St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 18, Number 47, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 10 June 1893 — Page 2
— — — z. c > /I ■XXv’^ /
G&|d]rOrr^r\cl ^ieck CHAPTER XXI-Continued. Dinah pointed her staff in the direction she wished them to take; but Old Bomonk, the only one that was not in an attitude to start right off, called out: “We were left here by the chief, and told to stay as we value our lives. “Hold!" cried Untilla in clear, silvery tones, “ Uncas, chief of the Montauks, is at this moment in the settlements of the wh-tes, and he cannot command. I am his sister; I am Untilla, a descendant of the mighty Wyandauch, and, in my brother’s absence, my word is law. I command you to leave here at once, and open not your lips about what has happened till my brother or I bid you speak. ” While Untilla was speaking, Old Somonk s wife secured her pot; and now she headed the procession that marched off at the bidding of the princess. The Indians were out of sight in a few minutes, and then Dinah’s manner -changed like magic. The trappings of the priestess had answered her purpose, so she threw them off, and, going to the vault, she seized the flat stone that answered for a door, and rushed in. Untilla was close behind her. The light was dim, as compared with the glaring sunlight without, but was still sufficient to enable them to distinguish the bed, and on it the form of a man. "We must get ’im out, honey,” said Dinah. “Tink ye kin lift de half?” “Yes, Dinah; if need be, I can carry j him alone,” replied Untilla. t ne seized the head of the bed and the other the foot, and in a few minutes they had carried Ralph Denham from the vault and placed him in the shadow of a tree. M ith amazing quickness, the old woman drew the cover from his face. Except that it had a flushed, pained expression, as of one trying to break a bond bj- a tense physical effort, or to rally failing memory by an effort of will, it looked very natural. Dinah was now all activity. She tore open his coat and underclothing, till his white breast was exposed, and against this she pressed the side of her face, increasing its blackness by the strange contrast. She remained in this attitude so long that Untilla, unable to suppress her ! anxiety, called out: “Dinah, Dinah! tell me if he will live? ”
pears strong, but he’s droogid. Ha. Tknowed he was droogid, or dead.” ! he’ll live, Dinah?” ■»? thkx- IhA ~~ "Ww* sK* Tnuan's 1 Jaain; now you see wat Dinah know.” The old woman removed the white j turban from about her head, and hand- i ing it to Untilla, told her to wet it j at°a neighboring spring, and then fasten j it about the captain’s brow. j While Untilla was doing this, Dinah i took off Ralph’s shoes and stockings, j and running back to the fire, took there- I from the pot of herl s. Tearing off part of her dress, ;,ust as . if she carried it for surgical purposes, Dinah took the herbs, now steaming hot, and b und them about the captain’s feet. He moved as if the heat gave him pain, and he heaved a long sigh. Dipping one of the unused herbs in the liquor in the pot, Dinah skillfully
pressed open the Captain’s mouth and : teeth, and, by means of the moistened : herb, slowly dropped several spoonfuls : of the liquor into his mouth. To Dor great joy, she saw by the movements of his throat that be was swallowing, and that with each effort ihe pained, intense expression on his face gave way to one of peaceful rest. They kept up their efforts for an hour, when Dinah said: “Now let him rest a wile.” “ And then you think he will be better?” "Den we can wake ’em an gib ’im > suthin’ to eat. Massy, won’t ’e be I s’prised when ’e does wake up en see ( whar ’e ez.” They walked tack to the fire, and I Dinah took from the bottom of the won- i derful basket some large green leaves, ' inside of which were a trout end a fat I woodcock, both ready for the fiiv. “Now, honey,” said Dinah, pointing to the articles of food, “dem tings’ll I taste better es you cook ’em.” “But will Ka!ph be able to eat?” I “A man ez can’t eat ain’t got long to I
