The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 1, 1899, Page 3

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Pacis Coast Steamship Company KANSAS TOWNS for San Prancisco ‘WILL MOVE | The company's ele gant Armalite | oon, W Walla, | Queen Walla Wall’ To Escape Bonded Indebted- Seattle” "m. vial ness They Change Sites. Port Townsend and Victoria, Mareh y Change Sites S10, 16, 20, 30, April 4, ® 14, 19, 24) 29, May 4, and every fitth day there- | pio of Western Kansas towns, bur after. Leave |dened with a heavy bonded Indebt San Francisco | ; found a Nquidating these debts. TOPEKA, Kan,, April t-—The ave new way | Por Seattle 10 a, m., via Victoria and y pro Port Townsend, March 2, 7, 12, 37. 23. | sose to move the town, bag and be April 1, 6 21, 16, 21, 26, May 1, and me wigs bs rok "a a Sap ~ every (fth day thereafter, ig re bea my e line, anc er FOR ALASKA mastera bai tere te posoene the vacant lots and empty cellars QT e Cot gage go Shy He Yesterday the representative of City, City of Topeka and Al-K1 leave | Beatle 9 a. m. March 3, 6 1, 36, 26, Mt, April 5, 10, 15, 20, 2, 20, May 6, holders of Attica sugar bonds was toll by the people of that town that land every fifth day thereafter. they would me to adjacent land ae further Information obtain | rarer than pay $30,000 on bonds vot The company reserves the right to | for @ sugar mill, which was a 4 change, without previous notice, fallure from the start. Aw a com | steamers, walling date, and houre of Premise, the agent of the bondhold | calling. ere offered to accept $10,900, but | 3. F. TROWDRIT some of the people objected on th ground that the sugar mill sehen | Puget 94. Su | Uptown ticket off was a fraud, and that to pay getting out from under a burden of bonded debt 4 | Beattie; Goodall, T thing would be a recognition a C3 a aa ~~ + Agenia, Ban Franvinon fraud. It is probable that the town ’ | - will be moved. ! . Nees City, a town on the Western similar scheme as the only hope of STEAMSHIP COMPANY. Alaska Lightning Express | STEAMSHIP CTY OF SEATTLE MORANS’ REW MILL. are rushing the Moran Br struction of their new sawmill Al Salts trom Vester Whart ready a large portion of the flooring of the new wharf has been laid, and onday, April 3, at 10 O'clock P.M. tne machinery sven an. the belt wheels, ete., have been placed in po sition Part of the skeleton of the build rn rOoR Skagway and Dyea OIRECT Subsequent Sailings, April 12th, 20, and May 4 Evening Newspaper Containing all of the ing has already been erected will cover a large enclowy: feet long by 70 feet wide. Th: wharf will extend out Into the wa ters of the bay ae far as the original wharf, but will be much larger, large portion of the old wharf facing the north, which has rotted away G. F. THORNDYKE, Agent. News ong World == Main 470. 116 YESLER WAY [Sew pitee and’ doocinge “n* "* BATES IS CLEARED. _'¢ ‘Boots Brought Him Luck According to the Klondike Nug- | Topeka, Kan, ts the posse get of March 6, J. L. Bates, an ex-|Pet superstition and ts not ashamed Seattle policeman, has been com- ' own ft pletely exonerated on the charge of} “Te what influence do theft and receiving stolen property | YOUT success in life? Mr. at Dawson, Early last February | ¥8* a#ked one day Dawson was troubled with « series| “Te @ pair of old boots.” repliet E of thefts. One day the constable | the miltionaire. “I allude to the old saw a man by the name of Wiliam | >t# that I once lent to Susan ff Moes leaving a cache with » loaded Anthony.” sled, and thinking something sus-| ne snowy night in the early sew- pieious, arrested him. Hates p- entices Miss Anthony, making r 5 pened to be standing near the cache, | WAY to the office of the Leavenworth q The constable arrested Bates also, | Times after a lecture, presently be but at the trial nothing was proven | ©@me aware that the snow had against Bates. soaked through her cloth shoes | Mise Anthony walked into the you Swayre owe b |componing room and aemanded the jloan of @ pair of boots in thes: words: “Boys, will any of you lend |me a pair of