The evening world. Newspaper, June 23, 1902, Page 7

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bespokon passage on Laramie helped him Fort Russell @id he ask or take. It was! “\nat for?’ was the graf reply Private Murphy, Leaving Russell about 8 P. M, they would sup at|tnore wont a dlfferent tale=from Mike. Phillippe's, “change cars before midnight, then drive | “ook out tor Roughs on th the plan—Cheyenne was a and Downs was then about the wealthiest man !n < rough" town in those dey WHERE UNCLE SAM BUYS AND SELLS. TREASURY SUMMARY OF FOREIGN COMMERCE. ‘The Treasury summary of foreign commerce shows that in April our total exports were $11,580,000 less than in the same month of last year, and that our total imports were $869,000 less than our total imports {n April, 1901, In ten months of the current fiscal year we have imported merchandise to the value of $764,523,000, which 1s more than the total imports for any of the fiscal years 1894, 1895, 1898 or 1899, and in these ten months we have exported $1l,- 190,161,000, which {s more than we ex- ported in any whole year up to 1898. the figures for months’ period, our imports are larger were in the corresponding months of either of the two previous Considering We purchased more from Burope, America and same time in 1900 or 1901, We purchased more from Asta than we did last year, but less than we With Oceania we purchased more than we did in 1901, but less than half as much as we dld in 190. Turning from imports to exports, we more merchandise countries of North America than in the corresponding period of the two previous The same statement ts true of Africa, but it 1s not true of the remain- ing four of the six great divisions. ope and Oceania than Africa than sold less to Eu RIPENING CHEESE. A hitherto unknown element in milk, @ new ferment, ays a writer in Scribn called galac- 1s proving of value fn the this ferment are similar to the secretion of the pancreatic organ in the human body. Old cheese is a predigested food, and the digestion 1s wrought by It was found that the galac- tose would go on working at very low tomperatures—temperatures bacteria were practically inert. into refrigerators and kept Other cheese was frozen for months. kept Just above the freezing point, ‘was found that the finest cheese Is cured at from 40 to 45 degrees Fahrenhelt maintained that 60 degrees was the low- est temperature at which cheese could be worked without becoming bitter and worthless, The new discovery will, it is belleved, revolutionize cheese manufac- ture, doing away with all curing rooms, being sent directly refrigerator. ee THE CIGAR OF Pi “Every attention te being paid to the Boer-jeaders, whose comfort in the mat ter of lodgings has been well Thus the report from Pretoria, and in the interests of peac: hoped, says the London Chronicle, that the comforts inolude some reasonably ( Choice cigars, the reduction of which to ashes forms the best basis for an agree- ment between men who differ and smoke. By muoh tobacco Bismarck re- duced Thiers to acceptance of the Ger- man terms, and the Spanish-American peace commission after the war of 1698 proceeded but lamely unl! the delegates kindled the pipe of peace, At the fifth meeting, Uttle progress having ben made, Senor Rios on behalf of his col- jeagues proposed an escape from the formal atmosphere. he sald, ‘that the American commis. are accustomed May I auge nd cl and of cues Hons speeded rapidly, there ® smoke la tine pave “I have observed,” to smoking, that we join to, ward the Platte. No one to send. Something up. | slopes to the northeast. Keep us advised.” Buthely the fresh, four-mute team of the A HON EY M OOo N H O LD- U P ‘And so It happened that, all unwarned, Downs sent | had spun away through the koft mooulight ‘ e this telegram near midnight to his waiting father-in- | Mullins handling the ridbons, Striker law at Russell: six-shooter by the driver's side, “Bafe and sound at the Chug. Beautiful night. | his winsome bride snuggling within the By GEN. CHARLES KING. Leave for Laramie 12.80." Kate's bonay head was on Jimmy's should and | to the roadst Concord was spur THE ATTACK. 