The Seattle Star Newspaper, March 22, 1899, Page 2

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tJ ' ” ° ml , de © 2 THE SEATTLE SPAR. is faa acest hacthiacetienisetl CS LT PLE } : pee | ployen of Gr and Ireland ’ | name of the Jnaper iluen an tint ‘ot rs \ ; 4 5 WEED apie, ns sagKR while 7 on ag : [780 in every 1000 receive $1/.12 0 woe HAL {' ( of the company. |True Blue Wos the ‘Frisee a. \ week In the United § th mt d Detatie have be arranged 1th . _ : Rouen PCRS paid to any ratlwe ) flag will be went south imme Giri, ca be ea pie te 87 w Wook, to trackmen > He Jnaper Thuer re c aad , i > so. colve on the average $1.17 a work fr snag Mower ’ ant HAN FRAN ), Same Pike 16¢ ing day no lowest rate paid in the flag was ma r aby @/ Sadie t . = ‘|A Proclamation of per ‘ oN tle Thint Ave th united kingdom f a of southerr Sms vay con por ANG Touched Two Men Passing on the sir. .' pcan su. co ood Wl {aie company. entered the. sors rey), OS . ve | Pxcluding agrioults | for six months, as state troops, ur ar " ' wages pald laborers and work - x | der Governor Joseph Brawn, ple. : |the English railway man, ‘The rail |W. D. Cornwell, W. H. Key, and | way service there shows the largest P. Persone, the latter being the only yrtion of men obtain! ” a | surviving officer. nt weekly wages—$9.73 After servin Uncle J now Horrible Tragedy at Second and Washington |rmore nw mr cons, cf ies cm, |Presigent Makinley Promises Belt: | anny tp six months at & pany longed for 4 as com tive work and re-entin know on . 7 Government to the Nati a sted man » the Con ‘omp: e \¢ e. of the tstands. ment regiment was ordered ¢ the Palace hote ntl an seat tt & uring the Early Hours of Tuesday a eet. i rent sie rewiment ‘war rdor | gia the aia ‘htel soa gre mit aft ‘ fessor Weyl shows that the rea z |ton, 8. ©., and until the surrender | Wien the news « en “ee » hia . 1 Evening wages paid to railway employes | of Gen. Johnson at Greensboro, was! that hor father had fa » Wales . . even lower than in the British Inies, 2 lin active service, and left record un-| p29 000 a a / 4 ijn France more. than four-ntth| MANILA, March 22.—All is quiet) oo tea ny pny company of the fore #0) and that she was no lon a A pre “ , , t ~ | (80.54 per cent.) of them recely [here today The sum an of tna nontehareay es 2 ; than $1 a day. In Helgian railways | fghting by the American’s since the| The company was in. tha Me _ Siete it ; Death reared ita horrid head last) ably fatally injured, The faces of | clerke receive an average of $2 withdrawal of Wheaton’s brigade! ec. asionvilie, 8. C., and alka on ady Jane Pre webs lies by a! evening in a moat frightful form,|@l were black with soot and dirt,| month, while over 60 per cent. of] from the territory—tetwern Mantla| John's island, near Chariestor pha : a lars 7 ‘ | o redert ‘ F “s walk at the corner poser beg wees petly aren | p-clerka receive an av pd Laguna de Bay is pre-|C., where two were killed and sever ¢iher of , : N slot 7 . heated boller when the explo- | $18.28 a nv Bis men are iminary to eral 4 vi a Blue ather ¢ je, th Sex ane south and Wasb Fn . | ¥ ay general and|al wounded. The same Janper Blues | icting that the tele # in- | ington atre Six men were sion came, _ Saithe). was tekst, - | from 15 to @ centa a day, the | culminating campaign against the| were in the battle of Fort Wagner ps lage ithe th eee 8 «| diately 0 Providence hospital, where | sum being paid to the in inaurgents. ‘The troops today are| Morris island, 8. C., and at Olusta, | UP ele me. One was thrown | he was attended by Dr. Bories and | including the young and the men| tetng snifted abeat and there are|Pis., where thelr lems was nite Kill-| AGr, Ws Ss Lj poiilelan, | kteh into the alr, mutilated, and In-| Dr. Raymond. He was unconactous.