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Utt. NEW-TOBK DAILY TRIBUNE. STNPAY. NOVEMBER SO.

USES UP TO THE WAKING IS UNCLE SAM


Secretary

Or AEROPLANES

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WAR

Piryuart, whose advance had been caugathsoon be tious, learned from his flying news will army tions Che United State* erers that the enemy could not bother him of A number provided with aeroplane,. if he fort"\u25a0<>!: coyness and became an aeroplane | unduly Congressmen have never seen General I*iequart present. aggressively during actual hostillblow up a battleship hence took the offensive with fine theoretical reand peace, of sult-, with how vast and map changing an tlte or even in the time to the scope of j are harassed by doubts as bad the war been truly war. peror outcome > an instrument * the a-roj.ian* work a* will be able to part haps our Congressmen, the Inability on war It has been this give Imagine. army officers to experiof c Inventors and Trance has gone far beyond the a $c.W a practical demonstration of how Dread- mental stage. She now has thirty aeroJ13.000.000 cripple a mlirbt United States weird and elec- planes for military use. The roucht. and do many other far first built by the Wright has one of the enabled Contive 'hings that has thus just given orders to patronizing front to the jbrothers. France has strength Siersmon to show a before the aeroplane double its could see how, riot Congressmen em-mv year. It is not strange, thereworth of the be end could ' potvJer that was smokeless good old Pitts- fore when the historic battles between he money charged for the Germany are recalled, to menFrance and burg sort. activities in tion nest the Fatherlanti's Pc-haps this Congress will wait and let to say nothing of aeronautics, military to do being first next get the honor of ever England. Japan. Russia, Italy. Austria and It bat things now seem brighter than by Iother countries Tho army boards of neithappropriation befo-v in the matter of aeroplane experi- er German:- nor France are forced to wait military that body tor equivalents of our Congressional Jacob M Dickinson, Secretary of for the artats world, b.-dy piaee funds at their disposal for to the j travelling around V.-*r. has been experiments. They >> saw in Europe and Japan men m mill- the ma.kmp of military sums to call upon at will when and aeroh^ve certain dirigibles tary uniforms piloting saw what the new aevfcse la believed to be worth inI.ams in mock manoeuvres. He of the ve.--tlgation and test. I -e=c air scouts could see of th* lay j stupefied enemy, because ! Germa:.: , then, has not sat jrii.und. the position of the Hofbrau nor restful effects of its in machines the these from =cr~tarv Dickinson flew of service dozed after puffing its long-stemmed pipe fi&OKd to m the fourth arm the while Trance was alert and vivacious ir.'the military life of the nations. Once 1in her Kleriots "the hobble skirt of the Mr Dickinson flew as a passenger. " Germany did at first concentrate a aeroplane for more" a:r be -emained aloft in an mile a travelling a minutes, l Mttie too much, perhaps, on the large dirlg\u25a0.-\u25a0 i :an down he said msr.uie. and when he came as it i had felt as safe the whole time and, contrary c iiad been in an automobile I peofo tbe automobile, a whole lot of other |te had felt safer. This -as the Secreliry's little joke which he did not permit ( loag to befog the minds of his friends War had The United States Secretary of matter. M3ie to =. decision in a serious notes he knew Without referring to his army had one ins: the United States someaeroplane, one only, and that it was Myer where either in Texas or at Fort from that Miyrcay. Secretary Dickinson I nWat was a:, advocate of aeroplamo United | aa-.-arwisrm --..-. armies of the New York j g-at-- and when he arrived In leaving the he before a;o days i-aid few h obtain the President's ! "If I com urgently ha to do so. I special appropriation ; r.:er.d to Congress a , aeroplane experiments. In advanced o army behind the : t-ronautics only is our I armies of Europe and that of Japan. aeroplane will iV,t-v(.t -v(. that before long the heavy U iifcl*- to carry bombs and other want our; agencies of war. I

MaKing Has Seen a Flights andjfof Selie^es Them To He Necessary Arm of the Service.

