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The Saint Paul globe. (St. Paul, Minn.) 1896-1905, November 24, 1898, Image 6

Image and text provided by Minnesota Historical Society; Saint Paul, MN

Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn90059523/1898-11-24/ed-1/seq-6/

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CHEAT All SWINDLE
SO IS THE POCHUmC FIASCO
BETVVEEX (ORBEiTT AND
SHtRKEV BRAXDED
PARTICIPANTS DISGRACED
6tnrl!ii!K Annotinrement «*f a New
lork Sporting Writer, Made Pri
or to the Jiiiht >ald the Affair
WOuld Kn<] an it Did. and in the
\lit!h Ituuod Fatal Blow to
H.,iiitK.
At 3 o'clock Tuesday afternoon, eight
nee of the jneetlng be-
I .1. Corbett and Thomas
key in i..- of the Lenox
Aihletio- club, Jn N w V-rk, Harry
rtiae; fditor ol the Xervv
Journal, gav^ utierance to the
- M t'Jilght ](j> >.t Uke a fake. My
3 ieud tut to believe tha': there
Is a i«ut-up Job to give The fight to Sharkey
on a foul in the ninth round. I make this
r.<i-.v beCare via ssea to ccc
i ill be Justified."
Mr. B< c&kgx'i ec were address
: . • : ■ r ■ f That newspap-r
in th
sialt. In oomflM
ti •■: ' . :u 88.f%:
readers of Urn Journal need noi be
s co weird caSncManot h-re.
a!?a:r is * &lain <■&» of mean
svindiii:*; It r-annot be dodged or evaded.
All oocerned are permanently smirched and
dish. . ud blackgnarda.
befora the j übli l» r— ftnr they
will -.ndieis. The dupes of th*>
. sue f.^r tie return cf
their money— if ng swindled
are advised
town for their future
zau:. | uudertakings.
• * •
Tl>. .'.as iiistiuct-.d to do as
Id Ji aim «t a forezooe conclusion.
old at tbe l.upinf-ss to have
what th<- \. oalty of <-uch ac
• • be. The ugly affair is aa
plain ;.: tbe lettering in an open book.
have k nfe th
!!.:■! be b • a in the lead at the
i iii!< it i) 'fair wouid
hn\. nd Srtarkcy would
wn as the
oss." But ("oi-bett wraa
II . . ■ , into the
iii a foul
„ ! ou;. Sow the ex
: can «?s.-rt that he- was not
I I .pped. anj
• ■ ..
r,f tl And the m ist discourag
ing part of it all Is ihat a certain
- who have bltadiy
w ihiouKh all his bhady
:-, will believe him and continue
is, \\hi.t he never
• • •
Ptuoe for a review
of w :. ; nas dona to • nt tie him
i he has assum d in
. h: the
.' 4< .-]>■ r . c
flghtii
,v. , ■;. i.--ki. I .in Davis. w'lO
one of the a<
that
ir. ti
ll'" t^siid N
..j would
ut, and he OOVid DO* nurt <':r>yn
ski. -\i that - ■ hands
I handiera
knew It. Thej i uy>on him to
• v . and in the tw«ntjr-«eve»ith
:. i cavi- n up btea: ■
irbett
or vi tirl< over tbe H< brew,
La the only <>ne to -which he
• • •
with Peter
.mating, urter slxty- o ne
• . Jackson was !
• at that time, and the
t fame. And yet
truth is that J&ckaon wa? n.<t
• tt. About
- prt r to their fight Q
ie victim of a runa-
In wblcb he aufl
■ 1 an
■ (-Hi "f tie CaJifof-
Wch the men met.
(fair, but
'You can i
I win.
■ beat
n • \ • a; . ' ." -'Oil ankle
rbett got a
: i nousjh of Ja
Kive the
. ., matcta. That i 9
• ♦ *
g biR men C rbett
. p ■ KM ■ ntrht'-r, therc^
\\h<> can beat him.
- i h ;-» t to W a fact
And that is why
as th*> :■■
-
■ 'ntlni?
finish
•a Ith the Baltimoi ■ ..• n, waa
Ktlrain where it was to a fin
ish win. He ln
v with
:ifter which he
sufnolfiuly
. -Ult I*3
i ■unds of
[ champlona
lerpindng;
■ :. In his comer — not
.- ' ■■■'■,-
And it
■an- th.it Bulllvan never es
. ntrr the rlnp. His sun
he met I "
— >^^Ei>
THE EXCELLENCE OF S^'RIT OF FIGS
I oolj to Vw orlg-inality and
::y >•{ the but also
■• care aud skill with which it is
aafaotered by scientific processes
ah to the Cii.iroKyiA Fio Syrup
. i:ly, and we trials to impress upon
an.o of purchasing the
true and ori,>rinr.l remedy. As the
gv; s manufactured
a Fig Syrup Co.
. a knowledge of that fact will
■ avoiuiiig 1 the worthless
• Pajet aired by other par
. h stacuing of the Caxj
■ _t \k with the medi
£^ . ~.' satj^ac^oc
!: the genuine Syrup of Figs has
: J of families, makes
name of the Company a guaranty
raaUeaee of its remedy. It is
n advance of aU other laxatives.
•s <>n the kidneys, liver and
■ut irriuiting or weaken
theiu. aud it does cot gripe nor
v'ata. Inordertogret its beneficial
.lease remtmber the name of
••mpany —
OiUFORNXA FIG SYRUP CO.
SAN ritA.NCIAOO. C*L
swM. UWUL k*. KKW T MUL. «. T.
knew it, or he would not have made
the match.
• • ♦
Joe Goddard, the "barrier champion,"
was Corbett's next Nemesis. He save
the Californian no rest until Corbett
finally announced that Goddard must
first make for hanxself a reputation.
