MULLIGAN’S BRIGADE. The Gallant Chicago Keein>ent Com­ posed of * rishiuen. | Lave been a follower of Mulligan Is an | honor which no American disputes. HOT TIMES IN THE STOKEHOLE. "Rally! All Irishmen In favor of forming a regiment of Irish volunteers Toilers at the Furnaces Twenty Feet Below the surface of the Sea. to sustain the government of the Uni­ ted States In and through the war will If a landsman wants an experience rally at North Market Hall this even­ tha-t he will not forget soon let him go ing, April 20. at 7:30 o'clock. For the down into the stokehole of a warship. honor of the old land, rally! Rally for Then he will realize. Indeed, what It the defense of the new!” means to be In the bowels of a vessel, This notice appeared In all the Chi­ and, to an extent, what it means to be cago newspapers on April 2o. 18*51. buried alive. If be can face the roaring Five days before Gov. Yates had issued furnaces without shrinking and stand a call for troops, and the patriotic fer­ in the steel walled pit without feeling vor of the people was at a white heat. dread, he will be a man of rare nerve. Enlistment had already commenced, j Sunk In a shaft twenty feet below Capt. Joseph Kellogg having begun the * 1 the sea, men toll amid tierce fires whose ■work of recruiting a company on April. flames in that confined si»ace lick out at 18. them with every movement of the long Those whose knowledge of war and j steel slice bars that are used to feed the war times is limited to the present con­ gaplug furnaces, as savage caged beasts flict with Spain have small conception are fed, and, like the beasts, the fires of the excitement that swept over the 1 are raging to kill the men who master COLONEL MULLIGAN AND STAFF. 1 laud, rising nowhere to a higher pitch «lian at Chicago when Fort Sumter was tired upon and the President Issued a call for 75.000 troops. The call for a meeting of the loyal ‘ Irishmen of the city, which was signed by James A. Mulligan, M. C. McDonald j hud eleven other Irish citizens, was royally responded to, North Market Hull being thronged to the doors. James A. Mulligan, on eloquent ycung Irish- American lawyer, delivered a ringing s[eedily seized ui»ou the people, and ap­ plications for admission to the Irish brigade, ns the ia-uspoctlve regiment had been already named, continued to lx>i»r In, not from Chicago only, but ¡ from all portions of northern Illinois, j oue body of Detroit Irishmen offering tlielr services. Within a week 1.200, names were signed and the regiment was complete. The Confederates were l»ent on hik­ ing Lexington, and Gen. Sterling ITlcv soon app.'arod with 28.000 men. Out-| them only by desperate labor. Then? is no room to si>are on a modern ship. Therefore the mighty furnaces are so crowded together that the men who serve them have barely space to move to and fro before them. So near them are the stokers and the firemen that until their skins are hardened to it they I »lister and crack with the heat The chance visitor can bear it only a tew minutes. That is a stoke-hole when the Ship Is going at ordinary speed and there are uo esissclal demands on the stokers ami the firemen. When there comes the time that a ship must fight for heT life, chase or run, the stokehole becomes a place of torment When the warship goes into action she calls on every one of her hundred and more firemen to be In readiness, and the boilers must fur­ nish every pound of steam that they can give her. The more they give her the louder are the demands of the en­ gines for more, and the men must work at the fires till they fall. Forced draught Is the order then, and the stokehole Is practically sealed up that no air may escape from It except through the fur­ naces. The fires grow fiercer and fierc­ er. and soon there Is no spot in the steel pit that Is not unbearably hot Men watch the Indicators and shout for more steam. The limp heaps are drag- IN THE STOKEHOLE OF A WARSHIP. numl>ered ten to one, poorly provision­ gisl away to die or to go mail. Relief ed and suffering from lack of water, Is called to tlie burning bole, and still tlol Mulligan made determined de­ the open throttles of the ship’s engines fense. Called upou by Price to surzen- take the sti*am faster than th«* furnaces der and agree to fight no mor«* on Mis­ can make It. Wluit Is going on altovc* no souri soli. brave Mulligan replied: man down there