1903, by Datly Story Pub, Co.) (perenne: What a chance this might be for “road 'N the Colonel's own carriage—in a whirl of fluttering kerchiefs, silvery voices, pearly tears, pelting rice and promiscuous slippers—the bridal couple nad | my? y, all Fort Russe: out to see them off, all fool!sh Fort Laramie expectant of thelr coming. Downs, leutenant and won the winsome daughter of old Capt. Furniss, and {t was a ‘‘tofs-up as to which was having the best of the bargain. Downs had some thousands a year outside of his pay, yet would rather be a file-closer of foot, far out In ‘Wyoming, than a fox-hunter at Meadowbrook or an idler at Newoort. He had planned a wedding tour across the sens, had the Servia for early May, but when the Sloux broke their bounds—and pledges—early in April, Jimmy wired to Washington, resigning M8 | oo) yy 10 0 long-promised leave, bluntly told his Colonel he must | stand by the regiment till the Sloux were whipped, ond fo far from chisling him, Kate Furniss was proud. Moreover, she saki she would -nanry him anyhow, | and move to Laramie and watch and wait for him till | the campaign was over, and Jimmy blessed her with all his heart and the ladles at beautify the Mttle cottage assigned him as quarters, Cheyenne and Omaha furnished the furniture and fix- managed a stunning wedding breakfast, despite the fact that the cs was under orders to march, Not even a week's lea some ninety miles by foothills from Russell to Laramie then, on the Chug ‘The Colonel's own carriage should drive them to the Chug, the Lfeuenant-Colonel’s pet Concord, the | » best road wagon at Laramte, should meet them there, Both drivera were soldiers who well knew the road. The Stoux no longer came south of the Platte, ‘The gray troop of the Second was in bivouac Chug. Jimmy's faithful striker, e agents!” You will wire from Lodge Pole and the Chug, Jim: sald Furniss, with a parting handelasp. ‘It's anxiety, pefhaps, but since her mother died that child has been—pretty much everything.” | “TI know," sald Jin stoutly. There were other | children, but who like Kate? And now, as they bowled swiftly away in the Colo- nel’s delightful surrey, with a spanking team fairly bounding over the hard prairle road, exhilaration in the brilliant sunshine, the keen, bracing alr, the rapid motion, with youth and Jove, hope and health all their own, and they all each other's, small wonder was it that Jimmy Downs was too happy to think of any- thing but Kate and bilss, too happy to fear anything | but detay. He had promised—what his post commander had not ev ked—to Laramle at the very lat- clock the following day | nned to start at t not until 4 could they break away, and even then half a dozen young | cavaliers had insisted on seeing them as far as the first “divide."”” | Neltlier Downs nor his bride cared to leave tho| carriage, ¢ Honest Michael, the owner, looked wistfully at them and then eas: at Murphy, but none read | sixnals In his eye. It was to old Stein, the colonel’s | soldier coachman, that he whispered: | uy, can't you make 'em stop over a few hours of the Grays can ride here and ‘scost 'em?" | had wooed He had valry garrison | rolling, open | ‘3 two fellers gone through here, an’ with “Phll- | 1 don't tke the looks of ‘em. for half-way “Pooh ers! sald Stein. He had the old t disfain of danger that he himself | not discovered, | tinck Hillers aln’t travelling now with the Sloux all over the road beyant the Platte," was the reply “You and Murphy have your guns ready, anyhow." at the) “Reached Lodge Pobe all right. Hate sends love. Leaving at once,” was the message dictated by the of the Ninth, would sit by the driver and wield his six- | jieutennnt and sent by the soldier operator. But to the veteran captain of the Grays at Chug Water ‘HOLD UP, THERE!" SHOUTHD A WARNING VOICE. » road to Chug Wat An hour jater, when Philippe wildly sought to send | her hand in his, her form encireted triumphantly Into Laramie by guard-mounting on the | yjeut. Dons and lady just gone ahead. Could you] a very different message, he couldn’t—the wires wore | arm, the coming campaign for the mom: send and meet them mooniieht thes r about bis ne: Hold f with them rol knows that, but you'd never ff must have hit] and that only within a week had “Buffalo. BM" re- a