Dickinson

France and Germany Ha%)e Equipped Their Armies Liberally and Are fioto Training Men To "Be Aeronauts.
' sunny shore he was so elated army. It has not been used for some time finis tit he minimized the difficulties of aHgatkm pay appropriation to for because of lack of gas. The aeronautical division of the office In 't/ flying machine upon the- deck of % battleship a much harder thing to do. of the chief signal officer of the army was organ on July 1. l*T>, and t;.<* aeronauA naval officer from Washington tag tical board of the signal corps was appoint- the other day that the flyin* machine ed in July,. 190S, for conducting t-sts of ; would mean the rapid disuse at sack*, dirigibleballoons and aeroplanes under ex- \u25a0tacks on battleships, some form of m 'engine or internal combustion engine I isting contracts, namely, those with the 1 r. "Wright brothers and Captain Thomas '3. placing the present power-plant. Thfcj mean that the- battleship of the near Baldwin. " .* a low-lying, swift-moving *\u25a0\u25a0* The ability to fly high will make the will ringing. It willnot even r*q%> 9 aeroplane In war practically Immune frcm without tower, because th an observation scocttn'j aerosays 5.000 land attack. General Miles will Mai in lnforrnatton fey aeri planes planes over an enemy's camp would mean An army officer ha *stinatqg No force, he says, could wireless. its annihilation. that on* aeroplane as a scout win b endure' the rain of explosive projectiles one thousand men. dropping from unseen, machines a mile in j better than sea during war its chiefest value, aa now that A. guns making are They the air. navy man who has ssrfiei have no recoil, light firing guns for use to cording to a ' question, nit' be to report "Mil Tlj^ in tho will mounted These be flyingmachines. watctj aeroplane will man In the the tS* vibration and all Is. glycerine ,to take care of firing of the battleship to which he belcsjj that sort of thing. Motors will be muffled and report just by wireless where and aeroplanes will doubtless be painted shot fired struck the battleship of tieai3 . may pass blue or leaden color, that they ' emy, and If th shots are wild, of earn n^ out of sight th more quickly. way Man- times the first (aw say in what Those who saw the racers in Bleriots fly- shots fall short or go over the enemy, t^g ing to the Statue of Liberty from Belmont the naval officer, and an officer in an aeja. Park will remember that no matter where plane thoroughly trained Is such sani they saw them they did not see them long. could tell at a glance Just what chasj^ On a day of blue sky the longest vision should be ma-ie by the g-inner? the bt; Wright perhaps. The i minutes, lasted three wonderfully to strike vital parts. climber, painted silver,' in a will Aeroplane scouts move at probab;* space of time fades from view forty THE AEROPLANE SCOUT: A VISION OF THE NEXT NAVAL CONFLICT. eiehty miU-s an hour. It is tna short to scene as the, conflict some such eas7 sky. naval Paint chosen Already, in against even the bluest Considering progress in the near future. the immense who has won medais tp German and -he prophetic pencil of our artist has de- with that cunning which is lawful in love for any nian to made in aviation within the last few mancuvrfs of the realize the difficulties" \u25a0, sharpshootinp ' French army and navy, aeroplanes are | picted may well be enacted. Tho Graphic <^, years, it would be rash to set any bounds I be met when trying \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 hit such an oojt frto the development of mechanical flight used as weapons of war. and in the next 6harpshootcr who has won three njdj A and Is a graduate of West Point said did not want to do anything harder tha hi: a moving- target on the ground, jwr% horizontal fire He said that \u25a0och taryij were hard propositions to hit with a rtfl^ atmospheric coodtdH* He believed that that atmospheric conditlca might phenomena of refraction ht produce phenomena retraction t ti that a man suchi an extent thai \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0 taking aim aia ai tt an aeroplane undoubtedly would be flri^ at a point a* a considerable distance frsa thf actual position. Refraction unquemoa. ably will be a difficult thin? to <v erroaa, as It Is always present and never the sana I- is also suggested that an aeroplane driver, pursued by another flyingsoldier, coca make his own cloud of smoke by drsjpis? smoke producing bombs and in some sscJi way as the cuttlefish save r.iir.*-:? a lot j; trouble at the proper time. Militaryauthorities do not agree coneoIng the destructive possibilities of .-oesj* dropped from aerial vehicles. It seems % be pretty generally accepted that. couU the bombs be accurately placed, great >it\u25a0struction could be wrought it, again. !& bombs were properly constructed Itis apparent that an aeroplane below the 19*foot level would be vanquished by rnac2S gun fire before anything it could tow* would do any serious damage.

