Indianapolis Journal, Volume 49, Number 2, Indianapolis, Marion County, 2 January 1899 — Page 2

2

more Interested In perfecting present systems than In building new ones. The industrials have attracted much attention, but these represent little new capital so far, though it is in this direction and in foreign markets that American capital will probably t>e obliged to look for more profitable employment, Buch considerations give our tx-.st railroad stocks and bonds an added value. These are being absorbed by strong institutions and rich men. and their supply is being so rapidly reduced that higher prices must be paid in Wt 9 than in 1898 by those who want them. Our opinion therefore is that the market will eventually go considerably higher. A reaction is very desirable, but seems impossible while so many are willing to buy at any recession of consequence. tSome liquidation has occurred, still the public does not yet seem prepared to take profits and cannot be forced to do so under present conditions. By and by a larger reaction Mill come; it may be closer at hand than snpposf and; so we can only emphasize the advice to he cautious concerning stocks and bonds which have advanced out of proportion to their intrinsic merit. ADVANCES IN STOCKS. The advances in stocks, compared with the lowest of the year, show very striking changes. In March and April, previous to tin outbreak of the war. the market was at its lowest, while the highest prices were generally touched Tuesday last. The uranger and Pacific groups show the most extraordinary advances, frequently of thirty points and over: Iwest, Dec. 27. Adi 's, IN e lVi v full p'nts. At* in- "a. T. \ K. I'c 1% 1% 9 A'-hl .n. T f S. Pe pref.. 22% 62% 29 < a radian pactfl.- a - , fir, 20 1 'i.tfal of New Jersey .... 83% 93% 10 • ’entrai Parifle 11 42 32 ' * ■ sapt-ake <V Ohio 17% 25% N • hi*. fturlington & 85% 1240 28 • tii-ae* Mil. & St. Paul 83% 119% 3*l t'blcago a.* Northwest 113% 142% 2'j • Itl*-ag. K I .. P vi 114% 34 Delaware & Hudson 91 104% 11 Denver & Rio Hrando 10 20% 10 Krle Ist prof 29% 38 9 Illinois Central 96 114% 18 I-ike Shore &M. S 17'% 201% 31 Louisville & Nashville 14 65 21 Manhattan Elevated 90 98% 8 Metropolitan 125% 192% 68 Missouri, K A T. pref.... 28% 38% 10 Missouri Pacific 22 46 24 New York & K. R ....105 123% 18 Norfolk A Western pref.. 42% 63% 21 Northern Pacific vot. trust 19 43% 24 Northern I’ r* ill pref 56% 78% 22 Pennsylvania 110% 123 13 Reading Ist pref 36 48% 12 Southern Pacific 12 35% 21 lexas .*• Pacific 8% 20 11 Union Pacific 16% 44% 28 I idon Pacific pref 45% 74% 29 Wabash pref 14% 23% 9 American Sugar Refining. .K>;% 124% 17 American Tobacco 83% 143% , CO Federal Steel 29 50 21 Federal Steel pref 69% 85% 16 international Pai>er 48 63 15 National Biscuit 30% 52% 22 “hlcago Uas 86% IP % 24 Tennessee Coal and 1r0n... 17 35% 21 l nited States T.eather pref 53% 75% 22 United States Rubber 14% 45% 31 The closing year has been a remarkable one in many respects. An unexpected war has boon fought and won within its limits. About 10.000,000 additional population have come under our control; thousands of square miles of the most fertile territory in the world have been added to our domain; civilization has taken a momentous step forward, and the Uhlted States, conscious of its maturity and strength, lias suddenly taken a foremost itositfim in the family of nations, Involving changes of policy and vast possibilities concerning the future which can only lie dimly forseseen. Whether we will or no, events are forcing upon un a policy of expansion, which, in spite of dangers, means an era of great opportunities for American enterprise, A revolution has taken place within a few short months; the curtain has been drawn, and our people are rapidly beginning to realize that their field is the world, and that in the future we must sidopt moro liberal ideas and work on a larger plan. 1899 WILL BE PROSPEROUS. This year we will strike the highest notch of prosperity that this country, or any other, has ever reached. Good times will embrace the entire Nation—all industries will enjoy great activity, and in consequence labor will be in full demand at good wages. The people of this country will be contented, happy and loyal beyond precedent. The glorious results of the Amoriean-Spanish war are going to be more far-reaching than the most brilliant dreamers of America’s destiny have ever pictured. The world’s commerce will he revolutionized. The acquisition of the Philippines makes our Pacific co;ust of Immensely greater importance and value to us than ever before. We are placed in possession of a front door entrance to the vast commerce of all Asia. From ocean to ocean run our great railroads, and tinder this new impetus these great arteries of trade will infuse life into the remotest comers of the land. The construction of the Nicaragua and Panama canals in our interests must soon be undertaken. Their completion will make the Caribbean sea the commercial rendezvous of the world. The enormous benefits to accrue to us may be only imagined. Porto Rico, our new outi>ost. and Cuba will share In the great distribution. We are now fast approaching a 100,000,00d population, which will certainly come within the next ten years. Reflecting men now begin to realize that fact, and that then we cannot fail to surpass all other countries in wealth and international importance. Hitherto they have not dreamed of what the United States is to the rest of the world, and now that their eyes are open to the inevitable expansion of our commerce and power, a great hope is inspiring thd"public consciousness This new inspiruTionMpiust henceforth be a great impulsive force behind the industry and wealth of the country, and its effect can hardly fall anything short of a great bound in national enterprise. The great financial and commercial developments which have been man’fest in the United States for the last decade are now assuming larger proportions than our forefathers ever dreamed of. The theory of expansion which our victories over Serve h-'-' forced upon us will develop the wealth and prestige of this country in a way that will make the nations of the eartli regard our progress with amazement and profound respect. Already they are predicting a future for us hardly second to the Roman empire when that mighty power was mistress of the world: but we arc not going to be an empire after the fashion of the potency once wielded by Rome. There will be no tyranny in oar political system, nor any constant reaching out for further possessions. We will simply keep the territories we have fairly won. and si t about civilizing their inhabitants and educating them for self-gov-ernment. CIVILIZATION WILL BE SLOW. Tt is not proposed, as some jteople seem to think, to admit these people to tlie full privilege of citizenship at once. We have not done sc* with our home. Territories, but have subjected them to a period of probation until they were qualified to enter the Union as States. There is no reason why the same rule of action should not apply to the territories captured from Spain. It will take longer time, but in the case of Cuba and l’orto Rico the time will be much shorter than most people imagine, for they will learn fast when under mild and proper control and no iungtor in the bonds of slavery. It will take the Filipinos longer to develop into true manhood, but in the meantime these islands will be a great source of wealth to this country. They will enable us, with the friendly assistance of Great Britain, to keep an open door to the Oriert and maintain our prestige in a wide domain, which will form a great outlet for our largely increasing manufactured goods of every description. It was by means of such outlets for her goods that Great Britain became the greatest and most wealthy manufacturing Ration of the world. We are old enough now to follow in our mother country's footsteps, and she is now expressing her astonishment <it the astounding progress which her offspring have made in little more than a cental y, w hile it has taken her several centuries to attain her present stage of development. The countries which our possessions in the Pacific will open up to us as markets for produce and manufactured goods will soon number nearly a thousand million people, or fully two-thirds of the entire hihabltants of the earth. Our teeming soil and our great progress in discovery and invention of all labor-saving machinery will enable u. 5 to supply the greater number of these people with everything they require as cheaply as they could be supplied by any other nation. The Philippines are absolutely necessary as a base of operations to enable us to supply the people controlling these immense markets peaceably with whatever they may choose to order on the principle of open and fair competition, without any monopoly maintained at the cannon's mouth and the point of the bayonet, as certain other nations would attempt to force a market for their goods. The “open door" to the Orient will be our motto, and will inspire our manufacturers in their business to do the best they can< as “Remember the Maine” inspired our soldiers to free these territories, and will afford us a base to maintain an open door for the distribution of the greatest supply of the best of •11 kinds of goods that these downtrodden cation# have ever enjoyed. This kind of commercial enterprise will raise the United States to a position of international imKrtance in a few years which no oilier Ruin thought before the war they could attain In less than a century. Rome people speak of expansion and the possession of colonics as If they must le< eaaarily imply imperialism and ar emperor. There is no such necessity. utside possessions and territories can be more efficiently managed by a republican form