boote? My feet are Se wet with the anow and tice.” woman always likes to swiftly | Out of the crowd stepped one youne scan the of the PD | man. carrying @ pair of boots In his globe during the leisure half hour bere Mise Anthony accepted them that follow: bh a laugh, saying, “Who knows f s the evening meal, and | i tac:teak Gade ey eae mee et then turn attention to other mat- good luck for both of us?" ters. The publishers of the THE _ “was that young man,” says Mr | Sway “and from that hour ev thing seemed to come my way Nothing but good tuck has followed me. Can I be blamed for induleing = the harmless fancy that the of the boots may have been th of STaR lainning ie omnes New | Wortd, Will be a noticeable feature. An + ierestingbresry se rae MUCH ACTIVITY. i days, as opposed to the old time fashion of ponderous ‘“‘write- ll and editorial utterances. HE STAR will have All of the Local (As well as the Telegraphic News Don’tdoubtit forone minute. The paper will not claim to be the best on earth with the “largest circula- tion’’—that is, not yet awhile, but the effort will be made to steadily improve it. In the meanwhile please remember that news “‘tips”’ telephoned to the office (Pike 150) will be much appreciated; also In the Shipyards Along the | Water Front. The shipyards along the water front are beginning to assume sor thing of the brisk aspect of last year In the vicinity of the Stetson & t mill a large force of ship carpenters are working on a small tug 4 by the Alaska Fish Packing com pany of Astoria, which waa recent- |1y launched on the tide fla The tug is to be taken north to Pristot lbay. to operate as a tender for the mpany’s cannery at that place |The botler and a portic the ma chinery has been placed in the vex and workmen are now engaged |in building the deckhouse. | The hull of the tug t# 89 feet long 18 feet beam, and 8 feet & inches |depth of hold. The machinery wilt consist of a Beotch marine boller inches in diameter by 105 In long, and capable of carrying 150 pounds of steam. The engine will be a fore and aft compound one of 100 horse power. The tug will probably be sent north about the latter part own We have not advertised this in the usual “firey” subscribers. It only costs natp scene ire Salec | of April - wey: Generally Fire Sales |‘ tSoran’s whart, ship carpenters jare a disappointment; in| and machinists are working on 2 hull of « new tle this case most everybody | Tug company tag r : oe Tacoma, w she was wo lfinds more REAL Bargains |fetenuy ‘brought here to. be com : “vy expecte pleted. The deckhoure has not been than they expected. buflt, but part of the machinery has ee ( e Understand the goods are | been put in position. The tug ts 82 s fi loma, 18 feet beam, and 9 feet its neither burnt nor scorched, |« She will have a Scotch marin n apacity of 1% . but DO smell strongly of pois athe engine will be fore ire: sp7ec and aft compound, with a hors fire; but summer breezes power of $96 pounds. ‘The machi will soon fix that. The! was butt by Moran Bros. compar The tug will be used for towing } 1 To secure The Star for whole stock about the So | On the ways near the Stetson & Hf Post mill, workmen are bull 2) | boata are also being repal | j mill wharf. ieee _ | Dandy Sait ir Bays HOW HUNTINGTON GREW RICH |Will be sold at a very —__—___—__—__ wn Story of His Success in the World of Trade. From a hardware store to the man agement of the Central Pacific rail way seems a long jump; but when C. jhandsome discount from|His 0 our regular prices. Open} till 10:30 p. m. Saturday, | TRY IT | P. Huntington was asked to tell how » transition was accomplished } replied | was merely evolution, 1 hod | been a trader from my youth. 