aiaking sf bread calces tftte A New Jersey cow recently tkilled in tlnit State vas possesv5ed of sn appe tite that woald iptit to tiue best fGorts of the lieahiest ostrich or cas sowary that ever lived Nineiy five pieoes of hardware were Xound iaa her stomach upon which she shad frequent ly ruminated while the cu5 of ped the question he said The Emper or my father has commanded me to make you the offer of my hand and heart To which Princess Alix of Hesse responded And my grandmoth er Queen Victoria has commanded me to accept the offer of your hand your heart I will take myself And thus the royal troth was plighted The Pennsylvania Railroad Company has recently adopted a new design of water scoop known as a balanced scoop by which it is possible to take on water while the train is running at jthe rate of sixty or seventy miles an jhour Since 1894 all new passenger locomotives and fast freight engines have been designed to include water scoops but with the old form of scoop it was necessary to slow down while taking water while with the improved design no time is thus lost and more water is taken per hundred feet of trough At seventy miles an hour it is now possible to fill a 300 gallon ten der in nine seconds The late James OKane who recently died at his home near St Louis had been in the naval services of the United States for forty years He entered the mavy as a midshipman from Missouri in 1856 and was on the vessel which brought over the first Japanese Minister to this country When the civil war broke out all of the -officers of his vessel deserted and entered the Confederate navy except himself He remained steadfast how ever and was placed in command of the frigate Brooklyn He was wound ed while running the forts below New Orleans and wTas placed on the retired list only a few weeks before his death There are some entertaining pictures of Ilife in Washington seventy years ago in Stratford Cannings diary and let ters My predecessor he writes had greatly the advantage over me in his collection of good stories I re cord one of them to serve as a pattern of the rest He was Sir Charles Bagot a man of very attractive manners intel ligent witty and kind An American minister and his wife dining with him one day he heard Lady Bagot who wasat some distance say rather quick ly My dear Mrs S what can you be doing The salad bowl had been offered to Mrs S and her arm was lost in it up to the elbow Her reply was procqpt Only rollicking for an onion imy lady A mew electric locomotive of large dimensions calculated to draw trains of double the weight of those attached to ordinary -engines at a rate of sixty -two miles -an hour has been tried with success on the Western Railroad of France line- The first experiments of this kind were made in 1893 between Havre and Beuzeville with an electric locomotive which behaved well throughout the trial trip Owing to the success of this machine the companys engineers constructed two larger loco motives -and it is one of these which has just ben tested It is fifty seven feetlong and of 1350 horse power In spite of their size they wear out the rails less than ordinary locomotives as ithe weightis distributed on eight axles instead of four or five They are safer than the others owing to their elastic character which enables them to make curves with security at full speed JG reat things are in fact expected from these contrivances which when per fected will do 110 to 115 miles an hour Among theold young men of this dec ade Gen Cassius M Clay of Kentucky is conspicuous Though he passed his eighty sixth ibirthday last October he still has more vigor and go than many men a quarter of a century younger than he Gen Clay has always been a fighter He was an abolitiionist in Kentucky as far back as 1852 and no one could intimidate or induce him to stop his free and violent denunciation of an institution which he considered totally wrong He printed a paper the presses of which had to be guarded by armed men against an offended and angry mob In 18G1 he went as United States Minister to Russia and he has been generally credited and quite right ly too with having done great service in influencing Russia to -stand between the United States and the threatened allianee of ithe European powers to rec ognize the Confederacy Gen Clay so as to sbowvhisiContempt for the limita tions of age took to himself within the last few years a young girl as his wife He Hives wihere he was bornin Madison County iKw and was most act ive in thessoent political campaign The plague Jiow raging income por ttions of India is thought by many phys icians to he adontical with the black death whieh devastated Eurone and Aftia in 1347 -and at subsequent peri ods Ancient writers ive graphic de scriptions of the frightful virulence