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Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 10

Chicago Tribune from Chicago, Illinois • 10

Publication:
Chicago Tribunei
Location:
Chicago, Illinois
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Page:
10
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

til nromise that all their HE MAY BE KEM0VED. ances are to be settled by President Cummes-7 TIT AV SETTLE THE WAR key of the United Mine Workers' and Pres- I ill-Xi. J. kJXJ X. J.XJXJ A-AXJ-i 1 XX At riant Tollow n.itnra' AsnrWMfU I dent TO CHANGE ITS ROUTE.

wires should be strung upon a single line ol FOR HALF A MILLloi TWO HTJUDRED FEET 0IT MICHIG vhn w- A airi forested nar- tion, wiu ties i mi nmmammaniimiiium Church, diocese of Southern Ohio, Piqua. May 17, 1393, from points in Ohio annual institute of tne Young People's Christian Union, United Presbyterian Church, St. Louis. May 13 to 21. from Central Traffic and Trunk Line As-ociation poiats i Illinois Stte Sunday-school Aa-sociataonof the Cumberland Presbyterian Church, Bethany.

111. June 6 to 8. from points in Illinois only Military Order of the Loyl Legion of the United States, St. Pant, June 1 to 10, from all association points. DIKED WITH BUT DID NOT KNOW HIM.

II neceaaanr. Another provision oi ARRIVAL OF' PRESIDENT JE FIERY i the uh PRECEDENT IS ESTABLISHED AT iost iiADisoir peisoh. law was ignored, wnicu jiruiui paymg the men on the basis of weight as the coal is taken from the mine. The operators SANTA IE COMPANY'S PEOPOSITIOIT TO DRAINAGE TRUSTEES. Off A MISSION OF PEACE.

AVENUE CHANGES HANDS. poles throughout the southern aistrics. xue electric companies will themselves pay for the work of re-stringing the wires and will also take down all the poles now standing the streets with the exception of the line upon which all the wires are to be strung. The streets of Hyde Park have been defaced by of nnlea and a network, of wires, i that unscreened coal ought not to be paid of mam -t nf thA nrirv for Meeting- of the Presidents of Western Roads It Ides Between Park Row and screened coal, and that making a basis of screened coal results in getting out the coal in better condition. Work will be resumed by r.

rWV i 1 1 ia a.nAAflul enh oioftriR company having a separate and Pinkerton and Illy Fail to Recognize the distinct system. The right to erect all these bwuh ufuw uieu tomorrow, auu caw to be one nf t.ha inKwct vpors that the men Notorious Jinx Tounger. to Re Held in a Day or Two to End the Colorado Conflict World's Fair Rates Cannot Be Restored to Old Figures Large Issue of Bonds Authorized by the "Big Four" Discrimination Against Speaking of detectives reminds me of a ever had. "5e Hotel Site-jm the Title Controversies Settled-tv City's Claim to the Thirty-Foot Strip Made Good by Deeds fronTtT Sellers The Block Secured at a zji Sain-Eqnal to $2,500 a Front Foot The block of nropertv little experience 1 once had with Allan Pinker- Convict Latimer Summoned as a Witness. poles was given by the xown or uyae far before its annexation to the city, and since that time the city has not had authority to compel the companies to combine their lines.

The agreement reached yesterday was an amicable one, the companies being willing to tho nit 17 with npr-t At inn of ton out in 'Frisco." The speaker was Jim 4 the World's Fair. Jackson. Mav 10. Sneci aL Attorney- Younger, who is serving a life sentence in the Minnesota Penitentiary at Stillwater for the General Ellis will be here tomorrow to oppose the There is now a prospect that the Colorado motion which will be argued before Judge Feck Michigan avenue between great Korthfield bank robbery of Sept. 7, 1876.

rate war will be settled this week. President Jeffery of the Denver and Eio'prande arrived by Uapt. Gill's attornev to onash the information. having requests for favors favorably considered in the future. Twelfth street has been sold for $500 OOOl tv, Wrt Tn.niU.- T1 -HIS I saw Pinkerton only once ia my life," con The motion to quash will be based on the point that Gill was not hlo to the law in allowing a x-.

jrnmiey and seph H. Dcfrees of the law fom of Itw Payne Defrees. and th KnnQ. Latimer to escape because Gill was not an otticer AGAINST TEMPORARY VIADUCTS. here unexpectedly yesterday morning, ana is is understood that his mission is "one of peace.

Ho held conferences during the afternoon with the managers of several of the roads, and tho opinion is that a meeting of the Presidents Fifth and Sixth Ward People Call on Mayor Holmes and a W. Kigdon. A contract oi tne prison, but rather a servant or nireu employe, and could not be held accountable criminally. If the motion to quash is denied the case will probably come up for trial Monday. K.

Irving datimnr wan tnHa. to appear as a Harrison. Aid. Vogt and Stuckart and Charles L. and General Managers of the Western roads will be held in a day or two to consider the "uici uos uwu entered into betwef these parties, and a transfer has bees made tn the Title Guarantee campany pending Uw examination of titia and aettlAmait 71 witness in the case against Capt.

Gill. The ques- uon now arises. Will the Warden permii usumw, situation and devise ways and means for the a lira convict, to appear in a court-room i Just six months ago litigation regardmst Schaar, Samuel Klausner, J. W. Maxwell, Patrick Gogan, Jerry Ryan, and Louis Meyer, the committee appointed by the Fifth and Sixth Wards mass-meeting at Koch's Hall Saturday night, called upon Mayor Harrison adjustment of the existing troubles.

Before any decisive steps can be taken as regards the Musicians Remember Gilmore and Cap pa. tinued Younger, and that was at the Palace Hotel ia 'Frisco, where I had the honor of eating supper with him and Yankee Bly, the great Louisville detective. It was in the spring of 1876. The Wells-Fargo express had been held up coming thrqugh the mountains in Southern California and robbed of about $30,003. The Pinkertons were put to work on the case.

They found out that I was in California at the time and of course they had our crowd down for doing the Work. But everything was laid to the James and Younger brothers in those days, you know. "Now it happened that I was tho only one of the boys west the mountains at that time. I was doing a little prospecting in the State and I didu't know of the robbery till it came out in tha papers. Well, one night early in May, 1876, I was walking down Market j.

ouira. ana Messrs. Holmes and Rigdon was settled m- ol Detroit, May 10, rSpeciaLl The dole- general situation it will be necessary for Pres gates to the eighth annual convention of the Na ident Jeffery of the Bio Grande and deeding the property to the other two claia tional League of Musicians are not working bard. President Eeinhart of the Santa Fe to yesterday to protest against temporary viaducts. Mr.

