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BLOODED DKS Will Be on Exhibi- tien Shortly. LOCAL —PANCIBRS — IVTERESTED Pocific Ki I League ef California Promoting the Exhibition to Be Hold Mere. jledge is still rich and sinking will | be continued. The fic Kennel League of | Can is contemplating giving | an ton of blooded cannines tn Beattie some time within the next two months, Animals from every part of the state, as well as from Portiand and Spokane will be ex- hibited, The scheme will be assist- | ed by a newly organized body of | | w 3} J. Retdelahelmer, vice-president; and | 2. W. Upper, secretary. ‘The arrangements for the exhibl- | tion are now being made. It will be similar in many respects to the can- nine exhibitions now being piven at Ban and Sacramento by | the Kennel League. Only blooded of every breed of the cannine family, from mastitt down to French poodies, will be presented. — Prizes will be awarded to the best | GOOD AS ATLIN. Ceast North of Vancouver ts Rich in Gold. J “Keep your eyes on the eeantry | north of Vancouver island,” said M._ Fairchild, whos with his partner, J.— as yet. been pros- ! | | quarts which he had extra n®@. Mareh p! . street Bome time aro urhed the yard and level® it up and it was while thus #aged that one day the plough Ait into & quarts vein, Marah saw that the rock was go!ld-bearing, but pald litle attention to ftiat the time. A few days ago the idea dawned upon him to prospegs the find and he went to work and commenced sinking a shaft an the ledge. He thought he would try @ pan of the decompored ted and he carried two candle boxes full | down to @ atream, where he panned it out, Much to his surpris® the | first pan yielded about $1 in gold, | He tried another pan and his breath almost taken away, When he looked Into the pan the bottom was fuil of shining metal and the pan yielded $20, So another was wasted with about the rare resulta. M reeelving some $0 out of three par full of dirt. That the strike ts a rich one is clear, and there ts no telling how long tt will hold out, the A GIGANTIC MAP American Railroads Will Erect as an. Exhibit at the Paris Exposition. SHOWING ROPTES OP ALL LINKS ‘w THE UNITED STATES | | | ne — Wop Ewhabit will Cost $180,am. In early days. some | very rich stringers grere discovered | in the vicinity and much gold was —__ taken out. e about the particular road, itn organ- imation, the country through whieh it passes, the products, and other similar information, CHICAS, March L—The plans for | the «reat joint-American railway exhibit are now pearing completion, NS | ee pve pretiestagrion were! 1: has also boon suggested that 6 Seven Tons of Pomder Dis- °°" i"! “teusted in & Kener cinematograph in th® evening and meeting of railway oMel held At a kinetoscope in the day time, show- lodged 200,000 of Rock. ine Grand PE Me hotel, In Chicago, ine moving pletures taken from the | last Piece The feasibility of trains, say, of the finer views of Among the many Incidents which | every part of the plan has been care- cach road, would be a most attrac are on record, one of the most not- able is that of the explosions of fifty-five tons of blasting gelatin which gvas being unloaded from a railway train at Graamfontetn, 300 yards west of Johannesburg, in South Africa, on Feb, 19, 1894, and which was explosed by an end-on collision, says a writer in Cassler's magazine, The result of the ex- plosion of this enormous quantity of one of the most powerful ex- plosives used, was to crater 300 feet long, 65 feet wid % feot deep In soft ground; or, tak- ing a cuble foot of earth weigh- ing 109 pounds, the superficial ex- plosion of this fifty-five tone of ex+ plosive gelatin, exeavated about %0,- 900 tons of soft earth, Besides this there was a total destruction of alt | bulldings within a radiue of 330 while from that distance to 666 yards all the Dulldings were ah tered, and the roofs were battered In | up to about 1000 yards. But all these bulldings were bullt chiefly of cor- fully Coated and reported on by perts, no that ak the the of the frst meeting almost every contingency had been marked out, Before giv- ing & minute description of the plans, it may be repeated that this scheme is to have all raitroad in the country rem lextensiv hibit, has met with very vor, beth on account of t of such a foint form off by reason of the Hmitéd 5) Parts. . < ‘The coming together o! and *entatives of the trunk [December to discuss the! stim Mer |eave the plan ite firat impetwe. A committee composed of General I wonger Agent Kniskern, of cago & Northwestern; Gener wenger Agent Buatia, of the\ Mur ington; General Paapenger Sebastian, of the Rock Isiand, and ‘Asstatant General Passenger Agent Higgins, of the Santa Fe, was then formed, which later agreed on a plan of action. At the meeting T had with me a number of amall relief maps. whick helped to demonstrate the character tive adjunet to the itumination, and talks given of and concerning the various roade To bring out into still stronger relief the tmmense railroad ayatem of the country, it is proposed to show all the tratne in nervies on the various roads going into a plan, in thelr approximate po» sition at a given hour of the day, This would be done by miniature transparencies. ‘The Hiner are to be exhibited sep- arately, deneribed above, in al- whabelical order, except when the total ratiroad resources of the coun. . When they will be all simultaneously ‘There Will be shown at thig tine matter relating to the national greatness of 4 system of the United States, and @ talk on thin feature will be given. The surface of the map will be painted In a panoramic way, bringive out the finer scenic effects. and showing the natural re- sources, an f. pomsible, of the Various sections of the country, As an educational exhibit, among & people who are not any too fa- millae with our country at best, the plan has been commended as being attractive and extremely pri yard rugated fron and mud, and there the undertaking. ‘There were @-— etioal, | fore were of a most unsubstantial * Present a Mr. Albrecht, a member 48 Well as mont effective for t pur | character. On the other hand, we Of the Royal i Soctety pose, The complete idea is very Geographica! of England, Paul Wilhelmina, a ta- | varian artiet, and Edward J. arr, |@ akilfed electrical engineer. Kach lof there gentlemen spoke of the ex. . | hibit from their respective stand- points, giving it hearty endorse- ment, as did in general the railwap men present. Mr. John H. MeGibbona, secretary elaborate, and, as has been carefully wodked out in d& | from technical and sctentifie | nApoints, Map-makers, electri- | clans and panoramic artists have been consulted, and they unite in d claring the plan practical, and re. gard it as destined to make one of the mont effective exhibita, have 'n the United States the blow- ing up of the Hudson river palisades: at Fort Lee tn 1893. when the ex- SPORTING NOTE The New York dom show opened February The Chicago A. A. hae attil enough athletes left to hold a club eham plonship swimming meeting M. A. C. Boatwiek, who paid #19, 900 for 4 four-in-hand recently, will ne of the exhibitors at the com nhow that part of the of the Chicago will be the pro Athletic Annociat NOT EXOUGH StampstoCarry Let- hibition of white fighters meeting | colored men Silay D. Heed, the crack tennis player of a few seasons aKo, In pow & member of the Managchunette Low isiature and elork of the committer that negotiations are 4 football game be- tween Pennsylventa and Princeton It i* about time that t two Helchborly ineUtutions made up The University of Michigan would like @ game of foot ball with Har vard o rYale for next fall The Michiganders were @ good attraction when they met Harvard in 1895 Amateur boxing is ina very flour isting condition in New York, but tn Masaachusetia it in a eriminal of fenne for even bona fide amateurs to charged, and Boston sports are dis- gusted Dr, Sargent ovt at Harvard takes ereat pleasure in examining all of the prize fighters who come to Bos. ton. Itt eeaid that Dr. Bargent in- tends to write a book about the sluawers he has met Marvard now has two Australian hes in Steve FDonnell and An drew O'Dea. Beth of thene men are excellent story tellers, and it is naid that they are almont as popular as Jack McMasters, Cornell will have to elect anothe foot ball captain.as it appears that rh. Bwee ‘a not the mort de- sirable man at Ithaca for the posi- tion, There is nothing the matter with Sweetiand as a football player but dis amateur standing i» one tloned by members of hin lene. : Keene Pttapotrick has entirely re- covered from the effects of the oper- ation performed on him at the Mas nachnaetts General Hospital two weeks ago. Mr. Fitapatrick in at present visiting at his eld home ta Natick, an dexpects to start for the Went In a few days to resume his dut athletic instructor at the University of Michigan. Chicago University will make a mistake tf it does not accept the op- portunity to play Harvard et Cam- | bridge next fall A. A. Stage doen not feel inclined to accept unless promised a return game in Chica- go. After Chicago secures a repu- enough for her to attempt to force terms on Harvard, There is a whole bunch of football teams that would like to come Fast next fall, just for the sake of tackling Johnny Harvard. Several Amerte: turfmen from Hoston and New York have gone to race meeting strong Western college | COMPLAINTS AT WASITING correspondence Deputy Mh tmaster Colkett f official snaking known the complaint that Canada does not like the way Uneh ‘a ciifzens stamp their interr itinh postofMfce department haw notified the department of for elen matix at Washington that mails from this country contain “short paid” letters The depart ment at Washington has acknow- ledged receipt o fthe complaint. .An Investigation already khowe that one letter out of every twenty five from this country are short the required postage, while that of other countries is at the ra to every 140 letters The rate for lettern to foreign untries in ntx for each half or fraction of half ounce, and not paid jn full to whom the mail is charged double the If this law ia not letters will be returned to thin intry. This short payment i# at~ tributed to the fact that the unit « welght in domestic mails ian and that of foreign mails in haif jounce, and the attention of the pub Ne ie valled to this fact, The letter whieh wan received by the pontoifice at this place read as follows: Post Office Department, of Foreign Mails, . D.C., Feb, 17, 1899. ~Your attention in catied to the oy of the daily bulletin of this department containing a clr- cular which will also appear in the Postal Guide for March next, relo- tive to chortpald letters in mails for foreign countries Please cause due notice person womd will be amount defictent « with, of the before stated, | tation in football it will be time game to be taken at your office N Supt M. BROOKS, of Foreign Malla, | WOULD TRAVEL FAST ters To Canada, *» in dyoamite placed in the chambers to the United States commissioner ‘The active co-operation of the Venerucia for the Chinese a English Order loading roads and contemporaneods which opens at Carcaces on Sunday. | # american Locomotives. enough, ut not the type they prefer When the jast rebellion in Cubs an and the supplies Havana af tobaceo fell off none the wthe introduced as substitutes wan Mantia, but even under these favorable conditions the importa- tations never amounted to much m a drop in th van, In than we brought in 8,476 Int yunda, val- Ht $200; in 1804 © pounds, val of thin wan clanaif baceo, In cigars, the importations in 1802 we # pounds, valued at $442; in 1893, C pounds, valued at in 1894-96, 1@0 pounds, valued at $608, and in 18% 1896 pounds, val ued at 114. The yreat bulk of there Nipments came fr ‘anada Out. ide me uptown store which deals In every tobacco under the sun, or pretty n rly I do not think you could find a Manila clear in the ity, except mementos recently brought back by soldiers The principal tobacco factory at Manila in th bel, with a capital f 115,000,000, emuioying 10,000 hands, nd making 80,006,000 cigars, 400,000,- ® cigarettes and 5,000,000 pounds of cut tobacco a year, The. value of the leaf tobacco at the planta- tion is fixed by an agreement which provides that no matter what the ‘upply or condition these prices hall never vary With the exception of a compa’ tively vba, few high-grade cigars from no forelgn cigar has ever been able to gain a foothold here, and probably never will, Fully nin tenths of the cigurs sold as import- made right tn this country co and are of ity today NOW YORK, Feb. 24.—1t ts quite likely that the New York legislature will be asked to appropriate money for the purpose of buying the cot- tage on Mount McGregor in which Gen, Grant died. The cottage is soon be sold at public auction, and it is feared by the Grant Memorial Asso- elation that it may fall into the hands of persons who might turn it into a scheme for making money out of relic hunters. The Grant Monument Association will probably (petition the legislature to buy the cottage, as was done with the house in which Edgar Allen Poe lived, and which is now kept sacred and free drom the danger of spoliation. For some time the visitors from Saratoga alone to the Mount Mc ‘Gregor cottage were sufficient in number to maintain a railroad be- |tween the two points, and doubtless if the cottage were bought by the |‘ atate, or even by the friends of Gen. | Grant, and kept in good order, It (might stil ¢ profitable to the rail- |road rinning up to Mount McGreg- or, The financial embarrassments of Mr. W. J. Arkell have made the saig u a rthrew 190,000 tone general to the Paris exposition, ex- sce ted the ‘th interests has served to advance the February 26. The races are beid on) of the Kan- tas City, Kan, authorities in thickly populated district of Arm~ street from a g yesterday that | in that 1—The | miners the | i @ Chicago’ Boarding House. | 1.