of government than by an imperial form. This has been demonstrated throughout the world’s history. Things went well while the republics lasted, but when ambition led to the one-man power it generally ruined the nation. There is no reason to believe that such a history of ruin would be repeated in our Republic. The circumstances are different. JOHN OSTERLOO'S FUNERAL Memory of the IJeail Fireman Honored ly All Terre Haute. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. TERRE HAUTE. Ind., Jan. I.—Perhaps the largest funeral cortege ever seen in Terre Haute this afternoon followed the remains of Captain John Osterloo, of the tire department, who died from injuries received in the Havens & Geddes fire, to the cemetery. Osterloo’s engine was in black and the hose wagon of his company w’as piled high with flowers. The Knights of Pythias, Red Men. the fire department and the mayor and City Council were in the procession. The streets on the w r ay to the cemetery were crowded. The funeral services were held at St. Patrick’s Church. Valnnble Pacini? Stullion Shot. Special to th<> Indianapolis Journal. PENDLETON, Ind., Jan. I.—“ Day Star,” a valuable pacing stallion with a record of 2:17. belonging to John Lewark, of this city, broke a leg last night and had to be shot this morning. “Day Star” was foaled in 1886 and was valued at $1,200. He was kicked by a colt two weeks ago, and it is thought a fracture was caused by the kick, and that last night he got down in the box stall and twisted the injured leg and broke it. Pulpit Change*. Special to the Indianapolis Journal. VALPARAISO. Ind., Jan. L—Rev. Clifford Stewart, of Brooklyn, la., has accepted a call to the Christian Church at Westville, succeeding Rev. Oren Orahood. w r ho has accepted a call to an Indianapolis church. Rev. Harry G. Hill, pastor of the Christian Church at Hebron, has accepted a call to a Christian church in Cincinnati, O. Indiana. Motes. Allen C. McDonald, formerly of Richmond, is now chief clerk in the office of the inspector of the Third Lighthouse District, at New York city. Statistics compiled for Richmond show the following for 1898: Births, 292; marriages. 340; building permits, 175; fire alarms, 68. with an aggregate loss of $23,570; arrests, 852; expended for public improvements, $lB,051.85; deaths, 210. FOR BACK TAXES. Kentucky Authorities Levy on a Block Owned by a Millionaire's Heir. LEXINGTON, Ky„ Jan. 1. Back Tux Collector E. T. Gross late yesterday afternoon levied on the Wilgus block, one of the prominent business blocks of the city, belonging to the estate of Miss Clara Bell, the nix teen-year-old daughter and sole heir of Millionaire D. D. Bell, who died several years ago. Levy was made on account df back *taxes alleged to be duo the city from over $205,000 worth of personalty, which, it is claimed, the Security Trust and Safe Vault Company, as Miss Bell’s guardian, concealed and has not given in for taxation during the last four years. The total amount of Miss Bell’s personalty, the city claims, is over $500,000, while only about $300,000 has been given for assessment. The trust company will fight the city’s action. WAR AGAINST A BISHOP. I)r. MorrDon’* Con Urination Opposed by Dr. Green’s Friends. CHICAGO, Jan. 1. Circulars protesting against the confirmation of Rev. Dr. T. N. Morrison, of the Church of the Epiphany in this city, as the Episcopal bishop of lowa have begun to be circulated. They are addressed to the bishops and standing committees of the American church and set forth reasons why the interests of the church demand Dr. Morrison’s rejection. Not a word is said in any of them against Dr. Morrison personally, and, in fact, he is mentioned in terms of the strongest appreciation and approval. The opposition is i based entirely on the methods of the electioneering by his partisans at the time of the election and on the means that were taken to defeat Dr. Green. It is not so much as hinted that Dr. Morrison had any part in the actions objected to, but nevertheless it is considered improper that he should profit by them. Other circulars, in answer to these, are being prepared or have already been put in circulation by Dr. Morrison’s friends.

