The Seattle Star Newspaper, July 13, 1899, Page 2

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i ie os: THE SEATTLE = EB WHMIS & 0, ulianer Every afternoon exe x conte per week p > y roenep-live ces month delivered nty-ove eu ty mall or carrion. RR en he postoMesat Beattie We aan as second-class matter, The opening of public schools in the Philippines isiande has great ele nificance, Tt marks the of the peaceful conquest of the isl. ands by the influences of civiliaa- tion, The Spanivh government nev er attempted #erioualy to cope with) education in the Phillppines existed, to be sure, but they w eonducted by the church. The te ers were poorly paid, the seh Were poorly attended and the struction offered was of fhe rowest and least progressive oharac- ter, The dimicuttios for the school- ere vie in nar master tn tife Phitippities are unusa-| ally @reat, but the moverament offers | inducements which should attract/ capable mén and women to the work Phe Fi mination of the sectarian ine fiueace marks a step in advance, and the teaching of the English lancuage will form a part of the course from bdeginalng to end, beginning | pupil } the purse out of my hand the lows would be only three cents, some aam- ples and @ poptage stamp.'—Chicago Post see Fireworks are sent off before services at the Hable (Hraail) o dral, in order to attract the atten tion of the people. “* . A successful firm of tea merchants in London composed entirely of women, The blenders, tasters and packers are alae women, -. e In 188 Germany imported exes to NO SPEEDY LEGISLATION To Knock Out the) | the val of nearly $8,500,000 1898) ‘the amount was nearly trebled, Rus-| sia provides 0 per cent of them According to ahaaines analy 18 parts of the flesh of fah have about the same nutritive value ag 12 parts of boneless beet eee Asparagus ix so plentiful on the Schools! Russian Steppes that the cattle eat it Uke grass, The seeds are some times dried and used as a substitute for coffee, see The French government is at! tempting to raise revente by letting out the backs of match boxes, which are & state monopoly, to outside ad | vertinets ee Ye Mra. ©. A. Steele, of Kan was General Punton's teac that soldier was @ boy, says that she then prophesied @ dire future for her eae One of the daughters of Senator) Clark of Montana has @ large collec } ton of the caricatures of her father published during his recent political contest for @ senatorial seat. | ‘The visiting editors of the National) os association went up against it over! in’ Tacoma Studied the government maps of the! Pacific Northwest before coming to the coast, and when the san shone} forth on Wednetday Morning with Wondrous brightness, they pointed enthusiastically towards the horiaon | nd exclaimed, “Oh, look at Mt Rainier! [n@ you ever see anything © beautiful?” {And behold, a white frost straight-| Way settied supan Pacema aod All| said to beve come all the way to Bt the region round about, and the fruit | Benedict's college at Atohison, Ka crop was Diig >ted. HURT rave dass ast place much confidence in Russt *| Professions tn bebalf-ef ceneral dis- armament, minister, said in a recent address at Yokohama, that Japan should keep tagtep WR the progress in mititary pes science, in order to be pre- | ‘to claim a share in the Anar| faftition of China. In many re- spects the civilixattonof Japan would Waguite as good as that ofany other goverhment, “especially when en- forced by 2 and navy. The contest tween Secretary Almer and some of the Eastern newspapers, in becoming | ang you're back quite dramatic. The allied journals tne proper spirit, Mary “ot them had| woods at Algoma, W. Va Ne waa the son of Africa. The Marquis Ito, prime | not, however, so well known that hi { 20,000 acres of hard le about te be cut at the rate of 35,000 feet a day. It te estimated that five yeots| will be spent in finishing the tract ‘The timber ex-Senator George F, Hamlin, of Kansas, ts the son of Europe Ham- lim, and has three uncles whose names are Asia, Africa and Ameri- ca. Vice-President Hannibal Ham- Joseph Faudics, of Porto Rico, is) in the hope of beginning school work there on June 2, which he saw an-/ nounced as “commencement @ay.” see Secretary Hay, as is well known, is