dm v * \ ' »*"•<»KW, ̂ * -/ <1 ^/y>W,\; *HK I*OET OF THIS rl.Tl'RG. | . . » T M u s s w w r w o M » K & B * r % •'^ Oxe poet of the fntu&T; oomes • . lie will com* to at as WUHM .•».•• f&Tsfco beaut y of the budfe** vofi» afco**-the roar ass ... • of drum*-- |«» beauty of the bugle's voice above the roar Mid din tfcOt battle drums that poise the time the victor £»• marches in. ?tfS< ®« hands will hold no harp, in sooth-; his lifted hww vlU bear % 3Kto coroiift of laurel--nay, Bitot, Symbol any- . where, flaw that hie palms are brothers to the tollers fiS-. st the plow, v :Hla Caoe to Heaven, and the dew of duty on his fctow. , We will sing across the orchard, Mid the woman ,y at the wall %U1 st ay the dripping bucket with a smile in effable; ' And the children in the orchard will gase wist- ;i ; fully the way ^'TOfcelieppy song comes to them, with the fra- „• j grauce of the liay. ' Tbo barn -will neigh iu answer, Mid the pasture ' r lauds behind ' • W i l t chime with bells, and send responsive low- a|V'^'X lags down tbe wind; • ••- jf^e' -And all the echoes of the wood will jubilantly - coil , li# ' Ma. sweetest mimicry of that one sweetest voice ' of all. J $%> th© poet of the future! He will come as man t ' 'f ' to man. ' ^WKt.h the honest arm of labor, and the honest ; face of tan, iThe honest heart ot lowliness, the honest foul >\ f - of love &•„,••:}?.:'"Wor human kind and nature kind about him and above. brow will bear tio coronet of laurel--nay, nor symbol any where. Save that his palms are brothers to the toiler's at the plow, -Sis face to Heaven, and the dew of duty on his *" brow. ' ' % / HE LOVED AND LOST. ,1 *. *" inr JAMBS RjUiRUM nm . ' The late Doctor Nicholas Fay was a toerfeetly original character. Fate and portune had been kind to him, provid ing him with wealthy and distin guished ancestors. He inherited their great worldly possessions; their gentility eamc #'s e to him as a matter of coarse, after "their centuries of good breeding; his ^eccentricities, if they were congenital *nd not acquired, dated so far back in th*} blood that they could not be traced. He studied medicine and pretended to practice it, because it was in the family traditions that its members should do something useful in the world; and ,;.§eith his decided aptness for the profes- tion9 nothing but what he facetiously Called his Jack of poverty prevented Jus making a grand success in it. As it %»•«, he was a doctor when he was com pelled to be one; he obeyed professional «alls sparingly and reluctantly, but whenever he was forced or coaxed to the tiedside of suffering, the skill and. , ^knowledge with which the case was ' ifcneated uniformly added to his fame, •; fend increased the demands upon his .time and efforts. He appears here at 45. . "I solemnly declare," he said one day to a friend, "this ridiculous doc- fr toring business that my good , father compelled me to learn, is getting monotonous. The people really ;• seem to expect me to get up out of a ^ Warm bed of nights to attend to their \ . pilments--and to keep on visiting them L-; 1 till they get well. If you'll believe it, jjsfj, jFw* only dined Out five times in two =weeks! This won't do. Til break up liere to-morrow and go to Saratoga, be- MjyJ ifore I get to be a confirmed drudge. i„ *» Dr. Brett will take care of my cases. fg - * The Lord and he help the poor creatures II though!--but I can't lead this kind of pi,' life any longer. I was made for society, P^V «&nd I am wronging myself and it by • this plodding." Those who were best acquainted with the man would hardly ft j have credited him with force ^ v of character enough to make ffc such a determination--or to execute it when made. But he did; that is, so *&}'> far as fate, circumstances, or what you iff , please, permitted. His bachelor estab- ; !lishment was turned over to the care of r^e Ms competent housekeeper, his trunks |£'. were packed, and 9 o'clock of the next -morning found him on his front steps, A*, waiting impatiently the arrival of the -hack that was to take him to the train. H'.'-: If I were telling a story, instead of ^ wlating plain matters of fact, g£* tliis would be the proper place ^ for flowery comments upon that moment as the turning-point of Dr. Fay's life. As it is, I have merely to tell what occurred. jjw£, A young girl came flying rather than m. naming down the street, her hands . wringing, her beautiful face pale as death. She stopped in front of the doc- tor's steps, and calling liim by name, ||,» Jbesought him with hurried and agitated |C y -speech to come to her father. |Jv . '"Perfectlyimpossible, my child," said Hv ?r* "Ingoing on a journey; here eomes the hack to take me to the pKTi-strain.