knows. Stunetlnwe a “The Irish brigade makes no compro­ i dull echoing shock may tell them that mise.” the ship has been hit hard. At length after n resistance that fair­ ly electrified all Northern hearts and A Henatok Hero» called forth exprvMdona of praise from No man Is a hero while seasick. I»a- the Confederates, Got Mulligan was fayette wns sent by Washington and forced to surrender, the devoted Irish­ , Congress to France to ask further sup- men destroying their gr«s>n flag In pref­ [ piles of men and money for the Amer- erence to yielding It to the enemy. The i lean colonies. He sailed from Boston total Uniou loss in killed and wounded In the frlgati* Alliance, on Jan. 11, 1770. was 107. Col. Mulligan will retained Tile harlxir was frozen. and a passage as a prisoner of war. but was soon ex­ 1 had to bi* cut for the ship through the changed. He was freak'd with great • lev*. consideration by Gen. Price, who. In ap­ 1 Off the Newfoundland banks the preciation of hi* bravery, refused to ac­ ship wns assailed by a terrible tempest cept his sword. which threaten«*«! destruction, and La- The heroic death of Ool. Mulligan fayette was very seasick. Ills ald- while lighting the main body of Gen. de-eamp, the Chevalier de Pontgihaud, Jul»al A. Early’s army at Kernstown. who relates the incident In hts Va.. July 24, 18C4. is known to all who memoirs, heard him soliloquising thus ■ re familiar with the stirring events of on the hoi»eleasness of the situation the war of the roludllon. and the emptln«*«* of glory: "Loy me down and save th«' flag.“ he "Diable! 1 have done well cortn nly. Mid to those who were bearing him At my time of life— barely twenty years mortally wound«1 from the fl«4d. of age—with my name, rank and for­ The "Irish brigade fought nobly for tune, and after having married Made­ their country, they did more—they moiselle de Noalllea, to leave every­ raised an enthusiasm that recruited thing and serve as a breakfast for cod­ many thousamli of troijia and Impart- fish!”—Youth's Companion. t ed l»Mn«*a to timid hearts. Their glory Drinking never hurt a stingy mah j —♦ *»d«t—will never fade. To WOMAN'S WORK IN WAR. FIGHT TO THE DEATH. What t-hc Is Doing for Soldiers and Their Families, Patriotic New York women, under TWO KENTUCKY FAMILIES EX­ the leadership of Mrs. Ellen Hardin TERMINATING EACH OTHER. Walworth, have organized the "Wo­ men’s National War Relief Associa­ tion” for the purpose of aiding in the The Baker« and Howards Have Been Fettling an 014 Quarrel by Shedding comfort of the soldiers and sailors who Each Other’s Blood—State Troops are fighting for their flag. The woman Were Called to Subdue Them, who Is not a member of a war relief association of some sort is the excep­ tion. The meetings of these organiza­ Mountain Fend. tions have almost entirely taken the The history of the Baker-noward place of such gatherings as pink teas, ' feud, which assumed such large and literary afternoons and ethical culture I dangerous proportions as to cause sessions. Scores of societies, little and State troops to be sent to Manchester, big, are either running along smooth­ Ky., for the protection of the court ly. but busily, or are yet In the throes is one of the most interesting In the of organization. annals of mountain wars. The meu AU have the same general purpose, engaged In this feud are descendants to provide a channel through which the of the same pioneers. Their ancestors patriotic enthusiasm of the American have lived there for more than 100 woman may lie directed. Each mem­ years. Many of the families have In- ber wants to do something, be it ever ' ter married, until nearly everybody in so little, toward the work of waging I Clay County is related by blood lines war. Some of the societies are merely 1 to everybody else. village organizations, entirely local In The Howards are members of the character and interested only In the fighting Howards of Harlan County, welfare of the little company of home who. led by Wilson Howard, killed soldiers who are away at the front. uliout thirty of the Turner faction in Others ore branches of associations Ilarlan and Bell Counties. Wilson was which are national In scope. afterward legally hanged after he had The chief executive officer of the Wo­ boasted of k.lling ten men with his man's National War Relief Association own rand. There is a Wilson Howard is Mrs. Ellen Hardin