The Seattle Star Newspaper, April 24, 1899, Page 2

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yd @ mparygentrrgrepzecay = Bro ——— —— ony ™ ” rr ” wee me vA An, POOPOOV POSES OOD GHOOF OOH g THE SEATTLE ¢ THE SEATTLE STAR ie twats THE ROUTE HAS. sisi 7c" HOME SEEKERS. [xt Sion FY" eeeptio: yo ” lie L Wills & O, Pain . re vt n room He atten autte * BEEN DEC DED Nfs it wa purchased by a nor hers T Y M and acknowledg 7 a oa as renee cyerligee: ‘chins a sactagiis | |e a the bene r4.t¢ singing. tue | A AKI A F to \cucale: oe Toner reape be Wholesale and Retail Cash Grocer. - — « « = —- | Fvery afiornoon except Sunday «i ‘ the sullow cheeks and the pallid lip No. 612 Second Avenue, between ‘ Queen Wilhelmina goes to bed at] gave the young woman an idea 5. M, WELLES. ) RP Chase. about 1 o'clock and gets up early which she was t slow to follow are not compatible with beauty and Vester and jemes Shrron. | Bosuseas MANOR On arining whe takes @ atrotl-arcund | allroad to Republic Will Fol a1 aT haw ahh Abed @ insiving bie ro Thrifty Eastern Farmers vivacity of expression. Hach of U $6000606004060000000000 “One ce Cony, sik vents por ween, | tM Dark and visite the stables, Her ness with native songbirds of t has her little spark of vanity that cr tke webs ceula ‘per Onin Wiverti | bedstead is of monumental sine, b low the San Poil. | south : | Who Have Money. akee ter wilthe at the knowledsy | carrie, . rT e Ne fre at eno e « o rn | | J ap ww } tae, Fon ont he rae free ing broad enough for six and pro-| SPOKANE, April 91.— Assurance] | Mise Cheatam does not attempt to! NORTH YAKIMA, April 3% that she je not at her best in ap- | GeO*Oeeeeeww : ‘ erp. |may now practically be given that|hatch them herself, but, watehing | g ; ‘ he | pearance ax in feeling. And if an we GO TO __ Telephone Pike 160 the king of the Bel-lthe Great’ Northern railway, in{her chance, goce bo.dly to the apot | A°Mreely @ day pasges without the | 14, cried to conceal from others the dace Na 116) SS Thiew Avenue |MIADM oes late to bed, Me apenda| building its Republic tine, will not | Where the parent birda have made |Arfival of homeseekers at thie place. |ract that she ix not quite up to the Sparkman & McLean : Jutered att 0 half the night working and reading, | attempt (© Us@’a Fonte over the | thelr homes and lif Sometines they come tn parties, and | usual mark of health she feels thet ered at the postoffice at Seattle. Washing. /In wtrong contrast to his neighbor- | mountains from the Spokane Falls |their young brood na wingle individual will get off| her efforts are vain, And, worst Yom wanoatnn t top, aa second-class mation train. This condition of aftaire!of all, if one ta bravely fab ng with has prevajied since the first of the/a genuine tliness, the consciousness your, and more expecially since the|that the disease hax made such | REAL E TAT ontinental lines made their |roads that the casual observer no- | weeping reductions on tickets to the | tices the change in one's appearance | sensation of fear and d hag Sovereien. Re: were ¢ dinary |@ Northern, but will build via Day. | beet and most huma bedstead, without any other luxury |enport a ants with onm nd the Ban Poll river peciaily with THE GRORGIA LYNCHINGS. than @ quilt of swansdown., He in| tt hae been the general opinion of !f & human t very chilly mortal jengtneers that thie would be the "°* King Humbert of Italy cannot get | result of the explorations made by The story of the ghastly lynching that took pl Phone Kea t west co awak 3 eat Newnan, Georgia, | a sleep except upc y hard bed. |the various surveying parties sent " ‘ oa Sunday afternoon, will cause a He disper with the use of pillows. | out ir & time some faith was put ame purent bird Moat of the people who are ning |pression that is detrimental ¢ shudder of horror from one end of | He Uses sheets of the very coarsest in the report that the company would fer they n way to polton | bere to make ther future homes, are | health.