* f| ; "Do come, sir," she pleaded. "He fell a high ladder, and they've brought 2iim home dreadfully hurt. O, my poor lather!". . * ^ The doctor listened, looked at the Bweet,- agitated face, and was con quered. Visions of watering-places, so ciety, and lounging disappeared to- gather; the voice of human suffering :could not be resisted. "Get into the :ha.ek with me," he said, "and we will see what can be done." In A few minutes they were in the mean chamber, where the crushed '.and mangled bricklayer lay stunned and 'dying. The girl flung herself down by him and frantically cried to the physi- *<sian to save him. "I can do nothing here, my poor girl," lie said. "Your father is dying." In fact, he died before the doctor left the house. The latter remained long enough to speak a few soothing words to ithe orphan, to slip some money into the hand of one of the neighbors who came into this scene of poverty and dis tress, and then entered the hack again. ^To the station ?" asked the driver. --home. I shan't go "to Sara toga." The man himself never confided to anybody the whole truth of this matter; out those who knew him best said that it was something besides this sudden thrusting of a black every-day misery *upon him that caused him to alter his purpose. They said that his fancy was captured by the picturesque beauty Of this child of poverty, and his compassion moved by her lonely and helpless con- edition. At all events, he surprised •them all by adopting her, and turning resolutely away from society to the energetic practice of medicine. He seemed sud denly transformed; he denied no call for help; he toiled night and day. ' Meanwhile the girl grew up in his i home, under the care of good Mrs.! ; Morris, and Dr. Fay realized a new joy ;; In the sunshine of her presence. But one day the housekeeper made a re- uaark that startled him. ^Gertrude ought to go away to school." "Away to school? Bless me, why?" "Because," said the blunt woman •who had served his mother before Mm, "*a house in which there is nobody but a halting servant, like me, and & musty, silent doctor, like you, is hardly th® place to educate a young lady/ "I never thought ot that, said the doctor, reflectively. But Mrs. Morris had already talked with the girl of the need of some such thing, and she was not only willing, but eager to go. She remained away two years. The doctor wrote frequently to her, and she replied with very dutiful and grate} ul epistles, written in a highly ornamental style of penmanship. When she sent her photograph, at the end of the first year, the doctor looked at it long and often, and Mrs. Morris noticed that he put it in his breast pocket. She observed also that ho kept her letters tied up with a blue rib bon. When at last the day came for her return, he positively declined all professional calls, and waited for her arrival. So tall had she grown, so perfectly radiant had she become in developed beauty, that the doctor was struck with amazement. He came for ward to greet the elegant ladv, and stammered in his address like a school boy. He had .determined beforehand that he would kiss her; now he did not dare to offer such a thing; but she put up her face and kissed her protector in the most natural fashion. She was run ning over with vivacity and high spir its ; she talked, laughed, and sang, witli only a word now an then from Mrs.: Morris; while Dr. Fay, the once brill iant conversationalist, did little else but follow with his eyes, and remain dumb. Long after she had retired that night he stayed in the library; and the housekeeper coming in with a letter, found him sitting back in his easy chair, his hands behind his head, and his eyes contemplating the ceiling. "I found it on the floor of the hall, sir," she said. "I can't read the address without my specs. Is it yours?" He took the letter, started as he saw the name and handwriting, and said, "yes, yes--you may leave it." When she had gone he read the letter; the en velope had been opened before. He would have condemned such conduct in another; but he could not help it. The letter was addressed to Gertrude; it was signed with a man's name; its contents plainly showed thai the two were be trothed lovers. A cruel letter for the reader! I suppose that Dr. Fay was as near being heart-broken as a man ever be-* comes. Nobody knew it from his words, but Mrs. Morris has said that he aged at least,ten years that night. But how the strong, resolute character of the man came out! A sudden, inexplicable passion for this girl had won him from frivolous idleness to the noble career of usefulness that was properly his; dis appointment, instead of souring his spirit and breaking his purpose, seemed to add to his earnestness and to increase his devotion to his profession. Gertrude was never allowed to suspect the truth. Mrs. Morris but dimly comprehended it, and maintained a discreet silence. The wedding took place in due time at this house; the doctor's congratulations were uttered heartily, and his generosity