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ra remem Daa NRC THE SEATTLE STAR Publishers Bi, WELLS & 00. afternoon exeapt Sunday BH, WELLS, om ana ‘One cent per copy. rte or twenty-f¥e cents per month y by carriérs, always ih alvane coptos “Telephone Pike Iso. Othews No, 110T Third A Bntered at the poxtoftice at Renitio, We The dispatches trom Washt D. C., London, and Berlin the serious character of affair at Apia, Samoa. ized. There ts an appa on the part of both the En the German governments to 5 er the odium of the oc wach other, The that England ts largely im that she has in settling the Samoan On the other hand, the Eng! emphatic attention to the fact ¢ the ambusecade of the allied of Britain and America occurred upon a German plantation, the pro nt urrence Germans sa reaponsibl forces upon | ayed joint action | diMoutties, | ail at} . THE SEATTLE STAR, = y Y 2 - genuine a oes atateeman fn \ [os ark in an audible tone, that he} United States of America, and \ | \ hj jmust have been with a magician | | vey? { |He leans over and #a pigcn in rata sa Mas way tap | "Not at all; Just my naterat abit ‘ @ Filipino trust, with him VAT lity to observe ‘things il il 4 proaident, secretary and } | He then tells how the man on the | treasurer, and principal stockholder, | } 1 i Jutage produces billiard balls, He I i) It ls hardly to be expected, however, ry ye He simply has that he will attempt to Mle articl meen [them to him, “Mut he negiects to tell | on ° neorporation In New Jersey you where they go to. beepptiegeay apie | “Wateh him now," says the man | nine. If the Mongolians prove as orange right out of the end of his expert at hitting @ ball as they do| It U wand, Simplest thing in the world Citi Jivt hitting the pipe, wreat things may | S USE, Eacalaney rebbye ail: saints tke 4 vUllizen. expected on the diamond this Soiicer anita. year, ee Mu t this time the man on | outeeene | the stage throws the fruit Into the; The Polling mill trust ts the mos! STATE NEWS. The Chehalis valley is prosperou this y The state in session in N rth Yakima, Sultan (Snohomish county nal has suspended publication. | | | | fair commissioners are | it) right stage box, where a litte gir HE CEASURES CORRECT PEOPLE ‘18 CHASED BY A MOB AND SLAIN proceeds to peel it and eat it with} reliah, considering it ts but India} ae aae rubber. | ——— ee that? queries the man be- | | Queer 8 ik by the Learned Prosis tind you. “The child works for the | Exelting Times in the Staid Little show. its In a box every perform: | dent of Clark University and His Explanation, ance and has a real or stitutes when you are nKe whe sub s looking Very simple when you observe these details,” — Perhbe. it ts, but when the child pens to be the daughter of an iiaicana | Dr. G, Stanley Mall, president of |optician and is accompanied by her| MIODLETOWN, Conn, April 13 >! Clark university, Worcester, Mars. whose theories rents ) tu T 4 rather lowe f xplanations the one f education, advanc trick. ‘The | shot th in the |~Meretio Araano, a barber, who ts | thought to have been insane, was and killed in the hills near Pete we os ee ed at the sessions of the school of | J Seeeiesah GAIN ides Gn the Febla eamit hie now has a money order paycholoxy, lately held in Chieage, (Tt! Behind you has refused to keep | Kast Haddam today by a crowd of qeenlndith, and Cher vonew the nc. | O°OSTtmemt At its pastodicn. eid y held in Chicas | sti and you are wondering If ¥oU| citizens who were chains Sand ; m tf io — have aroused unlimited discussion, can change your seat when the act |tu yen pret tenner ee cusation that Emperor William Is) Shelton merchants are talking of |approval and disapprobation, has |is over, But tho magician evidently | Gok taeda te or ren oe unfriendly in his attitude towards | establishing a chamber of commerce. | added two three more sensations | Knows of your trouble for he has ar. | wal ing through the streets flour- England and America | — to hin let. He advocates the use |ranged @ pit into which the explain. | #598 ® shotgun and threatening to Spokane populiats will put a ticket shoot several persone whom he met ‘The arrest of the plantation man. ager and hie probable trial by the British authorities, may develop an other most serious phase of the dim. culty, Under the joint agreement in Samoa, each one of the three powers reserved the right to exer- cise extra-territorial — juriad over its own subjects. In the pr ent instance the German author!