ja dewout Omar Khayyamite, It te collection of editions of the Rubal- yet t» second only tn this country to that of Nathan Haskell Dole. “ee Fish are pot only caught but pull ed into the boat by a Kentuckian’ device, comprising the usual tine, which is wound off the ehaft of a) clock mechaniem, @ pull on the ss releasing the spring and winding up the Une. At Oyster Bay Gov. Roosevelt's lit-) shih. In. new. am, be-| te som grecied him o@. Bie retern | from the west with the words; “I' m | commented the fire whole volley# of redignations at | governor. the secretary, and he throws them back at the heads of the editors with Peg (to Le semerse traveler seek- his compliments. Such retktesaness | you know how to talk ‘sp peeks to & customer? Appli- is Hable to result in a broken head | cant—Allow me to turn on this phon- for —_____ MINING NEWS. The '¥ of the prea Dewey Gold Mi company at Republic, fa to be developed. A shaft 166 feet) deep wil) be sunk. The work has Started, and wil} probably be com- Dieted in about @ days. eee Development work on the Ineur- gent mine at Republic is progressing favorably. Good paying ore is said to be taken out. eee | ograph with @ conversation between @ customer and myself.-Pilegende Blatter. cee General Wade Hampton and his daughter, since the destruction by fire of their handsome house and fortune, have been living in two small rooms in Columbus, 8. C. In an interview Gen. Hampton said; “IT feel that I did not lose anything in that fire, for I #aved my sword from the famea” eee | A iarge folio Book of Common Prayer, of 1652, which belonged to! zhton, who waa Bishop Wells, England, in 1670, | mend | prices and regulating Trusts, CONGRESS WILL WAIT AWHILE Industrial Commissioner Forquaher Gives Expression to Mis ines. WASHINGTON, ©. C., The industrial comm by the late congress and appointed by President McKinley has been giv~ ing much attention to trusts, but It is pot probable that it will recom legislation the next Srees touching this question Commissioner John M. Farqubar, of Buffalo, i» one of the men on the July 1 nm created to eon | commission who hat given much at- tention to labor problems. He was for two terms president of the Ty pographica! union. He rerved in rm reese from Buffalo for tren as a Republican and he was one of the men President MeKiniey selected on the Industrial commis sion, with the understanding that he would serve the interests of labor Major Farquhar does net beileve that the commission can recommend any legislation against the tr or declare them uniawful “Trusts,” he said recently, “are or- ganized for the avowed purpose of cheapening production, controtiing the output According to the universal laws of trade, thie cannot be declared aitimate. The formation of trusts is nothing more than the outgrowth of new business conditions in the coun- try. We as « nation are producing |® Yast amount more than we con sume, and the combine i nothing | more than ap effort to get products on the market im the cheapest way It te not due to a desire to make more monty, but to make as much as Was made before thir enormous | overproduction commenced.” LANGE WILL PLAY BALL Has Hopes for an Opposition League. CHICAGO, July 11—The proposed new baseball league, ta be formed in opporition to the National league, re- ceived a lively boom here when « story was Lge gen — the ye t a ve Bil Lange, who Chicago an any caher onary player, favored the new league. According to the story, Lange has decided not to quit the diamond, and will be seen next year in some position with one of the great agere- gations that amuse the country by their spectacular feats in bat- ting and Melding Lange does not deny that he) intenda to continue playing baseball | in spite of the publiehed report to the contrary. Me says be prefers to say nothing whatever about the mat- ter because of his peculiar relations with the Chicago League Baseball club, Hut he does not deny that he The Marmion Gold Mining com-/| hag been returned to ite old home in| will play next year any more than pany at Republié has 4 shaft 10 fet) tne palace at Wells and added to the| he confirms it deep on its property and will run 4) many historic treasures of the I~ tunnel 100 feet to top the ledge. brary. It