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TOCATCH CRIMINALS Tacoma. Now Has, Vigilantes. THE CITIZENS ARE UP IN ARMS Sa ae a Hold-Ups and Murder Have Gone on : Too Long and : Stop, | TACOMA, March 10, — Public tn-/ seenery, One paper has mna, and cannot find a ne the deseriptive arti P, J, Collins, of the place to b eles to a close. Northwest Agricultariat, Minneapo: lia, in making @ continued story of his articles, and his readers call it “good stuff.” Collins says that if he doean't end his articles his entire subseription Het will be tn Colorado, large number of his subscribers having gone there already, The Staats Zeitung, New York, will send a apecial correspondent to Oregon, who will make the tour of the state with the editors, A we.-known accident insurance company iy New York has tendered & policy to all delegates who make the trip to the coast, evidently hav- ing great faith in the safety of the transportation facilities in the land where rolls the Oregon The business men of Portland, and all others interested In the suc cena of the meeting, are urged in the name of the general committee to attend a meeting in the Chamber of ‘ommerce Friday afternoon at 4 o'clock, Portiand’s honor is at Stake, and it is important that her citizens complete arrangements as soon as possible. A letter from Past President Charles A. Lee, of Pawtucket, R. 1, gives the information that the Press Association of his state will send | vue hospital ambulance broke down reign of terror, For week a carnival | Come prepared to photograph every- ort | thing in sight. w of crime has smirched the fair fame 'i¢ wish Protector McGuire will have of the ' beep the Columbia river salmon on dress aon business men of the city, in| 4 mn conclave assembled, have!” The Florida State Press Associa- sworn to act, if all the dregs of the | p14, munie! | tlon ts intending to visit Oregon in ipality must be stirred up 19) july, arriving here at the close of the action. | tae National Editorial Assoctation Indignant citizens held a meetiog | and touring the state with the lat- in the chamber of commerce and de- cided to follaw the matter to the Bitter end. Every prominent bust- ness man in the city was present at he meeting, with resolute face and eyes full of determination. It wae decided that a vigilance committee | must be organized at once, and every t stop the holdups for have terrortged the ‘The painful Incompetence of | the police department has thorough- | ly Gingusted the citizens with their dilatory tactics, and the matter will be taken out of the hands of « city government which has shown no ability, made no arrests, and done | nothing to stop @ series of dastard-| ly robberies, the boldest and most | ever perpetrated in the Rorthwest. Fiercely denunciatory speeches ‘were made at the meeting today, scoring the police and city govern-| connected with | the sappreasion of crime in Tacoma | : He Gignant citizens today. | Marcced inet voce temaett was |Culces® Triday, and before the} ed . | even! passed ar ms, Wie seal beet BF She sae “*-| Buckingham were married. organization of a secret vigilance committee. A few of the most prom- inent and determined men in the ‘city met im the back room of a bank and organized. One of the beat known citizens of Tacoma was elect- 4 chairman, and every member was) rey the ter- ful commun- ity. All were pledged to absolute | secrecy, and if any man was found) dead, none of thetn were to know anything of the matter. . Warns Good Citizens. Chicago, March 10.—Prof. George D. Herron of Iowa college tec- tured at Central Muste Hall on} Resources and Spiritual) He said, among other) things; “The ‘good citizens’ are the chief enemies of goodness. The men of) "blameless lives’ are the high priests of wrongs that affront the skies, that blaspheme the universe, and | that make the very stones cry out) against the suffering of man. ‘Child murder, chattel slavery, prisoner flogging—which of these has not had upon its side the majority of | the “good citizens?”’ asks an En- glish writer. ‘Leaseholds of ty- ranny, ignorance and squalor would not be worth 12 months’ purchase but for the unselfish, devoted men and women willing to die in the support of any He or injustice.” It is this defense of evil system by ‘good’ men that constitutes the trag- edy of progress. The Father for- gives them, as the sons of men for- give them, because they know not what they do. They are as truly the victims of a false system and training as the several hundred lit- tle children who are today working beside their mothers in West Vir- ginia coal pita. They are the ‘lost’ whom Christ comes '> save In the social revolution, Let us hope that some of these at least will repent while there is yet time, before the day of dreadfu} reckoning comes on, ‘and they are called to repentance by barricaded streets and burning cities, by wasted and trampled fields.” ARE GETTING READY Portland Preparing to Ent tain Editors. PORTLAND, Oregon, March 10.