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Show inr NATIONAL but Augrles.. LEAGUE. Oakland.. .. .............. R. H. - E. 4 4 6 7 1 8 forwarded to President Bert. Louis va Philadelphia. Philadelphia punished two of the local American pitchers and aaHlated by many errors by the horns team, won handily. Attendance 10,100. K. R- Score: 8t 8t.: Louis. May 14. St. Ijoulfl ' ...... to-da- y 2 4 5 ........10 1 0 Philadelphia Batteries Suddholf, Pelty and Weav er; Plank and Powers. Game Postponed. Dayton, O., May 14. The game that was to have been played here today, between the Detroit and Boston dubs of the. American league, was postponed of rain. on account 4 PACIFIC LEAGUE. " Buttle va Ban Francisco. Seattle, May 14. Seattle took the first? end Ban Francisco the second of a double-headeplayed here this after-- . noon. In the first game Corbett was generous with bases on balls, end this, sombined with errors, made it easy for the local team. In the second game, Charley Hall made costly errors and slackened np somewhat In his pitching and San, Francisco scored four runs In tbp took two in Ihe same Sxth. Beattie which ended the run getting. Attendance 4,000, First gam- eR. H. E. Score: . 6 S Seattle 8 13 3 Ban Francisco Batteries Koaeh, Hall and Corbett andShea. Second game Score: . R.H.E. 2 6 5 Seattle , 4 6 0 San Francisco ......a...... Batteries Hall and Frary; Whalen and- - Wilson. Umpire Davis. r - Dash-Woo- Loa Angels va. Oakland. Ran Francisco, May 11. A pocullar-li- y in both of today's games waa that Oakland icorrd only In one Inning of each con teat, yet they piled enough tallies In each Instance to give victory. In the morning play the Southerners had Oakland blanked up to the seventh When the Los Angeles stonewall crum Score: Portland Tacoma . .................. . .................. Batteries Esslrk Kerf ami Graham. Umpire and 5 Rutso-Jipan-t-s- 3 1 C McLean; Klopf. GIRL BURGLARS. Gag Man of Science and Loot Houas. His rarls. May 14. Two girls have been arrested here for haring perpetrated a burglary in the room of an elderly man who lives near the Botanical Gardena. The young women burst into the savant's flat during the absence of his housekeeper, snd, having bound and gagged him, they put him to bed and told him sarcastically to go to sleep. Then they carried away everything that they could find in the flat, including a act of valuable mechanical Instruments. After their departure, the housekeeper, having come back, released her master. The man of science estimates his losses in money, and instrument! at 400 Jewelry, The female burglars negotipounds. ated some of the plunder before they were arrested. According . to their . story, they knew the elderly scientific gentli-mavery well, snd he Invited them to afternoon ten In hia flat. erli-ntlfi- Spends 300,000 Pounds In Five Years and le Arrested for Theft. Paris, May 14. A young French Maurice Baron the nobleman, notorious was who de Tour, a few years ago for bis extravagance, has Just been arrested on a charge of robbing a Part Jeweller, the circumstances being somewhat extraordinary. THE POLLARDS. He entered a Jewellers shop in the Rue des Haudriettes, and asked to Play-goer- s an to b afforded a treat be shown a valuable bracelet In the with the coming here to the Grand window. While bargaining with the Jeweller, Opera House of tha Pollard Lilliputian Opera company on May 19, 30 and SI, who wanted 300 pounds for the article; for an engagement of four perform- the customer looked at some others, ances. The productions by these fam- when the shopkeepers back was ous little people are complete In ev- turned suddenly decamped with the ery detail and the talent they show is bracelet The Jeweller pursued the baron, who far ahead of that of the majority of the high class adult companies. Such waa overtaken and given Into ruatody. dancing and drill work cannot be seen At the police station he explained, in any other mganisation, and the chil- amid a flood of tears, that he had run dren enjoy the work thoroughly. They through a fortune at 800,000 pounds have the beat of rare, and all are In five years. That morning the lady bright and Intelligent. Their recent with whom he waa living, and on trip to the Orient and the Philippine whom he had spent 30,000 pounds, had islands was one continued ovation. In threatened to turn him out of doors Manila they were the rage, and enter- that evening if he did not make her tainment! in their honor wore gotten an Easter present. He had no money, and could borrow up by