Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
j ; j , 4 J . geet et eae. —. -~s oe Fa eee eee e#eee ee ——_— OYS tee — e Between the ages of 12 and 20 woeeee TO seseee CARRY OUR NEWSPAPER ROUTES. APPLY AT —ap- btn W107 Third Ave Corner Spring Opposite New Telephone Building re Seattle ir Every Evening Except Sunday 7 . Show your neighbor a copy of The Seattle Star. "Phone Pike 150 & & €#e# ee @ ¢ & & & 4eIS " sIFVeEOES CUL JO AdOO e s0OqUuBICEU 4NOK MOUS HOW TO GET —— WARRIED No Trick at All in Ohio. | | ATrifie of $600 Extra is Cha: However, for Wealthy G THE SEATTLE STAR, lungs. Both these organs were stud ) the place where we stood; #o it was Jed with miliary tuberelos, and tt \ hard to hear him during the first had evidently been suffering for a BI | part of hin speech, He spoke slow lorg time, The disease was probab- ly and with gr deliberation, Th ly Inherited. ae | wan little in the greater part of that My informant then says that while b welghty discourse to excite a youth ra cate are delicate and expe full puditor, but the great thing was jeot to this disease, and | k at the great orator. Waldo ae many of them die from iY raon, who won there, said of what le supponed to be ex ure, it | is merely quick consumption, But] his figure and the great miachief les The |p re were all in so grand a le fe te well kr fito be both that he was, without effort, a» heridtary and contagious, and this Wht | supe to his most eminent rivals mentoated this disease to all th f all men did not disappoint other kittens in its soctety, aa well ear, but was o ff on to the other animals, like guinea Sale Mad There was lly susceptible to it wter He knew well that a little * When anyone buys an pik more or lens of rhetoric signified re the greatest care is} ee" Te: bea |nothing; he was only to say plain n on for ita physical condition, | 1g | 800 enual thinge—crand things, if one may bring into the fomily « NEWS COMES PROM SALT LAKE © bad them: ana it he nod them whole foeus of disease, which is Ii , only to absta from saying un- ahle to be communicated to little & fit things—and the whole occasion chillren or other members who kehes | was answered by his presence.” and pet the poor sick thing not | Me went almost through his Knowing the terrible risk which ts Some Utah Properties D welghty discourse without much ef- run. Jt behooves every purchaser in Now York by Samuel fect vpon his auditors other than of rueh a pet to be sure when it i# th which Em ‘con » well a |hought that it is plump, well nour seviber, But the wind changed be ished, and, ax far as can be ascer fore he finished, and blew toward tained, free from the seeds of thin ee | the cuarter where the boys sto most dangerous contagious disease | and he almost Hfted them from their CINCINNATI, March &—-Matri- monial bureaus are doing a land office business In Cincinnati, One firm, etyling iteelf the Ac Matri- monial club, and located in Fiat 1, 416 Vine street, in sald veritable Klondike. A man named Miller Is running tt “The money simply rolle inJ’ he raid, “it docan't make any di whether you make the matches not.’ Me then gave the following de- scription as to how the business was transacted, The object of the club is to find congeaial life partners for those who with to marry, and whe cannot find their choice in their own vicinity, or within thelr social sphere. ‘The headquarters of the club are ot Cincinnatl, with a branch office at Flat 4, 1728 Olive street, @t. Louis, Mo. M. Miller im in charge here, while Mra. M. Miller runs the one at St. Lous. Anyone desiring to join the club pays a $1 fee, and received a re- cel) The name ts entered on the [firm's books and each person tx Rumbered. The correct name in \aiven the office, and the ensuing cor- | rowpondence is carried on by number assumed, of correct names, at the | will of the writers. | A charge of & cents Is made when he agency are used | pake Introductions between In- terested parties. No money i# ever refunded to patrons, Each member of the club fills out | a blank describing himself accurate ty gs to age, name, complexion, na- | \Uonality, ceeupation, religion, health, |property, income, education. habits, accomplishments and appearance Marriage contracts are also enter- | |ed into. Amounts are paid varying | frem #1 to $800, according to the station and occupation of the life partner desired, Persons