- ties will probably demand the sur- render of the imprisoned plantation manager for trial by German pre cesses, and it ts extremely probable that the Engtish captain who has the prisoner in charge will refuse to give him up without explicit or- dere from London. There is much uncertainty as to the exact situation at the present moment at Apia, owing to {ts isola- | tion from cable offices. About one week's time must elapse between en occurrence on the Samoan tslands and the receipt of the news at Auck- land, New Zealand, where tt can be put on the cable. Much, therefore, must depend upon the discretion of Admiral Kautz and the other foreign oMficers on the spot. General In- structions only can be given by the home government to control their conduct. EE A battle royal is coming In the not istant future between Great Britain and Russia. For it the Czar is evi- dently preparing with a pains- taking deliberation. The sharp clash detween the two empires will come over the division of Asia, and the dominance of one or the other pow- er in that continent. The seizure of Port Arthur is by no means the Most significant of these movements. ‘While that act has excited Engtianh @pprebensions, the same thing, be- gun years ago by England, has been done by France and Germany, and now Italy and Belgium are demand- ing ports on the China coast. But there are two more import- ant moves than this. Only recently it hae been discovered that Russia has secretly constructed a railroad to within sixty miles of Herat on the Afghanistan frontier. This wil! al- low the Czar to throw a body of troops against England's India pos- sessions. It has also recently been announced that the Czar is negotiat- ing with the King of Siam for a In the feld for the city election. equipment for a fire department. The city voted down a proposed Jabor market at Republic camps ts slutted and there is no use in boring men going there to seek em- ployment. ‘The Spokane papers any that the sale of the Republic mine is a good thing because the ty will be spent In Spokane. The Ross- land Miner saye it t# a good thing because the bulk of the money will [be spent in Canada. In order to [be up to date we will say that it is & good thing because the bulk of the money will be spent in Republic, | An Indian was arrested yesterday on complaint of Deputy Fish Com- missioner Moore, for violating the law of the last legislature which Prohibits the selling of fish caught above the point of high tide in the Nooksack and other rive The violation was due to ignorance and Judge Kershaw let him off upon payment of the costs. <A fine of not less than $10 nor more than $25, te the penalty.-Whatcom Reveille. About Rich Girls. Many poor men would like a wife with a fortune, because a fortune is | undeniably a handy thing to have in lone's family, but the men who look |to marriage as a means of support are comparatively few, and usually | thete attitude toward life ts so ob- vious that no fairly sensible rich |girl need be taken in by them, says | Harper's Bazaar. No man who is |mot a fool or a rascal will wish to |marry & woman, be she rich or poor, }with whom he does not believe he lean lve happily. But there is no |such thing as a marriage in which one partner ts happy and the other not. Either it ts a good marriage for both or for neither. Marriage is as much, or Very nearly as much, a failure to @ man who Is not happy with @ rich wife, as to one who is not happy where both are poor. What the rich girl wants is just what the poor gitt wante—a good man who suits her, and who ts worth | A coal expert says the Bucoda coal $800 toward the purchase of council of Palouse bas ordinance prohibiting cows running at large om the streets, The Republic Pioneer says the} of the money | of slang a8 a medium of expression, | declares geography as now taught | to be an mination, and makes a plea for a return to the minstrels’ jrest of the evening An empty glass is shown and tn it an exe is placed. It is covered is as fine in quality a# the best/art of story-telling. with