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vat ° THE ATTLE cde ae PODYIPVLOV 2200S Dregon Conaciously or uncon theomophy; Mian Marie A.W “ h ly from the pulpit on this #u noct Be 13° atte eo o¢ bales: of honor in the line of battle : ppd vpn tegen ete FE funday. “Let your wife r¢ ur 3 BH, WELLS & CO, Punbaders | Tt will be remembered that soon | SERVE NOTICE." " nat Tae. govt, pre ot | FOR LAWYERS Aap urged the pastor. “and she will| - ; after the surrender of the Cc the | bebver ' hi Dr. Mary Weeks | be better ooking and happier, and it] _BVtHY afternoon except #untay Ticthien: ah Chesn eee Lurnstt, of Chicago, and the preal- | will be alo the means of saving BH. WELLS, RF. OM ASE back by Admiral Sampson, The In- | lente and not oakors of the lo- | lot of money in doctors Bilin” 4 Borron, | * Hisiwe MAN6" leination at the time waa that thin| That It ts Not “Affitiated wen Al nd other On sunday | Children of the Late Mrs. Ste- areter Grantors bs Pog Sonne boot] 904000 OOL O09 FHODOO G6 “One con f 5 . evening there w a public me or ainet y x er copy suis conte Bes week, order indicated that Sampson was “God's Regular Army. ling at @teinway hall, on Van Nur | vens Draw Lots. Two railroads run during the @um Bear Ne. the bene copies resenting the prominence of the two | siruet, he hh addresses Will tel mer season from New York to thi | vensels in the battle. Captain Ce Adjutant Nelson, of the regular | "reet at which addrommes Will WO) HOBOKEN, N. J., May b--The Ave] dace and the pastor would like t Telephone Pike (So. Salvation Army, called at the of yeew | REY children of the late Mrs, Martha 1, | 28 or on ne tiey of the Rrooklyn, and Lieutenant |i the Star thia mornin hye Jentific Corroberations of Theos eh ioe tha doeaeshin. |aee tt stopped. con Now <= Whit Ave bert ote of OM ! orning an y.”" Miss Marlo A, Walsh, and ons decid al mac — Faced wibepenietecisectie Wonins | Bherle, of the Ores m, Sxpiaing that | quested that the following notice ta] £0 ly yond [ery Wan not need tle their] Death From Overstudy. te the Londin ‘ 10 "| soon after the arrival of the com- | the public ahould be printed oe ¥ jaime upon the te, whieh in bo bought ton, a8 seeo | wo days will be up to discus " ry " ay Pong aut ioounenon mander in chief word was brought | "The Salvation Army foels it to | UN? dave will he fiven hb Tt Citi | valued at clone upon $2,000,000 < ARLINSVILLE, The May .O—| soar Bey “a § ieRii stn ER DEVELOPMENT OF ALASKA|that Another Spanish warahip was |be 4 duty to warn the public against | phe general programm of the con- | of the mwould well his or her a hs Le ated thie morning at-| approaching rom the east and had |"eohle soliciting for money in our! Sidon ie in charge of George Ied- |*hAFe At any price, because of the |G Tt Nee ay trom brain f ‘The building of railroads to and |attacked the transports and supply | to atonal cote oval - —— hou ward Wright, presid € the Chie | 1m (A pa beep te cae os ver, df excessive mental strain through Alaska is one of the certain: |ships, Sampson immediately order- |ing credentials trom elther #taft Cap. | AK? Thos execu mote ty ad ine | Point, for generations the family |She was @ junior in the high schoo ties of the ly future, That ajed the Oregon and Brooklyn to at- | tain Watson or Adjutant Ne indetbala tet th homestead, 1 drew tots for their} and had just completed her year'y Mine will follow the banks of the|tack the enemy, Captain Cook gives| [a explanation Adjutant: Nelson farmity. ab of the riches left by|examination = 9 ‘ : vista Baaaden gee a e an |oaid re are persons in this their fat Commodore Stevens, ‘Tukon seems reasonably Cortana A ite ee he trenaports [ONT Wearing yellow bands on their | AA PECULIAR EXPLO NN | ine tounder of stevens tnatitute, Te SOCIETY FAVOR ous nes pursuing divers proaches bd ports | cana, who claim to be ‘God's Regular | widen the cash, securities and real es Foutes have been suggested. The |fleeing before a great battleship, | Army,’ and who solicit contributions |tate there the Homestead, the Valleys of the Yukon, the Copper