The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 19, 1899, Page 2

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IEE TRE PRET TE IE LTE LE PLN ERT PE FI TIT I I I eM TE duane uahniuakeclds daa aS OAR i aceiaiamemmaii ma: Lacie ied aoe rer mine ent em eR RETR 2 THE SEATTLE STAR, out o y five wold oO f it of every Nive sold is never used, loosens show an almost unanimous } May 4 or, at the very latest on May { | \ bs simply goes to w te. jin In order to take part in the In rentiment for uniting Interests, The iinnedlabailastcaaetall — ternational tourna nt in Londo ead op na "in p : H, WELLS & C0,, Peas 1 At youne Atarican woman whe |Mowever, if Janowaki would consent | U 7] ware setielted to Join and are rauch 1. "i tshers, has beon at the Riviera this winter jto play at the rate of six games per | in favor of the move and will be re ‘ s Rvery afternoon except Sunday Fergie tee cea of the eosnonty \ mn week, he would, make It a seven (AnD Presented. | ‘The states of Indiana Wholesale and Retall Cash Groce MND Foner tou ] KamMe-up content 700 a side;, play nots, fohigan and Wisconsin, between ¥.N. WeLIS KF. CHASE, dered a glaas of hot water sent to | o begin on Apr veute ee ull oe: Boiron, |” hisixem Marsorn [her room. ‘The hot water came—so | enter cette ero ) Me tae iedeaicne ockaak (6 Be Goce ~Ohe San per copy AN eels Yer week | yy, “Ne ext charge OF FF on her | RB Dog's Rich Feast. JUM 4 i the proposed combine. leita ala at or twenty-@¥e cents per month delivered | Of - cuieppatiighenenaine ey by carriers, always ih advenca No free | ~- aan tema CALUM Mich,, April 1%—An -——— > . soos Tn 1898, according to offietal re |drew Jobneon, of Laurlum, owns a Mad Bull Kilis Its Owner Public and Rone Pike 160, [Ports 1451 miles of new rattroad C . pot dog that he wishes to get rid of, | . SHARON, Pa. April 91-—Matthew | Da rochial 4 oat Ele |were opened for traMe in India, 0 Ss t t The other night Johnson went home D | pe ete teens | PGR OMcee No. 1107 Third Avenue |ieinging the total mileage up to 22, url U iv) rea 0 | with st bills his pocket enouncin a coal operator, aged #7, was gored | & + 1 Entered at the postoifice at keaitie. Washing | Darine'the current year 4070 a ‘ Jamounting to $100, In taking off } a 8 to by a vicious bull SCHOO! =e os tacond-elase miles are to be completed, and tn Priest |trousers to go to bed the bills dre St Tra ed | He ; . ‘ | He > Is programme contemplates q ped out of his pocket, and during pg y. bull broke loose and attacked him Pupils Rome prominent business men in| the construction of 1869 miles, The the night the dog wandered Into the |e wan repeatedly thrown into the Helped Geattlo say that it might not be aj Mileage of telegraph lines in opera room and began chewing the bilis Sienaaeianeel air on the animal's horns, then tram- | 28 Ped ty 48,084 When Johnson got out of bed in the 4 and gored in a terrible manner. | 7 bad plan for the city to purchase |!" ™ | rqghe To Make aah 7 . morning he saw his $100 strewn | coupe DA PDp | His son was a withers of the uneque Make Cedar lake with the avowed tnten-| According to MM, Bianchini and IS A REFUGEE FROM RUSSIA the carpet in such small oh EEOMENTED MAN IN A THEATER fight, After vainly trying to drive m a tion of holding the property a® a| Regnault, the Inventors of the ho jthat it will be tmpoasible to put} the animal off by prodding him with Advanced om | source of electric power, in case that |nendoscope, by which the size and | Lectigasie therm together again or to get their coe a pitchfork, he shot tt, Powers | cs. : @ monopoly should attempt to con-| the ition of the internal organs | duplica died in a short tims. His estate in Grades. trel power furalahed to consumers |‘? out on the skin, a Turkieh | And Resi¢: a Hilisia ag nieve Vent to His Southern Senti- velued at $100,000. / te Rentiin, hd. te tacrenns prices, |vth commee the heart, lungs, liver City of Sen Fi ; Shot a Negro Preacher. sebite f'n Stililing Pechion —_—— . prices. and kidneys to dilate with the dry no a | mE Fae Thrown by Dynamite. It would be possible at any time to | heat and return to their normal size sient Sone at 6 See atte oe Aerts in Now York City. Pivbscdctottn, gd Break the backbone of such a mon-|in the cold water, This action ap leo maltose caten aeenahal | PRO: rbrat de " Ta eet Undead bevhonpnape Prodarer ec ery » Bilison, a negro preacher, our xplosion of a blast of dyna-| . 