h i mum - montananewspapers.orgmontananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1900-04-20/ed-1/seq-3.pdfful to...

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8©te- ^ * * : . w V '---' i ? ikham's Evary womam knowa som e woman friend who has boon helped by Lydht E, fHnkbom's VogottMo Oompound. What does thla M ea d say about It? Read the letters from women being published In thin paper* If you are t, donH try expert* Roly on the rolls* om T lOETHWUUiEKS Mrsm Phtkhnm*e great medkdne has stood with* out a peer for thirty Puzxled women write to M rs , Plnkham for adrtee whloh she gives without charge* The advloo Is confidentialandaoourutom It has helpeda million wo* men* Mrs* Plnkham's address Is Lynn , Mass, H ik e Money on the W revk. Gaston Drake of Nassau, Bahama, with other Americans now own the wreck of the Spanish warship Infanta Maria Teresa, lying in two fathoms of water near Bird Point, Cat Island. Drake and his associates purpose to break up the Wreck for the metal there Is In It. Mr. Drake wants to bring the metal Into this country free of du ty. Mr. Drake’s lawyers asked the treasury department If this could be done. In reply counsel for the treas ury department wrote: "The Spanish war vessel was not the property of the United States at the time she was originally wrecked, but was the property of the Spanish govern ment, and as the United States govern ment has abandoned the vessel on Cat Island, Its owners have been changed from the United States to private c.lti sens. Formal wreckage upon Its Im portation to the United States will be dultabie.” Mr. Drake and his partners believe there w ill be a profit In the importation from the metal of the wreck If admit ted free of duty, but not otherwise. HOW’S THIS I Ws offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any oeee of Catarrh that sen not be cured by HaU’s Catarrh Cure. F. 1. CHBNBT A CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J Cheney for the lest U years, end believe him perfectly honorable In ail business transactions and tinancle 1ty able to carry out any obliga tions made by their Arm. WEST it THU AX, W'.oleaale Druggists, To ledo, O. WALDING, KIN MAH A MARVIN, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, o. Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, aot- Ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur faces o f the system. Testimonials sent free. Price Ibo per bottle. Sold by all Drugglsta. , Hall’s Family Pills are the best Destroy lnv Coal Mines. Pretoria, March 29.— A dispatch receiv ed here from the Boer headt|UHi’tera in Natal announces that destruction con tinues of the coal mines likely to Ire use ful to the British. The Dundee colliery has been blown lip, the machinery de stroyed and the mine rendered useless for three months to come. IH A ltE INTO TOUR BHOBS A llen ’s Font Ease, a powder for the feet. It curee paiflful, swollen, smarting, nerv ous feet, and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. I t ’s the greatest comfort discovery of the age. A lien’s Foot- Ease makes tight or Hew shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for Ingrowing Nails, sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. W e have over 80.000 testimonials, Try it today. Sold bv all druggiBts and shoe stores. By mail for 26c, in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y. This winter has beaten the record, within the memory of the oldest Inhab itant of Dublin, for persistent fog, damp and absence of sunlight. Try Before You Buy. Ten cents buys a bon of Oasrnrets, but if you want a fret* sample and booklet, address Ster ling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York, today. The Czar Is an accomplished whistler and sometimes performs variations on national airs for the entertainment of hla intim ate friends, ■All PIbS i IbB b Aw S i r ssspw — T in 1b IttN B B lh W B B lB Like every new camp Buffalo Hump has its advantagee as well as its dls- advantsges and this was recognised by those earliest on tiie ground. The dis tance from transportation, about 100 miles, Is recpndied as a most serious drawback. Yei, notwithstanding this tact, investors readily availed them selves of the opportunity tor Invest ment What has been the greatest at- traction to parties who tor the first time visit this section, is its wonder ful surface showing and the only Ques tion has been, are the formation and characteristics of the ore-bodies such as would Indicate permanence and depth. While It must be conceded that the great Idaho gold belt which trends through thlB district, is unequaled for richness and width, of course it can not be expected that ore bodies will be found at every point along Its' line. However, after a careful and thorough examination by a number of the lead ing mining experts of the west, many of the largest operators In the country have thought sufficiently favorably of it to put In vast amounts of money. BRPUBL1C. Only one shift Is working on the Re bate tunnel. Progress Is made at the rate of about two and a half feet per day. The Golden Harvest adit is still mov ing forward about three feet per day. The average width of the ledge Is about six feet. The machinery of the Chico compres sor plant is being put In place rapidly and It will probably be ready to start up the early part of this week. On the Stray Horse the diamond drill has penetrated 290 feet. The drill Is said to be working satisfactorily. It is yet too early to pronounce It an un qualified success. Charles F. Potter, superintendent of the Golden Dion and Dlttle Four Con solidated, states that he was making the needed preparations, to begin pros pecting with the diamond drill on the Golden Lion. The local manager of the Qullp states that the values were Improving, and that the quartz was rapidly coming In In place of some of the streaks of por phyry that have been encountered here tofore. The wheat market shows slight change. Walla Walla was steady at 63 and 54c with the usual reports of Jp.ney bidding In the Interior, some re ports getting the figure up to 66c. Val ley Is steady at 63 and 64c. Superintendent James S. Wyatt, of the Mountain Lion, s.ates that the mil! Is working in a satisfactory manner. The saving of the free gold on the plates continues to be satisfactory In the fullest negree, and the cyanide Is doing its work far in excess of his ex pectations. As a whole, the Bay ing Is all that could be reason ably expected. The values are Improv ing every day, and It is now no longer a theory, but a fact, that the treatment Is a proper one for the ore of that mine. Good progress Is being made in lay ing the walls for the foundation of the Republic mill, and the grading Is pro gressing favorably. The frame of the sampling mill is up and timbers are being rapidly framed for the big mill. Lumber Is being rushed to the ground at a lively rate since the roads began to dry up. The framing would have been much further advanced if the Umbers had been ou the ground sooner. The plant of the Republican Reduction Company Is getting In place fast and supplies are wel. nigh all in. It can not be stated with certainty when the machinery will start up. Every day adds to the known length of the Princess Maud ore shoot. The face of the drift la 90 feet from the winze, and there is no ore in the entire vein for that distance on that level that does not show high values. The vein Is Blowly but steadily widening. It Is five and a half feet wide now, which is about five inches wider than It measured a week since. The ore av erages at least (43 per ton. Mach of It Is far richer. But 90 feet of ore of that grade and width marks the Princess Maud as one of the biggest things in the camp. F bbm u l Ir» Wkrki. POKTUkMS W IR* A IRON WORKS, WIRE and hr** Fsnatnc; otto* Tallin*. Mo. BM Alda*. It Is announced that over 80,000 Mor- mohs w ill leave Utah for Wyoming, where a tract of 200,000 acres of land is being secured for them. Mothers wRl find Mrs. Window’s Sooth ing Syrup the best remedy to use for their ehlldren dnrtm tns teething period. An Individual whose Ideas are vague as to his own duties usually has very clear ideas as to the duties of his neigh bors. Pise’s Cure for Consumption has saved ms large doctor bCls.