Schaar presented the resolution adopted at the meeting and said it was the voice of the people. He called attention to the as they gather late and adjourn early. After re cum, ouu MuiK uaus irom mem a moran for $290,000. This was undfirst meet and adjust their troubles regarding rates and arrangements in Colorado locally, as the marks eulogistic of the late Bandmasters Gil- time to be the consideration for an undividti more and Canna the convention today took up demoralization in World's Pair rates was the question of the unfair competition of mili luucicDu. me property nas a north froct- occupation by the Illinois Central of all ot Archer avenue from Sanger street to Twenty- tary bands.

The request to Congress to remeay third place, and suggested that this was sufficient to cause the elevation of the tracks. ayo oi leeu on x-arx row, a west fronts ot 200 feet on Michigan avenue, and a south frontage of 100 feet on Twelfth street caused by the local rate war between the Colorado roads. It is understood that President Keinhart decline to meet with President Jeffery for tho consideration of the troubles tne matter caving been cusregaraea, an appeal to the people will be made. The committee wants the pay of the government bands increased, so that it will not be necessary for the members to Mayor Harrison said it would take a long time to elevate the tracts ana scooa ior we Give Up the Disputed Strip. The controversv cnnFnmm.

unacroia the citizen bands. street in 'Frisco when a lady touched me gently on the arm and said, Mr. Younger, I I replied that it was my misfortune between the Denver and Rio Grande and the Colorado Midland until Mr. Collborn, late General Manager of the Midland, who is on temporary viaduct plan. He also characterized Ald.O'Xeill'3 elevated track ordinance as impracticable.

O'Neill was present and Finances of the Railway Telegraphers. Btrip running from Twelfth street to ParV row west of the block between the Canal Trustees, the citv. and thn Imh ViNTOX. May 10. "Special.

The grand said it was practicable if the administration his way here, can take part in the delibera to bear that name, and in. a moment I recognized the lady as an old Missouri girl whom I had befriended years before, when she was officers of the Order of Eailway Telegraphers left this evening for Toronto. where the annual tions. President Reinhart says he is as saw fit to enforce it. The Council would not allow the Mayor to block track elevation.

also been settled. Michigan avenue opposit. anxious as anybody to have the tight brought convention will open next week. The Grand Sec me property was at one time one-hundred mid twenty feet wide. When it to a close, but he does not propose to secure peace by sacrificing the interests of his com- retary a nd Treasurer's report shows that the receipts of the general fund have been $93,711, and the expenditures have been The receipts north of Twelfth street iZZZl Mast Go Farther Into the Lake.

No action has yet been taken on the report of little more than a child. She hain't seen me for nine years, and during that time I had grown a full beard, changed my Missouri slouch hat for a silk and got into the habit of wearing broadcloth clothes, yet that years ago the lot-owners ol the protective (strike) fund have been the condition of the work on the Hyde Park tunnel mads by the City Engineer. Commissioner their fences out thirty feet into the street and ana tne expenuitures have oeen me jui-cago. Rock Island and Pacific and Burlington. woman knew me at a glance.

'After talking about our old Missouri friends pano. He exprtsses the opinion, nowever, that the fight will be settled within a few days. The prediction may safely be made that no matter what the outcome of the proposed conference may be World's Fair rates will not be restored again to the basis of $19 for the round trip, Denver to Chicago. President Jeffery has all along been in favor of a low Jones said yesterday that it is not probable the work on the main tunnel will be stopped, though uedar Kapids end Northern strikes using of this amount. The headquarters of the otlicers Trustees disputed the claim of the propeity.

owners to the thirty-foot strip and the city n. eentlv Ret nn nnnntai- nlnim a few minutes she said: 'Do you know that that on the old intake may be. as the City En- in unicago tomorrow will be tne ir aimer mouse. Pitkerton is in I replied that I did Seth, II. Crals Suspended as Warden Thirteen Tears Ago After an Investigation Similar to the One Now In Progress-Member of the Commute Conducting the Examination Admit a Serious Tangle-Indiana Miners' Strike Ended and Men Will Go to Work.

Fobi Madison, May Special. Thirteen years ago Seth H. Craig, the Warden of the State prison at this place, was removed from office by Gov. Gear and E. C.

McMillan, the present incumbent, was appointed to fill the vacancy, and he completed Craig's unexpired term, but when the Legislature convened was regularly elected and held the position continuously for six years. CoL Crosley then succeeded him and was the Warden for four years, when McMillan ran for office again and was elected. He is now in the third year of his second term but, like his first predecessor, stands a good show of being requested to step down and out. Craig was a defaulter. He conducted the prison for personal gain, and on the recommendation of an investigating committee was ousted.

If only half the charges preferred against the present Warden are proved they will show that he has been following in Craig's footsteps. The committee investigating his administration has put in eight days of hard work, thus indicating that the situation is both serious and full of features demanding explanation. The committee is thorough in its inquiries and has gone over a wide scope of territory. There are so many little things, said one member, that it takes a great deal of time to gather the details together and get them in shape. In addition to the irregularities already enumerated it is charged that the Warden allows his nephew, a clerk in the prison, and Assistant Deputy Gillette to board their horses at the expense of the State that he charges the guards 25 cents a pair for cloth shoes which the State is supposed to furnish free of cost, sells soapgrease and fails to make any record of the transaction, and manipulates the distribution of prison clothing in such a manner as to make money out of it.

The committee completed its inquiry this morning into the potato deal and devoted the balance of the day to examining accounts. Food supplies for the prison are bought generally in carload lots, and during tne winter there happened to be a large supply of potatoes on hand and what the guards wanted for home use was 6old to them. State Fails to Get Proceeds. That would have been all right enough had the State received the proceeds, but so far as the committee has- been able as yet to ascertain from looking over the books and bills it did not. The transactions in soapgrease and clothing are not made clear.

It is impossible to ascertain anything specifically. The charges are made generally, do not go into details, and the committee positively refuses to divulge any of the things sworn to by witnesses. Nearly all the witnesses examined are guards, flerks, and other attaches of the prison, and have had the seal of secrecy put on their lips. The Warden even doesn't know how far the investigation has gone however, he will be given an opportunity to put in a denial, and if possible vindicate himself. Since it became known that things were not right at the prison and that an official investigation was going on the people ot Fort Madison have grown somewhat agitated over tho matter and they are divided in opinion, and as a result heated discussion can be heard in the stores and on the street corners.

