THE DALLES WEEKLY CHRONICLE. SATURDAY. APRIL 21, 1900. The Weekly Ghroniele. (Hit UALLIOi - official paper or wasco tvrsn pHllnhed in tiro parti, on Wed., and Saturdays. T kail, rosTAea raarAio, ta ADTAitts. One year II M SiA mouths lore mouthl Advertising rate reasonable, and made known on application. Addreea all commnnlrarJoni to'TBF ("HROJl ULi," Toe Dalit. Uretcun. LOCAL BRCTIT1KS. Wednesday' Daily. The merchants of Albtny hare agreed to close their placet of business at 7 p m. The wool market at North Yakima opened et 12'j cents a poucd. A year ago it was 7 cents. Sixty-five cotton mills have teen started lu the South since January, with abont $15,000,000 new capital in volved. No, dear reader, the street sprinkler is not dead, bat be might as well be for anything he is doing in the way of lay in2 th dubt. L. T. Robinson, of Hood River, has rented the "Palace of Sweets" store and expects to open a first class confectionery store some time next week. The Telegram says the steamer Iralda is to start on the run between Portland and The Dalles in a few days, in opposi tion to the D. P. & A. N. Co.'s boats Mrs. Dewey is engaged in a law suit respecting her foil title to some land lots wtiicii canie to her first husband, Goueral Hazen. The lots are situated in Wichita, Kan., and were won by the general in a game of poker. John II. Kesgan, of Texas, the sole surviving member of the ton federate cabinet, is writing his recollections of the Civil war. He knew Jefferson Davis and other Sonthern leaders of 1861-65 better than any other man now alive. The world-famous Passion Play will be put on the hoards in this city on Wednesday and Thursday of next week. The proceeds will be for the benefit of the Catholic church. Full particulars later. W. II. Marble, of Goldendale, returned on last night's boat from Portland where he went about three weeks ago to consult a specialist about his health. He feels so much improved that be expects to-go back to his trade of machinist and black smith upon his arrival borne. Rev. U. F. Hawk has returned from a short visit with Mrs. Hawk and their little son at St. Vincent's Hospital. The boy's condition is improving all the time and there is every hope of his com plete recovery. The evidence grows constantly that the last operation struck the root of the disease. The Walla Walla Statesman lost a subscriber the other day because it omitted to record the birth of a baby in the subscriber's family. Now It vows it is going "to watch the "shadows of coming events" in the future and record the births two or three weeks before they occur. It has been a question in the minds of Dalles people whether John Hamp shire could attempt anything in the line of character stage work that be could not master perfectly. Tomorrow night at the entertainment in the Baldwin he will appear in a new role, which, it is said, equals, if not surpasses, his for mer work. The new steamer Reliance will be put on the run between here and Portland next week. About the same time an opposition boat will compete for the passenger traffic. It is within the pos sibilities, therefore, that fares may drop for a time so low that even editors and preachers may be able to afford the luxury of a trip to the metropolis. All indications point to favorable ac tion by the present congress on the proposilion to promote Major-General Miles to the rank of lieutenant-general, and Brigadier-General Corbin to the rank of major-general. This is to he ac complished through an amendment to the army appropriation bill, which Serf ator Lodge has offered in the senate. Mies Nellie Brown, a well-known young lady of Salem, and probably the best violinist among the young ladies, has joined the Salvation Army, and it ii said will prove a valuable addition to it. She will train in Portland for the work she intends to follow. Miss Brown i a grand-danuhter of the Unions John Brown. She had Intended to go to Eu rope to perfect her education on the violin, hut has given it up (or the S. A. Ad E Igar, a former well-known stage man and resident of The Dalles, late of Dawson City, was In town today. Mr. K'lgar will leave for Cape N tine on the 10th of Mav. He Ml Dawson City In January. 'Among the Dalles people whom he left behind was William Grant, a former merchant ol tlila place, later of Oram, Kherman county, who Is in bni in Dawson and doing well. Mrs. MilliM. Ut of Miller's Bridge, was also In Dawson rnnnlniaan hotel. Tiie lulled i the fifth rity in popula tion In UreKoii. From a hnlrina h Int of View it In second only lo Portland, No tow n in F.a-tern Oregon a pprn teliea It in this renHrd and it iloa more business nd handle more money annnall than half a dozen of the biggest towns In the Willamette Valley, outside of Portland, pat together. The business ol one back .. . ,.e uanes last year auiountei to over I- TL. Ti ll I . ... '! 