—Harper's Bazaar the country to the other. The crime | Ye and sleeps like a top. une @ route from some point on the |A bird whieh they find caged thrifty eastere farmers who are tir - - Wie eter © meet, z-sees ed of working an eastern land and rh toxin; sinel Spokane Falls @ Northern, but it which provoked it was of the most " ENT! p as ne mos HIS YUKON VENTURE. tae now dewn found that the erades Vakima B terrible description, Dut if half that are too #teep, All enginvers have nee ib payment or Paatory| wish to raise Seay ts ie 08! KATHERINE MUST 3° ton of passengers within the next | bound over to the superior court, and is told of the Georgians’ vongeance| Captain Sidney Barrington, well | been removed from that locality NORTH YAKIMA, Wash, April|iarger returna than in the east fa true, the memory of the retribu-/known on both Puget sound and the} Three parties are now at work on 24—"North Yakima stands a« fair|They all have a Jitte money saved PAY THE FIDDLER tion will outlive the history of the | Yukon a# an experienced steamboat | the Ban Poll route. They are pro- chance of uring ¢ up, aad a@ soon as they note the | q crime. man, has chartered the British river | ceeding a rapidly as possible with of a beet sugar factory productiveness of the Yakima coun- | heehee | Phe fan dtl whe steamer Donville, and will operate | the | lon of the Vine, but it will pin, of nd re try they begin to hunt up « bar | The fact that 200 white men, In: | Ney during the season between Daw-| be several weeks hefore matters Will experiment nt eshte coin in ranch land ‘Thin has stimu-|Maving Made John Smith cluding presumably the best as well | .o. and White Horse. The boat ts| be in condition to go ahead with con the Yakima valley w ated the activity in farm hands, ana D. Her Music 3 the worst elements of society,}owned by the Klondike, Yukon @/struction work. Right of way ha® ined, thirty acres being planted in| U8" a!se caused @ alight stir in city ance to Her Music. | hould combine together on a Sab- |Stewart Pioneers’ company. The | yet to be secured, and so far as can haif-acres tra r rta of | eat estate | y y half-acrea tract srious parts of |" a t Katherine Peterson, the young wo , ; Bath afternoon to torture a human |frst trip will be made on May 1. be learned, no efforts have yet been ihe valley. ‘The renult demonstrated |,, Te new Northern Pacite depot at |? { robbing Johs rhe ; Reins with keites nd Gre efter the —$—$$_____ made in this direction. All the en- that thin Fenult Hemonatrated \this place has been completed, ana |man whole ee ee eee ae Ramaker BRUTES NOT DECEIVED, | xnect that construction Is to be #t beets, which In aaccahrine mubstance | Wit Be opened for the accommada, |#mith, a shoemaker, of 966, has beck | Music fashion once in vogue among North Company spect t construction is to be and purity are the « y beet American Indians, indicates that the | started this summer and rushed two weeks. Workmen are now lay-| ushed grown in the wee Cerbia be in default of 8400 cash ball, or § - passions aroused must have been ot UMlustons Which Mystify Humans) rngineer Lupter’s trip up the weet nouned 1 penalty Gagglared | the cement platforms whieh wur-1o0 06. ane wae epmenttted to the i Pits sib . - the pu cane raund the building, end the openin . | emoved ings do ni non the tm | hipped to this place, and that if the * obtne nanan wer aye hese retin ‘It's a singular fact.” said a man a view of extending the Ban Poll line experiment of two years ago sais he [Cement is hard enough to bear trat-|woman on Yesler way, near the} Second Ave. mai on wregyt in the show business, “that ‘tl. |to the Okanogan country, Packer® | repeated il at once bulla a|™ police station, and took her to his Geveasn affair was t outgrowth, the cul testons.’ ae we call ‘em, Gen't. tect |084 8 cook are the only people @- jarge factory b he oced is Gali | The depot le one of the handsom hop, where they drank beer to } mination, of @ recent series of out lcompany Me. Lupter. H : est structures of the kind ever Pike and animals, I've seen that proven over expected by Mr. Beudde who willl scted tn th t t 4 t lgether. He stated that after drink r Tages upon women tn the south, | Because. of the presence of © distribute it among the farmers for od in the wee! * a frame ling the figst glans he felt dazed. The | Union ap atin ge ag erg argee 1) much snow in the country to be tra- panting building, the outside walls being Ain- | oman then left and told him she had what is Known an the “Myatic | versed by the San Poll line, accur foes F ished in stucco, which at a short Sousa’ vatuon.” Balat ha dussovorell d je 0 distance close! bt . ee St farmer, Alfred Cranford by sam |MA#* At the Nashville exposition. |ate location hag bean dimeult 40 ‘ar. STORIES OF LIEUT. LANSDALE | with the exception of the” noors, [that his money was missing. Mrs Hose was not so much the exciting room filed |i) and more engineers will doubtiens [which the of Georgia maple, the| Peterson denies being with Gmith. | rith mirrors, so arranged that you : > es be - we cause as was th i trat.