—C. U Baker. 4«ft Bagsnt Bq., Philadelphia, Pa., Dee. I, ’C. Has 7 a man resembles a rooster. He does the crowing while Ms wife doss the work. BUY THE GEflUnUI BRITISH COUJMBIA. The California’s compressor at Ross- land has started up and Is Working in a satisfactory manner. Rich ore has been struck in the "Vel vet, on Sophia mountain. Manager Morrlsh says that he haa 12 feet of rich ore opened on the 300-foot level and the mine la ready to ship to North- port. The recent explosion In a powder works house near Nelson, B. C., killed two men. William Way’s body was torn in fragments, while Harry Ger- van was terribly mangled. The build- ttrg -w ar titer in y brown off the face of the earth. A ledge of almost pare limestone nearly 100 feet wide was recently dis covered on John A Manly’s property about one and a half miles east of Grand Forks. It Is'Situated on the slope of a hill near Echo creek, and can he reached by an easy gradient leas than a Quarter of a mile from the route of the proposed extension of the Gran by smelter spur to MeCool’s. There 4s promise of activity l a the Lardo-Dunean thia season. Already much talk is heard to the effect that hath the C s s s d a PmriM*. nOnsd aa4 sitttfttad i tala iC m u a r. Ttaffta** i a spur of Vokmnie moen- 1.000 toot above pad tx<m Grand exceed 10 mihsa The progress made in mining la southeast Kootenay during the past year’ settles the question beyond cavil that that district Is bound to be one of the richest in British Columbia. Not only have the developments shown this to be a tact, but It haa brought to the front another very Important fact, and that Is that the rich mineral deposits extent over a vast agea. From the celebrated SL Eugene on Moyle lake to the wonderfully rich North Star to the north, the Tracy Creek and Wild Horse properties on the oast, and Bull river and Sand creek properties on the south Includes a domain that haa brought forth properties already that alone would give fame to any dis trict Last season was tho first that any great amount of money had been expended aside from three or four well- known mines, and this money has brought forth results that convinces the most skeptical that southeast Koot enay haa Just entered upon an era of great prosperity. The developments of the past year have aroused greater In terest and created confidence, which means that capital will come more readily into the district than ever be fore. Moyle le on the boom and the pres ent season w ill be a record breaker tor development C o n s u m e r s In tM s community read this paper every week. They notice and remember the stops that Invite them to buy through advertising'In our columns. Mr. Mer- ehefht Is this (hot worth anything to you In ypur business? H I MUM WAB IS NfW MOST IMMINENT. ■m is sotbs . Work Is to be resumed soon on the Peoria, a big copper ledge on Methow In Okanogan county, Wn. The Great Western Mining Company operating on the Neapelim, on the south half of the reservation, Is about to install a saw mill, having obtained a permit from the department of the In terior. The shaft Is reported down about 80 feet in high-grade galena ore with a more solid showing than at any earlier stage. Among the most Important mines of Baker City district Is the Virtue-Collat eral, which comprises the old Virtue mine and the Collateral mine, having a 20-ton stamp mill. The Calumet and Hecla of the lake Superior district is an immense body of ore of an average value of about four per cent. This mine has paid more than $60,000,000 In dividends. The Butte, Montana, mlneB average about five per cent in copper and $2.10 In gold. The great Anaconda Copper Mining Company In 1889 reduced 1,525,- 49 tons or ore, which yielded on an av erage 4.64 per cent of copper, 4.16 oun ces of silver and .014 ounces o f gold. It paid in dividends during 1889 $3,000,- 000. The Butte & Boston Company’s ore in 1897 averaged about Beven per cent copper, and It made net $3,016,000 In round numbers. The greatest of Arizona’s copper prog ducers, the Copper Queen, having pro duced millions, yields an ore averaging less than eight per cent, ore as low as 2 1-2 per cent being matted profitably. The Quincy Mining Company of Lake Superior region in 1897 stamped 642,- 623 tons of copper Ore, which yielded 1,58 per cent of copper. It sold $1,872,- 213 worth of copper and $18,025, mak ing 4 1-2 cents a pound on each pound of copper. The Spokane mining promoter Is Irrepressible. He bobs up In the most unexpected places and makes a clean up under the very nose of older but slower men In the business. The lat est scoop has been made by Herrin & Reiner of this city, who have sold the famous Stanley mine, at Idaho Springs, Col,, to a Montreal syndicate for some thing like $1,000,000. Mr. Herrin has word from Mr. Reiner at Denver that $85,000 has been paid to close the deal, and Mr. Reiner has gone to Montreal to look after the final details. Over $500 per day cleaned up In placer mining the surface of the ledges on Thunder mountain. The vein Is said to be of enormous width, with free gold everywhere In evidence. Rich is the Black Bear at Loomis. The mill Is running aghln. The Bull Frog’s big vein Is proving wonder. These are busy days In Okanogan. Ruddy gulch, midway between Wal lace, Idaho, and Mullan, Is now one of the liveliest spots in the Coeur d’Alenes where only prospecting work Is being done. Some good ore Is coming down occa sionally from the Sonora, near Wal lace, Idaho, although the report is that the amount of it is limited. The Orofino country in Idaho prom ises to come into prominence as a new coal district. Very few persons know that extensive outcropping! o f coal veins have been discovered stretching from southwest to northeast across Orofino creek between the Clearwater and Pierce City. Bryan’s Trip. William J. Bryan made March 30 memorable in the political and popular history of eastern Washington by ad dressing no less than 35,000 people be tween and including the town of Colfax and the city of Spokane. Of these 35,- 000 listeners, 25,000 heard him in Spo kane. In the morning he spoke at Colfax, Garfield, Farmington and ..Token, and in the afternoon he addressed an audi ence of 10,000 people, and In the even ing an assemblage of 15,000 people in Spokane. In the afternoon he spoke for two hours and fifteen minutes, and deliver ed the most magnificently partisan-pat riotic address ever made fa the North west In the evening be talked for an boor and thirty minutes to a crowd greater in rise by one-third than the one which listened to his earlier speech. The evening throng was the biggest ever assembled in Spokane. The main MkniM* rd ■mmnWkan 19. With Japan; and Also Turkey—Brit ish Thlaf it I. UluS—Japan's Navy l uprapared—Ths Swltaa is fur a Compromise. j _ _ _ London, April 2.