123 000.000. And the fntnr nfthoritv at the head of navigation was never hrlg'iter than it is at this moment. Recorder Gates has been correspond ing Vjt aome time with Dr. E. L. Ste phen, mayor of Hinkley, Minn., who, with a camber of friends and neighbors, are thinking of em'grating to the Pacific vuat. The dactor has just written the recorder that he expects to reach here on a tour of observation some time in May, and that a number of Hinkley people, some of them with considerable means, are looking to the doctor's report for such advice as may determine their future action. A number of farmers and two proprietors of large saw milla are among the number of tboee who are anxious to come here. The weather bureau report for the week ending April 16ib, says the late frosts havs seriously injured early fruit in some sections of Southern Oregon and done some damage in several locali ties in Eastern Oregon. Speaking of the Hood River valley the report says: "The valley was visited by stinging frosts Monday and Tuesday morning, but the damage done was slight. Winter apples are unhurt. Early apples, peaches, pears and prunes were consid erably thinned, but tbey will make a good crop if not injured further. Early strawberry bloom was killed, which iill put the crop back about two weeks." Deputy Sheriff Sexton went out to Kingsley this morning to bring in Will iam Greenley, of that place, who is re ported as out of bis mind. Greenley is an old man of close to 70 years. He has a son in fhe Salem asylum, and the father, although harmless, has been a fit candidate for that place for some time. Greenley has lately fallen into the habit of wandering aimlessly wround the country of nights and (pending most of bis time in the King3ley cemc tery. He has an aged wife who,' in spite of his mental aberration, has hitherto re.fiiH '"i. abandon him, not withstanding that Bhe had been offered comfortable home for the rest of her davs with a brother In the Willamette vallev. i At the meeting of those interested in organizing a Dalles brunch of the Y. M. C. A., held in the Congregational church last night, after an address from Secre tary Stone, of the Portland Y. M. C. A., and protracted discussion by citizens of The Dalles, it was definitely resolved to organize and committees were appoint ed to carry the resolution into effect. A committee on membership wilt see how many members can be obtained ; a committee on finance will look after the ways and means, and a third committee will confer with the directors of the Commercial Club and ascertain definite ly under what conditions the new or ganization would be allowed the privi leges ot the lower floor of the club room and the use of the athletic and other appliances. These committees will re port to another meeting to be held !n the Congregational church next Tuesday evening The Dalles has a new company of local minstrels that are deserving of a little free advertising. The company is com posed of about ten Dalles youngsters and the star artists, or proprietors, or both, are Katy Nolan and Percy Long. They are billed to give two entertainments here next Saturday in the vacant store building across the alley south of the Columbia hotel. There will be a mat nee in lbs afternoon and an entertain ment in the evening. The price of ad mission is five cents and about (6 worth of tickets have been already sold. The proceeds will be given to the Catholic Orphans' Home at Portland. Patrons are promised the usual program of songs, dances, cake-walks and original gags, and there is not a doubt in the world that they w ill get the full worth of the five cents admission fee. Martin Donnell has oce of his shop windows decorated with a lot of Indian pictures that have made the artist, Lee Moorehouse, of Pendleton, famous. To those on exhibition for some time have been added a picture of Chief Peo, chief of the Umatillas, and Paul Showaway, an educated high muck-a-mnck of the same tribe, both of whom are now in Washington on some land matters, the guests of General Miles. The artist is an ex-Indian agent of the Umatillas and now clerk of the supreme court. He is an amateur photographer and claims to have a thousand Indian negatives. His famous "Caynse Twins" have brought m enough to build a $5000 house. Homo time ago the proprietors of Mel- lln's Food offered him $1000 for the copywrlght of the "twins." The '7an- nainaker department store of Philadel- hia lately ordered 10,000 copies of the pictures, 6,000 of'each. Mr. Moore has ade a little fortune out of his amateur ihotography. Mr. Donnell claims to tave sola here uetween ouu ana ouu copies of the "twins" alone. Thursday's Dally Where, O where is the street sprinkler man? We are requested to announce that i -i owing to llie continue! preaicm;u ui smallpox at Moro the term of circu!t court appointed to be held