fGH A-EDfMAI kJ Aii CHICAGO. Developments are mainly favorable in tiieir gim-ral effect upon the future course of trade. The government crop report 5rocd us good as looked for , and , witii < .hf splendid ] ) ro' "pels for greater harvests than la.st year , . .nero i. . reasonable basis for 'uh.rndng activity in the loading in- dustrie * . Money is also easier in tone find favors legitimate investment in high- .grade securities and r.iirital for business needs. Holiday retail trade : ese to ex tended proportions and this has caused much reduction of merchandise stocks. Clearance sales have brought much buy ing , prices being attractive in sej onnblc wares , foot ! products and household plen ishings- . A very hopeful indication is pre.senied hj largely increased attendance of visit ing bu.urs hi wholesale markeJs. and there is more than the demiul : usual at this period for fall deliveries of'dry gojd.s , footwear , woolens , ilothing and men's fur nishings. Furniture exhibits are excep tionally well taken , and the advance book- iings furnish a gratifying total in the best -qualities. JJanl : clearings for five days. $214. IG1- O10 , compared with $2GS.4H.91 ! : in the 'Cull wed : of 1907 , a decrease of 20.1 per 'Cent. 'Cent.Fa Fa i In''os reported in the Chicago dis trict number 25 , against . * > " > last week and 25 a year ago. Tihose with liabilities over $5,000 number G , against 10 last week and fl5 in 1907. Dun's Review of Trade. NEW YORK. "Midsummer quiet still reigns in gcnerni trade and industry , but the advance of the Geas-on and the promise of good average crops liave accentuated the feeling of con fidence as to the ultimate ourcome of future f.ill business. Filling-in orders "Irom jobber * are numerous but small , probably indicating widely broken retail " stocks , and retailers 'have ' rather earlier than u ual put in force reductions as a oieans of stimulating consumption. At vthc West preparations are making for tmyers * excursions , and a more thoroughly organized effort to stimulate linking is 'looked for thi < 5 fall than ever before. In- < lu--try is possible a trifle more active fol lowing last week's holidajs. but shutdowns - downs for inventory , repairs or to limit production ihnvc apparently more than counterbalanced resumptions that have taken place. Business failures in the Init vl States for tJie week ending .July 0 number 24(1. ( which compares with 2.(5 ( nt week. ISin the like week of 19 ( 7 , 14 : ? in 190G. KG ; in 1905 and 203 in 1904. failures in Canada for the week . * ; 9. which compares with 25 last week MiJ 19 in this week last year. Sradstreet's Report./ T'ucnrn Cattle , common to prirri o4.0to $ .2r. ; hog = . prime heavy , S4.0C -o ? G.7o ; sheep , fair to choice , ? . " .OC S4.-0 ; wheat , No. 2 , 90c to 91 c ; i.'orn. No. 2 , 7oC to 74c : oats standard , , -2c to r.c ; rye. No. 2. 72c to 7. ; hay , -hnothy. SS.OO to $12.00 : prairie , $ S.Ofl * u > $12. . 0 : butter , choice creamery. 19a ito 22c : eggs , fresh , 17c to 19c ; potatoes , oew , per baliel , 90c to $1.10. Indianapolis Cattle , shipping , ? . ° .0fl Vto $8.00 : hogs , good to choice heavy , t ? ? . "iO to ? H.SO : sheep , common to prime , . $3.00 to $4.r > 0 : wheat. No. 2 , S4c tc Qr c : corn. No. 2 wihite. G9c to 70c ; oats ; .No. 2 white , olc to 52c. St. Louis Cattle. ? 4..0 to $8.20 : hogs , ? 400 to $ rt.7r : sheep. S.1.00 to ? 4..0 ; client. No. 2 , 92c to 9c : ; corn. No. 2. Tr c to 77c : oats. No. 2 , . " )3c to "i-lc ; ; rye , o. 2 , 71c to 7. > c. Cincinnati Cattle. $4.00 to $ n..10 ; iiogs 'S1.00 to SG.7. > : sheep. $ . ° , .00 to Sn.SH : wheat. No. 2. S9r to OOe : corn , * No. 2 mixed , 7Gc to 77c ; oats. No. 2 mixed , r.Hc to > $ c : rye. No. 2. S4c to SGc. Potroit Cattle , $4.00 to $ r > . . > 0 ; hogs , ' $4.00 to ? G.0 : sheep. $2.oO to ? 4.00 : 'wlieni. No. 2 , 90c to 92c : corn. No. .1 yellow. TTic to 77c : oafs. No. " white , > oc to HGc : rye. No. 2. 7.1c to 7Gc. Milwaukee Wheat. No. 2 northern , ' $1.12 to $1.1" : corn. No. . ' 5. 71c to 7."e : oats , standard. . . * kto . > 4c : rye , No. 1 , 73c to 74c : barley , No. 2 , G7c to GSc ; -pork , mess , $1'J.72. Buffalo Cattle , dioire shipping steers , -34.00 to $7.2. ) : hogs , fair to choice , $1.00 -to $ G.90 ; sheep , common to good mixed , $4.00 to S."i.30 ; lambs , fair to choice , 0 to $7.0. New York Cattle. $4.00 to $7.20 ; ° . .nO to SG.SO : sheep. $3.00 to . ) ; wheat. No. 2 red. 9Sc to 90c ; -corn. No. 2 , STc to S2c : oats , natural 1 -white , , " ) Sc to GOc : butter , creamery , 20c > to 2.5c : eggs , western , l.'c to ISc. Toledo Wheat. No. 2 mixed , 90c to * 92c : corn. No. 2 mixed. 