The Washington Bee Newspaper, September 21, 1895, Page 2

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t | J. R. would like to be a sage on all questions. Lightning may strike some peo- ple in the school-board, but it is doubtful. The appointment of school trust- ees will be made when Col. Ross re- turns. The city postmaster, Mr. Willett, moves in a mysterious way. Democrats attend to business the moment they get a chance. The democrats are no fools. Republicans get no more credit for being sympathetic than if they would give measure for measure. Birds fly when they have occasion. A thief will steal when he gets an opportunity. We all should do something of importance in life. No man should be ungrateful to his fellow man. A good woman is a jewel when she is happy. Sometimes your friends work for glory. That day has passed now, and it is boodle. Boodle hunters are numerous in town. Some people think you can run a newspaper on wind. The pulpit should be reformed. W. Bishop Johnson is one of the most able divines in this country. THe knows what to say and when to say it. The promotion of Miss Emma Merritt is a worthy one. She is a smart lady teacher. In union there is strength. Why should men tell falsehoods when the truth will do? Be honest and just. Treachery will be found out, no matier what you do. THE WASHINGTON BEE. , Nae | 7 erat = : MTRRY MOMENTS. In a Company of Artists.—‘‘What is there between laghter and_ tears?” “The nose,” dryly observed Vivier.— Le Figaro. She—So you wouldn’t take me to be twenty. What would ycu take me for? He—For better or worse.—Philadel- phia Record. Tommy—Pop, what is a popular song? Tommy’s father—One that everybody gets sick and tired of hear- ing.—Philadelphia Record. “Hullo, Paton! Haven’t seen you for three days.” “No. Went over to Philadelphia day before yesterday and spent a week.”—Life. Billy, the Goat—That manuscript I just até has given me an awful pain. Nenny—Yes, dearest; that’s called writer’s cramp.—Harper’s Bazar. “How on earth did Smith become a colonel?” “Easy enough. Train s delayed in Georgia and he attend- ed a picnic.”—Atlanta Constitution. Mr. D.—If you get my coat done by Saturday I shall be forever indebted :o you.” Tailor—If that is the case, .t won't be done——New York Recor- der. Nell—If you really liked a young man, what would you do if some day he should kiss you suddenly, against your will? Belle—He couldn’t—Som- srville Journal. The Tourist—You seem to be proud of your family title. The New York millionaire abroad (proudly)—Of arse, I am, I paid for it in good hard dollars.—Chicago Record. Jingla—Here, you can ‘take back this dog you gave me. Dingle—What’s ihe matter with him? Jingle—He’s vaten his tax. I can’t afford to get iim a new license.—Life. Mrs. Bellefield—Mrs. Oakland hasa great secret. Mrs. Bloomfield—O, no! She can’t have! “Why not?” “If she had she would have told it to me.— Pittsburg Chronicle Telegraph. Nodd—Our nursegirl has just had a terrible fit of sickness. Todd—Yes? What was the matter? Nodd—By mistake she took some medicine she was going to give to the baby.— Judge. Trivvet—Miss Flopp claims ‘to have made 1,000 refusals of marriage. Dicer —That’s easily explained. When young Callow asked her to marry him she replied: “No, a thousand times, no!”’—Tid-Bits. Mrs. Hicks—How do you like this little theatre toque? I made it all myself. Hicks—It isn’t very big, is :t? Mrs, Hicks—No-o; I made It out of an old jet bracelet-—New York World. “I guess,” said the sharp-nosed girl, “that I will take the wind out of her sails.” “Why,’”’ asked the fluffy girl, “don’t you be up to date and say take: the wind out of her tires?’”—Cincin- nati Tribune. Hurrying Stranger (in Squeekawket) —Is there time to caich the train? Languid Native—Waal, stranger, ye-ve got time enough, I reckon, but Um dead sure ye hain't got the speed! Harper’s Bazar. “Here's the latest thing ia vyjaiz) said the Gealer, a warranted t proof case.” *“I believe,” said Mudge, “that one that could be soaked would be better suited to my needs.”