—Herman face, threatened to shoot every one in the BS capone Mra. Williams succeeded in excap- ing to the street and called Officers Walley and M@Carthy, who arrested the hilarious German efore he did any damage other than causing in- tense excitement among members of the household. Brockman was taken to the Cht- cago avenue police station and lock- ed up. When, searched, $51, « large “knife, a box of fifty cartriders and a rusty 28-caliber revolver were found Jn his possession. } Miners and Operators Meet TRAVERSE CITY, March 1.—Fot-, Following the plan of tnvestiga-| IM to determine how Judge Roscoe + Corbett came tovhis death jast | Jovember while with a hunting par- | & in the upper. peninsula, where he | ws shot, the Traverse City commit- te was joined here today by three Members of the hunting party who I at Boyne City, and the tedy ot the judge was exhumed and exam- ing, °All the circumstances now poht to the conclusion that it was preneditated reurder and the in- Vesigation will be continued. Mayor Nearly Drowned. TILLAMOOK, March 1.-May- or BL. Eddy was nearly drowned in the Wilson river on Wednesday. J. 8. Judd was taking him across In a bent which drifted down to a \whirpool, where the boat suddenty| went from under them. Fortunately an the oat disappeared they were near some willows, and grasping | them saved themaelves from the! whirlpool. They managed, after a/ to reach great deal of exertion, shore, In His Back Yard. |powder at Talcen Mawr was over |to l electric lighting. portunity of testing the new lamp go ‘no far as to say that It will effect a | met®od of rock, and the destruction of the plained the position of the United famous Talcen Mawr in 1895, when | States officials in regard to tt, and seyen tons of powder poured into |*poke strongly on the desirability of two shafts dislodged a mass of rock (‘the rallway companies acting to- computed to weigh from 126,000 to gether. 200,000 tons. From this we find that| Stnoe then the cordial, active and the dynamity on the tnterior at Fort| moral @upport of the leading com- Lee was over forty times as eM.) panies, and raliroad tereats as cient as thé explosive gefatin on the | ell, bas given added strength. At surface at Johannesburg, while the | present 4 regular form of agreement join tn the exhibit is being forty-one times gs efficient. It is, siened and approved dally by rati- hence, not surprising that the super- Way companies in every part of the ficial explosion of the 269 pound United States. This active co-oper- charges of gun cotton thrown by the | ation makes possible a permanent Vesuvius’ guns at Santiago during | organization at an early date, and the late war between the United | insures the Inauguration of the work States and Spain produced no incidental to the many parts of the serious structural damage, and simp- ¢xhibit enemy by their The plan submitted to and first frightful reports, which occurred at appteved by companies with bead- infrequent intervals and unexpect-|quartera in Chicago provide for the ed times. | conetrwepsom of an enormous upw- —— LIKE THE SUN. |Pa relief or profile map of the United States, on which all the ele This Mew Elecnric Lamp) of & possible failure, and an each rallroxd enters the compact, it ie | Just one voint nearer starting the | exhibit on tts Journey. Ferdinand W. Peek, commiastones | general to the Paris exposition, has been made esequainted with plans for this exhibit, and an appli- cation for the necessary space has been filed with him. A general as- surance has been given that Mr.) Peck will use his best offices to- ward securing the space required. ‘The cont of thin gigantic map will, | of course, depend a great deal upon the space that can be secured and | the number of companten intereated ‘The total coat of the exhibit is set At about $150,000, and It Is to pro- vide this m that the various roads) now making their subscription ‘The undertaking will give people other nationalities a striking, con- orete and concentrated td of the t resoure 4 progressive state of our land. “Comfort in travel, says & spokesman of one of the est) known American lines, “is mont per- vations and natural features of the | country will be shown in proper pro- portions and colors, with booths on cach side of the spectatorium for the use of the companies interested. The undertaking, until It past the point Sundays only end will continue un) tt May fi, About $16,000 if purses will be distributed among the win- ners, but as the natives, who turn lout en masse at the meetings, are good betters, bet fond of betting on native horses only, and American horses are far above The native ant- mals in clase, the Americans expect to make hey