Warden McMillan is personally popular in the town with a large portion of the population and they refuse to believe him guilty of crookedness. The committee, however, admits to having found matters in bad condition, but is determined that the facts in detail shall not be given out until they are turned over to the Governor. The appearance of the prison throughout shows that it is well-kept and the prisoners look healthy. ANTI-CO At COMBINE CONTENTION. V1UIU1 iua bifid nas now been deeded by Messrs.

Hohnesand Ris. not. Well, he said she. He is up at the gineer suggests. Mr.

Artingstall says the only elp for the tunnel it to extend it farther into the lake. Has Faith In Mrs. Carse's Management. Palace How and Bly is with Aow Allan ui. w.j auu a narrow siaewaig away Pinkerton had made his boast that if he ever Mcskegom.

May 10. Special. At the rate from Colorado to the World Fair and the Santa Fe has now reached the conclusion that a higher rate than $35 for the round trip uio UIC3CU1. street line snows how the city has taken possession. saw Jim Younger he would know him.

Bly opening session of the State W. C. X. U. today the Must Keep the Streets Clean.

Mayor Harrison yesterday met the street fore President, Mrs. Lathrop, gave a message of greet had seen me nve years beiore in Ijouisville 4. he holdings at the t.w0 comers were com-bmed in 1885 bv W. will keep visitors Irom Chicago during tne ing from her mother, who is 96 years old. The and had come along with Pinkerton to take men he has recently appointed in Sapt McCarthy's office and informed them that the reports from the districts today showed the so me in.

W. Shirk. They consisted of residence prop, erties and cost in the aggregate streets must be kept clean and that each one I had a curiosity to see the "two greatest Will Surrender IU Right of Way Along the Canal If the Board Will Condemn a New Line Farther North, Grade a Donble Track, and Give It 180 Acres of Land for a Switching Yard Commissioner Cooler Opposed to the SchemeOfficers Reports. "The Trustees ot the sanitary district have been the last few days considering a proposition which goes ahead of any of the novel ideas in canal construction which the board has hitherto furnished the public The proposition is the outcome of many months' negotiation with the Santa Fe railroad company to arrive at a settlement of the right of way questions and other legal difficulties that would arise between the railroad and the sanitary district, should the drainage board persist in its attempt to take possession of the Illinois and Michigan Canal between Bridgeport and Summit. A solution has been reached, which is satisfactory to the railroad company.

Engineer Williams, in conjunction with Joseph Donnersberger and J. W. Weston, is preparing plans and estimates of costs, and Saturday the board's joint Committee on Engineering and Finance will consider the data furnished by the engineer and his assistants. The proposition under consideration is as follows The Sanitary Trustees are to enter upon the use of the Illinois and Michigan Canal as the main drainage canaL To do this it is necessary to obtain additional right of way on one or both sides of the cunaL To meet this difficulty the Santa Fe people will give up their present right of way, which adjoins the canal reserve on the north of the sanitary district. In return for this the district is asked to condemn a new right of way for the railroad still further to the north and with the material excavated from the canal construct and grade a double track road from Summit to a point near Bridgeport, the first six miles of the road to be elevated.

The track is to be turned over to the railroad company in readiness for the rails. In addition to this the district is asked to condemn 180 acres of land to the north of Corwith and relocate the switching yards of the Santa Fe system, as it is claimed the present yards at Corwith will be destroyed by the board's use of the canaL The proposition meets with some favor among those members of the board who are iu favor of the canal route, but they are waiting for the engineer's figures before commit-ing themselves in the matter. In the meantime the route to the north of the Santa Fe railroad is gaining in favor. In reference to the proposition of the railroad company Mr. Cooley said yesterday: "It is a waste ot time to consider such a scheme.

It will furnish no relief from the difficulties which surrounJ any use of the Illinois and Michigan Canal by the Sanitary District, in view of the legal questions yet unsettled in the case of the canal itself." Opinion of Attorney. At yesterday's meeting of the board Attorneys Wilson and Carter submitted an additional opinion in regard to the board's use of the canaL It is merely a summary of the opinion given by the attorneys at a meeting held in April between the Illinois and Michi- fan Canal Commissioners and the Sanitary rustees. The opinion follows First The Trustees of the Sanitary District of Chicago have only such powers as are vested in them by the act under which the district is incorporated, and such act, in our opinion, does not confer any power or authority upon the said Trustees to make any contract or agreement with the Canal Commissioners in regard to the conditions upoa -which the Sanitary District may use said canal as a part of the site for its main channel. 1 tie canal belongs to the State of Illinois, and the General Assembly has by statute given the district the right to use any portion of such canal within the County of Cook as a Dart of the site of said channel upon certain terms specified in said act. In oar opinion said terras cannot be altered or modified either by the Trustees of the district or by the Canal Commissioners.

Second In onr opinion the Commissioners of the Illinois and Michigan canal will continue to control the navigation and the collection of tolls upon that part of the canal which may be included in the main channel of the anitary District. The set creating the Sanitary District requires that the public use thereof shall not be unnecessarily interrupted or interfered with, and that me same shall be restored to its former usefulness as soon as practicable. There is no provision of the act creating the district authorizing the Trustees of the Sanitary District to regulate navigation or collect, regulate, or abolish tolls upon that part of the canal which may be included in the main channel of the Sanitary District. In our opinion the power of the Canal Commissioners over the navigation of that portion of the canal used by the Sanitary Us trie detectives in America and I wanted to snow would be held responsible in the district over Fair period. The opinion is that peaceful relations between the Western roads cannot be secured unless the World's Fair rates are thoroughly revised and placed on a basis that will induce people to visit the Fair.

The opinion now is ciety in a flourishing condition. In ber annual message the President takes strong grounds in favor of filling all unfinished pledges for the Temple in Chicago and reaffirmed her faith in Pinkerton that he did not know Jim Younaor. Aim resmeucra on ran row were once ameae the most aristocratic in tbe city. On th front are now t.hrpe of t.heaa which he has supervision. Any negligent man, he said, would be discharged.

The patronage of their offices he asked to have distributed evenly bo 1 asked my friend if she would walk up to tne enterprise and the management, one saia Mrs. Curse had cleared away the diUiculties sug the Palace Hotel with me. She was aston on the lwelfth street corner are two cheao fulima Villi A i-n rma over the districts. ished at 6uch a foolhardy proposal and gested by the J.BIBUNE article. that a rate of one fare for the round trip from Trans-Missouri points and a fare and one-third from points east of the Missouri River will be asreed upon.

But there are in begged of me not to think of do Differences of opinion arising from th original fiumhnftA havA Kpn iha Notes. There are twenty applications for the police Treasurer Refuses to Transfer Funds. ing such a thing. 1 was determined series of lawsuits extending over a term of Siocx City, May 10. Special.