of this strange malady its course fim Bttaly being vividly described by Booeaecio and iPetrarclL In Yeniee more than 100000 people died of the disease and ifei iGyjprus neariy tte whole population was destroyed while in Genoa enihsaf the ini2abitants succumbed to l its faaxi ul ravages At Sienna the iion of abe cathedral was stopped by the plague and it lias ever tince been resumed From Italy the scourge made Its -way im France England Germany and Spain nnd is said to have been carried into Scandinavia by ship which Left London in the summer of sweet and bitter fnner These artieis I 1349 The wfoole of the crew died of includqrJ eighty nails a lot of screws i the plague and the vessel after drift- various stones jengths of vdre thtee larg I ing about on the ocean for a long time an iron spike three inches long was cast ashore -with itsgrewsome bur- a padlock -with key to fit a bg ring and a lHe Russians are fond of relating the fol lowing anecdote about the Czar whtci his MaiestF proposed to his future jwife When s jpng CzarowJtz o jyere destroyed V den at Bergen ad the infection sooa spread all over NfUjiway and Sweden Ie f aot scarcely a portion of the known worid escaped the disease even entire colosfes up in Greenland being oblit erated ind whole tribes OEsquinjays CABINET IS COMPLETE MKINLEYS OFFICIAL ADVISERS ARE ALL CHOSEN J A Gary and J J McCook the Re cant Selections Latter to Rule In terior Mr Gary a Marylander Is to Be Postmaster General Slate Made Up With the acceptance of the Postmaster Generalship by Mr Gary of Maryland and of tile Secretaryship of the Interior by Col J T McCook of New York McKin leys cabinet is now complete Following is the authentic list of the cabinet as it has been finally decided upon ft Secretary of State JOHN SHERMAN of Ohio jfr Secretary o the Treasury LYA1AN J GAGE of Illinois j Secretory of War RU SELL A ALGER of Michigan J Secretary of the Navy JOHN D LoNG of Massachusetts Attorrey General JOSEPH MKENNA of Caliornla S crztary of the Interior J J MCOOK of New York Postmaster General j JAMES A GARY of Maryland 2 Secretary of Agriculture i JAMES WILSON of Iowa The news that Mr McCook and Mr Gary bad been invited to scats in the cabinet and had accepted was received a Washington correspondent says by Sen ators and members of Congress with many expressions of satisfaction lames A Gary is the recognized leader of the Republican party in Maryland He is a business man of wealth a manufac turer and he has never hesitated to give effort and money to the cause of party He has been a delegate to every national con vention of his party since 1S72 and from 1880 to 1S5 lias represented Maryland upon the Republican national committee In the councils of his party he speaks with authority and his utterances are heard with respect In 18r5 Mr Gary was married to Miss Lavina W Corrie I 1AMES A GVnY daughter of James Corrie and is the fath er of one son and seven daughters His son E Stanley Gary is now junior part ner in the old firm of James S Gary X Son Mr Gary is GiJ years of age Col John J McCook New Yorks mem ber of McKinleys cabinet is the young est of the famous Fighting McCooks of Ohio a family which furnished a father and eight sons to the Union army He will be 52 years old in May He was a student at Kenyon College Ohio when the war broke out He enlisted as a pri vate in the Sixth Ohio Cavalry He will sacrifice profits from his law business said to amount to r0000 to Cj7500 a year to enter the cabinet Col McCook is dis tinctively a railroad attorney and was prominent in the reorganization of the Atchison Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad He is one of the trustees of Princeton and an elder of the New York Fifth Ave nue Presbyterian Church He was chosen by the Princeton wing of the Presbytery to eemluct the prosecution of Dr Briggs MOTHERS CONGRESS Will Hereafter Meet in Washington ICnch Alternate Ycar Kesolutions After a very successful and enthusiastii meeting of three days the first mothers congress finished its work and adjourned To meet next year again in Washington That will be the general headquarters of the new organization and the meeting every other year will take place there while in the alternate years it will be held iu some other city to be chosen by the congress Before adjourning a long series of res olutions were adopted In these resolu tions the mothers indorse the work of the Universal Fcaee Union and second the suggestion to the mothers instructors and citizens of America that lessons of peace must be first taught by harmony at the hearth approve the founding of a na tional training school for mothers that the women of America may be taught the method for making hygienic homes and for becoming intelligent mothers promise to use influence to