a handkerchief, and although | Pennsylvania article. | These startling enunciations were | you can hear it rattle until the very — made in the course of an won liast minute when the handkerchief ch * of Republic have sub-/"From Fundamental to Accessory |is whisked off the hen fruit has dis- jin Education” at an afternoon ses- sion before the largest audience so far gathered in the school. presidents from nearby | pertntendents of schools, yrofessors jot psychology, teachers and kinder- | #artners from out of town as well an | jim the city, made up the crowd that | heard him and applauded many of | his radical utterances, particularly that relating to the Inutility of geo. graphy, which seemed to find a responsive echo in the hearts of the | oa owt of the glase and is hidden by educators present, although Dr./the folda of the handkereh! William T. Harris took tesue with) Its very simple | Dr. Hall on the matter and dectar-| now. In fact, the trick is #o old the ed unequivocally for the study a4| magician can afford to show you useful and necessary. how it is done, It is sald that the Dr. Halt began his address by #2y-| only reason he uses it at all is #0 ing that mental development’ had. /no can protect people from explain- side by side with it, a phywical de-/ors and if this waa hie object, he velopment of muscles and nervour | corainly was successful. The man system. He said of this develop- jin the next row did not speak again ment: during the performance. “Before adolescence, from the ages of cight to twelve, there i a great increase of power in the develop- jment of the finer or accessory muscles—those which work the fact, |throat, and fingere—and there tf» jareat danger of laying too much |atress on. these muscles toc early, |before they have acquired matur- | tty. appeared “Very y." ways the man behind you. “The exe isn't put in the glam at all, You think it I, What you hear rattle is the attendant’s ring against the side of the tumbler,” But alas for the man behind you. The magician pro is to show just how the trick im de The eae in hollow and tied to the handkerchief, so that when you pull the covering joff in the right way the emg ts lift AMUSEMENTS. Tonight the bill at the Third Av- enue theater will be changed an i“Don Caesar de Bazan” will be giv- en by Richard Foote and his execel- |lent company. If this were property mates | igeane — Her “Rat” Created a Panic. Just when the ladies’ Turkish bath reom was crowded with feminine patrons arrayed only in blankets, from an adjoining dressing room ame a voloe somewhat agitated and Some authorities say that a correct | shrill, and ponetrating to every part | pronunctation and an idiomatic use lof the big cooling room. It addresa- lof foreign languages cannot be ac- | ed itnelf the rubber. | fier the age of twelve t#| “Mary, . “Lean't find my passed. rat. It's gotten out of this room Dr. Hall then spoke of the dangers | some way. Have you seen itt lof this period of childhood and point-| The shriek that rent the alr wae a \stood writing would be placed in the jeurricula some years later than at present. This period of life ts thar in which most games are played by children. It is the time when plano |ed out the fearful results of fatigu-|batticory. The occupants of the ing boys and girls by overstudy. He|room arose as one woman and ttacked the present system of edu- | scampered, if such waddiing haste tion in the elementery bools, as tightly swaddied limba could particularly the study of English ar | make might be called haste pursued in grammar and secondary) The woman in the dressing room schools. It was here that he pro- | tooked out from her inclosure around | poned the occupation of story tel-/the door at the wildly retreating nis- lers for bright young women, ex~-/terhood fighting at the exit to the | pressing the hope that some of his | shampoo room. audience would take the matter #-| “For heaven's sake, is it fire?” she riously and citing several eunenelte called, agitatedly clutching for her among his acquaintance nis | garments. came up in connection with a de- | “Your rat mand that children be given the man over her sho standard and classic tales during | “Goods their school years In speaking of English, ined the last wo- woman 