|and women. Not 1 per cent. of the | indications of a concerted advance | ed and twenty-three wounded. windtalt He mes ¥ + of his Own | stantly kil bs was carried into the res-/ signal men ve over 58 ta Al apataet the math Piipind. Gray | At Port Wagner a detachment of] Stent: ne oa tl Barah” resigned her 4. Another was fatally njured, and died this morning, The ther four may survive, but they are badly hurt taurant and laid on a mattress. H ay, again was partially conscious, though suf-|tn the Unt fering greatly from the shock. His | Belgium the average rate paid) north of the city within the next | thirty picked men of the Blues cap- | 5, States of $1.74 10} forty-eight hours. of the nion men, who had omen are largely employ ucceeded in getting into the fort ace, Bhe was engaged to G ant ¥ news, offer= at the time, and the gal man, when he heard the fe runs a saloon in the |T#ht bip and leg were shattered into /ed by the railways, recelying NEW YORK, March 22.—Adiapateh| The Blues witnessed the herolc : F Mieke runs a saloon In the | “doson pieces, and his left leg be- | «atekeopers as low as 14 cents day.| to the Evening Journal from Manila |chargs of Colonel Shaw at the head ed to release her from her promise, eee een eorner rere low the knee was fearfully crushed.) On the Prussian state railways] gives the Address to the Natives of |of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts but, Hike the true, faithful heroine Jewalk in front of his place ts a| At the hospital he placed un-| workmen are entitie? to only onelthe Philippin Grafted by the| regiment, and saw him fall radia in Henna, Sheet og = der the influence of anesthetics, in| free day a month, though the law the physictans | | American comminaion. tt assures | top of the parapet as he wa ey be given AN OPPO! the Filipinos of the intention of the | Ing his colored soldiers attend church services| From Fort Wagner the ks ago Pax from unselfishness, A few pa Holmes rent we r where a small steam ® located This heater hallow beater w insists that tunity to order that might amputete his limbs He sank rap k Jasper xploded at $0T p. m. tearing a . . United States to develop powers of eat hole through the sidewatk, | tly under the Influence of onige ~levery other Sunday, The avesare| self-government in Sie ue limes Gus ta Weed memes aaa that ‘that he was a killin and maiming the unfortun-| form and from the shock he | yearly wages in Prussia of show em- | are assured that the Prpaident | unMer the heavy artillery firing dur |lor@ and master of Brethorton castts « mentioned, breaking all of the | Dhy¥siclang were compelled to de: ployes and trackmen In 1807 wai wish is to establish a system haar Suly eed Auatat of 100 and [ome ee sree Berens pat the taey lane w owe for a block around, |@fter which the sufferer became and $142 respectively, The average! rovernment such as will render wore still there when General Sher and its broad lands, « the Lady and shaking the buildings to ther | Conscious for @ few minute ng ahr wage of all class rall-| natives capable of administering | man made his memorable march to | SOFeh at once told: the young mam ivery foundations. Fire quickiy | inauired for Saltiel, gave his age| way labor was $335, aa compared| their own affairs under Am Mon ase ie eres the fort | (hat her choice that she was ready roke s andan alarm | 9" residence, and then lapsed into | with 3545 in the United § rol. The protection of the Un-|earty In 1866 and rejoined their reei- te become his life partn She mar- as to the fire departm a comatose condition, He died at| Saxony the highest wal d Mistpn to not to be exercieed| ment at Choraw, 6, C.. afterward | ae? scow followed: Aster, thats Be h responded together with ade-| 1145 p.m. ‘The longshoreman was laborers. even after twe Xl in any spirit of tyranny or ven-| participating In the battle at Ayers }turn from Santa Crug Mr. and Mra, Mars atruck § 1 of and quickly fearfully bruised and cut about the | years of vice, in Tl conte @ G9Y. | seance Having destroyed the| boro, N. 8: also the last battle of Glaser may take o trip across the white-robed Tr {| extinguish: [head and body His left leg was|In the firat year's service In the/goanigh power and accepted the| the war at Bentonville, N, C., and | Ccean and insp the Welsh estates sr commercial travelers, D. W,.