encourage legislation in the various States and territories to se cure si kindergarten department in th public schools declare it to be their pur pose to exclude from their homes those juipers which do not educate or inspire to noble thought aud deed protest against all pictures and displays which tend to degrade men and women or corrupt or deprave the minds of the young and all advertisements which offend decency pe tition Congress to raise the age of pro tection for girls in the District of Colum bia and territories to IS years at least exhort sill mothers to a closer walk with our father and mother God in whose nurture and admonition our children must be brought up if life is ever to be worth living express appreciation for the re ception aecorded to the congress by Mrs Cleveland who stands before the coun try as the gracwus and beantiful ideal of motherhood They say tiiat she in her life has -exemplified the iriicipks for jirhich this congress stands Mrs Annie Besatit the thxsophist srjcIJ remain in this country six months during which time she will visit U1 the larger cities Her lecfurep will he de voted to the exposition of theosophy and some of her experiences in her journey through India from which country she is now returning will be told The golden jubilee of Mofher Mary Xavier head of the Order of Hisrrs o Charity of tfe Catholic Church vi sAC in t Flizabttfhs Academy Xc v nu There are about J00 si era jj ill va v Mojt them ypyt prrsef A PREPARING TO LEAVE In a Short While Washington will Have Xiost the Cltvelanda At the White House the President and his assistants are packing their trunks Large boxes are filled with books and papers which are the Presidents or Mrs Clevelands private property These will be sent to Princeton When the morning of March 4 comes there will remain only a few trunks and these will accompany Mr Cleveland then again an ex-President and Mrs Cleveland to their new home Mr Cleveland by the way has never seen the property at Princeton which is to be his future residence Mrs Cleveland selected it and the President said he was perfectly content to trust to her judgment The Presidents summer home in the suburbs of Washington will be offered for sale and no doubt a good price will be received for it notwithstanding the dull times in Washington real estate This property lies nearer the city than Red Top in which Mr Cleveland lived dur ing the latter part of his first term and which he sold to a syndicate at a profit of about 100000 The syndicate lost money on the venture very few of the lots hav ing been sold Mr Cleveland now owns three homes one in Washington one at Princeton and one at Buzzards Bay The total of his wealth is estimated by those who know something about it at 1000000 When he came to Washington he was not worth more than 40000 or 50000 But Mrs Cleveland has come into considerable property and the President has been for tunate in his investments During the eight years of presidency he has drawn 400000 from the Govern ment and of this he has saved at least one half perhaps more He has not spent as much money during the second admin istration as he did during the first All his entertainments have been of an inex pensive sort The three houses which Mr Cleveland owns are said to be worth about 200000 and besides these he and Mrs Cleveland own about 300000 worth of real estate The President will live in Princeton during the winter and at Buzzards Bay in summer He will practice law in New York City as advisory counsel He is not going on a tour around the world PHTHISIS NOT CONTAGIOUS Doctors Condemn the Action of the Mew York Bonrd of Health The action of tfre New York Board fo Health in directing that all cases of con sumption be registered and treated like diphtheria measles and contagious dis eases has aroused the indignation of New York physicians generally They are al most a unit in their condemnation of the action and the opinion of one is practically that of all Dr Robert Hunter who has made a specialty of treating pulmonary diseases for fifty years and who says he has treat ed or observed 50000 cases said I can not find words with which to express my indignation at the Board of Health for this foolish action which will do no good and more harm than any one can contem plate To begin with consumption is not a communicable disease History shows this There never was a case that was contracted by contact with another case The germ is not given off by the person suffering from the disease It is in the air It used to be believed that the disease was hereditary Weak lung tissue runs in families and a person with weak lungs of course will succumb more readily to the disease as the air he breathes is filled with the germs of tuberculosis It is but six years since the existence