Corbett sailed around the warships
Jackson, Goddard and Slavin with
their thirteen -inch gruns, and &aye bat
tle to the corvette Charlie Mitchell, a
middleweight. All this time Corbett
had been dodging the issue with Rob
ert Fitzsimmons. "Go and fig-ht Ma
her," was Corbett's rejoinder to Fitz's
offer of battle. And Frtz did as direct
ed. He beat Maher. "Now take on
Creedon; he is in your class," said
Corbett. And Fitz did so and defeated
Creedon. And then was perpetrated
upon the sporting public a travesty
second alone to the one that occurred
in New York Tuesday night Corbett
resorted to every trick possible to
make the public believe that Fitzsim
j mona warn dodging him. And, strange
to say, he had a majority of the best
posted sporting men with him. At
Hot Springs Corbett had the call, and
Fitz was in disgrace. The Carson
gagement showed which was the bet
, ter man. At Little Rock. Ark.. Cor-
I bett was offered a chance to go out
' into the woods and fight it out with
Fitzaimmons, for a made-up purse, but
! he declined. Fitz was willing.
• • *
Just prior to the Sharkey fiasco, Cor
bett was matched to meet McCoy.
Scandal soon attached itself to that
, affair. It was shown that Cort>ett — the
| great Corbett— the world-beater, %\ ith
i a copper — demanded that the purse be
; divided— and that, too. in face of the
i fact that McCoy is little more than a
, middleweight. To an unprejudiced ob
server and student of pugilism, it ia a
; puzzle to understand why Corbett was
: ever rated a great fighter. His glory
, undoubtedly grew out of the van
! quishment of Sullivan. Yet he did not
j defeat the real Sullivan — instead, a
1 shadow of the once invincible gladia
tor, who, as he said at the ringside in
New Orleans, "fought once too often,
forgetting that he had lived 100 years
in 30."
• • •
Corbett's career is ended. Surely he
cannut hepe to again gold-brick the
public. If Sharkey is an innocent vic
tim, he is to be pitied, for he, too, will
be marked as undesirable in future
ring contests. The men who managed
the affair will also come under the
boa. There are .some who have not
lorg t Lavigne vanquished
Walcott in San Francisco, and that
Torn O'Rourke. who handled Tuesday
night's fiasco, also handled Walcott on
that oocaskML Boxing has been given
:; bH w from which it will not soon re
cover. Good often comes out of evil,
however, and. if the lesson of Tues
day night has opened the eyes of the
Cortett srorflUpera to the real call-
Ler of the man, then, perhaps, It ia
well that what happen**! was as It
was. —Willie Green.
SOKRY SPOUTS.
Spent tbe Day in Dlacnsslng the
Boxing Fiasco.
NEW YORK, Nov. 23.— Tb« entire gather
ing of spor.iDg men in this city, and tha
number was ltrge, pptnt today discussing last
night a flg-ht arid the way in which it wound
up. There was much talk as to whrther
or not the ruferee, "Honest" John Kelly had
or liad uirt oxuoed«d his autiiority in c-illing
aU U-ifc uff. boss who bat on Sharkey ftedlng
tbat they fchuuid hav-j received their reward,
but the general reeling among the public
w«a that while It mig'ot ha> e been a technical
usuira.tk'n on Kelo <= part, he probably ddd
it In a dtsJre to i>r»-ect the public, and
thai from (.hat poiut of vKw he was right.
Many at those who suDport boxing contests
were much disturbed a* to the probable efit-ct
ou the a tendance at the future fights here,
and the opinion was freely expressed that it
had r>iK a damper ou t::'j »port lor some
time tv come.
McVoy, whoee entrance into the ring oaueed
the docislon last night, waa a#k«d today if
he oaifd o moke auy etatemen't regarding
I hie lart In the affair. He *a4d: "Corbe't
i wfai fouk-d oiirly in the fight, by Sharkey. ajut
1 wlsh«l to call the referee's attention to
the continued fouls. I ni>proacbed the ropes
for that purpose and succeeded in a
Kelljr'a attention."
Mi'Vey reused to emsw-er any questions as
to whe:h<-r or r. t he kaew that it was against
the rules for him to get in o the ring while
the fight was on.
It Is now known that men in New York.
who had bet:i betting their money on Cor
bett. sent three telegrams Westward. One
WCBt to Seattle, Wash. Another was sent to
San Franvisco, and the third to Portland, Or.
i lia.-n was to a supporter of Corbett, and read:
"Brents changed; hedge your money."
Thousands and thousands of dollars wero
sent to Western elites to be placed on Shar
key. Oorbett was 6een at his home tonight.
He did not look as if ho had been in a bwt-
I tie with one of the heaviest men in th«
I'Ugi'istlc world, as there was not a mark on
him,
"Really, I hardly know what to say about
this affair," he remarked. "No one is so de
pre*Bt*d «s I am at the action of MtWj.
, which lost me the fight. 1 have been half
daffy ever since. Kelly pare the decision
agalust me. CoM chills have been running
up and down my back at the thought that
I 1 had the fljrht won. and then lost It in such
I a manner. Luck haa been all against me of
late, t>u: It is Ix>uij<! to rhaiige."
"I>ut, Jim, many think you, yourself, was
I one of those in the Job, and b«?t on Sharkey,"
. was rnua- -
"Never in my life hare I been accused of
I utter Ignoiuea/' he answered. "People gen-
I eral'y, I believe, liave given me some credit
me intelligence. Now, with a
; spark of intelligence in my brain, do you
think I w mid have so bungled affairs in such
i a way? I think the mer« fact that the action
of McVey appeared so palpable Is evidence
that I was r.o* at the bottom of It. In the
first place, if 1 wanted to be crooked. 1 w uld
inner thhsk of doing go unless I had fixed the
; rffer«e. If there waa anything wrong do you
| think I would hare ru&hed over to Kelly to
tell him to declare all bets off. In fact, the
first oup to y*!l to Kelly to make such a de
! cisioo waa Goorg>e Consldtne. If w» had been
I in any skin game and bet on Shark ev. do
j you think we would warn all bets declared
off'"
"Do you think McVey sold you out?"
"I can't belli ye thai he did. We hare bee»
too close In our relation*. If there had been
any funny business on his part 1 would
certainly hare seen some chaoge In him wh.l%
we were training, l do not aay he did not
•ell me out. but cannot bring myself to
believe he did, tor 1 hava been meet liberal
with r::in."