| badly fractured, the broken bane | same class of work the laborer Fe-| sovereignty of the isiands, the Un-| were at Smithfield, N. C., when news which in time may become th her wings and sm, aged thirty-seven, of Chic- | Alfred Saiticl, aged thirty- lthree, of New York City; D. W./ Beals, of S£. Louls; and H. Mons, of| Laneaster. Pa.. left the hotels But-/ or and Seattle early in the even- ling, accompanied by Albert Swan- laon, of 2 Maynard avenue, | have} and a longeshoreman named Louis} Gen. Otis ts fos fact upon the F not the plonic that posed it to be. ———o The milk trust is reported t protruding through the flesh and making a gaping wound. He was internally injured as well, ang was unconscious from the beginning Dr, MeKechnie dressed his wounds and set the broken limb. It te alleged that the explosion was due to the carelessnees of a Jap who had charge of the heater, and after celves 65 cents a day nr | A Bit of Magic’ | In the course of hin experimenta| the other day Prof. M. ! Pupin. of Columbia College, New York, did a very remarkable thing He made | water boll by simpty holding his banda nround the outnide of the bot. | HER HUSBAND ited States will restore peace to the Philippines. To this end all insur- gents are invited to lay down their arms and place their trust in the government that emancipated them | from the oppression of Spanish rule. of the surrender of Lee was received. These these same Jasper started for home, tired and footsore, and without their battle flag, which had been fost in some action. It was but a few of the original com- pany which arrived back May 23, 1868. : At the pfesent date but eleven of the present Blues are known. Their Blues | home. Frederick Holmes, father of Mra. ser, ih well known in San Fran- cisco shipping circles as a broker. He was born in Liverpool and took to the sea’ when @ mere boy. When M years of age he married a pretty” ung Spanish woman residing In Panama, and at love's behest de- |serted the sea. Their daughter, now 7! o mM \ filling the firebox full of coal, went gone to smash. The promoters un- Molla t make a short tour tl re lthrough the city They ha ned | away to attend to ‘other matters. @uly watered the stock. ne pe ‘corente’n ian in er MINING NOTES. | le which contained It. He also made the water boll Uy dashiag or pouring water against the sides of the bot jtle. It was a very curious trick, and | one well calculated to excite wonder if the necret be not known. Yet any boy may perform {t in his own home Joy at hearing that their old pattie |t#¢y Barb, takes after her moth- | H fag was still in existence and would |°? IM appearance, and = with | hee be returned to thems knew no bounds, | ™other’s beauty aod her father's dollars whe in the envy of the girls und was only equalled by the willing. | C0000" Ait i ctch the switchboard day after day. with no buoying Sope nem with which it will be returned | of fortune coming from Wales line explosion occurred. Saltiel went| and the matter of the responsibility lying up Into space. turning over! Gxed. land ower, and fell near by with a The buliding where the explosion l resounding thud, bis face scarred occurred Is owned by Sheri! Ny de to save EVANSVILLE, Ind., March 22.—|D¥ the gentleman of the north who! and diackened, his skull cracked, and Vanter, and was leases Tree milling gold has Deen struck @t a depth of 18 feet om the Grand Forks No. 3, on the north fork of the Kettle river, three miles from Grand Forks, B.C. The claim is owned by} Jack Smith and Jamec Davidson. | Yere om the scene with © Mente The Mork of development will Be) 56 about the bullding and assist- : | od the wounded men to the Star res- | taurant. It is reported on excellent author-| *A'" nnte, Dr. Bories, and ity that Dr. J. F. Reddy, of Spokane, | has made an offer to Joan Dougias| OF. Sweeney went ee aan of Midwad ta purchase the Buraka | War sr0m at once that Jecdhe, Sebel) chaim. Tha offer has been submitted |*™4 the lomgahoreman were prod: | to the stockholders of the Dougias| Mining company, owning the claim. The property of the oldest) MALLPOX located in the camp. | bruises and cuts all over his body | He wes unconscious when picked | up. j Capt. Sullivan and Sergt. Peer) Alexander Dick, of Rossland, has} bonded the Ruby In Smith's camp, near Greenwood, to an English syn-| dicate for $15,000. The ore runs the} ore I width of ft and 8 “$1.50 gold. cases of smallpox have developed. | Archie Brown, the origt#al patient, cca fang gee ont agg oP \and his two nursed, who have a) ted to be working this