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; was directed. ONCE UPON A TIME. =< Ob, yes, he’s a decent young fellow; I've nothing against him, my dear: And it’s likely he thinks he is courting, And it’s wholesome, a bit of a fear. But when I think back to my girlhood, And your grandfather, he was the boy! If these days were those days, my darling, By this I'd be wishing you joy. He courted at fair and at frolic; He toasted me more than he ought, And I don’t like to think, to this day, dear, How he looked the day after he fought. "Twas all a mistake that he fought for; The other boy wasn't to blame; "Twas only a fancy of Talbot's That Mike laughed in speaking my name. And the ways Talbot asked me to have him! He'd not even pass me the tea, But he'd look in my eyes and then whisper “If I was that teacup, machree!” I I gave him my hand just in friendship, He'd sigh to his boots or as deep, And say in his beautiful accents, “Ah, when can I have it to keep?” It_seemed that I couldn't well help it; I just plagued him out of his life, Though still to myself I kept saying That I should some day be his wife. And then came the day of the jaunt, dear; "Twas to an old ruin we went; And he wandered me off with himself, like, And I, for the once, was content. ue flower rack of the wall, at till he'd pick it, ed to fall. iy how I did it; slipped to his death, at the last, nt his two feet in my hands, dear, for his life safe and fast. I fancied a little That grew in t nd he climbed 1 s he hung upside down there, about for his life. Salis up: “You'vemy fatein your hands, dear, Let go if you'll not be my _ wif Could I murder him? that I couldn’t! gave him no answ at all; T only held fast till he'd managed To catch his two ds on the wall. ing and crying, ncy the rest ire so different. y the best. pot, ut th A) aks her own 4: nother like y or the alc hi And your bo} mannered; I hope you'll be degrift. A CALIFORNIA MAN SAYS IT. That Queen Victoria’s Horses Wear False Tails, and He Saw ‘Em. “The m {in my tr tas just San F t curious thing I ever saw > said S. C. Lillis, who from Europe, to a <aminer man, “was ¥ Qngland right after a friend and I had attended a session of Parliament. We wanted to see the stables of Queen Victoria. We had been told that there were some splen- and being interested we thought we would “4 we climbed aboard a hansom and started. The cabman dréve us up to a gate, where there was 2 gorgeous fellow with a tall bea in hat on. We had to give him a shilling, and we didn’t go more than twelve feet before he handed us over to an- other fellow in need of a shilling, and so on. I think it was repeated about eight times, and I parted with eight shillings before we got to the first stable. “There were six yellow horses in that, and brown horses in the stable adjoining. Six of these horses make up a team for the Queen. The fellow that was showing us the horses said these were very fine indeed, and altogether just the thing for Her took a look at them and couldn't see a thing about them to recommend ‘them. To me they looked just like so many common plugs, and about six- teen hands high, especially the brown ones, to which our particular attention I said I thought they would be gentle, and that I didn’t think the Queen need be afraid of their running away. “Suddenly they flared around, and I saw three of them were rat tails. Then I was more astonished than ever. , I said, ‘the Queen satisfied to e those onery old rat-tail horses? “Oh, we fix that all right,’ said the attendant, and with that he whipped down As il—nice, black and flow- ing as you ple and buckled it on. ; It was done so well that you wouldn't know it was a false tail, Then he i brought the other tails and showed ;them to us. That, sir, was the strang- est thing I saw in Europe, and aston- ished me the most. I never knew th +had false tails for horses till I ¢them on the rat-tail horses belonging ‘to the Queen.” i AEE See ees § What Animals Have Done. ? The protest of Balaam’s ass prevent- the commi m of a great crime ainst he . and the cackling of 3 4d Rome. When the armies s Il. and William were con- *fronting one another the noise made by a wren picking up some crumbs rfrom the top ¢ 2 drum awoke the fsleeping drummer and thus saved the army of William. Scott tells us that the most splendid event in the history of Scotland—viz., a of Eng- jand resulted the crowing of a cock. The St. Bernard dog, named Barry, i