5 | pompadour he drear speaking room in d of my jin t ust Dr. Hall | was er will fall and shuts him up for the | when you know | Just before the pursuing party overtook him he raised his gun and sent a charge Of shot into the head of John IS. Gelston, a leading citizen of Kast Haddam, and one of the ad- vance guard of the posse. Arsano kept « barber-shop in East Haddam two years ago. He dis joppeared and had not been seen in |the village until today, when he re- |appeared, carrying a shotgun. He went to the barn of John M. Geis- ton, and when the latter tried to jenter he barred the way, Mr. Gel- ston finally induced the man to leave, and he made his way to a [house near bys where he demanded |food. ‘While hea was eating, Con- jstable A. 8. Bugbee was sent for He met Arsano in the street and lealled upon him to surrender. In reply the man raised his gun jand pulled the trigger, It fatied to leo off, Plugbee pointed his revolver lat the man, and he broke and ran, |He made his way toward the out- |akirts of the town, and a dozen men procured gun# and revolvers and tarted in pursuit. | At full speed the posse ran to- | ward the point where the man had been last seen. He was nowhere jin sight. and the men started to lerows the bill. Just as they reached the top they saw Arnano about fifty paces away. He was leaning lover his gun, in the act of priming it. | As the men came In view, he rain- jed the gun, and, pointing it at them, |fred. John B. Gelston fell with a leharge of shot In the side of hin head. Instantly every man in the pursuing party raised his weapon and fired. The man started to run jand @ second volley was sent after him. He leaped into the air and then fell to the ground dead. | The Music Roll is a Blind. If you meet a young, beautiful and stylish woman carrying a music jroll, beware! There are nine chan- ces out of ten that she ts a bill col- lector, | That ts the latest device of law- yers, who are entrusted with the collection of bad bills, The woman server of court summons ts old. The petylish young woman with the music roll, as a bill collector, is strictly new Mer lawyer employer Insists that she must be beautiful, that she must be young, that she must be stylish, and that she must carry a music roll. The music roll ts a blind” for the neighbors, It serves as a salve for the sensibilities of the aristocratic debtors, There cannot poustbly be any neighborhood gos- nlp about the calls of a stylish young woman carrying @ music roll. She has now re ot Montevide Dr 16, and tok A. Cook, tite American enthusiast on South Pola ploration, who had planned an distance from the North on the west coast of Spitebergen, amall hotel has been ereeted for th accommodation of summ Undiscovered Antarct) on the face of the globe as bic a continent twice the sise of Burope. GUILTY OF ASSAULT. Oliver Sanderson, who has jlocked up in the city jail the past three days, awaiting hie trial lassaulting Mise Florence Richards, an employe of the Queen City Laun dry, was fined $75 and costs by Judge Cann yesterday. Her at- eam appeal. It was alleged that Sand frightened him away. A few min- ut Ad restaurant on First avenue south, and, going in, found her ant sitting there. He was identified, and Officer Adams took bim to head- quarters. THE SPRING FOOTCEAR Styles Being Shown in the Leading Shops. Ultra-mannish types for women of athletic tendencies will be more pop- ular than ever, There are many degrees of style, from the masculine appearing boot to the dainty Louis Quinze evening shoe, and this season the entire gamut is run. Slippers to match evening gowns fo color are no longer considered fash- jonable, Cloth uppers to patent leather vampes, tn both military and Louls heels, are coming Into great favor. Jet and cut ateel buskies are seen in comparatively few slippers. Carriage footwarmers for wear to evening functions of spring have re- ceived extra care from the design- ors this year, and some cost as much as $20. A new imported shoe material ts a wort of patent kid, instead of the heavier leather. It has a fing grain, which, it i» said, will not crack, ana looks like vici, with an enamel finish. Turkish slippers for the bath and negiige are once more meeting with favor. Vici kid, in both black and