sconon | mild attack of the disease, arv deine Little Falls, Copper Worid, | Sicely. It was twelve days ago yes- terday thet Brown was about the streets when he escaped from the hospital. On the average it ts days after exposure before the dis- ease manifests itself, and two days April 1. Not in five yearn has min-| later before it can be definitely ae ing been as ac in and around| termined. There have been cases Loomis at this seas sis year's | When the disease dirt not develop for 2 «, which would extend the pos- cules, Bull Frog. Triune, Rainbow, Spo- kane, King Solomon, Riack We rior, Ka’ oo, Surprive and ers. Activ rtions are made to start at least two-third. the properties above mentioned a velo, ey » far tow 4 Saetiohing Chie as's. perinas ivie contagion. from Brown until producing free ¢ Pp. next Monday. Should that day pass with no news reports, it will be an ‘The Lake Shore on Mount Eime-| indication none others caught the ham has « 70-foot ls now | disease from Brown. Britain's Responsibiliti jreat Britain is Increasing her re- sponsibilities at a rapid rate. Bhe responsible for 420,000,000 of ple wh yellow, browns or ck about one-fourth of the man race; and of that multitude, increase since 1871, by growth or annexation, is put at 128,000,000. great part of this astounding rise 1 the number of the Queen's sub- jects is due to natural growth and unluckily, much of that prolific mul- tiplieation is places like India, where it means & multiplication of mouths, with little enough to feed | running 0 croescut vein WO feet of Greenwood, and for Vietor have # United gre di ia now camp, nea Phe sg m. In 3871 the empire covered | feet of v ran on 060 «square miles. Now, if tunnel fs r pt and thé Soudan, with other| tact with a crows vein ‘ent trifles, are counted, the area| — ae the as expanded to 13,-| i" miles, including most F f the places that are capable of being nized by white men, and a)| ei ep that are not. If R00 any pl ne includes the Soudan, the addi- IN THE MAIL tional mass of subject oples for | whom she has become responsible since 1871 is estimated at no lens than 000,000—or two and a halt times as.many souls as the agg NEW YORK, Mar Mangold, « letter carrier gate of the people of her ruling race. Station J, found tr The people of the British islands and ation J, f in a t their stock beyond the seas nomb iaagllse lair nor than 50,000,000. Sinve four- mathe firth these are at home, it fol-| pur lows that every Britisher beyond he dog'n neck 4 to| sea hes on an average to control ob 125 State | aNd civilize some forty subject folie ae peel coin Wk cgi Bg Clues to a Suicide. ~ ul CHICAGO, March The police | 7 ere today asked to assist the St. | Native City. Paul authorities in the investigation I Kipling ts recove fo terlous suicide which took 19 | pla that elty a few days a «| The only evide e they had as to the . ract n's identity was a baggage chece <4 - give ata 1 in this city Detec ¥ i ‘ ent to the hotel and dis- “4 mall catchel which bore | bs h vith a corresponding num 4 y 1” t a mong other Heither b | its Templar charm Come I to mi t chapter number had Mother of ¢ ) soon erased; also a shaving mug on For 1 was ' t h was the name T. 8. Webber le t nar on by the sulci in Where t I-end alt.l at, Paul wa Thomas. ! | Brake, SCARE OVER, | Before the |sor Weyl shows that in Englan who employed the Jap Charley Shindo. He says: “I filed up the furnace with coal, as Mr, Blake told me to do, and left plenty of Water in the boiler, 1 left Uttle before § o'clock.” Though no definite explanation ean be of the way in which the accident occurred, it ts more than likely that the hot fire in the heater created steam faster than water ran ig. As soon as there was no water left, the heater exploded. RECEIVER FOR A FRATERNITY RICHMOND, Ind., March 22.