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with the ! :-r iivat least on an even fooling of them in riles of the world, or ahead want t> begin at once.' tiii^ respect. And I thf -esident does approve of Suppose does Idr. I>ickinson's plan and Congress proves the aero;-ot lefore the next war solely to } l.feTW t,o fluffy ruffles intended against the -daT'.i picture pretty maUfc a Suppose of the sky." blue -\u0084t:r.a Congress appropriates money to place vhe equ.il skyi "niteO States at tea* oti an European ami those basis with s.-outi:>: V*r East armies that Secretary DlekinHow much has been ot has reviewed: lilac no Congressmen Oor.e by countries like, have or. which -having something very necessary ripple in the made the Mimrhow l^ii fart poolT Itis a short but interest,.c story In case of war to-day the inlum *ould irobably increase. She Takft our sister republic France. with a kiss on each welcomed he Wrightsarmy has made ">.EUGENE ELY STARTING IN BIPLANE FROM THE DECK OF THE UN'TED STATES WARSHIP BIRMING<-b<*ek. The French HAM, NOVEMBER 14. hr.vsiive. Illuminative experiments -with the ruroplane. The experiments. further i He made a safe landing at Wiiloughby Beach, in Hampton Roads, several miles away, although wind and fog opposed h bucctrssful, sur'Copyright. 1910, by Dnderwood Underwo I, New \ .-. 1 v.- been wonderfully prisingly so even to the French, who from the first flights at Le Mans talked ecstatlt- ibles of the Zeppelin. Parseval and Grosse jln many respects it is '\u25a0 last note. The j man army officers In several respects, but by the i.llv hen th*-y did not sing sonnets. built guns that permit a high j that the surprises would be caused types. It was incharacter that this should j German? This autumn ten aeroplanes, an array be so. The ponderous, comparatively slow- jangle of fire at flying machines in the mechanical improvements he and Wilbur off., r at the wheel of each, with all the money, heavens. ms in auto- Wright had made and not by any Hying of They placed these moving aerial sausage drew, first, precision required in carrying out military mobiles ready to travel rapidly along the a sensational sort by himself. next, adjectives from the German pop- i and. forth as regular ..ieery, flying back and At the manoeuvres next year Germany highways. They Invited the Wrights to ulace. scouts over the troops engaged in the anIt is said made m regard demonstrate before the Kaiser and began will fly a nock of aeroplanes. Germany first move The manoeuvres, brought back nual French military authorities have not study. In time of peace Germany has the German {to forbid the French aeroplane to was to the what would in real conflict have been priceAt j found it easy to keep foreign flyers from said itthat they have thirty aeroplanes The aviators to fly over the German border. ;**s information to their commanders. any not use at Isoaring- in aeroplanes over her fortifica- nearly ready, and it is probabale thai they did have altitude of the aeroplane was taken when first the Germans ', tions. In time of war a man from Paris or have at least met the recent French requinot see what aeroplanes. They could poHJble. and the hour and minute of the all for sition ami will have a double supply before trying get were to j Holland might not care whether the Kaiser Dayton from irking of the observation were recorded. those men by New Year's. even whether he showed approved to about or hop country any wanted by the nd these were later compared with the at. If Prizes have been advertised sparrows, that the angle of his mustachios that his dismuation as it was known to have existed. like a lot of un?.risUcratic That wings of 20 government for aeroplanes Fremh flying high I was on pleasure business. But as for country's This was not done to please the women was that carry 630 pounds -.vtishx at thirtywill horsepower. better than a i Germany, So serious a buzzard was or to : elr poets obtain copy. over : Germany has been awakened to its mis- seven miles ;:n hour for lj mil^s. In this war. it all that the results obtained are bumblebee, and the aeroplanes from over 660 away keep : take. Orville Wright is now on his way to country four persons weighing zealously guarded by the French military the border could Just please aeroplane sevStrasbourg Cathedral. i Germany to help Kaiser Wilhelm. A large pounds