—In- The Bee is the paper in which to} dianapolis Journal. advertise. Eighty thousand colored people in this city. Ask them did they see it in the Bee. It is true if you see it in the Bee. Dr. Williams is still at the same old stand. Send in your church notices to the Bee. Do you want a place? advertise in the Bee. Have you rooms or houses to rent? Send a notice to the Bee. If so, | Send in your notices if you want value received. Do you want first-class job work ? Call up and inspect our new type. The Bee has the largest bona fide circulation than any paper in the city published by Afro-Americans. Neither Lynch or Bruce favor a cutting down of Southern repre- sentation. Dr. Purvis is making a still hunt. | Bradshaw is in the soup. He wy'l see before hf gets through with hisqj¢stral committee. , Saar : Brad. must~stay at home this/ time. The f an easy victory. } The national committee will set- tle the question. Every man says he is coming to the convention. He has pledged himself to every andidate. ht will be a hot one, by Somebody will be disappointed. "t will not be the Bee. ‘here should be honesty in poli- tics Dn’t be fooled. Its in the Bee, did you see it? Ner push a man when he is go- ing den the hill. Yowhould not tell a falsehood when t; truth will answer. It is 1 tho Ree, read it. The conv&ton contest is still “Say, papa, if we were lying at the centre of the earth, wouldn’t we be all funny?” “What makes you think my son. ‘’Cause this jog hy s everything there loses its grav- ity. Brooklyn Life. He—“Don’t you think there is con- siderable danger in letting a woman who cares for you know that you love her? She—I think there is consider- ably more danger in letting her know that you don’t.—Harlem Life. “The first time I heard that played, Miss Ethel, do you know, I was com- pletely carried aw # “Indeed! W! how delightful! If you'll sit nearer the door, Mr. Bathe, I'll play it over again.”—Harpe: Bazar. A Bond of Sympathy—Mrs. Hicks— This paper tells about a hunting dog that has formed a strange aitachment for an old hen. How do you account for 2. Mr. Spori—Probably setters.—Truth. &. MISSING LINKS. 3 “°"FF The wealthy Japanese deem it un- jigniiied to ride a horse faster than a Walk, A century ago two stage-coaches bore all the travel between New York and Boston. The amazing statement is made that you can hear corn grow by means of che microphore. Twenty-four years ago, electr as a mechanical power was unknown Now $9,000,000 is in ted in various kinds of electrical machinery. * An English electrician prophesies t within a few years. electrical nee will have made such strides as to enable it to control the weather and modify the various climates. It is customary threughout Spain tor waiters at cafes to fill a glass h wine or liquor so that it overflows upon e saucer. This custom is one to w liberality, and is styled the ootbath.” In Siam, when a funeral is passing the women take down their hair and unfasien their heads, and the men fumble around in their pockets for a little piece of metal to hold between their teeth. Mendelssohn was not fond of fe ing. He said he could live a v on a sausage and a loaf of bread. His remantic opera of “Lorely” was to some extent inspired by this diet, for he ate little else while composing it. Fifty years ago a horse power cost | six or seven pounds of coal an hour. To-day a good compound engine will produce a horse power at one and one- half pounds of coal an hour. Wa: power costs nearly as much now as then. Birds which build in the open seem uniformly to have colored eggs, while those which possess concealed or cov- ered nests have white eggs; the color does not vary in any manner in the booming and\lve is no doubt that some one will Deft, same species in one climate or an- OTR titaet tte Liles WOMAN’S WAYS AND DOINGS. Beatrice Harraden begs neckties from her male friends and makes them into crazy quilts. It is said that Mrs. Hetty Green’s one and only ambition is to make her son the wealthiest man in the world. The Japanese despise women who become intoxicated. Consequently it is rarely that a woman of Japan is seen drunk. “What