in ordinary or preachers come high. ' [amount Is pald when enka 5 ithe other half when the marriage | takes place. | There are more than 4000 members lin the club. ‘The office receives 16 leents for every letter passing | through its hands. A paper, The Matrimonial Advo-| cate, ie published at 19 cents a copy. | It contains lists and qualifications of members, who are numbered. Rabbi Hirech Mot to Go. CHICAGO, March &—Dr, Emil G Hirech will remain in Chicago. This |fact was determined by the action of the Sinal congregation at its meeting last night in unanimously a4opting the report of the special |committee of the board of truntecs | which fulty embodied Dr. Hirsch's jterma. The report concludes with the following resolution “Resolved, that Chicago Sinal con greration enters Into an agreement | with Dr. Hirsch to officiate an ite |rabbt on the following terms: To | pay Dr. Hirsch « salary of $12,000 a yeor for five years from this dat and to make the engagement for life, the salary after five years to) be fixed by mutual agreement be- | | tween the rabbi and the congrega- | thon. | Dr. Hirsch declined to make any | | announcement, and it is probable he will spend the rest of his days at the |head of the inal congregation, |where he hag been for nineteen | \7 NEW YORK, March &—~At the | monthly meeting of the trustees of | the Cathedral of St. John the Dt- | vine at the Sea House, the bullding | committee reported satisfactory pro- | arenes. with the structure. Autho lity war granted by the board to con tract for eight monoliths of polished |marbdle, which will stand In the ehcir. The monoliths will be six feet in diameter and sixty feet long. ‘The trustees also gave their con nent to the erection on the cathedral barounds of a building for th York Training Schoot for Nur: Plans have been drawn for this structure, but the site has not yet been relected. CATS GIVE CONSUMPTION. So Says Physician Who Attended an Ailing Angora. T have received a communication from an eminent Boston physician whitch deserves publication, but which, for lack of space, I must only avote here in part, says a writer in | the Boston Herald. Just before Christmas the wife of this gentleman, while purchasing some Bragilian parrots, had her in- terest and compassion excited by one of a number of Angora kittens in the same place, and after reflec tion bought the poor thing at a priee that warranted the establishment of acat farm, When the animal arriv ed home the doctor discovered that in epite of its long silky hair ther wae very little cat, and ventured to remark to his wife that it was sick but she assured him that it © question of starvation and bad uy e, the animal having had nothing t6 eat, and having been at short in tervals dragged by its head or its tail from the cwge for inspection fo the little thing was affection etely adopted by the family. But tts appetite was below par, and, al thoug® fed with great care on cook fed milk, It gradually pined away 1? rpite of careful nursing and watch ing, including two nights’ mleepless vigil of the doctor and hia wife be wide Ite couch, Medical curiosity prompted the former to make an ait topsy, when It would that the ant- | | meal bad died of consumption of the | | with car No, 12, |hecerde, no It looked as if somebody SALT LAKE, March & ~The lare Crank FMS B Preacher. oe. cos) in wentern mines which has NEW YORK, March & George been consummated for many a day who recently came here from has been closed in New York. F went lo the home of the | million dollars ts involved, and one Kiev, Alexander W. Bostwick, at 106 of the best known properties of the Mast Twenty cond street yester-| West falia into the ponsesison of a day ufternoon, and, proclaiming him- corporation which has now thrown self the prophet of a new religion, #o/off the mask of secrecy and hans alarmed the minister by his de- | boldly entered in the mining field monstrative arguments that Mr. fn @ manner that made Beventeenth Bestwick had him arrested. He was street pause this morning when the sent to Hellewue hospital for ex-/ news waa heard amination as to his sanity A telegram from Samuel New- house, ‘now in New York, conveyed the firvt Information, It stated that The Black Cat Hoodoo, he had #old one-third of the cele- The myster!