4 — the a aes oft ne ary {his church, where he was conduct ~ ee in Bean's firesand quarry ot} oe. ake te @ rival concern, OF) One evening recently the queen of ling services, They abused him on y Forge this afternoon Samuel | the city could establish ite OWN) tiaty, accompanied by her mother,| SAN FRANCISCO, April 19.—"Bo) 8° sunt of testi ny which he had | NPW YORK, April 19.—A middle-|Andrews and Samuel, Smith, em | ‘ : Plant, Thi ts exactly what the |the Duchess of Genoa, witnessed one |{f You please, we will go to my {MC WBleh coum 1 the indictment Jaged man who eat alone in the ployes, were blown 20 feet into the | © Ask no Bowed do gt ee Shute = e a lof Allen and Joseph Robinson for | ¢. ab ag pon lair, and both terribly inju | fa Present companies fighting each jof Fregoll's performances, in the grave.” If It wae ap unsual remark |assault on W. I. Miller, another col- | urth row of orchestra chairs Ot) Vor, burened and the clothing was © Greater : uirse of which he carried out the the He % other and the city do not want to be made at the end of a meal in|ored minister | he Heerers Saare thanter Lhe other | carn trem thet hedie , 7 Their idea tw to create a sentim weban 4 tet coger ye Psion the open alF on o Placid hillside in| Ellison inalsted that he had told |*veRDe Broused inte Shy: Shed een enema | eh < Favor of 2 aly o 0 rains of the Roya — . : “\regularity with which he went out} o ss ‘ aentnet over utilising tie water Pow | arch. As eval, Fregoit's imita- /*eahot of fan Byancleco the truth and #tarted toward the /atter every act. An uncertainty in| Weung Wives Bie Together Prospective , ott lee ° rege . cogyeen ch. Just as he reached the ¢ “ ; ‘edar lake, thus shutting jtlon was so good that not only the | Ft tne eee oe ene ee te lerac, [HIM galt sURMested that he had been| OMAHA, Neb., April 19-—Mrs, D. | Patrons ueen and the duch.| "4" 80 balmy that a meal out « **}out a few Umes before the play be- |O’Nell and Mrs. Overy, who have | the one point of poswidle competi-| public, but the . ans 4 tg age ag oa tion with Bnoqualmie Falls. The [es# Were convulsed with laughter, |100rm, In the shade of a spreading |!n#ide the ollice, He ix not expect: | gun |recently been troubled ‘with the — The Bakers aim to keep the Falls of |T® audience, recognizing her ma-| lve oat 4 By mo meena out af /*4 ‘0 survive This man was of rather stout bulld | husbands, decided to die together | 4 Than mee Snoqualmie under thelr personal bed fi mood sense, _ ghbo oe San phn Boe rye ree sine Bela WH and medium height. His mustache |iast night, and took 30 grains of mor- | They Visit ave her majesty an ovation | : eld was read and #0 was his face y were - control, and the promoters of the | which must have been « convineing | Mignonette blooming like weeds ISKEY MEN The play was Othell ee ib pat akan aka aoe | Our School. General Electric are just as deter-|proof that the evening's entertain- | The meal itself had been out of the ette Tayler never was a ccentiy from Burlington, Iowa. Day and Evening Sessions There had been a caviare | mined to make the Bakers sell out ment had not affected tts loyalty, | Common } N kenwous, arch, captivating Desde- | Kicentes to them. Neither want two power | i the roe of sturgeon that had | mona. Her husband, R. D. Mac-| Collins Plock, ‘Phone Man 416 @ucquaimle plant ts . rtiaily built jean Herald's report of the Palm | Anchovies from = Archangel, — Othello. | partial *| Sunday bull fight in the City of DY the monks of Trottsa, the 7 | A Louisville Congregation De-| Th red-faced man looked unoasy All Work Guaranteot. a6 « specialty # will find favor in their eyes over Mexico: “Hull No. 5—This bull tum. |>ee" mead such a put courag Jduring the first act, Othello’s love- making caused him PETER EGGE f the | | OF CHRISTIANS the Cedar river proposition. j bled the pic pretty briskly, |t© he hearts of the Cossacks cides That They Must Go. to frown sav pe ee tend a sie land made tnt ively generally. | Don in their long strugkte againet | : ously ts P ti P ha fT Kelsomining Following close upon the heels of | There were some narrow escapes, | ‘he Vargian, there had been tea OUISVILLE, Ky., April 1—The | “#eandalous,” he remarked to ne ‘al Aper hangin, the disaster to the American and | 4” ¢l Culpuscoano Gistingulahed |broken from the be Pete carried |fashionable Walnut Street Baptist jooe te partiontion, ashe walked up Bishop McCabe Would Like to pneng hoon Mede ni Lock- e himself by a timely move on behalf} o ta on the church of this city, of which the jthe aisle after the first act; “scan emith Kepelring of All Kinds leut. ye obace w ast Wei | ° > > : 5 Was, the only thing deserving of on the host wound | 5 the wealthiest congregations in |**" UP Bywh to associate with nie! CovINGTON, Ky., April 19.