rs of service on the of forty master nine years, unparalleled devotion has been y a monument erected s Burdett-Coutts. A young man ence rowed out into the middle of a river with a dog and then threw him overboard, The faithful animal clung to the boat, but was driven off by his cruel master, until at length, during his efforts, he lost his own balance and fell into the stream. Did the dog desert him? No; he seized him by his clothes a him above water antil su One of these cruel enthu s known as dissectors of living animal: in need of a subject, actua n dog, ich had been for years in his own family, confined him to 2 table, and ripped him up as though it had been a senseless object. The suf- fering creature groaned and howled in his agony, and just before dying raised his head and licked the hand of his savage tormentor. Another Secret Discovered. It is reported that the butter secret has been discovered. Dr. Vaughn is the man who credited with having discoveries sented to which, bei S iy. by churning, produces butter. — Dr. but from Browning not a line can she ave got at is the alkaloid Vaughn, it seems, takes a can of fresh milk, drops in some alkaloid, 2nd_pres- ently dips out the fully developed but- ter without further ad: margarine, or any illegal-unless-tabeled Weekly. = Vb d it is regarded in scientific ' : perhaps the greatest of his till a fellow fast confesses that there's The thing that he is repre- not another maiden half so swect. Sc: ee SSS SSSA } NEW YORK CROWDS. They Tell of the City’s Immense Size— New Yorkers Fond of Pleasure. However you measure New York it seems a big town. Perhaps its big ness is brought home to the stranger by nothing more strongly than by its crowds. Nearly every other consid- erable American city has some con- gested business centre where crowds are continuous during business how Three or four other American cities have besides some fashionable parade where shoppers and idlers make gay ualf a dozen crowded blocks. No other eity on this side of the Atlantic has a dozen or more regions, each of which might be taken for the business centre ,of the place. Long before New York nad 1,000,000 inhabitants it was a city ' distinguished for its crowds. With the |enormous growth of the city the {crowds have become larger and the | number of crowded thoroughfares has {nereased. But if New York seems large whet | measured by its crowds of busy men }and women, it seems perhaps jiarger still when measured by its | ,idlers. This is not because the unem- ployed els s, rich and poor, are so large in New York, though they are at r than in any other American ; but rather because of the city’s ce: ss and sleeplessly active busi- uess life. ry day is a holiday to many thousands of New Yorkers, be- eause many thousnads work at night and t: their sleep and recreation by day. Furthermore, although New York is the hardest worked of all communi- ties, it so the most pleasure loving of American cities. In no other city of America does the skilled man of his craft earn so much as in New York; in no other American city does the same man indulge so freely him- self and his family in recreation. The two throngs work together to produce crowds at all hours of the day and night and in all parts of the city. The New Yorker, whatever his business, is a social being. If he have a home he likes to open it to his friends. If he tave no home he likes to seek amuse ent elsewhere, still in company with is friends. New York maintains ten times as clubs as any other American city, bee New Yorkers are more gregarious and_ hospitable than men in other cities. The stranger or or prince, resident of Philadelph Baltimore or almost any other Ame can city, on returning to any of th ; towns, finds men sunk in a dull routi and toe bu to stop and enjoy life. New York is the only American ci where crowds throng the pa every lay in the year and almost every how in the day. Baltimore’s beautifui Druid Hill Park is almost deserted at ordinary times. Even the noble Fair- mount is sparsely peopled save on Sund: and other holidays. New Yor ctivity defies even the lethar- gic influence of the dog days, aad thousands of Southerners find the city charming at the s on when the fash- ionable world has fled. Summer, deed, is the season when New Ye presents itself in the most wonderful aspect. No other American city has so many near-by resorts to be reached in a few minutes at cheap rates. No other