dozen hardy fron-|to save even In that dim leht, | throughout ¢ cut or down. the future, roseate as a frontier dawn, ‘There was only one thing that troubled Furniss in| And Mike's heart went low when, In half an hour,| Three miles northwar&, along the valley of the | sudden, the springy vehicle gave a , | the reply came from Phillippe’s Ranch. Chug, the Laramie road in those days bent around a| and bound. Ina rattle of swingtree ptaln and most of the troop away scouting to-' big shoulder of bluff, a:xi then went twisting up the | trace, the lead team recoiled In terror on the wheel- | him tlersmen as any one need sternly ahout “Thank you topping the mules. “Lucky we bad ao many,” was the cheery t Was easy énotigh to catch you, but hatd te em m* spoke up the bridegroom, twined on arm about Katee wie | ou meat == i jumped right out of that) Hanged Mullins, the drives Joan an’ Laura, an’ coyted cease , they whirled nd and threw Murphy out. Then ss wien IT see you jays a 1 let ‘em go. I know > tdug at the [> Ash, dash ye! You've got the drop on us thia > Aturpay | me, but — : lived like a log | But the rest was lost in shouts of uproartous laugh= 4 ter that gradually gave way to strained silence, for x whirled about, [0mebody ral, “Fold on! Listen!" ; aplng caps! ‘ p the Chug. toward t ranch, Lights were begin- he Bone. | MMR to dance, Down the Chug, toward the blufe i se the thunder of hoofs— rea of them—coming () te Mullins’s bs becwus at a rush, and then In frantle Joy the voice of Mulling " i was o@nin uplifted. ae he “lepped" a wild Irish ware a i “2 dane : saaliid Aba, me ould Jayhawk cried he, “aye hear ES sich ail He | {hat muste? Dye see them gray ghosts comin’ through) yA jo noon shine 2" " > i ‘s | {agaln the startled mules would have torn away, © anil alt hands had to seize and hold them. > UW Ree ‘Gray hosts,” Indeed were those a-coming—@ ¥ Dis Jozen troopers of the second, riding like mad to thé )u nae le reroue, for at the bend they had seen the flash ofa” Murphy's shots, had lear nid one to th 4 from his frenzied words! \0 7 of the hold-up, and while one squad had darted aweyieg oe In chase of two dim form Noping westward for the others, thelr biz captain in the lead, went temra® lz up the Od in setrch of “the mang.” é Like a tornade they came, yet, ao far from seek safety in Instant Misht, the captors Af the Coney ard looked on in calm and eritical Interest. a And when, in a cloud of dust, a sputter of grav@® | ener mix up of snorting ste and excited? = nl gaining on {f Downs had a Mi tn a minute th rays triumphantly surrounded the silent? then commanding votees rose upon the night the voice of the a Jun jarring, placidly addressing him of the ; the driyer, leaping | cavairy. wa 3 oft-whvelet ‘What on earth's your Kurry, Teddy? 1a a vt the luckless | Por an instant silence and amaze, Then a slap omye | " vey, | tle thigh, another peal of uproarious laughter that.” a warning yoler, “Quit ken up by the troop and, echoing through thet ills, smothered the sound of shots over to the” = 3 “Of course I's a nat last Ca eddy” could make himeel hia words were again nearly lost In the conse |) ns of his own laughter. Ri! this dash, dash stiok-In-the-mud What you coming Jimmy Downs looked up in astonishment from os 7 ; pallid face piilowed on hts shoulder, as the moon-age 0 & truck at him with }iight fell on the tall, erest figure of the leader. on din thundering tones jst niehtened up from ¢ vation of his wounded=® and unhiteh (At horse, and “Pike Mullins, the driver, essayed to Q@ a liteness and concern | craw) in confusion under one of his own mutes, and i” ark Interior and most | Kate herself, despite pallor and faintness, lifted her 4 head and gazed In gudtien rellef, rejoicing and merrle > Injured or frightened. | m, aa the Jovial captain was heard to guffw: alight a moment | pill Cody! Py all that's marvelous!’ . pitangled. White, you} The facts that “BR” Troop found the wires cut and horse will etand; | caught two tough characters after a tougher chase, ared In his 1 role of Catef of Scouts were needed Mm Downs from the merciless chaffing 9) campal oe As it was, It cost the blg-hearted fellow—and he | pald It glatly—many a case of champagne to drown. I the story of his “Honeymoon Hold-up.”’ in elther of the preceding years, Wii’ | months of 1902 with the corresponding South America we sold less than we did) periods of 1900 and 1901, it will be found | ported so far this year to that country |4n 1001, but more than we did in 190), and| that we Increased our imports from | more than we did In the first ten months with Asta we sold more than We did in| Austria-Hungary, Belgium, France, | of 1900. 1901 and less than we did In 1900, , Italy, the Netherlands and Por-| It 1s plain, therefore, that we have Turning from great divisions to coun-|tugal. Our exports declined to the|been bnying more liberally in Burope tries, and contrasting the first ten| United Kingdom in comparison with|in 1902 than we did in either of the pre. vious fiscal years, while we have no been selling Europe quite so much at we did in 1900 and 1901. Burope ie by «ll odds our best cus- tomer, and practically three-quarters of our imports come from there, and almost the same proportion of our exports go there. In fact, our whole trade with South America, as far as exports are concerned, did not equal our exports to any one of the six Duropean countrie: the United Kingdom, Germany, Franc Belgium, Denmark and the Netherlands, while In imports we purchased more 0 South America than of any European country, with the excaption of the United Kingdom, and more than we ob- tained from Belgium, France and the Netherlands combined. From Brazil alone we imported more ‘than we did from any other country in the world, with the exception of the United Kingdom, Germany and France, while we exported $),000,00 worth more of merchandise to Spain than we did to B: 1. the figures of 1901, though we have ex- GRAY ETAMINE AFTERNOON GOWN. ‘These figures show that, although our to expand In the future, we must expect to @jso see @ marked incre: in ‘the Purchases which we make in rope, 4 f, IN A OIFFERENT SPOT, “You were e@ soluier in Cuba ‘n 1895, Were you?” said the passenger in the @kull cap. “Yes,” replied the passenger with the loud necktie “I was wounded In the charge at Caney WHill,”’ business?’ 'Yes."" f “And opposed to a treaty of reci- procity and falr trade with Cuba, of course ?'' “You bet I am!” “That's the way I figure it." "Yet you were willing to shed your blood to free Cuba?” “By gad, wir, that ent proposition!” TRHALATION, Whereupon he proceeded to argue] tor $10 KOCH-O-LENE cates against Ouban reciprocity at great] sch Troubles, FREW examin length and with much bitterness. undaye, 11:8 Cull oF write to the only place with a: —— from Prot. Koch to use his LUN PROF. KooM OF an entirely differ- | pounds « wevk, Mra, Besely, of 444 For Women Readers of The ———— Evening Worid. rion and odd shapes of laces, The slip has ywo five-inch ruffles at the 1 on top of the other, and cach hound with velveteen binding, tucks im bottom, one pla i ‘The yest 1s of accordion plaited batiste ornamented with medallions of lace, r Tne stock aud collar are all in one, drawn over a gored Jining of taffeta orna- . WANTING 2 mented with medallions of lace, with the silk cut out underneath, the edges acal- loped and worked with slik embroidery, ‘The belt 1s of gray loulsine silk. ‘There are many leaguea In Paris. The| Spiders are met with in the forests of “Ligue de Balse-Main” has juet been ine | Java Whose webs are #o strong that it 72 ELTON ST stituted to bring back the graceful eus- Weare ibid hays Beatson, The quantity of material required to tom of kissing a lady's hands, Of late, sp! Ing four mounds, Which hag| make thia blouse waist of the medium P , ang: | r : inches wide, 4 yards 87 years Anglomania introduced the Eng-| (ak residen. size ip 4 yards 2 K A Tainarnanta Mah pump-handie shake the hand. » seagalea pel mith o large wide, 31-4 yards 32 inches wide} SF Aristocratic society found this too muc | 44 balloon four inehes long and a 44 Inches wide, with 6-8 yard CASINO Bre Att Be. “pans facon” and now desires to retunn | two tiches wh which she fastens lo a tp, tiie usin witich ‘prevailed In the | 80 Ly n single’ thread, then marches en] ‘Phe pattern 0 larie Argolnette. tC remaing & vard with her ha! omen little on be cin of the falon ouge' will prove | culate thread, (and ‘away goce 5s | bust) wh! be nent for 10 conte, cigteriome even the prevading abglomer alr to wome dis point en AHome Completely Furnished, $115, — fonier, special val $4.29 [CASH OR CREDIT] eo | When you conclude to buy Furniture and Carp:ts allow us to quote + Plain or Cork Tip zi ry 99 forelgn trade is not running with th sweep that it did last year, It hold, above the average of 1000, But, if tt In “and now you're in the beet-sugar| PROF. KOCH'S LYMPH INHALATION AND TEDERCULINE: Asthma, Bronchitis, Consumption, Last Februaty 1 had a In right tung, 9pit uo terrible” stuff, It might hit you In the pocket a lt- fi hemorrhage and de, méght it?’ A 7 weak and For Children. Pain and deform vith whieh ordi DAILY FASHION HINT. | px. kocirs SANITAKIUM, Incorporated | eye, 60 119 WENT 22D ST, next to Ehrich's Store ciontitienlly per PASTOR'S, “ini” houghtfully planned, preei ‘ vse, [TERRACE GARDEN S24 asly along the ar | Tu.MIGHT, A ERICAN ROO? GA DEN, This isuntrn ‘This charming afternoon gown of gray etamine haw ekirt built with pin-head ! : dt 5 TULL DIRECTIONS ON PACKAGE FITH § er ae a Atlantic City RSTAR SS WGA) Tape + $2,00108875 shoes also for Adulix, JAMES SS. COWARD, The Goods Included Ars Good Value at $149. List on Applic Metal Couch Bed, with Mat- | es Oak Chit. '¢5S in two parts, specilat $11.75 prices; we undersell all downtown stores, 3 fe 6th ant Oth Ave, El, RR. Station Be, 104th St. Open Saturdays Until 10 P.M. iY Amusements, Excursions Beye Entertaining Beyond Compariion, ae 5 Attractions trom all parta of the world. Incase be tug noveltion. “A by g'e BAND "ot wild tdere ea 1Q ANCIENT ROME from the Plalae Naa A of Mexico? Grand ‘Sa G concerts, ‘magnit-. ay AD BRANK .. « nemnnoe > ie ra, DANIELS apes, In MISS SIMPLICITY. era Saturday Matinco at 4, xtra Matinee, July 4 x e nee. Delighttal sall ‘it steamers. Giea’ PROCTOS’S Bix Comedy and Vaudeviite. bake, | Dignere, tS. fies, he, 3 or @nese sl, | be “Klein Deutuchland."” ‘The Dalry, 2 4 IDEAL SUMMER VAUDEVILLE, 7 M Re LEAVES Fishing. q plendld textures CONTINUOUS, | cy u twit Mg Stock & Vaude> | ta 3 oh RAS SAG Ro! Eee Ais MOO - reat Ate. Continuous. Bridge Dock, Fulton Fe o W5IH §] \UThe New Boy. avoiite Stock, 0. 1.2) A. Me 13.80, 150, 2.60 0 P = 4 ZOVH 81, ait, souvenir Stace. cor the Ladies. a3 BBW, ABA My ae d way 40th. Ey'ge 6.16, Mata Wed. Bat, |. Lenve Glen islaad 11.00 A. 6. tor $98 St, eagif ; HC Shad aes aude 8t 31200 M100 P.M. tor Conte i Herald CHAPERONS. | tor $i Lanalegs Diddle to! : Bargain M amid He OG | Tee OCU RE TO-NIGHT Oe ON rep tlle | duateslon t0/ all ea | “ Traine leave N.Y. foot H 84th at., week dai ey | 6.00, 64. 7-40, 9.20, 11.08 A. ake "1240 dae Po M. Race Daye C. 1, J. Cludd and halt : fr 4W, 60. 6.40, C00, G40, te : 7 4%, 1 ye iy ‘Sundays, ‘ ii 418 , : sta. ve.8.18 . hour $10 ana into Ba, tt Me ; ‘ 4 a New York about 2 minutes % ON PARE 40. CBNTS, 3 Whitehall at, via 39h st, @owth oomecting with L. 1, RR.’ Tralnt aniy, 2.00. $00," 820, 11.00 W640 FM Aa anys S- Koo AM ARADI:E ROOF ria qui days, 12,20, 12.40, GARDENS, te Theacres wh 4 D() tmuernactonal Vande SCENTS POPULAR Plows: batain ; ait, POPULAR Ol ‘ 5 om the tractioas, any company in ey "Week bagia ‘Stesman daily, yf. 2 f sions Sunduye), by Peace [roi SAID PASHA. New York: and alae at 9A M and West 129th ot. at O15 AM | Summer Resorts. spat BHOW IN TOW Hours VIA 4 274 Greenwich St, » For New Cn er re Brooklyn Aniusements. BRIGHTON BEACA ‘\"\)\" |i%s by WIRE SCREENS Sf ttticn thos . ’ UCKS* aT) -# \ MADE TO RESTORE KISSING. LAMP OIL FOR SPIDERS, he ‘| EAPEST ® BEST i RARE TAR ANIOKE RHOCIKER WILD ‘New Jersey Central a One huodred years ago the pope "A FULL F FRIPNDS.” ‘The advertiser who red | circulation enjoyed by The World ia | ognizes the value of Sundry World| excess over that of any other paper oi AF 0 qk pil wiante never lacks © full Were Would poguiste the city Ct. iah@Rla, ROSE Theatre voatiiated and cooled t WORLD IN WAX. (No, 410), atses 39 to 40 A CHINESE HONEYM Tout Py) Lysate Bat | DEN os el aaa, ce Ss |i aha”, “DOUL VARA | is a “= | lation of New York City wna 60,483, * NEVER LACKS | To-day the pald daily New York City 1F

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