of the germ was discovered and now the Board of Health proposes to break up 20000 fami lies and isolate that number of individ uals to experiment with that of which they can know but little They say they intend to isolate the more dangerous cases only but who is to decide which cases are the more dangerous cases It is simply a plan to put away 20000 in dustrious ambitious people who are a benefit to society and wh6se presence in the community can do no harm They are to be separated from humanity for ever Even those who are permitted to remain in the community will suffer as much as those who are isolated Think of the workingman branded as a pest distributor What can he doV Who will work beside him Who will go into his store He cannot ride on the street cars or go to church They might just as well isolate persons suffering from ring worm If your skin is healthy you can not have a ringworm on your face If it is not healthy the germ of the ringworm that is everywhere in the air will estab lish itself in the skin just as the germ of consumption will establish itself in the weak or diseased lung tissue whether you are in a sick room or a pine forest There is as much consumption in the country as in the cities and persons who never come in contact with consumptives are as lia ble to the disease as are nurses in hos pitals for consumptives In decreeing consumption contagious like smallpox and decreeing measures looking to the imprisonment of those af flicted with it in pest houses the New York Board of Health inaugurates a war of extermination not against consump tion but against consumptives and com mits the most far reaching invasion of personal liberty ever attempted by any medical organization since the founda tion of the art of medicine Oddities of State Iejri8lature The tuberculosis law has been suspend ed in Connecticut A bill has been introduced in the Min nesota House of Representatives making the Governor and the Governor elect eli gible for election to the United States Senate during the term for which they have been chosen to the State executive office There is now in the hands of a commit tee of the Indiana State Legislature a bill to compel all proprietary medicine concerns doing business in the State to place upon each package a label giving the formula used in the preparation of the contents The California Legislature is preparing to relieve Stanford University from tax ation burdens Up to the present time California has not made allowance of this sort and has collected about 30000 a year of the clear income of 150000 which the university has had A eourageons Indiana legislator has in troduced a bill to hold baggage men re sponsible for the baggage they smash He proposes to fine them every time thev throw a piece ofbaggage from a car door to the platform instead of gently trans ferring it to a truck only a few inches lowe than thewottom of the WORK iF CUMIilJtt THE VwEEKSDO NGG IN SENATE AND HOUSE A Comprehensive Digest of the Pro ceedings in the Legislative Cham bers at Washington Matters that Concern the People Lawmakers at Labor General debate on the sundry civil hi closed Saturday in the House The bill was used as a basis for an attack by ih Democrats on the vast appropriation made by this Congress which Mr Savers and Mr Dockery estimated would aggre gate 1045000000 dice the gate was opened the debate naturally drifted into politics The relative merits of the Mi Kinley and Wilson bills as revenue pro ducers were u tacked and defended The income tax decision and Justice Shiras change of position came in for a share of attention and Mr De Annond Mo con cluded the day with a brilliant plea for struggling Cuba which won from the House shouts of approval The Senate did nothing of importance The sundry civil appropriation bill car rying 0544743 was passed by the House Monday just as it came from the committee The main opposition was di rected against the river and harbor item in the bill Quite a number of other bills were passed of more or less importance among them the Senate bill appropriat ing 250000 for closing the crevasse at Pass a lOutre on the Mississippi and to equip the National Guard with uniform Springfield rifles 45 caIiber and the Sen ate resolution to authorize the Secretary of the Navy to transport the contribu tions of the Pacific coast States to the famine sufferers of India The report in the contested election case of Benoit against Boatner from Louisiana confirm ing the latters title to his seat was unan imously adopted The conference report on the diplomatic and consular appropria tion bill was adopted and the agricultural bill was sent to conference Owing to the brief time of this bession yet remaining extra night sessions were decided upon for the consideration of private