— ‘The near approach of the annual Association is awakening interest all along the line, and the delegates | are puzzled as to which route to take. They desire to make the en tire trip by daylight, but time will not permit. Colorado citizens re-| member the extensive advertising | piven that state on account of Inst) year’s v’ and have renewed the invitation st year, Some papers are yet devoting columns of write-| | within a few hours, | crumbling ter body. The Florida assoctation’s president writes that he desires to return the Northern weather that was sent to that section this winter. N. W. Darham, of Spokane, jt dent of the Washington State Association, writes that Spokane will send # delegation to meet the national deleggtes at the estate line, and extend to them the hospitality of the city, He says that Spokane will give the delegates a spread and show them over thy city, Hand- some souvenirs will be presented to the visitors, After Fourteen Years. Chicago, March 10--A wedding feast at 2520 Wabash avenue jast night was the crowning event inthe romance of two lives, Frank J, Nertney of La Salle, IL, and Mrs. Mary Buckingham of Chicago had been married by Justice James Fourteen years ago they schoolmates and sweethearts in La- again. They returped last week, and Nertney, who had been seeking for trace of his former sweetheart, knew of their arrival He came to Mr. and Mra. Nertney will reside | in Chicage. Riches for Man Long Dead. Webster City, lowa, March 10. ‘The people in Williams art satisfied that the mystery of the skeleton found half buried under debris of the Fiddler drug store in solved at) last. The dead man was Frits Z. Schrader, an heir to 400,000 marks, about $100,000. He was a Prussian who lert Breslau 35 years ago. After making a tour of this coun- try he came to Williams, where he landed as a tramp in 1887. He workea for money enough to buy what whisky he wanted and became a celebrated character, sleeping In barns, box cars and under houses, A recent letter from Germany says a fortune of about 400,000 marks has been left to Schrader by | Schrader din | relatives in Prussia. appeared from Williams about 11 | yeara ago, and it Is now belleved that he went to sleep under the Fid- dier drug store and died of heart disease. The skeleton was found when the store burned last Tuesday, Subpena for Governor. Perry, O. T., March 10—The Ok- lahoma = legislature committee, C. M, Barnes, governor, and J. H. Burford, chief justice, were served yesterday with subpa- nes to appear before the joint tn- vestigating committee. When asked if he would obey the subpana the governor remarked: “I think not.” He takes the position that he ts not subject to legisiative subpoena, ‘The Oklahoma lower house of the legislature hag passed a bill grant ing women the right to vote at all elections and to hold office, ssing Old Kaskaskia. Nashville, 111, March 10,—All that is left of Old Kaskaskia, the hrst capital of tne state of Lilinots, the first settlement in the Missis- sipp! valley and at one time the me- tropous of the great middle west territory, will be swallowed up and disappear in the muddy waters of the Mississippi river within a few days. The current of the river recently made another of those sudden shifts for which it is noted, and several acres of rich fertile soil, part of the ground trodden by the forefathers of the state, was swept away." But a few hundred feet, of the old vil lage yet remains, and this is fast into the river, ever since the Mississippi cut through the peninsula above the town in 1892 and formed a junction with the | Kaskaskia river, eight miles above the point where it originally emp- tied into the Mississippi, the his- torle old tewn has beon washing away rapidly Col. Sweet's historic tavern, in which Lafayette dined when he vis- ited Kaskaskia in 1826, and the old statehouse wherein met the first [l- unos general assembly, were among the last buildings to go, The old cemetery has also fallen a vie- tim to the relentless waters, has a Lexow | THE SEATTLE Vanked His Hair Out in New York, (THE AMBULANCE BROKE DOWN PationtRescued by Two Policemen, | NEW YORK, March 10.