Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, March 13, 1898, Part III, Page 20, Image 20

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    20 THE OMAHA DAILY BEU 8TTNDAT , MARCH 18 , 1808.
Progress of a Cartoon from the Artist's
Brain to the Printed Page.
LEGITIMATE LIMITS OF CARICATURE
Inlercnilnsr Talk * with Several of the
'Men ' Who Mnkp < the American
I'ulillc I.niiKli Five Xoln-
Mee nnil Their Work.
< ObpjrrlM. msir \ 8. 8. McClure Co. )
The other day I dropped In to see C. 0.
Hush , the cartoonist. Rather I dropped up ,
for Bush occupies an elevated position la the
journalistic world In these days on the
fourteenth floor. I could not help
thinking that Bush's present situation
is typical of the change that has
taken place in the relation of
pictorial art to the newspaper world. A
dozen years ago the cartoonist had no place
In dally journalism. A little later he be
gan to get an odd corner here and there
on the Inside pages , and filled It In with
funny pictures. Today the cartoonists of the
big dallies occupy offices adjoining those of
the cdltoro-lo-clilef , and their dally pictures
are the subjects of careful editorial con-
ultatlon.
foot on the window ledge looking down Into
City Hall park as ho talked.
"There , " wlj ho pointing dowu : "sed
thwio street * covered wl.h mud I Do you
know that If that mud was to dry up to
morrow and bo blown about the strccto It
would breed disease and send the death rate
up , especially among the poor tenements
of the cast tide ? Tt.ut Is a legitimate sub
ject for a cartoon.
"Of course , I don't get nil my Ideas from
observation * ; some of them arc suggested
by conversation , and even by reading the
newspaper * . Whenever a subject appeals tome
mo as sufficiently Important I sit down at
my table and sketch It out. I seldom draw
a picture over , but let It grow under my
pencil until It Is completed. "
HIS FAVORITE CARTOON.
"Whut do you consider your best cartoon
teen ? "
"That Is hard to say. For myself , I like
some of the serious cartooai , like the one
I drew on the Klondike , In which the dead
miner was shown rtlll reaching out after
the gold. But tvjme of the more humorous
ones are , perhaps , better known , the thomaa
cat cartoon of Platt , for Instance.
" 1'U' telt you how I came to think ot that
curtoon. It was at a time when Platt had
gone up to Albany , supposedly In the In
terest of certain legislation. Depew waa on
his way home from Europe. Tliero was a
play running In one of the theaters Ju/it
then called 'Charley's Aunt , ' and It was ad
vertised by a lithograph of a cut , with the
caption , 'Don't do anything until you have
econ "Charley's Aunt. " ' I worked Plait's
likeness Into the thing , and changed the
legend to 'Don't say anything until you
have seen Platt. ' The thing made a hit , and
I don't think that It offended Mr. Platt ; In
w3AV I
.
"BUSH" BY HIMSELF.
When Bush left the New York Herald lo
accept service with the World it was a mat-
.ter of gossip along Newspaper row that the
glittering magnet which drew him there was
yearly salary of J15.000. Whether he
actually receives this amount Is , perhaps ,
known , only to Mr. Bush and hU employer ;
but It Is undoubtedly true that ho Is paid
a good deal moro then most newspaper edi
tors and several times as much as any car
toonist -would have dared to hope for a tow
years ago.
The man who has made so many famous
Americans laughable la not Imprceslve In his
personal appearanco. He Is a llttlo man
with a gray mustache , twlnkllns blue eyes
and : a head that I * saved from being bald
-on top only by a few bristly gray hairs. He"
has a nervous manner , and a face that shows
his 60 ycara and the hard work that has bcco
required to put him where ho Is today ; but
ho U a boy at heart , like every genuine
humorist. Perhaps It Is a llttlo unfair to
describe Bush ua a humorist , for some othle
best cartoons have been of a serious- nature ,
and ho himself told me that he viewed his
art In a wholly crtous light. Still , the
term cannot fall to fit the man who mode
that ridiculous , yet thoroughly good-natured
"thomas cat" picture of Platt.
BUSH'S IDEAS ON HIS ART.
"My Idea of a cartoon , " said Bush , pushing
aside hl drawing table , "la that It should
tell a story , and tell It so clearly as to make
the addition of any printed explanation un
necessary. Above all , If It Is to be effective ,
U must bo true , and It must Illustrate a
point BO familiar to the newspaper reader
that ho will appreciate Its truth at once. To
WVBUT THIS PBCTURE 'AND SEB HIS
SON.
my mirjJ , a cartoon fchould b an editorial.