7. > c to 7Gc ; oats. No. 2 mixed. r lc to . 2c ; rytNo. . 2 , 7Gc to 77c ; clover seed. October , $ G.30. TBADE ATJD INDUSTRY. Over I.0 loaves of what is alleged Ir. $ je underweight bread have been confis- < atod by W. D. Mo-Call , inspector of bakeries. Minneapolis. It is said that the wary inspector is on the trail of a num tier of bakers who are furnishing Uieii customers with short weight loaves. The ore movement from the head of il/ake Superior will reaoh about 22,000.- i < XK ) tons , according to advices received by vcsselmen Hiere. This is little over half of that of 1907. The annual meeting of the Minnesota iStoto Pharmaceutical Association was iheld at Lake Carlos , near Alexandria This session was novel in that it was an 'outing in a camp , established between Lakes Carlos and Darling. Tfee sessions were held in a large tent and smaller ones were used for sleeping quarters. A large dining ball furafehed refresh' rt ments. BUSE1ESS 02 * TJP Nation's Trade in Some Cases Sur passes Normal. Careful analysis of commercial , in dustrial and agricultural condition * made by ivpreseiuatives of the Chicago Uecord-IIcrald throughout the United States showed that business activity in all lines is steadily returning to nor mal and has in some cases exceeded it. Crops are unusually large and the number of unemployed men and of empty railroad cans show marked de creases. One of Uncle Sam's most reliable business barometers , the Chicago post- oflice receipts , registered an exception ally reassuring indication Saturday that the tide of business throughout the country has ttilien a sharp upturn. Statislics on the postal receipts of the country were compiled in New York and made public by Postmaster Ed ward M. Morgan of the eastern me tropolis. There the business pulse was shown to be quickening by the fact that the rer-eipls at the New York of- n'Vo for June of this year were $21- 9C.1.2S higher than in June , 1907. Fig ures were forwarded from fifty of the largest olliccs to Postmaster Morgan , and of this number thirty-three made a showing of increases during the month of June , 1908 , over the receipts of June , 1907. The aggregate receipts of these fifty olliccs reached the large total of $7,01G,1GO , a gain of $ G1GS3 over the business of the same offices in June , 1907. In Chicago fully 10.000 railroad men have gone back to work in the last six months. Half of the men the packers laid off last winter are at work again. The idle cars in the Chicago district have been reduced one-half since the high number reached in May. Illinois will have a winter wheat crop of 40- 000,000 bushels , which is a little less than last year. The oats crop will be 125.000,000 bushels , which is 20.000,000 bushels more than last year. The corn crop condition and acreage suggests a crop of : )25.00.000 bushels , about the same as last year. General conditions seem promising in Wisconsin , where the big manufactur ing institutions report an increase of business , actual and in inquiries. J. I > . Klapp. of Milwaukee , president of the National Car Service Association , says that by Nov. 1 there will be a car shortage. With all factories and shops in Oma ha and its vicinity running full time , with assurance of another year of bountiful crops in Nebraska and sur rounding states , the industrial outlook in that city is most promising. In Kansas wheat destroyers have been : u-lm . but the yield of corn will be the heaviest in the State's history. There is a heavy demand for unskilled labor. Secretary George A. Wells , of the Iowa Grain Dealers' Association , in annual estimate made public at DCS Moines , shows crops in Iowa to be sligktly above normal , with prospects for the future favorable. St. Louis reports conditions in the wholesale and retail mercantile lines as fast resuming normal and keeping freight business moving fairly well. St. Louis reports conditions in the wholesale and retail mercantile lines as fast resuming normal and keeping freight busuiess moving fairly well. At Indianapolis there are probably 12,000 to 15,000 men still