—Dis pay ae: up his meal was grown in Russia, and hi people, but I suppose he gets hin | thie city: After a revival service last | qoserts after.” MADAME BROWN Gilmore and fourteen men from the | mention was Yorktown, who are supposed to have |by Minuto. € good pair al cuarteo ervera Prieto did some jen McCabe, of the Method! opal church, formerly the cigarette he called a papi fallen vietims to rebels in ambush | fair passe work, but experienced se-|To* So It was quite In keeping when night Dr. Baton called @ church! When the red-faced man resumed | - a Formerly at 98 Pike Street, bas moved to | rlo rf pate jhe cheertly proj 5 visit to his |™eeting to order, and after a dis- aro: Sh : ing Chaplain,” declared for an al- on the Island of Luzon. Such hap- cogging linens any hing ts | grave. er. : cussion lasting over an hour the | us meat for the last act be was very |iiance with Great Britain in his lec- 133114 Second Ave, penings send @ chill over the nerves|jirricr After @ poor pinchago, a| Yet the Rorigon was the smoke of |Church adopted resolutions pract- penne Aer syprerse his wrath |ture at St. Paul's M. E .church at Cor. Union, up stairs, Of Americans, who have almost out-|norrible cuateo and a somewhat | 540 Francisco. jeatty ag from the congregn-|chamber to kill Desdemona. He half seventh and Smith | streets, last The host led the way through an | tien all pers who have @ny COn-|rose in hin chair and snorted inar- night. He was indorsing the czar's grown the memory of Indian war | sianting media, he finished up with a horrors, and are not yet accustomed | Media perpendicular, which did the to the tales of butcheries which fol. | bétiness.” in the wake of coloniaing efforts! nis story illustrates the polite- om the part of Caucusian races in| ness of the citizens of Dresden: A is. In Eng-|stranger wae one day crossing the things have grown to be |#reat bridge that spans the Elbe, pathway of |*4 asked a native to direct him to been crim. |% ertain church which he wished to find. “Really, my dear sir,” said the Dreadoner, bowing low, “Tt grieve Persons in this|greatty to say, but I cannot tell are now anxiously asking | you.” Acewe ys nger passed on a lit- ‘i tle surpri at this voluble answer bana Ri oncapagelieg to the simple question. He had pro- ceeded but a short distance when he peace congress and declaring that all war will end. ut I want to see one thing done before universal peace comes,” he declared. “I want England and the United States to form an alliance and declare to the world that butch- ery of Christians by the Sultan, sometimes 15,000 in a single year, must stop. I hope George Dewey will live |iong enough to go sailing up the Hy this the the audience was all | eres gyete ee aes een oY ihie tine the ausione’ “Dende, [steel shot loose against the palace a-cakay. sae meter |doors of Constantinople. I wish my AN the wabara heard the sed-faced | Temiment, with ite white-baized saan, bal the bones was 60 dark thal |" 4 8% Rend, wee alive,” ticulate denunciations. When the | pillow, pressed by Othello’s furious | |hands, smothered the dying Desde- | mona’s cries the red-faced man got up and started up the aisle “Outrageous,” he shouted, pro- nouncing the word as if {t was writ- ten “oatrageou “Look byuh,” he eried in the mid- die of the aisle. “I'll not atay tn any orchard of gnaried and stubby olives | Hection whatever with the manufac with every branch weighed down by | ‘ure or sale of intoxicating liquors. purple fruit. Thinking of th a} | The resolutions were carefully drawn to which the path led he said: “Per-|*0 8* not to be offe haps I ehall not pass here caxity |#ome of the wealthiest whisk distil some day, but, after all, what mat. | fers and merchants in thie city ar ter? The road to the grave ix not | "embers of Dr. Eaton's coogrega easy for any of us, But keep to the | ten right and you will find my path| The Gret part of passable. HE te my grave. I dug | *8* 40 earnest appeal to # it here where the sun may shine for. | bere to «ive up their business and |. . f ever and the breeses blow and my |felleve the church of the burden | ene cr eain seein © ms Attic bees come and make honey. It| Which has been resting upon it. The | is all arranged when I shall die. My | **cond gives them one year to either } wife shall dross me in my robes of |#!V¥e Up their businets or get out of priest, the men from the ranch be. | the chureh. too i Meals at All Hours. OUR