lib: we’ll tempt ’im, honey,” replied ( Dinah. , . Tin .-.1.-1 Ut n blank pjnn and smoked wliile she v. arched Uio ( beautiful Indian girl preparing the • meal for Ralph Denham. Vfhen the woodcock and trout were 1 done to a turn and placed on the corn I cake which answered for an edible dish, Dmah knocked the ashes from her pipe and said, as she rose briskly to her feet: “Now I’ll see ’o ’e ’pears.” Untilla watched the old woman, and in her anxiety was about to follow, when she saw Ralph’s hand thrown up and pressed to his eyes, as when men ' rouse from a long sleep. Before Dinah could reach him. Ralph Denham was sitting up. Then he turned his head, looked about him, and ■ pressed his hands to. his eyes, as if to stop the dream that haunted him into wakefulness. The old woman, with that rare penetration that distinguished her, divined the trouble. Running up to Ralph from behind, sho laid both hands on his sir aiders, and said, in her most cheerful accents: “ ’Taint a dream, Ralph Den’am; yer heah wid me en Untilla. Ye bin rackt. Wait till I put on yer shoes en stockin’s, en I’ll tell ye ’bout it.” She could not have lit on more appropriate words. Ralph Denham, in his own sea experience, had known < f men who lay down calmly in bunk or hammock on shipboard, and woke up on a
abo a ut g the£!' and With 6trange faCeS Men, who frequently act bravely and conspicuously on occasions of great ® not tho slightest recollection of their acts, when the danger and excitement are over. !I f o this f!ashod through Halph Denham s mind, as with hiseves closed he threw himself haek o „ his stod dim? 116 Dlnah P uton hisshoes and Last night I took too much wine on the panderer. She must have been wrecked 0.. Montauk Point, after the rudder was repaired, and in so ne wav I pas rescued; and here I am among old friends. ° “Dar, de shoes am on,” said Dinah gleefully. “Now, try en walk to de fiah, where I ntilla’s got somethin’ to eat.” Dinah gave him her hand, and'he grasped it in affection, rather than with any thought of wanting its support. He was stiff and sore, and wh m he gained his feet, he staggered, and would have fallen, had not a lithe, strong form sprang to his side, and thrown one arm about him. “Untilla ”he whispered. “God bless you, I ntilla!” They led him over near the fire, and made mm sit down, with his back to a tree. “Where are the rest?” he asked, glancing about him, with an expression, half-awe, halt-wonder, on his handsome I face. "Am I the sole survivor? How I did f get here?” “Wait, honey, en arter a bit I’ll tole ye. But now I’ll say dat de Fader of de lan’ en water, en of ail de worls, de Fader dat save ye from de waves in de pas’, hez now saved ye from de chief of de Montauks,” said Dinah, standing ; behind him, and smoothing I ack his j curly brown hair. She had often stroked I it when it hung in golden ringlets to his j shoulders, in the days beyond his memory, in that other Long Island that was j his home. “The Wanderer is wrecked,” he said looking appealingly at Untilla, who was ' fanning him with a bunch of graceful | ferns. I "Not that; wait and we will tell you, ” said Untilla. “But how did I come here? Speak. I am strong enough to hear, or, if you i have aught to communicate, that you ! think would unnerve me at this time, I let me assure you that my anxiety to l hear it frets me more keenly than any- ; thing you can say.” “I 11 tell ye; but mebbe fust it’d 1 e ; mo’ bettah es ye was to tell us all ye i kin rekmimbah sense ye lef ’ Sag liar- j bor on dat ship,” said Dinah, squatting on the ground, where his eyes could I rest on her. Captain Denham stroked his fore- • head, and briefly recounted everything, j up to the breaking of the rudder chain ■ and his going to sleep. “Endat’s all ye know?” “That’s all, Dinah.” “Den ye mus’ hev bin a sleepin’ nigh goin’ on to six days.” "What!” he exclaimed. “Ui co-az we does not know; but I'll
tell ye wot me en Untilla does know, foh we’ve been wa'chin' foh dat ship to come back, and I never ’spected she'd - • T ”-'’ b Den’am back to land." ■ . r _ x — wtw I stituting, with nice art, another name, and somewhat dissimilar conditions. j 1 With rare skill, she told of the part ’ ! Fox played, and how Um as was to com- j i plete his work. ! Without disclosing her own sources j of information —he could imagine them | —she told of everything that had tran- । spired among the Montauks and at I | Sag Harbor, in which ho could have in- ■ ! terest, up to the last night. "And you say a letter is said to have j j been sent by me from New York to Sag \ Harbor, telling Mr. Hedges to turn over j the command of the Sea Hawk to this i ' man?” asked Halph, still pressing his , i eyes, as if determined, by will-power, I ’ to dispel an Illusion. “Dat is wot I say, on do Wandrah’s ; ' now at Sag Harbor.”