—Russian activity has been the iutejnational factor of the past week ami dqdomatic functionaries a t tached to the oourt of St. James are ask ing themselves: “ What docs it all mean? Where will it emit’’ The Russian ambassador smiles blandly and assures his dear friends that it means ’’nothing, absolutely nothing,’’ hut ju s t the same, speculation is acute. There are many rneu of fair standing and a to l erable know ledge of international under urrents who are willing to say that w ar between Russia and Japan lms come w ith in measurable distance. O f these l l e u r y .\olmull, who lms just returned from a trip to Russia, is one. But the Associated Cress leums that no such view is takcu by the British foreign oltlce, which, during Uie recent troublesome times, has up the international situation with won Uerful correctness. The next few weeks limy, perhaps, bring up a tremendous war seare, but the salient fact remains that Jujmii is not ready for hostilities. Alarming tele grams from the far east may increase ami multiply and Korea limy seem to be on the verge of annexation by Russia, but the calm of Downing street is nut likely to be disturbed. Koreau matters are ar ranged by treaty and Lord Salisbury dims not believe than Uu-Hia intends to break the treaties, though her relations w iili Japan may become at rained to a serious jHiint. J! all this rumpus in the fur euai had been postponed for a year there is scureely a doubt that the war would l,c a serious probability, but those having intimate know ledge of Japan s far reach ing naval projects and her recent stale of incompleteness, do not hesitate to sav that Japan is not going to risk anything until her plans are matured. Jupaneae naval maneuvers in the cum ing fall ale to be carried out on an un precedented settle m il w ill partake m ole of the nature of a demonstration than of peuccful evolutions. Forty or more war vessels are expected to lie present in Jap anese waters. There seems no longer lo l>e any doubt Unit Turkey for her tardiness to meet lie Russian demands regarding railroad ouceBsioiis' is being menaced by lmr northern neighbor and many signs | hhih to the fuel tliut Russia intends to settle herself in the northeast of Asia Minor unless Turkey gives in. Already a quar ter of a million of Russian troops are maintained on those borders, while the Black sea squadron is ready for business at a moment's notice. To what extent British moral assistance can be given to Turkey in offslanding the Russian demands is a question whim, at the present moment is oceupying laird .Salisbury's attention to an even greater extent than the South African war. In view of the troubles of Great Britain in South Africa it is more than probable that Turkey will meet the demands ami that the Russian troops will be w ith draw n. The seare enent Russian troops con centrating in Afghanistan apparently arose from thia movement in the direction of Turkey in Asia Minor and Afghan istan lias passed into the category ol peaceful, uninteresting spheres. W ith all these reports, to say nothing of continued rumors of Bulgaria's desire to throw off Turkey’s suzerainty and be come a vassal of the czar, it is evident that while Kussia is observing in tless iafter her promise to England not to in terfere in South Africa she is not idle in taking advantage of opportunities in every quarter of the globe. For the peai* of the world, it is reussuring to remem ber that the fixed policy of Russia few rears has been to take matters almond to the point of hostilities and tnen tc» settle diplomatically, the only exception of this in modern times being the Crimea, when the tone of the peace party in Eng- lan 1 led her to believe this country would not interfere. PRICES PAH) AT SPOKANE. Rates ta the Convention. Chicago, April 2.— The Western Passen ger association has announced a one fare rate plus $2 to Bt. Paul and return for the national republican league convention at St. Paul July 17. The woman who think! she is mar rying s novelist's hero and the amus who thinks heJs marrying s wingless angel invariably discover that mar riage is s failure. Some people who don’t know whist they want complain because they toll to get it. The VwUowlasr Q u t a llw i ProvaUI— Wheat Market. Poultry and B|g»—Chickens, old >c lb. live wright, springs, $8 and $4 doa; Goose, dressed, lie lb; turkeys, live 10 and 18c; dressed, I t and 18c; eggs, fresh, 33.75 and 14.26 per ease. Vegetables— Potatoes 60e per ewt; cabbage, $1 per cwt; onions, $3 and $3.50 per cwt Livestock— Beef, live steers 8%c, drase- ed 6% and 7%c, live cows Sc, dressed 5% and 6Mic; veal calves, dressed 7 and 9c; mutton, ewes 3c, wethers 8%c; hogs live $4 and $5 per cwt, dressed $8.50 and $7 per cwt Sheepskins— Shearlings, 15 and 80a each; short wool pelts, 80 and 60c each; long wool, 75c and $1. Tallow— No. 1, 8ftc per lb; No. 2, 3c per lb. Htdee— Dry No. 1 (16 lbs end up wards), 15 and 15%c; salted hides, steers (60 lb and over), 9c; cows and all steers under 60 lbs, 8c; calf skins, salted, 9c; salted kip, 8c; stags, bulls, 6%c. The local mills pay the following pri ces for grain, delivered: Club wheat, 88%o bulk, 40%o sacked; blueetem, 42c bulk, 44o sacked; red, 88c bulk, 40o, sacked. Tacoma wheat market steady, but nothing doing; bluestem 62MiC; club 60V4c. The water has been pumped out of the shaft and drifts on the Tom Thumb and work 1 b now in progress In the south drift. There is eight feet of fine ore In the face of as high grade as has ever been taken out of the mine. The working shaft has reached a depth of 145 feet. 8u 1 ti* towtabliris a big eon-lfritotifyj hie tribe removed to Oregon w ill probably be refused. Hans Hsrtell, a hardware clerk- at Greenwood, & C., shot himself with sui cidal intent recently. Mine owwte in Kelson and Ymlr db*- tricts make concessions, and the silver- lead mines am to start. " Alfred Plaw of ths University of Osli- forns smashed all American intercollegiate records for the 18 pound hammer throw Saturday. He sent it 156 feet 6 inches. Midshipman W. \V. tSilleman, sit Amer ican youth of 17, was recently mentioned in South African dispatches for gallantry. Ex-United States Senator Gibson of Maryland is deed. The Chinese general, Pans, who has been terrorizing and devastating the prov ince of Pansy, has surrendered at Logaapi to Brigadier General Kobbc, w ho is bring ing him to Manila. i The Light Blues won the annual race betuecu Oxford and Cambridge college boat crews it was a poor contest, a procession from the start, with Oxford beaten before the ours touched the water. - he Hamburg-American Line steam hip Phoenicia, which recently arrived from Hamburg and Boulogne, brought 2038 agriculture W wtatwdft, | _ from U e n n U ij*-***"-*-— T M l ment of, tbs tatadgtb :s d " solving the pnfehas off loftct fQMCW» forestry will cwnmanoo investigation which wiS tasK months. Sea*4*1 AV**I SR* SnsswS* Tbe transport Guasnor starts* jm her voyage for Manila with troop* l % i a p plies recently. Cuugrss— iis t g Briggs of Brooklyn, after making a thorinffb in spection of the transport, derisjwd that the charges of extravagance and lavish expenditure of money oak ths Butnwr Wars true. Hs declared that ths e f f i e n in command of the ship hard taken t h s tost rooms and crowded Onload Dttris, tho of ficer in command of the troops fo r tho Philippines, into inferior quartern. Hs examined every part of the ship, ■■king copious