gave the young people a promising start in life. For ten years afterward, until his death, he continued to be the Good Sa maritan that his love for one woman had made him; and at his decease his will was found to give the bulk of his wealth to Gertrude. If a moral may be per mitted, I will add that the grand pas sion which has for ages wrought such havoc and ruin--in literature--is really a different and less headstrong thing than it is described. "But," some deader will say, "this was not love." Mrs. Morris thought other wise, however, when she found Ger trude's photograph beneath the dead man's pillow, and the blue ribbon that had tied her letters twisted round his fingers. "I didn't think Dr. Fay could be so silly," said the good old soul, ae «tfy» wined her eye. Was he silly ? BENJAMIN HARRISON CLETfetAND'8 SUCCESSOR fAKIS THE OATH OF OFFIC1E. , » \S> rn'mmsm BKK Fifty HtWBssnd People Throng H>« Streets of Washington to Witness the Inaugural Kxerclses--Chief JaitJos Vollsr Admfo- lsf«rs the Oath. WASHINGTON, March 4.--Benjamin Har rison took the oath of office which made him President of the United States at 12:1ft o'clock noon Monday. Th® ceremony took place on the eastern portico of th® capitol, on which were .gathered thousands of the noted public men of the country. The party stood facing the famous "Peace" monument, which seemed to rim from a black-waved ocean of umbrellas. The people surged into the plaza in front of the capitol, and as the new Prasident raised his hand from the Bible on which he swore to obey and preserve the constitution of the United States, a cheer so intense in its en thusiasm that it seemed to make "Peace" wink told the waiting thousands that the formal act of the inauguration had been completed. The artillerymen in the park west of tfie capitol answered the shout with a volley from their guns, and then President Harri son began his inaugural address. At its conclusion another volley was fired by the artillery, and at this signal the head of the- the stand, however, was free to the people, and there tiUfjr tWgan to gather lo% be fore the lionr set for the inauguration. Po sitions on the (tups of the capitol were at a premium, as were also tlie places imme diately in Iront of the grand stand. Long before noon the great plaza was filled with men and women, while in the park adjoin ing batteries were in position to boom the announcement of the fact that the new President had taken the oath of office. Still beyond Upon the streets and avenues leading to the capitol the military began to group ready to fail into position In the grand procession which was to escort the new President from the capitol to the White House. A large share of the companies were formed into processions earlier in the day and marched to the capitol grounds, the divi sions then being assigned to their positions in such manner that they might take their places in the grand procession after the oath was administered. The thousands of seats which have been erected along the avenue were filled with waiting people who preferred occupying them to make sure of seeing the procession rather than take their chances at the front of the capitol and run the risk of failing to get back to their seats to see the procession pass. MORTON 1NAITGCRATKD. . Th* Oath of Office Administered to the Tic© President. The ceremonies of inauguration began , * •MUiuiiiartn the three centra! figures of the occasion, the retiring President, the President-elect, and the Vice-Plwldent elect, remained un til the hour set lor the great event of the day, Tbe newly-elected President, who had been escorted from his temporary residence at tbe Arlington hotel by the retiring MRS. HARRISON. LTJGTJBATION OF PRESIDENT HARRISON. "The depths of the ocean lie fathoms below The surface that sparkles above." Nature's Practice or Rotation. _ It is said that nature practices a rota tion of trees, „ and that rarities are not scattered promiscuously among one an other, but usually exist in groups, mainly one species, to the practical ex clusion of others. In other words, that the undergrowth is not of the same spe cies as the larger timber, and that the undergrowth of beech ridges and elm lowlands is mainly maple, and should be preserved to become sugar bushes. Trees of this second generation, grow ing up accustomed to.all the vicissitudes of the climate, are more stocky than the first old trees, have longer tops, and appear to sustain no injury from tapping. In the older States the bushes consist of this kind of trees, and give promise to indefinite endurance. It takes quite a long time to raise a sugar bnsh, but it also takes time to raise an orchard of fruit trees. The present generation has been favored by nature, and ought to provide for posterity. Neither does it take so very long a time as might be supposed. In proof of