DAVIS IN CHICAGO. Speculation a* to the Cause of ills Visit There. Chicago Post. The presence of Richard Harding Davis in Chicago has greatly excited the wonder of our esteemed journalistic colaborers, who are vainly endeavoring to account for his sudden appearance in this center of culture and refinement. It has been uregd that Mr. Davis’s health is somewhat precarious and that he has come to the lakeside for the invigorating breezes and for the delicious ozone that is so generously distributed over Cook county. While it is true that Mr. Davis naturally expects great physical benefits from his journey to the West, we feel it a privilege to announce that hygienic reasons do not wholly explain his arrival, and that he has come hither for the performance of a literary task of exceeding delicacy—in brief, for nothing less than the preparation of a life of Gen. William R. Shafter. We remember with much pleasure that many notable writers have wandered into the field of biography, and we recall many happy and, instructive hours spent in perusal of Irving's “Life of Washington,” Hawthorne’s "Life of Franklin Pierce” and Hay’s "Life of Lincoln.” One of the most agreeable books of the exciting period of twenty years ago was Mr. Howells’s "Life of Hayes,” and we have just finished that admirable biographical exploit. Hamlin Garland's “Life of Grant.” Why should we wonder, then, that Mr. Davis, with such notable precedents to encourage him, has undertaken to give to the world the principal incidents in the career of his friend and comrade, the hero of Santiago? Os course it was necessary, for the purpose of securing local color, that Mr. Davis should come first to Chicago, from whence it is easy to run down to De Kalb county and over into Michigan for the details of the general's early but comparatively exciting youth and manhood. It is also important that Mr. Davis shall be contiguous to the packing houses which have played so memorable a part in the general's military operations, and we understand that he has already made arrangements to go through Swift’s extensive emporium of dressed beef for the investigation of the problems that have so greatly annoyed the War Department and the committee on blunders. It would be naturally expected that the presence of Mr. Davis would be the signal for general fluttering in the dovecotes. and that our very best debutantes would exercise ail their charms and arts to entangle him in the toils of afternoon receptions and compromising teas, but we have no suspicion that our honored guest will be enticed from his literary purpose or that he will be seduced from the straight path of literal duty. And while it is a pleasure and an honor to have Mr. Davis with us and to feel that he is in full sympathy with our institutions, more particularly our feminine institutions, we should not impede or embarrass him by distracting h j s thoughts from the important work he has undertaken. Mnnnfactnrers to Meet This Month. CINCINNATI. Jan. 1. —Owing to delay in hearing from some prominent speakers expected at the annual convention of the National Avssociation of Manufacturers in this city Jan. 21, 2T> and 26, the programme has not yet been completed. Efforts are being made to secure the attendance of President McKinley as well as of others from Washington. Governor Bushnell and Major Tafel will deliver welcoming addresses. The usual one and one-third rate, with certificates, has been secured on all the railroads. Grand Duke Cyril En Route Home. CHICAGO. Jan. I.—The Grand Duke Cyril accompanied by Lieutenants Pousse now and Coube. of the Russian navy, reached Chicago this morning from San Francisco. He was given a breakfast at the Virginia Hotel by Baron Sehlippenbaeh. the Russian consul, and left for the East at 3 o'clock in the afternoon via the Michigan Central to see Niagara falls. He will sail from New York on the Fuerst Bismarck on Wednesday. Cathedral Burned. KINGSTON, Ont., Jan. I.—St George’s Cathedral, the largest Anglican church in this diocese, was destroyed by fire to-day, as well as several small buildings adjoininj. The loss will reach $50,000.

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, MONDAY, JANUARY 2, 1899.

ANOTHER CHINESE EDICT EMPRESS DOWAGER BEGINNING TO REALIZE HER COUNTRY'S PERIL. She Warns Governors that Administrative Reforms Must Be Instituted —liaron liunily Challenged. ♦ ■ PEKING, Jan. L—An Imperial edict issued last Friday remarks that China is “passing through a severe Crisis in her history.” It reminds viceroys and Governors of the numerous edicts that have been issued lately ordering administrative reforms, points out that many of these have not been observed and commands the immediate institution of reforms in the methods of training troops, in agriculture, in manufacture and in everything likely to conduce to the prosperity of the empire. It directs the viceroys and governors to memorialize the throne within a month that these reforms have been inaugurated. This edict is highly significant as showing that the Empress dowager realizes that the position is serious and that all hope of the country’s future lies solely in reform. A deadlock has resulted from a demand by the Russian authorities for the surrender of certain British property w'hich the Chinese government had awarded as part of the liussion concession at Hankow'. The British refuse to surrender the property. Panic at Pretoria. LONDON, Jan. 2.—The Johannesburg correspondent of the Daily Mail describes this morning a panic in Pretoria on Saturday arising out of rumors that the Krugersdorf burghers contemplated an invasion and intended to burn Jameson in effigy. Another report was that a picnic arranged tor live hundred miners concealed some plan for causing trouble. The correspondent says the Transvaal troops were oruered to hold themselves m readiness and the guards at the presidency were trebled. But nothing happened. Dreyfus Still Persecuted. LONDON, Jan. 2.—The Daily Telegraph publishes the following from its correspondent at Cayenne, capital of French Guiana: “To-day (Sunday) 1 interviewed the governor of French Guiana, who denied that there had been any modification bf the severe treatment or Dreyfus or that the French governmet had ordered his return to France. The documents forwarded him by the Court of Cassation reached him on Dec. 23 and his replies will be mailed by the steamer leaving Jan. 3.” Hungarian Premier Challenged. BUDA-PESTH, Jan. I.—M. Hernazky, member of the lower chamber of the Hungarian Diet, who, in a recent debate, characterized Baron Banffv, the premier, as a “cheat and a traitor,” and who had been challenged by the premier to a duel, which failed to come off, owing to the inability of their seconds to agree upon conditions, has issued a challenge to Baron Ranffy, and it is expected that the encounter will occur tomorrow morning. An Austrian “Jack the Ripper.*’ VIENNA, Jan. I.—A second murder of an unfortunate girl in the “Jack the Ripper” manner occurred last night. The man who committed the first was arrested tQ-day. He proved to be a butcher’s assistant, named Schestowitz, and is about twenty years old. While under examination he said he stabbed his victim after a quarrel because she refused to give him brandy. He is believed to be guilty of both murders. Newspapers Censored. ST. PETERSBURG, Jan. I.—The newspapers have been forbidden to make any reference to certain disturbances here arising out of the strikes at the spinning factories, which have been suppressed by an armed force. Refuses to Believe It. LONDON, Jan. 2.—The Daily News this morning says it refuses to believe that President McKinley proposes to denounce the treaty of 1817 with reference to war ships on the great lakes.