there next Monday is postponed till farther notice. Wnat is thought to have been the Urgent halibut ever caught In the Co lumbia river was captured in a gill-net at Astoria Monday. It weighed exactly I 193 poouds aud was 5 feet, 7s Inches in length from tiu to tii. Calt;e , BOod The Vale Herald, on the eastern boundary of the state, says a tuycr in that section ia in quest of a traitilcad of CAttle, and that he i paying $20.50 for jear'.itus, $27 50 for 2 ycar-oMt and $32 (or c .wj and calves. B. F. Laughlin has tweve men at work on the county road immediately south of Hie new stock yards. A change of location in the road, which will he an Improvement in several respects, was made necessary by the uew yards ex tending across the old road. -William Greenley, of Kingsley, was today examined before Judge Mays and committed to the insane asv'um. He will be taken down there by Deputy Sheriff St-xton tomorrow. The old man thinks he is going on a tieit to his son, who has been an inmate of the asylum for some ten years. A meeting of the Y. M. C. A. will be held in the basement of the M. E church next Sunday afternoon at 4 o'clock for the purpose of organizing a Sunday afternoon bible class for the young men of the city. It is intended to hold these meetings In the several church buildings till the members of the Y. M. C. A. have procured a home of their own. The corrals and stock yards which the O. R. A N. Co. are building eaBt cf the Wasco warehouse cover a space of 112 by S6S feet. They are intended to be large enough to accommodate a whole train load of forty cara of cattle or other stock at one time. They are made nec essary by the fact that the law does not permit stock to be on the cars longer than twenty-four hours without being fed and watered. Mrs. Potter, wife of John Potter who died here about eleven years ago, and mother of Mrs. C. M. Williams, also a former resident of The Dalles, died in Portland yesterday at an advanced age. Th remains will arrive here this even ing and the funeral will take place from Crandall and Burgett's undertaking par lors at 10 a. m. tomorrow. The deceased will be buried beside her husband in the Odd Fellows cemetery. L. B. and W. F. Peddicord, of Gold endale, started this morning from the Wasco warehouse with eight lumber wagons and a spring wagon in trail bound for Goldendale, The wagons are part of a shipment consigned to Baker Bros. They were drawn by four horses. Yesterday the Peddicords took five wagons in trail, with a ton of freight on one of them, to the top of the Klickitat mountain. F. S. Gunning has one of the most complete blacksmith shops in the state He has just rigged up a water motor of his own invention and attached to it a trip hammer that not only saves a heap of elbow grease but it is claimed hammers out a plow Bbare and does other similar work that cannot be approached by hand. Another attachment is a big emery wheel that would almost grind the rough edges off a Populist and still another, sets of drills, of all sizes needed in blacksmith and wagon work. With all this apparatus Fred can do better work and more of it than can possibly be done by hand. The Davidson Fruit Company at Hood River has furnished about 75,000 to mato plants to farmers who are going nto the business of growing tomatoes for the cannery. P..F. Bradford has the supervision of the growing of the plants and has visited the farmers and given instructions about setting the plants. The plants are furnished free and farmers have engaged to plant about thirty acres for the Davidson Fruit Company. Next season if 100 acres of peas can be secured, the David son Company will put in machinery to hull and can green peas. A party coneisting of Robert Wake field, of the Portland Bridge Company, Judge Mays, R. F. Gibons, Ex-Governor Moody and T. H. Ward made a trip this forenoon to the north side of the Colum bia, opposito the narrows, with the ob ject of determining the practicability of building a bridge across the river at or near that place. The party returned be fore noon and determined on a similar trip this afternoon on the south side. While, of course, it is too soon to report any definite conclusion tl may tie men tioned that some of the visitors were surprised to find the conditions for a combination railroad and wagon bridge favorable beyond their expectations. Mr. Wakefield had no hesitation in say ing that at one point opposite Mema looso island the conditions for a suspen sion bridge were all that could be desired. Friday's Dally. Spring Iamb at reduced price at' the Columbia Packing house. 