-A Belle- nd | yesterday at Avenue A and Seo street. ‘The front axle gave way, | | and Kennedy, the driver, was thrown out, landing on the horse's head. = | | with his « | bility with his elub. | violator of the law himeelf. Dr. Swantsk, who was on the re neat, landed with both knees on the chest of the patient, Sophia Hunne- | brich, who has been committed from | the Jefferson Market police court for examination as to her sanity, She thought that the doctor was making | an attack on her, and seizing @ fist- | ful of hie hair with one hand, start- | ed to beat him with the other. we | oe hospital in another ambulance. | E i g E i is i 2 i 3 i 2 : ait He e i Hi | : Hl A Rich Man's Son Suicides. Erie, Pa, slarch 10.—-Romeyn Olds, aged 17 years, a high school boy, sole heir to $350,000, and son of Clark Olds, one of the best known | members of the Erie ber, committed suicide at 1 o'clock this morning by shooting bimself in the head with « shotgun. The deed was done tn his own room. No cause can be as | signed unless tt be a boyish love af. | fair, | | | LAWYER DEAD. | A. W. Coleman Passes Away on Colville Reservation. A. W,. Coleman, & former well known lawyer of this city, died a few days ago on the Colvilic Indian reservation in this state, where he was interested in mining properties. Mr. Coleman had many warm friends here, where he was esteemed as a gentleman in every sense of the term. The following despatch from Spokane gives som information concerning Mr. Coleman and hin death: SPOKANE, March 10.—Alvyn W. | Coleman, son of Hon. James Cole- man, of Washington eity, whose ath at Toroda creek, on the reser- | vation, is reported, w ingularly bright and scholarly lawyer who h. lived in Seattle for six years prior | to removing to Toroda creek in May of last year. | A college graduate, and of pleasing address, he made many friends in | Seattle and Tacoma, and was prom- inent in society in both elties. For a time he was engaged tn practice with James Hamilton Lewis, but la ter formed @ partnership with Frank Quinby, and before leaving Seattle had been in several other partner- ships. Je came to Toroda last May,” F. W. Rosenfelt, postmaster at that place. “He acquired excellent mining properties in the camp, and was in a faig way to do well. Ever since his arrival he has done all our legal and notarial work for all of us in the camp, He was an exceedingly popular young man.” Poultryman to Meet. COLFAX, March 10.--A meeting of the Whitman County Poultry and Pet Stock Association is called for Saturday at the store of 8. C. Lyle, for the purpose of electing officers and deciding upon a date and place of holding the next annual show. ia | ol A Policeman Turned Down. New York, March 10e—Policeman | Hug. nssidy of the Mast 126th | street station, appeared In Part I lof the General Sessions today against Patrick Sheehan, a coal cart | | driver, charging him with assault. | Hho swore that Sheehan struck him lin the face, breaking his nose, be- cause he ordered the man to remove from the sidewalk two barrels | which Sheehan had been using to carry coal to a cellar, Sheehan's head was swathed in bandages. He swore that C@sidy | voir. | walks and curbstones. | flooded. lis in Greenup county. STAM abused him for not removing the| barrels quick enough to sult him, and attacked him, striking bm | dd white} Cassidy in void pute | inhment, he sald, w both fell, | Cansidy's nove etriking on the curb | stone. "He denied that he had struck | Cassidy, and declared that after the | fall Cassidy beat him into insens! Several wit heanos corrobora “Gentlemen of this story ¢ jury,” sald Re- corder Goff, sud nly interrupting the trial, “a police officer ix a pub He servant. His brass buttons and his club do not give him authority to overstep the law, Very often this fac. is loot sight of, and the public has become accustomed to it, Thin officer probably had a right to ar | rest this man for blocking the #ide- | walk, When ho raised that ab and struck that man he became a The de fendant t# a thin, consumptive-look- ing fellow, who would not be able to attack this big policeman, The police officer committea a felony, a most brutal act, and should be prom | eouted. It may not be necessary | for you, gentlemen, to leave your | seats in considering a verdict in this case. Theodore A. Havemeyer, Jr., the} foreman of the jury, whispered to the other members of the jury, and | # minute later announced a verdict of not guilty, Wood for Pencils. “The American pine and cedar cannot be equated anywhere in this world,” remarked a foreign manu- facturer to a Washington Star re- porter, “and my visit to this country this time is to make some contracts for a supply of the same. I am tn- terested in sawed lumber of all Kinds, the greater part of which, of | course, we obtain In Europe. The | American pine and cedar, however, has