is an excellent specimen In case & pew league is started in} to the National, opposition some. Some rieh specimens, of ore are be-l|of the binder’s art, having been the | thing which i not at all likely, he Ing produced. eee The Treasury Fraction company Repubalic is said to have a tun- on their property whieh has been | driven 25 feet. It ie being run to cut the Treasury ledge. = SORTS” f ‘hea oem L cry vans ure being used in cee Rabbite cannot gnaw through wire wt “7 placed about the fruit tdi?’ passenger service is Gelade b Pretoria and the Transvaal. ‘Within a year nineteen free public! ney Bulletin Hbraries have heen established Wisconsin. in Engiish locomotive exports in 1997. cles in company, “* Daniel Wells, of Mitwaukee, aged 5, iw the oldest living ex-congreas- man in the Went. “ee The Queen of Portugal is engaged in the work of translating “Hamlet” into Portuguese. “ae Cecil Rhodes is a confirmed woman hater, though he profits by their love of diamonds. see not generally known that H the dramat was for many & droggist, 69 years ago. oe wr It fi yen In the African elephant both sexes have ivory tusks, while in the Ani- a@tics they are generally restricted to the males. see ‘The Roman Catholic Bishop of Maitiand, Australia, has forbidden the use of flowers at funcrals in his Mocese see Mra. Lowndes, wife of the Mary- sand governor, claima that buttered Bread 1s a sovereign cure for the Whooping cough. . Why 6 you your purse tn Your fiend instead of In your pock- @t7! n@ anked. “For econamy,” she replied, “If ao piekpocket ever got Into my pockst he't more than like- ly tear my gown, while if he grabs | | Hamburg has been wisely substitut-| jed, so that a patient can be trans tast!in Fairmount Park a monument to Bitcomet 199 to $7,400,000 as againt| Bishop Richard Alien. A polite Chinaman considers {t {in 1787, and as a national church in Breach of etiquette to wear specta-! work of &, Mearns, the binder to Charies Il. The new German school for the} | study of Tropical Diseases is to be} established at Hamburg. Professor Koch, to whore initiation the school is due, designed at first to locate the! school at Berlin, but the great port of | ferred directly from the ship to the! hospital bed. ‘Accommodation is be- ing provided for thirty patients. | see | A Melbourne lady, whose husband | is in the bieyci® trade, lost a gold nugget brooch the other day while} whirling along on her wheel. A St.) Kilda hotelkeeper got a puncture in his tire the same day, and took the bicycle to the shop of the husband Aforesald, with the result that the wife's lot brooch was extricated| from the puncture. Providenge en- Joys @ little Joke occasionally. —S8yd- eee | The colored people of Philadelphia} are raising $10,000 in order to place the founder of the African Methodist Eptecopal church, firat & local organization) 1816. It now has a membership of | 700,000, sixty annual conferences, 20} institutions of learning, 9 general de-| | partments and § bishops. ' see In his account of the Ascot races |a London reporter says: “Thirsty American shoppers could be seen crowding into ice cream soda rooms, but, to judge from their expressions when they emerged, the article was not like what they had been used to jat home. Indeed, one fair Virginian | was heard to remark; “Call that ice \cream soda? It's as much like the beat thing as @ mint julep tossed to- gether by an English barmaid re-) jsembies one mixed by a White Sul-| phur Springs darky.” oe 4 The Romans deemed June the ear “4 fortunate month for espousals used to be the fashion to strew ie - ers and grains of wheat as the bride! passed, and at one time coronets of} corn wore worn by brider. Rice ts| symbolical of plenty, and in Java the bride and bridegroom partake of | rice out of one dish to betoken that they will spend thetr future together. | | } | | | | ‘The shoe is a sign of the submission of the wift to the husband; the left | shoe is thrown as a #ign of good luck jand once on a time, If a younger ain- ter wore married first, the elder ones | were rupposed to dence barefooted jat the wedding, leat they should be- come old maids. | | ing sent will be captain of the Chicago club. He has already promised ex-Captain Anson to accept this