"It Is alleged that your protestations U>
Ke!ly and your efforts to hit McVey we r%
iMvai, in view of the fact that you have
euoh a nervous. taTitabte disposition, which,
if you had reaJly intended to strike him,
would have resulted la your aiming blows at
ftfcVi f "
"I conducted myself cooly. througftont. 1
did r;ot K's<> my tamper at all. I came Ter>
near hitting McVer. but restrained niyselr.
as I realized it could do no good, as the
harm hart been (lone. I cannot see why No
\>y aot<vd as he did. but there waa somnhir.r
wrong throughout. If he had been bought to
do me. he erideotly realised the time bad
CJtn#. for I had all but bested SUsarkey. Tb%
fight ended co mysteriously that I am stift
in a trance. I would be ashamed rr> trl:
«pm« Deonle -what I reailly do thtuk. If
the people cry fake, I cannot help it. The
fltrht o*m be the beet Jud«e of that I neve*
fought so hard in ray life aa I did agajr.st
Sharkey. K. Hy had no right to declare bets
off. but be did the right thing, and acted
. yet l^e acted only oa mjr appeal to
return the pe^H>'« their money. It se«m»
queer thu he could nor haTe told McVer to
stay out. for h# waa not interfering- wi-h u»
in the least. When Keily aaid "yon lose -
I thought he meant Sharkey."
TO MEET MINNESOTA.
Illinois Men Are oa Hand, ana They
Expect a Hard Game.
MINNEAPOLIS, Nor. S.-Tbe members of
the Illinois foc-.ball team reached thte city
at l:4o this afternoon, on the late "Wisconsin
train. They are Quartered at the West hotel
Manager RaiUback aaid: "1 have no pre
a, tut our team is in exoei-
Itrn 5 form and w« h» T , cotnTliere "to pJa*
football. We inten(TTo win « we can and
so far as the Illinois team is concerned I
behere the people of Minneapolla will have a
chance to see a hot gam*. 1 h* ve t^,
-watching the Minnesota team, and I want to
sar that we expect to work au4 work hard
for every point we get. If we are beaten w*
shall console ouraelres with the thought that
It was by a worthy antagonist."
Tbe line-up of the Illinois team wtj be as
follows: MeLaae caater; King, right guard-
Kuhc. left guard; Clayton, left tackle* Me'
Cormiek, right tackie: AUslt. riglit end- Mar
tin, left end; Wlhnarth. quarter; Oook rirht
half; Hail, left half: Jofiaaton. fall back eub
si:tutes. Loweathal. Francis. Lta4creai At
wood. Jutton.
The game will be called at 11 o'atoak a. m.
Hnrk Brain*.
A Chlneae athleU says tbat the braJna af
the duck are the moat atrengthaßtng u>o& It
ii iKJOftible to eat.
THE ST. PAUL GLOBE THURSDAY NOVEMBER 24, 1893.
BIFFALO_WILL JOL\
TO HAVE A CLUB IX THE WEST
EH.N LEA(.IE THE COMIXQ
SEASOJT
TOLEDO MAY BE THE OTHER
Matter of Choosing: Two Cities to
Complete the Circuit Left in the
Hnnda of Ban Johnson and Pres
ident Kiinieo, of Milwaukee-—
Denver Deal Bide-TracUed —
Cleveland and LoniJiville.
MILWAUKEE, "SVis., Nov. 23.— At a
lengthy executive meeting- of the ma«-
B&tea of the Western Base Ball league;
| today, the matter of selecti-.ig- two cities
i to take the place of St. Jceeph and Co
lumbia T.-as lef; entirely ir. the hanie
of President Ban Johnson, of the
league, and if. R. Klliliea. president of i
the Milwaukee cloib. The cbaaice3 are
: that Buffalo will, without djub:, take
the piace of St. Je?e>ph, inasmuch as
Mt Mrs. Johnson, ar-d Klllilea favor th«
ck-al, end aJI that remains to make the
thing a certainty is eat;sfaou>ry t^erice
with the Eastern city.
It -was also stated that to case the
National ka.ffue reduces the number of I
j cities in its circuit that Cievelaaid and
Lotilgv;ile may b2 xak^n into the West
j em league.
BOTH ARE COSFIDEST.
Pennsylvania and Cornell Ready
for Their Big Game Today.
PHILADELPHIA, Nov. 23.— The red
t and blue and the carnelian and white ■
■ will meet in their annual contest on j
j Franklin field tomorrow, but tonight it
j ia hard to say -which of the two teams
i will be offering- thanks when the de
bris is cleared away. They are equal
\ly confident of victory. Capt. Whit
i ing, of Cornell, says of his men:
"They have come down not to score,
but to win, and. if they do .not do It,
it will be because 'Pennsy' has a
, much better team than she ever had
\><-i ,re."
"While "Pennsy" is making no claims
i as to the superior quality of her team, j
her partisans scout the suggestion that '
; the Ithacans will ever score.
Unless the predicted freeze comes
i along in time to harden the gridiron, '
I precalculations may "be knocked In j
; the head. In consequence of the heavy !
rains of laat night and this morning, !
it was next to impossible to cross the i
, field this afternoon without sinking ,
i into mud to the ankles, and, should
this condition exist during the game, !
there will be untold possibilities fur !
fumbles and chance play.*. T^nght !
there is every indication of foul weath- !
er, but it is growing much colder and
may prove to be a fine football day.
The sale of tickets has been great,
and the attendance is sure to run Into }
many thousands. The Pennsylvania
men had to confine their practice to
| day entirely to the cinder track encir
: cling the field. Signals and tacks weri
, gone over, and the men were all in
| youd shape.
The Cornell men did not take their
I usual practice this morning, on ac
i count of rain.
The two teams tomorrow will line
! up as follows:
Pennsylvania. PoaiUoo. Cornell
! McLean L E Davall
Keugenberg LT Wyveil
iiaxe LG R w d
.Overflow C Dorner
MoCracken R Q Leuder
Carnott ... r t Swaatiand
"«&» RB crow
Gardiner Q B G. Vourg
Coomb. LH WhHJiiK. Cape
Outlaid, Cap* RH Windwr
Folwell V B Starbuck
EASY FOR RVA*.