notes of what he saw. O o a g N * - man Drigge condemned the S— ndtiiy arrangements for the soldiers; 788 nriUHsa went on board. The American Cereal Company Of C » dar Rapids, lows, baa put In ma- slecrage passengers, the largest number o f' chines and locked out their union COOp- Th# Idtafhl Hun. There Is much rivalry bclv»R«ii the vari ous Colleges as to which will produce the ideal man. By this they mean a vigorous, honest, intellectual intiti, who will make the world better for having lives!. Health w ill demand first consideration, for iiihui that depends brain ami uidiievetmeiit. iloe- teuer’s btomacii Ritters wild keep the bowels regular and tbe stomach healthy by curing all stomach disorders. It also prevents malaria, fever ami ague. Try it. U B O H NOTBk. The advance In wages secured by the United Mine Workers will amount to nearly |60,000,000. It Is rumored the tobacco trust la backing the fight of Kerbs, Wertheimer & Co., In New York, against the cigar- makers. Machine operators In Parle printing offices, although the machines were but recently introduced, work oaily seven hours a day. Although carpenters’ wages are $4 a day at Honolulu, tho coat of living there Is so great that It Is comparative ly email pay. The farmers’ label I b a fact. The In ternational Farmers’ Union filed a copy of a label with the Nebraska secretary of state March 2, and It now has legal protection. Three hundred “lady barbers" of Chi cago asked to Join the union but were refused by Business Agent Lucas. The ladies are highly Indignant and will or ganize a union and demand admission for their delegates. The Street Railway Men’s Associa tion of Brooklyn, N. Y., withdrew its annual order for summer uniforms from a firm of clothing manufacturers In Brooklyn because they had forfeited the right to place the union label on their product, and the order was giv en ’to a union house. Hood * Co. of Lowell, Mass., makers of Hoods' Sarsaparilla, have recognized the advantages of employing union help. A ll their compositors, pressmen, press feeders and electrotypers are un ion men to whom the union scale Is paid, and 54 hours constitutes a week’s work. Ths Stove National Defense Associa tion, lately In session in Atlanta, Ga., agreed to advance the prlees paid the Iron Molders’ Union of North America 16 per cent over the figures In effect in 1*98. The result • means Increased wages to about 40,000 Iron molders in all parts of the United States. The workers in the various depart ments vof the printing trades In Lon don, Ifing., are uniting Into one general society called the Printing Trades So cialist Society; each branch, however, preserves Its autonomy for trade pur poses. A party of men recently waited upon and informed the chief contractor of the Ohio ft Kentucky railway, now un der construction in Wolfe and Morgan counties, that he must at once dis pense with the services of the negroes bo has employed upon the line. He re fused, and there may be trouble. The big strikes of building crafts and machinists in Chicago eontlnae, and there are no signs of early settlements. The bosses are scouring the country for scabs and are hiring anybody and ev erybody for the purpose of making a strong bluff to fool the public into the belief that they are doing business. It seems to he a fight to a finish. immigrants arriving by uuy Bteamcr in many years. Signor Alberti,v vice president of the house, took the chair at the opening of the chamber of deputies Batnrd <y at K », Hud announced that ttiguor Colombo had resigned tiie presidency and that other officials attached to the presidency had also resigned. I an il Roberts reports the death at Noor veals Pont of tiie Hon. Colonel Georg* Hugh Uougli, ('. B. Gough had been pri m te secretary of the conunander-in-ehief of the British forces, laird Wolseley, since 1897. Attorney Uenera.l Griggs has given an opinion to tiie seeretary of the navy to tiie effeet that the seeretary o f tile treas ury lius complete authority in the matter of tiie disposition of wrecks of ^Spanish vowels along tiie shores of Cuba. Robert Bradley, alias Barclay, a would- be counterfeiter, has been arrested in Ban Francisco by Ucited States Secret Serves Agent Ihtzeu, Tiie limn was apprehended in a room at t(22 Clay street, smi a display of revolvers was necessary to induce iiim to surrender. William B. Crosby of O’Fttllon, III., defeated J. A. H. Elliott of Kansas City in a 100 bird match at lutcraiate Park, L. I., by a score of 97 to 93. The match was for tiie Review medal and $100 a side. Elliott lied harder birds in the first part of tiie match and had a Rule the worst of tiie luck throughout. Venezuelan government officials report that severe fighting occurred near the city of Bolivar, March 22, General I Vila loss, commanding the government troo|is, it is announced, defeated General Hernandez. His forces killed 223 of the revolutionists, BAD BREATH Ssrfal •lok takl I to*** b— Ml*C C lMAEmtalM lid tod •fftotlf •lftk*U«« ftt* limply wgb- rul Ur d*u«tit«r ind I w«r« botb«r«a with §iok •iomidfc *nd~our br*»tb wm »9rr bid. Aftif laklif i fiw dOM« of CucirtU w* t* * « tmprovM NoadJfluUr- Thiy i n i «r«at bBlp to Um family ” WlMILtalNA MaOIL. U * Elltinbo'M* »*.. Ciiaioaitt. QbE CANDY W * ^ CATHARTIO Lm m rtMfpit, filitobii. Point. Tim foot. Pi •ood, M ivir fttokn. W n k n .o r Erlpi. Kto.lto.MB. ... OUIVK CONSTIPATION, ... Ik d h f l — i<7 Ostop—y, CUNft, I hmi I, I m f « i M I 0-T 0-BA 0 ]vKLZERjtx,.- la mHFla ttSBlM .EARED Nfl ',!• HlBMftM*. •C orn sms ’" t w n n a . tDn r**i*«. u •Mft.U0taM.Mr M ffifo T# •tirocm 1 APELT* Ik M JMMK. OfHtMl M il I M4h»jfoa4ifcta«it»»fttaft Wm?I |BaiKLCT, SEAKSLSM, I is 191feos. l i T f . YftMftrfeb | SAFE I k 4TH ** Hsl, «r«ft* tod be mat- •p, •«<*•, Fftoitof, «•»., M il | , Wtrili ■'M *m M «r»ft | top* •■•* ii * • « . » . f ft Itm u 1U1EV9 L ItoMit |ftMti « r l . t i v f t p l kpftrfcetaM la iaftrta* i m / i I bu . f l Iffilftftr VftrfftDis h I I |THE MILLION M U .il I fatmUts U m toftfti (plfcftdftfpft J [M i m ink, Ml I mmt |ta j ■total mtkwill msUaym rlA I ~~> m ( h«« cr p«m ih i i M i l l tta urif. , Y it w iiii u m \ |Ifirpftfti «M«to$ Km It |. || I Ofttaft | m#, Mb . Ik- I w llm f POI IN STAMPS I f ' rtiiN J M l ttk Bllfw, M r ftMritapfta# W itphtoM IN J fliiiin MM#, h. ppm Johh AS aizer S eed C ol LA CROSSE WIS. NONE SUCH Kotbiof bobbin t hg auiaoAas t&4 u&flti t o « M k Uki 80RENE88 and 8 TIFFNE88 Nothin! rslsxs. thus and *ak*a a t|>*«dy perfsel sure Uk« St. Jacobs Oil i w i MANY sick W 0 PE 1 I Saa lastly trass lk.tr trsukls t* tk* klsfd. k«t tkal don’t help, nalsss tk*f in d a n *M |. Moore’s (levelled llemsdy FnrtSe* tk* klood—asks* stsk wsss. sad wsIL 11.00ysr haul* M tk* drat B LATEST |l«r| I aid BEST WELL HORBff. STBAMT AND OABOLINK POWCR. I ____ _____ ________ i uousitimua. nw u, ora. YOUNG MEN! ■wm im m in im mm n by Ml rtUablp dntratam, a ^pTwPcBAiflCAg(XL*fl W ifoft CURE YOURSELF I r SW.HPH8# ft OTWIMI W MOT mi to wr it m% of ■■ cill M b Pwwta ^ nA*. PlitaiMW, MC Bot k r*EEYM*GwiM*{k. p » i M i i w u d . y t -w t Si paw i r i w i. WJfm JT— r I I I r i f t I essstwl. Pstntsd■ siWssd Lv. t^n« « 8 ora’ Prii&er. MILO B.liTftVEM ft dkjOO. im & p * ■jjoiiehi’iw e fcimidy. Urtrtif Md bfMdtefl A! __pfL_____ ftosAjno. DROPSY Treated 8ucc*nfulfy Addrsss DA ITIKTOU. Ms PENSION f t-a CLAIM ANTS FOB I { j write to N A T f U * I r BICKFORD.WMfetaftom. D. C.. w_ II raortvt fttftc* fipUw. B. Sk S . L « * H a lf SRA eorpa P ri—nwttnft atoms atwaw WEL Dyspepsia?,