position, which fact alone shows that be has po ine tention whatever of retiring from baseball, as has been so frequently published by papers which know nothing whatever about the matter. ‘The assertion that Lange will play next Season is BipO BUpported hy the faet that several baseball clubs are after him. It te known to be true that a deal wae on recentiy where by Lange was to be traded for Amos Rusie, the w York pitcher, and it is equally true that serious talk was had concerning his tranafer from the Rough Riders to the Brooklyns for Mike Griffin. LIQUOR TO ALASKA. Large shipments of liquor are be- to Alaska since the high license law went into effect. Prior to July 1 no liquor could be legally sold in Alaska, although it | known fact that !t is impossible to effectually prevent a traMe of this sort. According to the provisions of | the new law, each saloon keeper In| required to pay to the government a Hicense of $2000 annually. Cosmopolis Box Fac ‘tory. COSMOPOLIS, Wash., July 12.~ The Gray's Harbor Commercial Co has commenced the erection of se. | ° other box factory, BOx160 feet machinery il* now on the ground Th me company fttarted today one side of the big mili for a day ana! night run. Many men are needed and will be for some time. HIS BOND The bond of J. C. Fuller, the trav- cling salesman accused emben- aling from Dryfoos & Co., whole- sale liquor dealer, was yesterday fix- ed at #00 cash or 8750 with sure- thes ‘THE BATTLE OF TRUSTS INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. July 13 A western trust Is to be formed to fight an eastern trust, according to Col. Winfield T. Durbin. He said to~ day he had disposed of his interests in a paper mill at Anderson, Ind Crawford Fairbanks, the T Haute mil}ionaire, of the great strawboard trust International Paper company, is an eastern trust, does not operate ‘The whieh THE SEATTLE. in a well-| » to} who Is at the head! STAN. Pe eg deen able to pmintain an ageney in Chleago, from which heavy Inreade have been Made on the busines of ne Western Paper mille. ‘The jatter have Metormined to combine arn ee | the eastern trust to save themaclven T fat te underwtood t paper mitten west of Pitteburg will be a hed entirely 13 operated in connection with the jatrawboard truat | Sold Dis id Wilk. DOA MOUNTS, Ia., July 1a ’ Clark ¢ 1 5 from star Dicks in the district court here |day, beeause of a blood disease con tracted by using milk furnished by Dicks, The milk wax taken from a egw which, it was alleged, had tu berculosia. Clark sued for $16,000 on |the representation of his physl« tans jthat the disease was incurable was chown: that ie ke knew thet the Dave Merman Lenait and ©. J, Nelson were fined $10 t Judge Cann Yesterday for maintain- |ing @ nickle-in-th | rvs natie chit eM ROBBED WHILE MOVING Mra. Bather Sayre who reeently lived at the corner of Harrison street and Queen Ane avenue, to the police yesterday that she had 4a $80 gold watch, and $125 diamond ring, stolen from her while moving ntrivance reported Burne W. Beal), one of the vic of the botler explosion which oscur red March has petitioned the city counct! for $12.000 damages He states that hia injuries on the limbs have crippled him for life A CANC KICKS A MAN TO DEATH PHILADELPHIA, Pa. July 1 | A crowd of men became involved in @ terrible Aight at the corner of Con | extowa street and Wyatusing avenue etiy after noon today | Ashworth, 45, was thrown down. The gang Jumped on him and kicked bim) repeatedly about the body and head They kept up their terrible work uo | ti they kicked him to de Jobn Kennedy, aged 23, of 2717 Auburn Street, was the only one caught. He was lodged in the twenty-ninth dis | erte | the gang had not been caught at a late hour. ath. t station. The other members of Ice Companies Combine . y YORK, Juiy 18 It was re- ported tm Wall street today that the SS ars ar} ~¢ company of New Yor, with 0,000,008 capital: the | Knickerboeker lee company of Maine! | which does a large business in Phila. | delphia, Baltimore and Washington, with 819,000,000 capital, and the Am erican Ice company, a new corpora. tion, will Be cambined water the ti- tle of the Inst named, A HITCH IN NEGOTIATIONS | CHICAGO, July 1.