pension bills of which many hundred still re main on the calendar The Senate was in executive session most of the day Some progress was made on the bankruptcy bill In the Senate Tuesday Mr Chandler de livered a carefully prepared speech in ad vocacy of bimetallism It was an argu ment against a single standard of either gold or silver and a warning against a policy of monometallism Nothing else of importance was done For the first time this session the House declined to override a pension veto submitted to it for action The bill was that to pension Nancy G Allabach the widow of Peter H Allabach of the One Hundred and Thirty first Pennsylvania volunteers at the rate of 30 per month The House sustained the veto by 115 to 79 the requis ite two thirds not voting for the bill The immigration bill is now in the hands of the President the last legislative step having been taken in the Senate Wednes day by an agreement to the conference report on the bill Strong opposition was made to the report but on the final vote the friends of the measure rallied a small majority the vote being Yeas 34 nays 31 The bill as passed extends the immi gration restrictions against AH persons physically capable and over 10 years of age who cannot readjand write the Eng lish language or some Other language but a person not so able to read and writewho is over 50 years of age and is the parent or grandparent of a qualified immiirrmir over 21 years of age and capable of sup porting such parent or grandparent may accompany such immigrant or such a par ent or grandparent may be sent for and come to join the family of a child or grandchild over 21 years of age similarly qualified and capable and a wife or minor child not so able to read and write may accompany or be sent for and come to join the husband or parent similarly qual ified and capable The Senate adjourned at 030 Thursday night after spending six hours in execu tive session devoted to the consideration of the nomination of C F Amidon to be district judge of North Dakota and of the Anglo American arbitration treaty Mr Vilas has secured the passage by the Senate of the Senate bill to extend the use of the mail service It provides foi using a patent postal card and envelope with coupons attached The Postmaster General is authorized to suspend the sys ti if it proves unsatisfactory on a test The House by a vote of 107 to 11 revers ed the finding of a majority of the elec tions committee and decided the contest ed election case of X T Hopkins vs J M Kendall from the tenth Kentucky dis trict in favor of the Republican contest ant Eleven Republicans and three Pop ulists voted with the Democrats against unseating Kendall The Senate adjourned at S15 oclock Friday night after having spent almost eight hours in continuous executive ses sion on the arbitration treaty No result was accomplished beyond voting down the motion made by Senator Nelson to postpone further consideration of the treaty A very spirited debate on the general subject of the payment of claims found to be due against the United States was indulged in by the House during the consideration of the general deficiency ap propriation bill Mr Richardson Tenn had called attention to the apparent in consistency of an item to pay the costs of defending suits and the fact that the bill contained no item to pay the judgments Mr Mahon Pa chairman of the War Claims Committee made the statement that the House had been frightened by a bogie man and the just claims against the Government instead of aggregating hundreds of millions as was frequently stated could be discharged with 10000 000 The consideration of the bill was not completed The bill carries b441 027 Odds and Ends The film or a soap bubble is the 2500 000th of an inch in thickness A man was arrested in New Jersey the other day for digging his own grave The Zend language is one of ihe most ancient known to antiquarians or phil ologists It is said to bear a close re semblance to the Welsh Farmers in Douglas County Kan are educating their horses to eat po tatoes which they can feed at 11 cents while corn stands for 17 cents Never before have American tourists poured into Europe a they are doing ibis year It fe probnbjg that the in cicase will not be fav from 25 per cent oyer Jast year It is not true however that the Vesu vius is built of slippery elm New York Press A great deal of noise is made over the Waguer operas this year but very little money Chicago Tribune As previously there is a great deal more word painting than marksmanship in the Cuban war Washington Star When the Siberian Railroad is opened you can go around the world in forty days if you can get a psis s Boston Globe Senator Iliil says members of Congress do not get drunk What on earth can be the matter with them then