unemployed , but conditions are improving. Facto ries generally are putting more men to work. Advices from Detroit say that busi ness conditions in Michigan , though not yet normal , are showing a steady im provement and are much better than three or four months ago. Bumper i crops are reported from both grain and i fruit regions. In Onio crops are uniformly good and prices on farm , products are the best in years. Every trunk line rail road entering Cincinnati reports a steady increase in freight business. I Investigation made at Pittsburg showed that a gradual improvement has set in in all lines in western Penn sylvania , West Virginia and eastern Ohio , the district having financial and commercial relations with that city as the center. This is evidenced by the scarcity of men , more especially in the coke and coal operations. While the mills are operating from 50 to GO per cent capacity , more men are being put to work every day. A sane estimate of the number of men at work in Alle gheny County in the mills and fur naces is placed at 05,000 , while in the mining and coking districts not a man need be idle. The railroads have taken on a spurt within the last thirty days. At the Baldwin locomotive works in Philadelphia 1,000 men have been tak en back in the last three weeks. Norfolk mill Southern Receivership. The Federal Court at N6rfolk , Va. , has placed tlie Norfolk and Southern railway in tlie hands of receivers upon the appli- ' a'ion of the Trust Company of America , tlie raihoad assenting. The road recently has bought in a number of branch lines on borrowed capital and could not make good. A reorganization committee has been formed. 31 > n Crowding Out Catllc. One explanation advanced for the con tinued rise in the price of meats is that the big rattle ranges of the Southwest have been rapidly filling up with settlers in the Ia t two years , with a consequent Hearing of the pastures for ctiltivation. The prices for cattle on tlie hoof are higher than ever. In all the larger cities the poorer people have begun systematic boycotts of the butchers who charge the high prices. Tlie result is that people are eating less meat and more fruit and veg etables than heretofore. PROHIBITION PARTY'S HOMINES. Eugene W. Chafin , nominee of the Pro hibition party for the presidency , is a native of Wisconsin , but is now a resi-j dent of Illinois and is one of the most : * prominent members of Qiis party in that State , lie is an attorney and has been a candidate for the Prohibition nomina tion for Governor of Illinois at tlie com ing State convention of his party. He was born in Walworth county , Wisconsin , Nov. 1 , 1S52. lie worked on a farm by the month to defray his expenses while at the University of Wisconsin , from which he was graduated in lS7o. lie sXXr * < ' * jfj $ ' : ' - \ ; . . - . WliSiiii w & &K r S y n KUGENI : w. CIIAFIN. practiced law in Waukeslm , AVis. , for twenty-five years. lie Avas State presi dent of the EpwortUi League two terms and grand chief templar of the State Good Templars four terms , a candidate on the Prohibition ticket for Attorney General of Wisconsin twice and for Gov ernor in 1S9S. In 1901 he located in Chicago. lie is Hhe author of "Lives of the Presidents" and "Lincoln , the Man of Sorrows. " CORN CEOP Of SPLENDID SHAPE. Reports from Three States Show Improvement of Conditions. Special reports collected from various po nts in the tri-State territory around Sioux City , which includes the greatest corn country in the world , indicate that corn is from a week to two weeks ahead of its growth at the corresponding pe riod Inst year. Incessant rains during May and June caused alarm among the farmers of Iowa , Nebraska , and South Dakota , but the popping weather oi ! last week has brought corn out in great shape. Even in the low lands of the Missouri valley which were inundated by Hoods corn has picked up remarka bly and the loss will be but slight. Con ditions are especially promising in South Dakota ; wheat , oats and other small grains are doing exceedingly well , and in some sections harvesting has be. S = 5 \ " > - ' . - - - * fe * " * C- * * * * ; - * ' & * & % & ? - CzUL The See road will not have to fight it the courts to get into Superior. The other roads have agreed to abide by the decision of tlie AViscousin commission. The headquarters of the Wabash rail road