and |The guns of the Orem and the | from the pub They ask for n old family taansion, many treasures the Tanana rivers will, however, | Brooklyn were ready to open on the | ationa ‘for the army,’ and many per Celluloid Ornament Causes op art ana family heirlooms Mrs. Belmont By Again R offer the best thoroughfares for rail |strange vessel, when she displayed | "°°" F hte appre | me at th iy are Severe Injury. z hic an eos ean be ore : ef ceiving H contributing to the Balvation Army. | ory of family portraits, the rich tap communication, and it need surprise | the Austrian fag |Thin is not the care. There !8 no] BANGOR, Me., May Minn Car- |estries and brocades, the china, mil ae . pre no one to find railway trains run-| BI oy cory ngioe rage ee eanieaas connection between the Salvation | yy * soular young Han. | Yet Statuary, bric-a-brac, colonial NEW YORK, May 6 —— ning through them within the next os = * army and ‘God's Regular Army Hates fut injury {A2d modern furniture, paintings, en hope raed = Birsengs 4 | lessen 18 the Am, Gran. Sugar for,.....91.00 five years. The development of We want this fact distinctly under. | FOr Wor s ed a painful Injury | cravings and the thousand and one | 54* become Mr bagged jermon ne 2 Ibe Bayo Beane for , Alaska will undoubtedly be rapid. |, TR ews from Manila today in-!stood in Beattie. Almont every day | fow days ago which nut in |articlon of value were divided into|@uery Im going the rounds of clubs ea tat tor panel bid: |aicates that Aguinaldo Is a great|we have inquiries made by citizens |a peculiar manner, She wan one of |#ix lote—one each for the five surviv- | And drawine re , will she be re- bons ineral indications are excel-|senerai, When the battle went|Wwho wants to ascertain the facts |q large party of young people who|ing children and the sixth for the|habiiitated socially? |The | wentr Special for Saturday and men are bes! . | c ¢ tha . t, inning to WN-| seainat the Filipinos yesterday, as|*>0ut this matter, I do not With | wore enjoying: the day a nearby |200 nd daughter of Jotin Stevens, a a a eebiibeal tatieauins @erstand that the interior region hss/ Woua1 the doughty commander in |? *** soything against the persons | oo the lounuing | {2 elder brother, who died a few Rare vag- ip thonakt One Pound of our finest Mocha i. imino fara ago Mtoe, Rinahe, sonemnenti Whe cieeniae th a"army: |Fesort. ‘They sat in the lounging | years ago of Perry Belmont, it ia thought, is Pe ack betes Cortate sepeens, : chief order soldiers to Jump |and wear yellow bands, but simply to |foom of the hotel around a big open ee suMficien culture and Asheries are concerned, | anoard apecial trains in waiting have the public understand that |freplace in which was a binging fir It is well known that Perry Bel that will go a long way towards i : re by rs. George. ‘ous objections to 7 near the last ditch, and they steam. they are not members of the Saliva ™ Webster wore in her hair a CANTON, ©. ‘ mont made strenuous i pbs Dullding up @ permanent common: | .4 safely away from the amased|tion Army, J understand that they | gree celluloid comb. Bhe sat some- | pp AD > . May 6.—Mre, Anna|the marriage of his brother, er : A wealth. The Yukon is the greatest | : are ageia soliciting for funds in this FE. George hae declined all offers|H. P. Belmont to Mre. William K With every $5.00 salmon river in the world, f j Americans who had no special trains | 11," tence this request what nearer the fire than the others, from managers except for a lee-| Vanderbilt, though the cireumstan ‘ ad orld, far SUr- | ang could only pursue on foot. Thus in when the comb exploded. It set fire |ture on “Woman's Rights cos of his own courtship and marri Spot Cash Order passing the Columb ni . uma : seed Rambla te the sine | the retreat was accomplished with to her hair and nearly burned it off asl age are now sdentical for Groceries... end quantity of its fah. It Is no), iinimum of discomfort and little IDLENE. UE her head. Rev. W. M, Barrows, who married Wiehe sited'ta dna to bata uncommon thing to find king salmon