20a-lw The regular Saturday nlicht dance will be held tomorrow night at the Baldwin. The common council of Goldendale has increased saloon licenses from $300 to $500. The Goldendale Milling Company shipped a thousand barrels of flour to Japan and Manila by the last steamer from Portland. The McKinley Club met last night ami adjourned till Monday night. As an election of officers will then take place, a full attendance is requested. The steamer Iralda, that wai an nounced to be put on the run between I an oppoai up on the strength of a mortgage indebtedness of some $iX). Klickitat county has only two uan eligible for school superintendent. The present incumbent is ineligible because be has served two terms. Oiily two re main whose qualifications meet the demands of the law. From the Goldendale Sentinal we learn that the portage road people on the other side of the river are having a wagon road surveyed from the present terminus ot the road to connect with The Dalles and Goldendale. The registry law in this state provides for registration every two years, between January and May. It follows theiefore that there will be no other registration for. the coming presidential election The registration books close May 15th. County Surveyor Golt went to Mosier thii morn;ng to survey a new county road at that place which will give the public access to the railroad depot. He was accompanied by A. A." Urquhart, W. II. Taylor and Alex. Anderson as viewers. Honors come thick and fast to Hood River citizens, says the Glacier. So far as heard from it has one candidate for congress, two for presidential elector, one delegate to a national convention, two candidates for state legislature, one fcr county judge and one for county assessor. The Dalles Comrrlsion House will keep fresh milk at all times on hand and deliver it anywhere in the city at the folldwing prices: One quart, $2 per month: three pints, $3 ; two quarts, $4; three quarts $5.50; cream 20 cents per pint. Freeh butter every day. I8a-lm L. L. Hill has returned home from a protracted stay at the Last Chance mine near Canyon City. He has been doing development work for the most of the past winter and reports that the outlook ia very encouraging. E. B. Dufur, A. A. Jayne and Frank Menefce a,re inter ested with Mr. Hill in the mine. The Forest Grove Times is responsi ble for the statement that the worship pers of Bryan raised such a racket when their Joss visited them recently that windows were smashed a block away from the Joss house and nine-tenths of all the half-hatched chickens in the neighborhood were killed. The Prosser Record says the hard freeze of Saturday night week worked a terrible havoc with the fruit in that valley. The peach crop, which was the most promising ever known, has been literally destroyed. All other varieties have been greatly damaged and to say the least the freeze has cost the Yakima fruit growers many thousand dollars. The postoffice receipts of Northwest cities for the three last quarters of 1S99 and th) first quarter of 1900 aggregated as follows: Butte, $02,542; Helena, $40,536; Portland, $204,444; Seattle, $153,053; Spokane, $92,144; Tacoma. $62,051. It is to be seen that Portland leads Seattle by over $50,000, which gives an idea of the business between the two towns. Tammany contractors on the Croton dam have a strike on their hands, with the usual concomitants of forcible oppo sition to .the employment of non-union workmen; and, all the same as any common, imperialistic plutocrat of the Mark Hanna brand, they have called upon the state militia to protect their non-union workmen from the violence of the strikers. The new D. P. & A. N. steamer Re liance made a trip Wednesday from Portland to the mouth of the Willamette, a distance of over twelve miles, in forty one minutes. She made the run buck in forty-seven minutes. This makes the rate for the round trip nearly sixteen and a half miles an hour. Tte record, under the circumstances, is one that no boat on the river would be ashamed of. Special reserve old government whis key, recognized by the highest medical authority in the land; especially recom mended by the board of health of San Francisco for hospital use, also A. P. O'Brien, M. D., captain and surgeon, and Win. D. McCarthy, major and sur geon U. S. army, as the purest unadul terated stimulant for convalescents, in valids and family use. Sold by Charles Stubliog. apl20-dlm Th Dalles Market!. Wheat No. 1, 47 cents. Barley $10 a ton. Oats 14 cents. Wheat hay $9.50 to $10. Timothy $11 to $12. Alfalfa $10. Potatoes 75 cents a sack. Flour Diamond mills, $3.25 bbl; Du fur mill", $3. Eggs 1 21-a cents a dozen. Butter Creamery, 55 cents; dairy, 45 rents. Chickens $4.25 to $4.50 a dozen. Apples $1.50 to $2 a box. For Fata. 40-acre tract, 3' miles from The Dulles, 4-room house, barn, all fenced, orchard of 300 trees, running water, good range for cattle adjacent, 10 acres bottom land fine for berries or garden. ;'nca reasonable, terms easy. Call at this office. ni2l-dwlmo Latest designs for 1900 in wall paper. Elegant stock to select from at II. Glenn A Co.'