the new woman wants to learn,” says the Manayunk philoso- pher, “is to buy a larger shoe and a smaller hat.” It will behoove the ladies to make the most of their leap-year priv: S next year, for a leap year will not come again till 1904. A wealthy Parsee is erecting a hos- pital for women in India, at a cost of 50,000 rupees, the foundation stone of which has been laid by the Countess of Elgin. Lady Habberton, inventor of the divided skirt, has a new fad. She con- tends that female servants should wear knickerbockers, as such costume facilitates movements. Mrs. Alice Shaw, the whistler, who was once all the rage in London and Paris, is now puckering her lips for the entertainment of the habitues of a * Berlin music hall. Mrs. Nellie Grant-Sartoris adheres to the fashion of hair-dressing which prevailed when she was a young girl— the style which banged the hair across the forehead as men did in Florence in Raphael’s time. The mother of Aubrey Beardsley, the artist, is a gentle, old-fashioned Eng- lishwoman, who lives entirely for her son and his pretty young sister. Mrs. Beardsley regards him with reveren- tial admiration. Mrs. Clio Hinton Huneker, who is to receive $10,000 for her Fremont statue which she was commissioned to execute by the “Associated Pioneers” of California, is said to be only twenty-four years old. She is a pupil of St. Gaudens. Mrs. Muller, an English woman, speared a wild boar at a “pig stick” at Tangler the other day. She is an excellent horsewoman, but her achievement with an _ eighteen-foot spear has created great excitement and admiration in Morocco. Daniel Webster’s sister-in-law, the widow of his brother, Ezekiel Web- ster, is living at Concord, N. H., and is nearly ninety-four years of age. She was married August 2, 1825, and has been a widow over sixty-six years, her husband having died April 10, 1829, Mrs. Richard Watson Gilder is a prominent member of the New York association of women opposed to the extension of suffrage. She says that in three weeks it enlisted a member- ship of over 7,000, more than half of whom were working women. NEWSPAPER WAIFS. “Are you for silver or gold?” asked the statesman, “That depends,” re- plied the politician. ‘Which have you got?”—Chicago Evening Post. “Gray has had a good deal of ex- perience as a dramatist has he not?” “Yes, Indeed. Spoiled more Frenc plays than any other man in the busi- ness.’’—Brooklyn Life. Amiable Visitor- bab, s it?) Why, it’s the very image of its father. Cynical Uncle—Well, it needn’t mind that, if only it has good health.—Tit-Bits, Little Girl—Oh, mamma, come guick! Mamma—Mercy! What is the ma in the kitchen, and the poor cat is there all alone.”—Tit-Bits, Jones—“Curry is an awfully unfor- tunate fellow. Jackson—That so? Jones—Yes; he snores so loud that he always wakes the baby, then the baby cries so loud he wakes Curry, so they have to walk together.—Scribner’s. Jinks—Smithson strikes me as be- ing a sert of religious broker; but I'm blamed if I can tell whether he’s a dull or a bear. Filkins—Why not? Jinks—Because he’s long on counten- on works.—Harlem ance and short Life. Mr. Fogg—Oh, a fine elocution ly and every word is uttered h such distinctness! Mr. Fogg— H’'m! Reads distine does she? Well, all I’ve got to say is, re is no elocutionist.—Boston Trans- ript. Apropos of boasters, Dean Hole tells a story of an acquaintance of his at Oxford whe once wrote him a note be- ginning, “My dear Countess,” and then, scratching out “Countess,” sub- uted ‘Hole.’ Whereupon the dean, t to be outdone, began his reply, “My dear Queen,” and then drew his pen through “Queen” and substituted “Dick.”’—Household Words. “T licked him,” said the boy mourn- fully. “I licked him good. an’ now there are a couple of big fellows in the next street jest a-layin’ for me to lick me ’cause I licked him.” “My son,” said the father earnestly, see- ing an opportunity to impress a les- son in international politics upon the boy, “now you realize the position that Japan is in.”