to be secured here Ninetentha | of the lead pencim ured In the world are manufactured of American cod- ar, a very large part of which Is grown in Florida. Some so-called | American manufactured lead penetis | are made in Europe, but the cedar | from which they are made all comen from this country. It is shipped to) Europe in convenient-sized loge and | manufactured in proper shape after | it arrives there. There are a num- ber of cedars throughout the world, but the Plorita cedar is particularly valuable In the manufacture of lead penciia, It is of @ very fine struc- ture, the grain being hardly distin- guishadle, and can be worked up to the last inch. In the various grades) of the cheaper penctls, other cedars can be used, but for the finer goods the American cedar is exctusivety used. For all practical purposes all the pencils used In Europe are man- ufactured of Florida cedar. Much of the lead, plumbago, and graphite which t# used in them also comes from this country. There are & number of woods in Rurope that are used in the manufacture of matches, but the American pines are grad- ually weeding them all out, for the reason that the American pines gan} be handied and workg! at leas ox-) pense than any other woods, amount of wood consumed In match. | es amounts to two or three forests! of trees a day, but even with this) consumption hardly any inroad has} been made, for the growth more / than keeps up the suppty. The Am-/| erican mateh, as well he wood, | now goes to all parts of the world. } The business is simply enormous, and It is constantly on the Increase. A Flood Paterson. — Paterson, N. J., March 10.—A 24-/ inch water main, leading to the! large reservoir of the Passalc Water Company, burst about 6 o'clock thin | morning. Eearth and stones were hurled to a great height, and the road was washed out for a hundred feet around the break The rup ture took place clone to the reser The main was used to con- duet the water to the reservoir from | the Little Falls pumping station, five miles up the road, There was no communication between the ros | ervolr and the upper station, so that | before the water could be turned off | & messenger had to be sent to Little! Falls. For almost two hours the) water poured in torrents down the | Grand street hill, tearing up side An area of eight blocks was thus deluged and cellars all along the course were The tracks of the trolley | Hine were ripped up and travel coutd | not be resumpd until almost noon-| time. It was 7 o'clock when the! water was shut off, and the work of | repairing was begun at once The upper sections of this city | and also Passale city were without | water the greater part of the fore} noon. | | | Unclean Sweat Sho NEW YORK, March 10.~—Dr. MI- chael B. Feeney, chie {sanitary in-| spector of the health board, made a report yesterday to President Mur-| phy on the condition of the sweat | shops In New York in the district lying south of Kast Houston street | and east of Broadway, Three hun- dred and ninety-eight houses were visited, containing in the aggregate 1835 families he sanitary condition of the hounes occupied by those who hi recently emigrated to this was found to be vile on ac their ignorance and absolute disre- gard of even the simple require menta of cleanliness,” said Dr. Fee- ney in his report Fireworks. Japan, there ts a fire nu In Nagasaki, works maker who rotechnic bi r se that when exploded, sail in life-tk ner in the alr and perform movements exactly like those of liv ing birds. The secret of making the wonderful things bas been in th possession of the eldest ehiid of the for more ures py many woh generation family of « than 400 years. Drunk Fifty Years. VANCEBURG, Ky., March 10 Capt, Arch Horner, who is widely known as one of Kentucky's most picturesque characters, is dying. He claims to have n drunk 50 years and ig now 70, His house, puble one, is on the line between Lewis and Greenup niles. He has sold whisky for many years and when indie in Green » walks @ the opposite ond of the house and is tn Lewla county Indicted ingiaw ts | ounty, he goes to his bedrodtn and Attend the opening of the Cafe Halbe in the Collins block this even- | ing, Nothing sold, @ | Ing Tacoma out ‘The | era ° IT LEAVES TACOMA OUT G. N. to Run by the Valley Route. WHAT JAMES J. HLL WILL 0 mate Him at Tacoma’ ~To Portle It i# reported from Tacoma that ae a result of James J. Hill's visit to Heattle, the Great Northern will butld from Seattle to Portland, leav- The following from Tacoma makes interesting reading: TACOMA, March 10.