—A hiteh bh arisen between the committee of the | tug trust and the Dunham Towing company in the negotiations for the anle of the latter's property, and l option which it gave to the trust h been withdrawn. While there may yet be « consolidation of the Chicago towing companies in the trust, it now if the Dunham line and per- haps several other important towing |compantes on the lakes will remain outside of the combination. It ts said that an immediate effort will be made to bring outside lines together |to work in harmony in case a war with the trust is forced upon them |Capt. J. & Dunham, who left for | Cleveland last night, refused to dis- louse the latest development. Ail he | would say was that he had not seid out to the trust. It is also said that the Barry Bros.’ independent tug line and the trust committee have come to an agreement. A WOMAN MANUAL TRAINING TEAGHER CONSHOCK a., July 12.—The local school board is going to try the experiment of a woman at the head of thg manual training school The directors at the monthly meet- ing voted for Miss Ida Davis in pre- ference to two men, There la much speculation as to whether a young woman can effectively teach young |men how to use carpenters’ and ma |@hiniets’ tools. The people think it will be interesting to see the teacher drive a nail and make a clean cut with a saw. The directors rely on the |recommendations Mise Davis pri sented fr Drexel institute, from | wes h she Is a graduate T0 DIE FOR WIFE BOILING | | CHICAGO, Il, July 12.—"We, the jury, find the nda August Al- bert Becker, guilty of murder din | manner and form aa charged in the lindictment, and we fix the punish- | ment of the said Augus Albert Bock- ath." wan the er at ¢ Such reached in lone hour and ten minutes by the 12 men who decided the fate of the lit- tle butcher who killed hin wife and | bolléd her boay that he might marry verdict lida Sutterlin, a pretty girl with whom he was infatuated | Becker 4s extremely palo and nervous when he was ted in from the | jail to hear his fate. He reclined in his chair when the verdict was read jand four bailiffs kept close to him \to prevent violence If he should at- tempt to attack any one Alleyes were directed toward Pe er as Clerk Cummings unfolded t sheet of paper handed him by Fore- man Barrett, of the Jury, and read the verdict, The condemned murder er’s face grew livid with rage and he clutched wildly at his hair, He cur ed the Jury roundly a# he left court room and continued his expres- sions on the way back to jail and k- a Buy 6 acre tract, Moore Inv. Co, | extensively west of Pittsburg, but It) long after he was locked in his cell, Thomar | e the} TRUSTS ARE TROUBLING “The Leaders of the Democracy. SENATOR JONES GIVES AN OPINION Says That Anti-Monopoly Agitation Will Temporarily Oversh. the Silvor Question. W YORK, July 13 Dem- orate will certainly make 4 strong fight againet trusts in the next pre sidential campaign,” #aid Benator J P. Jones, of Nevada, to Just how the subject should I will confes# J do not know « ent, It je a difficult problem. It tn easy enough to shout ‘Down with trust bart eit? what are you going to ‘Ta the one that in most often made the target—the ugar trust You go to the members and they say: “Yes, We OWn all the sugar re- finer incorporated ac- cordl “Now will we pass a law that a concern shail only own so much pro- perty or what shall we do? What difference would it make us if there were a thousand inde pendent refineries and as many mid- diemen? 1 am #t The ex to ‘ongly opposed to trusts. remedy for the evil is not clear me. There would be no trusts if it were not for the gold standard, the shrinking currency and falling price Then you do not agree with Mr. Havemeyer that the protective tar- iff ts the father of all trus 7 I do not. There are as many trusts abroad without a protective tariff there are here | Does the ant ust idea for a De- | mocratic campaign lesue mean that) | Bryan will be the candidate? | “Certainly, It will be ryan and | MeKinley over again. That doen not }mean that the silver tesue will be sheived, either Tt will be rather overshadowed probably by the antt- monepoly movement, There are a areat many people who will nev- er understand the currency question | and ip the face of a semblance of prosperity the silver issue muy | submerged for @ time. It will not | stay down, however.” ‘How t# the Philippine situation | regarded in the West?" In California, where the troops have been shipped, the people have made money out of it and may want the Philippines. 