lI’JXN Cl L Oily-s WA. “My God, the man’s name can’t be । 1 Fox.” i “En it ain’t,” chuckled Dinah. “His j I name’s Captain William Kidd.” "Capta n Kidd!” Ralph Denham’s eyes flashed like 1 fire, and, wi.han energy that was mirac- । ulous, he leaped to his feet. "Dat’s de man; I know’im. ” Without heeding Dinah’s words, Ralph ' Denham raised his clenched hands aoove j his head and cried out: “Oh, I have been a blind fool. Why ' did I not act on my suspicions, and not j from the promptings of my heart? I dreaded the man. and yet I had no j proof. I must away at once. The Sea I Hawk, my honor, must be saved, or I I die in the attempt. ” I He would have dashed off through the woods at once, but Untilla raised i her hands before him and he stopped, । with his head bowed. 1 “I have a boat and strong rowers I awaiting you beyond the cliff. Come | with us, and before the sun has been [ down an hour you shall be in Sag Har-
bur. “En Eneas ’ll see a ghost. Ha, ha! Wait. honey; deind ain’t yet. ” this point, they found a canoe awaiting I them, manned by six powerful Montauk ; rowers. Into this Ralph Denham got, i and Dinah and Untilla followed. CHAPTER XXII. SAC. HARBOR LECOMES WILDLY EXCITED, AND THE CONTAGION REA UES THE SUBUOUNDINO ISLANDS. Captain Ralph Denham had passed ’ through an ordeal that would have ip: ostrated an older, or less vigorous I man. Indeed, if it had not been for I the mental excitement under which he i was now laboring he could not have kept up. ■ He sat back in the canoe, watching i the rowers as, with regular sweeps, i they plied their p addles, and flew across • the shadows near the shore. Quick as I was their speed, it was too slow for ’ him. At moments, he woulu close his eyes, an i try to reason that it was all a dream, and that he would wake up to find himself on board the Wanderer, in New York harbor, for it was expected the ship would reach that port the morning after leaving Montauk Point. i But Dinah’s voice, as she spoke in low ’ tones to Untilla, recalled him to a full sense of the wakeful reality es his posi- ■ tion. I Dinah’s voice, with her strange aci cent and earnest manner; it seemed to
Lira that all his earliest were associated with [f Co nectlona Memory could not cam-h-’ at voi ce. r yond a time when it wL^ / and often since reaching man- fa “ U i ar ’ i wondering if ever tho “T.^^hood.when from theWst^ “oVS thought woMd Jo™ h’ » I? 0 ■ reason would weigh it ami , and hl9 the old woman would exiLi^ 1 that i So great was the ‘“A ~ 1 rowm-s that before dark P a uW* 10 I could see away to the w< Denham ' lines of Ms ow and °' J ‘- Shortly after dark th a m dies, acting under the ' Vntilla, direct -’d their canoe cove and made a landing into a to™KXV E ^ to tho ' She went back to the r«nn„ the Montauks in their own *1 6p ° <e t 0 and tho,- at one. pushed ou? tie ?aX' ng hut which was frequently occupied by the chief. To this Halph Denham ' followed L ntilla and old DinaiHie place was provided A ith seats and a rude couch, and after carefully closing the door Dinah madad Lght on the hearth, and said: W j “It ’pears to me like ye don-’ . see as dar’s a sight of iroublu. »'ppr©ci- i "I assure you, Dinah, to get ate that, and hence m anxl®f a i n h “ on board of my ship,” replied ji,. j / “Now, jes’ let me ’splaln X icels ’bout dat,” said tho old womaJ’ CQm’ng nearer, and adding force i^Ker words by her <;uick, nervous gestures. “En Untilla, she’ll bar me out in payin’ dat I’m jes’ Tout right. Ln Wen ye’ve heard me, den es ye sez don't|keer, Use goin’ board any ’ow, wy, den ve’ll -o dal’s all.” b ’ I “Go on, Dinah; I will listen,” said ! Ralph, crossing his arms and letting his I chin rest on his breast. Dinah used no long words; she only ' knew a few of that character, and she was never quite certain that she comprehended the n. Now, she wanted Ealph Denham to understand her distinct!