this two instances may be cited: One where trees set out along a place twenty years ago, aud growing ever since in a June grass sod, are nearly large enough for topping; a sec- and one, where thirty-eight years ago ten acres of oak were girdled and left to fall down and rot on the ground, when the wind scattered the little winged seeds among the rotting logs, and to day the ground is covered with a dense growth of maples, with scarcely a tree of any other species. The New Department* The elevation of the Agricultural Bureau to the dignity of a department with a seat for its executive head in the President's Cabinet is of far greater im portance than may now seem. The bureau of itself has no great significance. But as a vehicle for business that over loads other departments the new execu tive branch will grow in importance. The Interior Department has far out grown proportions compatible with its greatest usefulness, and the General Land Office could very properly be transferred to the Agricultural Depart ment. So, too, with the Signal Office, which can be of greater advantage to farmers than any other class. There is also a range of service-'in the State Department that properly falls within the scope of the new department, and that is the system of collecting in formation about foreign agricultural methods and operations. This is min gled, of course, with a statistical infor mation about many other things, but to the farmer it is of the greatest value as determining the prospect of his market. This country could well afford to station a special agricultural agent at every important foreign mission. The inter- State Commerce Commission, which is classified as accessory to the Interior Department, should be related to the Agricultural Department if to any. The Secretary of Agriculture will not hav6 a sinecure.--Washington Star. grand procession swung'into Pennsylvania avenue and began the march past the capi- toL ^ Vice-President Levi P. Morton was ad ministered the official oath by President Pro Tem In galls at the bar of the Senate before the inauguration of the President. The sight of the advancing column sent the thousands who thronged the east park flying in all directions. A passage for the military was made through the crowd, and a wild scamper for places from which to view the parade began. The side streets were packed with people, many of whom could get only a glimpse of the flags car ried by the paraders on the avenue. 3/M ; EARLY KOBN1NO J8C1NI8. Pouring Rain Scarcely Dampens the Enthusiasm. Washington, which generally deeps late, was astir early. The beating of drums, the sound of bugle and fife, and the march ing and counter-marching of arriving teoops were heard all night long and the dawn of day saw Pennsylvania avenue and the (.neighboring streets busy with military and with the preparations for the events of the day. At all the centers there was with the organization of the Senate. At 10 a. m. the Senate and House had named the usual joint committee of notifi cation of the President of the readiness of the two4 houses of Congress to adjourn. The joint committee having been commu nicated with President Cleveland conveyed his answer to their respective houses that he had no further communications to make. The committee of arrangements then waited upon Mr. Morton, who was in at tendance at the Vioe-Presidence's office at the capitol. Having received their notifi cation the Vice-President-elect entered the Senate chamber by the main door. His presence having been announced by the door-keeper the Senate arose. President pro tempore Ingalls standing said: "Sena tors: The Chair has the pleasure to an nounce that the Vic 3-President-elect of the United States is in the Senate chamber and if agreeable to him the Chair will adminis ter to him the oath of office." The Vice-President-elect, having advanced to the President's dais, there took the oath prescribed by law, after which he was con ducted to a seat at the right of the Presi- pent of the Senate. That retiring officer rising, pronounced his valedictory, at the THE INAUOVBAXi BALL-ROOM. great activity. Hotels were crowded to their utmost limits; so were the apartment- houses and boarding-houses. .In the capitol and^ departments companies of troops of the various States had been given temporary quarters and daylight found the corridors of those great buildings strewn with sleep ing men in military uniform. The weather for the inauguration was miserable. Rain was falling all the fore noon, and the committee of arrangements at one time contemplated holding the cere monies in the Senate chamber, which would have eliminated one of the most interesting features of the day--the administration of the oath to the President-elect in the pres ence of the people. As the making wore on the bustle and activity incfilised. The great event