If It has point , it undoubtedly does Influence
opinion , end U ought to do co. It U gen
erally admitted that people do not read the
editorial page as carefully as formerly , that
U la usually the last sheet In a newspaper
to receive atteutlon. They nnven'l time , or
think they haven't. But everybody has tlmo
for a picture. It can bo taken In at a glance ,
and If It Is true It will atlck In the memory
as no printed column over dofj. "
"What da you consider the legitimate
limits of cit'tooulug ' ? "
"Truth , " said Mr , Bush , sen tenuously.
"If a public official Is lax In'hU duty or
corrupt , or If hl policy is.oppojod to that
of the newspaper. It U ua Just to call at
tention -to that In u picture as In a printed
editorial. I do not believe in hard , unjust
cartoons or In caricature * that hold a pri
vate person up to unfair rldtaile. If a cartoon
teen to funny U should be good-humored
fun , and I have never found that the men
who are the subjects ot cartoons object tote
to to. There 1 * a great difference , you know ,
between a cartoon and an cxacgeratcd
comic. "
"Whore do you get the Ideas for your
pieturwr
Air. Buak * * 4 tee * UMUac wife WM
fact , ho has the original of the cartoon In
bis possession.
' 'Mr. Platt. by the way , " cald Bush , "Is
an excellent subject for the pencil. He has
a strong face , the prominent features of
which can be readily seized upon and repro
duced. Now , State. Senator Gwdy , the
Tammany orator , has a face like a round
rosy apple , and It Is hard to make a dis
tinctive picture of him. "
"When you .take . up a new subject how
do you treat him ? "
"Well , I study the man , or else hla per
trait , und then I endeavor to emphasize the
prominent and charactohUU ; features of.his
make-up. When I have once drawn a man
his face always remains In my memory , and
I never need a photograph In order to re
produce It afterward. That la a special fac
ulty , I suppose ; at any rate U Is the fact In
my case.
"I think the wt of cartooning haa Im
proved greatly In Its technique in the past
few years. The first newspaper cartoons
wore In reality only exaggerated comics , bus
now the cartoonist must bo a good draughts
man. The cartoon at the present time is
more dignified than formerly , and has less
of the element of rough < urlcature ; cartoonIng -
Ing has , Indeed , become a special and Im
portant field of art. "
Since the retirement of Nast and the
death of Joseph Keppler and Glllam , Bush
Is the oldest of the prominent American car
toonists. Young Keppler and Dalrymple of
Puck , Hamilton and Victor Glllum of Judge ,
Davenport and most of the others are close
to the thirty-year mark. They are an aarn-
est , enthusiastic , good-natured lot of fel-
Jowa , who are too busy with their work to
cultivate iho artists' eccentricities of long
hair and frayed coat-collara. They are bet
ter trained than most otthe early cartoon
ists , too , and are well fitted to 'carry on the
art established by those earlier workers.
DALRYMPLE OF PUCK.
"The first cartoon I ever made , " said
Louis Dairyinplo , whose pictures form one
of the moat entertaining features ot Puck ,
"waa printed in a paper called the Prairie
Chief , out in a llttlo initials town. . Draw ,
ing had always been second nature with
mo , and during the heat ot a local cam
paign I made a cartoon of a democratic
politician , who was -prominent in tbe
county. The Prairie Chief waa a demo ,
cratlc paper , but Its editor disliked the
subject of my sketch so cordially that ho
wont to Chicago , had it engraved on wood
and prloteJ It In his piper. That set me
off. I reasoned that If the Pralrlo Chief
would publish my pictures I would be all
right If only I could make my way to New
York or Philadelphia. So I went to the
latter city with a big roll of cartoons under
my arm aad made .fjo round o { the news
paper offlcsi. The editors were interested ,
but skeptical , until finally I struck the
shset callel the ChrMl-lo-Tlmcs , whlh WBA
then run by a man r.amoj Daly , an eccen
tric Individual , but a fine old Irhih gentle-
nwn. Ho was fighting the city government
tooth und r.nll nud ho took me up and
printed ray pictures. So far as I know that
waa the beginning of newspaper cartooning
In tLls coun ry.