CUBA NOW FREE. fConcludeil from First Page.) (addressing Captain General Castellanos) I wish you and the gallant gentlemen with you a pleasant return to your native land. May prosperity attend you and all who are with you.” Generals Brooke and Castellanos then shook hands, after which General Castellanos and staff retired from the _ throneroom, shaking hands with Mr. Jerome, who stood near the door of exit. As they retired there was a movement towards General Brooke, Brigadier General Clous shaking him by the hand and saying, “Success to you.” A TEARFUL FAREWELL. Generals Brooke and Chaffee, with others, then stepped upon the balcony and looked down upon the plaza. A big American flag flying over the arsenal was in full view, and farther away the stars and stripes could be seen over Cabanas fortress. Meanwhile the officials of Spain were saying farewell to their nation's seat of power in the new world. Turning to his officers, General Castellanos said, with tears in his eyes: “Gentlemen—l have been in more battles than I have hairs on my head, and my selfpossession has never failed me until to-day. Adieu, gentlemen; adieu.” Then, with arms upraised, he moved swiftly towards the stairway, escorted by General Chaffee and followed by his staff. As he crossed the plaza the American ladies who were standing in the balcony of the barracks waved their handkerchiefs, and General Castrilanos responded by bowing and kissing his hand toward them. At the corner of the plaza, with tears in his eyes, he turned to take a final look at the palace. He could see the American generals on the balcony. Without a word he turned sharply in the direction of the wharf. History had reversed "The last sigh of the Moor.” At the dock Generals Clous and Chaffee bade him farewell, and the retiring captain general put off for the Spanish transport Rabat, on which he will proceed to Matanzus. He will be accompanied by a battalion of the Thirty-eighth Infantry. Major General Brooke held a reception in the palace salon, the various officials paying their respects and promising allegiance to the United States. First came the doctors of the University of Havana, at their head President Earriel. All wore black silk and velvet gowns, and small, octagonal, black silk caps, with yellow tassels, *ul oared their heads and bowed low. Next came the municipal authorities, headed by the mayor, and after them the Economical Society, formerly an advisory board to the captain general, with £senor Alfredo Zayas, its president, leading. Then came the firemen. Numerous speeches were made, to all of which General Brooke replied briefly. At the close of the reception the Cuban generals were introduced. General Brooke said to them: “I shall look to you to assist us in carrying out the purpose that brought us to these shores. It is a great trust and I shall expect most extraordinary assistance from you.” General Lacret, who acted as spokesman for the Cuban officers, assured the United States military governor that everything in the power of the Cuban military officials would be done to help the Americans restore Cuba to a condition of peace and prosperity. This speech was translated by Captain lage, of Virginia. It was scarcely 12:30 o’clock w’hen General Brooke and his staff the palace for the Hotel Inglaterra. Commodore Crowell and Captains Sigsbee, Berry, Cowles and Foss, of the United States squadron, arrived a few minutes after, too late to pay their respects. The only lady w'fro witnessed the scene In the salon was airs. John Adams

Fair, of Boston, who was ushered into the palace by mistake. When she w r as about to retire Colonel Gelpi, the captain general’s chief of staff, begged her to remain. All the other ladies were assigned places in the balcony of the barracks overlooking the plaza. PARADE AND OTHER INCIDENTS. Indianians Reprimanded for Displaying Cuban Flags. HAVANA, Jan. I.—The parade of the United States troops showed the feeling of the Cuban element of the population. The march was from El Vedado, along the Achia del Norte, the Prado and Central Park to Cerro and Quemados. About every fourth house displayed some decoration, a palm branch, a bit of red, white and blue bunting, or a flag. Not a dozen flags were to be seen in the stately Prado. In the Achia del Norte the troops passed under the skeletons of triumphal arches left unfinished when it was decided to postpone the demonstration. The roofs, the streets, the parks and the wayside in the suburban districts were crowded with curious, but, for the most part, silent spectators. Now and again there was a cry, "Viva los Americanos,” followed by a burst of cheering, but there was no general expression of public rejoicing, though Major General Lee, who rode at the head of the column on a gray charger, received a personal ovation along nearly the entire route. Major General Brooke, Major General Ludlow and the other generals reviewed the corps, standing on a bench in front of the Hotel Inglaterra and surrounded by their staffs. As the column swung into Central Park, past the lonely-looking statue of the Queen Regent, it made an impressive appearance. General Lee left the procession and joined the reviewing generals. At this point there was more cheering than elsewhere for the Americans, the crowd being immense and densely congested. The order of the parade was as follows: Brigadier Genera] E. B. Williston’s brigade, comprising the Fourth Virginia Infantile Second Louisiana infantry and the Second Engineers. Brigadier General E. B. Willison’s brigade, comprising the First Virginia infantry, the Forty-ninth lowa infantry and the Sixth Missouri infantry. Brig. Gen. H. C. Hasbrouck’s brigade, comprising the First North Carolina Infantry, the Second Illinois Infantry and the One-hundred-and-sixty-first Indiana Infantry. Maj. Gen. J. W. Keifer rode in advance of ihe last two brigades, forming the Second Division. Every man in the last company of the One-hundred-and-sixty-fiist Indiana Infantry, as he entered Central Park, drew from under his uniform a small Cuban Hag and waved it before the assemblage. The Cubans went nearly wild with cheers and excitement, and General Lee immediately sent Inspector General Lieutenant Colonel Curtis Guild, jr., to order the Indianians to put away the flags, which they did. It is reported that the entire company is under arrest. The offending Indianians were members of Company G, w'ho had received th£ flags from some Cuban women. General Lee turned in after the columti passed, the crowd pressing close around his horse, shaking his hand and making other demonstrations of affectionate interest. Hi's' orderly was heavily burdened with flowers for the general. The corps was up at daylight at Camp Quemados, took coffee, then marched leisurely to El Vedado, a distance of five miles, rested there and had breakfast after massing haversacks, reaching the foot of the Prado at noon, and getting back to camp after rests at 4 o’clock, having marched nearly twenty miles, hot, footsore and tired.