the exclusive army set of the capital of Uncle Berns Oriental none, as he had fallen out with hia The opening attraction on relatives and friends. In a moment Friday, May 19, will be Tha Belle of of madness, as he explained, he was New York." Popular prices. tempted to steal the bracelet. The baron baa been detained In cusJoseph Marvin, Altskan commission-e- tody, but haa been allowed to comfor the United Statea government municate with his parents. at the Lewis and Clark Centennial, Is In receipt of a telegram frhm Govern PRESIDENT ELIOT'S CHOICE. or Brady of Alaska telling him that a haa been large exhibit of gold nuggr-tAt tha time Eastern Massachusetts collected for exhibition. Mr. Marvin was considering the filling of its Prohas secured a special safe for storing testant Episcopal bishopric and bethe nuggets. fore Phillips Brooks has been named CHANGED HIS PLEA. Congressman McCulloch of Arkansas tells a story concerning an Irishman who was brought into court charged with stealing a valuable overcoat. He told hia lawyer that he had procured It from Ms friend. Tim Murphy, who had gone from Little Rock, to New Orleans, and who expected to never return to Arkansas. Thus informed, his attorney entered a plea of not guilty, expecting to clear his client Ha was therefore amazed, after the trial began, to hear hia client shout to the judge: Your honor, I want to withdraw that plea of not guilty.' "Hold on there," cried the attorney. What do you mean by withdrawing your plea without consulting me?" There's Tim Murphy cornin Into court, waa the excited reply, 'and I withdrew my plea, because I want to save Tim Murphy's souL" HAPPINESS DEFERRED. What," asked the youth, was the happtent moment of your life? The happiest moment of my life," la answered the sage from Bageville, yet to come." When do you expect It?" queried the Inquisitive youngster. When people cease to ask foolish questions, replied the philosophy dispenser Chicago internal. r - A ROUND TABLE ALBERTA that la I myself grown Chinaman values more than hi ha seen children In many life and will risk Ms life to defend If onuntriea Eskimo,' Chinese, anybody tries to cut It alt. In China the long tall of braided hair African and Jap babies, naked little T offal o natives and red Indian pa- la the badge of respectability, and only pooses. Of all these few were more Inconvicts have it cut o!T. To lose the tertilling than the Ghlnese children. In cue le to be disgraced for Ilf. Oddly enough. In their own land Chlnexe grown men ehava all the hair off their heads except that upon the crown and Immediately around it. This goes Into the braided cue, and the rest of the brad Is left bald, which glvei a man a queer Jouk In 'western eyre However, all depcmla on the fashion. ' Perhaps even more hdd than the hairless temples of the grown men are the little boys running about with the shaved bald rpota upon their crowns. When at length the tuft on h Chinese boys top head is long enough to braid he Is ax proud of It ae an American boy with his first trousers. Little Chinese girl are often very pretty. When they are a few years old their hair la gathered in a coll and fastened at the side of the head over one ear. Pretty plna are stuck through 1L und other natives of the Tngnlo Philippine Islands belong to the Malay rare. The Tagalo mother carries her infant astride of her left hip. She puts her left arm around It to xteady It, leaving the right free to use about her work. Tngulo mothers believe If 9AFAXESE BABIES AND NURSES. clothe are put on a little baby It Will cause the child to have ringworm. So China, a girl baby Is nothing and notho native children In the hot Philipbody, a boy bnb 1 everything and pine often run quite naked till they somebody, w hleh allows how fur behind af half a dozen years old. Ibe time the Chinese ate. The swarming children In the rural When a hoy baby in China I about ilixtilcte of Italy have not much bringthree months old hia mother ha the ing UP- - They go barefoot through nil crown of his hwj shaved In a round the worm weather, und any old thing Ir'iJ spilt n huge as a etlver do.lar. will generally do for (clothing. Their Fry if you can gue. shut that for. mothers have to work In the fields, and :ij when you hate tried in vain I may the young ones see left to tiring up Itdl ynu that the liny Chinese hoy hue themselves. In the elites they fairly hi- - erown ahavrrt siul kept so till lie lx swarm. When foreign travelers drive thi or old xo that wln.ii through the streets, especially In southth-.- ! hair is allowed to grow finally It ern Italy, children run after their carhr';!, be very strong und tfiii-k- . A fins riages begging for copper coin. Someel ewing of thick hnlr lx wanted to times ns many as twenty follow one Bu.l.e the braided cue which every carriage. Ardmore, I. T, tyay 14. In a storm which swept over. Sulphur, Ark., and points In the Chic kasha nation a num- - j her of houses were destroyed. The body of John Layton waa recovered ' from the ruins of the Harper hotel, destroyer at Sulphur. Near Ada, I George Bolen was killed by the storm. I The profit from a alnxle whale that la captured le very lurge. One shout fitly -- nine feet long weighs 110,000 pound, and will give 40.000 pounds of bli:bl-erfrom which 4S.UO0 pounds of train oil can be made, and 1,000 pound 1 enough to extent around the world nine and a half time at the equator. John Tyndall, tha ltiitirh phyxlrixt, wrote nearly all of his work.--; from fui to seventy years of age. The new military service law in Of wfciilnbnne. France cut down from three to two The annual output of link sausage In years the time during which thin country amounts to more than must serve In the army, thusconscripts lessening eeOOO.iAO yards, or 227.272 mile. Thl d the military burduu Im by ix . -t- one-thir- On July 6th the Standard-Examine- r young ladies will atari for the Lewis and Clark Centennial tion at Portland. The party will leave Ogden In a Pullman Palace car over the Oregon Short Line Railway patting through southern Idaho to Huntlxgtoa, where the Oregon Railway 4 Navigation Co, will take of tho party to tho Dalle Oregon, whom on of the famous Regulator" lino of steamoro will tako the pan! down tho mighty Columbia rlvr to tho mouth of tho Wlllamotto River, then up tho rlvor to Portland. Eu. Our Portland Home At Portland tho young ladies will otop ot private residence, corner Irving and Twenty-thir- d etrvet, a modern colonial mansion of twenty room conducted by Mrs. 8. V. Hill, as eldarly lady whose social standing ia among tho boat families In Portland. Sha does not conduct a public rooming house, but rente a few room, to parties, furnishing tha best of reference. It waa a place of good fortune that pormlttad tha management ts secure with Mrs. Hill rooms at eaa house for all tha young ladies. The lady further has contented to furnish breakfast far the entire party each morning. The ether maala will be taken on tha fair grounds or wherever hunger overtakes the young ladies. The beat hotels in the city of Portland offered ae good rates as does Mrs. Hill, but tha fact that tha young ladlea will have a homa all their own ia what cauaad tha management to elect tha colonial mansion located In tha heart of Portlands beat residence section. The Fair and the 9 Each morning after breakfast the party will leave for the fair gronnda, Just ons mile diatant from Mrs, Hill's residence. Tha public exhibits are all free after you get Inside of tho fair grounds. But ths Trail" will have a large number of exhibits that will coat from 10 cents to 50 cents each. In the day time the party will view tho public exhibits and after dark the ahowa on tho Trail" will be aoan. After the exhibits and tha Trail have loat all charma for tho Standard-Examine- r young ladiea, then other ocenea will be sought. The Portland Heights Loop Four hours will bs spent ia taking a trolley ride up Portland Haights to Observatory Point where li earth.' Portland and tha oxhibltioa In tha foregrounds, the Colnm-bi- s presented one of tho moat beautiful scenes on and Willamette Riven in tho distance, and far above tho elouda appears famoua ML Hood, standing out monumant reaching to th Okie. Ilk The Willamette Falls A half day will bs spent in taxing tho Oregon Water Power Railway Company train up tha Willamette river to tho Gnat Falla, Ongon City and Consmah Paris where all kinds of amusements may he indulged in, eui'i as shooting tha chutes, etc. The Great Pacific Ocean . Then as a sort of forewril trip, tha antln party will get aboard tha palace steamer Potter of the Oregon Railway and Navigation Company and will sail down tho Columbia River for a half day to tha PacHle Ocean, where ths young ladies will bo given an opportunity to baths In the greatest ocean on earth and ia at oaa of tha big hotels In breezes coming from Japan. r The Great Clam Bake Several time during the summer groat clam bakaa are given on th sea shore. Tha Btendard-Examln- r young ladiea will each be provided with a ahlngla and as tha tlda recedes will rush out on tho Band and dig tha clams which hide an Inch ar two ia tha sand. Thousands of people take part In theaa great clam txlq and Mr. A. L. Craig, the genial general passenger agant of tha company that owns tha majeztlc straw Standard-Examine- r party to tho Pacific Ocean on ona of tho days wfw a Potter, haa promised to run tho 4 at per head. Tha digging of clams, however, only rulaa on pair of clam bake la ta taka place which each young lady is expected to provide. Everything else la free. ; f Then for home. How do you like Itf Bound good. You shall have It all. Tha Btandard-Examlna- r ell th for pay of tha trip wearing apparel and personal whims alone axceptsd. Wo pay cash, banco, everything win be first eloao and of tho Wat Ho Wanted Information. Carl aged three, and hie baby slater COUNTRY CHILDREN Once a party of u drove out from Naples and went up to the crater of Mount Vesuvius. A flock of young onea ran along beside the carriages, yelling, shouting, bowling for pennies. One urchin had nothing on him for clothes except a pair of very ragged trousers much too large for him. The floppy trousers got in hi way, and he could not keep up with the procession. CHINESE CHILDREN. NEAR ROME. I know some Uttle prisoners whs new "A place for everything, and everyget quite free ell the pleasant wotM h thing In Its place," le a splendid plan to Except when os can be, work upon and la usually dinned pretty Whensunny eklsa ere blue and wind are sac often Into the forgetful heads of little end floorers are blooming nay boys and glrla. Now, everybody likes a And all tho children have to de la Joel P run and play. thoughtful child, hut, while neatness is a trait to be encouraged, do not overdo Then out they come, them happy tth 1L , that love to stretch and nrow. law There waa once a little girl who waa And round and round theandsoftnoitem gayly prance so anxious for everything to be at the Until they It's time for dinner, tea er elm w tho she that to bed; quite forgot right angle go cold water u fact that It la exceedingly rude to In- Then they splash In dear red. rosy glowing they're terrupt when another person la speakwhat ing. Doris waa allowed for the first Now, I wonder could you guM K, wo call thesa prisoner ten? Nin-J- 'U time to aeelat In entertaining guests at a good Uf her mother's at home," bui she was a Well, i'll give yonIt Juet and then whisper vary particular little lady, and when You'll surely tell mo quickly, er yon her mother dropped some cake crumbs If you should choose 4 walking, she Interrupted a most exciting story to I use them when I'm Inside my shoes. live tell her mother what had happened. Just as the lady resumed conversaA Clever Toy. tion Doria discovered that a certain cork end some matrtra email h Get plant waa not In Its accustomed place, two Into each end matches tho Stick and the mother's attention waa again bend them In then and cork taken from the story, and her visitor, the th IDuetratlon. In shown middle, ae watching her little daughter rearrangwater on of a Bhake drop ing the vases, and tidy Doria never realised how really aggravating her behavior was until taken to task after the vliltors had departed. By all mesne, he tidy. Put things In their piece, but don't 1 t this very good point develop Into a fidgety manner. When you ere older you will understand how very worrying such trifles are to grownups. Dtont let out of place trifles worry you, or. If they do, abut your eyea and don't see them. of eighteen months slept In the earns room as their parents.. Card woke up early and tormented his still sleepy, tether with questions. Father, can a cow speak?" ' . No, my child." Father, can a dog speak?" .The tether, thinking Carl waa going through the entire Hat of animals that ho knew, raid severely: And you No animal can apeak. must now keep quiet, for tether wants to sleep." For a long time the child remained quiet Then, being no longer able to restrain his curiosity, he asked timidly: Father, what kind of an animal is baby?" Bad Grammar. Which tense does an army In camp prefer to use? Perfect tents. Give an example of the Imperfect tense. Pretense. Give another. Impotence. Of tho future tent. The expected circus. In the eentence, The officer who orThe Cable Steamer nigeaL ders the men to atorm the breastThe telegraph" steamer la a vessel works." in what mood ia The officer who orders the men?" The Indicative. employed to lay down or pick up a telegraph cable, and every other boat, large or small, is obliged to keep out of her The ElectriSed Pipe. Place a clay pipe In equilibrium on way. Aa a danger signal to other craft tho edge of a glass. The problem le to tha telegraph steamer displays two red balls with a white diamond between make the pipe fall them and at night two red lights with without touching It, a white light between them, and If tha blowing upon It or agvessel ia moving through tho water the itating the air and red and green aide lights ar also without moving the -- 1 licit o he quickly flipped them off, threw them over hie shoulder anil loped along naked, the old rag waving behind Mm like a tattered flag. But these same strong young Italian beggar boys when their grow to he men come to thl country by the thousand a aleeragc passengers and build the roadbeds for railways, dig the earth to level streets und highways and do much hard work for Americana. Of children t hare eeen the little Japs are perhaps pleasantest to remember, they are so gentle and polite to one another and to their parents. Jap boys do not fight sinning themselves aa so many hoys In other lands do. Their fighting Is done In sham battles, where they pluy thut they are In a war for tlieif country. A favorite game of Jap hoya is to play soldier. During the present war schoolboys In Japan often divide Into two parties and plsy that table; Take another one party is Jip. the other Russian; giass and rub it rapthen they go through military moveidly on the sleeve of ments and have a ahem battle, in which your coat. When you the Japa always whip the Russians. bring it doee to the Little Jap girls often boys, too are pip you will see the pipe turn after obliged to take cere of their baby the glace until It falls. LITTLE PRISONERS LITTLE BRIGHT EYES. Cera of Wledow Fleets. Just now one is very likely to find traces of worms In flowerpots. These may be disposed of easily. Take about a teacupful of lime and work It Into three quart of water. Stand for two 1 ours, and with tha clear liquor water the plants, taking car not to touch the W "i? ifSi the teg course begin to move. Of will not. race madly of bw but if the matches he wiootk B, and the top of the table desk wiggle a good j Father-No- w. .do you ever cf look posed uron French Industries. Another h:ilf tho number was any trace of the feature tx that all ablchodted males missing persona discovered. Somewill have to serve these two year, thing like fifty Londoners disappear there being no exemptions. completely every day of the year. The bridge across the Zumbexl river. The tot;,! number of ail known varie-- I Routh Africa, for the Cape to Cairo ti of poxi.'ige issued by ell the railroad Is of the cantalerer type and l government ofstamps world up to the the the highest In the world, being 420 feci present is 15.;4L above the river. uf the criminals In Danne-nior- a No fewer than 23.2(2 case of disap(X. Y.) state hospital W.40 per pearance tn London were re;orled to cent are of foreign birth and foreign the police last year, and In lias thou puree. lag e. or 6,301 Inmates of New York penal institutions two years ago 2.1 S7 were foreign born, I.U7 of foreign and of the accesalons since parentage, 60 ce,lt have been of foreign ?y" birth andJ?' blood. A wav of religious emotion appears (reeding over Great Britain. lemon Is (Ul a text,nring two andlarge enough to of an inch inside ft li picked, and If tt la etfll green ft Is stored until it Herbert Spencer, the Englishripens philoeo- - i4 hw that eg! mart tor It don You cant do It W er ear I waa born ,tupl on earth can make m I coma of a etupli temW t Father-Wh- at? - . g, ttj & TU go ' leaves. teacher. pher, prolific In scientific writings wrote nearly all of his works from forty-one to seventy-tw- o years of age. A company of French capitalists is plann ng to build a railroad from Siberia to Alaska by bridging. Th company will u lrtertaka to construct the road without financial or other guarantees from Russia. An automatic and self acting cah tariff la a novelty of Paris It will shortly come into force, when 1(099 cab as a first Installment utomatic time and Atlantic wavMuair to thirty feet in height but sometime ttaln forty to vK far. y-two 15, 1005. brothers end eleters while their mothers ere at work. Tho boys and girls are always gentle and sweet tempered with Infants. The Jap baby hangs In a sort of hood or bag a Its nurse's back, its legs parted around her waist Us heed sticking up over her shoulder. Often a little girl nurse with a baby upon her back rune and Jumps in her play, shaking the child up In a lively way, but It does not stem ts mind. fr-u- AND MAY) FOR OUR JUVENILE READERS A NEmR MORNING, Yaw-renc- It. H. E. 3 MONDAY. ON CHINAS NEUTRALITY d Chicago vs. New York. Chicago, May II. Chicane defeated Jfew York today. Putnam was unfive steady, allowing Chicago to make and giving live men their . hasra on balls, three of whom scon-115,400. Attendance R- E Score: . J 1 Chicago 81 New York Altrock and McFarland; Batirrles 'Putnam and McGuire. UTAH, CONGER and . Eager; B.i it cries Goodwin Brooklyn vs Pittsburg. Moekcniaiid and Toren. Brooklyn. May 14. At WashinRion Talk today the Pittsburg' won troiu Tacoma vs. Portland. The Brooklyn by a score of 5 to 1. Tacoma, May 14. Tacoma won the Hnd Leaver were locals last of the scries with eae. Keefe was Eason. Attendance 7,5iW. R.H.E. In fine form. Easlck also pitched well, Score: were bunched, Eagan's J but the bits J Brooklyn home run in the first inning scoring b . J'itteburg nad Bergen; three tallies. There wa to have been Batteries Eason a morning game, hut Manager Me-- ' Leever nad C.arrtxch. Emslie. 'reedy failed to hare his team on the and O'Dajr Umpire ucld, and ll waa not. plaved. Tacoma will claim it, the farts having been AMERICAN LEAGUE. j out-baite-d OODEN, EXAMINER: for the place, President Eliot of Harvard and Professor Lawrence of the Camhridgo Divinity school were talking over the situation. The latter waa supporting the claims of Dr. Brooke; the president opposing them. "V need Brooks right here," said This bishopric Is purely formhe. al office; it la alreadv well organised San Francisco, May 14. E. H. Con- and offers no work big enough for ao to big a man. Boston needa him. The fer, formerly American minister (.hint and who wsa leccntly appoints I diocese can get along very well with a fellow." ambassador .to Mexico, arrived today third or even fourth-rat- e Then came the election and the sucon the steamer Siberia from the Orient. Mrs. Conger accompanied him. cess of the Brooke party, and then e it is Mr. Conger's in lent ion to pro- again Dr. Eliot and Professor met. ceed immediately to the CJ.y of MexiAre you glad or sorry Brooks got co, unless he receives orders to sb contrary. But Mrs. Congrr will lirt the place! asked the clergyman. Oh. glad enough, replied the head tet urn to her home si Dps Moines, la. Mr. Conger sold that he left diplo- of Harvard, for 1 hear he wanted the matic matters in China in a very satis- honor. But I tell you what, Lawfactory court i lion. On the question of rence." he added, you were my choice." China's neutrality in the war, be said; to been disposed "China has always THE IGNORANT LANDSMAN. maintain the strictest neutrality aland the warring nations Captain Kaempf of the Deutschland, though there has been considerable was entertaining a little group of pas Rus-f criticism from both Japanese and with sea stories. tensers ian source!, I believe that the Chinese is it," said Captain Kaempf, Why government has never shown partiality are not ignorant of the Seamen en? one way or the other but ha always sea? Seamen aren ot ignorant of the adhered strictly to the requirements of land. It la only, in teet, through international law." knowing the land well enough to avoid Mr. Conger waa asked concerning it, that seamen keep their ship afloat of the the periodic rumors of another Boxer Ignorance "But landsmen uprising and replied: is It sea deplorable.' There is absolutely no truth In such In B reman, one day, 1 saw a farmreports. There is no dnnger of another er looking at the shipping in the Boxer outbreak. Of course, there are harbor. A longshoreman wat explainfrom arise I occasional troubles but they ing the shipping to him. Finally mirclv local causes which havs no heard the longshoreman say: of hearing whatever upon the presence a 'It la low water, now air. There never ha been foreigners. fanner took hi pipe out of j The when time In the history of the country and pointed It solemnly hia mouth, or the government waa more ready, heavily-lade- n tramp steamer a toward Inhetrer prepared to put down any waa passing. that dicipient organization that might be 'it's a good thing for that vessel rected against foreigners. water, he going past that it 1 low said. The waters near over the edge FRENCH BARON'S FALL. of her now." bled and on three hits ended by a a, lies ut nuspigys scored seven run. In the afternoon Oakland fell upon Halls curve and on Hie bits .cored five runs. Hall was displayed In the third and Tur--- for the balance of the play did not allow a hit. Morning: Srore MORNING fortr-eiffMfe- ri- affP P' of V |