"I think. " continued Mr. Dalryraple , "lint
tbo American sense of humor Is becoming
moro and mere ref-tisfl. and ttiat cartoom
are becoming moro dignified. I dcu't be
lieve that anybody nowadays can make a Cilt
by lerrcaontlnir a president of the United
Sttaca In the guise of a hog. The people
have a pride In the office- and person of
tlelr chief magistrate- which they don't
wl.ih to see insulted. Thiii doesn't apply
so much to political brssej or to men who
aie looked upon merely as politicians , but
In general my observation has been that
harsh , vindictive cartoons are not relished.
" .My conception of a political cartoon Is
that It is a political argument. It has a
serious purpose , but it It can be presented
with some clement of humor so much the
better. I get many of my subject * from
political editorial ! , or from toy own knowl
edge of the existing political situation.
"For Instance. thU picture of Croker's
Thanksgiving dinner" picking up a color
sketch that Uy on the table "corresponded ,
I think , to the situation- It stood at the
time. Platt , having been ( beaten , was in a
position where he would toe grateful for even
a , few crumbs. I worked this 13ea out one
afternoon , and , as you eee , the first sketch
do i not differ materially from the pub-
picture ot oounw I chugo my
pictures from the first drawings , but uiualty
I start out with tome central * figure , , aad
work out the acctisorlc * a * 1 go along
until the thing In finished. "
HAMILTON'S NOTEBOOK.
"Jt's hard to tell where I get my Ideas. "
said Grant S. Hamilton , the head of Judge's1
art staff. "I carry a little notebook about
with me , and whencvcrl I sec a subject that
A LI3A.F FROM HAMILTON'S NOTK
'BOOK. ' ( THE G'EItM ' OF JUDGE'S CARTOON -
TOON , "M'KINLEY'S VALENTINE. " )
aeems to have possibilities I Jot It down lor
future refcreace. "
Mr. Hamilton drew from bis pocket a little
book , the pages at which were filled with
all sorts of sketches , diagrams and noted.
"Hero , " ho said , es ho turned the leaves
rapidly , "Is one of my jottings. I was rid
ing down en the L train one morning , when
my eye lighted on a heading In a news
paper , something about Speaker Reed readIng -
Ing the rules of the house. That stuck In
my mind.
" 'Reed reading , ' I said to myself. 'Can't
I make something of that ? ' and I sketched
out this llttlo drawing , giving a rough repre
sentation of Reed's face formed from the
writing. A few weeks ago I was running
over my book , and the thought came to mo
that I might work In the president and use
Reed's picture as McKlnley's valentine. I
did so and the picture was published In tha
middle of February. The finished picture
and this first sketch Illustrate the ordinary
process of development that my cartoons un
dergo.
dergo.AN
AN ODD DOUBLE-FACE PICTURE.
"Several ycara ago J was In a hotel down
In Asbury Park , when I saw one of those
Englishmen whoso faces are to an American
as funny as any comic picture. Ho wore
a monocle and a llttlo black skull cap on
top of his bald head. Ho had Just a littel
fringe of Imlr on his head and a beard that
was carefully parted and brushed. As I
looked at that man I thought to myself ,
'Supposing ho had a son , what would the
son be like ? ' In a spirit of fun I drew a
picture which , when turned upside down ,
gave fcomo Idea of what the son might be
like.
like."I
"I had that In mind for two or three
years , determined to use It when occasion
offered. I did use It a few weeks ago , at a
time when Platt and Croker were supposed
to bo working with the eamo Interests In
view , representing them In the two faces.
"It's a peculiar thing that wo never can
tell whether a particular picture will make
a hit or not. or whether It will sell a single
extra copy of the paper. Some of those that
wo Ilko the least take best with the public.
I have noticed that , In general , good-natured
cartoons are better received than those that
are moro severe. It Is true also that the
cartoon In which the point Is most obvious ,
the one that can be taken In at a glance ,
Is usually best received. This applies to
educated as well as uneducated people. People
ple turn to a cartoon for relaxation. They
don't want to study oa It , and if it Is too
complicated they are likely to inlss the
point. Sometimes , too , a thing that seems
very obvious to the artist doesn't strike the
comprehension of the public. "
KEPPLER , THE YOUNGER.
Young Mr. Keppler , who has succeeded
hla father on the etaff ot Puck , Bald to me
the other day : "I believe that we are grad
ually , perhaps unconsciously , developing a
distinctively American school of cartooning/
Thomas Nast and my father followed foreign
models to a certain extent. Their work
showed their study of the Italian 'school.