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Page 1: H I MUM - montananewspapers.orgmontananewspapers.org/lccn/sn83025326/1900-04-20/ed-1/seq-3.pdfful to the British. The Dundee colliery has been blown lip, the machinery de stroyed and

8©te- ^ * * :

. w

V'---'i

?

ikham's

Evary wo mam knowa some woman friend who has boon helped by Lydht E, fHnkbom's VogottMo Oompound. What does thla Mead say about It?

Read the letters from women being published In thin paper* If you are

t, donH try expert* Roly on the rolls*

o m T lOETHWUUiEKS

Mrsm Phtkhnm*e great medkdne has stood with* out a peer for thirty

Puzxled women write to M rs, Plnkham for adrtee whloh she gives without charge* The advloo Is confidential and aoourutom It has helped a million wo* men* Mrs* Plnkham's address Is Lynn, Mass,

H i k e M oney on the W re v k .

Gaston Drake of Nassau, Bahama, with o ther Americans now own the wreck o f the Spanish warship Infanta M aria Teresa, lying in two fathoms of water near Bird Point, Cat Island. Drake and his associates purpose to break up the Wreck for the metal there Is In It. Mr. Drake wants to bring the m etal Into this country free of du­ty. Mr. Drake’s lawyers asked the treasury department If this could be done. In reply counsel for the treas­ury department wrote:

"T h e Spanish war vessel was not the property o f the United States at the time she was originally wrecked, but was the property of the Spanish govern ment, and as the United States govern ment has abandoned the vessel on Cat Island, Its owners have been changed from the United States to private c.lti sens. Form al wreckage upon Its Im­portation to the United States w ill be dultabie.”

Mr. Drake and his partners believe there w ill be a profit In the importation from the metal of the wreck If admit­ted free o f duty, but not otherwise.

H O W ’S TH IS IWs offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for

any oeee of Catarrh that sen not be cured by HaU’s Catarrh Cure.

F. 1. CHBNBT A CO., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned, have known F. J

Cheney for the lest U years, end believe him perfectly honorable In ail business transactions and tin ancle 1 ty able to carry out any obliga­tions made by their Arm.WEST it THU AX, W'.oleaale Druggists, To

ledo, O.WALDING, K IN MAH A MARVIN, Wholesale

Druggists, Toledo, o.Hall’s Catarrh Cure Is taken Internally, aot-

Ing directly upon the blood and mucous sur­faces o f the system. Testimonials sent free. Price Ibo per bottle. Sold by all Drugglsta. ,

Hall’s Family Pills are the best

D es tro y ln v Coal M ines.

Pretoria, March 29.— A dispatch receiv­ed here from the Boer headt|UHi’tera in Natal announces that destruction con­tinues of the coal mines likely to Ire use­ful to the British. The Dundee colliery has been blown lip, the machinery de­stroyed and the mine rendered useless for three months to come.

IHAltE INTO TOUR BHOBS

Allen ’s Font Ease, a powder for the feet. I t curee paiflful, swollen, smarting, nerv­ous feet, and instantly takes the sting out of corns and bunions. I t ’s the greatest comfort discovery of the age. A lien’s Foot- Ease makes tight or Hew shoes feel easy. It is a certain cure for Ingrowing Nails, sweating, callous and hot, tired, aching feet. W e have over 80.000 testimonials, Try it today. Sold bv all druggiBts and shoe stores. By mail for 26c, in stamps. Trial package FREE. Address, Allen S. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. Y.

This w in ter has beaten the record, within the memory of the oldest Inhab­itant o f Dublin, for persistent fog, damp and absence of sunlight.

Try Before You Buy.Ten cents buys a bon of Oasrnrets, but if you

want a fret* sample and booklet, address Ster­ling Remedy Company, Chicago or New York, today.

The Czar Is an accomplished whistler and sometimes performs variations on national a irs for the entertainment of hla in tim ate friends,

■All PIbSiIbBb Aw S i r ssspw — T i n 1bI t t N B B l h W B B l B

Like every new camp Buffalo Hump has its advantagee as well as its dls- advantsges and this was recognised by those earliest on tiie ground. The dis­tance from transportation, about 100 miles, Is recpndied as a most serious drawback. Yei, notwithstanding this tact, investors readily availed them­selves of the opportunity tor Invest ment What has been the greatest at- traction to parties who tor the first time visit this section, is its wonder­ful surface showing and the only Ques­tion has been, are the formation and characteristics of the ore-bodies such as would Indicate permanence and depth. While It must be conceded that the great Idaho gold belt which trends through thlB district, is unequaled for richness and width, of course it can­not be expected that ore bodies will be found at every point along Its' line. However, after a careful and thorough examination by a number of the lead­ing mining experts of the west, many of the largest operators In the country have thought sufficiently favorably of it to put In vast amounts of money.

BRPUBL1C.Only one shift Is working on the Re­

bate tunnel. Progress Is made at the ra te of about two and a half feet per day.

T he Golden Harvest adit is s t ill mov­in g forward about three feet per day. T h e average width of the ledge Is about s ix feet.

The machinery o f the Chico compres sor plant is being put In place rapidly and It w ill probably be ready to start up the early part o f this week.

On the Stray Horse the diamond drill has penetrated 290 feet. The d rill Is said to be working satisfactorily. It is y e t too early to pronounce It an un­qualified success.

Charles F. Potter, superintendent of the Golden Dion and Dlttle Four Con­solidated, states that he was making the needed preparations, to begin pros­pecting with the diamond d r ill on the Golden Lion.

T he local manager of the Qullp states th a t the values were Im proving, and th a t the quartz was rapidly com ing In In place of some of the streaks o f por­phyry that have been encountered here­to fore.