under the South Amer- > jean sun, At the coming show of the New England Kennel Club the Irish Ter- rier Club of America’s Dare-Devil stakes will be decided. Besides, the club offers the following specialt Five-doitar cup for the beat bra American-bred Irish terrier puppies, bred and owned by the exhibitor: #5 cup for the best dog or bitch (Amer- jean bred) In puppy classes; $5 cup for the beat dog or bitch (American bred) In novice classes; 85 cup for the best dog or biteh (American bred) in limit classes; $5 cup for the beat dog (American bred) In open class; $5 cup for the best bitch (Amacerin bred) in open clans: $5 leup for the beat Irish terrier in show map Itaelf in to be on the scale of one |fectly expressed in the United | (american bred) uncropped. Sheds Light. inch to the mile, and will be 140 feet|States.¢ Not only that, but the | <<< PHILADELPHIA , March 1.—An | high and 226 feet in length, approxi-| value of nystem, of thoroughness, THING and of ability to move and encen trate all kinds of trafic at short no- tice to any given point will be seen ‘i mately. electric glow lamp with « Mlament | “in,, ‘route of every line of railway which does not need enclosing In 4| wit ne shown by electric devicen. wiase globe, but which burns with a) That is, by turning a button, the at a glance by the leant intelligent soft, steady light in the open air, is route of one road, for instance, will | foreigne the latest eompetitor in the field of be shown in miniature lights,| The map will be expressive of a | very great deal bewides the ratiway [Mines of the country. It will tell of huge quantities of food, of raw m: teriala of all kinds, of peed, and a — |against a background of the whotr «reat map of the country. The name of the road will appear in large let- lamp, the Inventor betng Dr. Nernst, | ters at the front of the lecture plat- @ young professor hailing from Vi- | form, and while any particular road jo of quick, unerring force. Tt wilt enna. Those who have had an op-|is being displayed nothing else but/ show up Uncle Sam's backbone, the natural ‘features of the country | with steel vertebrae a ribs ou will be seen, Meantime a short ep-| breakable. It will undoubtedly be a |tertaining talk will be given, telling | center of attraction at Paris tn 1990, QUTRAGES AT A FUNERAL Morbid Curiosity Seekers Almost De- molish Three Coffins, It is known as the Nernat electric complete revolution in the present f electric lighting The advantages clawned ° for the | Nernst lamp are that it has a much | Mronger filament, which does not) need enclosing, and which burns in the open air. This filament is on.’ sentially a thin rod of-a very re- fractory substance, which will not convey the electric current at ordin- ary temperatures, so has to be heat- ed to a dull red he before the elec- tric current will ow. This auxiliary heating may be affected by a match, candle, gaper, or aspirit Jamp. Once the rod is hot enough the electric current flows and raises it to a white incandescence, which ts maintained until the electric cur- rent in turned off. The Ught given by the new lamp i# as near sunlight tn quality as can PHILADELAQIIA, March 1.—Dur-| Then the excited persona In the mob Gn Seadinel, Walaa Gees Soean tha }ing the funeral of the Fahrenkamp attacked the front doors, but failed jectionable bluish purple of the are, family, who died of asphyxwtion, a| to reak them in, As a@ result of the | lamp or the ghastly green of the in-|erowd of funeral harples, led on by setae en dpamgass were broken | capdescent gas mantic | morbid cursiosity, strove with one | {ni aba Won) pootnag od elle another In a frenzied attempt to tear of the women, who were the most open the coffins, and afterwards al- violent in their struggles, climbed up the front of the house and endeay- anid the not oreatige the “Of cou parrots do meaning of their words; otherwixe |™o8t demolished the undertaker's they would not be #0 profane."* establishment. The coffin handles Ored to push open the windows, “T suppose they don't,” answered were torn off and the stpe, doors ana | Which were locked. Some were #0 ie Bement ut 16 is certain-| windows of the shopstrehen, ‘The | ern) set in that they smashed ly marvelous to hear them ask for : “f the windows. crackers and then stand up and dis. only motive apparently was a mor-| phe disappointed crowd proceeded cuas their rations ike my officers,” | Vid desire to view the remains to the back entrance and broke Washington Star The Fahrenkamp family, consist. down the gate and a part of t He used to lead her through the |!ng of mother and two daughters, fence, but the doors were locked, and | dances |together with the