Walworth, whose in the Clay County family, but he was official title Is that of director general. -so unfortunate as to fall early In the Mrs. Walworth is quite capable of di­ tigtit. Old man A. B. or "Bal” Howard, recting the affairs of an organization who Is the leader of the faction that os large as this one promises to I m *. bears Ills name, is 52 years old and has She is one of the three original found­ tried to lead a correct life. He has ers of the national society of the been a member of the Christian Church Daughters of the American Revolution. for many years. Is a Free Mason, and She ranks as one of the feminine pio­ has served his county one term as neers In chronicling American history Sheriff and two terms as Deputy Sher­ and genealogy. She was also among iff. While Sheriff he lost all his wealth the first of her sex to make a thorough and went Into voluntary liquidation. and systematic study of parliamentary He has tried hard to keep down the In­ law and practl«*, her classes for con­ herited fighting blood, but now that sidering parliamentary procedure be­ he has been drawn Into the fight he is ing well known In New York City, as as anxious to win as any other moun­ Is also the Post Parliament Club, of tain fighter. He recently said he could which she Is President Associated go Into Harlan County and get 500 with her are such women as Mrs. Rus­ fighting men to come hack and clean sell Sage, Miss Helen Gould, Mrs. Dan- out the Bakers root and branch. When he made this declaration his eyes flash­ ed fire, and although he Is bent from suffering from the wounds the Bakers gave him In the fight when his son Wll- MRS. ELLEN HABDIN WALWORTH. A. B. nOWABD. lel Butterfield, Mrs. Seth Low, Mrs. W. C. Choate and others whose names are son was killed, he straightened up and known far and wide. Mrs. U. 8. Grant with head erect emphasized his words has recently accepted the national by stamping the ground. The trouble between the Bakers and presidency of the organization. the Howards came up last December 'Facts About Cuba's Climate. over the purchase by Tom Baker of a The weather bureau at Washington judgment for 840 and costs that had has completed a valuable treatise on been rendered against A. B. Howard. the climate of Cuba, which furnishes Howard’s son. James B.. now County definite figures In supi>ort of the con- Assessor, had bought a spring wagon tention that the bugaboo of the rainy and Uls father had gone on his note. season In Cuba Is largely imaginary. The average temperature at Havana during June, July, and August Is only 82 degrees—the same as that at New Orleans, and only seven degrees more than at Washington. In fact, Wash­ ington has hotter days than Havana ever has. Havana's hottest Is 100 de­ grees, while Washington's Is 104 de­ grees. The average yearly rainfall at Havana Is considerably less than at New Orleans, being 51.73 Inches, against the Louisiana city’s 00.52 Inches. Even in the so-called rainy season, which began with May and will end with September, the rainfall at Havana is only 32.37 Inches, as against New Orleans’ 27 Inches. As much rain frequently falls In the dry season ns in the so-called rainy period. The rela­ tive humidity of the atmosphere ap­ pears to be fairly constant and aver­ age« only al>out 75 per cent of satura­ tion.—Chicago Tribune. A Feat of Memory. The geographer Maretus narrates an Instance of memory probably une­ qualled. He actually witnessed the feat and hail It attested by four Venetian nobles. He met In Padua a young Cor­ sican who had so powerful a memory that he could repeat as many as 30,000 words read over to him only once. Maretus, desiring to test this extraor­ dinary youth In the presence of bls friends, read over to him an almost In­ terminable list of words strung togeth­ er anyhow. In every language and some mere gibberish. The audience was ex­ hausted before the list—which had been written down for the sake of accuracy —was completed, and at the end of It the young Corsican smilingly began and repeated the entire list without a break and without a mistake. Then to show his remarkable power he went over It backward, then every alternate word, first third and fifth, and so on, until his hearers wen* thoroughly ex­ hausted ami hnd no hesitation in certi­ fying that the memory of this indlv.tl- ual was without a rival tn the world, ancient or modem. Charges fbr