rik. ‘The cable dispatches do not Her friends tried to smother the Mrs. Gloane and Mr. Belmont, sa in the Yukon weight over 100/ ze lare but were unsuccessful, and not that his wife was in Philadelphia at| ma E peo Reena oe Pts ac A Reh run (tate Whether or not Aguinaldo had | 10 ) STRIKE Juntt! they had poured water on the the time, and that he was given to Orders by "Phone thirty to f - |dining and sleeping cars attached to | young woman's h was the fire put FROM HAWAII understand that the divorce had Receive Careful Attention from 'y to forty pounds 1M ithe retreat trains, but the crimes} sut. The scalp was badly buraed. been granted a year ago. Mr, Bel- ° weight. Their numbers are almost jinn is that #uch luxuries were! Mine Webster is now confined to the | mont distributed several hundred incredible. Yet up to the present LOCKPORT, N. Y, May 5 house dotiare between the minister, law- Gay there has net boon 0 singic cal ere” ATTeS fo the Filiptuce 88) nearly a month the Holly shops SAN FRANCISCO, May 5—A4-| vers, hackmen, ete ma single eal- oi ’ . era, hackmen, ete. . undecoming for soldiers. Retreat by mon cannery established upon the! isin is one of the novel develop river. This may be due to the fact |ments of the war in the Philippines, that In the past there were no facil- | 144 may lead to @ revision of a time ities for the shipment of salmon | lhonored adage. Henceforth it will from the interior, but now, with the | probably be that many a day.” _— ie who fights and | jetoame away, will eat and fight for) Lockport’s chief manufacturing tabliahment, have lover Fiber company. has also been idle, silent ¥F & week the United Indurated employing t owin to astrike been jof the fiber workers tries |meneral is growing anxious The idleness riously felt and of these two indus is beginning to make itse!f se the community & to me a cmc AGO, May from Honolulu dated April 25, as follows: No.1127 Yesler Way an eccentric Lakeview | The First American bank of Ha-| LOUISVILLE, Ky., May 5.-—There | Teley <oc ang who died yeaterday, caused hi wail will be organized will be organ-| will be numerous speakers at the erat service to be performed in his | led with # capital of $1,000,000, with [convention of the Ohio Valley Bi- presence Wednesday. He went for privilege of Increasing it to $5,-| metallic League in Louteville, May 90 the Rev. Mr. Hoke and a quartette |900,000. Only $00,000 will be cailed|and 31. Mr. Bryan will make three who were to sing. The music was|for a the present time. The Selig- | speechen. In addition, other Demo sung and then the minister delivered | mane of New York and the Angio-|cratic and bimetallic leaders are to nia bank of Ban Francisco are | be heard President Jame P. Tar RES 0 en and the | hl © mn, Mr. Mason said it wan : mae 1m TIME OF WAR. lCnptebtes allamaeriony a rhea the |e very good nermon. He paid the [interested in the project vin said that W. J. Bryan, John P. Indications Aow paint to a speedy |Auartette and minister and under The National Guard of Mawall ts] Atigeld, George Fred Williams, Sen- One of the subjects that will be) rotenone oe een cnoce ta the (taker. Afterward he nent for the | now an entirely American organisa-| ator J.C, & Mackburn, William submitted to the peace conference | ™Itltimant ot tie etree era. wha |Dallbearers he had selected and gave tion. Ite arme aad equipment were | Goebel. General P. W Hardin and native tribes at some future day. which is to assemble at The Hague \o.. 4 ~ ohn them instructions as to the formally turned over to Lieut. Kern, | William J. Stone will certainly ad- ‘This policy could anes! jRave demented © wiferm rate of | 1 were to take about the ¢ 4 the Volunteer engineers, repre. |dress the convention. Lt is highly| CHICAGO, May &—That the Re- Leno in a few weeks will be @ proposition |41.40 day for men in that depart Yon & N he died. ating the war department, three or | probable that Joa, W. Bailey of Tex-| publican national convention in 1900 a . > . . ne low | TEN hourw later he died e we O out. It would simply act as a hind-|that in time of