CAFE Min. Con. A. Rideont, = Proprietor Cor. Third & i the resolution h mem- ‘This question has been under agi in her development, end and rumors of wars fil tof war fer meet threshold of a new era of liberty, guarantees of progress, and with not in the direction the privileges of the peo- ®@ compelling force to forward to their own ad- Tt is @ new experience in of the world for a lib- people to enter upon the organization or reorganiz- government with patience, and toleration of preju- at the same time with to enforce a definite policy. experiment is successful in and Porto Rico, will achieve as much in the administrative capacity as fighting ability on land ALL SORTS.” ‘The American navy has practi- cally been bullt since 1883. Great Britain makes $20,000,000 a year profit oyt of tts postoffices. Tt is stated that 200,000 Russian emigrants settled in Siberia in the year 1898, ; j i Hen 5 7 The blankets issued to the soldiers of our army cost the government 93.40 each. It is expected that the Siberian railway will be completed to Ir- kutsk in February, 1600. Little Eva wag encored at Atchi- fon, Kan, the other night In the Geath scene, and was compelled to the United} beard hurried footseps behind, and. turning around, saw the same man running to catch up with him, In & moment his pursuer was by his vide, his breath nearly gone, but enough left to say hurriedly: “My dear sir, you asked me how you could find the church. and it pained me to have to say that f did not know. Just now I met my brother, but I grieve to say that he did not know, either.” They Looked Alike. A prominent South Side minister relates an experience which he had night before last in @ street car on his way home. There was but one other passenger in the car, a jovial looking man, who sat In one corner with his hat pulled down to shade his eyes. The minis- ter felt that the other man was watching him, but every time he turned his eyes in that direction the passenger was looking out of the [window and smiling. Finally their glances met and the pleasant look- ing passenger kept his eyes fixed on the minister's face, scrutinizing him carefully. The minister coughed and looked embarrassed, and then the other man, looking a little sheep- lish, came over and sitting down be- side him, extended a hand, at the same time saying: “Stranger, I've been thinking that we look so much alike we'd ought to get acquainted.” The minister emil- ed, shook the hand and they soon ere chatting like old friends. As the stranger arose to leave the car he passed out a card saying: “Come around when you're around my way. After he had gone gianced at the card and read after the man’s name: Ines, Uquors and cigars, The comlest place on the South Side.""—Chicago Dally News. | Half Price. “Some months aj says the Kan- sas City Journal, “Professor L. T. Weeks, of Southwest college, wrote &@ poem which he thought was all bright, and which he offered to the }Century Magazine for publication. His wife, Ida Aheborn Weeks, made fun of his literary aspirations, and kept telling him about the fali which the minister In due af association in to be call- Western Washington Intor- the League. The cities that president of the league. The scratch meet to be held with the university boys will take pl May 16. |low shall carry me here and lay me the eples shall report to the chiet of | Ville churches for a number of years the third section the end of Agaplos | but the Walnut Street church Ie t plotter for Liberty and exile.” strike the blow at men representing All of these things thus briefty re-|*° much power and wealth as the before he found a refuge in the bille ONES SGI. aang ana ey at the bask of Haywards, on the HIGH SCHOOL NOTES Costa range, and not more than ents dozen miles from Gan Francisco! Ata recent meeting of the athletic neighboriy solitude he has made his | rider as captain of the track team, home a refuge and an asylum for was accepted, and John George w who find their way owt of Siberia | ensuing season. Charles Sewell wil and of Saghalien. The purpore '* | continue as manager of the team, [rillie letters of the signboard which | ‘The baschall boys seem to how a extends across the gable of the lit-/iack of interest and energy as only | gle word, “Bvoboda,” the “mens | ae which Russia secks, At @ meeting held In this of the high school athietes state, The ' echolastic comprise the association are Seattle, Townsend. Mr. Reed, of Tacoma, ts His Ships to Execute Prob- WASHINGTON, April 19.