Wt-llrrnelght Champion Handily
Beit* Johnny Uormou
SYRACUSE. N. V., Nov. 23.— Tcminy Ryan,
the champion welterweight, weat agalntt
Johnny Gorman, of Brooklyn, before 'he
Monarch Athletic club, in this city, tonight,
■■i wag awardtd the de.lslon by Referee '
"Yank" Sullivan, Gorman's manager throw
lag up the sponge at the cud of the eighth i
louud of what wu to bay» been a twenty- ;
round go.
Ryan started in from the beginning of the \
fighi. at Gonnan 1 * stomach acd wind. In '.
the third round Gorman iardtd ou Ryan's j
head several tlmea, and warmed the welter
weight chamricn up. Gorman was sl.w, but
game. Ky«ti'« punches on the wind btgan
to tell in the fifth round. In the sixth and
seventh Gorman was severely punished, and
Ryan had him going when the gong sour.ded.
Gorman seemed quite fresh when tl.e eigiuh j
round opened, but Ryan went at him ham- !
iner and tongs. Gorman was soon unable to ;
defend himself, when Ryan tent right and I
left hard to the ribs in quirk sucre£3ion. '
Gorman fell to the floor. He trU<J to rise
tmt se?med unable to do so. The gong
stopped the COOK and his f-eeonds carried
bltn to his corner.
A physician oxacilned him and declared that
one of his ribs was broken. Gorman was
evidently no natch for Ryan, who from the
time he starred the claret from the Brook
lyn boy's nose In the fourth round had him
at his mercy. Gorman's bows app^revtly had i
no steam, and there was every prospect of a j
knockout in the seventh ac<3 eighth rounds. '
Four good preliminaries were given be- i
tween local pugL'isia. Eighteen hundred peo
pie crowded Into the Turchall ar.d w j re unsn
iraoua in ibtlr declarations of sarsfa.tion.
Billy Moore, ct this ci:jr. -will me«t Tommj
White before the Monarch c'.ub Dec. 37.
HARVARD GETS U'UEA.
Official Notification la Prcs>nla;ated
by Capt. HlKKinion.
CAMBRIDGE. Mas*., Nov. 23.-CapU Hig
ginson, of the Harvard university crew, an
nounced tonight officially that the Australian
oarsman, O'Daa. lately coach of the Cniver- i
sky of Wisconsin crew, has t>eea engaged to .
• rowing at Harvard, and will begin his
work Dec. L This by no means signifies tiat
P. C. Stotr. w head coach, will be a mere
flguithead. The "varsity stroke will be thor
oughly agreed upon, and Mr. O'Dea's able!
uatafulry^s* will be In teaching it daily and
breaking- in as much green material as po^
slbie.
in«i«-»liie Races.
SAN nUNCISCO, Not. 2J— Weather clear;
track si W. ?'jinniarl:-s:
First rtc*. pur«e. «1x furlongs — Gauntlet
won. L^s Medanoa second. Rainier third
Time. 1 :7"-«
Second race, six furlongs maidens— Pongo
won, Sokombo second, Pu.-wad third Time
1:17-5.
Third race, cue mile— Benamelia won, Boa
fiie lone second. Polish third T.me. l:4rji 4 .
Fob- Bm Golden Wfest stake, one I
mile end a half— -Buekwa won, Marplot aec
ond. Time. :C.
Fifth T*r?. hurdle, pur**, one mil* and a
sixteen tr— Vikin«r won. Grander »e«;n<3 P F
third. Tlm«. 2:01.
Sixth raoe. e'even-wixteenths of a miie— I
ForaKT.a wen, Fleming eecacd, Alamnlum
third. Time. lJl)fr.
All Bets Are Declared Off.
To Tfcs M. Pau" G!-A«:
A bets n CorbcU w.T. win In his fight with
Sbarkey. I: was also agreed a decision on a
foul wouM count the same aa on a knock-out
or points. Who wins, or does anybody?
9L Paul, Nov. 28. 1898.
Thji«L«Bivin* Day la en Kot. 24th
By official troclamation, but every day In
tbe wt.lt year Is th&sksr.vlng day for Uioae
who travel m the Pioneer Limited trains
the only perfect trains In the world of th« '
Chicago, Milwaukee & Si. Paul Railway be
tween 3t. Pau! asd Minneapolis asd Mllwau
kee and Chicago.
City ticket oflJee. SSS Robert street, St. p au L
DOWN ON PAPER PIPES.
«*Tor Klefer Favor* Moral S n(u lo B
tn Preventing: Ctflrarette Siuokln^.
Imcj Pa** Gaattw, of Caicago. editor of the
actl -cigarette department of the Christian
Citizen, called on Mayor Kie'er yesterday la
regard to tbe enforcement of Urn aßli-clg&retts
law Jn St. Paul. 9fha Gutoo reported thai
th£^mayor waa ia fun aeoard with Oie en-
Cnrwment of tbe law. but favored tha moral
wetoa rathax Am Urn arrow, at tk« r*a*
bpye. as he pointed oiit tfw bringing of lads
la the police court often did more harm than
good,
blisa G«*ton -will appear before the Asso
ciated Charttie* of this city aFthe Eteoem
ber msetlng of that organization and read *
paper on the cigarette question, (she will
also, on tb« occasion of her visit at that time,
consult with the board of •dttca.tkKi regarding
the formation in th« ecnoola of an aatl
cigar&tte league, suca as is np-w org&niaed In
the public schools of Chioago,
policeTatrol system.
Supt. Kinar Unable to Giv* a Com.
mittee Any Satisfaction.
Mayor Kiefer, Comptroller M«?C»rdy, As
eemblynmn Klrke end Gustavo Willius Jr.,
the three last mentioned being the commit*
tee appointed to investigate and report as to
tb» present polios patrol telegraph system,
visited tfie central police station yeaterday
anernoon.
The committee v« appointed by the mayor
an a resolution adopted at the last meeting*
of the conference conhniiateeL Aside from in
specting the system now ta use in the police
department, the committee looked over the
working model of a new system put up at
the central station by a Chicago company.