w^n- carried In an from the tower of army will eral months ajro. The French and beyond the Iorder for Wright racers and three-passenAs a result of the information brought the Kaiser's town house : ay the premium, but ranpe by omit to hover over per carrying aeroplanes is said to have undoubtedly have to pcouis. camera's dashing the the by willing from the clouds : been placed. Before sailing Mr. Wright no sooner than the authorities are jr*-nral plans of both armies at the iranreu- the legended Rhine. A machine for the zrim business to do so. first, the early dictum, and said he felt confident of surprising the GerThis was the changed\re? were For instance. General
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from a safe height say a die. Soaw method of definitely de-enr.in;rg the position, height and speed of the aeropUM must first be found. An Invention of Lieutenant Kile- Z. of West Point, ttt Scott, a graduate which patents are pending. Is design** to furnish a method of dropping expto1 sive projectiles from airships and 2rThis Invention consist <st ing machines. device by means \u25a0< a mechanical-optical ! w!jlch. it is believed, tr.e aviator will t able to place his machine" to l:ne with tts A TARGET CAN target" and drop hl3 bomb at the proper \u25a0 WHEREBY A METHOD PATENTS ARE PENDING ON ment to cause the greatest possible das* DROPPED BE HIT WITH ACCURACY BY EXPLOSIVE PROJECTILES age to Its prey far below. OR A WILE FROM AIRSHIPS OR FLYING MACHINES WHILE The position of the aerop!ane a: M MORE HIGH. jmoment of dropping the bomb wouid BS* i vertically above the target as oner rsi^t and war will enable a*scout to ?ee with- be of war should carry two men. one to drive j suppose, but at a considerable distance depart in "\u25a0\u25a0" same I out belntf seen and to it. the other to make maps and take pictfront of it- This I? on account of the tec ures by the telephoto lens. When not j selfish manner. that the falling bomb tak-s a -aboio* doing this the second man could handle the ; An aviator in one of the less stable ma- j path, due to the combination of the &* may mounted. rapid fire gun, which the deck of the cruiser I j v.a-.: motion of the aeroplane and :i-e \u25a0 j chines flew from One of the bloodiest contests the world Birmingham across the lower end of j due to Kravity. By an ine-eniou* dette, on Japanese attack has ever seen was the j Chesapeake Bay the other day. It was j .-..mi>in*<: wifh sultabi** tn>!es. Lieutes*^ "203 Meter Ft ill," yet the sole object of this the first time in the history of th world | icott.says lie I? able to ermine the * purpose of that such a feat had been accomplished.! t;nee In front of the target at whlca great slaughter was for the placing two or three men at its summit to Navy men were prompt to say the aero- i t.omh must be .Uncharged and to piae* t direct tho fire of the Japanese siege guns j plane, was a factor that v/ould have to be jaeroplane in line with the tarset. so '-'* upon the Russian fleet in the harbor of dealt, with in the naval tactics of the [ theoretically, the lower end of the paraPort Arthur. It the United States had pos- world** future. The flight of Ely in his il.o!l<a! path of the falling bomb -will cost | Curtiss biplane was not lone: less than five ]Ihome. sensed in IS9B a single aeroplane, at a navy \rmie no prat-tira! expe^BM , of $5,000, the American armj and minute! and the distance flown was prob- have yet \u25a0 conducted. Lieutenant SSt world not have long remained in doubt of j ably three or- four miles, but the start was j b.-ll^ve.s that he xcflX l able to drop -?erl j the presence of Cervera's fleet in Santiago , made from th" deck of the Birmingham Itxpkwi prujrctltei which he has .---sigal ; Harbor. while the cruiser lay still. Perhaps K!y j t or tb<" Jt'vice with at l?nst :hf ncct^aGT [n addition to the one Wriphr aeroplane modern mortar fire. The invention could have done better if the cruiser liad I k of been moving and hud Riven him her ad- met the approval of several competes* _p* owned b> Hie United States government.. , n.- dtrif loon, too small to be men- ditional momentum at tht start. But he thorities. ajuontr thrm Hudxin Maxim * tioned in the .~;unt column with the foreign proved it was possible to fly from the il-ck mUM J. Hammer. battleship, and after tie touched V'.rthe property of the L'nlted States of a