of the day was not to take place until high noon, and the huge procession of 50,000 people, military and civic, would not move until near that hour. Yet by 10 o'clock the long line of seats which had been erected up and down Pennsylvania avenue began to be black with people anxious to see the spec tacular features of the day. The great mass of people of course were deprived of the privilege of witnessing the event which took pht^e inside the capitol, for but a handful compared with those who are in the city could be giv^i accommodation in the Senate chamber. At the inauguration proper, howeveir, all are permitted to see, provided they can get near enough to the grand stand to do so. At the east front of the capitol a plat form covering a half acre or more of ground had been erected and was gay with flags and bunting. On this were seats for a thousand people--Senators, Representa tives, the Supreme court, Cabinet, and other government officials, diplomates, and distinguished visitors. Admission to this was obtained only through the capitol, and the entrances to that building were care fully guarded to prevent the admission of any save those bearing the proper creden tial*. The great plasa at the east of President and the committee of arrange ments and attendant body of soldiers, en tered the Senate chamber, accompanied by his predecessor and the committee, and was shown to a seat in front of the secre tary's deek, the ex-President and member of the committee sitting on his right. The Vice-President then announced from the chair: "The sergeant-at-arms will now execute the order of the Senate relating to the inaugural ceremonies of the President of the United States." The persons in the Senate chamber then proceeded to the plat form on the eastern portico of the capitol in the following order: Marshal of the District of Columbia and Marshal of the Supreme court of the United States, ex-Presif' nt Hayes, ex-Vice-Presi dent Hamlin, the Supreme court of the United States led by Chief Justice Fuller, the sergeant-at-arms of the Senate, the committee of arrangement, the President and President-elect, the Vice-President and the Secretary of State, the members of the Senate, the diplomatic corps, the beads of executive departments, the members of the House of Representatives and Representa tives-elect, Governors and ex-Governors of States and others admitted to the floor. Upon reaching the platform on the east ern portico the President-elect, Chief Jus tice and committee of* arrangements occu pied seats on a raised dais. It was still raining and the party had to use umbrel las. The others of the distinguished par ties present in the Senate occupied seats in the vicinity. Before the stand were thou sands of people, filling the spacious plaza east of the capitol and the escorting sol diery massed in the rear, the saluting bat tery in the park and the participating sol diery and civic bodies formed in positions converging upon the plaza ready to swing into column when tbe procession moved from the capitol to the reviewing stand of the President in front of the Executive Mansion. The President, as soon as the arrange ments 6n the platform Were completed," turned facingyfhe Chief Justice, in the pres ence of thep people; the clerk of the Su preme court advancing between held an open Bible, the President resting the palm of his right hand upon the open page and repeating after the Chief Justice the oath prescribed by the constitution. Having finished the new President leaned over and kissed the' sacred book as a symbol of acknowledgment of his great trust in be half of the people and their institutions. Chief Justice Fuller then extended his hand in greeting, the Vice-President ad vanced and extended the same form of ADVISEES. COMPtCTE LIST OF vag PRESI DENT'S CABIKKT. ?mm ; BSafttkt Wlndom, Proctor, Traey, Kfa&to, Wanamaker, Miller, and Sash Comprise the List Portraits and Brief Sketches of the Distinguished Men. Hasrlson sent to the Senate on March 5th, the following nominations: >::• Secretary o/Stote-Jamel G. Blaine, of Mains. .W Secretary of the Xreamry--WilUiun Wiudoul. m Minnesota. - Serretary of War--Bedfleld Proctor, of Ver- jftont, Secretary of 0* WMy-Benjamin F. Traey. of Hew York. Secretary of the Interior^ohn W. Noble, o! Missouri. Postmatttr Oenaral--Jobn Wanamaber, of 'Pennsylvania. Attorney Oen«rol--W. H. H. Miller, of Indiana. S-'t r/ tary of AffriaUiure--Jeremiah M. hntk, ot Wisconsin. •The nominations were oonllrmed In a tsninib- ttte session of the Senate. KB 3. MORTON. s, Tfce Lucfcy Kl(ht , .James Gillespie Blaine, the Secretory of State, pas born in Pennsylvania in 1830. and on attain ing his majority re moved to Maine and b e c a m e a n e d i t o r . Here he served four years in the Legisla ture, two of them as Speaker ot the Hou^e, and in 18ta WHS elected to Congress, serving