|* be in Uh " ‘ siding le finished In Washington @ outrage perpetrat. | "On ete te ima narrow conrta e eld soon He Was Very Popular With the thareuanly eaapined ana bichiy | A Brooklyn Scandal. which, rightly or wrongly, were charged upon negroes. The murder It was simply a «mall ed upon his wite. eae dies «see a tis. eoemans | eee “Gass etn ns cae tea Dangers of the Dance. King of Cor polished. The using of native wood! In Brooklyn's fashionable hotel M8 | sling, and I used to get lost in the | in this connection @ fine adver- | not far from the heights, you know, | AMUSEMENTS. etorm were plainly heard last week. | piace myself, but it never bothered | The London Daily Geaphic enters! The Chicago correspondent of the|tisement for the merits of Wash-|many swell families dine habitual. | on... Use: the Star having published on Satur-|my dog a moment. Me would run |@ Protest against the-habit some wo- New York World says: Lieutenant Ington's forest products, and care iy once or twice a week an a relief . ‘ ONE S| anne Gay a deapatch from Palmetto, Ga.,| through from end to end at full/men Rave of, converting the dance p V. Lansdale had charge of has been taken to select the best Of\¢rom home cares and duties, ‘The DEWEY DAY EXCURSION stating that the white citizens of | "Peed: and never bump against a into & penitential rit caravels here during the W lumber for this purpose, The bull4-| other night Mr. X. whispered to his mirror. | Under ordinary circumstances. Livute Wilson, of ing is practically dust proof TO Campbell, Hall and Cowetta coun- 1 saw something on the same line Says the newspaper in question, the era phic * speaking The depot is about 125 feet in| "eee that couple over there at the ¥ ties were scouring the country in an jin ‘Frisco not long ago A friend of arma of the brave anly make ac length and 30 in width, Im thelr tape’ OLYMPIA effort to capture the negro Hose, mine bad an illusion called ‘The ance with the waists of the with the King center i* an opening 15 feet wide,| «yes who is she?” all intent upon eee WEA, cee and had determined to burn him Haunted Swing.” You get in what ia moments of strong emotion; of Corea. In 184 Lansdale took a rating the baggage and expre@e line pandsome woman. NORTHERN PACIFIC RAILROAD alive if caught. The fact that the *¢*me to be an ordinary swing, hung |>ut during the dancing season of te yele and a aif of skates to departments from the waiting rooms, “Never mind, but I can tell you ‘on on. He tn said to have been the There are wheel on Cor- above the ladie in the centre of a good-sited room, | 189% this punctitious regulation has mob was largely composed of etu- 114 the thing begina to move, It | been reversed. and the strong er first man tha cated and well to do white, If pre- | soos back and forth and finally clear tion has generally followed upon the ean # sumed from thefact that many mem- over the top—that Is to say, it seema | attempt fo eneirele the lady's waist from walling room, and ” re: something about her. She's been | ‘os . ; room & tower has fiving with that fellow for twenty |SUNday Next, April 30th : e running | been built from which a fine view | years. Don't say anything about it.” | Train leaves Seattle at ham. Returns hen they saw him |of the city and hurfounding valley |” Fotaing up her napkin in a rage | leaves Olympia at @ p.m. The grandest , Bers rode in carriages to the scene * What really turns und is |in the mane= of the waite The rea. peda “ue the streets of is given. The ladies’ reception room q | celebration Olympia bes ever ma. Good ft the berhinn. [the room itself—the swing stands |#0n for thie has been the deplorable Chemulpo on hie high machine ornamented with @ big open fire- Oe ie aettht CaS yor, | ees aula Mecenery. and. ‘The later news of today, announe- tng the capture and hanging of the megro preacher Lige