Later cartoonists have gone forward from
their beginnings and are developing Ameri
can standards lor tha art. "
Mr. Keppler Is a serious-minded young
man , whose bcylsh face bears already the
stamp of maturity , and who looks out on
the world through a pair of colored glasses.
He has had a thorough art training , and Is
perhaps the best posted man In the country
on the history and development ot cartootv-
Ing In this country. Ho Is well qualified to
sustain the prestige which has descended
"ORTTINQ IDEAS" BUSH'S I3KBTCH OK TH'B ' CATlTOaVIST AT WORK.
to him with his name ; In fact , he Is doln ?
ED week by week In the pages of Puck.
A young man nho h a come out of th (
west and has startled tbo metropolis more ,
than ever by his bold caricatures Is Mr. '
Homer Davenport. Davenport Is ono of tbo
men made famous by Mark .A. Harms , for
ho was comparatively unknown until his
cartoons of the Ohio statesman began to ap
pear during the last presidential campaign.
"I got the Idea for my original Hanna
cartoon , " said Mr. Davenport , "from , the prev
alent association of Mr. Hanna with the
campaign barrel during that fight. I stud
ied his physique and dress carefully , and
emphasized certain features which , as I bo-
lleved , brought out his characteristics. J ,
believe that a cartoon Is Ilko a lawyer's ar
gument. Intended to score a point on ono
sldo or another of a case , and If it docs that
it Is successful. " EAUL W. JEAYO.
Iliitv 4o < irt a Itojr Hnck Iivto a Pen.
A Denver man , relates the Times , his dis
covered a plan to get a hog back into a pen
through the aperture through which It passes
out. Ills recipe In eubstanco Is : Get the
nose at the hole In the pen , then pass around
behind the hog c&refully , get hold of its tall
and pull back as hard an you can. The ani
mal will think you want to prevent It from
going In and make a leap to its old place.
llucklvB'iArnica Salve.
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NAL
History of the BMnnd'ltoeBenefits of Its
Operation.
01 M -
LITEKARY PIRACY ON THE WANE
Steady arow h In ithc LUt of Amer
ican WarkV Indlnar t'lnce In
the Cnfal < ika < Ni of Kor-
J'nhll hm. .
The fact that 'a ' copyright syatera had
boon lo effort for some years In Europe.
wrltca Qcorgo Havea Putnam In the Inde
pendent , and that Its results , while bringing
juotlco and satisfaction to authors , had , ! a
place of imposing Increased taxes upon the
general public , resulted In substantial ad >
vantages to the buyers ot b ki3 and ot
music , was , of course , of material eervlco In
connection with the efforts to brlns the
United States Into copyright relations with
the rest of the civilized countries. Thcso
efforta may be said to have been begun In
1837 , when , under 'the Initiative of the late
Occcgo Palmer Putnam , the first Interna
tional copyright association was organized In
this country. Something moro than half a
century was required before It proved prac
ticable to bring to bear upon congressmen a
prcnsure of enlightened public opinion suffi
cient to convince congress 'that the reform
waa one desired or required by their constit
uents. The act , which Is known as the Inter
national copyright law , bears date March 4 ,
1891 , and wont Into effect on the first of
July In the same year. The act did aot con
stitute a new statute , but comprised simply
amendments to certain sections of the slat-
ute relating to copyright which had been In
FVance ultice July , 1S70.
The most Important changes In the law
were as follows : First , Us provisions , pre
viously limited to the works of authors
( under which term I Include for conveni
ence artlats and composers ) , who were "res-
Idento of the United States , " were extended
to cover the proJuctlons of non-residents ,
on the condition that the country of which
such nou-resldent was a citizen should con
cede to American authors similar privileges.
Second , all editions of the works copyrighted
must bo entirely manufactured In the United
States. This provision Imposed a. new re
striction upon American authors , who had
1 previously been at liberty to have their
books manufactured on the other side of
the Atlantic. The manufacturing provision
did not apply to music or to higher class
art productions. Third , the book , to secure
American copyright , must be published in
the United States not later than the date of
Its publtcAtbn In any other country.
LITERARY RECIPROCITY.