nntil In70, and being Speaker of the House from 1869 to 1874 Jn 187t> and in 1880 he was a prominent can didate for President. He was elected to the Senate in 1877. IJe served as Secretary Ktate in Garfield's Cabinet, retiring upon 'his deai h. In 1884 he vr a R nominated lor P r e s i d e n t , b u t w a s defeated by Grover Cleveland. William Window, Secretary of the Treasury for a sec ond time, was born in Ohio in 18-/7. He vraB admitted to the bar and became Pros ecuting Attorney in his native State," and in 1H53 removed to Minnesota, where he •was elected to the Thirty-sixth and the four subsequent Con gresses, taking an im portant part in the management of In dian affairs. In 1870 he was appointed; Senator to fill an iiu e x p i r e d t e r m , a n d •was afterward elect ed for two terms. He wag a candidate for the Presidential nomination in the convention of 1880, and was appointed Secretary of the Treasury in President Garfield's Cabinet. He retired at Gar field's death and was again elected to the Senate, and since the expiration of his term haB been engaged in business in New York City. : Bedfleld Proctor, the Secretary of War, has been Governor of Ver mont, and is at the hood of his party in that State. At present- he is a farmer, al though he practically controls the output of L -11 the marble quar ries of the State. " He was Chairman of the Vermont delegation t o t h e c o n v e n t i o n which nominated Harrison, and cast its vote solidly for Harrison on every ballot. General Benjamin F. Tracy, of Brook lyn, N. Y., the new Secretary of the Na vy, was born fifty eight years ago in Oswego, N. Y., stud ied law, and in 1853 was elected District Attorney of Tioga County, being re elected two years later. In 1861 he was sent to the General Assembly, and the following year re-f eruitedtwo regiments- and went to the front as Colonel of one. He served honorably through the war, afterward resuming the tice of law, and in 1876 was maae United i District Attorney for the Eastern District of New York. In 1881 he was appointed Judge of the Court of Appeals, and served one year. In I8B2 lie was an unsuccessful candidate for Jus tice of the Supreme Court of New York, and later was Chairman of the convention which Lomlnated Warner Miller for flnwnnr. tates \ To which they invite yoirr espe lenced this year with increasing salutation on behalf of the legislative co ordinate branch of the government. The moment the President placed his lips upon the Bible in response to a given signal the batteries in the park 11 red a national salute and the troops presented arms. Then the President delivered his address The Sen ate returned to its chamber and formally « *FC»~ • V» *• adjourned for the day. The committee on OO DUSlHeSS Principles 8.1 arrangements having charge of the Presi dent escorted him to the state Carriage, drawn by four horses, awaiting him at the Senate entrance. The President took a position near the head of the column, pass ing down Pennsylvania avenue to the W hite House, where he reviewed the great procession from the stand erected tor the purpose in company with a large number fi^^n^ierfe wetaVe lem in stock. Satines, Scotch ling hfms, alicoes, 3 1-2 to 14 ?nts, new styles. New Shirt- lgs, new Domestics, Carpet V^arps, Carpet Paper. We re- )r with pride to our past success Shoe deals, ass the well known |. H. Fargo & Co. .custom made conclusion of which, the great clock of the Senate pointing at the moment of meridian, he declared the Senate adjourned without day. The new President of the Senate the instant his predecessor retired from his seat took the chair. The retiring President de livered to him the ivory gavel, the insignia of the authority of the body over which he presides. The Vice-President of the United States and the president of the Senate, Mr. Morton, after a few introductory re marks, proclaimed the Senate in session by virtue of the proclamation of the President, which the Secretary of the Senate read. The newly elected Senators whose cre dentials were on file were called forward in alphabetical order in groups of four by the Secretary and the oaths of office adminis tered. 