1 think the question ie weakening President McKinley in other parte of the West.” atest 0 Si Railroad Reorganization MILWAUKEE, Wis, July 12--The new Wisconsin Central Railway Co. lin good running order at a meeting to be held in Milwaukee Saturday. H. F. Whitcomb, one of the receivers bd the Wisconsin Central properties for the past five years, and during| the railway line be the presi- dent d general manager of (he new lj company, although nothing official to this part of the programme bas [been given out as yet. and nothing | will be announced until the meeting has been held. THE DEMAND FOR SUGAR IN SPAIN WASHINGTON, D. €., July 12. As the result of the low f her colon- les @pain'’s sugar factories, with a yearly production of 60.000 tons, have been unable to satiafy the home di man, amounting to about 100,000 tons per annum. rding to Consular Agent Mer- at Valencia, the government has been petitioned to reduce the high prohibitive duty of 102% per cent. to © per cent., and, in spite of pposition of the refineries, the production probably will be made as a revenue-producing measure. SEPARATED FOR FIFTY YEARS DAYTON, ©, July 13.—Yesterday a father and daughter who had not seen one another for nearly a half} a century met'at the Soldiers’ home. Over forty-eight Fisenle left his home and came to America, When the civil war began he enlisted and fought bravely throughout the en- tire struggle. During that time he never heard from home and thought his family dead. He was afterwards admitted to the Soldic home here and is now tn the nospitat on what is probably his death His daughter, who was ten years| when his father came to Ameri- ca, followed him years later to this country, but, hearing nothing from | in Germany him, thought that he had been killed in battle, She married, becomin Mrs. Anna M, Miller, and has live for several years at Williamsport, Lycoming county, Pa. Recently she heard in a roundabout way feat there was 4 veteran named lin the home here. She immedi tely me this city and father | daughter met eeeo Mexican Proverbs. ors There are many fine epigrams and} proverbs in Spanish. Many of them) |cannot be transiated so as to pr serve the terseness and the aptness | of the original. Many, of course, are }the same as the English proverbs Jor «imply change the simile, ‘They lare used with all possible variety of application. A gentleman who was seated near a group of young ladies lat a railway station, busy with their farewell kisses, stood it as long as he could and then protested; ‘Don't will be formatiy organized and placed | that period the general manager of! years ago John) ote Or a SS oune your money tr © premenc the peor Following are eo 10 the proverb not wncommenly “ ard i Sparkman & McLean é in Megico FOR BARGAING OM He who fever ventures will never the ay Aca ats hac anid ~ op ay Vhone Ked 1704. 46 Halley Bidg mouth wenn Behind the crons is the devil luanttieven ‘A cat in gloves will never catch «hungry no bread is dry." | A book that is shut makes nd] a hala good laundress washes the sitet first,” | N EVV No evil will endure a hundred years.” “When the river is pasted the sain | ts formott He fear.” “It the pil were not bitter It Then preserve the window would not be gilt.” get the best ven- the shades by mouldings, and tilation; save having Crigler's Shade Bracket “Do not trust your money to those who keep their eyes on the floor (make an outward sign of plety) “Wind gnd good luck do not last.” on’t take a pawn that must be fed,” It is good fiahing in troubled wa- ters,” Best thing out; adopted #y r A frugal, rich father and a spend best hotels; sells on sight. is aon. ‘ aah ree Agents wanted. No word Is spoken not i) understood.” a! H. PLACE, 605 Bailey Block A tongue may inflict a de wound than a sword.” “= YOUNG TACOMA BANDMAN SHOT Fell Prom a Bicycle and His OBERON Revolver Exploded. TACOMA, July 13.