—Chicago Tribune. IT’S JUST LIKE A WOMAN. To try independence, succeed in it, but prefer tt not. To faint at mice and spank tigers with a broomstick. To keep nine commandments more easily than the tenth. To value a baby above the world; or a pug above a baby. To scold about little troubles and be brave about big ones. To toil life long for social position, or throw it away for love in an in- stant. To look at the most undeserving of men through the kindly spectacles of pity. To overestimate their own beauty far less than they under2stimate their own goodifess, z Tc retain despite many bitter x periences the trust of a good heart in human nature—New York Recogder. And this is the | r? Little Girl—There’s a mouse | PEOPLE OF NOTE. Cornelius Vanderbilt has paid $75,- 000 for a fireplace in his Newport resi- dence. that he has got money to burn. Carrol D. Wright says: “Hunger has caused more men to commit petty crimes than anything else.” Of 6,952 homicides in 1890, 5,100 had no trades, Sarah Grand marrted at sixteen and for some time lived with her husband in China. Since then she has travel- ed much in Japan with no escort but her maid. Darwin was a great smoker, and though he reads everything the pa- pers had to say against the cigarette, he was rarely seen without one in his fingers or his lips. John D. Rockefeller said not long ago that his great ambition in life is to accumulate a fortune of $500,000,. 000. He made a good start toward it in the late oil flurry. Queen Victoria’s daily menu is writ- ten in French, With the exception of the single item “roast beef,” which is Icyally and uncompromisingly Eng- lish, as befits a national dish. The Austrian Emperor created a sensation in Vienna the other evening by appearing at a theatre. It was the first time he had been seen in a playhouse since the tragic death of his son, Sir Bache Cunard, who married Miss Maude Burke, of New York, is the second baronet of his line. In mar- rying an American girl, Sir Bache has father. Deaf, dumb, blind and an imbecile, England, is not to be envied by any, healthy man who can earn a dollar a day and enjoy it. Edward S. Holden, director of the Lick Observatory, announces that he has raised nearly all the $5,000 need- ed to secure the famous Crossk flector, for transportation, ete. Wwikh this addition the Mount Hamilton as- tronomical equipment will be unequal- ed in the world, Maria Louise’s son by her chamber~ Tied after Napoleon’s death, has just died near Vienna. He was Prince ized form of Neuberg (Neipperg), and was seventy-four years old. He sum vived his brother, the King of Rome, sixty-three years. In London the other day Mr. E. Matthews, aged seventy-two, and Miss Mary Bright, aged eighty-six, were married. It was explained that the happy bridegroom had been courting the bride for upward of twenty-five years, but that their marriage was de- layed because they could not agree on the question what religious persuas- up in. ABOUT EATING =! In good eating there is happiness — Apicius, Thou ghouldst eat to live, not live | to eat—Cicera A rich man may eat when he will, but a poor man when he can.—Diog- enes. Eating to repletion is bad; but what we eat should be good of its kind.— Dr. S. S. Fitch. It is not the eating, but the inor- dinate desire thereof, that ought to be blamed.—St. Augustine. In eating it is a great fault for a | man to be ignorant of the measure of | his own stomach.—Seneca. | Animals feed, man eats; tell me what you eat, and how you eat, and I will tell you what you are; the man of intellect alone knows how to eat.— B. Savarin. Eat not for the pleasure thou may~ est find therein; eat to increase thy strength; eat to preserve the life which thou hast received from hea- ven.—Confuclus, Nc THE WOMAN OF THE PERIOD. When women don’t know what eti- quette would demand they kiss each other.—Atchison Globe. ‘A gold thimble is as good as any for a girl who cannot darn her own stockings——New Orleans Picayune We are patiently waiting for the new woman to tackle ‘the old ser- vant girl question.—Washircton Post. The ladies ha’ ganized @ good government club.