Strickland, also the m the lynchers has led them to here- tofore unheard of lengths to gratify their desire for retribution. ‘The character of the testimony present- ed against the preacher of the gospel fe not yet apparent, but if the charge rested solely on the accusations made by Sam Hose, it would seem that there was but « poor excuse for an execution. One of the most de- plorable features of the matter is that the chasm between the white and black races In the south will be Measurably widened. and the bet- ter element among the negroes will be compelled to bear the resentment of the whites. The race question in the south is far from a solution even Gt this late day. The war of seces. had improved it by setting out S00) sion is a memory of the dim past. the negroes are free, but race an- tagonism in the south is an ever- Present and bitter reality. Outrages, Durnings of property, and retalia- tions follow in swift succession. | ‘The “poor whites” and the lower class among the negroes may be re- @ponsible for most, if not all of the Fapine and disorder, but the south- ern people as a whole are vitally effected, and are in a state of turbu- dency in consequence. In the effort to cure the disorders lynchings and ‘whippings have been resorted to. but the remedies seem to fail of ultimate effect. ————EESEEe—s Frogs as Weather Prophets Have you seen the little weather from They are knowing little fel- lows and can always tell when it is going to rain and when it is goin; to be fine, and if you will purchase @ couple of them, just for company for each other. you will never be caught out in the rain without your umbrella. Thene little weather pro- phets are newcomers in our land being German immigrants. They have been shown for a few days in a large bird store. When I saw them the little frogs were perched on two sticks, which ran across a glass sided affair, like an aquarium box. These sticks were almost at the top of the box, which ‘was about half filled with clear wa ter, The majority of the little fellows) ‘were a dull brown, very nearly the color of the stick on which they sat | perfectly still, It ie a goed illusion, and when the room ts revolved rap- idly there never w: a man who could keep his head tn the swing. It tiation of his person, would seems ax if he must certainly pitch | eeem to indicate that the frenay of | out. and if the motion is kept up he | gets deathly sick. But a pet cat be- jionging to my friend used to le on the edge of the seat and never turn ir, no matter how fast the thing | | worked. | “The elder Herrmann told me that lanimais were never deceived by false glasses, and used in stage They always passed around on the other side. 1 guess they must see better, somehow thao men.” ———$—— | Land Values Better. HILLYARD, Wash... April 24— | That the land on Pleasant prairie is growing valuable is evidesced by « trade in real estate that was made this week. George W. Brown owned ten acres of fruit land that he pur- chased six years ago for $400. Me lapple, pear and prune trees and some small fruits He exchanged \it for 449 acres of unimproved land near Buckeye, that has considerable |timber on it. ‘The land ts travere- led by the railroad. ee soca j Rudyard Kipling’s Map. One of Rudyard Kipling’s school- fellows tells this story In the Inde- pendent AS iMustration of Kipting’s be havior tn clans, there was a certain | geography master who greatly fav- ored the drawing of sections of the earth's surface, showing the moun- tain rang rivers, lakes, seas, strata, ete. and which were gener- ally executed by his puptis on sheets of foolecap. At first the master was contented with quite ordinary distances be- tween two given points, as from London to Edinburgh, Paris to Ber- lin, and so forth; but gradually he came to lengthen them out to an alarming extent—Chicago to Tim buctoo, Viadivostok to Goa. Cape Town to Moscow, which, while it embarrassed the rest of the boys, suggested a humorous idea to Kip- ting. From somewhere or other he pro cured several rolis of wall-paper, and then day and night, with pens and l brushes, he labored diligently on a gigantic section, inserting men birds, beasts and fishes, trees — ia fact, anything he could think of.) which, being at length completed to his satisfaction, Kipling calmly | awaited the