servant, were the crowd howled with rage. | | |found on Sunday dead, after a auch which lasted two days. Mr. Fahrenkamp, who is a traveling salesman, wan out of the ofty. Ye terday he made arrangements to take the bodies to Brooklya for bur- fal * Fy this time the police arrived on | the scene with drawn clubs, which were freely used, but they could not | ing off the handles of the coffins which held the bodies of the Fahren- ump family. Hut love will have its way: And Cupid spyke—she's leading him A merry dabee today. Chicago News, An author, having waited in vain for a check for an accepted poem, | wrote the editor mildly inquiring A large number of persons, mostly! ‘The coffins were finally carrie” out about it, The editor replied; women, struggled flercely to get In-| of the house, when a fresh outbreak Dear Siri—The magazine 1* dead. 1| #ide the undertaker’s establishment urred, As the wagon was driven | couldn't stand everything. It| Many of them) fainted and had t/ rapidly down the street hundreds of | pansed peacefully awa with your|be carried away. ‘al hundred | shouting people followed tt several poem on the front pag The sher.| poople were shut out. These m woke. At Broad street station, » where the three bedies were shipped to Brooklyn for burial, another crowd was walting, but a disturb ance was avoided by taki t « through the Peeeees fom ae ie iff, who is a man of some Iiterary ability, i« now writing itt obiluary. The bi in a ned one, but we hope to out of you-Atlanta TOO GOOD A Are the Consus Spoils for the Congressmen. WASHINGTO D.C, Feb. 2.— ““Vhe members of the National Civil Bervice Reform Association may ad peal and protest until they are | Diack In the face without being able to stop the house bill to move the | twelfth consis from the operation of their favorite law: ° That Is what a well known repre- sentative said today “The fact inf" he continued ‘the census is too good a thing to be wasted on ctyil service reform. The apollamen ingcongree need it. Piven the best thet Mark Hanna has been able“to do for them has left them with the ‘claims’ of thousands of their faithful constituents on their hands. Now comes thie decenniat snap, with ite 3000 clerkshipe and $8,000,000 2 year, Tt-Is too much to ask a weak congressional nature to overlook it. They have the census “jumt where they want ft. There in sort of a civil service rule affectin, these clerkahips. To be sure tt | a bluff, but It If enough to enable members of congress with tender consclences to turn away constitu. enta whom they don't want to ap- point. “No, sir, There are something like fifteen or twenty Jobs all around fe ch Republican senator, ant | five or six each for the good Demo rats, and if Secretary MeBnery an, his friends think congress Is going throw a good thing like that away for a little thing like bungling (he twelfth census, why, they don't um- deratand the moral make ¢ the avera member of the upper house - Eight Laws in Force. SALEM, Ore., Feb, 28.- There ight new laws for the protetic el PHILADELPHIA, Feb, 28,.--Om- clain of the Haidwin Locomotive Works have broken their allence concerning the reported large order received by the firm for engines from a Chinese rafiroad, and admit that such an order has come from the Chinese Fastern Hallway pany. It calls for twenty-< Vauclain compound consolidated en gines. Of this number forty are t be shipped during the coming sum= mer and the balance In time for the opening of navigation next year, The locomotives are to ¢ similar in jcharacter to the fifty that were built by this firm for thin railroad last year. In addition to this has received from the ¢ Railway Company, of supplemental order for ten me - comotives. This railway, it will b remembered, placed an order some six or eight weeks ago with the Raldwina for twenty locomotives, and a similar order with the Schen- ectady Locomotive Works, a thing unprecedented in the history of Min- glish railway —— “The pies that mother used to—" She Axed him with a flashing eye he wiaely paused. uur father,” she said, income sufficient to enable had an pur mother to keep a firat-claas cook Still he was a resourceful man and not easily dinconcerte mother used to jhave made never did amount to much anyway,” he asserted, there was a lack of enthusiasm in his manner and tone that told her she had evon a great victory.