-“The ladies pught to be experts in good governm es- pecially the married ladies. ti- more American. The coming woman may said all the intricate political problems, “but no man will ever be able to under- stand the philosophy of spring tfuse cleaning.—Cleveland Plain Deal GRAINS OF GOLD. —*~ —West Union Gazette. The true art of memory ‘is the art of attention.—Johnson. It is easier to believe in someone than in something, because the heart reasons more than the mind.—Bunece. Despondency is ingratitude; hope is God’s worship.—Henry Ward Beech- er. d Reason shows itself in all occur- rences of life; whereas the brute makes no djscovery of such talent, but irs what immediately regards his ovh preservation or the continuance of Bis spesies.—Addison, Ferg ea \ MODERN PROVERBS. Petia She new woman is an old problem. ‘ woman’s freedom does not con- sis, in bloomers, E is not the ballot, but the caucus, tha: rules this country. | £ man may not like the fashion of hir pie but he follows it, .@pretty girl with a new hat comes neac to answering affirmatively the question whether life is worth living. he art of making money does not ustklly coexist with the habit of) (| maling friends. Srm warnings were first given earl in the last century. There seems to be no doubt} followed the laudable example of his the Earl of Arundel, heir to the old-| est, richest and proudest peerage in! lain, Count Neipperg, whom she mar- | William of Montenuovo, an Italian-| ion the children should be brought | A good advertisement never sleeps. | | | CHEERS FOR GEN. LEE. | 4 Demonstration of Affection that Touched the Confeaerate Leader’? Heart. | . | “Gen. Robert E. Lee once teld me of an ovation he received that teuch- ed him more than any demonstration ever made in his honor,” said thé, venerable Judge White, of Virginia, to a Washington Post man. “Follow- ing closely on the surrender of the Southern army, the commander-in- chief of the Confederacy went to | pass a season at the home of his par- | ticular friend, bk. R.. Cocke, who last November ran as the Populist can- didate for Governor against Col. O’Ferrall. After a few weeks of the | most hospitable and elegant entertain- | ment, Gen. Lee was called to the presi- |deney of the Washington and Lee | University. Bidding his kind friends adieu he started for Lexington on ‘horseback and alone. He had gone some miles and was passing through | a rather dreary stretch of wooded} country, when he espied a plain old} countryman mounted on a sorry nag} coming towards him. As they passed | 2ach other both bowed, as is the fash- | ion when strangers meet in out of the, way places, but the old farmer in the home-spun suit stared hard at the sol-| dierly figure as though not quite cer-_ tain of recognition. He went his way | a little further, then turning his horse) | around, cantered back and soon came up with the General again. “I beg pardon, sir, but is Dot this Gen. Robert Lee?’ | | “Yes, I am Gen. Lee. Did I ever) meet you before, my friend?” | “Then the old Confederate grasped | | the chieftain’s hand, and with the} | tears streaming down his face, said:} ‘Gen. Lee, do you mind if I cheer} you? The General assured him that} he didn’t mind, and there, on that} | lonesome, pine-bordered highway, m} lonesome, pine bordered highway, with no one else in sight, the old rebel | veteran, with swinging hat, lifted up > his voice in three ringing rounds of |hurrahs for the man that the South-| land idolized. Then both went their) | Way without another word being | 3poken.”” Beyond Him. The man’s wife had asked him to go | upstairs and look in the pocket of her dress for a key she thought was there, and, being a man willing to accommo- | date, he had done so. It was a long time until he returned, and when he | did there was a peculiar look -in his | eyes, says the Detroit Free Press. “T can’t find any key in the dress of | | your pocket,” he said with a painful | effort. | “Why,” she retorted sharply, “I left | it there.” | “I say I can’t find any dress in the pocket of your key,” he said doggedly. His tone seemed to disturb her. “You didn’t half look for it,” she in- | insisted. “TI