war the private prop- | ment, have aseurances from th - | four days ago, and they were then|as and Senator William M. Stew- | wilt be held in Chicago ts the opinion France to the development of the ter-|erty of citizens jeal directors of the co npany, it art, of Nevada, will be present. or subjects of a | teow od to it a part of the nv ofc en € stroller of ritory, and would prove an aggrava-|Ddelligerent nation, with the <p hee ya ed “3 i, of the unk a : TALLEST MAN |" onal guard of the nation > poor nanny a rg iG cistage © tion rather than a blessing. There |tion of contraband of war, shall en-||1y forthe consent of the ont of | | Honolulu port ts now garrisoned IT CANT B BE S STOPPED fs Welot 81kC. tar: Dade anak dane is no gprs decqeoed 4 such 4 pro-|joy immunity trom seizure by ships |town directors to the increase in the ie batteries of the Sixth arti! day that considerate quiet bet cedure on part the national |of war. The existing rules of inter-| wages. There ts little doubt but | ” earnest work for cago as the The board of survey, appointed by 1 ft the t oo tion had government - ‘ 3 ‘ortheom- | © for next convention ha than there would be for | national law in relation to this mat hea this consent will be forthcom PUL the war department to survey the Lease i che to Lec- nea done by the friends of this city @ similar prohibition on other iter were discussed during the war |'"* harbor of Honolulu and establish on the Republican national commit- streams in the United States in the between the United States am WASHINGTON, May 5.—The tall- | harbor lines, hae completed its work ture in Michigan. tee, “and there are many of them,” interest of native Indian tribes. No Spain. But the old project to «tv |Coreal Trust Reorganized |.) ian in the United States navy |and Major Langftt will take the re- he added, i Ghee Weel wugbect that the other|ty internationa) agreement, to the| AKRON, 0. May &—The Ameri- | has been selected to take the part of port with him to Washington. The LAPORTE, Ind, May 6.—Mre. M1" '.7 think that the Republican con- rivers of this country should be t rt: enneie loan Cereal company will be reorgan-|Vacle Bam in the peace jubilee to lines adopted are similar to those EB, Lease, who espoused the cause of] | ion should be held in Chicago,” = jurn- | private ¥: and ordinary mer- lined tn a few days, with a capital of |be held in Washington next m nth. previously established Bryan in the campaign of 1896, = said Mr. Dawes. “After the conven- jchandise of belligerents at sea the | 927 000.000. New York men are fur. |The gentioman who will represent who has embraced spiritualism, will/ 70" lisonal headquarters of the Why. then, same protection from hostile seisur miven to them, | which i jon the ground that it would tend to ‘Within a few years brs |Drolong wars and deprive the na Alaskans left. | [tone which should assent to it of « of, and the effectual method of Weakening their | vigorous race of white people enemies. thelr places. This suisti-| This argument against the propos- been the underlying prin- ed international measure, however, development of the Unit- cannot be regarded as conclusive States, from the time when the The damage that may possibly be in- Pligrims landed on Plymouth rock. ficted by the capture of private ves- It fs now Im progress throughout the | seis and other private property of Hy fis i E : 2 g nieht ing & part of the money. The accorded to private goods | present stockholders who do not de a half for one in cagh and new com- pany [new stock for their holdings. company will probably inctude ho more mills than in the present | trust, pany brought to extort money the diemisea! of the case, saying that the plan for a new combination had been A $100,009 mill wilt which resulted tn a the Amertcan Cereal com- asserts that the abandoned & greater cereal trust some white op jon land, has been recently opposed |#ire to stay in will receive two and to possess The be built jin Chicago. Answering to the in- | junction suit failure « action was!t Tt asked | i this character is Chief