As a result to see them and finally prevailed on her to go with me. We stepped into the parlor of the medals for bravery given ont each lecoration day by the Mayor. Chief McO'laughry. the May- dications that even such rates as are referred to cannot be maintained owing to the large of tho recent embarrassment of the Woodbury County Treasury the Supervisors arranged with a Hotel, and as we passed the dining- -or, and the Controller will meet soon and decide number of cut rate tickets on the market in to whom the two medals shall be given. local bank to carry warrants at a premium of room door my companion called my atten this city and elsewhere and that still lower aoout eigne years, wnich have checkmated a nnmber of negotiations for sales.

Tha original purchase was made with a view to improvement with a fine hotel, and a number of hotel projects involving the corner as a sits have been under way at various times. The Finance committee of the Council will tion to the two detectives seated at supper. I rates will have to be made to prevent the scalpers from controlling the bulk of the went down to the office, registered, and told be asked to mlike an appropriation for the pay of several additional street sprinkling inspectors. per cent interest on the condition that the bank have the county deposits. The board passed a resolution ordering Treasurer Kifer to transfer deposits to their bank.

He refuses, claiming that the law allows him to select the depository and not the board. The board takes the opposite the clerk that I wanted supper for two. As we walked into the dining-room, as good luck 1 here is but oue in the city and Suit. McCarthy thinks ten will be needed this summ r. Kquals 3,300 a Front Foot Thn corner is so favnrnhlw aitnafo L.

would have it, the head, waiter led us to the LARGE FINANCIAL TRANSACTION. Aid. Madden, Chairman of the Finance very table where Pinkerton and lily were. I uui B) flnrnpwhnt difrifnlt to a It a Anmnanu. view, and will institute mandamus proceedings.

New Issue of Bonds Authorized by the ll ICTVTl.n i i values with other holdings in the vicinity. sat down opposite Pinkerton and the lady opposite Bly. Did I eat a hearty supper? Well, committee, says that the committee will take up the question of closing offices in jrlie City Hall at 12 o'clock Saturdays during the World's Fair at its meeting Friday. He does not think the re Dentists Meet at Rock Island, 111. no.

My companion gave me some uneasi Stockholders or the Big Four." Cincinnati, May 10. One of the largest Rock Island, 111., May 10. Special. At the price paia, is equivalent to $2,500 a front foot, or $25 a square foot Tb Chicago University paid $3,100 a foot for forty ness. She was pale and nervous, thinking, of quest will be granted.

meetings of stockholders of the Cleveland, second day's convention of the Illinois and Iowa dental 'societies the afternoon session was held course, that I might be recognized and an at Controller Wetherell is seeking a tenant for Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis railway tempt be made to take me. But 1 enjoyed that iees au uie corner or jmariuge court The Congress Hotel company Becured its holdings nn a tiacia rt tl 1YYI a fr.t here, better accommodations than those used yes meal as much as any 1 ever ate in my the Gage farm near Riverside, which was turned over to the city by the defaulting City Treasurer in 1873. For years Con Sullivan has had terday having been secured in consequence of the company Four met here today to vote upon one of the largest financial trans I always had a profound contempt for de increased attendance. Papers were read by Dr.

and $3,000 for the corner. The Twelfth street the lease at an annual rental of StSDO. The Con tectives. They had come on from New York A. O.

Hunt of Iowa City on the topic. Iowa's actions within its history. Over 200,000 shares troller does not think this enough and is trying to and Chicago in droves to capture us, until we chare in the History and Progress or Dentistry make new arrangements. by Dr. B.

Roland of Alton. TIL. on Conserva got so used to their ways that it was a positive of common stock and 75,000 of preferred stock were represented, which makes up three- tism in Crowns and Bridge Work." The conven enjoyment to have a few of them around. I had a worse opinion of detectives than ever SAYS O'BRIEN WILL MAKE RESTITUTION. tion continues until bat urd ay.

wirucra uu uis wes siue ui aiicmgan aveaua are held at $5,000 a front foot The fourth corner is owned by E. J. Hopsoa and improved with the Imperial Hotel. Tho holding which has just been transferred extends to within 120 feet of the side of tne new Illinois Central depot The purchase was made as an investment without any view to immediate improvement Mr. Defrees is Catholic Knights Council Delegate Gives No Indictment Against Coal Combine.

t. PAUL, May 10. Special. The after eating supper that night. The very man they had traveled across the continent to take had walked right into their arms.

Of course they couldn't have taxen me, anyhow, and it was probably fortunate for them that they Basis of Settlement Contests Settled. The second day of the session of the Supreme fourths of the issue. The vote was practically unanimous upon both propositions before the meeting. The most important of these was to issue $50,000,000 in mortgages and bonds. Five millions of the bonds, bearing 4 per cent interest, are to be sold at the pleasure of the directors to be used for double track and equipment $29,000,000 to be reserved to grand jury practically finished its work today.

It failed to find an indictment against John J. Council of the Catholic Knights of America was opened yesterday morning with prayer Rhodes, manager of the coal combine. Several Minneapolis dealers testified that they had sold didn't know me. Well, after supper l6trolled down-town with my fnend. She invited me Jackson Park.

Mr. Frimley has built up a coal below the combine a figures, but were soon to her home to stay as long as 1 wanted to. by the Rev. Father Koesing. The content between the two delegates from Illinois was de compeueu raise prices.

retire outstanding bonds now secured by but I concluded that it was getting a little too iortune in tne cuewing gum Dusmess. ine purchase is consequently the investment of a half million dollars of chewing gam profits in one of the most eligible hotel corners ia the city. mortgage on portions of the property and warm for me out there, as 1 was alone, so 1 Northwest Notes." walked over to the other side of the city and cided in favor of Jaeger. Another contest between two delegates from Wisconsin was settled by dividing honors evenly among the contesting delegates and placing both jointly the other to be used only after lBti at the rate of $1,000,000 a year for double- The Grand Ijodge aFO. W.

of Wisconsin took a train out for the H.ast. Who was the lady? WelL I don't care to track, equipment, and construction purposes. HOW CH0LEKA IS SPREAD Uf XSBIA. say, for even at this late day it might cause It is understood these bonds are being sold Ernest Emmest. a farmer living near Dixon.

with tae powers of one delegate. The Presi- in London, and this action will place the some unpleasant talk out Frisco. She was 111., was killed in a runaway. Cent was requested by the assembly to notify Through Lack of Sanitation and the Peo Big 1 our iu souna financial position and John Bunn of Decatur. 111., committed sui a true blue friend of ours, however, if 6 he did belong to one of the best families of the city.

the Pope of the session of the Supreme Coun furnish it money for yards, double tracks cide at Wichita, after several days of disci ple's Peculiar Habits. Phildelnhi TjAnrr plain storv of tha cil and to ask him for his approval and bless pauon. and engines, which are needed for the grow ing business of the road. 1 don't know now. long Pinkerton and Biy looked tor me out there, but since we have ing.

rnnditiona that nrpvail in India for the spread Two Bohemian boys riding at full speed A claim for the sum of $2,100 was presented ihe other proposition, which was also voted been here Bly visited us. When I told him of the cholera was told yesterday moroing at near Traer. collided. Both horses and one that 1 bad supper with him in 'Frisco in '76, boy were killed. by Branch No.