/, and not to be diverted from her reasoning by any unusual address in her speech. t Her vocabulary was limited to words of one .-yllable, which sho invariabiy mispronounced Sue seemed to prefer arran.ing them in ways that assured their inaccuracy from a grammatical standpoint; yet she never left her hearer in doubt as to h?r meaning. Aga : n she : ohearsedall that had taken place in Sag Harber during Ralph’s absence. She showed him that his 1 riends l eiieve ! he was in New York, that one , of his foes at least—Colonel Graham— > believed that he was de id, and that the others arrayed against him were sure < he was in their power. D nah went on to show him that ' neither friend nor foe 100 red for him in i Sag Harbor, at this time, and that if he { were to enter the town at once, Fox, j who was in virtual command of both [ ships, not only could, but wOWd have i him killed at once, and so defeat the ob- ; ject, which Ralph himself hath view. ; This, and much more, sheg* l D an red, * in her quick, earnest way. posing by , saying that she and Untilla w#uld go to the town at once, find Mr. aad Valentine Dayton, quickly te»* L bem the whole situation, and bring liM&'u ‘ Captain, who, after a convert ft?V? with were right. L, “Very well, how long wflrljou be gone?” he asked. 7 They told him they would Return as soon as they found the pikers they went in search of; they would be back by midnight, certainly by daylight. "i'ut you leave me unarmed," he ■ said. Ah'." exclaimed Untilla, “I came near ■ * forgetting what has been en my mind ' ever since we came here.” ■ She stepped on a bench, and reaching I f up to a few boards thv male a little I • loft above the fire-place, she brought , * I down a'belt an r l handed it to Ralph. | It contained two tine pistols, a dagger j 1 1 with a horn hilt, and pouches well filled ( 1 i with powder and ball. ; “You see,” said Ralph, as he strapped j the belt about his waist, “there is no ( ' knowing who may pay me a visit while , j you are gone. ” I , They assured him that there was no j i danger of any one’s coming, and then । ; shaking his hand again and again, they i 1 । left him alone in the hut. ITO BE COXTIXVED. i How to Put On Gloves. The length of time a pair of kid ' gloves will wear depends very much upon the way they are put on, especially the first time. Never put on a j pair of new gloves in a hurry; take plenty of time and keep cooh. It is of great importance that the hand i should remain dry and cool and be perfectly clean. It is well to dust.it ] with a little plain rice powder to this J end. Work the fingers well down before you put in the thumb, work the thumb in slowly, and then the rest of the hand: begin at the second^utHm and ascend, then return to 11 button, winch will now fas, r iq easily | without breaking or stretetdw tne buttonhole. . E V..ur lmn<l will freorm-U *Wmoist witii per-pu .iLi-jii wuen about] to remove the gloves; in this case pull them off wrong side out, so that the moisture can evaporate. When quite dry. turn the fingers and smooth the gloves into shape, laying them in a box or other receptacle long enough to receive them, except in the case of I evening gloves, which may be folded half way up the arm. Another way to make gloves last is to buy them large enough. A glove that is too । tight presses the hand out of shape and makes it red, and is always in bad taste. Bracelets should no more 1 be worn over gloves than should ’ rings.—Albany Cultivator. Poisoned by a Black Kid Glove. A woman at Redruth, England, died recently from blood poisoning caused by rubbing a small sore on her face . with her black kid gloves. Inflammation set in, her head swelled enormousj ly, and she died after a very brief iil- ’ ness. ______ ■ । The largest peach orchard in the . ] world is that of the Ohio Fruit Land Com; any, situated n&ar Fort Valley, I Ga. The orchard ai present contains j ■ I 150,C00 tree?, and la being enlarged • i every year.