Mayor Kiefer. after the inspection, reported
that the present system, appeared to be soine
■whaa defective. He had tried to talk over
the police line to the Margaret straet station,
but waa unable to either make himself heard
or hear the person at the otheT end of the
line. There was no one, the mayor sai3. who
could give any figure* as to the probable
cost of putting in the new system, and Supt,
Kinr was not abl« to estimate what it would
coat to put the present one in good oonditlon.
Owing to no data being obtainable, the com
mittee adjourned until Friday afternoon,
when another meeting will be held axd a re^
port drafted which will be submitted to the
conference oomraittee.
Members of the council who have made in
ve3rtigatlon» roport that a new police alarm
system wiii oo»t anywhere from $10,000 to
£15.000.
The "American Boy" Battleship.
Every patriotic Am«-ican hopes the school
boye of the United States will succeed in
their efforu to raise $3,000,000, which will be
used jn building a battleship to be called
the "American Boy." It costs great sums of
money to build a warship, but you build up ]
ycur health with Hoetetter's Stomach Bitters
at small expense. This remedy is an appetiser,
tonic, blood purifier and stimulant, it la for
stomach, liver and bowel disorders.
GETTING DOWN TO SCHEDULE
Street Car Company Has All Lines
Except One Open.
All of the street oar line* in the city, ex
cept the Com-o interurban, were running on
seme kind of a schedule a: 6 o'clock last
evening. The regular MTftoa was impossible
on some of the lines, but cars were gotten
through with Borne regularity* through-ut the
city along in tie afternoon.
The Merriam Park extension was opsn at
uoon yesterday, and by 2 o'clock the Grove
land park exu-ri.-iuLi of the Grand avenue line
was in operation. Whon the system had been
gotten Into fairly good shape trains were run
as nearly as possible on the schedule on the
most important Met«. but the Maria avenue,
Stryker avenue and Ham'ine oars were run
only on a half-hour service instead of the
regular shorter service. The Hamline line
was not in operation until shortly after 5
o'clock yesterday afternoon.
It was a;atf-d at the company's lo?al efflee
last evening that by this mornlna; all caxs
would probably be running en the regular
schedule. An effort will be mads also to get
the Como interurban cars tirough on time
today. The snow on the tracks in every
part of the city Is severe on the car machin
ery, and no trailers are being run as yet.
CASE OFJEPILEPSY.
Dr. Lee's 9nrmi»e About Brldttet
DonKhtrttN Death Was Correct.
The death of Bridge: Dougherty, who died
suddenly at the home of W. H. Neal,
Portland avenue, Tuesday, was Investigated
by Coroner Nelson yesterday.
Dr. Charles Lee returned a dfath certifi
cate in the case. Betting forth ihat the cause
of dea'b was unkiiCwn. The vromau had suf- \
fen d from epilepsy. I>r. Le«- wrote on th« I
certificate that he bellevct! this led to her 1
death
Coroner Nelson saym Dr. tree's surmise was
correct, that the woman had been subject to
epilepdc flu. and hid £.rd while in the
Jhroea of such an attack. \'o inquest wi'.l be
held.
MISSING Ts^AFE.
Miss Philbriek Instead of Facias;
Storm Remained in Minneapolis.
Mi?s Elizabeth Phllbrick. -of 29C North Prior
avenue, who was reported to the po'.ice as
having been missing e4nee Monday afternoon, j
returned to her home yesterday. After tak
ing her a.usic lesson in Minneapolis, liise
Philbrick. rather than face the storm in get- ;
ting to Manias Park, want to the nome of
friends in Minneapolis. These fri >?.£* live
In the Mill City suburbs, and Mii-s Phl:b:i k '
was snowed in at th^ir home so "hat she '
couM not inform her Mtrriam Park friends
of bar whereabouts.
.
Collections I roiu Dogr LJcenses.
The weather, if the collections from dog '
' lc ?PV* v ™y indication. 1« growing too i
TOM fur the dog catchers to ply their cail.ng. '
Oct. 20 Ch'rf Goss reported the numb r of
roaJa do« li(en*r-s issu-rd were A.X,» aud the
iMMMaa paid on female dog* numbered
The books In the office of the city e!a*fc
show tnat up to la*t night 3.588 licenses had I
been issued for male dags and 191 for female, '
According to these figures the receipts for the
past month have amounud to *i3l a trifla
more than the exposes of tke catchers.
PatrloUc Cveniny.
Rev. Carl w. Bemrai, of tkf, Bomim at Hope :
church, will If. tare on the war at Bsth- ,
leheni church. Ramsey end P;' > eftant avenue i
this e^-eulng. T k c leoture, which prom ses to
be decidedly interesting, will be riustrated
v'th views taken durirg tbe fighting before
Sil:tiago.
Another interesting feature will be an ad- i
dr?es on the eipcrienoes of the fight, rs by
CorporsJ Brown, of the Tnird regiment. »:.o
participated In tLe bat.les before Santiago, j
The adnjUelon fee will be nominal.
Bntrhers' Benefit Soetetr Ball.
The Butders' Mutual Benefit eociety will '
g;ve their thirt*fnth annual ball t night at j
the Mozart hail. Franklin ftreet near Sixth. :
Hani's orchestra will furni-h mus ; c. The fol- ;
lowitig committe* has been r.amed to keep '
things in good order, and :o gi\e a gocd time
to every on*: Arrangement Committee — j
Charles E;»ei:m«Higer. Charh » Frani. Percy i
Naah. G. K. Bruckner. Joseph Heier. Re- j
ceptton Committee — P. Nash. A. Kafiairsky, I
B. Hansen. Floor Committee — Charles E sen
menger, Charles Franz, O. W. KchUnd.
Bis; Imac* of Baddka.