has been removed from Piltsburg to Cleveland , and the NOW million-dollar de- pot and office building in Pittsburg will be rented. T3ie federal grand jury at Richmond , Va. , has indicted the Chesapeake and Ohio Railway and its general freight agent , togetiher with a Richmond grain dealer , on the charge of rebating. The Burlington road attempted to file witih the Secretary of State at St. Paul a mortgage for $800,000,000 covering all of its property. The Secretary of State has refused to accept the filing until a registry fee o $100.000 is paid into the State treasury. Another thing that will be required of the road is that it give a detailed statement of tt * > real estate hold ings , together witli values. This covers trackage , terminals and depots This statement must cover the entire system. Upon the petition of the National Car Wheel Company of New York , the Dis trict Court at Toledo , Ohio , has appoint ed Vice President Wortrnngton of the Wheeling and Lake Erie receiver for the road , which is the fourth Gould property to go into the hands of a receiver. The proceeding was a friendly one. The pe tition says that the road is in debt to the extent of over . ' ? 23.000,000. This move is understood , however , to be a prelimi nary step to the reorganization of the Gould system. The Canadian Pacific Railroad Com pany has undertaken to plant pine trees along both sides of the track , from Win nipeg to Vancouver. The company will plant various kinds of pine trees and ev ery few j'ears younger trees will be added to the plantation , which will be some 1,500 miles long. These trees are to be planted for a double purpose , the younger ones to keep the track clear of snow and as they grow up the larger ones will bo used for bridge timber , telegraph poles , etc. , while tihe smaller trees will be util ized for fence pos-ts and ties. Chairman Knapp of the interstate com merce commission has derided the case of the Rhinelander Paper Company against the Northern Paoific and Chicago and Northwestern railway companies. The complaint challenged tlie reasonableness of an 8-cent rate on pulp wood from Dnluth , Minn. , to Rhinelander , Wis. During the proceedings fhe S-cent rate on pulp wood was reduced to 0.95 cents. The commis sion > ld that the reduced rate on pulp wood ft not shown to be excessive , and that , upon ail facts disclosed , tihe rate fldQjstment ; on paper is not shown to be unlawful. Eugene W. Chafin Is Nominated for President by the Aqua Pura Part } ' . WATKIIsFS Iff SEC01TD PLACE. Shortest Platform in History of Ra tional Conventions Is Adopted at Columbus. Columbus Correspondence : Eugene W. Chafin , of Chicago , was nominated for President of the United States by the Prohibition national con- vcntion Thursday. For Vice President the convention named Aarou S. Watf Kiiis , of Ada , 0. , a professor in the Ohio Northern University. Both candidates - didates are gubernatorial candidates of the Prohibition party in their respective - ! , ive States. The shortest platform on record and one containing lor the first time t in the history of important ua- tional t parties in this country a decla ration in favor of equal suffrage was framed for the candidates to stand upon. t Republican and Democratic candi date and platforms were , scored alike , and evidence held to prove that Lincoln was a Prohibitionist was presented at the opening session of the Prohibition party's national convention. Both Taft and Bryan were stamped as friends oi liquor in the address of the temporary chuirmau , Robert II. Patton of Springfield - field , 111. Mr. Patton held the attention of lih audience throughout his speech and al times moved his hearers to great enthu siasm , "Take off your coat , " and "Hit him again ! " cried the delegates , and thesa shouts were interspersed with "Anicn . " The speaker took off his coat and then paid his compliments to the late Heri man Raster of Illinois , author of the personal liberty plant of the 1S72 lieI publican platform , lie read a letter from Wade II. Ellis , attorney general of Ohio and author of much of the lie- publican platform of this year , dechirj ing that he could find nothing in the Raster plank "iucousibteut with Repu'j- hcan doctrine. ' ' "Caught with the goods ! " shouted some one in the audience. Passing from the Republican party , Mr. Patton spoke of that "very