- brated Mighland Boy property Spokesman: leview at our Iinck cat with the white fore-| Pingham, Utah, the deal including paws, which brought woe upon the his management contracts. fire department, has had a fit, and ‘The sale, it ts sald, represents over the hoodoo is off » longer do un- | 94,900,000, canny alarms come sounding at all! The purchaser is the @tandard O11 hours of the night from uninhabited | Company. The management con- f thestown. » more do the tracts are valuable themaeives. By find their wom = muddenty | tn Mr. Newhouse received so Jame, or the bolts dropping off their | much percentage on every ton of apparatus, All troubles of that sort have reached a happy end. ‘The cat crept into the station last ore. Negotiations between the English owners and the Standard Oi Com- Moaday night, and be morning | pany have been in progress for some he department had re i tol, Reeently a party of capital- five alarme, Four of them were tri-/ iste interested in the oll company, vini effairs, but one was the hardest! with experts, were whirled west in blaze that the fire boys had met tn! president Rockefeller’s private car, weeks, The crowning achievement | ond inspected the property. of the cat was that night while No.| Tho prive paid is over $4,000,000, making a run to the ‘The horses were gal-| 4 Mallon avenue at top as Monroe street we was an usly collision which also was do- ing some eprinting. Hoth the car ané the truck were mixed up for ten © truch was Pluramer fre loping down when. a, the nd f# the largest sum represented in nine transfer for a number of years It te said on excellent authority reneh million or so of off money may be jInvested soon in Colorado. MA. Rod Comes to Lecture. W YORK, March §—Edouard Kod, the @wies writer, arrived yer- terday on the French Hner La Nor mandie, from Havre, He will deliv a series of lectures before the Cercle Francaise of Harvard university, on - |the “Hiatery of French Dramatic try.” M. Rod was greeted at Estate. |the pler by members of the Cercle Chauncey | Prancais of Marvard, and ih the must wurely have been killed, but, inckliy, dempite the biack cat and the number, of the nobody was hurt beyond being badly Jarred And tue next day the cat had a fit and tince then the hoodoo has been of, Depew Buys R NEW YORK, Mareh & M. Depew took tithe yesterday from | evening a dinner was given in his John Livingston to the four five honor at the Metropolitan club by story Hate 12 to 1% Kast Elehty- | james M. Hyde and others. elehth street, for a consideration oF | siieaentiacaeaiete $150.000. Dr Depew said in ox- plenation of the purchase, that/ Riparia to Lewiston. friends, wh he hoped he could| LEWISTON, Idaho, March &— trnet, had persuaded him that the | Chief Engineer Kennedy has been in comsyliation with Engineer Beth. property would prove a profitable in- vestment ol, Who'ts now In charge of the en- 2 dntindinns gineering plans of the O. R. @ N.'s Bonds Found in a Drawer. |" {°™ Biparia to Lewiston. The neultations have been for the pur- FREEHOLD, N. J. March & ampleting the final details Three $1000 Morris & Kesex railroad ometruction, which is new hidden away Peter tially in progress. Mr. Kennedy Wright, an aged resident is greatly overworked, and Presi- who died suddenly OM dent Mohler is anxious to have the Febrnary 12, and were only discov-|tine to Lewiston completed and to ered by accident yesterday. Mie" thereupon begin the Camax Prairie Wright, sister of the 4 man, Was, sion. It in @ fact that the lat- preparing to break up the home and ter extension is to be made along €o cltewhere, She gave away most |ing present surveys as soon as the of her belongings to frie “nd intervening work im completed, and neixhbors, On woman recetved ® while the company will not be able handrome ol wardrobe, In moving to take « year's crops, ex-} it aeroret aperture was found. When | cont such as steamboats can bring | lopened the bonds were ound tuck~ | down the Clearwater to Lewiston, it definitely promises to handle next - eine year’s. Mother and Child. | Six Tock camps are working be- tween Lewixton and Riparia, The Norma on Sunday unloaded a car of ed away In a neat pack Piay with the children all through poodlig bccme dy 2M | greg eh powder and tools along the river age; enter as fully and an heartily | and also a car of lumber for black- a ow can into thelr world, which smith shopa, Ap rapidly as possible “WHO | the company im getting, the