10 of Cincinnati for assistance rendered in the capture of the alleged de Rockford. offered $15,000 bonus for the upon affirmatively, was to give authority to the directors to extend the line of the Big Four to the Cities of Jefferson ville and New Albany, and Louisville, or to one or more of them by construct aig new lines, or location of the shoe factory at Appleton, re faulting Treasurer j.vL J. Brien. The claim was referred to the Committee on New Business. In connection with this matter one of cently purnea, put was declined.

the Jew Century club by Dr. -Uoot ol the Woman's Medical College, who has lived for eight years in Southern India. Dr. Hoot began by describing the conditions under which people live in Southern India in order to show exactly ahat crenerate the cholera. There and jogged his memory a little, he remembered the incident distinctly.

No, it wasn't detectives that brought us down at last. After dozens of detectives and hundreds of uniformed State militia had hunted us for weeks and finally gave up the chase a crowd of farmers with muskets and pitch The Rev. Dr. J. P.

Robinson of Remington. the delegates renewed the statement that be by traffic arrangements with existing com and Miss Ada B. Swisher of Paxton, 111., Gov. Nelson of Minnesota Calls It to Meet in Chicago June 5. St.

Mey 10. Special. Gov. Nelson today accordance-with a resolution adopted by the Legislature issued a call for an anti-coal combine convention to be held in Chicago June 5 and 6. The Governor has received avorable replies from the Governors of twenty-six States whom he had invited to appoint delegates to the convention.

The call is as follows To his Excellency the Governor of Dear Sir: Referring to my communication to you of the 17th in which yon were requested te name ten delegates to represent your State at the Inter-State Coal Combination and other unlawful trusts conference, to be held on the tirst Monday in Jnne next, at such place as would po mutually satisfactory to the Governors of the different States and Territories, 1 have the honor to inform you that favorable responses have been received from a large majority of the Governors, who signify their in ton tion of appointing delegates to attend the conference. It is evidently panies, or leasing or purchasing lines now were married at faxton yesterday. fore the end ot the sessions of the Council O'Brien, who is in Chicago at the present time, would probably submit a proposition buut. Thus a clear held is given the direct The Tunncliffe-Cooke mayoralty contest at forks got alter us down near Galesburg, 111., is to be settled by a recoun t. is absolutely no sanitation there, as ws haw ors for adding immensely to the value of this growing system.

tor a settlment of his defalcation to the affect Medeiia. and brought us here. which will take place next ednesday. it. Drainage, with the exception of a lever hrooHor in the wav of an open sewer, is un that he would turn over $3,000 in cash and give notes becoming due in ten years for the The tools of non-union teamsters and crrad- We have served now over twenty convict years and both Cole and I are getting to be old men.

Bob, you know, died about three amount of known. In the villages people live in low mud ers in Columbus, were destroyed Tuesday night. The union men, who are on a strike, deny Have No Sympathy for the Fair. The General Passenger Agents of the roads in In the meetmgheld the afternoon numer any connection wita tne matter. ous amendments to the constitution of the O.

Smith, arrested on complaint of years ago. Do we ev.pect to be pardoned? Well, of course we hope to be pardoned some day. No, we will never try to break jail. It order were offered and referred to the Com Miss Black more of Kansas City. was released huts, where all the family congregate in one room, the dimensions of which are likely to be 14 feet by 10 or 12 feet As there are no outbuildings at all, there is no way in which per- -sons can protect themselves against the cholera It it- amaa onruava in cllfih a hnl1-4ihnd- Some mittee on Laws.

The Committee of the in St. Paul, yesterday on paying the $1,500 would be an easy matter to get out of here. Whole, by Judge Shine of Kentucky, its ue is ciairaeu iaj nave got oy swinuiing. and we have had a good many chances, but we the Central Traffic Association met yesterday morning at tho office of Commissioner Donald in the Monaduock Building and the entire session was devoted to the consideration of applications for reduced rates for various meetings and conventions. For the Grand Array of the Republic, Christian Endeavor, and National Educational Associations a rate of one fare for the round trip was agreed upon, while for saller organizations a rate of a fare and one-third was Chairman, reported the order to be in a pros Joseph R.

Gochey married Miss Annie the wish of a majority of the Governors that the conference be held at Chicago. as a were nunted down once and it would be an easier job to catch us again. If we ever walk 11 IH WliV.U 11 I times, if the well runs dry, stagnant water perous condition. The council adjourned after deciding to attend requiem mass this Schneller of Winona, Minn. Yesterday the allegation was brought against him that be had a wife from whom he was not divorced.

Gochey at out of here it will be as free men. STou know Third The obligation is to restore the canal to its former usefulness and that the public use thereof shall not be unnecessarily interrupted or interfered with, and imposes the obligation upon the Sanitary District to do whatever is necessary to restore and maintain that portion of the canal which they may use in such condition that the same may be as advantageously nsed for navigation as before its use by the Sanitary District. If to that end a tow-path shall be necessary and Sum ping works at the Summit, in our opinion the anitary District will be under obligation to construct such tow-path and erect and maintain Baid pa raping-works. In our opinion the Sanitary District will not be under obligation to furnish any land along the new channel except such as may be necessary to enable navigation to be maintained therein as hereinbefore stated. Delayed by High Water.

The Chief Engineer's report showed the disposition of the force under bim, and gave a table of the amount of work done between Liockport and Summit. The contract required worn; to be done by May 1 amounting in COSt tO whiln nr. tr that J.fk. must be used. A nign caste personage not allow a low caste to use his welL our notoriety ia what keeps us here.

It isn't once disappeared. morning at 7:30 and high mass at 9 o'clock, at which the eouncil expects to be addressed by the Archbishop. Today's session will commence at 10 :30 o'clock. larger and more representative gathering can be had and the States will be more fully and generally represented. In view of this fact the conference will be held at Central Music Hall, in the City of Chicago, the 5th and 6th days of June.