Ye stands 6 feet T inch: hand he an Wille! hare feet and is weil proport every way | Mr and it j s purer dn he gust n Washing eniieted when declared Wille ts of Be Piorida is th te « from that state on 4 ot remain was p when he te lor om sition th. the war with Spain He had sea experience merchantman 4 seaman be- take the rostrum in Michigan, speaking for several weeks in De- Suicided at a Party. party should be established, and the ty political campaign of the year should ned in| WLKESBARRE. Pa. May 5—Mrs|troit and furthering the organt a Herman Fink, of Union township, sane in other ond in the state,|0e directed from here. As in 1596, teh birth, bat died today from self-infiicted Injur-| Mra. Lease will abandon the poll- the presidential contest in 1000 with his adoption, les. About three weeks ago the wo-[tical field and direct her life work |>¢ fought out in the West. Illinois that he|man celebrated her birthday anni-|along the other lines which have|W!l! be the political storm center next year, and everything that might arouse interest and enthusiasm in Miinols and the West for the Repub- lean ticket should be done. Hav~ \versary and a large number of the lfrienda were present. In the midst and lot the festivities she seized « big knife and drew it across her throat been revealed to her by faith, of which she has made open confer- sion. Like Joan of Are, Mra. Lease believes she has been commanded Fat to chief quar- | There was @ great gush of blood and|¢o go forth and lead. Mrs. Lease |'n& the convention in Chicago and const wienal serv-|the guests fled from the room in|says there are now 275,000 active having the national —— he held until Aus | terror spiritualiste workers in the United|Mere afterward would do much tm was ordered to duty Gtates. Michigan being one of the| this direction I am sure. strongest states in the faith. Won't Join the Trust. CLAD IN OLD GLORY western states, and in Alaska. The Yukon ts destined to be the white Man's stream, and to yield substance to his commerce. Scores of salmon canneries along its course will ultt- mately give employment to thous. ands of men. —_—_—_ CAPTAINS STAND BY SAMPSON) ‘The Century for May publishes narratives of the Battle of Santiago by Captain Evans of the Iowa, Cap- tain Taylor of the Indiana. Captain Cook of the Brooklyn, Captain Chad- wick of the New York. Lieutenant Eberle of the Oregon, and Lieuten- ant Commander Wainwright of the Gloucester. Thes@ stories are told from the viewpoints of all the ves- sels engaged. All the officers agree on one. point: | There was only one squadron in front of Santiago, and that was act- ing July 3, under orders of Admiral Sampson. None of the officers re- fer directly or indirectly to the Sampson-Schiey controversy, but, evidently, each writes with it in mind. Every captain, even Cook of the Brooklyn, speaks of obeying the instructions of the commander in chief to “close in and engage the enemy.” There is general agree- ment that the Iowa was the first to | Giscover that the enemy was putting | to sea, and the first to raise « signal. | Captain Evans explains this promp ness by the statement that Lieuten- ant Hill of the Lowa believed from the ens in the harbor on the evening of July 2, that the Spanish fleet was Preparing to come out, and had the proper signal bent and ready for in- stant use. None of the captains refer to any ignal from the Brooklyn or any other vessel as to what should be done when the Spanish vessels were Giscovered. Bach captain speaks of ordering his ship clearéd for action, and of closing in, according to the instructions of the commander in chief. ‘aptain Philip of the Texas touch- on no point in controversy ex- cept the sudden change in the course of the Brooklyn, which endangered the Texas. This he describes as the most perilous moment for the Texas in the whole battle, because when the Brooklyn was discovered she wan so tlone that it”seemed that either one Vensel or the pther would be destroy- ed. Captain Philip makes no com- ment, but simply bears testimony to the truth that the change