talkative man from Lincoln , " and said that in the last sixteen years Mr. Bryan "has championed everything loose under tlie sun in the way of a political issue except - cept the prohibition question. " The convention was called to order at 10 o'clock in Memorial Hall by Chair . man Jones. Tlie invocation was offered ! j by Rev. E. L. Eaton of Illinois , and j i j after the formal reading of the call for ; the convention the name of Robert II. Patton of Springfield , 111. , was an nounced as temporary chairman. Following the address of Mr. Patton the roll of states was called for the an nouncement of committees. An address of welcome to the delegates was de livered by Mayor C. A. Bank of Colum bus , and a response was made by W. p. F. Ferguson of Chicago. Planks in the I'latforsii. 1. Submission by Congress to die sev eral States of an amendment to the fed eral constitution prohibiting the manu facture , sale , importation , exportation or transportation of alcoholic liquors for beverage purposes. 2. Immediate prohibition of the liquor traffic for beverage purposes in the Dis trict of Columbia , in the territories and in all places over which the national govern ment has jurisdiction , the repeal of the internal revenue tax on alcoholic liquors and the prohibition of interstate traffic therein. 1 o. Election of United States Senators ' by direct vote of the people. 4. Equitable graduated income and in heritance taxes. 5. Establishment of postal savings hanks and the guaranty of deposits in banks. G. Regulation of all corporations doing an nitrestate business. 7. Creation of a permanent tariff com mission. j 8. Strict enforcement of law instead of j the official tolerance and practical license J of the social evil which prevails in many j of our cities , with its unspeakable traffic in girls. 9. Uniform marriage and divorce laws. 10. An equitable and constitutional em ployers' liability act. 11. Court review of Postofnce Depart ment decision * . 12. Prohibition of child labor in mines , workshops and factories. lo. Legislation basing suffrage only upon intelligence and ability to read and write the Englis-li language. 14. Preservation of the mineral and forest resources of the country and im provement of the highways and water vays. Shop fur the Illiiul. Helen Keller has opened at Manches ter. Mass. , the first of what she expects will be a chain , of shops for the sale of the handicraft of blind workers. The display includes fine products of the loom aad various liouse furnishings. Xelsou Downs Onus. At San Francisco Joe Cans , the negro who so long had held the lightweight championship , was beaten in seventeen rounds by "Battling" Nelson. I Civil War Stories 8 Sounding Their Only iletrent. The following article , showing the /'ipid decrease of the members of the 5rand Army of the Republic , we take ! rom the Minneapolis Journal Sunday Magazine : The Grand Army of the Republic is passing in final review. The total num ber of survivors is now G20.0CO. This 3gure is obtained as follows : The last > flicial enrollment , made by the pension Luthorities at Washington. June GO , 1007 , was G14.35S. Deducting 2.500 a nonth , i'or nine intervening months , there were 22,000 dwiths. The Old Buard is dying eft" at the rate of OJ a Jay ; but the death losses for each month are often higher. In 190G , Grand Army survivors tlkd to tile num ber & of 29,208 ; and in 1907 the loss was U,201 ; for the year that closes June 1 , 190S , the death rate will be unquestiou- Ibly between 35,000 and 37,000 , if not higher. For the old soldiers of the Re public f now have reached the average age of G3. At that rate , the deaths will flj come faster and faster still ; and within ten years the noble army will be all but a memory. Had the soldiers of the Civil war not been mere lads in their teens , the Grand Army would long ere this perished from the earth. But the Union was saved literally by boys boys in their teens ; End many had not even reached their teens. Startling as this statement seems , it Is indisputably born out by the official records : There were 2,778,309 enlistments , as fallows ( : At the age of 10 and under 23 At the age of 12 and under 223 At the age of 14 and under 1,323 At \ the age of 16 and under 844S > 1 At the age of 18 and under 1,1-31,438 At the age of 21 and under 2lo9,79S Twenty-two years of age and