tell you I can’t find any pocket in | the key of your dress,” he replied ina dazed kind of way. | This time she looked at him. | “What's the matter with you?’ she asked nervously. “T say,” he said, speaking with much that I can’t find any dress in the key of your pocket.” She got up and went over to him. “Oh, William.” she groaned, “have you been drinking?” He looked at her leerily. | “TI tell you I can’t find any pocket in the dress of your key,” he whispered. She began to shake him. the matter? What's the ked in alarm. med to do him good, eyes as if he were regaining consciousne: |. “Wait a minute.” he said verw slow- ly, indeed. “Wait a minute. I can’t | find any dress in—no; I can’t find any | key in the dress of—no, that’s not it; an any—any pocket. There. that’s and a flood of light came into his ‘ace. “Confound it, I couldn't find any pocket.” Then he sat down and laughed hys- terically, and his wife, wondering why in the name of goodness men raised | be transferred from the New York to | such a row over finding the pocket in a woman’s dress, went upstairs and came back with the key in two min- utes. An Impending Evil. Spring was everywhere in the air as the tramp came through the back gate and some of it seemeed to have got into his step as he ambled along to- wards the home. “Ah, good day,” he said cheerily to hired girl, who was disporting herself on the kitchen steps with a scrubbing brush. She looked at him and nodded. “What's the chances for a bite to eat this beautiful morning in spring?’ he inquired. “Not a mouthful in the house,” she replied. “Struck a famine?” “No, something worse.” “What can that be?” | “Partof Coxey’sarmy; they came by | this morning early and got everything we-had to give away.” blue went out of the sky of face, and the lowering over it. wled, “them chumps is ‘he perfesh and drive us to the poorhouse er to marryin’ rich wives,” and he stalked out of the yard in a fit of disgruntle | mentDetroit Fre Press. No Smoke. ; The man who abolishes smoke will be one of the greatest benefactors of the human race. Nothing else will so change the conditions of life in our great cities. Without saying that this result is already at hand, a great step toward it is made by the new inven- tion in fireplaces, says London Truth. By this system a fire can undoubtedly be produced without smoke, and though at present a special fireplace | must be employed for the purpose, | there is no reason why every one who a furnace should not have a smoke | less one. when every householder as well ag every manufacturer will be compelled | to consume his own smoke. In the | Meantime, however, there is the pulsion, for doing so, for the like all which are based on erring the combustion of the fuel, gives a largely increased heat for a reduced consumption of coal. henceforth fits up a kitchen range or. I expect to see the time | | strongest inducement, short of com-. | mated Colona T. ~ | port, for the F*= | Niagara and OEHIO’S CAMPAIGN OPENED, John Sherman Asks the Nomination o¢ Mo. Kinley for President. Springfield, O., Sept. 11.—The Republican | campaign for 1895 of this State was tormay ly opened yesterday by a vast popula meeting presided over by the venerah Senator John Sherman. The meet Go on record as one of the most tic gatherings in Buckeye polit only ‘was General Bushnell, torial nominee, on hand, McKinley, ex-Governor Forake Shermar, State Auditor Poe a Ara Jones, nominee for Lie ernor, were also present and as: the speech-making. When Senator Sherman mot platform to speak the applau: ening. It was several minu efore he could be heard. In his speech he askog for the nomination of McKinley for p dent. Governor McKinley spoke of the United States Senators! that from 1861 to 18€9 the Rep two Senators—Wade and that this year they were goin their rightful place. Mr. Foraker woujg take the seat of Mr. Brice. eo FIGHTING BOB WINS AGAIN. nted the Capt. Evans to Have Command of the New Battle Ship Indiana. Washington, Sept. n.