1S93, commencing at 10 o'clock what we have done in Minnesota. Why. only Commonly, people go to the river lor water. As the water is frequently not on tho surf a The case contesting the will of the Re v. Har a few years ago a fellow was sent up from the rison Thompson, a Bantist minister of Lenan on.

western part or the state for chopping his own made. Ihe fact that these rates are much lower than the rates made for the World's Fair gave rise to a stormy discussion, some of the raoro sensible General Passenger Agents being unable to see why so much lower rates should b- made tub is dug in the river oea ana tne watei -n 3 At tViia tnH nr nt the 111., who committed suicide in January, is on a. m.ounea. lnaicaaona point to a largo gnth- trial in tne ot. tJlair Uouuty Circuit Uourt.

Ihe ANOTHER HATCHET REPORTED FOUND. father all to pieces with an ax. He served about a year and was pardoned. No one here all the functions of bathing are perfornn-a. estate is valued at $50,000.

knew that he had any friemas at ail. Suit has been becrun at Galesburg. 111.. for meetings and conventions than to tne World Fair. It was contendtsd by the World's Fair sand baggers that the Fair rates were for a period We are trying to live down our notoriety, eriug ui representative men irom tne ditterent States in the Union and 1 sincerely hope your State will be fully represented at that time.

Kindly furnish me with the names and addresses of the persons whom you appoint. I am. yours very respectfully, Knute Nelson. Governor of Minnesota. against tho Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen on a $1,000 insurance policy.

Two women, both First, the jar is niiea, ana me swt "ys dashed over the person soon trickles back to its source. Ia the case of certain religious ea. thusiasts water is poured over the body fifty times. Next the Seely. the single piees but it a pretty hard thing to do one life of six months, while the rates for meetings and time.

The fellows that write this blood and claiming to be the widow of the insured, II. Tim lin, are interested iu the scut. thunder literature have been our worst ene Preparations Being Made for the Trial of the Borden Case. New Bedford, May 10. Special.

It is reported today that another hatchet has recently been found in Fall River and that this implement is believed to be the long-looked-for article in the Borden case. The story is neither denied nor affirmed by offi The Governor has appointed as the Minne of silk or cloth which is worn as a garment. conventions were for a short period only, lhey clinched the matter by insisting that the General Passenger Agents had nothing to do with the establishment of World's Fair rates, which bad been tiled by the General Managers themselves. mies. No there isn't more than a half dozen A merchant named Allen of Keithsburg, must bo washed.

This is dipped into bis sota delegates to the convention 111., arrived in East Dnbuque. 111., a month ago pages of truth about us in any book 1 ever UHHU IUO engineer says only was paid, leaving a shortage of $720,490. That is explained by the fact that fcx-Congressman J. B. Wakefield.

Blue Earth City: U. B. Shaver. Kasson: Frank F. Davia Min ana tney alone could change the rates.

accompanied Dy a woman he claimed was ins widowed sister. Yesterday Allen's wife reached Uubuouo. She savs the woman is a resident pool. Finally the jr is rehiied ana cameu home. The quality of the water by the tune th iar is refilled is promising, indeed, wbea vvx av cvo on account of the high water, and also by the saw.

Nothing but a lot of fairy stories, got up to selL Most of the books about us. you knaw, have me down as having been with Quantrell during the war. Now I was barely 14 when the war broke out. I enlisted in the neapolis; Congressman-Elect James A. Tawney, YV uiona Ignatius Donnelly, Hastings of Keithsburg and she will sue her for $10,000 for iact sna several contractors are still at work cials.

It is stated that this hatchet was minus cholera is ia the air. In these river tabs New Southwestern Association. St. Loots, Mo My 10. The agreement alienating ner nusDand attections.

vtuv. r. n.icf), (Y iumar; ex-voneressman a. a. Strait.

ShakoDee: pi.Lipnt JJmi r. A putting in their plants and excavating machinery. As soon as these plants are readv reached by the railways of the Southwestern the clothes are washed. ihe eauie taken there to drink. Dr.

Boot said tha St. Cloud; W. P. Murray, St. Paul; J.

F. Jacol THE SEAL OF THE FISHERMAN. the engineer says the contractors will have Railway and Steamship Association for the reor Confederate army and served as a spy. I carried dispatches from friends of the Confed in sending a man to the river to men Buii, juaaisou. no trouble in catching up with their work ganization of the body provides for the election of eracy in the Jnorth through the Union lines.

Attorney Carter reported that the board a permanent Chairman and Secretary, with head' A Fish Has Been Engraved on the Pope's NOT SHARP ENOUGH FOR A HOOSIEK. rater there was sever any that he would not fill his jar with tue tho instead 01 and if I wanted to I could tell you some inter paia sitsu.uou for the right of way in April quarters ia St, Louis. All rate matters are to be adjusted by the Rate committee, composed of freight traffic officers in all the interested lines bignet Since the Thirteenth Century. The "Fisherman's Seal." whinh has hoon it i-uu uuw hu aii it neeuea between Summ Trick of a Green Goods Man Detected by digging a fresh hole. The very cleanliness esting things about people in Illinois.

Most of my work was done between Springfield and Nashville, But here comes the guard. You ana iiockport except twenty-five acres, for called together by the Chairman from time to referred to in the nresa flistmifhps from Rnm the Intended Victim. wnicn negotiations were being made. and Washington in connection with the ap Bbazil, May 10. Special.

Clay A communication from Dr. F. W. Reilly was read in which notice was given that Dr. must step out, it's time to lockup." A LITTLE ONE FOE F0US CENTS.

vity, on the southern border of this county time, and their rulings on trathc will be hoal. Traffic matters in dispnt9 will be heard and determined by a Board of Arbitration to be composed of three traffic officers to be selected as the occasion may arise. Sixty days' notice must be the people, and they are exiremeiy -r; tends to the spread of cholera because tnrir method of bathing is so unintelhgeut Southern India there is always more orl? cholera. It is often prevalent after a certaia religious festival of the marriage of two divinities which is celebrated by an encamp Martin, the board's sanitary inspector, had has a clever sreen foods episode. T.prlw in its handle.