result of his joke, When at last the geog@aphical er called for that particular * and amuse mi section, to his surpri knowing that such persons resorted here, have had the temerity to feteh me here to dine? It is monstrous! \The husey! I shall leave the place |immediately and never put my foot lin it again. I shall speak to the \proprietor. Oh, disgraceful! Twen- BERT KAUTZ, on the coasta of the Samoans, has been ao officer In 1862 he was on the of the big guns in the engagements officer in the fighting with the waa in command of the howitzers under n the city hall after the mayor he wap raised to the rank of dered away to Admiral Albert Keutz, whore gu ne recently thundered of the United States navy since 1861, when he staft of Farragut, on the Hartford, and commanded the first with Forts Jackson and St #, and in the taking of New Orelans Captain Bell. and with his own hand he hauled down the lone star flag fre Then Kautz ran up harge of the naval = commission as a latter place by tars and Stripes n at Newport had retused t commodore and placed in served until ty years! As she rose he said in a low voloe “My dear Mre. X. what is the matter? The man t= her lawful hus- band, and this is the anniversary of their marriage.”"—New York Pross. TWE FUNERAL RITES. ‘The funeral services of Mrs. Etta M. Kahaley were held yesterday afternoon at the residence of Peter |MeIntyre, 211 Queen Anne avenue, | Rev. J. P. D. Lawyd officiating. The * largely attended, and were placed on the casket. The pallbearers were A. J. McArthur, E. E. Cheasty, T. FE. Jones, Stephen Meek, %. EB. Miles | and T .W. Jones. And He's Not Cured Yet. First Friend—Feeling run down, eh? Now, take my advice—tie a boll- ed onion between your eyes; it's the only thing that will cure you. Becond Friend—My boy, what you want to do is to put a cold poker down your back under your shirt and paint your arm with lampbiack It's the only remedy that ts any good. Thint Friend—Oh, I know what is wrong, my boy. My mother said that sunflowers tied around the waist and a lump of butter on the head were the beat things in the world for it Fourth Friend—In all my experi- ence I never knew an orange peel wragged around the knee to fall to cure. le—Yea, John, dear, all these things may be good, but there isn't anything like this tonic my mother used to make of vinegar, sulpbur, | benzine, sugar, zinc rust and cob- webs, Now take some, darling. Tramps at Colville. COLVILLE, Wash, April 4.—The citizens of Colville ve had a sur- feit of hoboes within the last month They were becoming #0 bold that when told to move they threatened vengeance by setting fire to the town Yesterday the town officials gather A posse and headed by about a dor en of them on their way north. Some of the more toughened ones objected, but when they saw the overwhelm- ing numbers of citiens gathering to the assistance of the officials, they thought discretion the better part of valor, and moved dc over the beautiful roads. | stew 41. round trip from Seattle, Kent uburn; 0.25 from Tacoma. |NEWSPAPER FOR BEGGARS France Has One Devoted En- tirely to These People. Among the manifold and curious productions which emanate from the French press is a paper called the Mendicants’ Journal. This pertod- jeal is published bi-weekly and is ed- ited and printed in a smart style. It does not concern itself with either religion, drama, affairs of the sen- jate, or the world of books, but ca- |ters wholly and ingentousty for ite numerous and sagacious readere. | It t pract ly published in the interest of professional beggars, and contains many curious advertise ments, understood only by this sec tion of the community. We append a few of these advertisements culled | from a recent number of this unique | Journal: “At 3 o'clock tomorrow a fashion- able funeral is to be celebrated at the church of St. Angelo.” “On Saturday next, at noon, the | wedding of a wealthy gentleman will take place at the Catholic eathe- dral.” “A vacancy has occurred for a blind man who can play the violin, Collections good, Small premium required.” “Wanted at once for a seaside re- | sort, a pair of helpless cripples. Good | busin References given and re- quired, also a moderate premium.” Those who have visited seaside re- rts in France must be well aware of the numerous fraternity