rock iw rot at all your world, If y Keane’s Reply to the Pope T was a freshman, had a place in the KROME, March 8 Arehbieh precession, We marched from Cam Keane has sent @ letter to the pope bridge to Boston, three miles and a wholly accepting the pontiff's dec- | half, and stood in or place for arations on Americanism, hours, and then march over to - Charlestown, We were tired when Tyndall says 50,000 typhus germa|thagoration began. There was a will thrive in the small circumfer- | little wind, whic! rr@d the sound ence of a pinhead, or visible globule, |of Mr. Webster voice away from rot on hin great organ tones rolled out his long sentences “Ane when bothe we and our chil nm shall have been consigne. to house appointed for all living. may love of country and pride of country glow with eq fervor among those to whom our names end our blood shall have descended! And then, when honored and de- crepit age shall n against the bare of thie n nument, and troops of in: lous youth shall be gathered round it, and when the one shall fpeak to the other of its objects, th Prurpones of its construction, and the ereat and glorious events with which it is connected, there shall rise from every youthful breast the lejaculat . “Thank God, I—also— jam an American! mw at Colfax. COLFAX, Wash., March #.—A of more then ordinary has been consummated here, by which the Colfax inventor expects to reay a fortune. L. D, Harding, of Colfax, inventor of the Harding | diff.rential rotier mills, and his a» rociates, have cloned a contract te put a line of these rollgin the 2000- barrel mill in Milwaukee, Wir. The mills are to be manufactured by the Edwerd P. Allis company of Mil- waubee, which agrees to manufac- \ture the mills and place them on the market, paying a good royalty to deal Importance thet another deal is pending, and a|the inventor if the mflis work suc- | | consfully This system of roller milis w In- i vented and patented by L. D. Hard- jing, head miller of the Eagle roller | milis of Colfax, and a complete sy: [tem was placed .in the mills here {last yea It was fully described in | the Spokesman-Review at the time. | the raills have proved a decided suc- | cess here, and R. G. Hargr j cently made a trip to the B succeeded in getting Eastern millers | interested in the invention. An ex- |pert was sent out from Milwaukee to examine the mills, who reported favorably. ' ‘The invention promises to revolu | ttoniae the milling business, ‘The deal was made through the efforts of KE. H. Sullivan, of Spo- kane Harry Cornwall and BR. G. | Harera of Colfax. Those inter- l ested in the patent are Hon. D. H Warner, L. T. Br H. 8. Holl- ingaworth, Julian Howard and L. D. | Harding, the inventor. Mr. Hard- jing will go to Milwaukee next week to saperintend the manufacture of the mills and the placing of the ma- jehinery in the mill —— Will Increase the Plant. GOLDEN, Wash, March §&—Del Hart, of the Triane mine, is expected lin Seattle about the Ist of March. He will be accompanied by Mr. Van | Khuye, who will examine and report upon the plant and mine. It is said the plant in to be overhauled and added to, and much improved both The Triune group comprises several claims, from which very rich ore ‘has been taken, especially from the Triune and Jessie locations. Sight. WALLA WALLA, Wash., March &—In response to ecu of Whitman college a goodly num- ber of representative business men ssembied in the Walla Walla club yma to consider the proposition ymitted last summer to the trus- | s of the college by Dr. D. K. Pearrona, a Chicago philanthropist. He promised to t a $50,000 ad ministration hall, with the provision that th citizens of Walla Walla donate $25,000 for a boys’ dormitory President Penrose made a state of the matter, and sald that | he had recently received a letter from Dr. Pearsons, practically waiv- ing the for conditions and grant- ing the use of his gift as soon as $15,000 in sight. Dr. Pearsons was asured that the remaining $10,- 000 could be raised by Miss Virginia Dox, the eastern soliciting agent for the college. Upon receiving this information many of those present favorably ex- pressed themselves and ga prom ines of their material support. Over half of the amount was subscribed before the meeting clom Another. Ten thousand men obeyed his light | ext } wor and lo! who for years had struggled on and on Awoke to find