May 10. Special Now that it is de'Smtely settled upon that the Borden case is to on the boards at New Bedford the first Monday in June everthing is bustling in the office of the Clerk of Courts. Simeon Borden the assistant clerk, says that over 100 jurors will be needed to select from at the trial because there have been so many about the county who have formed opinions. Miss Borden will be taken to New Bedford the week before the trial opens and placed in a cell, which is to be assigned her in the House of Correction, and the same attempt at secrecy will be made by Sheriff Wright which was attempted and failed Monday. Bridget Sullivan, who is ostensibly having a prolonged picnic at the House of Correction and who is earning more than board wages, is really impounded, she being considered too valuable a witness to be allowed to run about loose.

been made an Inspector of the State Board the week a well-dressed stranger made his ap given or withdrawal irom the association. Man vi xieaiin, ana could use his authority But It Is Largs to Cause Wach pearance in the town, lie went about making Bucn making the contractors comply agers will select the Chairman. The Rate committee got together today and is overhauling the Trouble to Cashiers. pointment ano powers and actaoi Aigr. satolli is the seal ring worn by the Pope, and used by him as a seal on all official papers to which his signature is attached.

Such a seal has been worn and used by the Popes since the thirteenth century. The engraving of the seal is the form of a fish and the cipher of the Pope. Upon the death of a Pope the Cardinal Chamberlain, immediately after announcing dentil- takes t.hA fitlhormnn'a acl nr ia acquaintances, and finally seemed to be espe cially intimate with Clinton M. Cooprider, tariffs with a view to restoration of rates on wurj ruies. ur.

Martin su xnitted a Mnni .1 ment in the river bed for tour or nve As for facilities in caring for the sick inin- -3: T- thnWWl HOW IOnOTO- Texas trathc generally. A well-known Wall street broker has pasted up in a conspicuous place in his office a bit of paper which is regarded as one of the young man who lives in th pniint This hospital at Willow Springs was ready for the ly poor these are by describing her experience muorera. ne reported the health Coming to Settle the Bate War. morning the stranger and Cooprider went into the former's room at the Kline House. The financial curiosities of tha street.

It is a cer in the house of the ice-ireeiueQ M.n. a wanlrhv man. WOO Dentek, May 10. Special. Manager or me laborers as unusually good, and said Agaew who are constructing Section Xo.

9, refused to supply their employes with stranger had agreed to give Cooprider $1,000 Collbran of the Midland Division of the Santa Fe lliui iJCllii jr vi a rayed himself resplecdently when he icsme h. uvu w. USUI ring, as it is also called, and shatters it with a left for Chicago today, where he will meet Rein i.vw:t unuung water, ur. Martin was in in Dans Dins, just as good in appearance as the genuine, for $300. Cooprider paid over the hardt.

President Jeffery of the Rio Grande, and iinmiuer iu prevent ever oemg used on a forged document. The succeeding Pope is at Once KlintlllPll with fish rmrr onirnvoH tified check for four cents drawn on one of the national banks of New York. This four cent derelict the bank accountants probably have a stronger name for it has now been out several years and is probably a constant cause of irritation to the bank people, who structed to see what he could do with his others at the Midland unices. It was sivan out money, ne stranger put it into an envelope. Of auiuoruy as an officer of the State Board Health.

that Collbran bad gone out on the road. Insiders his monogram, ihe device of a fish as a uo auuressea to nimsell, to be sent ailOther nORtoffira nnd nlnnorl it in tk believe that the rate war will be ended inCnicago ask her to visit his wile, tnus snowm for his wife's condition. Undoubtedly meant to do the best ho could for the aiik worn-an, for the doctor found her in a room aaja-cent to her husband's a position of honor. The woman was badly crippled and oniy to crawl down from her cot Beyond playm. with the children and polishing the jeeis The board met in its new rooms in the wunin two aays.

oyuiuui oi vuristiamiy is very oia. u. itoeJt, D. ill hiR TTiAFnvcrin has thia nnta. UUlltimiT- tmunntml.K,.

I now must cf necessity take a balance four mr J' i.u ji a newspaper lying on the table and smoothed down as if blotting the ink. Ho Railway Notes. provided for such of the public as may wish cents out of the way as a true one. It is not known what means the drawee of this check then pulled it out, or what The question as to who will be President of Mfcwuu uug uviru a meetings purported to be the same envelope and handing it to Cooprider. said Now.

noth ng relieved the monotouj oi --ti fr A hole in tto used to induce the teller to certify it, but they were undoubtedly potent ones, as may be the Missouri Pacific railway system has at last been solved. George J. Gould was elected Presi MAT NOT STAY EXECUTIONS. -7 vau UVKI St. Clement of Alexandria, who flourishod towards the decline of the second century (A.

D. 194), ia one of his works called the recommended the Christians of his day to have the rings they wore engraved, not with the images ot idols and of utensils, which contribute to sin or intemperance, but with a dove, a fish, a ship under full sail, a dent yesterday ot both the Missouri Pacific and learned by any one who will present for cer ot, Liouis, iron Mountain, and southern railroads. Prosecuting Attorney Assy Issues aa Or- tification a check for any way near a like amount, even though the drawee's name I nave told you I haven't my green goods with me, but 1 will leave this envelope containing your money with you to send it to me when you receive the $1,000, which I will send ju as soon as ever I get home." Cooprider wall for refuse was cleaned only once a day-The woman died of blood poisoning. Aoa this is the way a sick person fared one the better houses. Usually a sick J1800." placed in a room that is reached Uova The General Freight Committee of the Cen der la Polios Coart Business.

be good for ten thousand times the tral Traffic Association is in session at the office of Commissioner Blanchard in the Monadnock Building, considering the various subjects named Prosecuting Attorney Asay yesterday issued an order to his assistants that none of them amount at the bank at which it is presented, Lr utuor, "Thefisrureof a fish oq uiuugut mere was something wrong about THE SHARP PEOPLE OF CAPE COD. How Some Speculators Got Ahead of the Town Government. A story of sharp legislative practice comes from Cape Cod. It also illustrates the cumbrous methods of town government on that old-fashioned peninsula. Some of the citizens of a certain town believed they saw a remunerative enterprise in raising herrings in a fresh-water pond near the sea, with which it had once been connected by a small creek now filled up.

Thereupon they petitioned the Legislature for a license to use the waters the pond, at the same time giving notice of their application to the local authorities, as required in such cases. The sleepy town fathers were so slow in calling a meeting to consider the question of assent or protest that they were anticipated by the passage of tne bill. -The meeting was held, nevertheless, and angry protests were put on record against giving to a few persons natural advantages that rightly belonged to and should be enjoyed by thA mnnv. nrliamo vpfi hv Kt The teller would probably hold it and give a cashier's check for a like amount in place in me commissioner call. At a late nour last the auu Hsueu me Btranger to let him see Paper he Was niltt irm in hia nrafc-of TV.

house by crossing a court ana paasuis an Riley. The alley usually has black, -Uinf water in it. fhe ro is seven feet must stay the execution of any case in any police court. Ha also notified the police glyphic is of very frequent recurrence on the monuments of tirimitiva OntlAlliflT TnAi'lMnb evening the committee was still in session. u.

ujau protested and Cooprider pulled a pistol and i an Official announcement is made of the ap of it If the party didn't like that he could cash or do the other thing. The bank would most likely pay a considerable premium to magistrates that no policeman other than a term which signifies a fish is composed of the initial 1aa. i pointment of H. Ackert. late General Manager 'iwi it a mm an tne same time openmg his other hand and his teeth the envelooo commanding officer may be allowed to stay mm acreci name ana titles, as In the court are oiten ioubu "io ens, and a number of persons.