--Now it is re- ported that as the reault of Jim Hill's | work in Seattle, it has been decided to build the Great Nurthern from Black River function to Portland by way of the Mtuck valley, Lake Kip- owsin, the Batonville country, and foothills route. This has been brought about by the Gifference between the read and he Northern Pacific, by which the old Union Pacific grade between T coma and Portiand has to be aban- doned by Mr. Hill ‘This grade is owned jointly by Mill and the Northern Pacific, which re- cently acquired the Union Pacific tn- terest, for the express purpose of making Mr. Hiti's Interest in the property valueless, Aa a retaliatory measure it ts said Hill fe attempting to shut the Northern Pacific out of Beattie, as noon as their present lease of the track of the Puget Sound Shore road shall expire, over which the North- ern Pacific now runs ite trains from Black River junction into the city. A rumor has been afloat that the Northern Pacific rattway would com- pel Beattie to bring Hill to terms by the threat of building a line along the east shore of Lake Washington, leaving Seattle out of the main line traffic, between the north and south. Hill is generally supposed to have controfling interest in the Pacific Coast company, which owns the Puget Sound Shore road, over which the Northern Pacific railway rune its rains tnto Seattle, The lease runs out this year, Until a short time ago, Hill ex- pected to use the old Union Pacific je between Tacoma and Portland and with that end In view, paid sev- eral thousand dollare worth of tax- os on the right of way. To checkmate Hill, the Northern Pacific bought the other half inter- ent in the roadbed and right of wa: Now Hilt has been going over the matter with his advisors and en-| gineers, and has decided upon the straight route by way of the valley cutting out at Bumner for the south and running down through the rich) timber and coal country to the south. enat of Tacoma. ‘This is the teritory through which the Hart railway, the Tacoma & Col- pumbia River railway and several | other lines have from time to time been profected, and Is the richest territory in national resources yet untouched. The coal is said to be the best In the country, both In quantity and quality, and facilities for handling the forests stand thick with timber of the first quality, and the agri i tural possibilities of the valleys are wondertul. In addition to all this an easy route can be had, with ght grades | and few curves, making @ short line not only to Portland, but cutting off for the Cispus pase and other gateways through the Cascades through which another tranecontin- ontal road must come, as well as tapping the many valleys leading up into the mountains. Hill now has a survey and profile of this proposed route, from Black River junction to Seattle. Just what survey it Is cannot be ascertained, but It Is one made recently with to-date reports. —— Quarreled and Died. NEW YORK, March 10.—-Mre. Blanch Roberts, 22 years old, of 25 Hamilton street, attempted suicide by taking poison it night at her home, She had had trouble with her husband, Tony, who, the police say, insisted . that two diamond rings were enough for her to wear. Mrs. Roberts had three rings be- aides bracelets and other things, so she took poison, Sho will recover. An Essex Street View. NEW YORK, March 10.—Since Chauncey M. Depew made the favor- able impreasion on the east side which resulted in his gaining the title of “the Peach,” in compliment to his ability and magnetism, there has been a steady demand for his picture east of the Bowery which the pleture dealers have ben quick to supply. A profound impression would be created among the friends of the senatorelect if they ld view a crayon portrait of him which is on exhibition In a pleture store in Hesex street, The pleture could not be mistaken for one but My, De- pew, but the artist has given him a Hebraic nose whieh is an uncon- aclo caricature of Mr. Depew's own organ, though it is likely to be popular among the dealer's custom- ers, New Copper Company. NEW YORK, March 10.—The Ar- cadian Copper Company has been incorporated under the laws of New reey, with a capital stock of $3, divided into 160,000 shares par yalue of $25 a share, Of this capitalization 100,000 s are to be exchanged share for sh for the stock of the Arcadian Cop per Company of Michigan, and the privilege ts offered to the stoc khold ers of record of the latter company to take the remaining 60,000 shares at $30 cash per share on the basis of one-half of one share for each share held in the Michigan com: pany. The reason for the incorporation | garten has been temporarily closed | reer capitalization than. $2,501 006, which ts that of the Michigan Company, and it was desired to raise additional funds to ent the property and plant | Hy the additional fund of $1,5 000 provided, $600,000 wil aid for the Highland, St. Mary's Copper Company and other properties on the north, south and west of the Michigan Company's property and $900,000 rewerved for additional plant and developments, A_ report that the newly incorporated Are dian Company was to be the me dium for the organization of a great copper combination, with $400,000 | 000 capital stock, was positively de- | nicd yesterday, Valo Owns a Railroad. | NEW HAVEN, March 10.