SURRENDER OF THE FORTS. Spaniards Refused to Give Ip Fing* —Harbor L'cenes. HAVANA, Jan. I.—Havana harbor presented a striking appearance this morning. The stars and stripes w r ere conspicuous on the American men-of-war and merchantmen across the bay, while launches w r ere constantly playing between the shore and the ships. The docks were crowded with sightseers, many of whom wished to enter Morro Castle and Cabanas fortress, but they were refused admission. When Lieutenant Lee, son of General Lee, with Lieutenant Jones and Lieutenant Colonel Livermore, of the army. Ensign Webster, Boatswain Hill and Gunner Applegate, of the cruiser Brooklyn, representing the navy, entered Cabanas, they found no Spanish flag flying from the staff and the halyards w r ere tangled. Two sailors from the Brooklyn rove off new halyards, and Lieutenant Lee requested the Spanish officer in charge, Lieutenant Cache, to hoist the Spanish flag, that the Americans might salute it. Lieutenant Cache was about to do this when Lieutenant Colonel Cavestany, governor of the fortress, said it would be unnecessary. Then, on a signal from the Brooklyn, the sailors, under Gunner Applegate, tired twenty-one guns at Cabanas, after which Lieutenant Lee, who was in full dress, hoisted the stars and stripes, the Spaniards firing tw'enty-c-ne guns in salute and Lieutenant Colonel Cavestany handing the keys of the fortress and an inventory of its contents to the American officer. At Morro Castle Lieutenant Wade, son of General Wade, raised the stars and stripes, and Quartermaster Sergeant Mersoig hauled down the Spanish flag amid cheers. Lieutenant Colonel B. Birnie, of the ordnance department, who gave a receipt under the evacuation agreement for the contents of the fort to Lieutenant Sancho, the Spanish governor, then turned over the fortifications to Major Russell Harrison, of General Lee’s staff, who in turn made a formal delivery to Lieutenant Patterson, First North Carolina Infantry, who has a garrison force of ten men Then the Spaniards were escorted out of the castle by American troops under Major Harrison and given a cordial farewell on leaving for the transport. Lieut. Wade was refused possession of the Spanish flag, the Spanish officers saying they must take it with them. About noon a Cuban produced a spectacular effect by letting loose a big Cuban flag from a kite string high over Morro Castle, where it flew all the afternoon. The United States military commissioners wired President McKinley at 12:30 that the governor general of Cuba had formally surrendered to the commission the government of Cuba, and that the American flag had been hoisted. In reply General Wade, president of the commission, received the following: “I congratulate the commission upon the successful termination of its mission and the peaceful occupation of Cuba by the United States. “WILLIAM M’KINLEY.” General Brooke also received the President’s congratulations. As Captain General Castellanos was escorted to the wharf by Generals Clous and Chaffee, the band played the Spanish royal march. General Castellanos thanked Gen. Clous and, as he stepped into his launch, wept. Crowds of Spaniards, men and women, all dressed in black, gathered upon the sea wall and silently watched the fleet pass out. There was not a shout, not a handkerchief was waved. Men and women wept together. The Spanish squadron, which sailed to rendezvous at Martinique, consisted of Rapido, with Admiral Manterola on board; Galicia, Marques de iMolinas, Vincente Y'anez, Pinzon, Marques de Ensenada, Vasco Nunez and Patriota, the last towing the transport Filipinos. JOY AT SANTIAGO. Cabana Celebrate the Birth of Independence—Wood’s Reception. SANTIAGO DE CUBA, Jan. I.—The last day of the old year had scarcely passed when the peoi le ofteantiago began to celebrate the birth off Cuban independence. From that hour mp.il dawn crowds marched

the streets, 6lnging and cheering for Cuba and the United States, while bands played exhilarating music. It was the real voice of the people, instead of the e.emeut that is usually making itself heard through the local press, and there could be no question of the enthusiastic feeling towards Amenea. This morning Gen. Leonard Wood, military governor of the department, following an ancient Santiago custom, held a reception at the palace, appearing for the lirst lime in the full dress uniform of a major general. He received the members of the Supreme Court, uie City Council, the Chamber of Commerce and the other officials of the city. To-morrow, with Mrs. Wood, he will hoid a reception for all who may choose to come. 'rae special commission recently appointed. on the basis of charges brought by Lieutenant Colonel Ray, to investigate affairs in the Guantanamo district, returned to-day. Its members report that they do not believe conditions so serious as Colonel Ray had reported. Certainly there has been considerable cattle stealing, as there always used to be before the Americans came; and it is also possible that a few of the more lawless Cubans have made threats, as such men will; but, in the judgment of the commission, the thieving is insignificant and the threats in no way represent public opinion. The commission will make a written report in a few days embodying its recommendations. It appears that Lieutenant Colonel Ray has captured seven horse thieves, with thirty horses. ' The new scheme of local taxation goes into effect to-day. The money to accrue from it is badly needed to carry out many improvements in connection with the streets, the waterworks and other matters, for which the customs receipts are quite insufficient. OFFICIAL DISPATCHES. Menrageii from the Military CommlsMion and General Brooke. WASHINGTON, Jan. I.—The following brief cablegram from Havana, conveying information of the transfer of Spanish sovereignty in Cuba to the Americans, and of the raising of the United States flag, w 7 ere received here during the afternoon; From Wade and Clou9, of the evacuation commission, to the secretary of war: “The flag raised on Castle Morro, Cabanas, the palace and other buildings in the city. Government formally turned over by General Castellanos to commission, and by it transferred to General Brooke.” From Wade and Clous to the President: “The government formally surrendered by General Castellanos to the American commission at 12 o’clock, and by latter transferred to General Brooke. Ceremonies successfully carried out. The American flag flies from Morro Castle, Cabanas, the palace and other buildings. City orderly.” From Major General Brooke to the secretary of war: "The flag sent up on Mono Castle and the palace at 12:01 p. m., local time.”