T h e wheat market shows slight change. W alla Walla was steady at 63 and 54c with the usual reports of Jp.ney bidding In the Interior, some re­ports getting the figure up to 66c. Val­ley Is steady at 63 and 64c.

Superintendent James S. W yatt, of the Mountain Lion, s.ates that the m il! Is working in a satisfactory manner. T he saving o f the free gold on the p lates continues to be satisfactory In the fullest negree, and the cyanide Is do in g its work far in excess o f his ex­pectations. As a whole, the Bay­in g Is all that could be reason­ab ly expected. The values are Improv­in g every day, and It is now no longer a theory, but a fact, that the treatment Is a proper one for the ore o f that mine.

Good progress Is being made in lay­in g the walls for the foundation o f the Republic mill, and the grading Is pro­gressing favorably. The fram e o f the sam pling m ill is up and tim bers are b ein g rapidly framed for the b ig mill. Lum ber Is being rushed to the ground at a lively rate since the roads began to d ry up. The framing would have been much further advanced i f the Um bers had been ou the ground sooner. T h e plant o f the Republican Reduction Company Is getting In place fas t and supplies are wel. nigh all in. I t can not be stated with certainty when the machinery w ill start up.

Every day adds to the known length o f the Princess Maud ore shoot. The face o f the drift la 90 feet from the w inze, and there is no ore in the entire vein fo r that distance on that level th a t does not show high values. The vein Is Blowly but steadily widening. I t Is five and a half feet w ide now, w h ich is about five inches w ider than It measured a week since. The ore av­erages at least (43 per ton. M ach of It Is fa r richer. But 90 feet o f ore o f that g rade and width marks the Princess Maud as one of the biggest th ings in the camp.

F b b m u l I r » W k r k i .POKTUkMS W IR * A IRON WORKS, WIRE

and hr** Fsnatnc; otto* Tallin*. Mo. BM Alda*.

I t Is announced that over 80,000 Mor- mohs w i l l leave Utah for Wyoming, where a trac t of 200,000 acres o f land is being secured for them.

Mothers wRl find Mrs. Window’s Sooth­ing Syrup the best remedy to use for their ehlldren dnrtm tns teething period.

An Individual whose Ideas are vague as to his own duties usually has very clear ideas as to the duties of his neigh­bors.

Pise’s Cure for Consumption has saved ms large doctor bCls.—C. U Baker. 4«ft Bagsnt Bq., Philadelphia, Pa., Dee. I, ’C.

Has7 a man resembles a rooster. He does the crowing while Ms wife doss the work.

BU Y THE GEflUnUI

BRITISH COUJMBIA.T h e California’s compressor a t Ross-

land has started up and Is W orking in a satisfactory manner.

R ich ore has been struck in th e "Vel­vet, on Sophia mountain. M anager M orrlsh says that he haa 12 fe e t of rich ore opened on the 300-foot level and the mine la ready to ship to North- port.

T h e recent explosion In a powder w orks house near Nelson, B. C., k illed tw o men. W illiam W ay’s body was torn in fragments, while H a r ry Ger- van was terrib ly mangled. T he build- ttrg -w a r titer in y brown off th e face o f th e earth.

A ledge of almost pare limestone nearly 100 feet wide was recently dis­covered on John A Manly’s property about one and a half miles east of Grand Forks. It Is'Situated on the slope of a hill near Echo creek, and can he reached by an easy gradient leas than a Quarter of a mile from the route of the proposed extension of the Gran­by smelter spur to MeCool’s.

There 4s promise of activity l a the Lardo-Dunean thia season. Already much talk is heard to the effect that hath the C s s s d a PmriM*. n O n sd aa4

sitttfttad itala

iC m u a r . T t a f f t a * * i a spur o f Vokmnie moen-

1.000 toot above pad

tx<m Grand exceed 10 mihsa

The progress made in mining la southeast Kootenay during the past year’ settles the question beyond cavil that that district Is bound to be one of the richest in British Columbia. Not only have the developments shown this to be a tact, but It haa brought to the front another very Important fact, and that Is that the rich mineral deposits extent over a vast agea. From the celebrated SL Eugene on Moyle lake to the wonderfully rich North Star to the north, the Tracy Creek and Wild Horse properties on the oast, and Bull river and Sand creek properties on the south Includes a domain that haa brought forth properties already that alone would give fame to any dis­trict Last season was tho first that any great amount of money had been expended aside from three or four well- known mines, and this money has brought forth results that convinces the most skeptical that southeast Koot­enay haa Just entered upon an era of great prosperity. The developments of the past year have aroused greater In­terest and created confidence, which means that capital w ill come more readily into the district than ever be­fore.

Moyle le on the boom and the pres­ent season w ill be a record breaker tor development

— C o n s u m e r s

In tM s com m unity read th is paper every week. They n o tic e and remember the s to p s th a t Invite them to buy through advertising 'In o u r co lum ns. M r. M er- ehefht Is th is (hot w orth anyth ing to you In ypur business?

H I MUMWAB IS NfW MOST IMMINENT.

■ m i s s o t b s .W ork Is to be resumed soon on the

Peoria, a b ig copper ledge on Methow In Okanogan county, Wn.

The Great Western M in in g Company operating on the Neapelim, on the south half o f the reservation, Is about to install a saw mill, having obtained a perm it from the department o f the In­terior. The shaft Is reported down about 80 feet in high-grade galena ore with a more solid showing than at any earlier stage.

Among the most Important mines of Baker City district Is the Virtue-Collat­eral, which comprises the old Virtue mine and the Collateral mine, having a 20-ton stamp mill.

The Calumet and Hecla o f the lake Superior d istrict is an immense body of ore of an average value o f about four per cent. Th is mine has paid more than $60,000,000 In dividends. The Butte, Montana, mlneB average about five per cent in copper and $2.10 In gold. The great Anaconda Copper Mining Company In 1889 reduced 1,525,-49 tons or ore, which yielded on an av­

erage 4.64 per cent of copper, 4.16 oun­ces of silver and .014 ounces o f gold. It paid in dividends during 1889 $3,000,- 000. The Butte & Boston Company’s ore in 1897 averaged about Beven per cent copper, and It made net $3,016,000 In round numbers.

The greatest o f Arizona’s copper prog ducers, the Copper Queen, having pro­duced millions, yields an ore averaging less than eight per cent, ore as low as 2 1-2 per cent being matted profitably.

The Quincy M ining Company of Lake Superior region in 1897 stamped 642,- 623 tons o f copper Ore, which yielded 1,58 per cent o f copper. I t sold $1,872,- 213 worth o f copper and $18,025, mak­ing 4 1-2 cents a pound on each pound of copper.

The Spokane mining promoter Is Irrepressible. H e bobs up In the most unexpected places and makes a clean­up under the very nose of older but slower men In the business. The lat­est scoop has been made by Herrin & Reiner of th is city, who have sold the famous Stanley mine, at Idaho Springs, Col,, to a Montreal syndicate fo r some­thing like $1,000,000. Mr. H errin has word from Mr. Reiner at Denver that $85,000 has been paid to close the deal, and Mr. Reiner has gone to Montreal to look after the final details.