IsoWJS'j that under such conditions cholera sp res-like wildfire. But cholera is always brouso'- of the Iowa Central railroad, as General Manager of the Eigin. Joliet and Eastern railwavcntnnanv. get hold of that four-cent check, as once did stranger had given him and which niirnort.Art week language, ol our Divine Kedeemer. 'JeumChrf an execution and that when the Law Department wants such action taken he will Bend to to contain his money.

He found brown paper a.a wiit inio supervision auu uirecTiofi or an departments except the treasury. His office will fcin. VI VllAi. JUC bavior. On account of that spiritual regen- the magistrate a letter to that effect.

He the "Old Lady of Threadneedle Street" in an instance of this kind recorded by a writer in the London Notes and Queries for July 1, 1S82. By some misadventure iu iu men insisted on having the papet out of the Btrancer'a nn-fetr Tt n-oa of be at 1.00m ail itoyal Insurance Building. It never starts of itself. Veiled Sarcasm. -rr n- ni; nicer autj juau received Dy being bora, as it were.

bv vo, procured and being opened was found to oon- said that under this new order no one but the City Attorney, a commanding police officer, the police magistrate, under certain cases ni luiwatcu tutu UK laith of Jesus, and from the conviction that if a note tor one penny stanopea witn tne promise to pay" of the Bank of England tjooper "isay. uwiwr, a. a joke ia hi3 prayer for oar public othciaJ Notice was given yesterday that the lines in tbe Western Passenger Association have adopted the following rule to take effect May 13, Bicycles carried in baggage cars of lines in the Western Passenger Association shall be charged for at regular excess basrgairo rates. mtt.imifArt i.iey uiu doi continue in that vivifying belief un envelope witn cooprider JfoUU. INDIANA MISERS' STRIKE ENDED.

got into circulation in 11. and tor many 1 ucau, UJUCk iUldUUliy lose their Ralvar.inn a- proviaea lor by law, and the Attorney can stay executions. If there is any charge of boodle there are but four parties to years gave tbe cashiers much trouble with HILJ had provoked, the gentlemen interested in the tians delighted to employ the BymboL and their accounts." "About hiteen years xerms mat Have Been Insisted on by the weight 10V pounds. Baby carriages shall be go io ana is wiii oe an easy matter to nnd I -1. says the writer in Notes and Queries, "it was yrupaganuu ui uerruxg nave petitioned me XJn.V.

in Operators Finally Accepted. ITw me enigmatical ap-peHafeoa of Pisciculi, or fishes. i-ERKE in brought to the bank, but tbe owner, not unwisely, would not take a penny for it, and I believe the bank settled the transaction by I UVl ten days of conference th Tniani Kif charged ior at regular excess bagsage rates, estimated weight fifty pounds, minimum charge to be 25 cents. At the May meeting of tbe Western Passenger Association tbe question of proportions to be accented on World's Fair excursion tickets, rami. umwi out tmiu vjuiumuuuuners ior permission to reopen the old waterway from the sea.

Attacked fay Highwaymen. Cnabashed. Jack Friske Can you love meT" Miss Pert9 "Whv tr giving blm Jta. Just Like a Man. Jack Friiikn W1 1 I i.

rm Gostav Johnson, No. 153 Townsend street, and F. P. Carson, No. 136 Townsend street, were held up by four men at Market and Locust streets at 1 uioruingT Hooper" How?" t.

for Cooper-" Didn't you notice that he IM'. the blossmir of the Lord upon those who goj-' the people Pnck. Why She Opened the Letter. Willis" I am sorry that your wife opened ts business letter I sent you, Harris. ou tow that she never opeaed yoor letters." h3, Harris She doesn't as a rule.

you see, you made a great mistaite by mar.u udge. Still Worse. She-M Can you think of anythin wores twa for a girl to encouraga a maa when shs has no tentionof marrying aimf he He yes. Suppose sha should change mind?" judge. m.

orawer yon on hand, but 1 will have the many reasons typewrit- Mrs. Stocks If we move into that cheap vj uu uie guury party is. WILL COMBINE ON ONS SYSTEM. Hyde Park Wires to Be Strang on One Line of Poles. Corporation Counsel Kraua and Commissioner of Public Works ones had a long conference yesterday afternoon with representatives of all the telegraph, telephone, and electric light concerns having wires strung in Hyde Park.

After several hours' talk the city officials secured from the representatives of house we'll lose caste." ing in one direction over lines in association territory, was considered and tbe following resolution adopted World's Fair excursion rates which read in one direction only over lines in the territory of the Western Passenger Association shall yield such lines nothing less than the reduced single-trip rat. authorizod for one way World's Fair business." o'clock yesterday morning. The men dragged them into an alley near the corner. Johnson and Carson struggled with the robbers until Officers operators and miners today signed a contract for the scale year, beginning May 1 last- The terms are practically as the operators insisted upon at the beginning, the price of mining being 70 cents a ton, the same that was paid last year. The men gained one point in securing $3 a day instead of $1.90 for day labor beneath the surface; The operators refused to comply with the recently amended law providing for weekly pay day, but signed to pay semimonthly as heretofore.

Hereafter all criev- Mr. Stocks Don't care if we dot it's the best we can afford without running hopelessly into De Leslie and Schoenheit of the East Chicago debt, and besides, it's a comfortable place any ion tne list." a etc York Herald. hieajro. Now does your boldness conquer all The troubles that might bring despair; Again the maxim yoa recall None but the brave deserve the Fair." Washington Star. how." Avenue station arrived on the scans attracted by the noise.

The highwaymen dropped their vic The Central Traffic Association (passenger KtVo TTnh Jnst a man. Onlv so you can be comfortable, and pay every little tims and ned. Uennia Jtfeckman, said to be one of the men, was arrested. ucpanmeuw nas agreeu io grant excursion rates at a fare ana one-third for the round trip for the bill as quick as it comes yon Hon ears What following occasions: Protestant Episcopal the world thinks. JXeto XurK neemy..

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