their dreams of riches | ‘ | And bowing come and go. | Men servants saw him He spoke, the markets rose forth- with or fell; governed all that mighty wealth will buy! | Fame, honor possessed, And yesterday you would have call- ed him blest But millionaires and paupers have to die @ | He power, homage he shouting In goes Op, Though whispering servants. tip- toe through his hall; How peor was I beside him yester- | day the market stilt read this fancy that it needs no ex-| wor of which there in @ great 4 | Penditure of brain force to play with | wut of the way and accumulating the baby, Froebel's “Mother-Play™ | jus, at convenient points, so book ts a go or you to Degin | that ax soon as the weather seems with OUFOEE 80 | tn. "tag the grading and track m™ *8Y ‘laying can be pushed continuously, r own head ss ai : the bed time nie ered to Intir confidences and] 1 Word has been clom munion between mother received here from Wenatchee that and ehild.—Elaine Goodale Kastman the rteamer Ellensburg would arrive in the Women's Home Companion, at Brewster today on her first trip -_— of the seanon. Flour for Russia. Advices were also to the effect a wf thet several carloads of delayed ma- GARFIELD, Wash. March %—| cninery for the Golden Zone concen- The farmers’ warehouse te shipping | trator would compose a part of her 30,000 bushel® of wreat wold to the | (hia) Sheldon mills, situated at Rockland, "°C". castson, owner of the Wash. price paid was 46 cont® tientand Chief, near Wellaville, was per bushel tn the warehouse. The i today and reports that he had § Is have a contract for 50) jist tapped a ot ledge with a care of flour to be delivered to | crossent tun feet in length at Russia for the Sibertan ratiroad, now |) th of 12 The ore samples butiding Th bale ts considered « brought in for assay have every ap- ood one, being two cents above the ot anita well. market price : assays from the shaft 70 C4 % feet down showed valuos of $40 to Stevens County Booming. | 800 In gaiena and gold. POKANE, March & —olvi ts = n" a) prowine and property has advanced Death of an Old $ r. three-fold In the past eighteen) WENATCHEE, Wash, March §.— nor said D.C, Bly, auditor of ti Wilson, an old soldier, died at Steven: mty, Mr. Ely is senior the home of Mr. Courtney, be vi mmander of the G. A. R. in) Wenateh fter an iliness of many thj# department, and cae down to|months. His body was brought to attend tho reception given by the town and given in charge of the G, G. A. R. of this city to Department A. kh. poat, which conducted the fu Commander G. W. Tibbets neral rites. Mr. Wilson was a stran “We feel the direct benefit of min in this country, and has no re- ing in Stevens county,” he contin~|jntiver at all, as far as known. He | ued, “Our county warrants are at died of cancer of the stomach per Two yeart ago they were beg - - ——— po big se are BUNKER HILL ORATION. . January Ist to February 16th | - we resalved 1966 tnatramenta for te: | Sengter Hoar, as a Freshma cord, of which a large part were location notices, T have seven dep Saw Daniel Webster, Utles ahd copyisia, and even with! ne‘frat time I remember seeing this force are required to work | 1), niet Webster waa on July 17, 1843, nights to keep up with the business | 1 yunker Hill, @ays Senator Moar in af the office,’ the Mareh Serlbner, The students of Harvard, where | | How rich todoy, beside his pulseless | | clay’ | Make fast the lids and let the curtains fall | —. B. Kiser in Cleveland Leader. e a* to mining and treating the ore. | THe pressed a button at his desk, | TRIED FOR Is an Ohio Girl for _ Slaying a Lover. THE MALD WAS IX ANELY JEALOUS Had Boon Swoothearts for Over & Yoor, but En in @ Sad Tragedy. SANDIBKY, ©., March §.—Mar- tha May MeFillen, 2, a pretty young woman, i” on trial in the as court here on a charge { murdering her lover, George K. whic. ‘They had been lovers for more than 4 year, and, ding to Mins MeFillen, Koeghle had repeat- edly promised to marry her. On the night of October Sth, Jast, Miss Me- Fillew and Koechle met at the house of friend of the former. On the night preceding the lovers had a quarrel, and Miss MecFillen claims Koechle struck bh Leaving bim, whe went to her boarding house, se- en 4 revolver, and vowed that no man would strike ber and live. She was insanely jealous of Koechie, | When they met the night after the |quarrel Koechle was seated at a able, Miss MeFillen entered with young man and the two took « scat at the table with Koechle. Soon the party started to leave. As Koe- jchie stooped to adjust his bicycle lamp, Miss McFillen drew from the folds of her dress a revolver and fired three shots in rapid succession, Keechle raised up, staggered, and an he fell, said, “My God, what have you don As he dropped to the floor the woman fired two more |rhots. The man died in less than a minute. Miss McFillen was imme- diately arrested, and to the police stated that she was glad that she killed Koechte. She sald she did not want to see him live and give his love to another. ee Nungry as a Bear. | In this happy land no famine comes nigh the Sierra bear, says John Muir in the Atlantic. All the year round his bread is sure, for some of the thousand kinds that he likes gre always in season and ac- cessible, ranged on the sheives of the mountains like stores in a pans try. From one to the other, from climate to climate, up and down he climbs, feasting on each In turn, en- joying as great a variety as if he traveled to far off countries north and south, To him almost every- | thing ‘s food except granite. ree helps to feed him, burh and herb, with fruits and flow- lers, leaves and bark, and almost ev- erything living or dead within reach, animels and insects—badgers, goph- ers, ground squirrels, lizards, snakes ete, and ants, bees, wasps, old and young, together with their eges and larvae, and their moss, grass and paper nests. Craunched and hashed, down all go to his marvelous stom- ach and vanish as if cast into a fire! What digestion. A sheep or wound- [ed deer or @ pig he eats warm about as quickly as a boy eats a buttered | muffin, er, should the meat be a | month old, it ts still welcomed with | tremendous relish. After so gross a meal ar this, perhaps the next wiil strawberries and clover, or rasp- berries with mushrooms and nuts, or puckery acorns and chokecherries, if fearing that anything eat~ lable in all hia dominions should es- re being eaten, he breaks into cabins to look after dried apples, ba- and if still hungry he eats ountaineer’s bed; but when he | hod had a full meal of more tempt- ing dainties he usually leaves it un- disturbed, though he has been krown to drag it up through a hole in the roof, carry to the foot of a |tree and He down on it to enjoy @ jesta. Kating everything, never te he himself eaten, except by man, and man alone n enemy to be fearca. “Bar meat,” said a hunter, from whom I was seeking informa- tion, “bar meat is the best meat in |the mountains, thelr skins make the lbest beds and their grease the best butter, Biseult shortened with bar area goes as far as beans; a man lwttt walk all day on a couple of | them biscuits.” Law of Horse Bite. NEW YORK, Mareh 8. — While Louis Stern of 128 Madison street was walking along the Bowery, near Houston street last December, one of the two white horses attached to a brewery wagon of the Hoffman brewery company browsed on his coat sleeve and bit off a large plece, with a bit of the skin of He says that the horse He for toget his left arm. had its feet on the sidewalk. sved in the Fifth District o . the price of the coat, cloim for his skin. Ju dismissed the case on the rund that he could not recover bes cause he had not shown knowledge ® the part of the owner of the herse that it was vicious, The Appellate Term of the court says that, as the horse had its feet on the sidewalk, where it had na right to be, the defendant ts Hable, regardless of proof that the defen- dent knew hidQhe se was vicious when it was left without an attends nthe j REFLECTIONS OF A BACHELOR, | The average woman robs her hus< band of a lot of attention which she gives to a cat that hates him, A man judges a man by the kind of 9 cigar he smokes; a woman judg< jes a cigar by the kind of a man that smokes it. | ‘There Is generally only one worse foct tha the woman who refuses @ man twice, and that is the man wha asks her twice. The women always let on that | they have to refuse a lot of men, | but the ones that really let any get away age as scarce as hen's teeth. Mahikelah probably didn't enjoy | his old age much, because there were | so many younger men who had more xperence in everything than he had.=—New York Press. TBR APE ~e s me court has overruled the towtiay art and directed a new trial. Thy