Park Heat«, Paris manages to make $30.000 a year from permits to\let chairs In the squares and gardens for the accommo­ dation of promenaders. A great many financiers haw their loose change tied up in old stockings. tide came about a week later old man Howard, his sons Israel and Carter and Burch Store went to the log pit and took the undivided raft out of the mouth of Crane creek, and Israel anil Carter remaned on It and floated It down the Kentucky river to Frankfort. A. B. Howard and Burch Store start­ ed back home with the five horses that had been used in pulling out the logs. They overtook Israel and Harlan Shackleford and invited them to ride two of the horses. A little further on they canto uj*on Wilson Howard and Will York, and they were Invited to ride the remaining horse. The party was riding slowly through the deep mountain mud, little dreaming what was In store for them. They were cracking Jokel, and those who had been walking were congralu- i man, so the latter could claim the re- ward of $250. The Bakers were charged with killing Wilson Howard and Burch Store, and with shooting old man Howard, but they were ac­ quitted on the examining trial, on April 17. The next day Sid Baker, a son-in-law of A. B. Howard, and no kin to the other Bakers, met Charles Wooton on the road. After watching ] each other for several minutes, they 1 both drew tlielr weapons at the same time. A shooting followed in which Wooton was so badly shot in the back that he has never been able to walk, and the physician who attends him says that he will die before very long. June 2 Tom Baker met Will White on the road near White’s house and shot him to death with an explosive bullet. Nobody Las been punished for any of CLAY COUNTY COURT IIOUJSE. lating themselves on having a chance I these crimes, and It was to make the to ride, although to one of them It guilty pay the penalty that Gov. Brad­ proved a ride to death. When they ley called out troops. reached the house of John Baker they Just as He Put It, say Baker’s wife run to the large farm bell and ring It violently, although It I Modest people should have a care. was much too early In the morning for If carried to an extreme, modesty is liable to become ridiculous, as In a case dinner. They had scarcely passed Baker’s reported by the St. Louis Globe-Demo­ house when a volley was fired at the crat: Years ago a member of the In- cavalcade from ambush. Old man ■ dlana Legislature, in a brand-new suit Howard wns struck In the back, but he of broadcloth and a silk hat, gold- managed to stay on his young horse, , headed cane and white lawn tie, wan­ which carried him out of range around dered up Into the sanctum of the Cour­ a point In the road. The second volley ier-Journal, stood around tn a listless struck Burch Store, killing him In­ I way, looked over the papers, went stantly, the bullets striking him In the i down-stairs and came back several neck and In the breast The third vol­ | times. He was asked to take a seat, ley came almost as Store fell from his I which he declined elaborately, and horse, and Wilson Howard rolled off ended by drawing his chair In a con­ his horse with a bullet In his back that fidential way up to the “Roundabout” paralyzed his limbs. The other horse­ man’s desk. “Couldn’t you,” he said, “put In the men rode away as fast as possible. When they got out of sight Wilson paper that I am at the Galt House with Howard said Tom Baker and Charles my bride, and just fling In something Wooton came to them and fired an ex­ about my being a prominent Indlanian? plosive bullet Into the alxlomen of the I don’t care anything about this sort two wounded men. Wilson Howard of thing myself, but you know how the died shortly after telling the story of women are. I want fifty copies of the the shooting. paper sent to this address.” He laid When James B. Howard, who was in down two dollars and a half, grinned, town, heard of the shooting he was al­ got red In the face, said “Good morn­ most crazy with excitement, and, al­ ing,” and vanished. Next morning he road that “Mr. John though Ills friends begged him not to go to the scene of the killing, some six Huckleberry requests us to say that miles away, he got his horse and gal­ he Is at the Galt House with his bride; loped toward the place. When nearly that he is a prominent member of the there be stopped at Murray’s store, Indiana