EXPENSES AT THE FAIR. : WHAT IT WILL COST TO SFF THE BIG SHOW. I Visitors May Spend ns M uch Money as They Choose-The Man Who Wishes Io Econ J mize Will See the Exposition at a Sa3an One Day for 90 Cents. World's Fair correspondence: If a man is fond of: Pink catalogues, with pages full of italic tvpe, cactus sprouts and hyacinth bulbs, liberty bells made out of glass, imported asparagus at 10 cents a stalk, cigars costing 20 cents each and wearing gold labels, sedan chairs carried by Turks at Japanese vases, with yellow catfish chasing red butterflies over a pmk landscape, el ervescent drink at $2.75 a p:nt, and other lux. ries, he can manace to spend qu : te a roll of monev in one brief day at the Fair. It is j m . possible to say just what is the expense of seeing the Exposition unless you know your man. In spite or all that has leen printed i and circulate 1 al out extortion, extras and sideshows, the visitor who keer s books and Ulms his expenses down ' to necessities can get along without ! wasting any more money than he would ' at a ball game or a circus. - On the Other hand, the ver on who feels that he has silver toin to feed to the fishes can find what is commonly known as “action.” Between these two there is the happv medium—the man who is willing to see i what is worth seeing, and expend area- j sonable sum where it will do the most | good. A paper recently made an editorial announcement that in order to get any satisfaction out of a day at the Fair the visitor would have to part with i 536. It would keep a man busy to i spend that much. He would be com- ■ pelled to eat numerous m als and pick । out the most expensive articles on the j bill of fare. He would have to chase ;
1 I I VENICE RIGHT AT HOME.
from one end of the plaisance to the other, patronizing every show and scattering tips among the Egyptians. His pockets would be loaded down with souvenirs. Specially chartered palanquins and rolling chairs would be at his service. At eventide tne ambulance would carry hin to the emergency hospital free of charge, and no one would pity him. On a Minim am Basic. Let it be supposed tljat the visitor starts from down-town to put in the entire day at the grounds and : etui Hin the evening. This will make three Items of expense absolutely necessary
—transportation, admission to the park and some kind of luncheon at the noon A A 1 I„hT\ I‘J JeW COURT IN GERMAN CASTLE.
hour. The round trip to the grounds will cost at least 10 cents, the cheapest I routes being the cable ar I the ’L” , roads. By the boats it is 15 cents one ’ way, or 25 cents for the round irip. j The yellow trains on the Illinois Central charge 10 cents a single trip. A ’ lunch of sandwiches and fruit may be procured at any down-town counter for ' 15 or 20 cents. On the grounds a sandwich and cup of coffee costs 20 cents and no more. Provided the frugal visitor puts up with this “snack,” his actual expenses for the day will be: Car fare (Illinola Central) $ .20 Admission r,n Lunch 2o Total : This is a belrock programme, but 1 hundreds of people who have visited I the Eair have spent no more. The ex- | tras which afford the most satisfaction ’ are cheap. Eor 10 cents the intramural
en^th J th y a Dassen ger the entire ^ound and give him an the\; edTteW i O1 the buildings. One of the steam or electric launches will carry bS B ar h°im d i M°° n astern and wring h.m back to the starting rlace or 20 cents. Then it is a good th^ to ha/e a guide book. Outside the So}d . £or ^ fair] y good books Il cents J he ° !Lcial P uide i 3 th» nr 1 ?' t These L hree extras come on visitor in day t^ t th 2 Fair and assist the aid In lay ° f the g™ Und r m ng i lulldl egs. Added to the abo\e table they would make: Necessary expenses « Elevated road.. 5 ,' Launch ride J" Guide book /Z.. F? Tot! d Z7Z After these staples, so to sneak, the \isitor may plunge into luxuries to his hi art 3 content. The lunch may be e.aomated to a meat order with dessert and something to drink. This would cost cer‘s to 75 cents. In one day o ordinary sight-seeing, it is impossible to take in more than one or two of the smaller shows, such as the Esquimaux village, Hagenbeck’s animals Turkish theater or a big panorama.’ , These cost 25 cents to 50 cents each, j Any cue who has some definite part of I i-fI 0 .^ 9 in a nd do-s not care tin at ion sooner S by t ^1X^004“; a launch than with a rolling-, hair and a- boy.