Buffalo Express There is no longer a pebble on the-Hicks-Beach Sir Michael has thrown it at the Franco Russian alliance Mon treal Star That blockade in Charleston harbor ap pears to have been fashioned after t he pattern of one of Weylers trochas Chi cago Tribune England might make two treaties One for arbitration with the United States and another for war with the Senate Chicago News If England persists in bullying the Other European powers it may find out after a while that insularity does not insulate Chicago Tribune England and France may furnish diver sion for the world by executing a militidiV couchee couchee in the streets of Cairo New York Advertiser Legalizing prize fights is disgraceful of course but it would disgrace some States less than others Nevada isnt hurt mrcch Kansas City Journal There seems to be considerable perplex ity as to who started the latest Cretan r rising and more perplexity as to who will stop it Chicago Tribune In connection with the arbitration treaty the Senate is experiencing some difficulty in c ggesting something equally as good Washington Star Sesftor Morgan as usual is opposed to about everything in sight and his volu bility rolls on as regularly as interest on a mortgage Baltimore American Perhaps the sovereign State of Nevada would consent to let the fight be settled by international ar bitration Indianapolis Journal It is proposed to turn the Michigan State House into an insane asylum The suggestion is liable to be caught up ic some other States Boston Giobe Nov comes the Congress of Mothers in Washington Lets hope it will set the Congress of fathers a good example in the dispatch of business Boston Herald It doesnt seem possible that the fight will amount to anything Neither has as yet referred tc the other as a cowardly cur Cleve land Leader Prince George of Greece is a cyclist L That settles it The Tnrks may aswell let Crete be annexed to Greece The Prince will scorch his way through Buffalo News Doubtless the drum major fancies he bosses the panide It is that way vyitlii some politicians because they are in the procession they imagine they are leading the party Baltimore American A Lexow investigation is much like a rip round the world You go a long dis tance and you see and hear much and hen you finish just where you started New York Commercial Advertiser Now that microbes four inches long are being discovered in Chicago drinking water we suggest that in addition to be iiy boiled it also le run through a sau sage machine Cincinnati Commercial Tribune Representative Suttons bill in the In diana Legislature against printing in en a cards in French is undoubtedly a revenge on the hotel man who gave him potatoes when he ordered pommes deterre Chi cago Journal In Michigan they are trying to induce Gov Pyigree to take Mayor Iingree by the nape of the neck and toss him out of wHu e Thus far however the Governor has been inclined to stand b3 the Mayor Cleveland Leader Europe may have an occasional war scare out Arnca and jihi and South America do the real fighting There is peace in Europe mainly because the standing armies are holding war down Baltimore American The Bradley Martin Ball The Bradley Martin ball was a tame af fair It passed off without a single fight Knoxville Tribune Mrs Martin has been more talked about and more lied about than any public per sonage of recent years New Haven Pa ladium All that the Bradley Martins need now to put them right up in Vanderbilt Astor class is a salacious divorce case St Louis Post Dispatch Speaking of the Bradley Martin ball it is said that there are over 300 families in one section of Arkansas that are living on turnips Washington Post The exorbitant cost of these displays of wealth do not promote a healthy national life There is in them heartlessness worldliness and emptiness Kanas City Times The Bradley Martin ball has taken place and the 200U ha been distributed among the poor The family will now go to work to see how quickly it can get the money away from the poor again Denver Times John Nicholas Brown is the name of a man who has just given 2000 to the Providence public library- and it is as well worth printing as if he had spent the money on a fancy ball St Louis Globe Democrat As to the taste of such displays there is ample ground for criticism which the- Bradley Martins are estopped from re- seating since they made their fete as spec tacular as possible for the supposable pur pose of making talk Philadelphia Rec ord Perhaps some of the critics of the lav ishness of the Bradley Martins would pre fer the thrifty example of Russell Sage who believed it the height of extravagance to pay the doctors bills of a clerk whom he pulled between himself and a dynamite fiend n few year ago Minneapolis Trib une J r t 1 4JV J r n