—Word has been received at Yale that the Indiana and Lake Michigan Rail- ad, whien is largely owned by the Yale corporation and other Connec- tient capitalists who hold its bonds, has been purchased by heir repre \gity Engineer Thompson EMolns sentative, ex-Gov, Morgan G. Bulke- |ley. ‘che road ip 40 miles long, and | runs from South Bend, Ind., to St. | Joseph, Mich., and valued at over a | million dollars, It has been oper- ated by the Vandalia system, paying 7 per cont interest on its bon The Kastern bondholders found the op- eration of the road by the Vandalia and Pennsylvania system too expen- sive and bought !t in at a price not announced, New rolling stock will be purchased. ‘The road ie the shipping point for lumber from the northern regions ‘of Michigan and for the berry and fruit supply of Chicago, M. L. Beud- der aud Colgate Hoyt of New York are heavy owners of the road's bonds, NEW YORK, March 10,—A ¥ dict for $18,000 was awarded to | Clara M. Stewart In the supreme | court in Brooklyn yesterday in her sult to recover $60,000 damages |against the Long Island Ratiroad Company for injuries received | the tally-ho accident at the Valley bye crossing on Aemorial Day, 1 . Stream of Consciousness. I sald that the most general ele- ments and workings of the mind were all that the teacher absolutely needed to be acquaintedwith for his purposes, says Prof, Willlam James in the Atlantic. The immediate fact which psychology, the science of mind, has to study is also the most gerieral fact. It ts the fact that in each of us, when awake, and often when asleep, some kind of consctous- neas is always going on. There ts & stream, a ete., that constantly pass, and con- itute our inner life. The existence of this stream is the primal fact, the nature and origin of it the essential problem of our science. So far as we clans the states or flelds, of con- sciousness, write down their nature, or trace their habits of succession, we are on the descriptive or analy- tieal level. So far as we ask where they come from, or why they are just what they are, we are on the explanatory level. In these talks with you T shall en- tirely neglect the questions tha | what our successive flelds of con- separate their contents Into elements 0U® MUST BE CLEANLY Health Board Issues | Its Orders, | AN ULTIMATUM TO BLACK CHAPEL Some Engineering Proposi- tlons—Future Plans. j / The health department will come : pel persons occupyifg houses ie the blocks bounded by King Wel- ler streets, and Sixth avenue south ang Maynard avenue, to improve the sanitary condition of their surround | ings or they will be compelled by law to vacate them. The board of health claims that for years rubbish has been collecting in this neighborhood, especially the old part known aa Black Chapel, and as there in no sewer system nor can © any be placed there owing to the and being so low, drastic measures have been taken in order to improve i sanitary condition. - | and mp rubbish in the Sound and as the is not strong enough to carry the pipes. Most ail of this is bufit on teh level of the | | refuse off. collect t in the bay.’ the rveadhnaad J city ever all of the prosperity and panic,” says | writer on “New York Soctal Lit \in the February Ladies’ Home jnal. “It was not until | prosperity were set in mation sclousnes# come from, or why they | tween 1840 and 1860, and ~ which they do have, They certain- ly follow or accompany our brain states, brain conditions them, we have not the remotest Inkling of an answer to give. And, on the other hand, if have the precise inner constitution | & time when P eggee) was 80 that literally wert without any legitimate for at if we ask just how the ‘Thetr past had nothing to suggest their future, and men, eagerly assisting and men, set about establishing we should say that they aredue to a bases of existence. The prince | spiritual being called our soul, which certain country had a patace that lreacts on our brain states by these had taken a ‘grande dame’s’ fi American cit! peculiar forms of spiritual energy. lour words would be familiar enough, it is true, but I think you will agree that they would offer little genuine explanatory meant ‘The truth ts that we really don’t know the an- jswers to the problems on the ex- planatory level I shall therefore dis- |miss them entirely and mere description. | Mabel Safe at Home. | HUDSON, N.Y. March 10.