1 be gan gathering shillings when T was e years old, and had a wide bus Inens experience before taking up raliroad work, It was not a jump for me. "It jan't by sudden jumps that healthy success ia attaine 1 h steady work and honesty of pur pee. A middle-aged man inay Jump 1431-1433 Second Ave,, near Pike ‘orens one ana vurveod, ‘but 1 wi NS | | ferent one and succeed, but it will dei ica atbias PNS i THE ATTLE TAR. need hard work and the probabtiities | | \ Ww ald tn youth F ) fifteen and twenty-two | | cal learn more th t noven years than | in any others in hia whole life, yet} — | one are the years that many youths | | nd at colloee, unttting them- | Varled Work of the Depart. xelven for commercial — pursuits, | ment of Agriculture. | learning things that are ef no use | ' to thenr-actually building up # bar WASHINGTON, Apri Lit ts cy 7 cs on oboe Hl pen learne the ru true,” sald Secretary Wilson, of the iments of business in early lite, | 2Partnent of agriculture, “that we The une man ia the ono |are diverting part of the money for who, In-hin watehed the clock Aistribution of seeds, Of the ap to nee that he did not begin work priation of $120,000 we are allow B minuto uhead of tir ww QUit & ing §7!,000 for the distribution i behind it. Th are the boy weeds through congresn ary harmed first, whenever | remaindér expendit " ff In reduced; but the boy who own way, We'belleve we are get ing Insteart ¢ {HIOS, | ting much more good from the pre Nin employer’ Inter- ent method than fram the old, All t Instead of hin own oa is tho needa are now tested before being me who is kept on, and goes ahead |gent, Formerly ‘swe tested nd eu ! after distribution and the contrac “Success is a simple thing, The tor was paid accordingly, Now th money saved-in early life grows In geedw are texted by our experts and af hap later on The YOUN 85 per cent. must germinate or the man wi wave 10 cents & day 1 seeds are ted. ‘This insures th A mar wet He ie on th read 4 pecds. Not nly > mY Hut the young man who * mermin but they trades 10 cents for a cigar ts a fool fertility also. ‘The There mav Canes where out through made by Jumps, but great merems thie year are comes trom persistent effort beat the department has ever to point aut thi handled. ‘This distribution in re hed work successful Hf) warded by the nen ve Of ihe # young man to dupll partment a® @ very excellent thing, immensity of such @ Work ang we are constantly trying to im appals him, Jt js like taking prove the system. suddenly to the top of a high steept But we are doing much more to see G ereat city, The great beleht than mimply distributing common makes him dixay, but to the steeple- gecda. The great country lying in jack who knows his business 4nd the temperate gone and stretching has 1 the steeple, It 16 alte from oeean to ocean has within ite a litte matter FeAnON confines almost every condition of why ri men t VOOR | obter and poll It ts ponsit head ney ald for (9° therefort, to grow to highest pert tay and today ly, and if they do)» o where in the United Sta that talthfutty and economic verything in the world. \.@ ally, they will ready for what trying to ascertain what parti- | ever comes om the my . fF porta of the United States My part In the organization 4nd | wit grow eertain grains, fruits and building of th Vacitic 414 | vegetables, and to what parte cer- | not seom @ great tne, becOUs tam grains, ete are peculiarly my hardware bi bd | lad adapted. "We find for instance, that it down, was greater than my Tally tne finest muskmelone sold in th road business when [took It up 1 joastern markets come from the dry call it a hardware business: We | valleys of Colorado, There is, per- bought and sold all kinds of thing®— nae, in the valleys of Afghanistan, nde of dollars the ht and thous worth of goods that never saw inaide of our store We t whole cargoes and sold them dir from the ehips, I reeall buying one carge at 10 per cent. above invotee prices, paying only $2000 down. The captain could not get satiors, and we thousands perhaps the original home of the melon, a murkmelon greatly superior even to those raised in the West. So to Afghanistan we sent an agent, who returned with a quantity of the weeds of the famous muskmelon, which often grows to a weight of 20 or 8 pounds, and these seeds we are had four months to remove the |S Gite ts the Weat this year. goods. We ad them by degrees, = paying as we took