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Young, New
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tw ch< sen. cheerfulness. It should* ever be " y*-ar>. has been immanent chairman of > d~ endeavor to r> forth upon the etna Republican state conventions and was th^ Republi'-ari nation*of the world with a frrf*nsind and a elieer- .at -at-lartre more Cuqfentiin in :S5 ami :s&S- He maie fc ful heart. Wttk so doing we will invincibly nrnie-1 ap;iinM th- trial* and nom'.narinc .sreivh placing the nan* 3 ' tribulation." [,'wtiich liumim being? are heir Th^l'-rr Rp.o^vH: "tefore the Hri-b^-* est Senator was bcm a Democrat., his ; Young's appointment by Governor B. F. : to. I..et us learn to tik*> every thine Which ntlcr.al cinvrn;:on at Ph:lndeipfcj -? Carrol! to succeed, the, late Senator J. P. \ father and brothers all being Democrats. ar=ar. i= 1 an ail Wise Providence , sends upon v- l\> lV4i. M.- .- with Shaftcr's political influattempted Commenting early on his photographer the first i:iv*-r. : past conduct, a corrpondrni in ISO ?. H* recomj*nse I for cur Cuba ;) be a Just experiences Mr. and newspaper to set a picture of Mr. Young In his sane- ;ences and determine ourse-lvt =, In f.i la-.i:;u se a nx-mVr'of Sroretary Taft> partj3Jr! tun* -.::.-. .at the office of "The Daily j Young said the other day: to Orient !a Us)'.. He wa. poet j of the Capital." of which he is editor, he.jumped j "My oldest brother . published a Demothe !;i^t Presidential campaign in -*y| "Let t. wlAf world was: is it will. during the year IN#. Albia flashlight paper : i cratic at tjuickly to his feet when the . so . ) We'll be Rlad nl happy still to being Interested in the wool- ; spoiled his the : in addition exploded that motion wa.* PERSISTENT \'JD SEES** is a 'difficult task, we know to negative, and a second' attempt was re- len mill. ' The paper was called "The Sen- ' !main cbtctful amidst the present scours*^ Mr. Toting Is a persistent fishfrr: g tinel.' it had been 'The Albia' Free Press," quiieO. | which have been visited upon our land Km at that whih he b*>* lo a Republican paper. Monroe County was j The new United States Senator is a man ; "which, has '. fte !atf. rawed It to become ror.tlnuallv until he t-a^ of quick action, both physically, and men- Democratic. My father voted for Breckenntressory to all rum our midst UMM jrt.t* sPuk<r. a shrewd r>-!i^ ar aIMf ta!ly. and any explosion in the United , ridge In 1860. But he soon became a war ' 1 of our numbrr who arc- must near nnd ;mat. Concerning lil*attitude in the l* Democrat and ever afterward voted the States Senate in the course of his term of | -r::iif Ifr. Ttnirye say: , Republican ticket, as did all of the boys. to m but we should reconcile our- Srntfs in dear asleep will not find him his chair. office selves with the thought that such arc ' "In r*varl t. the joli r that T His lcrm is v,, short unless he is chosen jBut my oldest brother closed his little j 3 necessary sacrifice* end -till remain cheer- sue ! a. rcdntor of tb* I'ntte-i -jta** -^_2 by tii*- Legislature to succeed himself and 1 Democratic newspaper office and pasted a j lt fui. .:;,-' at. Icannot say more than t->a sheet of paper on' the door of the H tle ; promises to be m brilliant that he may I \ u 25a0 ways to war,' and signed it i of driving away bf c nstruciiye and r>t ileFtract:" "There are various \u25a0 title cf "the flashlight! Fhop. 