of beg- gars who haunt such places. They jare apparently suffering from most jof the diseases under the sun, by |means of which they excite general |sympathy and draw large incomes. In reality most of them are clever impostors, ingeniously got up for the occasion, and are quite a different kind of folk when they move in their own pecullar circles at night. Moet of them take the Mendicants’ Jour- nal and profit considerably by its tmely counsels. Less Than ‘One-Half What your tailor charges you when you order your Trous- and a few were betwee en and ment of Kipling’s mates, Kip-| Admiral Kautz is an Ohio man is Just sixty and entered the naval academy | vended These Gee sre ceally the [ling unwound his gigantic roll on the| from the Buckeye state. He has a fine a fighting sail Called Down an Avalanche. — ers, Then. you're not sure tree frog, and have the faculty of |floor. It first tt wae evident (Wat | —sssessesesnsgpeeee eee Ie it true that the sound of a/ io & Ah nue Galena thine changing their color to match the the master aly és tel” Ce ‘3 a = human voice may start a snowslide? | a fit—you take a chance. object upan which they are perched. |question as to ether it was acase|practice in which »many = lads The King of Corea, then a boy of place. Comfortable sett are | James Perchard, Clerk of the State | ‘The receive the name of “weather demanding public rebuke by the in- | thoughtiessly indulge of pinning up sixteen, heard of the wonderful bi- provided for both rooms and the|6f Appeals at Denver, Col. ts tn * frogs” because they jump into the |stant use of the cane, or commenda- | what for want of a better expression cycle and sent an invitation to Lans- platforms, The building proper |clined to answer the question in the! 0 ance “ 1 water upon the approach of rain or|tion in its highest form by full) we must cal) their waistbands with dale to bring his wheel to Seoul, the cost about $5000, to Which should De | affirmative. When Perchard was } nd come out again|marks, when Kipling’s absolutely in-| pins whose name of fety” in capital, This wax Just after the added $4200 for the big cement piat-|mining in the region above George- | * ‘ own signs of |nocent expression of countenance de-| quite unmerited and illusory. This massacre of some fifty Japs by the forms around the atructure, On the} town he took dinner one day at the changing to clear. When full grown cided him to adopt the latter course. | policy of “pin-prick: if carried Jon by the Chinese. track side the plateform is 700 feet |cabin of a friend. Perchard says n | ere. e these tiny frogs are a little mere| At the end of his colle career |much further, must tend to reduce e, the American Min- in length, 600 barrels of cement be- “I arose from the table and start. | ’ than an inch In length Kipling left Westward Ho In the |atill further the dwindling band of 6 representatives of ing used In its construction ed on my Crossing the | A thousand sizes to select e In captivity the weather frog js ordinary manner, and not, as has | partners who prefer the exhiliara- thirteen volunteered t J —_— canon, I turned to wave a farewell from The style atte’ h kept in a glean jar or globe, which |been recently stated, as a “runaway |tion of the waxed figor to the more France, Germany and and A NOTED JOURNAIST. to the friends who had entertained ¢ 5 PO sim ’ fs covered on top with a wire screen, |truant,” having gained, in spite of |temperate attraction® of the stairs had fled from the capital when the ‘enahnedy me. The man and his wife and price of the Trousers é Water fe put In the bottom of the |his pranks and peculiar humors, the |or the supper room; and this con- trouble broke out. I ith OB. Herber, editor of the Na-| standing at the door of the cabin you select here means a few " Jar, and at @ convenient height a regard of his masters and s#choolfel- | tingency ia one Which every woman thirteen others lunteered to £9 tional Printers’ Journalist, the om. |& third person was in the house, The dollars more in your pocket a stick is placed for the little frog to lows, the general opinion being that with the interests of her sex at heart bask there th General Foote, and al organ of the National. Editorial |@r was perfectly still Not the instead of your tailor’s— s jump pon. he was an awfully clever