—The appolatmegt ef a receiver for the | other room full of unsuspecting peo- | been taken to have the marriage an- Continent) Preternal Union caused something of @ sengetion here, and there is eoacera among the members of the lovel lodges of the order. Despite of the fact that there had been rumors afloat for a week or two that the order might dissolve, there were*but few here who were familiar with the inside affairs and who were aware that the crisis had been reached. One of the lodges in this city was scheduled to be paid off next month, and the members say that they will have @ prior claim to the asgets of any of the other lodges. Wind Lyrics. East Wind— ‘Through gates of pearl sapphire set, I stent at dawn to fly, while yet The clouds with silver dew are wet, On wings that brush the morning star Of song afar. rth Wind— From fleids of frozen stars I blow, I bear the fragile flowers of snow, That fall upon the earth below, With pure celestial lips to bles In soft caress. South Wind— On wings of perfume, born of Spring Sweet memories of the South I bring; From birds and blossome pink that fling To heav'n their gladnese in an ec- stacy Of melody. West Wind— Back through the gates of gold and rome, Where late the glows I slip, before the evening's clone, On pinions woven of a sigh, Into the night I seem to die Put hush! the night will soon pass by. mtar of evening lark when morning breaks ‘The East Wind wakes. ~—Carrie L. Ward, ‘THE WAGES OF RAILWAY MEN In the last bulletin of the United States department of labor, Profe sor Walter BE. Weyl, of the Univer- sity of Pennsylvania, presents an tn teresting report on “The condition of raflway labor in Europe.” Pre the average annual compensation of rail way employes Is $292.57,'against § in the United States. There fures refer to the wages of employes ex clusive of the salaries of gene: officers and clerks More than per cent, of the 266,000 railway em- with little trouble. No apparatus except @ bettie te | needed The botti however, should be one with o long, thin neck Prof. Pupin used one which looked like those used to decorate the shel ves of French and Italian restaur- ry Such bottles generally are wound with straw to prevent break- age, and @ restaurant keeper will sell one for a few pennies. Fit your bottle half full of w j ter and place it over a gas jet or flame until the water boils, When it boils flercely, remove the flame and} jat the mame time quickly place a| leork in the mouth of the bottle, Of! course, the water in the bottle will| instantly stop boiling when the} flame is removed, but if you now Jturn the bottle upside down and | pour water on the outside, the wa ter within will again boil flereety. | If at this juncture you take the } bottle (without the flame) into ar ple, and show them how to “boil wa lter with water,” they will be very | much surprised. But you will add to their astonishment if in @ moment lowhen the bottle has become cold | lenough), you will place both of your hands around the outside of the bot- tle: for the water inside will again | boll fercely. | Any boy who owns a bicycle pump | may add to the fun of the occasion. | | He will be able to do exactiy the « posite of the above. That is, he will be abie to do exactly the opponite of the above Th in, he will be) able to make water stop boiling leven when there is a fame burning | brightly under It, To do this it Is necessary to merely pump afr in Ithe bottle in which the water i# bof ling. No matter how violent the wa- ter may be bolling, It will cease do ing #0 the Instant fresh air is pump ed into the bottle, You may attach the pump to the mouth of the bot tle by means of a short length rubber tubing. Now the reason for the above phe-| nom@pa ts very simple, It is all a | que of how hard the atm aphere presses down on the surface Jof the boiling water. A column of air many miles high presses down on everything on the parth. When water bolls {t must generate heat and power enough to overcome th pressing of this alr on tte surface. | If you were somehow to remave this] pressing air, water would boll more quickly and at.a lower temper than It does ordinarily, On th of a very high mountain or In a va-} cuum, water will boll a low tem perature. Now, when it the first} inatance, you took the flame from usder your bottle mouth you thus prevented the air from pressing n | the water at a when the bottle contained nothing but water and steam When you turned the bottle upside down you effectively prevented any more alr from getting moment inside. There was, of cour a amall| empty space between the surface ot} the water and the bottom (now tho] top) of