'Closed early ' sorrow. Some, when their afflictions ate bt :i>r thesoti! of th- courttry. Josiah T. Young. He never reopened it. ! Senator from lowa." \u0084 . of being I HuMU;aa ; A man by the name of Robb started the j deep and affeftlnt;. report to that bar'.iurl- :for the rvunltms f tfee Mr. Young enjoys the distinction ' ifr^J vp v 111;-- method of drownlns their troubles again Republican paper, go the United -as a but he In The of the euntr> paper native 10 to >.-.>od lowan_ the first o Tin ;^ ,urt.v The 1-';1 -' the nowins bowl.- The more fhrtsttanized. R.puMlcnn : States Senate from that -state. He was | soon closed it and went to the war. He whose happiness Is not limited \u25a0\u25a0 thi- i:iiule by thr party tieien.J -.iio * bora on a sunshiny day In May. sixty-two :was killed in battle. world, turn their thoughts to ctune In their Isbal! to\or rv*rv s*l;naiua* I years ago. or. a Monroe County farm. The "The paper was published for a time durfuture state, which do-s not at all con- r.c,nl \u0084. V,, .souroe wh,mv H family into which he was -born was large ing the war as "The Albia. Union,* edited ff:< ; four boys and three, girlsthe times were by a lawyer, who was a bachelor, a good cern the former named ,-;2. ? t^t us b shall thtnk DM 01 The :hi 4 .\u25ba 1 \u0 8*cheerful in all our doings, follow ->.;i.m>l awr of. ami .shai! not be i-s"'* primitive, and his boyish days were largely writer and very "fond of booze. I used to ; mutes, and rest assured & reproduction of -h- 'simple annals of the. sleepwe will meet with Ik Mi:- '!\u25a0".with him In the office, in his bed, where j "' y* poor but ione -During his early boy- he had a quart of whiskey .leaning against, success." 1 .)mll rnaW. an iff. to ta rumtntr bo jA .be wielded bundles of wool in jhi* the front bedpost, in order to take a drink: Mr. roans newspaper . earliest daily of urns with Senator iR id \u25a0-.--.. woollen factory, run by horse- I work was In the job department of the have no aimcuTt.v i 3*-ttJ. in the night whenever he woke. He went rri LAFAYETTE YOUNG AT HIS EDITORIAL DESK IN THE OFFICE OF "THE DES MOINES DAILYCAPITAL." "St. L*>ui Dcsrmtch." ten years Wfore the MM W. an th. best power, and enjoyed the communion of the to Oskaloosa at one t!:ii.- to, defend a man road when he dallied.; /7 .V' "Despatch" was auctioned off on the who whs .charged with stealing a horse. rode, the care ho,- to h* al.le to coun.hou.ie steps to Joseph PuUUer for C- nrnt. an.) I Btruffglat of MHiy !if*- had as his motto, essay -which Lafe Young It was while he thus labored that fate He was Acquitted, and. the lawyer dressing myself going when about out on wrote "Cheer" ' 1 tan f i to gft \u25a0',\u25a0 :\u25a0\u25a0 > sack; but 1 never suffered turned the course of his life, with the ulti- horse home as his fee. : .