Over $500 per day cleaned up In placer m ining the surface o f the ledges on Thunder mountain. The vein Is said to be o f enormous width, with free gold everywhere In evidence.

Rich is the Black Bear a t Loomis. The m ill Is running aghln.

The Bull F rog ’s b ig vein Is provingwonder. These are busy days In

Okanogan.Ruddy gulch, midway between Wal­

lace, Idaho, and Mullan, Is now one of the liveliest spots in the Coeur d ’Alenes where only prospecting work Is being done.

Some good ore Is coming down occa­sionally from the Sonora, near Wal­lace, Idaho, although the report is that the amount o f i t is limited.

The Orofino country in Idaho prom­ises to come into prominence as a new coal district. V ery few persons know that extensive outcropping! o f coal veins have been discovered stretching from southwest to northeast across Orofino creek between the Clearwater and Pierce C ity.

B r y a n ’s T r ip .

W illiam J. Bryan made March 30 memorable in the political and popular history o f eastern Washington by ad­dressing no less than 35,000 people be­tween and including the town o f Colfax and the city o f Spokane. O f these 35,- 000 listeners, 25,000 heard him in Spo­kane.

In the m orning he spoke a t Colfax, Garfield, Farm ington and ..Token, and in the afternoon he addressed an audi­ence o f 10,000 people, and In the even­ing an assemblage of 15,000 people in Spokane.

In the afternoon he spoke for two hours and fifteen minutes, and deliver­ed the most magnificently partisan-pat­riotic address ever made fa the North­west In the evening be talked for an boor and thirty minutes to a crowd greater in rise by one-third than the one which listened to his earlier speech.

The evening throng was the biggest ever assembled in Spokane. The main

MkniM* rd ■mmnWkan 19.

With Japan; and Also Turkey—B rit­ish Th laf it I . UluS—Japan's Navy l uprapared—Ths Swltaa is fur a C ompromise.

j _ _ _

London, April 2.—Russian activity has been the iutejnational factor of the past week ami dqdomatic functionaries a t ­tached to the oourt of St. James are ask­ing themselves: “ What docs it all mean? Where will it emit’’

The Russian ambassador smiles blandly and assures his dear friends that it means ’’nothing, absolutely nothing,’’ hut ju s t the same, speculation is acute. There are many rneu of fair standing and a to l­erable know ledge of international under urrents who are willing to say that war

between Russia and Japan lms come w ith ­in measurable distance. Of these lleu ry .\olmull, who lms just returned from a trip to Russia, is one. But the Associated Cress leu ms that no such view is takcu by the British foreign oltlce, which, during Uie recent troublesome times, has up the international situation with won Uerful correctness.

The next few weeks limy, perhaps, bring up a tremendous war seare, but the salient fact remains that Jujmii is not ready for hostilities. Alarming tele­grams from the far east may increase ami multiply and Korea limy seem to be on the verge of annexation by Russia, but the calm of Downing street is nut likely to be disturbed. Koreau matters are a r­ranged by treaty and Lord Salisbury dims not believe than Uu-Hia intends to break the treaties, though her relations w iili Japan may become at rained to a serious jHiint. J! all this rumpus in the fur euai had been postponed for a year there is scureely a doubt that the war would l,c a serious probability, but those having intimate know ledge of Japan s far reach ing naval projects and her recent stale of incompleteness, do not hesitate to sav that Japan is not going to risk anything until her plans are matured.

Jupaneae naval maneuvers in the cum ing fall ale to be carried out on an un precedented settle m il w ill partake m ole of the nature of a demonstration than of peuccful evolutions. Forty or more war vessels are expected to lie present in Jap anese waters.

There seems no longer lo l>e any doubt Unit Turkey for her tardiness to meet lie Russian demands regarding railroad ouceBsioiis' is being menaced by lmr

northern neighbor and many signs |hhih to the fuel tliut Russia intends to settle herself in the northeast of Asia Minor unless Turkey gives in. Already a quar­ter of a million of Russian troops are maintained on those borders, while the Black sea squadron is ready for business at a moment's notice.

To what extent British moral assistance can be given to Turkey in offslanding the Russian demands is a question whim, at the present moment is oceupying laird .Salisbury's attention to an even greater extent than the South African war. In view of the troubles of Great Britain in South Africa it is more than probable that Turkey will meet the demands ami that the Russian troops will be w ith ­draw n.

The seare enent Russian troops con­centrating in Afghanistan apparently arose from thia movement in the direction of Turkey in Asia Minor and Afghan­istan lias passed into the category o l peaceful, uninteresting spheres.

W ith all these reports, to say nothing of continued rumors of Bulgaria's desire to throw off Turkey’s suzerainty and be­come a vassal of the czar, it is evident that while Kussia is observing in tless iafter her promise to England not to in­terfere in South Africa she is not idle in taking advantage of opportunities in every quarter of the globe. For the p ea i* of the world, it is reussuring to remem­ber that the fixed policy of Russia few rears has been to take matters almond to the point of hostilities and tnen tc» settle diplomatically, the only exception of this in modern times being the Crimea, when the tone of the peace party in Eng- lan 1 led her to believe this country would not interfere.

PRICES PAH) AT SPOKANE.

R a tes ta th e C on ven tion .

Chicago, April 2.— The Western Passen­ger association has announced a one fare rate plus $2 to Bt. Paul and return for the national republican league convention at St. Paul July 17.

The woman who think! she is mar­rying s novelist's hero and the amus who thinks heJs marrying s wingless angel invariably discover that mar­riage is s failure.

Some people who don’t know whist they want complain because they t o l l to get it.

The VwUowlasr Q u ta l lw i ProvaUI— Wheat Market.

Poultry and B|g»—Chickens, old >c lb. live wright, springs, $8 and $4 doa; Goose, dressed, lie lb; turkeys, live 10 and 18c; dressed, It and 18c; eggs, fresh, 33.75 and 14.26 per ease.

Vegetables— Potatoes 60e per ewt; cabbage, $1 per cwt; onions, $3 and $3.50 per cwtLivestock—Beef, live steers 8%c, drase- ed 6% and 7%c, live cows Sc, dressed 5% and 6Mic; veal calves, dressed 7 and 9c; mutton, ewes 3c, wethers 8%c; hogs live $4 and $5 per cwt, dressed $8.50 and $7 per cwt

Sheepskins—Shearlings, 15 and 80a each; short wool pelts, 80 and 60c each; long wool, 75c and $1.

Tallow—No. 1, 8ftc per lb; No. 2, 3c per lb.

Htdee— Dry No. 1 (16 lbs end up­wards), 15 and 15%c; salted hides, steers (60 lb and over), 9c; cows and all steers under 60 lbs, 8c; calf skins, salted, 9c; salted kip, 8c; stags, bulls, 6%c.

The local mills pay the following pri­ces for grain, delivered: Club wheat,88%o bulk, 40%o sacked; blueetem, 42c bulk, 44o sacked; red, 88c bulk, 40o, sacked.