them away, and seein when the shit was S. (2) CHEAP SLEEP PROMISED made @ profit of $100.00. ¢ business done by| Humors were prevailing in the offices of the transcontinental lines this morning that the west bound sleeping car rates will shortly be re~ 1 to perhaps more 2.209 annually, and so the Central Pacific than $5 ation of the ‘ame an a comparatively easy task, duced. The present sleeping car In its ontirety it look a reat rates from Bt. Paul to the coast are it ne rail at 4/912. Pullman, and % tourist, or second class. To what extent rates that industry, honesty, are Hekly to be reduced, or when, y an ments of euc-lofficiais af the several fines claim, ave probably more |is uncertain | iniles of rallr hen any man in Prec EAE SEE Mea ae | the wo I have bought rattroate | in tne ey 1 1 have bought M | railroads and put into tnaol vency; but in all my constructive defaulted on a single coupor t cy I have out Rahidetemiets here, and I know that tt Is SYDNEY, N. # W., April 1—The announéeinent of the discovery of A sea ntonesfer at the island of Su warrow has éxcited general both If setentific circles and a REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS. Real estate tranrfera Mied in the the general public, Only a ounty auditor's office yesterday | port of the skeleton was br were here by the steamship Emu, but it Emma Jackson to Mary Vernon, w !t intended during the next trip of t 00 of Io the véanel to call again at Suwar- 4, being 25 feet by 100 feot of lot 18/ the veneel to call agaie W nea it] bik 29, Otiman park, $40. is explained that the remains con J. M. Halland and wife to W. MH. gist of two skulle, with one lower Vernon, lot 13 bik 24, nm park, jawbone, a rib and one of the bones $0 of the vertebrae, The skull mene. . 9 ures about three feet from the nec! L. J. Rue and wife Magee rage Hower cag abe maine Yeon Howen and Washing . lot td a partial readmblance to the gkull of S22 an alligator, The teeth are missing, | William Wil- put there are evidences of the ex- aanrdée istence of two amall tusks at the ex- fs % of w tremity of the lower jaw. There are} 1 right of way, channels in the skull which seem to! 9.63 acr have been for the purpose of breath- bik 9 Union CHY ing. The rib ts about two and a) add., $10 half feet in length, and the spine is Mark Wileineki to Miss Frances apparently about 4 Inches in diam- Wiiginski, lota 13 and 4 bik t eter. All the bones are extremely | tral add.; lots 22 to 40 bik 3 and lot | jignt | 30, 2 bik 2 In Dodge add The natives, it appears, said that | also and 16 bik 1 in Queen | in addition to ite other peculiar} add characteristics, the monster had} Mark Wilzinsk! to Mies Virginia | qappers like those of a seal. Wilainek t ning § nt 330 feet ED e and ® t woof ne cor sec Th tp Mnr thence w 22.14 tots SU | thence « 196 feet , © 24 feet, | then n 10 feet i THE QUEEN Luke t njamin Miller, | nw | sw \ of nw © 28 tp a n| r 7, containing 89 acres, $900, | Pre 7 Se, Fs Rufus P, Lincoln and Caroline . William Waldorf Astor So De- Lincotn to Harry 1 Allbright, tra eee we tala So ee clares in New York. Catkins lot 4 bik 29 plat of North S« mW YORK, April 1.—Wittam! tle, quit claim, $5. ia Waldorf Astor, when he arrived here Maria Christ and Ida M. A. Christ | oaay on the White Star liner Ma- » Robert MeCormick, lot 8 DIK 39 Of sevtic, in answer to interrogatories supp. plat to David 8. Maynard’#) or in) custome officials, described plat eget gel h | Mimself ana foreigner and a resi A. Ls. Smith and » rates ta Of Great Hritain, ‘This reply relic Fe ee ae na |* lod himself of answering such ques- BAdition to City of Kirkland tions as are required by law to be M. I. Smithson to Frank Sale, 1ot#) jit, returning Americans regard- 4 and & bik 1, R, G. Graves’ add. |i purchasers while made abroad. $200, 1 husband to | Mr Astor refused to be interviewed Abbie 4. Dew ae In the course of a week he expects D. M, Owburn & Co., lot 10 DIK TT ef te ne on his way back to England. French's add, to town of Slaughter, ~ re oy goatee nw Sur Oy Mtarwaret a, PRIVATE MARKS