in the course of the Brooklyn endangered one of our own battleships, All the ceptains also speak with the greatest enthusiasm of the sea manship and fighting qualities of th | quite evident that the corner. |the enemy cannot be large enough to destroy his power of resistance and to shorten the duration of the war materially. Blockades have a greater effect than the capture of | private vessels, but the proposed im- munity of an enemy's private prop- erty at sea would not protect ves sels which should attempt to disre- gard an effective blockade. When the ports of a belligerent country are open, its commerce with other nations may be carried on under the flags of neutrals, whose rights must be respected by the other belligerent More than forty years ago the Un- ited States dectared its willingness to accede to the famous declaration ot Paris if the European PF would agree to the principle that the private property of delligerents at sea, not being contraband « should not be Hable to seizure. The refusal of England to assent to this proposition resulted in its failure at that time. But our government has never changed {ts position in rela- wers war, tion to this question, and a general in accordance with its views is now regarded as posnible The consideration of the subject at the peace conference will atten- tively watched by all who are inter- ested in the reform of international agreement As far rain in concerned, it ts the weather ha cut loose from all affiliation with the weather bureau —_—-- It looks as if the fight would be over before Gen. Joe Wheeler turns jank T. Short $10,000 WIMLANGTON, Del, May EK B. Me? receiving teller of the Wilmington Savings bank for many years, is over $10,000 short in his ac- counts, and his property haa been made over to the society for its pro tection. President William M. Can by says that the society will not lose more that $4100. Baby Roasted Alive. MORNING 8UN, Io. May 5.—A baby of ames Reynolds was burned to death today. It had been left in a chair near and its clothes ignited, roasting infant before assistance arrived. Ohio Split Over Hanna. WASHINGTON, D. C., May It fa said that Mr. Hanna fa lin to have a set back in the fight over the nomination for governor of Ohio, It a stov the is regarded as not improbable that Mayor Jones, of Toledo, will carry off the nomination In spite of Hanna and it is sald to be certain that Me Kin and Kurtz will bolt if Hanna hould control the convention, ‘Three Kurt by a Derrick SHE GOES TO Mi MARKET |. CARLINSVILLE Mrs. Wm. K. Vanderbilt Sets | mice » the Style. oi ager wide in od under a ed with NEWPORT, R. J. May 6.—Mre Bore will die. The oth William K. Vanderbilt, Jr., has wet) os are aeriously hurt, but may re the style for young matrons. Yes: (oe ee ee ial tra moved them terday morning shortly after ® Mra.{i) a) y mepital in Springfield Vanderbilt's basket runabout drove ~ canal up to the door of the Muenchinger King cottage, where, with her hu |Gaunt. Famine in R sia May S.—1 fr m tel NDON, |band, she had taken temporary dence f Russia Mrs. Vanderbilt, accompanied by | m store of distress the coachman and supplied with an e of Kazan, the center ivory-covered memorandum t out f the f Jixtriet, the Red Rose to do her own marketing, dispensing | » feeding 000 peo with the services of the chef, whose |pie. The relief delemat the prov prere ve has always been to look|inee of t rta that peasans after this part of the household man n and be 1 for agement lon their knees tn the snow. The The first stop was at the grocer's, | Petersburg Skyya Vied st ways where, in a businessiike way, whe) “Crime tality and the number ‘onsuited her memorandum and |of stil! born infants hay eared gave her order., She then proceeded | and now scurvy and typhus a te to & glass and crockery merchant, |vouring the population like a con where she purchased some candlo-|flagration fanned by nds sticks. The next stop was at the baker's, and she wound up at the butcher's, having traveled the whole H business seetion of the city in mak ing her purchases. In His Second Childhood GUTHRIE, Ok. May 5.