--The navy department has practically de- in this grave and cover me up, and | tation in some of the largte Louls- Honcharenko, priest and heretic, |Mr*t one whowe congregation would lated this simple moujik has been | Whisky men do here. road that leads across the Contra across the bay. Here in almost un-|association the resignation of C. J the trickling stream of “politicals” | elected captain in his place for the plain to all who spell out the Ky- —— tle cottage and can interpret it #in- awe have tur ut for practice, i Baturday an asroctation © SUMMER WORK od Tacoma, Olympia, Everett and Port | lems in Naval Strategy. termined that a ssoon as the squad. At a meeting of the cadet company |ron of evolution returns to New| yesterday ft was decided to put « lYork from {te course of winter ox-|baseball nine in the fleld for the ercises in the West Indies Admiral |coming season. Roy Kumicr was se lected as captain and Glen Dunbar manager for the season. Sampson will be ordered to take the ships composing it, and probably some others, to Narragansett bay, ceo ond for a series of tactical maneuv of the athietes who will be outlined by the naval war in the interecholaatic meet} at Newport. The plana of the de d here on May 27 are partment contemplate ordering the |Geors. Bilder, Crooks, Davis, Hill, | squadron to Narragansett bay as|Dalby, Gardner and Barnard. Some soon as possible after itn return to |W material will also be brought New York from the West Indies, A|Ut for the time of the meet, problem in naval strategy will then ; ee be presented to Admiral Sampson| John W. Lewis, a Civil war veter- addre pupils in the as smbly hall Monday afternoon, Mr. Lewis was Introduced by Mr. Me Donald, of this city. Mr. Lewis re later his experiences in the war and in Libby prison in a very Inter ing manner. and the commanders of his vessels and the squadron will proceed to sen to work It out. Then, according to the ideas of the department, Admiral Sampson will bring his ships back to Newport, where the officers will go ashore to laten to lectures at the war college and to participate in | discussions pertinent to the problem few could see him, Two found him at lant, seized him, and trotted him out Into the lobby. He struck the pavement perilously near the front end of & north-bound Bitroadway ear. BRISTOL, Pa, April 19.--Eight- year-old Lissle MecKenny tried to out-do her playmates here today by jumping rope 300 times. She over- exerted and strained herself in the attempt and died soon after. Steel Rails for China. BALTIMORE, Md, April 19.—The Maryland Steel company, at Spar- row’s point, recelwed an order today for 75,000 toos of 67.pound steel rails for the Chinese Eastern ‘road The milla are working night and day on @ large order of similar rails for the Trans-Siberian road, of which the Chinese will be @ continuation, VOLUNTEERS MUSTERED OUT ‘All Those in Cuba to be Out By End of Month. WASHINGTON, D, C., April 19.— The war department Is exercising all haste In forwarding the troops from ‘uba to this country, where they will be mustered out as soon as practicable after their arrival, All the volunteer regiments on the isl- and are under orders to concentrate at designated points, from which y will take ship for home. Sev- i regiments are already on the y, and others will leave during the present week, Most of the troops will be mustered out at southern ports, where quarantine stations have been established, and where, after five daya of detention in camp to provide against the outbreak of yellow fever, their effects will be disinfected and the troops will be given travel pay to their homes. Four of the immune regiments will be sent north, landed in New York CORSET SAVED HER LIFE BRIDGEPORT, Conn., April 19. Frank Kester fired @ bullet from a revolver point biank at the heart of Mra. Lottie Wilmot lest night, and then placing the revolver on the right temple fired the second shot. A corset eteel stopped the bullet fred at the young woman and sav- e4 her life, but the second shot sent & bullet through his temple and he died before he reached the hospital. The attempted murder and suicide was the outcome of an infatuation for the young woman by Kester, which was not rectprocated. Keater had been connected with the Buffalo Bil! Wild West show, and had been tn this city for some time waiting for the show to leave on the summer tour, Mrs. Wilmot is a young married woman of 3, but for some time has been separated from her husband. The couple met about two months ago. Kester was anxious to have Mra. Wilmot poin him in the show business, but she re- fused