over 018,511 Adding the number under 21 and over 22 5 that is , 2,159,798 and 618,511 the total { enrollment was 2,77Sv309. But there are some very old men in the t Grand Army of the Republic ; and that t is all the more reason why tue death t losses will be exceedingly nigh in the t years near at hand. There will come a time when the last call \will \ be responded i to each mouth by no less than t 5,000 of the brave heroes of 'Gl for I already that figure has been touched by I one-half and over , and is growing with \ alarming rapidity. It requires little argument to support the j statement just made ; and if the reader j Is of a mathematical turn of mind , let him go to the standard mortuary i tables of the life Insurance companies and determine i'or himself what ' is the expectancy of life for" men of ' the ages sot forth. Here are startling official figures pointing ' to the rapid vanishing of the Grand ( Army : r Number and age of survivors passed on ' by Commissioner of Pensions War ner ' , to June 30 , 1907. Age. Survivors. Age. Survivors. Gii i3,3Si si 1,257 03 11,0(55 ( 82 1,129 64 11,282 S3 733 Go 9,4i > 5 S4 036 GO 9,248 S3 430 07 0,811) SO 378 OS 3,201) 87 230 09 3,109 88 12T 70 , . . 8,302 89 . . . : 60 71 * . 3SS1 90 3fi 72 5,112 91 23 73 4,409 92 24 74 : . ' ,901 93 11 73 4L'5 : ; 04 8 70 3,528 95 2 77 2,490 90 5 78 2,099 97 1 79 1.7SO ! 98 5 SO 2,031 108 1 Never in the world's history , before > ur day , was a nation saved by youths In their teens. In the stirring years of Father Abraham , these boys came for ward by the tens of thousands , In re sponse to the call to arms. War expenditures reached $0,000,000- 000. During the war G7.000 were killed in battle. The records also show that 43,012 died of wounds. Disease claimed 22-1,580. And 24,772 perished from other causes. There were 280,000 wounded in bat- 'tle. Between all these dread disasters. It Is -wonder that even a remnant of the Grand Army of the Republic survives ; and it should ever be the pride and pleasure of this American Republic to remember the debt owed to the boy of 'Gl. Happily , all soldiers who have sur- rived "forty years after tlie close of > the war" ( to quote the language of the ; law" ) are now entitled to a service pension. Veterans in "The old soldier , when he Is a bachelor - 1e elor or widower , is running Into grave danger these.days of financial distress ; among the feminine portion of humanIty - iie Ity , " remarked Treasurer Bigler at the Bub-treasury to-day. He was speaking of the recent reforms adopted in paying pensions to the surviving defenders of the nation during the somewhat late : unpleasantness , whereby checks are sent to the veterans , instead of them crowding into the pension office once every three months , thereby creating no end of trouble and annoyance for the agent and his assistants. "It is not generally known among tlio 10v gentler sex that the United States government vto ernment is bound to pay a pension to the widow of a soldier. Now , a man need not to have 'been married before bea he donned the blue and shouldered a musket for his country's cause and the protection of his home. Ke has the right to marry any time , whether he be twenty-five or seventy-five , provided al- ways that he Ims no such responsibility } as a wife living. [ "One can see , therefore , where the danger to the old soldier lies. He ought to have some protection from the wiles of those who will seek to many him against his stubborn will. No retreat will be sacred from the adventurous maid who s-eeks a husband , or the widow who desires to have her maritalj relations renewed , with the prospects } of a pension for life in the somewhat ! dim and distant future. Let him secure ! for himself such seclusion as he may desire , he will be found out by the per sistency women apply when looking for what they want. " > I know of certain cases where wom en have courted aged and infirm men. whose only source of getting money for ? a livelihood comes through the pension1 agency solely for the purpose of secur ing for herself his pension when death , which appears near , takes him to thof grave. This has been so fully demon-j strated by the figures obtained at thej War Department that it needs littloj comment , for , if I am not mistaken , there are still about half a dozen wid ows of pensioners whose husbands fought in