the bottle. There was va-) cuum there. ¥ will remember that! the water must yet have been quite! hot af you removed the flame, It was, in fact, nearly at the boiling point in ordinary air, yet you sud-| denly removed th alr pr and placed the fluid in a vacuur It would now t at a much lower tem rature than before nd ing already quite hot, the heat of your hands around the warm bottle was quite sufficient to set it off There are three that a man should never with,” re marked the cynic as he poured ow a full ¢ his wife, pork deals and his raz And he ed his mouth thought fully Detroit Free Pre Rill—in parts of Cuba two crops of tobaceo are rained every yes Jil—I suppose one is smoking and | the other chewing tobace |neparated in his early infancy, the | July 1 there will be a surplus tg the | ‘A FADcD REBEL and a dark stain—some said it! was blood | e most of the battle Mags cop-| tured by Maine soldiers were ent to | the capitol at Augusta, but this one was presented to a prominent citt zen, who had a large ection of | curlos, troph and relics, and all th years this old flag has hung upon the walls of a summer cottage | at Alamoosook, @ short distance | |from Buckesport. The eltizen ha long cherished the Idea of return ing the flag to its former owners but had not been able to locate the Jasper Blues definitely until within 1 short t ant summer, ame the many visitors to Alnmoorook, which ts one of Fucksport'’s “show places,” was a gentleman from Georgia, and, know ing something of the war history of Mra. Nicey Johnson, colored, 6 years old, and Zebe Johnson, were married three months ago after an acquaint ance which began nearly one year ago. Mra. Johnson was formerly a slave In Murray county, Tennessee, and her husband was Isasc Johnson There was one son, who was sent t Louisiana. After the war Mra. Jobn- non came to this city, where she has since remained. Mra, Johnaon and the young man were singularly at- tracted one to the other, nothwith- standing the difference in their ages, and the marriage followed. Yester- day Mra. Johnson noticed a peculiar scar on her husband's shoulder, and this led to the discovery that he way really her son, from whom she war scar having been caused by a knife she dropped. Mra. Johnson was hor- rifled by the discovery, which was corroborated by Inquiries concerning her first husband, and steps have nulied. IOWA PAY ITS DEBTS DES MOINDS, fa., March 22.—The state of Iowa in out of debt. By| sury. The income for July and August in so small, however, that the surplus will be dissipated until after October, By January 1, 1900, the state will have a big surplus State Treasurer Herriott issued a call today for the last of the out- standing warrants, There are about $400,000 of them. They will be re deemed as soon am presented after April 20. Among these warrants are th amounting to $140,000 tesued by the state for war expenses, which| will be paid to the state by the na-| tional government BATTLE FLAG This week a tattered and faded battle fiag—one with the stare and bars—will be taken from the place where it has huang for over thirty) years and be carefully packed and| ent back to Dixte, where a remnant of one of the bravest companies | which ever fought in any cause is awaiting It When the boys of that famous} Maine regiment—the Ist Maine ca alry—came marching home in 1865, they brought with them to Bucks-| port a trophy, It was a beautiful slik flag, bound with a wide fringe, | and to It was attached a heavy stik n cord and tassels, In the fleld, upon one aide, was the inscription The Janper Flues’; upon the other. Vietory or Death.” There were] the jagged rents made by minie batts his state, he at once recognized the | | pings from which run from § | with energy the | they lived by themsely }and each m: | An has carefully preserved it all these years, A NEW LINE TO DULUTH CHICAGO, March 22.