ON WATCHES c 1 to J. Sanders, lot 1 bik —_— 1 ston’ afd ie aS Repairers Can Tell When They, 41 Mullin ar na Mul | Ton Johnson, lot st Were Cleaned. Deny ee kag and ii. J. Bioma-| There was a. crowd around the kag to Willlam Hand, $1500, ¢ t counter in a down town jewelry koHd rode o ot aw cor nw % ew \ |store where watches are received for seo IT tp 2h nrGe, thence n nw 4 aw repairs, A woman who was evi itp when thence e¢ to ne dently in a hurry made her way to we of nw % % 17 nr the place where the man with the Se ean ate eae 4% |magnifying glass stood and handed snréo to cor of |a Htthe watch to him, says the New | . f tp 2% nn! York Tribune. 4 au place of beg.,| “Wil you please tell me what ails 3 19 acr this wateh?” she aske watch doctor opened the case er Was Bright Bismark’s Barb dell ately, peered into the works and sald: "It needs cleaning.” The late Prince Biamarek’s barber My, that seems strange,” said the is eid to be well on the way to) woman; “you cleaned it only a few making his fortune, for he has saved | nonths ago,” | no less than elght years’ elippings Ix that so?” asked the man, and 1 his master’s hal The he I | opened the case once more and made now dividing Into small quantittes, another examination with the aid of nd incasing In gold by carta miniature miseroscope. ‘Then he pir nd locket Howing Chree | handed the watch ko and said hairs to each ornament, and selling | uy, ved this watch in Decem- | to the publi The barber sta ber and it has not been In our that he had the late prince’® permis: | hands since that time." 1 to do this.--London ‘Titt-Bits: Is that so® T must be mistaken orn STAR Bat b ; do you know when it was : weit tt fs The man explained that tt was no al jot trick of memory, but simply the | Be Can 100 Weet Washingto sult of a system. “Whenever a » Bank Building, [wateh is brought to us," he sald, ud | atreet | broken off and fallen into the bay.” jon th sith stil alc I i ak aki i a at 3 to be cleaned, regulated, repaired SCHOOL BOY © fixed up we put a tag on it and umber it with with # number to espond with a number in our the style and make of the wateh tho owner, what rep made and the amount the work when the And the Ideho Law May Bo finishes the Job he put Dumber In mincroncople Invoked. the edge of the inner cane. / | moscow 5 . or sigh also shows what has } n m & + Wdaho, April 1 Mone done to the wa fo you nee gin to be on the verge of @ a here w sk for a neation arising from an incident mark ¢ kind and when we 1 ich occurred in one of the city It we refer to the book, and there schools some time Sireiat ot the prominent eltizens The v e wateh with the | 7) “pi . + ge ure arranging n of and when the had es -e ' ornow and gone he.said: "Past bapper y Janitor Thomas Lamb of the Rus- times every day, We have the well school, and will seek to have fun with the people who aay 1 them punished for alleged Improper Kuaranteed this watch for a | treatment of pupila. Ad a result of when you repaired It, and here The « injuries said to have been inflicted out of order ain The «lass w by Corsow and Lamb, Be He ally reveals t act that the wateh 9%) 7 ltow amb, Bennie King, to break’ months and some- |* °F , has been confined to his mem years ago. 1 for more then a month, and All watchmakers keep records and He ie avticnae . Sits ondition, mark the ate whieh are put in) i) Bt te ei gyabaae 5 ree th bh repairs, but no two on ne at the mory o ee OC- have the nystem, Bome mak- © he Russell school is as ers mark the watch with the name” m On the afternoon of February §, at the instigation of a pupil, Corsow accused & boy named Gilbreth of nd a record num rk the date-and of the workman, ber after it; some tm the workman's initial on th hi and others have signs in conjunction replys upset the wante basket on Giese ghatione to show just (tH _ Prev evening ‘ibreth de- what work has been don the Bed and Corsow, Jerking him from time plece. iit somt, began to beat him with @ This system of marking and re- ‘@rdwood pointer, Finally forcing { much service the boy down tnto a chair Corsow cording watches is of to the police also, and lost and stol- |S the Janitor owt after switches, en watches are identified by means The Janitor soon returned with @ of the watchmaker's private mark, | >48*-tipped towel roller and two switches about ameter and Corsow grabbed the switche and, ng that they were not large said they would not do where brutes had to be dealt with, He soon broke them to pieces upon Gilbreth and a boy named Zelgier who had offended by rising from his seat “The janitor took a hand with his towel roller, saying: ‘I just glory in this, Iam glad to see it come.’ The kirls began to screa mand faint, and Corsow ordered them below, telling them if they hadn't the heart to wit- news the punishment it was no place for them. A 17-year-old girl named Mabel Waltham, could not stand and had to be carried away. Cor- sow told the janitor to kick her out if she could not be gotten out other- halt a of considerable inch in di- length. angrily CABINET HAS. A CRISIS NEW YORK, April 1—A special to the Journal from Berlin says: According to reports received here from Bt ersburg there ia @ crisis in the Hussian cabinet. Tire Caar has found out that bis minis ters have been systematically ecealing important matters of state from him, and as for one examp the extent of the famine In Russia. It ts also reported that the minis- ters acted without authority in tak- eabl ing extreme measures against the | wise. duchy of Finland, When the Caar| ~The next is nal Vaden wet became aware of the independent | sarion Bundy, He was given e moves of his cabinet there was & stormy scene, the Czar deciaring to the ministers that he war ruler, and would not allow the cabinet to #u- persede hia authority In any parti- cular. ‘The Caar was particularly severe on the minister of the interior, M Goremy Kine, who is likely to be superseded by M. De Witte, minister dressing down with the towel roller and the broken switches, Young King was then set upon while at- tempting to escape. Corsow seized him by the collar and threw him backward over a chair. As he at- tempted to rise the janitor laid hold of him struck him a blow diag- onally acrows the back and side, breaking the towel roller and knock- of finance. ing the boy unconscious, He has It ts also expected that M. Boro | since been unable to attend his lepow, minister of instruction, Will studiqs and most of the time has be dismissed on account of his con- duct in recent student troubles, j Came to the Rescue. | In the smoking room at the club the low murmurs of a man's v came soothingly to the ears of hin been ‘confined to his bed.” The school authorities have taken care to keep the matter quiet for fear it would injure the school. Nev- ertheless a number of the citizens are now arranging to bring Lamb and Corsow to trial. They are sub- scribing maney and have employed inteners: It wana most embarrassing predi- |#" attorney. The case bids fair to cament.” the voice went on, “She |€ of absorbing interest to the peo- was such @ lovely girl, and we had) no idea it was so late. Sorely puz- nied, 1 stood there debating with my | ple of this locality, self why my watch had stopped, and | just then A shudder which the speaker tried in vain to suppress shook his frame Five Thousand Tons Will Go says Stewart, lin This road was built two years later than the Grant street line. The lat- violently. “Her father came down stairs and From Newport News. helped me out.” - Save for the slow and measured | ,, WASHINGTON, ‘ware aon rhythm of popping corks the ailence | Heunand one oF F dathet which followed was expressive of its envy departenent Lae wilt < Intensity.