—Flifah | WITH QUAY Senator Rayles, a farmer, eighty-one years| WASHINGTON, May & old, who lives near McKinley, this |Quay of Pennsylvania and Senator county, called on Probate Judge Fou-|Pplatt of New York, are said to have ter today and applied for a license |entered into arrangement which to wed Carrie Thomas, a fourteen |{t is belleved will practically Insure year old girl. The girl wan accom-|the seating of th nneylvanian in panied by her parents, who gave! the senate n his appointment is their consent to the union. The girt od upon. Senators Quay and Pen ix not yet out of short dresses and _ of Pennsylvania, have been in 1 not weigh more than eighty-|the city conferring about the forth five pounds. leoming stat nvent and the Judge Foster refused to issue a| probabilities of the seating of Sena license, and Bayles went to Okla-|¢or Qaay, The ne contemplates homa county, where he w alno | that Senator Quay will deliver 18 of refused, The girl says she does| the « of the Pennsylvania not love Bayles, and she don't know | deler the house to Senator why she wants to marry him. Platt of ftepresentative Sherman for father promised the sheriff he would | the speakership, and in return Sen vote and use their influence to se ure the seating of Sena Quay. THE ( |The two Republican members of the house whieh stor Quay cannot Joliver to the New York senator are 3 acker Williamsport. Senator ae Quay left for his home at Reaver Pa., where he will remain for sev CHICAGO, May 5.—The thirteenth | o/uj weeks, resting annual conference of the American “ < eal section of the Theosophical society will be held here, beginning Ma Resisted the Officer. and lasting three days, The sens PAINESVILLE, May 6A war will be held In the Athenacum build-|rant was placed In the hands of an ing, No, 26 Van Buren street. Theloffcer today for the arrest of Ea convention will be called to order at| Faker of Wiloughby, on the charige 10 4. m. Sunday. A reception to vis-|of assault and battery. Baker learn iting delegates will be given Satur-|ed that the warrant had been Issued, day evening, May 20 land arming himself with « shotgun Among those to be present at the entered his house and deficd the of convention are Alexander Fullerton | cer of Now York, general necretary of| The latter very discreetly changed American section; Hrahmachar- | his hase and is now awaltir vel [in i y, & popular Hindoo lecturer « pments, |Tarboro and Fayetteville Adventures of an American in Spain. NEW YORK, May 5.—G. Melville Roynton, who on August 12, 1897, ar rayed in @ sult of paper clothes and without a cent, started from his lodgings in San Franc encir cle the globe, without cash, arrived today from London. The conditions were afterwards broken, but the young man haa performed the equal- ly sensational stunt of walking through Spain wearing the Stars and Stripes. He had any number of en counters with natives, who were in- famed by the silken stars and strip- es shoulder sash that he wore. The fights were with fists, fe ath stones or any old weapons that hap © to pened to be handy. He was poisoned n another occasion and was once arrested as @ spy In Dublin the American was im ed by the portrait of a young \ sd, finding that the original wa Mise Lauder, of Glasgow, he sought ber out and married her, She follows next week Industry in the S uth RALEIGH, N. C,, May Capital is eagerly seeking investment In the textile manufacturing in the south In this city @ $250,000 spinning and weaving mill is to be bullt, and at GOWANDA, N, Y., May 5.