Tacoma wheat market steady, but nothing doing; bluestem 62MiC; club 60V4c.

The water has been pumped out o f the shaft and d rifts on the Tom Thumb and work 1b now in progress In the south d rift. There is eight feet o f fine ore In the face o f as high grade as has ever been taken out of the mine. T h e working shaft has reached a depth o f 145 feet.

8 u 1 t i * tow tab lir is a big e o n - l f r i t o t i f y j

hie tribe removed to Oregon will probably be refused.

Hans Hsrtell, a hardware clerk- at Greenwood, & C., shot himself with sui­cidal intent recently.

Mine owwte in Kelson and Ymlr db*- tricts make concessions, and the silver- lead mines am to start. "

Alfred Plaw of ths University of Osli- forns smashed all American intercollegiate records for the 18 pound hammer throw Saturday. He sent it 156 feet 6 inches.

Midshipman W. \V. tSilleman, sit Amer­ican youth of 17, was recently mentioned in South African dispatches for gallantry.

Ex-United States Senator Gibson of Maryland is deed.

The Chinese general, Pans, who has been terrorizing and devastating the prov­ince of Pansy, has surrendered at Logaapi to Brigadier General Kobbc, w ho is bring­ing him to Manila. i

The Light Blues won the annual race betuecu Oxford and Cambridge college boat crews i t was a poor contest, a procession from the start, with Oxford beaten before the ours touched the water.

- he Hamburg-American Line steam hip Phoenicia, which recently arrived from Hamburg and Boulogne, brought 2038

agriculture W wtatwdft, | _ from U en n U ij*-***"-*-— T M l ment of, tbs tatadgtb :s d " solving the pnfehas off

lo ftct fQMCW» forestry will cwnmanoo investigation which wiS tasK months.

Sea*4*1 AV**I SR* SnsswS*Tbe transport Guasnor starts* jm her

voyage for Manila with troop* l% i a p ­plies recently. Cuugrss— iis t g Briggsof Brooklyn, after making a thorinffb in­spection of the transport, derisjwd that the charges of extravagance and lavish expenditure of money oak ths Butnwr Wars true. Hs declared that ths e ff ie n in command of the ship hard taken ths tost rooms and crowded Onload Dttris, tho of­ficer in command of the troops for tho Philippines, into inferior quartern. Hs examined every part of the ship, ■■king copious notes of what he saw. OoagN*- man Drigge condemned the S— ndtiiy arrangements for the soldiers; 788 nriUHsa went on board.

The American Cereal Company Of C » dar Rapids, lows, baa put In ma-

slecrage passengers, the largest number o f ' chines and locked out their union COOp-

Th# Idtafhl Hun.There Is much rivalry bclv»R«ii the vari­

ous Colleges as to which will produce the ideal man. By this they mean a vigorous, honest, intellectual intiti, who will make the world better for having lives!. Health w ill demand first consideration, for iiihui that depends brain ami uidiievetmeiit. iloe- teuer’s btomacii Ritters wild keep the bowels regular and tbe stomach healthy by curing all stomach disorders. It also prevents malaria, fever ami ague. Try it.

U B O H N O T B k.

The advance In wages secured by the United M ine Workers w ill amount to nearly |60,000,000.

I t Is rumored the tobacco trust la backing the fight o f Kerbs, W ertheim er & Co., In New York, against the cigar- makers.

Machine operators In Parle printing offices, although the machines were but recently introduced, work oaily seven hours a day.

Although carpenters’ wages are $4 a day at Honolulu, tho coat of living there Is so great that It Is comparative­ly email pay.

The farm ers’ label Ib a fact. The In ­ternational Farm ers’ Union filed a copy o f a label w ith the Nebraska secretary o f state March 2, and It now has legal protection.

Three hundred “ lady barbers" of Chi­cago asked to Join the union but were refused by Business Agent Lucas. The ladies are high ly Indignant and w ill or­ganize a union and demand admission fo r their delegates.

The Street R ailw ay Men’s Associa­tion o f Brooklyn, N. Y., withdrew its annual order fo r summer uniforms from a firm o f clothing manufacturers In Brooklyn because they had forfeited the righ t to place the union label on th e ir product, and the order was g iv ­e n ’ to a union house.

Hood * Co. o f Lowell, Mass., makers o f Hoods' Sarsaparilla, have recognized the advantages o f employing union help. A l l their compositors, pressmen, press feeders and electrotypers are un­ion men to whom the union scale Is paid, and 54 hours constitutes a week’s work.

Ths Stove National Defense Associa­tion, lately In session in Atlanta, Ga., agreed to advance the prlees paid the Iron Molders’ Union of North Am erica 16 per cent over the figures In effect in 1*98. T he result • means Increased wages to about 40,000 Iron molders in a ll parts o f the United States.

The workers in the various depart­ments vof the printing trades In Lon­don, Ifing., are uniting Into one general society called the Printing Trades So­cia list Society; each branch, however, preserves Its autonomy for trade pur­poses.

A party o f men recently waited upon and inform ed the chief contractor o f the Ohio ft Kentucky railway, now un­der construction in W olfe and Morgan counties, that he must at once dis­pense with the services o f the negroes bo has employed upon the line. H e re ­fused, and there may be trouble.

The big strikes of building crafts and machinists in Chicago eontlnae, and th ere are no signs of early settlements. The bosses are scouring the country for scabs and are hiring anybody and ev­erybody for the purpose of making a strong bluff to fool the public into the belief that they are doing business. It seems to he a fight to a finish.

immigrants arriving by uuy Bteamcr in many years.

Signor Alberti,v vice president of the house, took the chair at the opening of the chamber of deputies Batnrd <y at K » , Hud announced that ttiguor Colombo had resigned tiie presidency and that other officials attached to the presidency had also resigned.

I an il Roberts reports the death at Noor veals Pont of tiie Hon. Colonel Georg* Hugh Uougli, ('. B. Gough had been pri m te secretary of the conunander-in-ehief of the British forces, laird Wolseley, since 1897.

Attorney Uenera.l Griggs has given an opinion to tiie seeretary of the navy to tiie effeet that the seeretary o f tile treas­ury lius complete authority in the matter of tiie disposition of wrecks of ^Spanish vowels along tiie shores of Cuba.

Robert Bradley, alias Barclay, a would- be counterfeiter, has been arrested in Ban Francisco by Ucited States Secret Serves Agent Ihtzeu, Tiie limn was apprehended in a room at t(22 Clay street, smi a display of revolvers was necessary to induce iiim to surrender.

William B. Crosby of O’Fttllon, III., defeated J. A. H. Elliott of Kansas City in a 100 bird match at lutcraiate Park, L. I., by a score of 97 to 93. The match was for tiie Review medal and $100 a side. Elliott lied harder birds in the first part of tiie match and had a Rule the worst of tiie luck throughout.

Venezuelan government officials report that severe fighting occurred near the city of Bolivar, March 22, General I Vila loss, commanding the government troo|is, it is announced, defeated General Hernandez. His forces killed 223 of the revolutionists,

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