city needs so many or could maintain half so many. There is noth- ing dearer to New York than a subur- ban summer resort; in almost any other American city such places are deserted two-thirds of the time, and never interesting with the varied hu- man life that characterizes the New York resorts. Nothing would so con- vince a Philadelphian or a Baltimorean or a Chicagoan of New York’s great size as to be able on any night of the week by some species of magic to look down upon all the urban and suburban pleasure resorts at once. He would see thousands upon thousands at Coney Island and other resorts that line the harbor; other thousands across the Hudson on the Jersey bluffs, stil! others at the upper extremity of the island; and yet others up the Souna. to say nothing of enormous numbers upon the streets, in cafes, on the roof gardens, at the theatres and in the parks and public squares—a number ceeding the population of many big s—amusing themselves in their leisure hour One thing that interests rural Ameri- cans in New York is the same thing that made Walt Whitman celebrate “Manhatta” as his first love, its fluent. unnumbered crowds. Chicago has - ler buildings, Philadelphia has several more charming residence streets th New York, but when a country wishes to see his fellow Americans the aggregate he has to come to this city. It is the bewildering crowd that makes Coney Island a fairyland to the rural itor on a summer night. It is the varied crowds that make a thou- sand restaurants and two hundred and fifty club dining-rooms places of inter- est to the rural visitor. The club the tell another interestin: of New York life. Scarce ) them dares have its earliest breakf: hour in summer later than 7 o’cloc! or in winter later than 8. The most fashionable clubs must consid necessities of bus, members who br fast up to 3 o’cloc in the afternoon; but the great mass of men who breakfast at clubs are off to business shortly after 9 o'clock. is a big town, in iably but fond of wholesome pleasure.—New York Sun. men. TI The Old-Fashioned Girl. She can peel and boil potatoes, make a salad of tomatoes, but she doesn’t know a Latin noun from Greek. And so well she cooks a chicken that your appetite would quicken, but she cannot tell what’s modern from an- tique. e knows how to set a table and make order out of babel, but she doesn’t know Euripides from Kant. Once at,making pie I caught her— Jove! an expert must have taught her —but she doesn’t know true eloquence from rant. She has a firm conviction one oughi | only to read fiction, and she doesn’t care for science, not a bit. And the way she makes her bonnets sure is worth a thousand sonnets, bat | She doesn’t yearn for “culture” bot a » whit. She can make her wraps and dresses She’s immersed in home completely. created in milk or cream Where she keeps all things se neatly. repeat. Well, in fact, she’s just 2 woman gentle. lovable and human, and her >. Itis not oleo faults she is quite willing to admit. “Lwere foolish to have tarried, so we substitute, but real butter—Harper’e went off and got married, and I tel you Tam inighty glad of it. ca ! THEY REFUSE TO MOW. | Reaper and Barvester Men Reject the Field Trial Plan. Chicago, July 18. — There is war among the reaper and harvester exhib- itors at the World’s Fair, and it ap- pears likely to result in a condition as serious as that which arose from the ° Paderewski piano trouble. The trouble arose over the announcement that the harvesting exhibitors must be prepared for a field trial yesterday, on the farm of M. W. Dunham, at Wayne, Ill. Only the McCormick works here gave no- tice of acceptance. The following com- panies refused to appear: Walter A. Wood Mowing and Reaping Machine Company, Hoosick Falls, N. Y.; Walter ‘A. Wood Harvesting Company, St. Paul, Minn.; Ma y-Harris Co., To- ronto, Ont.; J. F. Skibberling & Co., Akron, O.; Johnston Harvester Com- pany, Batavia, N. Y.; D. S. Morgan & Co., Brockport, N. Y.; D. M. Osborne Co.,, Auburn, N. Y.; Minneapolis erly Harvester Company, Minne- «polis, Minn.; Sandwich Manufactur- ig Company, Sandwich, Ill.; Adriance Platt & Co., Poughkeepsie, N. Y.; Ault- vaan, Miller & Co., Akron, O.; Milwau- “ee Harvester Company, Milwaukee, Vis.; Warder Bushnell & Glessner Co. springfield, O.; Plano Manufacturing ‘ompany, Chicago; William Deering & ‘o., Chicago; Emerson, Talcott & Co., Rockford, TH. It is the old story of ‘usiness jealousy and a belief among che majority of exhibitors that the Mc- | ‘ormick works would have an ad- antage owing to their manufactory xing located here, where they have ‘very convenience, while the other ompanies had not contemplated a field rial. The notices for the trial were ot sent out until July 8. THE FAIR PAYING ITS DEBTS. xposition Finances in a Much Improved Condition, Chicago, July 17.