—Balttmore American, (ie ieee airest to srt » aa man &, the coal used by the Meet under his NEW PILES NEEDED |command, as well as that sent to * |Honotutu, ie shipped chiefy from tos Atlantic seaboard, and princtpals ly from Baltimore and Newport For the Trestles of the Grant News. Since the close of the war 0,000 tons have been sent to Manila Street Line. pa steamers and safiing veasels, the ie the former proceeding through the Sues A report has been received by the |.) aoa the latter around the Cage Loard of public works from OMcer |CF Good Hope. ‘The trip through the Stewart, pointing out the dangerous | canal occupies nearly two ovary condition of the trestied portion of | while that around the cape covers the Grant street car line. The/|nearly five en All coal sent bi acles on the |¥Y the navy to Honolulu goes in ee eT sailing versels around the Horn. Tt piles, which are badly eaten. lee beon suggested that coal might “Many piles on the Commercial | he taken from the Pacific coast, but have |testa made two years ago by the bureau of equipment of coal mined on the slope shows that the vartety. if far inferior to that coming from ter carries crowds of passengers |the East. Some little coal was pur every evening, and if the road 1s not| chased in Australia and sent. te replied, an accident Is Hable to Manila for the fleet, but little coms cur which will result In loss of life.” | jared to the vast quantity sent from this country, Large shipments Aone Robber’s Work. of con! will de continued to be tors varied to Manila until there hag KENDRICK, Idaho, April 1.—A | Wan - hold-up took place at Jullaetta Inst |Deen am immense wupply stored fot night. A lone masked robber cool. |e Use ¢ 2 aod ly entered McNamee's saloon at dusk and ordered the proprietor, en- MARCONI FINDS gaged In con sation with a trav- eling man, to hold up his hands, promising not to molest any ome if R W the would remain quiet. He then walked behind the bar, emptied the contents of the cash drawer into his kets, took a bottle of whisky American Newspapers to Use Wireless Telegraph. v and disappeared again tn the dark et. ‘The cash stolen amounts to ut $4.75, although a few minutes uk previous the proprietor had taken TONDON, April 1.—According to @ wer $200 from the same till to a /ispatch to the Daily Chronicle frony Dover, Signor Marconl, whose suce ful experiments with wireless telegraphy across the Straits of Dover have excited the liveliest tn« terest, says he has received an of- fer to report the America’s cup races for certain American newspa- pers. He declares that he could flash messages across the Atlantic had biffel vers on each side, IN ACTIVE ERUPTION Lava Pouring From a Mexican Volcano. GUADALAJARA, Mex, April L— ma volcano is again in an active ft eruption. Lava ts pouring th rater in great volume, column of molten matter ts be- forced to a height of several hundred feet, The lava is pouring down the sides safer place. The presence of this large sum must have been known to the burglar, whose identity still remains a myste Great Northern at Work. SPOKANE, April 1.—Foley Bros, & Larson establishing their chief camp at Trinidad for the work ni that they are about to do in bulld- Nag ing 12 miles of track, giving the great Northern railway a new ap proach from the east of the Colum- bia river. Several of the ofce fore from the eont headquarters Columbia & Western railway itivh Columbia have been sent to Trinidad and suitable temporary buildings will be erected, Active construction will commence probab- ly by the first of next week Held Up and Shot. NPORT, Wash., Louls Kirehan, of the was held up by in F stat from April 1 Davenport Packing company, of the mountain and into cultivated two young men last night » boys | valleys below, destroying th ops had some trouble with Kirchan and /and causing the inhabitants to flee they waylald him. Roy Millis, son |in terror, The eruption is accom- of Merchant Millis, shot Kirchan, |panied with frequent earthquake Inflicting a severe wound. — Millis | shocks. has been arrested and placed under | eatnaemensiiadineammainn 000 bone SUNS DORGE. 2 Klondike Mining Company A man dare not complain of the) BRUSSELS, April 1—A company Size of his milk bill; if he does. wife will take is a buy a cow named his a permission to sy. has been organized here with a cap- ital of 2,000,000 francs to work min= ing claims in the Klondike, pica ulema ch bile sii

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