6 ' TAKING TUB OATH. Benjamin Harris un Solemnly 8wears to Support the Constitution. Senators Cockrell, Hoar, and Cullom, representing the inaugural committee, called upon Mr. Halford and upon the President-elect at 10:30 o'clock, and the finishing touches of the plans for tin? pro gram at the capitol were completed. At 10:45 o'clock, Mr. Harrison and his party took carriages and were driven to Willard's hotel, where they were to meet President Cleveland, who was to escort, according to the usual custom, his succes sor to the capitol for inauguration. The delay at Willard's was very brief; and at 11 o'clock the retiring President and the one who was so shortly to be his suc cessor were driven to the capitol, followed by a selected military guard and accom panied by the Vice-President elect. The families of President Harrison and Vice- President also followed in carriages, and on their arrival all were shown to rooms in the Senate endof the capitoL Adjoining the Senate chamber are two rooms set aside for the use of the President and Vice- President. elegantly fnrs^boW and only a Here OOTS AND the Postmaster Gen eral, is 51 years old and a native ol Phila delphia. He was gen eral Secretary of the oung Men's Chris- >an Association, and a 1861 went into the 'lothlng business. His justness prospered Ilintil now he has the argest store in Amer ica, in which the sys- f-em of profit-sharing s in successful opera- ion. Mr. Wanamaker vas a member of the i1 Centennial Hoard of finance, and has been irominent in various mblic and benevolent movements elphia. but his first marked 'as in the recent campaign. William Henry Har rison Miller,of Indian apolis, the new Attor- in Phils- political service rasElngron on any occasion of this kind. The Inaugural Ball-Room. The inaugural ball was held in the im mense interior court of the Pension Office building. It easily accommodates 5,000 people, and from 2,000 to 3,000 can dance at one time. A grander place for an in augural ball could not have been planned. nev General.is 48 years old, MBS. CLEVELAND. capitol, surrounding aad in front of I few steps from the Senate chamber. V 4 jk There is more room for gorgeous decora tion and lighting than is to be found per haps in any other building in the country. In fact there is nothing just like it in the United States. The he ght from the iloor to the roof is fully 150 feet, and with the balconies running all around jfestooning can be done that would be impossible in a hall of the ordinary height. FIB,8T sweet girl--O dear, most we invite those De Pretly sisters to our party? Mr. Nicefellow is awfully sweet on one of them. Second sweet girl-- And Mr. Richiollow is awfully sweet on the other. Let's cut them both. A NOVELTY in a timepiece is a silver dog. I'ite clock is set in his side, a red tongue wags in his open month, his tail ticks off the seconds. a native of Augus ta, N.Y., and has been the law partner of President Harrison for ten years,coming from t ort Wayne, where he had been in practice for eight years. Close relations have always existed between the President and Mr. Mil ler, Mr. Harrison plac ing great reliance on his judgment and learning. Aside from their business rela tions, tbe Harrisons and the Millers have always been the closest personal friends. Jeremiah M. Rusk, the Secretary of Agricul ture, is a native of Ohio, where he was MSB IB 1830. In 1653 he went to Wisconsin, enter ing politics by being the successful candi date for several coun ty offices. In 1862 he was a member of the Legislature, and in the same year went to the war as a • Ma jor. He served until the close of the war, and was breveted I Brigadier General for meritorious services at the battle of Salke- hatchie. In 18 and 1808 he was elected Bank Comptroller of Wisconsin, and in 1870 was sent to Con- . _ .. _ gress, where he served three terms. He after ward served three terms as Governor of Wis consin. _________--------== SENATOR VANCE, of North Carolina, is a profound student of the Bible, ana his knowledge |of the Scripture shows itself in his speeches, many phrases of "which are in Biblical language. GERMANY is all right. She didn't suppose America had any rights or any sand, and as soon as she discover ed her error she backed down like a polished gentleman. AN authentic silver dollar of the Confederate States is valued by coin collectors at $1,000. Only a few were coined before the Confederate mint ran <aut of silver. MIBTH'S *AOTC TTAm How to signal a bark--pull a dog*« tail.--Texas Sifting9. THE most accurate weather report is the thunder-clap.--Boston Bulletin. "BOAB© wanted!" yelled a man who fell off * lumber schooner into the river. * A FORTUNATE fall--Falling heir to n$. fortune. -- Pittsburgh Chrorticle-Telei^ gram. A MAN is like a drum in that he isn't of much good after his head is busted. , --Danville Breeze. THE lobster is a fish that never ap pears on the table without getting red th the face.--Bochester Post-Express} THE Salvation Army now has a new song, the refrain of which is "There are no flies on Jesus."--New York Mercury. "EAT with judgment," says a learned!' physician. Most people, however, continue to use their jaws.--Boston Post. A NEW YOBK cigar dealer refers to aj^ cousin who runs a restaurant in Hart-o ford as a "Connecticut filler. --Yonkern Statesman. > -'l "IT'S jnst my luck," said a Harlem , man who was tossed by a steer yester day. "I never could take more than one horn without being upset." J FBOM a' monetary standpoint, thfif man who gets $50,000 with his firsts, wife may be said to have married a-goin. -- Glens Falls Hepublhcani ~ x t SHE isn't an angel, ' ' She isn't a goddess, She isn't a Uly, a rose, or a „ Shei's Bimply what's sweetest, • *-y, Gompletest and neatest, A dear little, queer little, sweet Jittttrgirl, g? "You are a highwayman," exclaimed!