to leave her home here. ‘They were together all the after- noon and last night Kester wanted her to go to the theater. She re- fused and boarded a car on the State street line. Kester boarded the same car, When she left the car Kester fol- lowed her. He asked her if she would talk with him for a minute. She refused. His reply wa: “You'll never talk with any other person, then.” He pointed a revolver directly at her heart and fired. The shock was not enough to fell her, and she ran away. Two men coming from the winter quarters heard the shot and when she cried for help took her in- to the office. Just as they did a sec- ond shot was heard. They went out and found Kester lying on the ground with a wound in his right temple and a larga revolver lying on the ground beside him. He died just as the ambulance reached the hospital. wre. J. TWO NIGHTS ! Seattle Theater and general topogr clase vaudeville epee PARLOR GROCERY 1329 Seoond AveRat N & CO. ‘Phone Pike 1%, DEA TWO NIGHTS ! Management J. P. Howe. Tonight and Tomorrow Night April 19th and 20th. Under Auspices Fraternal Order of Eagles Mr. Douglas White Special War Correspondent of the San Francisco Examiner and New York Journal, in his Miustrated Lecture on the ‘Washington Volunteers And Their Surroundings At Manila. 100-REALISTIC WAR SCENES-100 Showing active ement, camp life terspersed with high The leeture will be Tickets TRADE WITH CHINA GROWING Increase of 15 Per Cent Shown at Shanghai. ‘WASHINGTON, April 19.—The state department has received a re- port from Constantinople nfr amhw port Goodnow relating to the American {imports during the past four years. from Consul General John Cotton goods aggregated form 1898, 3,876,629 pleces; of kerosene, 43,329,- 920 gallons were imported. ‘That is lay in wait for hie vanity. time, however, an acceptance came from the magazine, accompanied by ie a second time. WILD DUCKS Z and forwarded to Camp Mead, Penn- . aylvania, for muster out. It is not ee meet enh tet oom that any other troops than squadron, This plan will be com- A Kansas soldier in his letter home | tells how “Gen, Otis came along one likely these will be sent to Camp Meade, Spain has greater mineral resour- ces than any other country in Eur- ope, including iron, copper, zine, sil- ver, antimony, quicksilver, lead and gypsum. While Mr. Moody pieaded for more kindness to criminals in San Fran- cisco the otber day a thief crept into the building and stole his over- coat. The value of the gold, silver, lead end copper mined in Colorado in 1898 was 942,646,344, the gold being one- half that amount. A recruiting agent proposes to be- gin a bicycle tour of New England to recruit for the regular army pects to ride 15,000 miles t through. Speaking of ex-Senator John Sher- man, Senator Lodge said rece “Everybody respects him, but I he never known anybody to be too fa- miliar with him, to slap him on the shoulder, for instance.” One of the largest and most cum- bersome forms of money ia found tn Central Africa, where the natives use a cruciform ingot of « ten inches long. It is heavy enough to be a formidable weapon Nails are so cheap that it is eaid {f a carpenter drops one it ia cheap- er for him to let It lie than to waste his time in picking it up. One keg ly: | a check for $10, and then that man began to lord it over the woman, Finally she got mad, and declared that she could write better poetry than he with one hand tied behind lher, and to prove it she indited a piece and sent it to the Century. Almost at once she got back an ac- leeptance, accompanied by a check for $20, and now she is making life jsuch a burden for her $10 husband that he doesn’t know what to do.” What She Wanted to Know. At a dinner party, not long ago, a certain young gentleman (an en- }thusiastic golfer) started off with \the whitebait to enumerate to his detain of a match that It partner the he had been playing that day was not until the dessert was brought that he suddenly be- |thought himself that 1 been doing all the talking; the young lady had not said single word during the progress of the |meal. It was possible that she was not Interested In the subject—Iincred- ible, but stil possible, 1 am afraid 1 have been boring lyou with this talk of the shop,” he |sald, in half-apology. indee: a »| “Oh, no; not at all,” was the pret- |ty maiden's polite “Only, | what in woit?” psponne, The Czar of Russia, once a lover of cycling, has given up that sport and is having made for him in Paris a petroleum tricycle. pleted at frequent intervals during the greater part