In Japan Is the Kotokunl monastry. which
waa one of the many erected by the Emperor
Thomu about 737 A. D. Th* image outside
the monastery represents Buddha, was made '
of bronte in the y«ar 1250. and is fifty feet i
h:eh. n:nty-«!glrt fe«t in waist clrcumferftnce '
has a face orer eight feet long, an eye four
feet, ear nearly seven feet, a mouth ov*r
three feet broad, and a nose four feet long
Th* cirtumfMrenc* of the thumb is over thrae '
feec
'
I The Standard
medium -priced n_
whiskey of the/
I Z/ncfeSamls
I Monoghsm
Pure and p_latable-nqt
a drop of fusel oil in it
An excellent drinking^
Druggists, dealers or*
BIG FIRE AT 'FRISCO
THE BALDWIN HOTBL IS NOW A
SHOULDERING MASS OP
mm
LOSS OF LIFE IS SMALL
But Two Known Victims, Though
Several Persons Are Unaccounted
For Amonar the Latter Is a
Famous Race Track Judge, J. J.
Carter An Alaska Merchant
Drops Dead From Fright.
SAN FRAXCISCO, Nov. 23.— The
Baldwin hotel, for almost thirty years '
one of the principal land marks of San
Fran-Cisco, is no more. A fire which
broke out in the east end of the build
ing*, shortly after 3 o'clock this morn
ing, supposedly in the property room of
the Baldwin theater, totally destroy
ed the immense structure, entailing a
financial loas of n«_rly J1, 500,000, be-
Rid€B <iestroyin« property that no
amount of money or science can re
place.
The kws of life, so far as reported,
has been miraculously Hg_t. but two
deaths having occurred as far as
known. The loss of dead. Injured and
mi__rng. as far as known is as follows:
Dead:
CAPTAIN J. L. WHITE. San Francisco
capitalist.
LEWIS MYERS. Skagway, Alaska, merch
ant.
Injured:
F. P. Noon, St. Louis, Mo., both ankles
broken.
George Hilber, San Francisco, cut about
body.
Miss Bridget Mitchell, San Francisco badly
bruised.
Fire Marshall Towe, San Francisco cut
about the head.
Misaing:
J. M. Lelghead. San Francisco, pureer
steamer. City of Sydney.
F. Weaiherb«e and wlte, Haverhill, Mass.
Tate Pryor, of St. Louis.
F. B. Andrews, cashier cafe.
Frtd V.'ebeter.
Two chambermaids.
John J. Carter, race track judge.
Thomas Berkey and wife, assessor, Sacra
mento county, Cal.
FINANCIAL LOSSES.
The financial losses are very far
reaehdrs, almost eveiy branch of com
rru.Tcial trade beinjr ddrcotly affected.
The ground floor of the hotel wa? di
vided into a number of large stores,
and few of their oceu.pajvts saved
anything worth mentioning, the ma
jority reporting total losses. Two of
the most haxideome cafes In the city
were gutted, and the stocks d. -strayed.
The Baldwin theater, the fashttu-n.a'ble
amiMnffitw r.Laoe of the city, waa to
tally destroyed wiih the rest of the
building, and the "Secret Service"
oomrany lest all of its paraphernalia
and accoutrements. Many of the mem
bers of the cornipany lost meet o° their
belongings, and trunks containing th.?
official papers of the company were de
stroyed.
GUESTS PANIC STRICKEN.
There were upwards of 200 guests in
the iK-tel when the fire was discovered
and the scene which followed beg-gars
description. The watchmen, bell boys
and other hotel employes worked nobly
in arousing sleeping residents. It is
liflieved that every person im the
building was appraised of the danger
within ten minutes after the fire b k •
out. but rumors are i if- that many of
th'^e in the ea>*t wing, where the
flames were discovered, wire cut «>ff
from escape and h.st. How true th j s9
rumors are cannot be told for several
days yet, as many parts of the building
have collapsed, lunying a.ny who may
have bet-n left in the building under the
debris.
Capt. J. L. White, who occupied a
room on the fourth floor, was killed
while trying to escape by means of a
icj« which dangled from the fifth floor,
almost to the street below. Thy; rope
had previously done good service, be
in^ the means by which five persons
escaped from the burning building:. The
story of the rope is a thrilling one. For
tight years Kate Richardson has been
en employe of the hotel, occupying a
room on the fifth floor. Five years ago
Miss Richardson, as a prec.au tk> nary
measure for juen. suc-h an emergency,
procured a lengthy rop» long enough to
reacih from her room to the street.
Wfeeo the alarm was given Miss Rich
ardson, with th« assistance of Gussie
Johnson, a oompa-nion, secured the rope
to a piece of heavy furniture and threw
the free end out of the window. The
two girls were about to miaJte the de
scent to the pavemem when three lady
guests rushed irrto the room and begged
tc be saved. The two brave girls gave
precedence to the guests, and then Miss
Johnson took her p is.it ion on the rope
and went down hand over hand. Miss
Richardson was the last to leave, and
she had gone down but one story when
Cept. White, who occupied a nx>m on
that flo. iv, called to her appt-alingly,
begging her not to jump. Miss Richard
son stopped and begged the captain to
tnke her place on the rope. This he
refused to do, and only after dint of
mveh persuasion could he induce Mise
Richardson to save herse:*, promising
to CoDow in her wake. Miss Richard
s<.kn rveched the giuund in safety, and
(V.pt. White had launched himself in
the a.ir when, suddenly, the i-ope broke,
and he fe'.l to the ground below, a dis
tance of nearly 100 feet. The rope,
weakened by the intense strain to
which it had Wen subjected and worn
by contact with window sills which had
btcome intf-rwsHy hot, could not with
stand the strain of Capt. White's
weight and broke. The other known
death was that of Incuts Myers, a mtr
chsn< of SkAguay, Al—ska, v/ko was in
thus city on business connected with
his Alaska store. Mr. Myers, who was
sixty -eig-iw years of age. had been
safely rescued, f>ut the shock had been
so great that his heart, weakened by
frirht and oikl age. could not stand the
strain, and he died.
SUMMING UP LOSSES.
The most sanguine hopes are express
f-d that the loss of life wifl not be add
ed to, but the indications are that, the
death roil must increase. The police de
partment is busy computing a l'st of
the guests and checking them off as
fast as they are reported safe. Man
ager Lake, of the hate!, f-els certain
tba-t all of the employes have i>een
etved, though two chambermaids are
Kissing.
NOT SUPERSTITIOUS,
Bat Wouldn't Allow » Open Im
-I'fflU on the Trnlm.
Firm the Chicago JcurnaJ.