—Chi- cago “The p at ‘PHILIPPINE TOBACCO. Little Danger of Competition ° With American Goods. “Jusria tthe prevent time,” sald a prominent tobacco man to a New York reporter, “it is of interest to consiger the vetation 46200" py. ippine tebacen industry to the Unit. €d Staten. Phere need be no fear of competitits. ‘We will sell them atnifely mre than we will ever tay fr m, and an the islands eet m tized and more Amer: Ane oy ae ‘ans settle there, * will eo ( Them more and more to- 4 efgars and buy te j wea ye © Gfmnet take many fewer ar so We do no | several acquaintances, Ens who occasionally like a cigar, and they have to get of one dealer. He sends te la for these cigars in single cy : lets, for there is none ke ) Onis country, end yot th®y make | | the Philippines a matter of 150,- | 000 clgarn a year. There have on made from time to time efforts » Introduce there cigars here, ut without much success, In England they sell very irgely, mainly in bundies of five und six, which cost 2 cente @ bundle... These are both eheroota and civars, rather roughly fish and game, They are gous. fl | tur out, banded with strips of 143, n general act; house ill) M7, ited and yellow paper about a quar amendatory of the law pasked / the |ter of ant ion ri Phat bet special easton lant fall; house’ il 1, !tive hundred in a big cedar box with to protect sturgeon; house /'f 119, for salmon hatoherte s; hemtaer (il! 146, protecting trout; seaate DIYS? pre- scribing regulations for 7° dintric bill 107, g/plying to Roque rive’ fecting Curry county. © the state pretty thorawal’ wd are in the main sntiefactes to Fish and Game War’en seGup tergyman?” “Ho owner on rate. are to be found in nearly every drug Alsea (store in the country, @ oliding Nd and cost the lealer, duty pair, about $3.60 lish They The tobace is of a peculiarly light color, most of and senate Hi! 171, fs it rather dull looking, and it has, ¥F cover |to mytaste, the tia ss yor among tobac- which gives rise ‘ur people will not ne a aiid “# ah m- | % ler the firm | but} er Sweetly sings w' to the mistaken idea that there in | feotins f Hid him first | opium in it. ” smoke it at ™ price. It is good | pretty bad, jot the cottage necessary. As long las Mr. Arkell had a fortune there | was no danger that this famous cot- TRAINS MUST. STOP mportant Court Decision | _Favoring Smail Tomns. | WASHINGTON, D. C., Feb. 28.~ In the United States supreme cour® today a decision was handed down by Justice Harlan, upholding the constitutionality of the state law of |Obto regulating the stoppage of through trains at stations in the state. The law requires that any railroad company in the state shall have at least three trains a day, t¢ so many are run, stop at any station on its line containing not less thar 2000 population. The action was be= gun against the Lake Shore Com- pany because of its refusal to obey | the law by having a# many as three of its trains stop at the town of West Cleveland. The railroad company contended that the statute was antagonistic to the Federal constitution in that it erfered with the commerce be- |tween states. ‘The court held this lcontention to e unfounded, saying | that the question Involved was only that of subserving the public cone venience, and that the state had @ (right to legislate to that end. The |judgment of the supreme court of | Ohte was therefore affirmed. Jus, tices, Brewer, Shiras, White and Jeckham dissented, and Justices Shiras and White delivered dissent. ing opinion pester ER ‘The prisoner confronted his acd ~ users calmly, “My innocence js obvious he ree usual hush fell upon the court. “Look! ‘My alleged accomplice, who stands the prisoner exclaimed, convicted, is a tall man! I, too, am a tall man!( Robbery is always done }by a short mar and a tall mai Ab. how stupid of the police not t@ af thane a MILLIONS IN CERALS > Jersey Corporati | TRENTON, N. J. Feb, 28—<Artte [eles of Incorporation were filed wittt the secretary of state for the Amere jean Cereal Compan th an aus thorized capital of $23,000,000, ¢ ompany is empowered to nd grind, or otherwise manu! | as well as to buy levators, mills ures. T ital stock Is divided into $15,000,000 preferred stoek, with: 7 per cent. non-cumulative dividends and $18,000,000 common stock. The incorporators are Adrian H. Larkin, Francis L, Patten, jr, and Willian F, Wilson, jr., of Jersey City. Articles were filed with the secres tary of sta today changing the name of the Philadelphia Motor Was gon Company to the Pennsylvanty etrical Vehicle Company, and ine using the authorized capital stool from $3,000,000 to $6,000,000. The coms pany is authorized to make and deal in self-propelled vehicles, The incor= ators are Cornelius W, Woodward and Willlam A. Jackson, Germans town. Pa, antl Joshia 8. Du Bolg ” which the beet has among ves- Camden, tables, rather earthly, It is also heavy in type, an! makes the smok-| Dash—Don" — ies, rather slee jon't you think Misa ith a gre; ie tonight? crest tomy Smash—Yes; sbe must year