Tttkine; a TAbeml View. The following would be the estimate I of expenses of one who spends his j money freely but without extravagance: Car fare 4 an 1 Admission £ 1 Guide book „ | ; Launch ride J : Lunch ‘‘"J I ; Side shows *-'.’-.***'*****'*’ I • Total.. These expenses would naturally be reduced after the filth or sixth day on the grounds, as the visitor would by that time be supplied with the neces- ! eary guide-books to the different build-
ings and would have seen all that he ' cared tc- see in the pay-shows along the , plaisance. Instead of finding the Ex- : position a drain upon his finances be I would I e compelled to use some dili- I gence to get rid of $2 a day, for his time j and attention would be directed to the j art galleries and other displays which are offered without money and without price. Here is an exact copy of what one man spent in six days at the Fair, counting from the time he left his hotel until he returned in the evening. Carfare SLIO Admissions 8.00 T.r.nnchrs and electric road TO
.uauncnos an.i eiectriv - Lunch. s 8.00 j Admission to small shows 2.75 ; Guide-books 1.35 I Small sundries 2.00 Total sl4-00 No Regard for Expense-. It is pretty hard to make any estimate for the people who wish to purchase everything that suits their fancy and see the sights from beginning to end. regardless of the outlay. They would go in for rolling chairs, symphony concerts, and a luncheon of several courses. They would find opportuni tin? to tip the attendants, buy flowers in the horticultural building, and gather knickknacks at the foreign bazaars. In going to the Exposition they might ; refer to swing down Michigan boulevard on a tally-ho beside a man in a plush hat, who toots a lung horn. These visitors will keep no expense account. If they .71.1 7) O daily entries might be about aS
follows; Tally-ho, round trip $2.00 , Rolling chair, all day »-so • Luncheon I- 2 ® I Plaisance shows 1.00 I Gondola ride 50 1 Tips and sundries .. 2.00 j Total $10.25 j The great beauty about the big show at Jackson Park is that the man who spends 50 cents is bound to see as many sights and get as much out of his day as the pampered millionaire who spends $10.25. The concessioner has no hold on the landscapes and domes. The humble sandwich and nut-brown sinker
stand ready to welcome the poor man i ; who flees from fricandcau of veal at 85 ■ I cents. If a traveler came into Chicago, | i engaged the bridal chamber at the ho- J s tel and had a box at the theater every night he could figure out that living was J high in this city. It’s the same way at i Jackson Park. People who crave luxuries are the only ones who will spend ! any large sums. The plain and unas- ! sumlngjfolk from Peotone, Chebanse, , and Inman Mound will carry a fewbites of lunch in a paper box and drink water freely from the blue tanks, and see the Fair proper just as thoroughly as the spendthrift who will let go of a small fortune during his visit The above proves very conclusively the statement made in a previous letter I that the weekly expenses of the visitor to the Columbian Exposition need not exceed £2'. , Death Is the half-way point
1 SECOND OPEN SUNDAY. VERY SMALL CROWD AT THE WORLD’S FAIR. Exposition Officials Disappointed at the Result— Machinery at a Standstill—Quiet on the Plaisance—Rain in the Afternoon —The Infanta in Chicago. X isitors N . t Numerous. If the machinery had been running and ihe exh bits had been uncovered people at ihe V orld’s Fair Sunday might have t u ught they had turned the Wiong leaf :n the calendar, according to a Chicago correspondent. It was more like a dull Monday than a wide-open Sal bath. The scattered. s,ra gl.ng streams of Sunday sightseers left enough room on the lii-h---ways and in the buildings for half The Topuiation of Chicago to walk in comcr-. the ra;d attendr.n e. as shown by the pur l.a-e of tic ets at ackscn lark was e-L in, o f which num’.er Z.'l' E:-position peo1 ie a .mu ed the light attendance to xanous causes. They thought that many were deterred 1 10:11 coming on account of the heat, others be ause the western horizon in the afternoon por- ! :'. nce ‘ ra n. and still ethers thought l ~^..l iDcc ^ air * t y o£ tae ia unction pro-M-n’l-n ’ tl '' I cope indoubt