The provisions of the act became operative
between 'tho United States and any foreign
state only when the president had made
announcement , by proclamation , that the
necessary conditions of reciprocity had been
fulfilled by such state. The proclamation of
July 1 specified that the act was In force
with Great Britain , France , Switzerland and
Belgium. Slnco that date the following
countries have also boon brought within the
operations of the act : Germany , Italy , Portugal
tugal , Spain , Denmark , Mexico , Sweden and
Norway.
The most Important direct results of the
new copyright policy of the nation were
naturally to to looked for in the literary re
lations between the United States and Great
Britain , relations' which the supporters of
International popyrlKht naturally had par
ticularly In vlqw. rHefore the act of 1891
the moro roputab'lo of the English publish
ers who were not willing to "approprlato"
American books. ' > , voro deterred from arrang
ing for authorized editions by the certainty
that , If the books found favor with the
English public , ' "piracy" editions would
promptly appear. Daring the lait ten years
there has betn a steady increase In the pro
portion of American" titles finding place In
the lists of thotteadlng English publishers ,
while there has also been a noteworthy de-
vejopment In , th extent and In the Impor
tance of the publishing done in Great
Britain by American 'firms having branch
houses In London. It Is evident , therefore ,
that satisfactory arrangements are now be
ing made with American authors for their
English editions and that there must be a
substantial Increase .In the returns from
such editions. It Is probable , nevertheless ,
that these returns from England are still
Ices considerable than bad been hoped lor.
Not a few authors who had assumed that
the lack of International copyright was the
only obstacle that prevented a transatlantic
success have learned that there are other
dlmcultles In thesway. The English public
Is ccnmrvatlvo In Its tastes and In ita con-
Ictlsiis. Scholarly readers are not easily
to IK ) convinced of , the scholarly trustworth
iness or of the distinctive Importance of
books coming "fron the states , " while in
light literature and particularly In the average -
ago fiction the iuppljrs from English pens
are more than sufficient to meet the de
mands ,
FOREIGN SALES.
In the case , however , of an American
book which secure * , ( or Itself what may be
called a comminalufT Interest , the receipts
from England now constitute a very sub
stantial factor Indeed la the commercial
value of the production , end the fortunate
author has added to. his reading public a
circle sometimes Almost equal to that se
cured In the hoinp country. American au
thors whoso names have become known In
Eng'and are beginning alto to secure some
receipts from Paris , Leipzig , Berlin and
Stuttgart , although for some years to come
such continental returns must be but in
considerable.
A very noteworthy case ( the first that bai
arisen since the German-American treaty of
1831) ) has recently been decided In Stuttgart.
The work In question was Wallace' * "Prince
ot India" and the plaintiffs were the London
representatives of Harpers. The court de
cided that the unauthorized German edition
of the work , concerning which the complaint
was made , must be ruppresaed , and that the
return * from the salea secured must bo ac
counted tor to iho owners of the Wallace
copyright. The cage pouegsea continued
Importance as evidence that the provisions
of the treaty are In line with the condition *
of the copyright law of Germany.
Tue writers of American fiction have been
Able to aosuro from American publishers
RIDPATH'S HISTORY
Sweeps the Whole Circle
Many homes bonst n ROOI ! history of Kiitflnnd , of Ourutnnjr , or of France. Most Intellectual families posses * n aooj
history of the United Static. But how many own n relluulu UlHtory of Hawaii , of the Jnnnuctia or of the I'lillllppln *
IslllllllLTS ?
T'JFAC and nil other nations ami wees have their true measure taken In niilpnth'a Brent History of tbo World.
What Is more , yon form clear ami more Just IdiMs ot each nation by vluwlim them all arranged In their true rela
tions to eaeh other. The pictures , tuo , ot which thetc are nearly four thousand , greatly aid the mind as well as pleat *
the eye.
The set comprises elpht massive volumes , and Is spiling country-wide toJay for double the price at which w *
arc selling them to members of the Megcath History Club.
Membership Fee One Dollar
We deliver the complete , set at once.
Members agree to make llfteeu monthly payments first payment thirty days after joining for the cloth-bound ,
? 1.0 a mouth ; for the half Uussla by far the more desirable and attractive-$12.00 a month ; for sumptuous full Mo
rocco , $ -.50 11 month. '
Members may resign within ton days , and their payments will bo returned.
Megeath Stationery Co
Enclosed find $1.00 for membership in tne History
Club. Send set to address below. I agree to pay
balance in 15 monthly payments.