"Who-^ umbrella t» that?" veiled the con
ductor as ha entered the smoking car of *
suburban tiain.
llw timid little man sterted and was pre
paring to wwilogjae for ownlLg the e*'U«
of the troubie when the conductor again
relief almost in the same breath," "Put tt
down!"
The timid little man grasped the drippia*
umbrella, which he had 6Dr«_d In or_«*"i*
ailotr it the cuicker to dry, and a* he
closed it with nervous bast© tb« conductor
continued:
"Don't rou know enough not to open an
umbrella In a house — In a car, I mean? f>o
you wan* to hoodoo this train? Well it's
ml«hty lucky you didn't run across a' con
ductor thai was superstitious, wi_h that
umbrella, or he might tare cut you off "
Tie timid little man stowed the dripfjn*
umbrella under i_e teat, watched Qm coy
ductor punch his ticket, replaced It in a
pocket wk«r» he wouldn't think to look for
it in tfce morning, and breathed a *!*_ of
relief as tfc* oar door sl__i_ed after tie sra.
Biding gwaiua <rf the train. "
Coins.
A cold ccio passes from cms to another
SjmJSoO.m Kmes before the stamp or ln»
--proa_on upon, it become* obliterated by
frictloß, wmlle a. sflrer ooln ciaores bauds
UGS.OM timm bcf«r* tt WaomM eaUre^y
effaced-
— . . mm — — — — ■ — — ■
I The Savoy ,_„ I
The Baltimore I
These are the pre- II \St»\ ji a
vailing Lasts, but P®j
like other good %«^^ *®
things they have % %
been imitated ... I^^**** 3
See the original I
Gorier Sixth aisd
Wabasha Streets.
EXPLOSION KILLS SIX
A FATAL ACCIDENT IX A POWDER
MILL. AT I. A MOTTE,
MISSOLRI
MUCH LIKE AN EARTHQUAKE
Force of the Fi|ilo«l,in Wax Felt
for Many Mllea The ( amialty
l.tht Include*, lv Addition to the
Dead, Many Serlonslj- Injured—
Men at Work Gatlierlnff Ip Bits
of Bone and F'lesb.
QUINCT, 111.. Nov. 23.— The powder
mill at Lamotte, Mo., eighty miles
south of here, blew up at 7:55 a. m.,
killing six men and wounding several
others. The names of th« dead fol
low :
WILLIAM WILSON, foreman and son o£
the manager, living at Ashburn.
ALFRED WEXZEL
ALBERT MILLER, HannlbaL
D. M. SMITH, Louisiana.
WILLIAM CHARLESTON, Ashburn.
JACK HOLLINGttR, Ashburn.
The explosion took place in the pack
ing house, and was so terrific as to be
heard and felt a distance of twen
ty-five miles.
Telegraph reports from PittsfleM,
New Canton. Bayless. Winchester,
Kinderhook and all over Pike county,
Illinois, are to the effect that the ex
plosion was plainly felt in those places.
Until the truth was known the inhab
itants thought it was an earthquake.
At New Canton windows were broken,
and everywhere buildings were shaken.
The exact cause of the explosion will
never b« known, as all the men in
the packing house at the time were
Mown to atoms. Something like 10.000
pounds of powder was usually kept
in the packing house, which was &
frame structure.
During the day men were engaged
with buckets in gathering up Buch bits
of flesh and bones as iney could find.
A piece of spinal coiumn was found
half a mile from the scene of the ex
nloslon. Those who were injured were
employed in another building. They
were struck by flying debris, but none
of them fatally lnjur-d.
Th«*re is always some loose powder
on the floor of the packing room, and
it is supposed that something was
dropped upon it that caused It to ex
plode.
CULTURED fTuPINOS.
i
K«-velßtl« ma of a Trip to the In
terior by Amerlcnu Officers.
MANILA. Nov. 23— Paymaster W. B.
TVUeox and Naval Cadet L. R. Sargent,
of the United States monitor Moavad
iii>ck, have returned here after a six
Viteke' tour of the Interior. They were
well received ev^ry\vh€-ie. Traveling,
however, was most difficult. They
crossed the provinces of Pan.gaena aad
N\ uva Ecija, amd then -traveled ovar
the mountains. The scenery w&» mag
nifictwt, but the r.>ad» were execraible.
The officers nexit v;t;t»d the watershed
Of the Rio Grande and Cazayan. They
say its fertility is marvelo-ura. Not a
yard of barren land was seen. The
t<'*Tß were qul<Et a.nd pioeperous, the
plairs Were highly cult I vat Hi and the
mountains were splendidly timbered.
The rivers were mostly without bridges
a«nd are almost imna»«>a, ; S)le during tha
rainy season. A pacK h..r.-e was drown
ed and the travelers had eeveral nar
imv escapes.
Tha native authorities refused to per
mit travelers to go into the mounta.ns
•.u.escc-rted, becaus- the "ht*d nunters'
anrihiJate any party of les9 than
twmaty rifles.
Ntar Il«ig£un. the r.a"tlve« ms»to ik Mr.
Bargent f'>r a Spaniard, and openeJ
fire, but ncAx-dy was hurt. Messrs.
Wllcox 6jkl Sarg> n-. enjoyed three days
festivities at Ih-Ljran. There were din
ners, theater paitie--? and a ball in hor.or
of the Americans who were immensely
feurpneed at the a l:ui-e a-.id education
of the pe">p4e. The latter wear Wes
tern dress, and the ladies are beautiful,
entirely falsifying the anticipations of
£■* mi -3*ivager y .
The lnsuTseiiit t:< ops have every
where, apparently, settled down, and
there Vv*re no signs of dissatisfaction
with a Birdeless govemniftat.
IT LOQKSTIKE DEPEW.
He I» In the Lead In the New York
Senatorial Race.
NEW YORK, Nov. 23.— 50 far as c»n be
dwermined at thii stage, Chauncey M. De
pew appears to be in the lead in the senato
rial race.