Slid, but Dignified. MADRID, Jan. I—The New Year editorials in the Madrid press are sad and dignified reminders that the hoisting of the United States flag in Cuba and the Philippines means the closing of four centuries of Spanish colonial history. With suppressed emotion, rather than bitterness, the papers exhort the people to have confidence in their recuperative pow'er, urging that there be the smallest possible waste of time in reorganizing the affairs of the country and expressing a special desire for a speedy settlement of the Cabinet crisis. The general belief is that Senor Sagasta will be able to resume his duties as premier by the end of the week and that he will form a Cabinet to include Lieut. Gen. Weyler. Dentil* at Santiago. WASHINGTON, Jan. I.—General Wood, commanding at Santiago, Cuba, has, under yesterday’s date, reported the “following l deaths to the War Department: Privates Green Burell, Company D, Twenty-third Kansas Volunteers, died Dec. 29, acute dysentery; Frank Paffenlarger, Company H, Fourth Volunteers, Dec. 31, mirasmus, following typhoid. Policemen Sworn In. HAVANA, Jan. I.— I Three Inspectors and eighteen patrolmen were sworn in to-day as members of the new police force. The Spanish former police inspector, Martinez, has presented Colonel Moulton with a silver baton as a badge of office, and the Spanish inspector. Dominica, has presented former Captain McCuilagh with a baton as a souvenir. Private Slioot* Himself. HAVANA, Jan. I.—Private John Ward, Company H, Tenth (regular) Infantry, shot himself with his rifle this afternoon in the Prado. He had been drinking to excess. NORDIC A AND THE OZAIL The Famous Singer Describes Her Nervousness Before the Emperor. I sang two seasons in St. Petersburg, and on a certain occasion had the honor of command to sing before the Emperor at the Winter Palace, when Massini and Sembricn also were to sing, writes Mme. Lillian Nordiea in the Youth’s Companion, .limes were very perilous in tho.e days, owing to the activity of the Nihilists, and danger seemed everywhere to threaten. Their threats were dreadful, and a painful anxiety pervaded every heart. One may imagine that in times like those public safety that the movements of the Czar be kept secret, and so, as to my singing at the palace, we were merely given to understand by the imperial chamberlain that on some unstated evening during a stated week we should appear before his Majesty. Hence it w r as requisite for us to be dressed each night at 10 o'clock in readiness for the summons. Finally the word came and we were driven swiftly to the palace. From the entrance we were escorted by officers of the household up the grand staircase and through the long corridors to the concert room, the wails on either hand being lined with soldiers, shoulder to shoulder. I must confess that the tremble of anxiety which I felt at the significance of this display came from a dread that I might at any moment be blown up. The evening was, however, one of peaceful, ceremonious magnificence. At the close of the concert the Czar spoke personally to the artists, addressing each in his native language. With me he held a few 7 moments’ conversation in English, and, knowing that I was a young American girl just starting on my career, was so kind as to give mo commendation and encouragement and to express his wishes for my success. New York’s Female Tipplers. Special to Chicago Tribune. The alleged liquor tippling habit of women shoppers w 7 as considered by the Demorest Women’s Christian Temperance Union at its meeting to-day. “The growth of the drinking custom w 7 ith women shoppers,” said Mrs. Emilie D. Morton, “has been a matter of observation with us all for some time past. It calls for our immediate investigation and such radical measures as may be found possible.” “It shows,” declared Mrs. E. P. Prentice, “that practical work and personal service are needed from each one of us when the drinking habit has made such inroads upon our womanhood.” Cases were quoted of women drinking in department stores, of bottles dropped under chairs and in toilet rooms. “Is it true,” demanded Dr. Ellen Miles, “that liquor is to be had in department stores?” “Yes.” came a chorus of voices. “There is a law against it,” avowed Mrs. M. A. E. Carter. “But the women can buy it just the same, and they run it in on their candy bills,” announced Mrs. C. E. Latimer. “I am perfectly aware that liquor is to be bought over any confectioner’s counter,” said Dr! Miles. "I heard two young women ask the other day for cocktails, and got them, in a w7ellknown shop on Fifth avenue.” “I move, ’ said Mrs. Martin, “that every member consider herself personally bound to make inquiry into this affair.” This w 7 as adopted. “And when we have thoroughly sifted It what will follow 7 ?” asked Dr. Miles. “Legal redress,” replied the president, “as well as personal work among the women.” • The Storlee of “Old Sleuth.’* Boston Transcript. A writer in the St. Louis Mirror, a bright society paper, pays this candid tribu’e to Old Sleuth, which in enthusiastic 'rankness is almost worthy to be one of Thackeray’s boyhood confessions: “If the later boy got as much delight out of those stories as I absorbed from the earlier issues in the almost interminable series in other words, if boys are still boys, and not the\insufferable prigs that one would suspect \from some of the literature recently written at them—l must say that the world could fetter have spared a better man than the creator of Old Sleuth. He deserved tbe fortune of $500,000 he is said to have made out of those stories, for he certainly gave to boydom, what time I dwelt therein., the square of those figures in value of thrill.” The newspaper “magazine supplement” which now fills the time of the small boy to the exclusion of bookreading furnish' 6 a much baser pabulum than the old dime I **®'**.

BRITISH SHOPKEEPERS - - HOW THEY ARK AFFECTED BY MODERN TRADE DEVELOPMENTS. ♦ The Co-Operative Store and the More Recent, Syndicates—Department Stores Not Yet Known. London Letter In New York Post In a letter from Manchester, written some time ago, describing the growth of the manufacturing towns of Lancashire and Yorkshire and the physical changes this growth and prosperity are bringing with them, I noted the fact that the department store, as it has been developed In the cities of the United States, is practically nonexistent in the large towns of England. In the newspapers one looks in vain for the columns of department-store announcements which are so prominent in the advertisement pages of American newspapers. English advertisers are going on in the same conservative way as ever, and, with one or two exceptions, in cities even as large as Manchester or Liverpool, it would be difficult to find retail business houses which spend as much on newspaper advertising as they do on rent. The English tradesman has not yet come to the conclusion that if it is worth while for him to pay two or three hundred pounds for the rent of his shop it is worth while to spend a correspondingly large sum in telling people where he is and the kind of business he is doing. The English tradesman, whether in London or in the provincial cities, secures as good a stand as he can and then relies on the displays in his shop windows to attract trade. The English shopkeeper seeks to sell as trustworthy goods as he thinks his trade demands. He gets just as large profits as the trade he has draw n to himself will stand, but makes none of the systematic and continuous efforts for larger trade, with smaller margins of profit, which are so characteristic of newer retail trade methods in the United States. Since I wroie the letter from Manchester I have traveled further among the towns of Lancashire. I have been through the Midlands, and spent six weeks in London. While observations on these journeys go to confirm what I wrote about the general absence of department stores, they have shown that the old one-line trader is being attacked in England, although not by the same methods as in the United States. Retail trade in the towns of the north of England and of the Midlands has long differed in one essential particular from retail trade in the United Slates, and this difference has brought about conditions w 7 hich do not leave quite as free a field for department store enterprise as exists in American cities. The English retail trader in all the large industrial towns has to compete with the co-operative stores. Nearly all these organizations do their purchasing through the Co-operative Wholesale Society of Manchester. a mammoth concern owning steamships and many factories, which a month ago reached the total of twelve million sterling in its annual turnover. All this trade is on a cash basis. The Wholesale Society, which came into existence In 1564, to act as the purchasing agent and warehousing firm for the local co-operative societies, whose beginnings date from 1535. demands prompt cash from all its constituent members. The local societies in their turn demand ready money for every article which passes across their counters. CO-OPERATIVE SOCIETIES. All these local co-operative societies are supported by the better-class artisans and the lower middle classes. These people are permanent members of the co-operative societies, and at the initial stage of their membership invest a few 7 pounds in the capital stock. When buying goods they pay at the same rates as nonmembers, much the same rales as are charged by ordinary traders. At the end of each three months’ trading, however, they are paid dividends based on the amount of their purchases from the society. The fact that these co-operative societies draw so much of the ready-money trade of the large towns accounts in some degree for the conservatism of the one-iine trader, and would to some extent retard departmentstore methods and enterprise if they were tried in English towns. The one-line trader draws his support from customers either too improvident or shiftless to meet the ready cash requirements of the co-operative store, or from famillies whose manner of life does not fall in with the co-operative-store organization. None of these stores sends around for orders, and few of them deliver goods. The ordinary trader is necessarily compelled to do a large credit business and to carry the losses which a credit trade involves. And. moreover, while the trade of no single shopkeeper is large, it is of a character which is hard to move. If department stores wei’e established the management would have to convince the co-operative-store members that at the department store goods could be bought cheaper than at the co-operative stores, even when the quarterly dividends on purchases were taken into account. This is what is now being attempted in the new departures in one-iine trade. It is most largely and generally done in the grocery trade, specially in lines of bacon and cheese. Concerns with enormous capital are opening branches in all the large towns. They buy for prompt cash, and then sell for a profit little larger than the discount which ready money commands in the markets which they buy. An immense trade has to be done to make these concerns pay, and the effort to secure trade in such a volume is made by placing a branch of the business in every town where there is the least opening. It was in this line of trade, carried on in this way, that one of the most talked of knights created in jubilee year pushed his way into the ranks of English millionaires. THE TOBACCO TRADE.