russet, promises to be more popular than ever this season. Red kid evening slippers are dis- played again in the fashionable shops. Few enamel shoes for women are shown. Nearly all the originality of the shoe men seems to have beeen ex- expended in feminine foogear, few new styles or shapes are shown for pedition to Antarctic waters ever | previous the Foyn-Bull ventur jand who be me a member of th Belgian exp ition, now cables the n for | torney, Frank Bim, gave notice of an erson attacked Miss Richardson and | knocked her down, but her screams | later, in company with Officer e went to the Horseshoe DEAD AFTER TWO YEARS news that “much land in Weddell fh ue dea and open water to the far south \han been discovered.” ‘This newly ldiscovered land He theast ot h L f Cape Horn at a distance of at least ‘Says t @ Law 0 a 11500 mt The exact point may be} i south of that attained by Captain eee | ‘ Weddell in 1426 (74 degreem 15 ¢ | Missing Man. ye utes south latitude), but it ie @ | = ful, however, whether the ¢ he expedition has penetrated be on | ae — the latitude reached by Bir James : ss Kons, ptain Weddell and Com-| IWPPRESTING INSURANCE CASE mander Foyn, The highent latitude | ™ yet reached tn the South volar re gion ta 818 statute miles from the | aemeen - th Pole, At almost exactly the Pre | Who Mysteriously Dy in Alaoke. Pr ST. LOUIS, April 12—The quese el tion of what constitutes legal deat age in ¢ of disappearance was passed n by the court of appeals yesterday in the cane of Mary KE. Carpenter, ainst the eupreme council of the m of Honor. The plaintiff sued for $2000 on @ rtifleate issued to her husband, J, Carpenter, who disappeared from his home, at 3540 Olive street, to the evidence in the case, on January 30, 1897, and hag j not since been heard from. Judgment for the full amount of the policy was awarded the plaintif? at the trial of the case. The court of appeals affirmed the verdict. The opinion handed down by the appellate court recites that Carpens ter had met with a total lows of fore tune about twelve years before he disappeared. For a time after he lost his property he was employed as a bookkeeper in Chicago. He loat his position and removed to St, Louis. He was unable to obtaiq employment some time before he disappeared, and ame very de- spondent, being dependent upon hig friends and former business asso- clates for support. He had been heard to way, the opinion states, that “he had lived too long; that life was not worth living.” | according On the day of his disappearance + he left home in the morning and — went down town. The last seen of him was at 5 p. m., at which time he called at the office of the harbor © J commissioner, on the levee. He was | very despondent and recounted to Com his friend, the assistant harbor — “IT, commissioner, hia disappointment im not obtaining work, He finished by ¥ saying, the opinion states, that he At “had better Jump tn the river.” The efforts of his friend to remove his gloom were unavailing. and he departed, saying that he did not know where he was going. He has not been seen or heard from since, Advertisements in the newspapers and posters offering rewards for hia discovery met with no success. The river at the time he disappeared contained @ large quantity of floats ing ice. The appellate court, {n passing on the case, said: “The legal presump- tion of death permitted at common law upon the lapse of seven years ; is also allowable before the expira- tion of that period, if there ts evle = dence tending to prove that death occurred at an earlier date, or show- ing @ greater probability of death than life at a prior date.” Found the Job Difficult. XA remarkable attempt to commit suicide was made by « Vienna musia teacher. The London Leader cor- respondent anys that she first swale lowed ten doses of morphia, which failed to produce any marked effect, Next she tried oxalic, which also failed to act, and potassic acid, which was equally unsuccessful. She then had recourse to overdoses ot styrehnine, but still remained alive and conscious. A final at- tempt with prussic acid also failed eoaling station and navy yard on the | marrying. If she can sati#fy her-| also advocated the use of slang, | poll.” } men. Russets are most): | ‘ c + | roll. * ay ts , . y made with |to rob her of her life. Abandonti coast of that kingdom, offering a|telf that her suitor is a good man, | saying “Oh-h,” was the tong-drawn sigh | TAY be & music teacher or the friend | tne egg or bulldog toe and extension| poison, the lady got out of bed, handsome rental for the same. This *?4 Baie 4° has er * ugh ati ‘Biang expresses many thing®. | of relief, as the women returned to| ang has called to practice duets. No|les. Vict kid is largely used, and | where she had been lying to await provide for his own happiness, she | onic 0 peceh bo! th. eomiahe " s * will give Russia, if the concession | Too not distress her mind with |« Ment hisiene eh quent If cena | Gage on Jone would dream of associating her | patent aN gh ho § See nannne’ |the working of the folsons, and to gained, @ foothold on the Indian |«uecuiations as to how much weight | use slang. ‘ne puree of preted | — oh with a vulgar bill qollector. Then |*® Shoes for social occastona, fetched @ heavy rolling-pin from the ocean, and be an absolute menace to|her fortune has in promoting bis tion im to cultivate expression. “1 GOLD BROUCHT DOWN the Jounn ans Serer © estiate Marriage in Si eek Kote ote ead tc ee | prestige of her own. It ts harder jage in Siam. and the back of her head with this, British power in India. attentions. The man who wants to |epeech is one form of expression. | i 5 nent : safll without the desteoa elect. ‘Paar ‘These two moves can have but one|™arry her merely because she is| Alas, for the child who can write a| ere ae DavmoeAt te thie, benastifal tation: | oil ery ane eat Wee Teaches 6! 51 che took iher pocber-anite aii a rich is unworthy, and If she has a | re. 04 4 who haw bayment to OF |certain age without marriage ts tio- — * interpretation, and that is that Rus-| (ot ye ee Or discernment she will | thin gle Noy ae che ht \ Farallon Arrives With Late |imade young person than to a male|Keted and labeled and plased in a |€Ut Open veins in her left hand and Ga ts slowly, but surely and system-| aotect his unworthine Put the | pressed counpasition. body has Alaska News collector whose clothes are shiny. | privileged class, under the special|®*™. She began her attempts bn atieally preparing for a great con-|man who wants to marry her, and/q right to speak or write uniexs he , walt sxidond folie af 8 collection, She |e Seor Aut,kines whe, Mindle Sanit | SOs tn tee atteraoon: when Mee filet with Engiand, on the issue of |is iad she has a fortune because {t| has something to say.” Steamer Faralton, captain Roberta, | [ol seldom fa m x t Bnd haahonde Sor thee ae. Ae T ek, as ti alt 4 cons which will depend the future dom-|mokes marriage more feasible for | - — — lcseload 4 tt evening from | 2, .2e Very. Rewest and the most method ts delightfully eimple. 4 |COvered, she wae etl alive ene ecm |both of them, ia not necessarily un-| tated Wis Own Foot on ee wee uk ‘rom | successful institution. prisoner In any of the Stamese jaiis (cious, although faint from loss of ination of Asia. weetiey, bet 4 ake loves him he may| mpu Skagway and way ports, with pas aeeeeieemaeter eenremeanrD may gain his pardon and release by | Di00d and from the effect of the va- _—CCCOC-C ° - aoe “ a ped > plac 5 ‘an advantageous person for her| ARCOLA, 1i., April 13—William |sengers and freight. She had on NEW SUITS FILE marrying one of the incligible class, | Tous poleons. | she te sure of re At every stage of events in the marry. The practical turn of | Warren Murphy, @ cripple, residing | hoard 200 ounces of gold which came | ampere Whether he is already married or |Covery. ‘The doctors declare that a . Philippines prophets of the dismal! mind which makes a man appreciate |In the northeastern part of the rom mines at Helen bay, located ew suits filed in the superior | not Is not of great consequence, for constitution able to withstand ow situation. They never seem to be | money does not necessarily render |tioa upon Aim y ore Liat | eh ailein ane 1 py |, Montana National bank vs. Wash-|the line at one wife. econ ty | Bt ny respect incapable of ap-|some of the most eminent surgeonn | 6 at nad teas »Y ington Condensed Milk company and wag at ype 08 Saale discouraged by the collapse of their | BUM in ey yaman, or