* fuL" fulness." on November 14, ISG3. while living 3*)o. He tamed 525 a -week and saveU 'JO- The people V>t I*> ' Young at and working ma . resalfof his -becoming a United Siatee In the private office of Senator was working from ehilln.ahis. and studying at Albia. He After two years in St. U, u he returned to tr.ere wUI V no B "At the close' of the war I. n is a sort of lo.u holy prevented Daily Capital" Senator.' The occurrence that there v.u.s then fifteen years old, -I -shal. work for for Aaron Meilck, who published -The j "Kddyvillewas jnaiif uj of what Rii> Van VThe biit boar in lowa. With the money he had saved and him from Incoming a woollen magnate Eddyvllle Star.* 1 boarded with the editor, j Winkle calls Jolly tellers. They did every- of holies, which is stored away with mind that the fifteen-year-old boy of \u25a0 half \u25ba'" borrowed from relatives he started ,' in innernight 'ceremony century the ago did came on July 11. If6l. The mill burned' as usual, and I each 'The Atlantic Telegraph- ;at Atmntic. ly. agricultural state, the great wp.6 not overfed. The editor ; tiling .but ui-ii." 'Tlu-ir principal business not have anything like the . ' which he published They most recesses of the steel-bound safe. It educational advantages down. . . was postmaster, and I slept in the back was to drink beer and '\u25a0\u25a0' union nineteen years. ttfteen-yeurof the \u25a0'- is a kcrapl 1-.. in which Lafe Vmi: old boy -of to-day. trie upu -' Lala.;-cttft- Vioung -was :tmrt*ea; years old part of the litllo postomce. Washing- for One of my would gal >\u25a0! In th( Kuluunw umi play things stand out In 1873 he was nominated and elected i:: tit Washington Two S " r every Important chronicles of his line, the writer's cheerfulness and' State Senator. Wa .s The sudden loss to the family meant, thai duties was to get up at midnight or after- up with the dirt > i deck of cards that was pastes the most t-n , .1 h.ve dtltc, re-electfd In ,*] ;n.l \ as life; the bitterest -words of his enemies, We journalistic impulse the youth was-thrownupon his own re- ward, .when the .Western >taj,' .-an., In'\u25a0 \u25a0\u25a0\u25a0.. ever known to provoke a kiiih^." Hero Bb-ain in ISSS. ,s?), s?) to advise. i i n to ! went kind March> hr relatives, " things the is. the. essay: . It meant that the. boy. had sud- the West, and throw the mail bag on the The Vouiik tumily removed ftom A'.biu to it!.- letters of his touret's. Molnos and purchased "The De Motnes his! said about him by the people who know denly become a man, with 'a* man's' re- sidewalk, when the driver shouted "Mai!!" Klrkville. \\'ii]>< iiu Couniy. Bel v."There. is nothing that lends more to the Capital." which !,< has editetl and pub- j lU|l|>lnoas . spunnlbtfity. Leaving hie ather' farm Ihe .This was.in.the.wintertime,' and union suits j engdiii-inwits in nt;wtiia|ier ofHoeii Mr. | him best. of an intilvidual than the tneau- i Ushed 10 the pr eSent time Itesidesi being j v.tnt -. v.crji la a newspaper ofljee at had not been invented. I uid not tike much Vounjf atu-nded ttchuvl, ami through all the t Outs -human -document in this book.is tile u cnibouiwl in the subject which wo have State Senator, he wus atatu binder ror

the "Reuniting AllFactions tUithin ths 'Republican Tarty.

WorK. Hard for

Moincs Editor Has Had a Pictures Climb from a Lcb&'ij,' Start to His \'l
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