chap—was |should do her bent to guard against, on th he took his wheel, a8 eee nin this city. He win| slightest intimation was given of 5 A cr le yen p ‘The trom is fed on files in summer, | “Glen.” |The way in which the can best do per in nm. although th Und he present at an executive com-|the awful disaster which was about fully one-hall saved. a and ta winter.on gsi worms. ite —- —- | this ie to discard the Insincere was covered by snow and ice. The mittee meet ‘ a tee vreau, {to happen. I waved my hand an {ood must be alive. PORTER’S SUDDEN DEATH |insitiour satety pin, and secure her- King was astonished at the sieht of Sy yt enna Of the local Press| routed ‘Good-bye,’ " : We Always ‘ a — felt by copper rivets or plain stitch- the officer astride the blevele Mr. Herbert was Instrumental in| . “Hardly had the echoes of my voice | oy we a How Kings and Queens Sleep) taward Woods, @ porter at the es ‘ not to hold {t OD: organiging the National, Editortat {dled away before a muted sound | SHOW the © - |Richeliew house, age twenty-nine ren 7 I don't understand how you ride on | association, and was the first prea. |Struck the ear—a noise like the boom b> t Emperor William is a soldier even | qieg suddenly yesterday morning She Makes Birds Sing. it,” wuld the King with @ puagled/aant, He has b in Portiand for [of & Canon—and the whole side of Cl ives 4 t when he gows to bed. for he sleeps | trom hemmorhage of the lungs. He jalr the past two weeks, completin, the mountain seemed to be in mo 4 hoicest of fi on & regulation camp bed such a8 | yom stricken in the hall, and carriea| 4 southern woman has lately ad4-) vr jeut, Lansdale explained the art|rangements for the. nesting of the {tion The snow, ice, trees and rocks | > ® his officers use, says Tit-Bits. The ints his room, where he noon diea. |¢4 % new chronicle to the already |of riding, and under the King | Sanociation there ‘on duly. 4. He {started toward the bottom of the atterns. ® bed clothing in of the rough regi- | woods has been under the care of |iengthy list of feminine achieve yok leswons, with such I progress | says the members intend to return [Rulch, and within five seconds the t mental mettern, a retires at M4 physician for heart trouble ments to earn money, She raisen| ent an order to America| over the Northern Pacific, and will |C&bin was overwhelmed, and the spot v ae oy ane ee some trouble. |and trains netive song birds. Mina |fora score of bicycles.” | | latop over In Seattle in response to [9 which I had stood one or two n nm Victoria goes to bed quite _— ee CS Puttin Chem tam lives near tho popu- | sk aad whee. ieielgn Lanadate |e, Mavitatiog of Atmg Beattia Proes Atty feet bwin bsg hues br ge tate, aithoueh she fea comparative-| picoat & FRENCH Co. cng |}or winter resort, Alken, 8. C., and fed skimt iver the ioe the|° = Pi Walahes an cusiecae ht cored 10 ; y early rier, Year in an@ year ovt|Weat Washington atroet, Dexter | the idea was suggested by the anle of 4 wer istounded, Lt . done. antically dug out twe | her average time of going to hed t#| Horton Hank bullding, have the |@ pet mockingbird, This bird came | Wits auently went out Don't Throw Cold Water. peooaie) Rvtdty hea MA pee ose: tee : 1045. A lady In waiting is deputed |onty Linotype Job printing machine |to her through a negro boy whorn ther, one darting over| One of the “don't” with which it|erward recovered from the injure “ 1 to rend her off to sleep in the entire Northwest, Catalogues, | she caught robbing the parent nest. | the | hile the other amused him- | would be well to ffmpress society at inflicted by the slide, but I have new. bs The Czar of Nursla haw the great- | prinphietx, et pecially low |The fledgling wan the weakling of jscif by watching the natives acram-|large Is, “Don't tell a person that |er entirely forgiven myself fur i J. REDELSHEIMER &Co o ent diMeulty in getting a good rest! prices, SAVE MONEY by giving|the flock and for that reason the | ble on the ice for “cash” which he | she ts not looking well.” word which I shouted on that nev tk @t night, and yet ho is what old- | them an apportunity to figure, [boy considered it worthless and left} tossed up in the air, | The sentence, "My dear, you are|to-be-forgotten day," beats ami

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