—It hag been known for several days t representatives of the big trust were negotiating with the own- EDMBPR, N. J. May tempt to seriously cripple th Elmer Glass works, recently started up by the Isaac Starr company, waslers of the ¢annery here and much discovered yesterday. Some one|fear was expressed that the great had thrown a lot of cast fron in nducements held out to the local ce mpany might cause it to join the mbine. This would cause the clos- ing down of the tannery here, which ould throw a large number of men the “batch” of melting glass, com-|« pletely runining it, at considerable lions. The fire had to be drawn and the furnaces refilled, The plgnt is} running on a unton bas out of employment and seriously in- jure the business and prosperity of es for X-R. Burn | the village. Word was received ye sire ¢ Lg ¥ terday from New York to the eff CHICAGO, Tl that an agreement could not be a Ralling, who sued t ers of the Roentgen X-ray laboratory in the Schiller building, W. C. Fuchs and Dr. 0, L. Schmidt, for damages for |the loss of a limb, which he asserte | was necessitated by the improper application of the X-ray to his foot, today got a verdict of $10,000 da ages. rived at, and the proposed trust has burst like a bubble, KINDNESS PAID THIS WOMAN A Marrow Esca LEBANON, Pa. May Monroe| UAPORTE, Ind., May 5—A very Strohm, a fireman of the Pennsyl-| strange bequest has « to light in vania Bolt & Nut company, mirac- | connection with the filing of the will who died recent- of David Hepburn, lulously escaped death today when |he stepped on the railroad in front |ly without friends or relatives at Re- of a shifting engine. He was thrown | Po, Mich. Hepburn was believed to between the s and his clothing | be penniless, but his w which has |just been brought to light, bequeaths torn frem his body by the running gear of the engine, from under which | $60,000 tn cash to Miss Maggie Mont- lhe was removed with difficulty, His|gomery, a young girl of the village |tace and body were badly lacerated | who had befriended Hepburn in his new mills are going up, and New ersey capital- iets are this week beginning work on a new silk mill in the last named town, Another $100,000 mill is to be built at Mt. Mourne, N. C., and a second silk mill was this week de- ided in for Weldon, N. C. At Laurinburg, N. C., @ new mill Company has been organted within a fortnight, k of construction, while at Con- rd, N. C., where there are already seven spinning milis, another will be erected the coming summer, As to new hoslery and knitting mills, they “too numerous to mention.” we ar Wa Advanced. RIRMINGHAM, Ala, May 6.—On May 1 the Tennessee Coal & Iron & RK ‘oad mpany will advance all employes’ wages, except miners’, 10 per cent, and more, and miners will wet ton more. This af- fects 5000 people. CALLS WIVES TO CHURCH STROUDSBURG, Pa., May 5.—Rev R. H, Crawford, of the Methodist Hpiscopal church, who took such an active fight against the granting of 1 Hcense to the big brewery has now taken up the cause of the hard pressed women who are compelled t remain away from church Sunday mornings to cook big dinners fo jtheir husvands, In speaking recent- and will soon begin the| and his jaw broken. life as a recluse. Miss Montgomery —_——_—_— was also in ignorance of Hepburns rowing Cottonwood Trees |wow!'). There are no relatives to ORBGON CITY, Or. May 5.—C. claim the bequest, which will come Graser, who hae charge of the Wil- | {mo the immediate py session of the lamette Pulp & Paper company’s |¥ouns irl sheaested ewly planted 9-acre cottonwood sone feld near Canby, states that the Avecé for Revenue Paper trees are making encouraging prog YASHINGTON, M Cerone Mr. Graser says that he has|sioner Wilson, of the internal rev- on 4-year-old cottonwood trees on|enue department, has awarded tho Columbia that measured 16 inch-|contract for furnishing the distin len in diameter, Usually, however, |tive paper on which revenue stamps Jtrees are elght or ten years old be-|are printed to the present contrac. they attain this sie. The young] tors, the New York and Pennsyl- s for this field were secured from} vania company, of New Yo at the Columbia river. their bid for 4% cents a pound. K The Firsi—- roppings of Spring We herald the arrival of our Spring Clothing, The swellest garments ever put on sale. are ready-to-wear clothes that sell at $10, $12.50, $13.50, $15, and up to $20 The cut of these garments is up to date— workmanship the best. J. REDELSHEIMER & CO. Best and Biggest Clothiers in the State 800-802 First Av jor, Columbia. and Summer Stock of They ttle ore