—Henry A. Pel-| letier, a brother of Major John F letier, Governor Rogers’ private # retary, and a member of the Tacoma ()heron’ military band, was accidentally shot at 12 o'clock last night. The accident occurred near Modern Mex x Sicstessugerloe*** SPOT CASH Highest Prices Paid. JAKE MARTIN. 1104 Third Avenue. Seatile’s Favorite Concert House, IRVIN BARUCH, PROP, Ladies’ Orchestra Herr Irvin Baruch, Conductor. wit the | SPECIAL ARTISTS reservoir on the water ditch road.|/rom peineipel 75, "hom end Peiletier fell from @ bicyele and a re- | volver in bis pocket was exploded. Admission Fr. Sunday Matinee the ball striking him tn the thigh. Pelletier and another muttary Every Friday Amateur Night bandaman were riding toward Tac- Amateure Wanted oma, At the Fern Hill road they Latest Styles parted, and shortly after @ shot was Ladies, have your Tatlor-aaade Suite made by ane heard, foliowed by a cry from Pel- HUMES & Co. | letier His companion went to the Rooms 2-2 Hale Deposit Building place and found Petietier lying on the! path. He aided him to rise, and the} jtwo walked to the home of OMecer | Shock, at Twenty-seventh street and | Tacoma avenue, from which place the police were notified and the pat- |rol wagom was ent to remove Pel- | lletier to the St. Joseph's hospital. | This morning he was resting casy. and, though the wound is serious, | yet it is not as bad as it might have | 7s March, Waltz, “MINERS LOSE | raezgaeartas THEIR GOLD copies om sale tite wreaks zoe After Being Secured it Re- turns to Resting Place Thomas Parka, one of the latest ere who have lost money in this way have kept very quiet about It. Mr. Parks is @ guest at the Com- mercial hotel. He has been tn the north for about four years, and says he has no objection to returning. The output this year, he estimates, will be about $20,000,000, DIED ONA STREET CAR TACOMA, July 13.—Owing to a complication of apoplexy and heart troubles, James C. Richardson, the father-in-law of President Franw M. Harshberger, of the Mohawk Mining company, died suddenly yesterday afternoon while on his way home on |a Point Defiance street car. Mr | Richardson had been over to Seat- tle for a visit of a day, and had just | returned, WEATHER FORECAST. For Seattle and Vicinity.—Tonight and Friday fair, cloudy, cooler; wind | becoming southerly. The temperature has risen slight. | e ly in the Northwest; it has remained | 3 WINTER & HARPER 903 Second Ave. Seattic, Wase. arrivaig, from the Klondike district, | who arrived here yesterday on the | cently, | He says that a number of mine the mine. Each dump was worth thousands of dollars, but the miners j from the shaft. With the arrival of the warm Kit | original resting-place, the bottom of the #hatt. * 708 Second Avenue hardest kind of work lost. The own- steamer Humboldt, has an tnterest- FRI ! lowners on Eldorndo and Bonanza made no attempt to timber them, weather, however, the dirt began to Thousands of dollars, Mr. Parks . Free Demonstrations AND... ing story to tell of several peculiar and expensive losses to miners re- reeks dumped their pay dirt last wee AT THE...... winter quite close to the mouth of | thinking they were a safe distance Model. oe spread, and, meeting no resistance, gradually worked itself back to the says, have been lost in this way for the tme-being, and months of the AND __eetth> stationary in Oregon and California, | A thunderstorm is reported from Rolse City, and .04 of an Inch of rain occurred at Pocatello. ‘The pressure is hig along the en-| tire Geast, and low over Nevada; bat} a “high” of much intensity is re ported’ from Eastern Idaho, which Tomorrow we will show how acema likely to become the dominat- | easy it is to do perfect ing one. The formation of a trough | of low pressure from Nevada to the provinces would cause cloudy weath. ler Friday in the Vicinity of Seattle. en P| EE ti even work, ‘Swignby wasn't at the office on } was celebrating the} Vill Be Bakei and eThe Fourth FP! E “Yes. It's the fourth girl.” a 10M. aud Pe Seattle Gas and Electric Company Safe Deposit Boxes For the safe keeping of |Valuable Articles and Papers, For rent at zs yearn, You carry Safe Deposit Vaults OW. Columbia se E. SHORROCK BONNEY & STEWART Funeral THreotors and Kmbalmors lors, Third Ave. and Columbia St. Telephone Mai 1S Beattie, Wash,

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