The eight Imperial octavo volumco contain in round figures 0,500 double column pages , the equivalent of about 65 ordinary volumes.
Nearly 4,000 engravings , reproductions , maps , chronological and race charts and diagrams , many ot them In colors , Illustrate the text
and constitute the most expensive art galery of history ever gathered together.
The type Is large and well spaced , the printing even and clear , the paper clean and super calendered and the. bindings handsome and
substantial.
Write urn for 40-pnire boo It of Hpeclmen pnuo anil Illustration * , mnns , chnrtB , etc. free.
MEGEATH STATIONERY CO. , Omaha.
a larger measure of favorable attention than
was possible when their volumes had to
compote with editions of English stories
that had not been paid for , and tbo re
moval of this unequal competition must
have proved of decided advantage to Ameri
can novelists , and especially to the newer
writers. It happened that during the two
or thrco years Immediately succeeding the
passage oJ the law the English novcllot suc
ceeded In producing work ot more distinctive
interest for readers on each side ot the At
lantic than was brought before the public
by their American ) competitors. A group of
noteworthy books secured an immediate and
continued sale on each side of the Atlantic
and brought to their authors substantial
returns. American fiction writers were in
clined during this first term ot years to a
feeling of disappointment in regard to the
benefits accruing to them 'from the interna
tional arrangement. They wore later , how
ever , able to take the more sensible view
that when the two reading publics from
cither side of the Atlantic were practically
thrown into one , when reviews and personal
comments about books found their way freely
across the Atlantic , each writer could de
pend upon securing the public that fairly
belonged to him. National prejudices and
national boundaries would count for less
and less. It was a fair field with no favor ,
and American literary workers , with a legiti
mate ambition and with any tense ot fair
ness , could ask for nothing -more. There
have been produced during the last two or
three years a group of American romances
which have constituted sufficient evidence
that American novelists are fully able to hold
their own. The authors of stories which
have secured such general acceptance as has
been accorded to "Soldiers of Fortune , "
"Hugh Wynne" and others , have helped to
make evidence that international copyright
was of service American no less than to
( British authors.
SOME DISAPPOINTMENTS.
The disappointment with the law has
mainly come from lower-grade writers on
both sides of the Atlantic , who had Indulged
themselves in the belief that international
copyright was going to secure an extended
remunerative sale in two markets for 'books '
which had failed to obtain any substantial
measure of success In one. . It Is as if a man.
doubtful about his ability to read , should
complain to the optician fbecauso " such ability
did not como to him with the" purchase of
spectacles. The English authors in particular
had Indulged themselves with visions of
" 65,000,000 American readers , " and bad been
too ready to assume that as soon as their
returns from the American market were as
sured by law , these returns would also be
counted by millions.
It Is probable , although on such a point
exact statistics are not within reach , that
there has been an actual decrease in sup
plies taken from England for American
readers of the lower grade of fiction. There
had. In fact , never been any natural de
mand in America for English fiction ot this
class , anil It had been purfeyed or "appro
priated" chiefly In order to supply material
for the weekly Issues of cheap "libraries. "
These "libraries" came to an end with inter
national copyright , and the lessening ot the
supplies of this class of literary provender
may bo considered as ono of the direct gains
to bo credited to the law.
Authors , both English end American , have
today the satisfaction that they are able to
place their books before their readers wild
a correct and complete text. Previous to 1891
English bookn had to be reprinted on what
was called the "scramble system. " It was
found not practicable to give to the print
ing of the authorized editions sufficient time
and supervision to insure a correct typog
raphy , whtlo the unauthorized Icsuca were
not Infrequently , either through curclessnrai
or for the sake ot reducing the amount and
the cent of the material , eerlously garbled.
Ttio transatlantic author , who was then
helpless to protect himself , can now , ct
course .arrange to glvo at his leisure an
"author's reading" to bis proofs.
I recall ono Instance of a popular Ameri
can story which , In a season prior to 1891 ,
was appearing as a serial In a New York
weekly paper .Flvo or elx Engllnh "reprint-
era" were putting the story Into type from
week to week on the Instalments reached
Great Britain , with the view of Issuing the
complete book Immediately after the receipt
ot the last pages of the text. One enterpris
ing Scqtcb publisher got the better of his
English competitors by having the final chap
ter of the story ( the chapter which the Amer
ican author bid planned to contain the
conclusion and the moral ) written by a
Scotchman employed for the purpose. Ho
waa able by this device to bring his volume
tate the market a week before tbo appear
ance ot tbo other a.ually unauthorized re-
prints , the publishers of which had Intendoj
to make their editions substantially com
plete.