. aprl7-lw Wall rapert Where? At Glenn's paint and oil store. airl7lw Portland and The Dalles as tion boat, has been tied AUDIENCE WAS AFFECTED. Many Womra Wept When th 1' let urea of the fassloa I'lay Were Produced. The following from yesterday even ing' Telegram rtter to the play to be reproduced here on Wednesday and Thursday of next wit k : "A large audience gathered at the Y. M. C. A. last evening to witness the Passion Play, as it was portrayed by a series ot moving pictures. The scenes were taken from the play as It was ren dered at Oherammergau, Bavaria, in 1890. The most noteworthy events in the life of Christ were given. The story was told by Mrs. Laura Holmes. "The shepherds, startled by the blaze of the star of Bethlehem, were repre sented by the first view. The next was Mary, presjnting the baba in the tem ple. This waj followed by the attempt ed assassination by an emissary of Herod, and the flight into Egypt. "Christ was shown In the midst cf his disciples entering Jerusalem in tri umph, preceded by a shouting throng. The raising of Lazarus from the dead, the last supper and the betrayal by Judas were very realistic. "The scenes at the condemnation of Christ and the crucifixion visibly affect ed the audience. Women wept as the Savior was being spiked to the cross. The resurrection and.aaconBion followed. "Pictures taken during the Spanish American war were presented as a pre liminary to the Passion Play. Pictures of the first American soldiers landing on Cuban soil, the bombardment of the fortifications by the dynamite-boat Ves uvius, and the sinking of the Viccaya, were heartily applauded." Death of Mra. IV. L. Bradshaw, Thursday's Dally. After a long and painful Illness of many months, Sarah Eiiza Bradshaw, the beloved wife of Judge W. L. Brad shaw, departed this life at 7:45 this morning at the family residence in this city. The deceased is the daughter of Dr. II. R. Littlefield, of Portland. She was born in Chicago May 25, I860, and married to W. L. Bradshaw at Lafay ette, October 9, 1883. She leaves a hus band, a son, Clinton, aged about 10 years, and Clara Davis, a niece of Judge Bradshaw, who has grown up from childhood with her aunt and been al ways treated as a daughter. Besides these Immediate members of the family, Mrs. Bradshaw leaves a father and three brothers, H. J. Littlefield, ol Newberg, Professor E. V. Littlefield. of McMmn- ville, and Dr. Harry A. Littlefield, of Portland. More than a year ago Mrs. Bradshaw was attacked with consumption. She visited the Winyah Sanitarium, North Carolina, and remained there for three months. But it was too late, and about soven weeks ago Bhe returned to her home with the full consciousness that there was no hope. A large circle of ardently attached friends and neighbors mourn the de parture of Mrs. Bradshaw as a personal loss, and the sympathy of this commu nity goes out to the surviving members ot the family. The funeral will take place from the house tomorrow (Friday) at 2 o'clock p. m. The interment will take place at the Odd Fellows cemetery and the eer vices will be conducted bv Rev, D. V. Poling. Dr. Harry Littlefield has been with his sister since her return from the san itarium. Her father and two brothers from Yamhill county are expected on the evening train. Laid to Beat, Friday's Daily. The funeral of the late Mrs. W. L. Bradshaw took place this afternoon from the family residence. It was very largely attended and many were unable to go out to the cemetery because of the inability to procure vehicles. The banks and business houses closed from 1 :30 to 4. The services at the house were con ducted by Rev. D. V. Poling. His ad dress was a tender and impressive eulogy ot the deceased. The musical selections were all of Mrs. Bradshaw's choosing, opening with "Lead Kindly Light" by members of the Congregational choir and Mr. C. J. Crandall ; followed, after a scriptural (election and prayer, by the chaut "Tby Will Be Done," and, after the address, by "Rock of Ages," sung at the special request of the deceased, by Mrs. B. S. Huntington, Mrs. E. M. Williams, Miss Cushing, Dr. O. D. Doane and Mr. C. J. Crandall. The coffin was surrounded by an im mense wealth of floral tributes of many beautiful designs, that of themselves bore silent but effective testimony to the place the departed held In the hearts of her acquaintances in the The Dalles. A fairy Tale. Yesterday evening's Telegram had a blood curdling tale of the narrow escape of the Regulator last Sunday from anni hilation on the huge boulders of the mad cross-currents of the Three-Mile rapMs. The scare head will indicate sufficiently the marvel. ms imaginative power of the Telegram reporter. Here it is : "Steamer Regulator Had Narrow Es cape." "Laid AlmoBt on Her Beam Ends In Three-Mile Rapids" "She Was Attempting to Take a Load of Rail road Ties Above The Dalles for Portage Railroad Became