Next after the trader in provisions the one-line traders now most assailed by large capitalists, with extended ramifications and newer retail methods, are tobacconists and chemists. The attack on the old style of retail tobacconists is most vigorous in London. It was embarked on about seven years ago by a Jewish firm. They began in a comparatively small way, and at first established their shops in the nearer suburbs. Then they moved on to the city and central London, and to-day in some of the main thoroughfares th< ir shops are as near together as those of the well-known company which pioneered the revolution iri the refreshment business, and is now making dividends of seventeen or eighteen per cent, from takings at its hundreds of te..-rooms. In one way the tobacco concern which is doing for the o*d-st>le London tobacconist what the department store has none for so many oneline traders in American cities began like the tea-house concern. In the early days of its enterprise the tea company took the smallest stores available, but took as many of these as its capital would permit of its renting and staffing with assistants. As soon, however, as the tea habit got possession of Londoners and the concern began to make money, the small places were abandoned and no site anywdiere in the city and central London was too good or too expensive to be occupied w 7 ith a tea shop. The tobacco concern is now a limited-lia-bility concern, paying 8 per cent, dividends, but instead of taking possession of larger shops, it is constantly adding to the number of its stands, and making it impossible to pass to a railway station or reach a stopping place for street cars and ’busses without being confronted with a shop window closely packed with tobaccos of standard brands, all sold at cut rates One set of figures will serve to show the havoc these cut prices are making in the retail tobacco trade. While cycling through one of the larger towns in the north of England I paid two shillings for a packet of tobacco of a standard English brand. It was the regular price in that towp. When I reached Manchester I renewed my supply at the rate of one shilling and sixpence the packet. In London I found that the cutrate price for the same brand was one shilling and a halfpenny, and on making inquiries as to these diversities in price was told that the profit of the cut-rate concern was represented by little more than the odd halfpenny. The attack on the old-fashioned chemist is more recent. It is on the same lines as that of the tobacconist, except that it is mum more general. It has been organized by one firm, which Is establishing stores In London and the provincial towns, wherever an on* i Ing offers or can be forced. On the whole range of proprietary articles and on the mi cellaneous goods dealt in by chemists it out* prices to a point which cannot be reached hv an old-dashioried chemist, buying his sun plies through a jobber. Even the prtserin tion business Is being assailed, although the doctors ara disposed to stand by the mu chemists as against the great concern which is everywhere assailing them. Against inroads on the old-fashioned one-line none of the remedies laid before state K latures in recent years would apply af though from present appearance it would