GOSSIP AI1OUT .YOTUU 1MSO1U.I2.
The most Influential personage In Spain
during the present momentous crisis of Its
fortunes Is the queen regent , Maria Chris
tina. She is by birth an Austrian grand
duchess , a daughter of the Archduke Karl
Ferdinand and his second wife , the Arch
duchess Elizabeth. She was conspicuous In
her youth for beauty and amiability , and
haa shown during her < carccr in Spain that
she possesses keen intelligence and sobriety
of Judgment the best trails of the Hapa-
burg Lorraine house.
This year , for the first time , the celebra
tion of General Grant's birthday at Galena
will be marked by a memorial address de
livered by on ex-confederate , Judge Emory
Speer of Georgia , who thus answered the In
vitation sent to him : "I do not hesitate to
accept the invitation , and If I can give any
adequate expression of the carefulness and
honor with which the renown of that great
American Is cherished by his countrymen
who dwell in the southern states I shall be
happy indeed. " Judge Bpccr went Into the
confederate army at the age of 16 , and served
in the Fifth Kentucky regiment , which was
part ) of the famous Orphan brigade , under
the command of General ( afterward chief
Justice ) Lewis of that utate.
Fremiet , the French * culptor , has com
pleted 'the model for the colossal etutuo of
Ferdinand de Leceepp , which the Suez Canal
company ts to erect at Suez In memory ot
the French engineer. The statue will be
nearly ( twentyonefeet high ; It will repre
sent De Lessepa standing , draped in the
camel skin "burnous" which he was fond
a ! wearing In Egypt ; in the left hand he
hold * a plan unrolled , and with his right
is pointing to tbo entrance of the canal.
The statue will tie placed on a pedestal ,
ornamented with a large medallion and pro
file bas-reliefs of the khellvcg who aided
De Leteepg' work.
Miss Wlllard left only $17,000 , most ot It
In real estate ; the protatlng of her will re
moves all possible foundation for -tho always
Improbable rumor that this generous woman ,
who was forever giving away her money to
causes , bad accumulated a fortune. She
bought little real estate , whlh M now
'
worth $16,000 , and there will DO only $1,000
In money for her companion of many years ,
Miss Gordon. U Is fitting that her house
In Evanston , 111. , should revert to the
Women's Christian Temperance union , and
doubtlcsu that society will ultimately pre
serve the house as a memorial.
Claude Monet , the Impressionist artist , who
lives in the picturesque village ot Glvcrny , In
Normandy , is thus described by a corre
spondent of tbo Boston Transcript : "Monet
Is now a wealthy man. but the house ho haa
enlarged Is quite like that of the surrounding
peasants ; white plaster , with a red-tiled roof ,
narrow and low and long ; so long that It is
In Its length only that It shows Its superior
ity over Its neighbors ; for his family Is
largo. But though the house Itself Is sim
ple , the glory of it 1s In Its garden , and this
Is truly superb. Personally , lie la an inter
esting-looking man of about CO , strong and
rugged , thoiype of a refined peasant , and It
Is that that his clothes designate him to bo , for
ho wears the big , clumsy wooden sabots of
tha country , combined with the finest linen ,
with hemstitched ruffles at neck and wrists. "
Captain Silas Capcy , commandant of the
League Island navy yard , who has become
ranking captain In the navy , was graduated
from the United States Naval academy In
18GO , and was a master In the navy \\hen
the war broke out. From 1870 to 1873 ho
was on tbo Colorado , then attached to the
Asiatic nquadron. He was in command of
the battalion of sailors from the fleet In- the
Corean expedition and the axsault on Fort
McKee , Seoul river , In June , 1872. Since
that time ho has held many Important places.
Defore talcing command of the League Island
navy yard he was captain on board Admiral
SIcard's flagship , the New York. All told ,
Captain Casey's actual ica service covers a
period of nineteen years and nine months ,
three years and ono month ot which were
under his present commission.
It Is stated that there are now In the
United States 1,187 religious newspapers and
periodical ! with an average circulation of 12 , -
5CG copies thJ lotal aggregate amounting
to 14,91C,921. U may bo truly tuld that tha
religious prchd may always be found on tie
sldo of law , order Add public morals Mveil
M religion.
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