^ an irate citizen to a short coal-dealer J ̂ 3 "Qh, no, I'm not," was the pleasant reif, ply, "I'm la low-weigh man."--Wash* ington Critic. ^ A LAST summer watering-place oorre^. spond&nt wrote that very few bathers^ lathed at the West End," to which Mrs. Partington answered that she "had! an idea they bathed all over. '} BOARDER--This tea seems very weak, * Mrs. Skimp? Landlady--It must be; the warm weather we have been hav ing. I feel weak myself. In fact,:. everybody has been complaining. "WANT to buy some real estate?" "Yes." "To built on?" "At once." "Well, here's a nice little piece of land "OhI that wont do--a little land; I want a lot."--Chicago Ledger.-' A NEWPOBT chemist analyzed a woman's tongue a few days ago. He found it composed almost wholly of an irawearoutable material called in Latin "everlastingo."--Kentucky State Jour nal. "MINNIE has been to see me to-day," said little flve-vear-old, "and she be haved like a lady." "And I hope you did, too," said her mother. "Yes, in deed I did; I turned somersets for her on the bed." MRS. DE TEMPEB--Well, I declare! And so you are as old as my husband ? Why, you look twenty years younger. Does your wife look yoijng, too? Mr. Hailf ellow--I never married.--Philadel phia Record. CRIMSONBEAK -- I understand Dr. Quack has sold 25,000 bottles of his patent medicine. Yeast--Well, all the fools are not dead yet. "No; but if the doctor's business keeps on they soon will all be."--Yonkers Statesman. BRIGHTLY--What would you do, doc tor, if you had a bad cold? Doctor (orushingly)--I'd copsult a reputable physieian, sir. Brightly (calmly)---I don't suppose you could tell me where I could find one, doctor, could you?-- Lowell Citizen. MR. THOLP (who is lunching his cou sin at a country hotel)--You may bring a filet for two, and a small bottle, waiter. The waiter--I kin give yer all - th' cider yer want out 'r small 'r big bot tle, {but th' boss swaped his last Ally more'n a week ago.--Judge. LITTLE DOT--Mamma, what's this cake called angel cake for? Mamma (mean ingly)--Because little girls who eat too much of it become angels. "Don't an gels get this kind of cake to eat?" "No; angels nev#r get anything to eat." "Then I dess I don't want to be an angel." FRIEND (to elderly young lady)--I should think, Mirandy, that you would be afraid to intrust your future happi ness to Mr. Bullavd. It is notorious that he was cruel to his first wife. Mi randy (with a glitter in her eye)--I know he was, and that's what I'm mar rying him tot.--Epoch. "WHERE is Switzerland?" asked tie teacher. "Switzerland is a Republic of Europe." replied the scholar. "What is it noted for?" "It is noted for the fact that it is the only country on earth which has not insulted the United States in the last six months," explained the scholar, who reads the papers.^•-- Pittsburgh Chronicle-Telegraph. VISITING foreigner--My man, why is all this dirt heaped up semi-periodically on the 1 streets ? Laborer--It's clanin' the streets we are, sor. Foreigner-- But, tvhy don't they haul it off instead of leaving it to be scattered and scraped up again? Laborer--Git out widyez! Ye'd be afther takin' the bread out.of a poor laborin' man's mouth. -- Terre Haute Express. GENTLEMAN--See here, it isn't half an hour since I gave you a dollar to go into that fine restaurant and get a meal, and now you say you're starving. Tramp-- Just so, pard; it ain't my fault. You see I ain't used to dining at first-class places, and I made a big mistake in my order. Lost the hull dollar and only got three mouthfuls. "Eh? What did you order?" "Spring chicken."--Phil« adelphia Becord. A GAS-TLY Hnrr.. He lingered at the sagging gate; TTW al0ht WM cold and damp; The hour was getting somewhat late, the gas man doused the lamp. * Said he, "My dear, the gas is out; but yet, oh. radiant lass, Your eyes shed such a light abont, one does not miss the gas." I'm very glad," the maiden said, "and think 'twould be discreet For you to use the light they shed to gvide yoa i, ___ down the street." - ' -- )ne of i P&i&ta, Oils ud Colors. [lso a large line of Toilet Articles, •>. y?4. \f^vno,v ruii... _ _ ice relieved the nausea resulting from cancer of the stomach by the applica tion of ice to the back of the neck and»* r-\ occipital bone. The ice is to be broken fcfip\ and the bits placed between the folds of a towel. Belief may be obtained by holding the head over a sink or tub, and a small stream of water on the k of the neck. This is worth re-, ; memboriog as a relief for sick headachn. to which so many women are subject. '" Immm mm