_ NATIONAL /jp Tube Works E jy, Wrought-lroo for Gas, Steam and vN ater, Wl rare pine Trimming, Gauges pipe 1 ‘ pass r Cutters. Vises. berew fclft 4 fcr Plates and Die< wrench^. I- v •*, W Steam Traps, Pumi£ i'wj 1 Kitchen Sinks. Hose Belt ft mg, Babhit Metal. boUier i White and Colored WIP‘ T J* JSjjJ ( 3j Waste, and all ollier L t,'T ILHI plies used In connection .ifh Gas. and * -J*j Water. Natural Gas Sup fH) nlitv a specialty. ste ‘l™ Bf fa Beating Apparatus m Kta Public Buildings. Store'S M rooms. Mills. Shops, Fac--1 I'l tones. Laundries. Uurnber ■ EM Pry Houses, etc. Cut ana H Thread to order any slz# I I H knight s jillson, S. PENNSYLVANIA ST. seem that the s r” a li f.l u^~i\erce t competiEngland Is soon to America naa tion as the online trader gtore3 . had to encounter been a little The change in retail“ a = development slower tn coming aI U* has only than in the United States, but one slntga to keep his eyes °P en ,"2..!, h^ 0 * ee that the streets of any large town to ete change has begun. GIRLS AS GALLERY GODS. Femule Devotees of Tlteapla Now Feel at Home In tlie Lpper Balcony. Philadelphia Times. • Years ago, when it was the s ash on for Olympian deities to disport them s fresco upon the ceilings of h " as hiehest tier of the theater won its name the gallery of the gods-from the cjose proximity of the heavenly company to its benches. The cognomen huts , c i a " s upper balcony ever since, and the habitue of this tier of the theater is still „ re l e ‘i. fully designated as "a gallery god. 1 rom time immemorial Zeus and Phoebus Apollo have been represented in the critical a t appreciative throng above stairs, wnuo Hera and Daphne have been de k arra< * °y accident of sex from sharing such ecmiornical, histrionic enjoyment. It remained for the girl of the period to storm tins citadel, carry it victoriously and force grudgin recognition of the new 7 pow 7 er among tn® gods—the gallery girl. Any Saturday afternoon a casual observer on Broad street, between Walnut and Spruce, may see an exhibition of prowess which resembles nothing so much as a bargain counter rush or an ameteur footbail game. An array or orderly men stand, one behind the other, sometimes doubling the length of their long line, while to the right a crowd of eager women, probably dominated by the maxim the first shall be last, contend with each other and with the gods for the most advantageous position. In each fevered right hand a quarter is grasped tightly, and every eye is riveted on tire doors, which, regardless of inclement weather, remain close shut until the clock strikes two. Then, like the window of the imprisoned sage in the fairy tale, “they open outward, but they do not open wide,” and a good demonstration of two bodies trying to occupy the same place at the same time is afforded interested onlookers, Chivalry is forgotten —the fittest survives. Up the winding stairs half run, half tumble, the devotees of Thespta, • breathless, disheveled, but triumphant. Once seated, hat and gloves discarded. the gallery girl has time to taka note of her surroundings and study the types of nature around her. Almost all species of human kind are represented, from the college studenrto the ragged, rollicking boy who has saved 25 cents by dint of hard labor—“ Morning paper. Times, sir?”—to see the play. The girl who sinks behind her muff to prevent a mala acquaintance on the back row 7 from becoming cognizant of the awful truth that sha has expended but the fourth of a dollar on the afternoon’s enjoyment, is in shrinking evidence. The happy, careless gallery god looks down upon the array of fashion below and sends well-directed fragments of his programme, whirling, to disturb the dignity of an elderly matron or the absorbing dialogue of a youth and maid. Above the pleasant hum of conversation the voice of the ticket agent from his box at the head of the stairs rises dryly, “Has any one seen Bertha? Here’s a ticket left for Bertha,” and the gallery laughs Infectiously, for good humor prevails to a marvelous extent in the upper tier. 77 Hats off,” cries a stern god from his high and mighty perch in the topmost bench immediately below the roof. Several rows in front sits a young woman, whose hat of alarming dimensions remains steadfastly wedded to the curly head. A well-directed nut lodges upon the crown, another besieges the rolling brim, while sepulchral cries of “Take K off!” “It's not becoming!” “Hats off!” and a chorus of hisses bring an angry flush to the face below the feathers, but the hat is removed, and “Thank you, so much.” greets this tardy obedience to the unwritten laws of the higher balcony. The vender of rock and rye cough drops elbows through each row, regardless of the disturbance his passage creates, and when remonstrated with replies truthfully, "When we’re crowded, lady, is the best time to make moftey.” Half buried beneath the waves of a New York Journal, a breezy-looking Individual reads aloud to two attentive companions extracts from the pen of Cholly Knickerbocker and the sporting news of Greater New York, while over his shoulder the girl, who never buys a paper that she may w r ith a clearer conscience read those of her neighbors, devours the admirable drawings and satires perpetrated by Miss Jessie Wood. An unusual, guest among the gods is a short, sodden man with wavering, uncertain hands and labored speech signs of the times he has celebrated the treaty of the peace commission during the forenoon. With sickly pleasantry this Bacchanalian god invests In a package of coug'* drops and presents them to the discomfited purl beside him, after which gallant action his head sinks on his breast and “nature’s sweet restorer, balmy sleep,” claims him as legitimate prey. Upon the steps a boy of tender ye irs lounges, a cigarette between his teeth. Leisurely extracting a match from his pocket he strikes a light and appli. s it. !S ' vee( l. A precise dame near by says cmdingly: "\ou must not smoke up here, little boy. Precosity bites off the end of ms cigarro and laughs provokingly, while nis mentor silently anathematizes the ruses of confectioners. But one element is lack ing to make the gallery of the gods a radiant example of agreeable economics. “That, most excellent canopy, the air,” is excluded from its precincts, and before the afternoon is over a pestilential congregation of vapors is inhaled in lieu of healthy oxygen. momS Ve v,’- P' a > r ’ s tlie thing,” and the philosophical gods are content if actors and drama adequately hold, as it w 7 are, the rnirup to nat V re > showing virtue her own feature scorn her own image, and the very age and body of the time, his form and pressure.

Tlie Neglected Married Man. New York Evening Sun. .Tt pr<^eßt - ’ said the young father, riof 3 ™! 1 , shameful neglect of the mar™h. 2 at T C hris, tmas time. When I was SrrftSi ? 1 0t P ltan ty of presents. They a 1 ?! 1 antl by ex Piess; they came nfesJr?tH t deliver y anf l they were ofttimes hL by the falr hands that They ranged from all possible hnS tl n n U , W . t want to aII impossible fijllf® I TS ° Uldn t Vam ’ and their nam. was rhrVJf'm? 111 now that I’m married, not a given To Jlf 686 " 1 do 1 Ket * They are all Heh? Wire - °r- if n °t to her outor S onr>rantrvTfJ?* resent , some house-furnishing ,n "hioit I have neither iTs elp and d n g l nor int J? rts t- Since the baby came housTTn tho 2 Everything that enters the there isn'V I to ß^ pe u 0f a s ’ ft is for the baby; me anvthw ?T ch aa a at giving T£senrViT fe l- hav ® n * had a Christmas birthdav 8 !^, 6 1 , ve been married—no, nor a mrtnuay present, either.” Volunteer Accidentally Shot. Harr? I A N \ I , LI f B,^ S - c * Jan - 1 .-Private Virginia Vo. tee l e ’ Company I. Second West Lv Pn m 2.? teers ' was accidentally killed exam?nTt Kan ,e this morning. Kane was snanned S ot 8 rev °lver and carelessly Steele’s tlf? , P sto , > sending a bullet into Stffi V k i lling him ihstantly. sutler's clerk. Clarksburg. Kane was a Doesn’t Go to College, Anyway. Boston Transcript. grfcgatim^l’'^l C An , ■ haß boycotted a Conaccented 2 in Oklahoma because it Busch the qt he r k - for from Adolph old Ij 2 uis brewer. But It is an s that all money is orthodox. Blld Chess Playing. Bimultane!rm? B ’v,s n ' !•—Janowski gave a exhibition of play at the Coshoursfnd Club last night, and in two games winn!n Ve j minutes finished eighteen M and losing two. This i a record performance. A Naughty Tru*t. et Th^n S Re P u hlic. purpose 1s B f 2 Trust should be enjoined. ItJ V PB6 ls _to squeeze the ladies. r-n„.- . . Beware. Cleveland Plain Dealer cemetf by°mT|p n the bromo-seltzer when it