° la ’ e lor ' b -ccn to plan a Sun? uaj 'r p. ruey all agree I, however, । that the attendance was discouragingly light. At no time were the gates Iroubl <1 by the size of the < rowd. The । bustle and liveliness of the preceding j six days were miss ng, and for an open 1 day the Exposition was wonderfully I quiet. With the exception of the Gov--1 ernment building all the Exposition : halls were open, but n any of the ex--111 mis were covered with sheets. Quist on M.dway Plai.anee. .Midway Plaisance concessioners were disappointed. The <rowd there was small and those who were out did not spend money. Mhen the thunder
sh .wer came ud many of the foreigners thought that the rain would drive the crowd into the ala ost empty theaters for shelter. Put the shower had no such effect. The people crowded under the viaducts or splashed around in the mud, and as a resuit the theaters were almost empty. The zoological arena did the largest busines? and the Street in Cairo did fairly well, but the Dahomeyites and Chinese did not have crowds enough to yell to and the performances were cut short. The glass works ana the New England cottage were closed. The Irish girls in Blarney castle at endei high mass in the morn ng and opened the village at 2 o’clock :o inspection, but no work was done. The chair toys and the sedanchair men complained that they did not have anything to do. The people preferred to walk through the mud to paying for chairs. EULALIA IN CHICAGO. How tbe Representative of the Queen of Spain Was Received. The Infanta Eulalia. Princess of the bloo I royal of Spain and guest of the Government of the United States at the Columbian celebration, arrived >n Chicago at noon Tuesday- a an ?s" ments for her recer tLOII .' , a Itllghty delicate matter for COD rough Western but they v much discuss^.-,,. n y v^-b* resentauve; Hobart 'CiiV'.'.y?-"-’ l ';-' ■ ’ ' —- —- v \\ i WA ‘ A I; nW' \ 11 INFANTA EULALIE,
i lor, who is Spanish consul at Chicago, ; and Allison V. Armcur. It was the i business of these g< ntlemen to learn the pleasure of the royal party and to see that their entry to the city was attended with no inconvenience. At the Union Depot Mayor Harrison met the party. The aidermen were there, too, but there was no lunch and the aidermen will remain in the background. Mayor Harrison was presented to the Princess, Prince Antonio, and the suite, and having been presented, ' the Mayor offered his arm to । the Infanta and escorted her through a ; lane, fenced in with the bigeest coppers < n the force, to Canal str. ct, where ear- ; riages were taken io the hotel. The ■ can iage which carried the princess was j Mrs. Potter Palmer’s landeau and four, i and in the carriage were seated the ' Infanta, Pr.nce Antonio, the Duke de ; Tamames, an i the Mayor. At each side
i of the carriage rode an officer of the l cavalry ami an orderly, and the waolc procession was escoited Vjy Into troops of horse from Sheridan. The members of the royal suite drove with carriages and pairs. A detour was male down AV abash avenue and around Michigan i avenue, where the royal salute was I fired. From Michigan avenue the ! party drove to the Palmer Ecu e. A j carpet was laid from the edge of the | walk to the private entrance, and Mayor : Harrison escorted th- Infanta to her ■ apartments. There she was presented i with an invitation to breakfast with the ' AJU M x-.»-< rn rl o V
, Mayor on the loLowmg day. The Secretary of the Navy has made ! the twentieth payment of sßoty67 1o • Cramp Sons on account of the construction of the cruiser Minneapolis, and thereby indicating officially that the vessel is two-thirds finished. The Patent Office has celebrated the issuance of a lound 50;i.( 0 ‘ of patents. Patent No. 50i»,t o > has been issued and the office has started with a good steady i gait toward the 1,C00,<00 mile-stone. The Minneapolis Humane Society has appointed delegates to visit Chicago for the purpose of trying to stop * the proposed cowboy race from Chadron, Neb., to the World's Fair. Social Democrats at Berlin attempted to break up a meeting of antiSemites. A desperate fight occurred, which the roll e finally ended.