—The oppressively yarm weather is beginning to tell on he attendance at the World’s Fair. ‘Walking is practically impossible in he intense heat, and the sedan and vheel chairs seem luxuries beyond the each of the multitude. It is believed vy the Fair authorities that the deter- iination to close the gates on Sunday 1 the future will have the effect of iereasing the average daily attend- nee during the week. Some are san- ~uine enough to hope that Sunday clos- ug will actually increase the aggregate weekly attendance. The gate and ther receipts yesterday for the bene- t of the families of the firemen who vcrished in the recent fire were about 0,090, and in all $100,000 has been ized for the purpose. Auditor Ack- man has presented the financial statement of the Exposition to the Board of Directors. According to the statement the total gate ‘eipts up to June 30 were $2,121,660.76, including 282,449.51 received prior to May 1. The total expenditures to June 30 y $20,610,160.40, Of this amount $16,- 156,662.93 is charged to construction. His estimates, however, place the oper- ating expenses for May at $609,S tnd receipts at $719,402.71. I ng June the estimated receipts were $1,- 30,820.21 and expenses $642,921.27, leaving a balance for the two montlis of $1,127,417.78. The receipts since July 1 have been over $1,000,000. ADVOCATING REBELLION. Gen. Hamley Thinks Ulster Men Entitled to Resist Home Rule. London, July 18—Great interest ex- ists here in the political situation. The Tories are desperate and are talking of bloodshed. Gen. Hamley, an offi- eer high in the army, in a published letter, says that British soldiers would be justified in refusing to put down re- bellion in Ulster. Hamley puts the ease in forcible and unmistakable words: “British troops would be justified morally and legally in refusing to sup- oress & revolt in Ulster if the insur- sents should be fighting that they iight remain citizens of the United ingdom.” No act of Parliament, he declares, can force people of the United King- dom to transfer their allegiance. Peo- ple would cry for vengeance the mo- mént they should see loyal Ulstermen shot down by troops. ~Hamley is an intimate friend of Gen. Lord Wolseley, who has heretofore expressed much the same Opinion. Printer and Gateman, New York, July 17.—There is no lit- tle feeling in this city on account of the ruffianism of elevated railroad guardsmen. Ou Saturday George B. Childs, who claims to be a nephew of George W. Childs, of the Philadelphia Ledger, was savagely assaulted by a guard whom he attempted to pass at the wrong exit, being knocked down and kicked in the face. The same night William McManus, a young printer, was assaulted by Thomas Mul- ligan, a 200-pound guard at the City Hall station, because he pulled open a gate when the guard was negligent. McManus, who is a little fellow, gave the guard a knock out and was arrest- ed for it, but will probably get free. Slave Traders Defeated. Lo.don, July 11.—A Brussels corre- spondent says the latest advices from the Congo Free State give an account of another victory over slave traders. After the battle of Stanley Falls, in which the state troops won a decisive victory, the slave traders forces fled to Isangi, an Arab fortress, at the mouth of the Lomain River. Tippoo Tib’s son, Sefu, and his nephew, Rachid, were in command when the attack on the fortress was made by Commander Chaplin and Capt. For- back. The Arabs fled and the s troops took possession of the fortress. The Sioux Chief Dead. Omaha, July 17.—Information from Pine Ridge Agency says that Young- Man-A fraid-of-His-Horse the head chief of the Sioux Nation, dropped dead at Newcastle, om., yesterday. By his death the chieftainship falls to Lit- tle Wound. Young-Man-Afraid-of-His Horses was a friend of the Govern- ment, as was proven by his actions in the outbreak at this agency in 1890-01. Another Big Cruiser. Philadelphia, July 18.