the war of the revolution. "Under the present laws this thing 1st likely to go on indefinitely. No one ) knows how many widows the government - ! ment will have to support through this arrangement. Some , of course , will bo worthy cases ; the most of them will bet of this class , perhaps , but it is a no-j torious fact that some men of ninety ; have married girls of eighteen and nineteen - , teen years. The girls , perhaps , are notj to blame for this , but those who have | an eye for the future have seen it , and ) very frequently have urged such unions. ! Now , if this were generally known ; among the women of the unscrupulous ; k4nd they would not hesitate to becomo/ / legally bound to some man , very old , who is a pensioner , and who draws anywhere - ' where from $2-1 : to $72 each quarter ) from Uncle Sam's treasure box. I do not see how the system could be im proved , but I think that there is some. way of modifying it. " Philadelphia Telegraph. Her First Speech. It was the first appearance in public of Ada C. Sweet of Chicago , United States commissioner of pensions under President Grant and one of the first women In the movement for equal po litical rights for the sexes. When the civil war broke out she was living with her parents In the village of Lombard , now a suburb of Chicago , and was chosen to present to the boys of the Lombard company a silk ilag which. the women of the place had made with their own fair hands. The literary woman of the village had wiitten for the occasion a beauti ful presentation speech , in which the soldiers were adjured to "take the fs.ir flag into which your wives , daughters and sweethearts have sewed fond hopes and tearful prayers for your safe re turn , carry it through the smoke and shell of battle free from the stain of dishonor and the rents of defeat and bear it home victorious at the end of the war. " " " Miss Sweet "that "I thought , says , I had learned that piece up and down , backward and forward , inside and out , but Q.n the great day itself , when the band ceased playing and an awful hush fell upon the crowd and every face was turned expectantly up to mine , itwas different. I opened my mouth and paused. The literary lady creaked forward in her chair and whis pered loudly , 'Soldiers of Lombard' "Thatwhisper went through me like a knife , but left me still speechless. I sot my teeth , stepped decisively forward and pushed the flag into the hands of the nearest soldier. Then I spoke. Every word of that speech had left me , but I knew what it meant. " 'Soldiers of Lombard , ' I said In a desperate voice that must have been heard to the utmost confines of the crowd , 'here's your flag. Don't get it dirty ! Don't tear it ! And be sure to bring It back ! ' "A shout rose from that crowd such as no orator before or since has ever evoked from a crowd in those parts. The first thing I knew I was riding oa the shoulders of two soldiers , while the whole company pressed about me , with waving hats , and my father was leaning over toward me from tl& bade of his big horse and calling me hl3 'own original girl , ' while the tears rolled down his cheeks with laughter. "As long as I lived In the village of Lombard I never dared to meet square ly the vengeful eyes of the literary lady who had written that presentation ; speech. " St. Louis Republic. An Anecdote of There was a characteristic incident in the early life of Colonel Ellsworth , the brilliant young lawyer who was one of the first notable victims of the civil war. His struggles to gain a foothold in his profession were attended by many hardships and humiliating priva tions. Once , finding the man he was looking for on a matter of business in a restaurant he was invited to partake of the luncheon to which his acquaint ance was just sitting down. Ellsworth was ravenously hungry , almost starv ing , in fact , but he declined courteous ly , but firmly , asking permission to talk orer the business that had brought him thither while the other went on with fho meal. The brave young fellow in telling the story in arfter years confessed that ho s-uffered positive agony at the sight and smell of the tempting food. "I could not in honor accept hospi- tallty I could not reciprocate , " was hia simple explanation of his refusal. "I might starve , .but I could not sponge. " Marlon Harland's "Complete Et > quette , "