Unmanageable la Swift Cross-Currents Nearly Crashed Against Huge Bcnldurs." Then follow s the tale of the steamer becoming unmanageable and shifting; her cargo til! she careened over to far th;t four feet of the guard rail waa foiccd uu.ler the water," and "heavy sticks were thrown In the way ot the crew so that it was Impossible for them for some minutes tooflYranj relief by attempting to right the steamer," and "the men in the hole were driven from their position," and "steam was allowed to drop," and' the boat lay helpless la the mad current with her rail nnder water," when Bhe finally, somehow, "partially righted herself and struck the bark track. The story is colored powerfully. Turn Chronicle has the very highest author ity for faying that the Regulator waa never in dancer for a moment, and never for a moment was beyond the con trol of the captain. That she rolled heavily in the wild, cross currents while turning around to come home, goes without saying. All else, as told, is a fairy tale. raislon fly at St. Leu'a. Scenes from the famous "Passion Ploy," as presented once every ten years in the little village of Oberam mergau, Bavaria, were reproduced at St. Leo's church last night with the aid of Edison's wonderful moving pictures. The Savior's life, from the very moment the shepherds first saw the star of Bethlehem and heard the joyful tidings of the birth of Christ, 'until the sublime finale when the Redeemer slow ly ascended to heaven, was shown by m series of photographic tableaux. The scenes of Christ's triumphal entry Into Jerusalem, the raising of Lazerus from the dead, the last supper, the trial and condemnation, the awful journey to Calvary, and finally, the crucifixion of the Messiah, were all given on the canvas. The expressions on the faces of the actors in the great drama could be distinctly seen, ami everything in the pictures, the costumes, scenery, etc., wese strictly accurate. The originator of the drama, from which these views were taken, had twice been himself an actor in the play as given by the Bavarian peasants, and alter coming to this country spent $125,000 In securing costumes and scenery and necessary paraphernalia for the production. The views were made more interesting by the lecture which was given at inter vals during the play. Tacoma Ledger. These movable picture views will be produced at the Vogt opera house next Wednesday and Thursday nights. The Bami Old Game. The Oregonian says it edits the news "so as to make it full and accurate," etc. The following is a eainpie: Alt of the amendments proposed by the Oregon Senators to the Indian ap propriation bill were agreed to today without any opposition, and it is be lieved that they will remain in the bill after the bouse conferees have had a chance at it. Oregonian of April 7, 1900. That our readers may see how full and accurate the above report was, we give below, in parallel columns, the amend ments secured by the "Oregon sena tors." Here they are: Senator McBridk's am km dmknts. For the erection ot a brick dor ma tor y at Cue- BlHATOa Simoh's Amkndmints. mawa S'-'0,eC3 For waterworks and ftewertwe. yntem at Kla math agency.. 1,300 For construction ol barn at K la matb agency.. 1,013 For electric Ilght lna at Klamath agency 3,000 For portable saw mill Klamath agency 3,000 The fact that Senator Simon offered no amendments is of no consequence, as in all probability Mr. McBride waa looking after this particular matter, and being the senior senator would be more likely to get it through. But the above parallel la to show that the Oregonian "adds to and subtracts from," and otherwise changes the news, but not in the interest of "truth and accuracy" as it asserts. To Iteoiiver 8135,000. W. C. Kelman has filed an action in tho state circuit court, says the Tele gram, against C. M. Cartwright to re cover $35,000, alleged profits due in a mining transaction. Kelman, for cause of complaint, avers that on May 26, 1899, he entered into an agreement with Cartwright whereby it was understood that In consideration of services ren dered by plaintiff the defendant agreed to share equally with plaintiff whatever right, title or interest he should acquire in the following mining properties in Crook couutv: Silver King, Ruby, Bird, Deuce, Dandy, Dude and Ella mining claims. Kelman says Cart wright obtained a certain interest in these claims valued at at least $70,000, and thereafter disposed of a portion of the interest ami converted the entire in terest acquired, etc., to his own use. The plaintiff alleges that be demanded his share of the claims from the defend ant and was refused. By reason of the alleged conversion Kelman avers he ia damaged in the sum named. Have you seen those "swell" shirts at the New York Cash Store? All styles, stiff and soft bossoins, just received. Come early and get your pick. s ... t i