Legislature and that he him­ where persons were buying grave self, personally, cares nothing for clothes for Store and Howard, and for newspaper notoriety, but that a society the first time heard that his father note would be very gratifying to Mrs. was not dead, but he was told by the Huckleberry. He added that he want­ doctor who attended him that he could ed fifty copies of the pai>er for distri­ not get well. Rushing out of the store. bution to his constituents.” Intent on going to the side of his fath- Paper. Paper horseshoes are now being used by some of the Chicago blacksmiths. The horseshoers themselves are not re­ sponsible for the Innovation, but it Is due to some of the owners of fine horse­ flesh. After being saturated with oil or turpentine the paper Is glued together in thin layers with a cement which does not become brittle when drying, being a mixture of Venetian turpentine, pow­ dered chalk. linseed oil and lacquer. The holes through which nails are driv­ en to fasten the shoes to the hoof are stamped through the paper when molsL Then the shoe is placed under a hydrau­ lic press and subjected to a strong pres­ sure. When fitting the shoe to the hoof It can be tiled or planed to fit as snugly ns may l>e necessary. The shoe« made of paper are said to be stronger and better than those of Iron, just as car wheels of paper are superior to those of iron. Another advantage claimed is BARRICADE OF TIIE HOWARD FACTION. that a horse wearing paper shot's is not Not paying for it suit was brought and er and his dead brother, he met old likely to slip when traveling on slip, judgment rendered. Before Baker tnan George Baker face'to face. With­ pery roads. bought the judgment he had gone Into out stopping to consider that he was Coral Flower Gardens. partnership with A. B. Howard, in no danger from the old man who No gardens on earth can match the through his son* Israel and Carter, who had tried so hard to make peace, and gardens of the sea that encircle the were made parties to the contract, in northern part of Australia. As the tide order that none of Howard's creditors ebbs In the azure of sunset, coral reefs could levy on his logs. Thus, when his own partner tried to get the better peer out. symmetrically arranged In of hint, as he considered it, old man b«ls and Intersected by emerald chan­ Howard became very angry, and there nels as If they were the colossal flower were some sharp words between Tom beds of some great sea king. Corals Baker and the Howards. Howard re­ of all hues and tints can be seen fath­ fused point blauk to pay the judgment oms deep In the channels. The coral and Baker levied on the logs, as the polyps, although they build islands and partnership papers had not been made help to extend continents, are most del­ out. Howard fought hint in a magis­ icate orgnnlsms, and die on the least trate's court, but through the Influence exposure, and leave behind them their of Baker's father a compromise «as skeletons, but even their skeletons are effected, and It looked as If there would things of beauty. be uo furtUi^r blood-letting. River Bank Protection Wanted. Israel Howard and Tom Baker bad had a little shooting scrape over the From Great Britain comes a call for matter a few days before the compro­ a method of preventing the current of mise was made, and Tom received two a river from wearing away the banks. slight flesh wounds, which soon healed. The claim Is set forth that the present Several days after the compromise old system Is unsatisfactory because, while man Howard found Tom Baker at the the l*anks may be strengthened, noth­ log pit taking out undivided logs. They ing Is done to deflect the current from quarreled and Baker drew a pistol and weak points nor to diminish Its force. threatened to sbivot Howard on the sBEnirr a. r. white . One of the worst things about friends spoL Howard nos unarmed and he soon talked Bilker out of the notfon of who never carried a pistol, young Is the manner In which they abuse shooting. As Howard walked away, Howard leveled his gun at Baker and each other. however. Baker threw an auger at him. shot him dead. After staying a short About all some people do Is to follow This opent'd the breech between the time with relatives in Harian County Bakers and th/ Howard*. and when a Howard gave himself up to a kins- other men around complaining of ths way they do their work. * A