of the summer sea~ }son It is intended by the department that only those problems involving the actual material under Sampson's command shall be presented for #o- jlution, In other words, the pro’ |lems will be capable of practical de- monstration by the force actually at Newport at the time. If Samp son's aquadron, for example, con- sists of two armored cruisers, three CARRIED GOLD. An Assay of Indiana Birds Gives $4.60. LAWRP RURG, Ind, April 19. | Wild ducaks killed here In the last | two days have caused a small sensa ton. In their gizzards have found grains of pure gold agereat- | been battleships and six cruisers, no prob- |!n& in value $4.60, and the people of lem involving more than that num- this section are at work to ascertain ber of veenein will be undertaken, | Where these ducks have been feed ing. It Is believed the gold was gath | During the existence of the theor- etical course at the college problems involving twenty or even more ships « presented, discussed and work ered by the birds from the sands and pebbles along the banks of the river | Killed His Brother-in-Law| ed out, but this summer the work | will be entirely practical, with no) apLmANSHORO, I, April 19 problem presented that will Involve | aye Geore er and her broth more than the veasela actually In | ., Franet Howick, living near service under Admiral Sampson's | tough 4 in a quarrel tast | direct command. evening, Hosick struck Mrs. | ‘Showalter Going to Europe | NEW YORK, April 19.—Showalter | was seen at the Manhattan Cheas cnsesed | lelub today respecting the proposed | Hosick cutting Garner fiv king her down husband, took the par and Hosick and Garner a fight, which resulted in times, the Garner, George | chess match with Janowskil, The|/!ast thrust proving fat Honiek | Kentuckian said that he would be| a" arrested this afternoon and brought to i} at this cltw, where willing to play another match of five kames up for $600 a side, and that he would be ready to begin play on | April 20, but he could not engage in | match of seven games up, as it] Buy Clipper Bicycles, For exercise | | would take too long @ time to finish. | buy others. F. M. Spinning, agent, | He intends to leave for Hurope on | 1022 Second avenue he i now confined without bail, | FOR BUSINESS OR PLEASURE 4 unless unanticipated trouble in con- nection with quarantine regulations in the south causes a diversion of troops northward, It 1s expected that all the volunteers In Cuba will be out of the Island by the end of the present month, and that the re- kimenta of the regular army that ire to take thelr places will be tn camp there within the next two weeks, ja Lacks War Supplie: ODESSA, April 1%—A_ complete overhauling of all the government arsenals and supply depots has been ordered. The St, Petersburg auth- orities are ignorant of the actual amount of the reserve supplies, It is believed that there are heavy de- ficlencies, Proper records have not been kept of the recent shipments to the far East. There are also grave rumors of fraud and corrap- tion on the part of sundry govern- ment officials, Still Another Trust. RUSHVIL 19.—Manu- April facturers of staves, hoops and heads for produce, flour and sugar barrels will meet in the Grand Pacifle hotel in Chiearo on April 20 to combine better and more uniform prices. \ call was sent out from Milmaukee bout a month ago to ascertain the sentiments of slack barrel material makers with r nee to an asso- lation for mutual benefit, The re- evening, and when the men had fin- ished firing for a minute or two sald: “Well, boys, how are you coming?” Only a few of the men knew him and one of them said: ‘All right, pard, how's yourself?’ Another of the boys who knew Gen, Otis told him to shut up; that the man was Gen. Otis. ‘The general overheard him, and sald: ‘That's all right; pard is as good as general tonight.” Swell Grips, of these wares, a gain of nearly 15 per cent. over the preceding year, and almost dou- ble the imports of any single years previous to 1897. turns give only imported, definitely stated, mated that our flour was imported into China in 1898 to of 59,000,000 pounds. of flour was $1,231,650, As the customs re- value of the flour quantity cannot be The consul esti- the the amount The total value — —EEEEE_ Club Bags, Gladstones, Dress Ca Fan Tab Valises, es, == Trunka And all Fine Leather Goods. A complete department Drop in and see, J. REDELSHEIMER & CO. Strongest Top Coat House in the State. 800-802 First Ave., Cor, Columbia,

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