—Ma- bel Connor, 15 years old, for whom | the pollee of New York sent out a description as missing, was found in the suburbs of this city today. She left her home, but failed to nag relatives who were waiting for | her at the Grand Central Station in |New York. Outside of the family no persons here knew of her disap- pearance until they read it in the Sun this morning. Then persons at once hurried to the anxious pa- rents with the information that she had been seen at early morning mass in the Catholic Church here. She was gradually traced from street to street and at noon one of the searching party found her near the fair grounds. On reaching New York yesterday she alighted at 125th street, and, forgetting her aunt's address and becoming bewildered, took a train back for Hudson, reaching here shortly before 11 last night. She wandered about the olty all night and this morning until found While being brought home in a sleigh she fell asleep at once. Her father is a prominent business man here, and has held several political offices. To Patent Q. S. Group. CHEL/ Wash, March 10.—It ts learned that the Q. 8. Mining Com- pany is preparing to patent its min- ing properties in Toat’s Coulee as soon ag the snow goes off, Quite a Diack of its stock was recently sold at as high as 15 cents per share, Work on the company's big tunnel on the Q. 5S. mine is progressing steadily and It is only a matter of a few days when the 600-foot level of the ore body will be struck, and it is said the developments will aston- ish (g@ mining world when the com- pany gets ready to let the public know what th really ig in these mines, ° Fever Scare Subsiding. COLFAX, March 10. | lever scare is subsiding, now thre cases under quarantine, but all are mild In addition to | the two previously reported the lit- | Ue daughter of Mr, and Mrs, Leon | Kuhn has the disease, and tne place | has been quarantined, The kinder he scarlet ‘There are under New Jersey lawa is that the | and no foar of a turth laws of Michigan do not allow @/ the pita is caterteined, i turn to | ax. | why sbould not | ‘a sovereign in his own righ! one like tt, only ten times finer? “Now came the thirst for show,” for entertaining, for spieridid ri in extravagant expenditure, } (had not yet been checked and which may not even have reached its clim- The American woman who I like a duchess must wear ‘nia of her order, and thé metro | itan opera house each winter Is b barous with its show of gems worn in ostentatious fashion, and . apparently being only distingu from one another by the wearing jewels which cost thoustnds of do Jars more than those worn by rivals in adjoining boxes.” ‘The Pacific Coast Steamship Com- pany's steamer Queen, Capt. Jeph- sen, arrived in port last evening from San Francisco She brought — up a large number of passengers and much freight. Thirty of the passen- gers were on thetr way to Alaska. Following is the passenger list: J. T. Urquhart, B. Nelson, F..G. Seeley, T. D. Seeley, A. G. Says, Miss Sall- mer, A. W. Kennedy, J. A. Saliger, Mrs. Sallger, J. McCafferty, J. P. Stidger, Mrs. G. Gibson, P. J. Knight, J. Kennedy, A. Whit Miss Williams, Mra. Sieka, ‘Thomas O'Hara, G. Huddleston, Mrs, Hud- dieston, C. W. Snow, Mrs. W, EB. Haskell and son, J. P. Staftor@l F. W. Johnson, Mrs, Sweders, Mrs. Sa cassi, P, M. Williams, J. M, Pinker ton, H. A. Potter, J. Davis, A. M. Stephenson, Mrs, F, D. Eustis, Mra. Nellis, A. J. Craig, Mrs. Craig and 88 second-c! The Umatilla, Capt. Cousins, salled at § o'clock in the morning for San Francisco. She bad a large freight cargo, Her list was as follows: Mrs. J. K. Leaming, Mrs, P. He Clausson, A. F, Haas, Mrs. Arthur Prociaes, Miss B. Myers, Miss L. My Boone, Mrs. L. W. Osborne, Mrs Jane Anderson, W. H. Jossalyn, C. A. Taber, A. T. Jameson, Mrs. G. T. dameson, W. B. Walker, J. P. Hearn, EK. P. Vandernook, J. B. Thompson, F. J. Stockett, L. F. Taskey, Mar- garette Bloomfeld, Mrs. Rees, Miss Rees, H. B. Ernst and 33 steerage. | ——* | Wew Jersey 4 | ELIZABETH, N. J.,eMarch 10. | Louis Rossell was hanged here this morning for the murder of a farmer | named Pitts, : —- said Viodding Pete atter ridden @ short distance In patrol wagon, “we've got a lot thankful for.’ "answered Meandering Mikey ink of all de folks dat'll have to | pull roo dis zero weather widout any nice warm jalls to go to." |’ ‘ashington Star, are written of in the newspapers a6