All of the candidates are keeping quiet, and
Sf-caror Plait bea rtead<awly rpfuaed to ex- j
[re«i an opinion. The fact that Conereas- j
maa Quigg declared Lircs^.f In favor of D«- j
P«tc has, however, been taken to mean thai ;
hvpew is al«o Platt'a preference and th«
FeflaTor will JpTt _him the support of the j
regular oTlanfradcn.
It la also beriov«d that Senator Platt'*
recommendation of Elihu Root for ambaaso
dor io England *as in ord*r to clear tie |
way for Dep*w for senator, as Mr. Root, la i
■nppesed to be Col. liootevelt's cht>tce for
eenator. The flght ha« not ye*, grown warm,
and little antagonism to any candWate hag
yet been developed.
FIRST FOR HAVANA.
Volunteer Ivnjclneer* Leave For tbe
(■ban < apltp.l.
SAVANNAH. Oa., Nov. 23.— The Fir«t b»t
talinn of the Second United Staffs volunteer
«ng<a>eer3 left 9araJßaah j i'ediy on the j
Pl&nt system for Port Thainpa, aid wst! sail :
from th«T6 on the transport Florida for i
Havana today. Tbece will be he first Ame>.
leaa trooo* to entue Havana sent from Urn
Udud SUtes. U lim* b«ao. r«Mrv«d (or Urn '
fflfiHff
»* Gen. Greene and th-Tr^nee™ wl'l it
CHTLD_MURDER.
Awful Crime Charared to ■ Cali
fornia Couple.
OAKLAND, Cal., Nov. 23.-The cor
oner's inquest over the remains of Lil
ian Bmr.des, the thirteen -year-old g-irl
who was supposed to have committed
suicide by hang-in* at Berkley laat
Sunday, resulted in a verdict charging
her father with murder, and naming
her stepmother as an accessory The
evidence tended to show that the child
had been beaten to death and handed
to a bracket post by those responslblo
for her death. Neither Brands nor
his wife was taken to the Inquest aa
there was talk of lynching, and it
was thought best to keep them safely
confined in the county Jail.
MARRIED HlsTwiFE
Atfalu After a Separation of More
Than Thirty Year*.
From the ChJca«o Inter Ocean.
After the laps* of mare Mian thirty years
Hiram Burr, of Clear ha« been tinned
with the wife of bis youth. Each has mourn d
the other m dead during the years of their
separation.
Their flr»t marriage was celebrated b-fore
the outbreak of th« Rebellion. When th"
flret oall camo for troops Mr. Uurt went out
hi *njowa resrimont. For eeveral montim
n« and Ma wife corresponded regularly. Thtn
news cams of the husband's death In one of
the great battle*. In the course of years tha
wife maJTUd M. S. Knowles and went East
to live.
Aft»r the war Burt. who was not dead as
supposed, but had been languishing In a
fcsmUwrn prison, returned home to look for
bis wife. He failed to find her; so he final
ly obtained a divorce, married a second tbae.
and lived happily with Ms new partner until
death separated them Bt-veral years ago On
a recent Eastern trip he accidentally met o:ie
of his children by his first wife, learned that
her second husband was dead, mot her
brought her back to lowa with him and
remarried her.
Justice of the Peace S. M. Klchard^.n per
formed the oeremony, and a daughter and
granddaughter of the couple appeared aa
witnesses at the wedding.
France* Smallest Soldier.
The smallest soldier In France Is Louis
Bernadot, of Luret, who is only J fret 4
inches in height. He Is a dwarf with a slicht
mustache. When he prewnted him*, if t »
draw Ms number out of the conscription urn
it was discovered that his hrad did net reach
to the top of the table on which thp urn wo
placod, so a gendarme held him ur> by the
collar to enable him to put. his hand in tha
Urn.
Bean the ,^Th6 Kind Yon Ha«B A! 1 IVS Bou'tM
THROIGH CARS TO CAMI'ORMA.
Quick Time Bent Service.
Tourist car running through to Los
Angeles leaves Twin Citita every Thursday
via "The North-Western Line"— C St P
M. & 0. Ry.— the Pioneer through ' car' line
from the Twin Cities to CaMforma makin*
the following fast time: s
Leace Minneapolis 7:10 p. m., St. Paul 745
p. m. Thursday, arrive Ogden 1:40 a m
Sunday. San FrancUseo 9:45 a. m. Monday*
Los Angeles 7:30 a. in. Tuesday.
Each of these cars Is accompanied through
from starting point to destination by on»
of our own employes, thus insuring every
attention to ladies and children, or any other
pasEfneera.
For tickets at lowest rates and other in
formation call at 413 Nirollet avenue Minne
apolis, and 395 Robert street, St. Paul <-r
address T. W. Teasdale. general passt nzer
agent, St. Paul.
IMnylnjc Card Tax.
Moscow's orphan asylum, founded by
Catherine 11., Is supported by a tax on play
iug cards.
Romntl Robin Story Denied.
CLEVELAND, 0., Not. 23.— With refer- n.«
to the "round robin" from 'he cflWrs of
the Rlghth regiment of Ohio v.jlunterrs, ask
ing for the r<aignati4»n of OoL Hard aM
Lieut. Col. Dick. MaJ. Charlss C. Weyl.
said tonftght:
"No reaiwst was made for Lieut. Dtck'a
resigna- 100 by anybody or for Col. Hud's
by utf::-ers of the regiment."
MEW ERA
FOR MEN.
W§^\ Eappg jnanfagg,
W J ami Long Life.
and achvnokdp'A ty the patktU.
TneEna Medical .'/omuany^s Appliance erul
Remedies cave been talked of and written alxiui
till eyery man has heard of them.
The highest medical authoritlea in the world
have lately commended them. '
They possess marrelloua power to vitalize, de-
Telop, restore, and sustain. '
They create vigor, healthy tlssae, new life.
Toey stop drain* that sap the enen?.-
They cote all effects of early evii'habiu, ex
cess**, overwork.
Theyglve full gtren^th, development, and ton*
to erqtf portion and organ of the body.
Failure impossible, sgc no lihitht.
No C. O. D. scheme, nor deception; no exposnm
—a clean business proposition by a company o|
high financial and professional stastding. VVrin
fcr Haled informfctioa.
Eris Medical GB..Baffa!a,S.Y,
5

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