—The protected cruiser Minneapolis, a sister ship of the Columbia, will be launched on Au- gust 12 next and the event will agaiu make Cramps’s shipyard on the Dela- ware a point of attraction for many visitors of national distinction. The contract speed of the new cruiser is to be 21 knots an hour, but her build- | ers expect to make 22 or 22% knots. ' on which the staff covering was 1: WORLD'S FAIR IN PERIL. 'aho «. H. Clarke, A DISASTROUS FIRE AT THE WHITE CITY. An Awful Death Trap—Forty Firemen Lose Their Lives—The Great White City Threatened With Destruction—A REAL ESTATE AND LOANS. 606 F Street, N. W., WasHtneTon, D. C Dozen Buildings on Fire. | Chic hour y World’s Fair was threatened with de- struction by fire. The fire started in the cold storage warehouse on th Fair grounds, and before it ceas burning forty firemen had lost their lives and a dozen buildings had been ignited. was a structure 250 feet long by 150 feet wide, and was constructed entire- ly of wood covered over with staff, like all the Fair buildings. The main body of the building was five stories high. In the centre of this rose the smokestack in the shape of a cupola to the top of which was almost 2 feet. The base of this cupola about thirty feet square. About ei feet from the base of this cupola there | 609 F st., n. w. was a balcony, from which another square tower rose, culminating in the mouth of the smokestack, where the fire was discovered. The interior of this tower and around the smokestack were wooden beams and frame wo It is supposed that the frame work around the mouth of the huge chim- hey caught from a defect in the flue, At first it appeared to be an insigniti- cant affair. But knowing the inflam- mable nature of the structure, Fire Marshal Murphy, who had charge of the fire department on the grounds, sent in a call for all the companies te turn out, With about forty of his men, Capt. Fitzpatrick climbed the stationary lad- ders inside the tower to the balcony, and from there ropes were lowered to haul up the hose. Only one hose, that of a chemical engine, had been hauled up when a gust of wind caused the flames fo break out in an alarming Manner about ten feet from the top of the cupola. Meaptime the fire had eaten its way dowp through the net- work of timbers inside thé structure, and, unconscious of their danger, the firemen were standing, as it were, on the shell of a burning volcano. one of the tens of thousands of inter- ested spectators who had gathered from all parts of the grounds had any intimation of the perilous position in which the firemen were then standing. The fire had been burning scarcely twepty minutes, and the firémen were puiling and hauling at the ropes, when suddenly the flames burst out around the base of the cupola in a perfect heil, imprisoning the firemen in the baleony in what proved to an awful Geath trap. A large crowd had gath- ered, and for a few awful moments watched the efforts of the med fire- men to save themselves. eral tried to save themselves by sg! gz down Topes, byt they were fed in the raging ftames. John Davis eseaped, down the teertbly burned, by slidi mical hose ne. everal men famped from the lcony to the roof, but were killed by the fall. Capt. Fitzpatriék slid down a rope and reached a ladder, whence he was res- cued by Marshal Murphy, but both meh were terribly burned, and Capt. Fitzpatrick died in the hospital. A lrage quantity of linseed ofl was stored in the building, and when it be came ignited made so fierce a flame that the bodies of most of the devoted firemen were utterly consumed. A number of visitors who were in the building when the fire broke out were injured in the rush made to es- cape. The building was situated west of the Administration Building and south of the Annex to the Transportation Building. Had the wind been blowing strongly from the south the main build- ings, which were all grouped near at hand, would have ignited and noth- ing could have saved the great World's Fair. The fire has made a great sen- sation, and extreme measures will be taken to guard against further peril of the kind. Chicago, July 13.—The list of victims of the World's Fair fire so far shows a death total of fifteen. A number of bodies are yet known to be in the ruins. Up to date over $13,000 has been subscribed to the relief fund. The Hercules Cold Storage Company, which owned the burned building, has made an assignment. It is probable the Grand Jury will hold the company responsible for the disaster. THE FIRST GUNS FIRED. The French Wasrhips Exchange Shots with the Siam Forts. London, July 16.—News has been re- ceived here from Bangkok that the French gunboats Comete and Incon- stante slipped across the bar of the river below Bangkok on the evening of July 14 and exchanged shots with the Paknam forts. The two men-of-war then proceeded to Bangkok and now are anchored with the gunboat Lutin opposite the British Legation. One sailor was killed and two were wound- ed in the exchange of shots at Pak- ham. The Siamese Government re- fused permission to permit the French gunboats to enter the Meiham River, twenty miles from the mouth of which Bangkok is situated. The French commander, it is stated, held this to be a declaration of war, and proceeded to force a passage, as above stated. The French Minister at Bangkok, after learning the facts, disavowed the action of the French naval command- ers and concluded an armistice with the Siamese Government. The situation is very strained. The Siamese warships are ready for action and Bangkok is filled with troops. The British fleet is prepared to take action to protect British residents in case of the bombardment of Bangkek. There is no American war vessel in Asiatie waters capable of ascending the river to Bangkok. The Concord 46 now on her way to China. Paris, July 17.—A report from Rear Admiral Humann, who was in come mand of the French fleet in Siamese waters, reports that the forts first fired on the gunboats. He aiso says tt no attack is contemplated on ngkok, as the Siamese Government bas agreed to make no further dis» crimination against the French guns ts. Ocala, Fla., July 13.—Robert Lar! a negro, was,lynched last evening the citizens of Citra and vicinity assaulting Miss Fannie Ale aged 18, last Monday. Many me took part in the lynching. od go, July 11.—For a brief hat | terday afternoon the great | } monthly. Subscribe to and advertise 1p the Brg, The cold storage warehouse | THE INDUSTRIAL BUILD- ING AND SAVING CO. Loans money to buy or build homes. Shares $1 each, payable Dividends declared ev- ery January. Secretary’s office: Open9 a. m. to 5 p.m. Monthly meetings at Lin- coln Memorial Church, cor 11th and R sts., n. w., first Monday night in every month. Hewry E. Baker, gSecretary. Advertise in the Bex. Rooms with Board: In _ first cass house and in a popular partt of the city, Cars pass the doo 922—11 stn- CHEAP JOB PRINTING | a, At the “BEE” Office, omece~aore T0971 Streets NW." near 11th ae jwhere you can get =DODGERS. TICKETS §-csc* PROGRAMMES, CIRCULARS. BUSINESS CARDS, VISITING CARDS, RECEPTION CARDS, WEDDING INVIATIONS, BILL-~HHADS, LETTEEADS{ j STATEMENTS, CONSTITUTIONS, BY. DRAFT BOOKS, CHECK BOOKS, & LOWEST CASH PRICES. AT THE ? Liberal Discount to Ciurcues Beuevolent Societies, Social_Clabs, Military Organizations and Labor and Trade Unions. ALL WORK READY WHEN PROMISED. 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Double track 22 trains stop daily. Fare to and rom Washington, only Six ents by commutation ticket, The inno. tion of the Baltimore and mac and Pope Creek R; Telegraph and Expres: The best depot on the B. and Pot +c ralroad. churchesan. hools already built, The most healthful spot in ihe State of Maryiard. Title to props erty perfect. No Taxes, and pa ehasers of lots will receiy offered r- deeds, with certificate of “an “Free ” PRIGE OF LOTS ONLY S109, TERMS OF L'URCHASE: Five doi. lara cash and two dollars per month, with ne interes, Hal cash, 10 per cent discount; 20 per cent discount. Money will be advance ties desiring to build. If abusband purchaser digs before his purchase is completed, a deed in fee will be given to his widow, if the property ius been improved, or if not. the smount already paid will be returned her ‘The above presents an opportu. nity uever before offered the Uol- ored people of the city of Wash ington to secure a Valuable lot either as an investment or for s bome ou monthly payments, and at the same time, entitled them to a vote and a voice in the Goy- ernmeut of the country. Those who apply first, will have the tirst choice of lots, Aiready many have made their homes in the “City of Bowie, and lots purchased on the above terms should double in value with. in the next six months. For further information apply to W. Catvin Cuasz, Agent, 1109 I Si, a. & or CAMPBELL CAKRINGICN Owner, 505 D Si, a: w, Washington, D, ¢, 1 to par BHE LADIES FA SYEVER OUT Ox C If you desire to pur: win ask our agent at y prices. 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