—The Chica- £0, Milwaukep & St. Paul road is considering the construction of a new line between St. Paul and Du- luth, a distance of 175 miles. Prest- dent Roswell Miller yesterday ad- mitted that the engineering depart- ment had berun the survey for an extension from St. Paul to West Su- perior, It ts doubtful if the survey can be completed tn time to enable the company to do any construction work this year. Reports have been in cireulation for eome months that the Milwaukee & St. Paul road was endeavoring to aecure control of the St, Peul & Duluth road. The present survey may be intended to bring about such a transfer. By getting its own road into Duluth the St. Paul people will be in a better position to meet thé competition of the Great Northern, a Northern Pacific and Northwest in bringing wheat from Minnesot and the Dakotas to Duluth for ship- ment by the lake lines, At pres the Milwaukee & St. Paul reaches the lake lines at Green bay and Mil- waukee. Copper Creek Mines. The Copper Creek mining district is showing up well. There are about 100 mining claims recorded, the crop- Among the most ir Yellow to the ton ant claims are the Bird Golden Crown, Ida Martin, May Day and Crown Rock. The latter Is ric in free milling gold. The Ida Martin has been sold recently to Tacoma capitalists. The purchase price could not be learned, but it is generally understood a good round figure was realized for the mine. The Baby Alice shows croppings of gold and silver that assay $79 to the ton. The assays are made from the surfac croppings, no tunnels of any great depth having as yet been run. Buch resulta are seldom realized from the surface croppings, and must impress the practical miner favorably, Work will be prosecuted in that district oming summ and the results to come from there will some day be enormous. Copper creek is in Skamania county, about | 20 miles north of Stevenson and near Lookout mountain, where a year ago so many claims were staked off. fs Non-Existence the Ideal? ‘The San Francisco Chronicle says the “Japan were better off when sin a clo ed country” than when mpelte to fight, under handicaps, for a pla in civilization.” If this view w correct, the Middle Ages furnished us the highest ideal of human a velopment, when there waa little pas across boundary nes, when y castle kept its portcullis down, ry city watched behind its wall, n's matied hand kept ad. Then the discovery of joa was a misfortune and w should sorrow whenever a furrow ts his h | drawn on new ground or a new city is founded Florida Times-Union “It Is hinted that Miss Tenspot ts indebted to the druggist for her complexion,” sald Miss am ‘Oh, Lean't credit that, for I know her well," replied Miss Ricketts, “In fact I am he arest friend “Then she doesn’t use cosmetics at ane ‘On, but she pays cash,""—De- troit Free Press e any other country Just Drew His Pay. Reginald Throckmorton started suddenly, and awakening, thrust his head from out the covering of hay that he had pulled over himself as he clambered into the loft with Wandering Willie the night before. Willie! Willie!” He shook his companion’s arm. The latter opened his eyes and sat up. Vhat’s the matter?” he inquired. “Oh, Willie,” ‘exclaimed Reginald enraptured, “I just had such a beau- ful dream.” . “Wha’ wash it?” 1 just dreamed I was a suspended ommissary genera)"—Detroit Free 198 A Widow's Ire. CHICAGO, March Mra. Mary |W. Thompson, a widow, living in a fat at > 99 Thirty-third street, has began a suit for $10,000 damages in | the superior court against Lathrop | E. Reed, a millionaire ex-banker, | who lives at the Hyde Park hotel. The damages which she says she ha sustained arise from an alleged rm mark by the defendant reflecting on her character. As a further cause of injury, she declares that Reed broke open a receptacle for mail at the of Mrs. Thompson, took out of it a letter addressed to her, ope: ed the letter, read it, and returned it to the mall -box “I'm here to ¢ at the place,” lannounced the six-footer with long | hair, a slouch hat and a choice se- lection of side arms “Ah!” exclaimed the little editor, from the far E “I see, The new janitor, Just t in operations in the | basement, my good man,"—Detroit Free Press. OVER 100... | Styles | And Qualities In | Men's UNDERW We fit any sized men and carry all sorts of weights. There is something to to be learned from our Underwear stock. We can show you value upon value, tizgest and Best in the State, J. REDELSHEIMER & Co First Ave., cor. Columbia St. aerial bends

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