— Bob” Evans will have his app! shting tion to the Indiana granted. He will have ¢ honor of commanding the nav battle ship and the largest war sel constructed in this country. Sec Herbert was opposed at fir: transfer of Evans, and it is b makes the assignment at the requ the President, who will grant E most any naval detail he w' The Indiana will not be rea tive service for three months, but 4s to superintend her fitting command of the New York w some captain who has not yet of the first rank ships of the na tain Frederick Rogers, now attach the Brooklyn Navy Yard, may be lucky man. The detat] of Fighting Bop ie sure to create surprise in the navy, where it is held that so fine a vessel ag the Infdana, and the only battle ship for service, should be in charga of a captain higher in rank than Evans, who was only promoted about seven months ago. eee LEXOW MAY BE RENOMINATED. the Democrats in His District Will Pat Up an Orange County Man. Nyack, Sept. 11—The Democratic committee appointed last week by State Committeeman Clark for the Senate dis trict comprising the counties of tand and Orange, met at Newburg terday to apportion the Senatorial dele gates and appoint the day for the m ing of the convention. Three mer of the committee were from Rockland county and six from Ofange county. The delegates were appointed on a basis of sixteen to each Assembly district, h gives Rockland county sixteen and Or- Bnge county thirty-two. The conven- tiom will be held at Middletown on Ooto- ber Z. ‘When Senator Lexow was elected two years ago the digtrict included Dutchess county, but in the new apportionment Dutchess county was taken out of the district. It is almost certain that the nominee will be an Orange county man. Lexow will probably lead the Republican ticket. GOV. MORTON'S MEASURE. Mooney will Give 44 Pairs of Shoes to 44 Governors. New York, Sept. 11.—Harry J. Moon- 2y, who describes himself as “ a typical American mechanic,’ is 2 shoemak trade. In July he conceived visiting every State in the Uni making his living while on the His plan is to visit the capital Btate and make the Governor a shoes to measure. He started on July thirty w money, and has visited every N tand State except Conn t. day he was in this city and ob Governor Morton’s measure. H he has made money. SF aT Ee HARRISON'S HASTERN BOOM. Mr. Studebaker Says the ex-President 1s Developing Wonderful Strength. Le Porte, Ind., Sept. 11—Peter E. Studebaker, of South Bend, has - ed from the East. Mr. Studebake ts named as the probable Repu candidate for Governor, said that t State of Indiana wfil send a Har flelegation to the National C “Harrison is developing wond strength in the East,” said Mr. baker, “and I confidently believe ana will again be accorded the distin tion of naming the candidate.” ee —ee CANADIAN SEALERS SSIZED. United States Cutter Captures Two Ver sels Violating the Bering Sea Ru Victoria, B. C., Sept. 10—The V sealer Beatrice arrrived here un tor alleged violations of the Be! regulations. She reports seizure of © schooner Alnoko, The Beatrice was boarded by the Rush August 23. A few seals, marked as !f siot cy buckshot, were found on bo’ the Ainoko was seized on the charge mside the sixty-mfle protective z seals. The Beatrive réports a light © of seals. a ATTEMPT TO BLOW UP A CHURCH. Michigan Vandals Use Dynamite to 6 Money From a Corner Stone , Greenville, Mioh., Sept. 9—An attem? was made yesterday to bow up the First Congregational Church of this y lynamite. The charge was 1 che corner stone, but not being lar enough, little damage was ¢ - ‘The supposition is that the attempt © made for the purpose of obtaining « | = sum of money that Is reported to oi veen deposited in the corner stone W* the chureh was built. ee ‘Woman Bridge Jamper Fined 95- New York, Sept. 10.—Mrs. Ciara 4 Arthur, the first woman to jump ‘7 the Brooklyn bridge, was fined $5 Magistrate Crane in the Tombs Court yesterday morning. She paid the ber and left the court with her busbar who ad in a bundle under Bis arm man'é clothes in which she mode. /™ jump.on Saturday i+ —————— ai Albion, Sept. 11,<4cter Senatorial Convent

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