repaying her jin the state refused to undertake. —|Captain Charlies I who return- 1 Marlow, promissory note, &m-| Claribel: “You told me you were Merely a Feeler. Predictions. No sooner Is one phase | ongdence in ‘him with entire devo- With a pocketknife he amputated 64 on the Farallor ma J. Davis ve. Ann W. Benjamin, | P¢ver going to write to young Han- “No, I thank you, I prefer ta of affairs cleared up favorably than | tion and fidelity Her fortune, far | ht ght foot, while no one was prea- Part of the Farallon’s passengers et al, foreclosure; Scandinavian | *ingon again * f lity. " t "4 paasengers ; ysure; Scandinavia e 2 étand. @ fresh chapter of dismalism is|from belng a drawback to her hap- ent in the room, and then cailed N18 wory trom Dawson and Atlin, and | American bank ve. Julian I. John-| Angie: “He's written me a dosen| "6 stout woman who Opened. Three months ago they tn-| 5 * after marriage, will still be brothers, ba Says cy gill they repc that many people are ston and Carl W, Speer, promissory etiam aby ce in a ing up in the crowded hers, and will still be yut as une- of blood 0" nprov oming out over the tratis from the | note. ast one he left a page out, an¢ s aah ae Sea tated that it would take an army | oii". o her as it was before. The|He had teen told that amputation | former piace. The trail is sald to| a had to write and ask him what it| straight ahead of her as she made of 5,000 men to drive Aguinaldo's |.” . “_ rf ? the member would result fatatly. e r bout.” . ‘ possession of it will help to make |! be very soft and travel ta hard A New Discovery, was abou The men sitting down glanced fure army out of its works. But 10,000 her an equal partner in the house-| Murphy is twenty years old, an@ | passengers from D. nm report the , eee - proved enough. ‘Then expenditures hold, and, Indeed, will tend, esp during his lite has begged to have | isgortunes of an old man who at Six years ago H. J. Bull persuad- A BROKEN CONTRACT. “ os . ; : , n ; J ear anybody offering in the Philippines were estimated (cially if tt 1# too big, to make her |his deformed foot eet of, but no pted to make the journey from ¢4 Commander Svend Foyn, ot — » said, still looking tt ling partner, #0 that she w argeon who examined him thought 3 ., , Poenubere, Morday, to eauis a eres S aid, still loc by opponents of the treaty hun- | the ruling pes ses o bi be da se poner sein tae hog {De eon t kng ay u s ke sealat ot as camtkes eee ke ohn Gh. oe: ness. suit r|straight at the front end of the car, . © exercise some ¢ e- | through the trail, a 5 e Feders “hi 00) granted somebo Gree <f millions ‘a year, ‘The real |, void having too much her i ee |wam unable to get out without as-/vovage in South Polar waters; and |® inet W. 8 Thompeon. Ni ssh Ml hg At fhe la a eae figures are quite moderate, thlown way. That may be bad for NEW THEATER BORE. ete lb hailed some travelers Mf Bull later narrated to the world Shaaee that he agreed to buy of MBit dau GAGNAy seen. up. oe revenue ro an offset. Even|her, but it is ot the risks rich ae who w ng, but they refus nad 4, pi ’ saict a tae dita Thompson the timber on n| “No, I thank you," she anity the annexation of Hawai! drew forth | girls must rv a 0 by th ed to H as Mnally found |W" bs * “be ‘ ©-liand in Snohomish county, at 75] without looking at any of them, “ a warning that {t would be ne ar gr Rggronlle tery - 7 Mya Ta by the Canadian but both hin | le m4 - , - be Ma cents per thousand fee It is al en standing for 15 minutes, ere ‘one erty po much ¢ mated by his 5 feet were badly frozen and he died POF an he eo leged that upon measuring the tim- n't hurt me to keep it lite to maintain there a strong army ne » Melbourne in ™ « 4 nv ¥ upa to's money; but If the man 1s the short fter t rescued turned t marae in 2 ~ found to contain 19 » longe get o} and flect. A few soldiers sumiced iit sort of man and the woman the| Everybody knows that ubiquitous y from Atlin [At the eleventh hour a Mr, Boreh. | Der it was found to contaln 19,860 | the Met op i ah all ence even of one cruis t on oth riske may indi 1 who generally sits about : - A teen ‘ba ony: eet, and The nce | ere er is not required here has been | by y taken, In the enc : ¥ people are |*h" voraser® & e completion | ier thereby repudiating the con-|much relieved talk of @ spirit of revolt in Cuba |character and disposition that count, | piay hana A whiapeees what la wo there: dally. | SC cee Serpe era re aac alt | tract. She had overestimated them, el bal rai nor here much or | ence, a a np ‘ sta om Australia to the rte and Porto Rico, but all tha at Nad whoever has it, becomes |ing to happen next, His rival has wh ked | Gongreas in London, where—arrogat- | -— happened is distinctly encoura i na n re. heen discovered, He ts the man who ing, perhap too much credit to : : nf e and no mo had the follo " > Fi ~ y A favorite assertion of the pess: geeapore violet sits behind you and tells the two pe ie fHOwing | Himnself—he inapired the assembled The judging at the Dog Show mistic class ix that the Philippines | Tapped Telegraph Wires, |reople he prought in on passes how , Miss Cook, O. 3, /Seopranhere of See world with & new commenced this morning. Blue othe i waa ob he magician perfor eke pace tas A r men! future Aiscovery in the Ant- : ‘ i" gp be at a gebean ! OLMVELAND, April 1%—Harry| Of course, every one likes to know Winte: [arctic Ocean Ribbons will be awarded to je change for the better t s as James Cooley, and » things, but usually prefers to et, ky The Foyn-Bull-Borchgrevinck ex- firsts » . va » two weeks Has mn remarkab! Wiles, clectricians, are un them out for himself. ‘And |" , Me Ten antt4t | pedition had succeeded in reaching Firsts. Attend and see the The natives will be n all wt at the central station ony a man who knows it all hasn't pre ure Mer el Nh oy been py, |the mainland of the great Antare awards, tous tele they can maintain ; me of attempting to tap the |the faintest iden of how the alm-| 0%) hog Mrs, Bond and twochit. |i nt never before trodden by q See BAS Mee are Suding aut Nickel Plate road, |pore, Like most bores, howover, he (Are, Mins Marie Russell, and thirty. | human “rm... Une tanding at an that they have no rea f leat th the ane ot idccent adie 1 nowover: Ne |aix stecrage passenge ’ ogothe ‘ nera caught | act of | doesn ow he Atter ‘lis cruise, Was accepted as a proof that fighting. The calamity prophet to tap wires, It Is alleged |toning to him tell the man on to set foot on Antaretica 7 ‘ ‘0 8 otlea proper was not down, however. Wilson avenue bridge the stage has the rabpite up the THE DIRIGO LIBELED. not so difficult as had been thithor- ener int house a short distance | sieeve of his dress coat, attached to to considered, and that a wintering | 4 a found a complete elastic bands, you turn around and| The Canadian Pacific Navigation | party would have every chance of | > . i "26 aWwarde Is now said that “noc 4 Jerry for equipping @ telegraph|giare at him with the idea that he uny, operating the steamer spending a safe and even pleasant | The Blue Ribbon was awarded Sirgon,” of Kanaan, has a rival in| office. It iv said that the men were|may take It into hin head to keep has filed papers in the twelvemonth at Cape Adare, with a| to us some time ago. sock Bes Mayor Quine f LY to cut in on wires on|his mouth shut and let you enjoy jeral court Mbeling the steamer falr chance of penetrating to, or | who claim ch 1 b news is transmitted |the show. But he amiles at you in| igo for $15,000 salvage claim: The nearly to, the magnetic pole by aid . Rhé eronad that he has decided to|!n order ut the pool rooms i pleasant way and imagines that |\ibeling company alt that but Jedges and Norwegian skies, — | >, > ~ 2 _ nt aia s ——— - - you are Interested In what he Is |for the assistance ndered the veral expeditions were promptly | & 4 R a CO they “i . i : FOR BUSINE t PLEASURE nying and proceeds to explain the|Dirigo by the Te tr she had | planned, but only one got under way, |av © - nt Q e juch ® cheap n ation Clipper Bleycles, For exercine | next trick truck on Midw island, she would The Belgian steamship Relgica, un- | will yned upon # ' F. M. Spinning, agent,| Finally you grow extremely tired |have been a total | The Dirigo |der command of Lieutenant Ger-| Strengest Top Coat House in the State. the American peop c ue. [of tis self-m ued at $90,000, lecturer and re-|is said to be val i 800-802 First Ave |lache, set sail from Antwerp on | » Cor, Columb * nish chili Ak hk ti ii a A lak: