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Show THE MORSISO EXAMINER I'TAIL WEDNESDAY OODKX, line &j H,' Mill'll fi'iluH - SAL1 LAIVC Any (FROM CORRESPONDENTS maid AND STATE EXCHANGES) political machine in Wisconsin1905 and for waa elected to the senate in r term. For nearly a year News mv: the Feb.Ts The I.ke colored. after hia election to the senate he t decidedly governor In order to before Judge kept his seat 'appeared J"j some railroad legislation. BeflUrfihi morwin to answer to the past he entered the political field helaundry fore Njhblae doming, lie waved waa admitted to the bar and prarticfor several yeata. Itufuarv hearing, and wj held to ed in Madison, Wb., . fixed bond being the Cdwirirt court, BURGLARS GET LARGE BOOTY. the to taken waa BoDey i.l iill by Deputy Sheriff Sieele. - Salt Lake. Feb. 13. The Herald him went Dan SinipHiBdcuffedai charfed wi,j, burglary says: 6entered the apartTwo jKree. and who will board ment ofburglars Mrs. N. Ucheustein. Mr. and the of bounty. 't meat the expense g Emery flat, last evening and seMK) a default of furnishing cured furs and silverware representing . afniMoa i accuaed of eniering the hundreds of dollars in value. was committed short-l- v The North on burglary Guaiave Moyer after 8 o'clock, while Mr. and "Mri. aireet. tome time duringstein were at the theatre. The Lichen there6. and taking Jb. aiah. of Feb. men used a large carving knife in their to $ In silver. A number of operation, cutting through a screen in court, and gave Sesaea to prove ilie guilt of the door in the rear of the apartments. left loused. The defendant acted as bis The Inside door had beensearchedopen. the little to Once Inside the burglar at'omey. but had very ro blun out occasionally house thoroughly, ransacking every ... was a "liar ' The iourt drawer and cheat in the rooms. tlut aome one In rned the prisoner to be careful r six-yea- aud prepared the breakfast aud won: About about her ordinary work. noon she begad to complain of a pa n in her chest and si x o'clock she iasa-eaway. Ijouib Alan', her husband, la a merchant here, and w a member of the town board up until the end of last year, when the newly elected board took office. Mr. and Mrs. Alaut came here from Merrur about four years ago, where Mr. Alant had been in business fur some time. As yet no arrangements have been made as to where the body will be Interred, but it i expected it will bo binied here. child of Mr. The little and Mrs. Warren Conroyd suddenly passed away at Winter Quarters yesnot terday. The cause of death has seryet lieen reported. The funeral child vices took place Sunday and the was burled in the Scofield town cemetery. The coal company is working the coal mines at Winter Quarters and Clear Creek at their full capacity, and aa many as five engines are seen here st one time rushing ran to the mines. : d rfvrai FOR LAND OFFICE. a C., Feb. 13. The Washington, Utah delegation has decided to recommend the appointment of E. D. K. Thompson as register, and F. D. Hobbs receiver of the Salt Lake land office. Thompson has been selected for the position of register, it ia stated on account of his experience as a lawyer and familiarity with land matters and land legislation. Hobbs owes his retention In the service to the fart that he Is s veteran. There were many applications for the position of receiver, but Hobbs' record aa a soldier waa given consid eration in connection with other qual- ideations and it was determined to appoint him receiver. In this connection it is stated that the recommendation of Secretary Hitchcock to abolish the office of land office receiver will not be adopted by this congress. A canvass of the sentiment of the public land committee of the senate and house indicates that the proposition has not sufficient friends In either committee to get it reported. Senator Smoot today offered an amendmeut to the Indian appropriation bill to appropriate $000,000, $125,-nto be. Immediately available, for the construction of irrigation systems for irrigating allotted lands of Vlntah and 'White River 1'te Indians, the fends thus expended to be reimbursed to the government from the proceeds of sales of lands on ihe Finish reservation. Representative Howell is making an effort to have this item incorporated in the Indian bill by the house committee. er dumb-waiter- HUGE HILL COMBINE. Story of tho Latest to Curb Horrimane Ambition. E. H. latest on the scramble in Idaho and the northwest ronies in the form of a dispatcli from 6. Paul which has appeared in all the Hearsi papers. It Is reproduced for what it is worth: It was disclosed her today that the railroad osr gigantic transcontinental deal ever known la being forntulaled. the It mer.ns the consolidation of Northern Psclflc and Ihe Chicago, Milwaukee and St. Paul and the Great Northern and Burlington into two great transcontinental lines. It means the putting out of the Harriman interests on the Pacific coast. It also means a desperate fight between the four llnee mentioned and the Harriman lines. Aa disclosed today by an authority of unquestioned integrity the situation is as : n The very $5,-rmi.Pi- $100,-iirto.n- ( SERIOUS LOGGING ACCIDENT. Kama. Summit Co., Feb. 11 Meritt Park met with a bad accident last evening when returning from tho Iark mill with a load of logging. In ri'tnlng down a nterp grade Mr. Park's "ad came tn contact with a tree, loosening the plank that held the tors In tlirlr place. A short distance fir'her on the sleigh dropped into hole, enuring the toed to part. Mr. Park was thrown forward off the load, and ih togging slipped forward upon him. pinning him to the earth. In nn-.way one of the horses got on to ihe logging snd Mr. Puck was badly rninhed. Help was fortunately near, and he was conveyed to bla room. pen examination It was found that e rihs in the left side were broken, nd one pressed on the lung. At prps-'n- :g the injured man la intense pain. Dr. Dannenberg attendance. There are four ease of typhoid in piare yet. The disease has had a tne run in Kama. Chlokenpox has .reW broken out snd sickness v'eni very prevalent, la grappe ao many. habj toy recently arrived A at the renie or Fred Pack, also one at the me of Morgan Lewis. Wisconsin senator TO Fait ij,ke. Feb. erra-(.- i Robert M. LECTURE. 13.-V- nited Wla-"tifi- n na-rr- T r:e term. LaFollftie fim x o. ; Utah-Mexic- o States UFollette of will speak at ihe Ball Lake iti'n-e- r April 2n under the auspices p 'be Y. M. C. A. He will talk on 'i'i!ial problem. Senator LaFolIette ' pwernor of Wisconsin, gained reputation In his fight for re-i- n railroad rates. He fought political machine of Senators , I,h v- - Quarles and John C. Spoo-T"and succeeded In defeating Sen-!'n- r Quarto m i05 for senator. Be-the ws for three ?' m In the house of representatives d was defeated for to the in 1M,. In l&oo he was elected governor of f Wisconsin and served ,v r AeiUkijr Developments In the during the peat week have been of a sensations) character and indicate that this property will soon take its piece among the great producing mines of the ramp, eays the Tonopah Miner. On Thursday a sbott of high grade ore was opened up in the southeast cross-cu- t on the 400 level which is quite likely to develop into one of the richest ore bodies ever found in the district. The pay streak occurs on the hanging wall of the big ledge, at a point. 475 feet southeast of the shaft. The ledge, which la without doubt the western extension of the West End ledge, le about thlrjy feet wide, and for the past two weeks the drift has shown about a foot of very rich sulphide ore, having all the characterTO CLOSE THEATERS SUNDAY. istics of the sulphides In the West End. When, the day shift quit work Heinrich Conreid and Another ManThursday evening this rich streak ager Arrested. had widened out to between four and values running five feet, carrying New York. Feb. 13. Heinrich Conabove $1,000 a ton. This splendid shoot waa hnicing Its width yester- reid, director of the Metropolitan opera house, waa arrested today for day, and If It maintains ita present will soon be one of the giving a rendition of Verdi's requiem mass last Sunday evening. His arret show places" of the camp. Ore of good grade is now being was made for the purpose of a Heat sacked ai the Ohio, and the mine will case growing out. of a recent agitation anon enter the shipping list and slay against Sunday night concerts in New York theaters. The requiem mesa last there. Sunday waa one of a scries of Sunday YOUNG SPEAKS OF MORMONS. night concerts at the Metropolitan opera house, which have been in progA special to the Herald from Washress for some time. After bring ar, raigned today Mr. Conreid waa par ington say a: In an interview todsy Major Rich- oled. The hearing baa been art for ard W. Young, who la here to help de- February 20. J. II. Scullion of the Wallack's feat the Philippine tariff bill, said of the Bmoot case: theater management, later waa brought In the winning of the west, in combefore the magistrate whom Mr. Con mercial integrity, thrift, entrrpritte, reld was arraigned on a summons In virtue, temperance and in all other re- - which It was alleged that a perform sports except polygamy alone, only ance waa given at Wallack's last Sunembers of which remain, the Mormon day night. The Scullion case also was people hare ever displayed splendid set for February 20. qualities of cHlxenshlp. Speaking of conditions in this sec-lio-n PEASE OUT ON BOND. Major Young said: The arid west under the reclama- Is Mining Mu Recently Arretted at tion act can produce sugar enough for Inatlgation of Eaateraera. the total consumption of the United ia. If the government, does States; that Phoenix, Art., Feb. 13. O. E. Pease, not abandon the policy of protection inaugurated hy McKinley. Under this who was reeently arrested Inat the Yuma factories hsve been re- Quartsalte Mining company policy fifty-sicounty, hy Sheriff Livingston of that cently erected at a coat of nearly Conceding that tne Filipino of that county, passed through Phoenix works only half as hard as an Ameri- today rn route to Yuma. Pease is a can, yet his soli planted to cane will well known mining man and the charge produce twice as much sugar as sn against him la embezglemrnt of acre of our soil in beets. Effective- $300,000. ness is therefore equalised, and the The arrest is made at the instigation difference in wages is about aa nine of H. J. Beemer of New Y'ork or hia to one. Senator Newlands hits the representatives. Allegations are that nail on the head when he save to pass Beemer and associates were induced to this hill is to forever attach the archi- Invest vast sums of money in an amalpelago to the United States." gamated mining enterprises by fraudulent. methods, the result not proving to ENTHUSED OVER MEXICO. he what waa represented. There has been previous civil litigation in the of the Feb. party case. Provo, which went to Mexico a month ago have returned, among them Andrew Knud-sen- . RAILROAD SHOPS DESTROYED. James Meldrum. Mrs. George E. The Howe and Mrs. Alma Murdock. Live Wire Caueee Fire In Southern object of their trip was. to Inspect the Shops at Denver. land of the Sugar and Livestock company, and to gather inDenver. Feb. 13. Fire caused by the formation in regard to the country end of a broken electric wire dropping and its opportunities generally. They Into a pot of varnish damaged the a are of all report pleasant trip and railroad shops In this city Southern the opinion that the Mexican republic today to the amount of $20fl.O(M). InThe lands surance on the buildings and machinoffers fine opportunities. owned by the company ery destroyed L $31,500. The fire are considered very valuable and spread with great rapidity and eight adapted to the prodnetton of oranges shop men and firemen sustained hums. and cane and some parte to stock rais- Eleven passenger coaches, five of them ing. Pullman sleepers, were burned. The IAncoln exercises were held in all shops wHl ha rebuilt. the schools today, prominent speakers being invited to address the children. WILL NOT ABANDON FIGHT. At the Mseser Attorney Rydalch delivered an address on Lincoln in the President Platt Awaiting Action on forenoon and Judge Kellogg spoke on Legal Questions. the same aubject In the afternoon. SaB Francitco. Feb. 1.1. - President Judge Whltecotton delivered an able he Oeary Street address on Lincoln at the Congrega-tloua- l Horace O. Plait church Sunday evening. Railroad company said today that his Vo intention of abandonThe brick layers and stone mawna company-trai- l ui Frovo bars effected an organisation. ing it legal fifitt for control of tho Ohio-Tonopa- h sep-srs- ir 13. Dol-llv- Between Four and Five Feet of 1r 000 Ore Opened on 400 Level. "The unilarisking Involves two transactions. These have been In the minds of the promoters for sev-- i rsl year. The proposal means two of the greatest railroad system In the world. The Greet Northern, with its ..jn.nnn.ufln of iron ore leases, and the tele of rights to Its own and Burling1 inn stock itolders, amounting to more, will cement these two mads Into one vast double track system to the roast. The Northern Pacific, whose stock Is worth 300 on the basis of its earnings, may easily devote toward the piirchsue of stock In the Chicago. Milwaukee and St. Paul, now extending to the Pacific mast ami practically paralleling the Northern Pacific. The Chicago. Mll- mike and St. Paul will find it more nuivenlent at points along the route u use the Northern Pacific tracks, (need, conferences already have been Md among the officials to this end. "A railroad attorney, whose business brings him in touch with ihe financial end of these roads, declares that affairs are no shaping that one can resell no other conclusion, and he predict that within ten years, at least, and possibly sooner, the four roads mentioned will have become two great transcontinental lines hy a process worked out hy James J. Hill." 1 , bruka Ute . Utah-Mexica- ,,f House Transacting mu. 14. 3 n-- cer'ia m .i.lj pirvvnr lv. ELECTED LOWTHER British !:. i: in, tifar-im- : SPEAKER. Without Adjourned Any Business. The Shoe Trust in Ogden London, Fell. 13.- Jaiui's William wan imur, iuum.-i- y liowther defied speaker of the hiuit-- f id fomiuon towith day. In acrordain-there waa no oppiif.ion The house sfieiward adjourned uiril lumorrow without transacting uio kirines. The w.ll occupy swearing in of mei::ta-rihe real of the week Nearly 3W of th, lu.'iuiier are new to parliamcntur, life as a result of ihe upheaval yauned by the It No s Let them howl, and well they may We are after them and the public seem to appreciate the savings the SHOE MARKET is giving them, instead of preaching honesty and warning you against fakirs. & WILL NOT ASSIST LAWSON. Decline to Accept tonian's Invitation. La Folletta Bos- Washington, Feb. l: Senator Tat Follct'e haa declined :he invitation extended hy Thomas W. lawton to become a member of tup iiinimlttee to s vote the proxies of a numlv-rtiof two of thr life insurance companies of New York at their meeting this year. The senator found it impossible to undertake ihe work because of pressure ,f public f ; more three prices for shoes general election. juilicy-hoider- YES, LET THEM HOWL In the meantime come in and g'et a pair of those ONLY A SMALL AFFAIR. Only One Killed In Reported Massacre of Jew. There were Washington, indications today at the meeting of the wnaf committee on inter! sate com merer that an amendmeut would he proposed tomorrow on which supporters of the conn review feature for railroad rate legislation may agree. The phraseology of ths amendment haa not been determined, but may be decided upon at a conference of Senators ravins. Aldrich and one or two other senators opposed to the bill as it stands. Senator Foster took an active part In the discussion todsy by asking questions concerning the powers of the court nnder the Hepburn bill and whether it would interfere with any fundamental rights. Senator explained the rata making section of the bill and the Intention of the persons who drew it declaring that ft waa the purpose to carry out the provisions of th constitution, giving Ihe government the right to regulate interstate commerce between stales. Neither faction in the committee Is able to lino up ita forces and know jnat where it stands. One or two Democrats have not made their positions known. Of the Republican, Dolliver, Clapp and Cullom favor the bill aa it came from the house and Elkins, Aldrich, Kean, Foraker and Crane will not. vote to report. a bill which does not contain a provision for court review of orders of the Interstate' commerce commission. Supporters of the how bill have claimed all of the IVmocrat, but the speech of. Mr. Tillman In the senate yesterday is said to have made them uncertain as to his vote, and so far as known Mr. McLaurin has not made hia position clear. If these Democrat votes ire lost the bill could not ho reported in Its present form. If one of the vote was lost the committee would be lied, ns Senator Cullom rsn-no- t get here to vise on Friday, and Senator Dolliver hae been unable to arrange a pair in the committee. Feb. - - AMENDMENT. Decided After Conference of Senators Elkina, Aldrich and Others. STRIKE. OHIO-TONOPA- folio-- 1 WILL OFFER pi:-,- - luiis A lent Scofield. Feb. 31-died si about 8 oclock this evening. She was apparently well this morning : in rr:nRTARY Miuaiun If :h, rah: 'tur proper' it, mi; Midi ac;i.n on the law ponii? DEATH COMES SUDDENLY. - would no longer bo language, aa It WThewidPnce tended to show that worked about the Simpson, who had was dead place aa a porter, flush" In the J5ke" at flight, hut a deformed morning. Some one with a. aa evifoot, life I one of Simpson In the denced hy the pedal prints .now had placed a ladder against (he whereby an up-.ileu of the building, entered. Thence room had been the bar room waa readied by way of " up and very narrow down which consignment of beer and wont to travel. empty glasses were After helding himself to what money could be found and some bottled goods, ihs robber went out of the rear door. Witnesses testified that during the night defendant tried to get f5 in currency or gold for small change. He waa arrested at Garfield the next his Inday. and for a time maintained admitted to nocence. hut afterwards an officer that he "didn't steal no $17 and three bottlea of whiake.v, but tuk only about $ and a pint bottle." and did that only to get even with is proprietor for bawling him out fur two glasses of beer. j hI'k'IuIiiik lrg.il Mope day as They will demaid an eight-hou$5 a s'art. A proposition to a day has been under consideration, but will not be acted upon ui present. Twas his own attorney. hia new 'Vt arc MORMXfl, Petersburg, Feb. of the report in ihe Monday dispatch, that a maanarn- cf Jews bad taken place at Kalarariii, allow that the affair waa of small liuporLiiioe that there was no one klihii and no pillaging. The facta are that n crowd of roughs went through the two atrei-twhirit comprise the Jo lab quarter of the town, shouting, bring guns and Bt. - Trust price always $3.50 and $4.00, because they are so advertised. s breaking window. COLONEL Veteran GRAVES RESIGNS. Editor No Longer Connected With the Atlanta News. Atlanta, Ga.. Feb. 1. The controversy among the lockholdera and officers of the Attains New Publishing company was ended today by the resignation of John Temple Graves a editor and the dismissal of certain court proceeding. Colonel Graves gave aa bis resona fur withdrawing dissatisfaction mint of the paper. hi FOR A Wisconsin PRINCESS ENA i the managie wi;h was a spring morning In Hia year Ikon when ilia present writer .food In the Clarence Victualling Yard at Portsmouth, among a small group of pentons waiting for the of the late Queen Victoria from Osborne on her way to WlndHor, says the London Dally mall. The Albert, was due st eleven; and present I), which through lines of herlKw-shtp- s broke their flag as she entered, the little yacht, with tin sun shining over her royal standard snd while ensign, came taring up thu harbor and swung round Into the VicIt RATE. TWO-CEN- T Bogins a Fight on tho Rail-roo- tr-riv- Madison, Win., Feb. 1.5. Steps were lakcii today looking lo the establishment of a two-ren-t per mile passenger rate on Wisconsin railroads when Herniary of State Waller L. House, r filed stale personal complaint with th white-decke- railroad coisiiiissics against the Wisconsin Central rallwnt over ihe three-oen- l charge, which he declare to lie tualling Yard as the seventh stroke exnesaive. of eleven clanged nut from the dock-yai- d , It was so that Queen clock. y Victoria loved lo have things done, THE ANEMONE ENTERED. and her officers never failed her. Will Compete In the Yacht Raco from Her majesty walked to the traiu with her little grartotia bow to thu 'Frisco to Honolulu. walling offidNla, among whom, for a Bpanl.h officer apHonolulu, Fob. 13. C. L. Tull of aome Colorado Spring haa entered the. Ane- peared suddenly. I think he had come mone for the New York Yacht, club'a over on the Albert, but in any case proposed race front San Francisco In he hid very lately been presented to Honolulu. The Anemone will soon Mil Queen Victoria, and belied the tradifrom New York for San Francisco tions of his rare in being very conaround Cape Horn. siderably "flurried'' thereby, ('failing down a little, he nodded towards a Into the Jumping TAKE UP ISLE OF PINES TREATY. child who ws train, and said that he bad been watrh-luher: It Is an English child Ju.l Will bo Discussed by Banata at Noxt such as I read elmul In Imoks. Hhe Executive Seooion. hss gold hair, blue eyes, rose and cheeks, she runs and dances, Washington, Feb. IS. Tlie Isle of ivory hss been Pines treaty wax taken up hy ihe but dim not. wslk; atshe that boy with senate In executive session today. It laughing continually her now, who ha singing comic diswas read formally and will hr songs tn her under Ills breath. A sescussed st the next executive very pretty, very churiiilng little Engsion. lish child out of a story lasik. Who is it?" FOREIGN NEWS NOTES. Princes Kna of Halonburg," was answer. the Natal.-T- he recent letermarllxburg. Princess Victoria Eurenla Julia Ena small nHtlve outbreak have he n held of Ilattenlnirg, since she was born practically in hand. opal in the October- the lucky Madrid -- The cruiser Infanta Isabel month of 1887. ha had the same to coast African ordered the haa been remark made shout her by men snd to keep waich. women of a good many nationalities. -steamAt Nice, during Queen Victoria's last Belfast, Iceland The British er Queen Wiihemina of the Neptune few visit there, Princesa Henry of line, was towed in yesterday drier an Battenberg took a separate villa for awful experien ce. her children since Princess Ena and London -- A dispatch from Tiriis to one of her brothers were romp of lira the Time report that soldiers have moat riotous description; and here life waa a matarrested ami searched the Turkish Uielr consul hen-- . ter of amusement to some of tho I hsva Havana-Lo- uis Marx, the winner of French visitors and resident. the Cuban automobile cup, has en- Just been Introduced to your Queen's French gaged Demnguot in represent him la little grandchildren," said a In the lady at (Index In the writer the cup race in I!0". as spring of 1896. "I talked to themcourt I rvrtild with all possllili; as long HUNDRED STRIKE. TWELVE I etiquette and politeness; hut soon began to wonder whether they were 13miners Pa.. The Scranton. the two children who rnblied my and laborers at the :wo collieries of tho orange trees last week!" at company Rendhsra, Jermin Coal Princess Ena hss hart two very near here, weni I strike today. The friends ail her life: one. her discrimmen claim the company hss elder brother. Prinre Alexander, the inated again' them In reduction of singer of romlc songs who wss with wages contrary to the nward of the her when Spanish admiration was reducstrike commission, snd that the first offeied to her. and was her com- tion ia an entering wedge to a gen- panon at lessons for ten years, and la eral cut in wage to he put Into effect with her now at Biarrltx; the other, In the entire region before the award her godmother, the Empress Eugenie. expires on April 1 The brother and sister were greatly of the commii-aioTwelve hundred men are involved. attached, too. 10 their grandmother, her albeit kept a little tn awe hywhole-some snd most strict, STILL ANOTHER VICTIM. Vicnursery regime; and Queen chilen- toria loved them both. The two Victoria. B C.. Feb. dren were among the last relatives on whaler the whaling today gaged in whom the dying queen's eyes rested 'I another of the victim Orion pir' ' one of her majesty's last act was and miles of southwest, .hT Valencia. a piece of furniture for ITInce order a was The lo which body, Cape Basic. room ' school. But Alexander's head the with male of sreiace bright a century sephalf more than Co! the remained Ur though missing, though and -- torklnga arate them, the Empres, Eugenie and on the neck, and friend, conwere still on. offered no mean- - of Iden- Princess Ena have hvnthroughout the Bsm-flelhe will fidantes, sympathisers buried at tification. L life; the young Princess and the grave marked. This la vounger one's valuable has stores of the forty-s- c court body recovered. Jewels, bonks and gifts f all kinds from her friend: snd will probably, it WOOD WORKERS STRIKE. is believed. Inherit a large pait of her fortune. Fcl. 13 Five hundred Chicago. The young princess's conversion to union wood wurkci in the furniture Roman Catholicism was more than factory of S. Kariien and brother half effected years ago. because this went on strike here today, because of kindly godmother was longing for it. the Introduction cf plec system of The hours spent lately by Princess Ena at the Carmelite church in Church payment. street, Kensington, have been devoted to very little more than formal MARY E. HOLMES DEAD. s'udv of Roman creeds and practices; Mary E. all the real faith of the Roman Rockford. 111.. Fi b. E. Catholic church rame to her tong ago, of the founder Mary Holmes, because it wn the fal'h of he Holmes seminary nt West Point. Mis-of the French. school for colored girl, and indutria) Prim-es- s Ena. who. by the ws. waa and prominent as a scicniiFt, died at ihe first an in born Balmoral, her homo here today. g lu-e- n d - - 13.-W- hile d Knick-knac- , royal child I torn In Scotland for 300 years, was eight years old when her father died, and since the death of Queen Victoria ahe haa shared her mother's life entirely. Prinress Henry very soon discovered, sumewliat to her amusement, that the public tf various function in the Isle of Wight had almost aa warm a welcome for the children" as for herself; Prinress Ena waa invited to be presidrtil of the Isle of Wight Juvenile Needlework Guild; and If Princess Henry had allowed it. her daughter might have opened aa many liaaaara and presided st as many meetings aa herself. The as "Quern of ths Isle of Wight, Princes Henry la occasionally railed, knew better, liowover. than to allow anything of the sort, and tha young prinress led a very quiet life, with plenty of music and a little yachting and few children's parties (of which no announcement might ever appear In the paper) till ahe came out last year. Her musical studies have been aa successful sa those of her mother, fur whose taleni Mme. Bhtnrhe March rati has much admiration; snd she ia a three fairly good linguist, talking ' languages beside English. Life changed curiously little for Ihe young princess when she baine out last season. Princes Henry politely lint resolutely declined to have her parties talked about by the public, and very little waa known to the outside world even about the large ball at Kensington ialare, at which Princesa Kda made her dehuL except that the king waa there, Princess Beatrice of kept her cousin company throughout the season at Kensington Palace, snd the twn young people, one dark, the other fair, both enjoying themselves immensely wherever (hey went, were always popular guests. Admiration of very miirh the same kind as in her youth, admiration for a healthy active, happy English child, Pillowed Princess Kna at ail the lisrtlea given to her; and she laughed wiih everybody at everthlng, declining, altogether to he formal. A young man rame up to her during her first ball at Kensington Palace asking somewhat stiffly and formally for the honor uf a dance. "Oh, are yon sure you dont mind? waa the Joking reply. More than once during (he visit of the King of Spain to London it became obvious that the two young people were thinking a good deni of one anothrr. A lady in (he royal party at the gala performances st the Opera claims to have been the first at least to proclaim the fart;- and then everybody In the secret watched ceveiop-n.riii- s with such Interest and sympathy as spectators will show; the world over. In such mail era. The Spanish minister look Princes Henry down to lea at a large afternoon party, llt-lluixs of talk; It and there wna a became known that Princess Henry was being pressed to visit Algeclras In the winter, and everyone waa delighted. Finally rumors and tales grew and multiplied without contradiction. j And now all the world knows that the solemn grandeur of Spanish society, with Its sixteenth century great ladles and mediaeval etiquette, la to be invaded hy the laughter and freedom and liberalism of this young English princes. A month after her marriage she wll be the wonder and delight and terror of every woman in Spain. Baxe-Cohitr- - WHY SOME GIRLS ARE UNMARRIED By Dorothy Fenlmore. I picked iip a London magazine, the Ladies' Pictorial, the other day, and read the following extract: How should we get married if there were no London season 7 asked the debutante. Some of you would get married If you were bricked up In u ogre's castle arid had to be reamied." said the n seaAnd American millionaire. son wouldn't marry the rest.'' v Then the article goe on to that there Is an ever increasing evidence that people no longer lose their heads because they have already tort their hearts: th-- .t It ia only the heroes and heroines of penny novelette who fall desperately in love and behave with extra foolishness In consequence. If the writer meant to Imply that all girla with love Inspiring dlsjios!-tlon- s sre destined to msrry, whether they would or not, l am not au mre about It. Rome of (he sweetest, most lovable girls I ever knew, Just the kind who would have made Ideal wives, who were pretty and willing lo marry, have remained slngls through no fault of their own. Orcnmsliuices alter cases, and In no other way more noticeably and radically than In the matter of matrimony. Tho fact (hat there are mors girla than young men in most communities is largely responsible for it. Ths changeability at ms a la an important far lor. A young maa wooing a pretty girt often turns to one lea attractive and marries her through ths merest whim. The fart that he haa Indicated by his devotion that he haa serious intentions keeps other young mea away from Ihe first girl Air a considerable lime, and by the time ahe haa had several snrh experiences with fickle mea ahe has grown from girlhood Into a matrimonial uncertainty. Or the boyhood sweetheart whom she seemed destined lo wed may have moved from ths village to tha big city and tilers have fallen in hvo with and married another girl, while she, poor, deluded woman, went on loving and pining until no one rise wanted her. Or the young man who wooed her may have suddenly become ambitions and mercenary at the same time and transferred hia flexible affections to the banker's plain daughter, who lived on another street. There are hundreds of ways In which sweet girls worthy of being learned from an ogre'a castle, who by all Ihe law of sexual attraction should have been wives, are left lu the ranks of the ever aging unmarried. And by the Mme token (here are thousands of plain young women being tod to lha altar each year whom.we look at amt wonder at their achtovrmrnt. , About the evidence that people no longer lose (heir heads liecaiise they have already kuu their hearts I am not convinced, either. But I know that It ought to be so. If all women had tha gift of keeping their heads when they lose their hearts there would be much lass matrimonial misery In this world, there would be many mme tolerable and happy home and fewer divorrs. I confined that remark to women because my observation shows me that men cannot be charged with this offense. Men do not lose their heads while wooing, or while in love. They meke their sweethearts and nearly everybody around them think that they do. but they are only shamming. They are using their brains an the time to further thefr scheme, so that in ths end (bey may exercise their own will. They hsve an easy triumph over tbs girls, whom love hss turned Into silly creatures, who are ever studying the wishes of their sweethearts and have no higher aim than to trot around after them and go where they lead them. They prove so docile and easily broken to harness thst it i little wonder that men tire ot them soon after the chase Is ended snd the game cap-trad and tamed. As a contemporaneous writer aptly puls it, a tame bird I an 'uninteresting aa any barnyard fowl, and man's sportsmanlike instinct urges him on after more elusive and tempting game, often following into other fields where hunting Is forbid. il den. Keep the mm guesting; keep some tempting bait in tight; let them see that there are charms In your makeup that are held in reserve and are worth going after. In other words, when in love keep your head and yon will be loved longer and more ardently. Yon will be much more tempting than the silly girl who gives herself sway st wholesale, who becomes a bankrupt la tha power to please and to allure. Remember that the rule held equally good after you are married, for variety is the apice of life., and men are fond of variety and of spices. PLACED IN RECEIVER'S HANDS. Mas.. Feb. 13. The Hsu-ovbank today waa placed in th hands of Charles C. Barton, of Bus-toas receiver, hy Judge Braley, of the state supreme court. The bank, was a West Virginia corporation, closed last week on the ground that It. waa insolvent. Its liabilities are at laced $3j,000, ( Boston. er n. |