Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Lima News from Lima, Ohio • Page 4

Publication:
The Lima Newsi
Location:
Lima, Ohio
Issue Date:
Page:
4
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TIMES-DEMOCBAT, LIMA, OHIO, THUBSBAY JANTJABY 2 1902. THE Organ of the Democracy ol Alton Coaoty. a North Main fey d'HS TIMES-DEMOCRAT PUBLISH COMPANY, minority of one-third in the senate 'ftIf CO sthe power of killing even the verv iiUyDLto UVcn little the law.allows. The reciprocity treaties have all teen defeated, ac- raaated "rwi- pnwitj" is mde to serve a double purpose --first, to catch the rotes of those who see the need of real reei-j- procitv; aad, second, to delay and! baffle any redactioa of protection. It WOJiKIKJ AT QEOBS PtJEPOSES.

is, indeed, like an abatis of felled trees or a barbed wire entanglement' Fierce War Raging Between Two Factions. B. Selfrisige, Manager. Entered at the Postoffice at Lima, 3JS Second Class Matter. OUFi MX3ST DANGER placed in front of a fortress to delay and baffle the attacking force.

But the patriotic, intelligent American people are fast realizing that to preach reciprocity on the stump and kill it in the senate ia a fraud, and that the Terms of Subscription. true friends of reciprocity and of Daily edition, one year $5.00 i their country are the free traders, who Daily edition, six months 2.50 advocate a tariff for revenue only. Daily edition, tiree months 1.25 Daily edition, one week 10 Semi Weekly edition, one 1.00 Telephones. Counting Roota, Bell 84 Counting Room, Lima Change of Addresses. Any subscriber ordsrisg the address Bi the paper changed ausc always give the former well as present address.

The Maryland legislature will meet OB Xev? Year's day. and its first ira- KO CHANGE IN SIZE, The TiMES-DzaiocEAT is the largest, newsiest aad cleanest newspaper in Lima. Compare it with its competition and yos will find that the TIMES- DEMOCRAT contaias each day eight columns more of choice telegraphic, losa! and general reading matter. Evory part of the field is thoroughly One Crawl on Treating: Ha- portent polities! action two weeks eorered. "We did not reduce the size later will be the choice of Arthur our paper when the holiday adrer- Gorman to succeed Senator "Wellington after the 4th of March, 1903, ia the United States senate.

The legislature consists of 26 seaators and 95 members of the lower house. Of the senators 17 are Democrats and 9 lie- publicans, ia the housu there are 51 Democrats and 44 fiepobHcans. The Democratic majority on joist ballot is More money is demanded to meet expssses in Ohio. The needs of the radons state departments aad institutions, as furnished to the auditor of state, call upon the legislature which will raeet on. Hie 6th of January ensuing, to appropriate i 840.

S6 for 1902. For 1901-- the piea- eat year-- only was appropriated. This enables Governor Xash to make a favorable showing for (he financial administration during his governorship, as the Wayne County Democrat notes, but it was short of the present requirement. This does not furnish a pleas- Using period -was over, bat it remains as usual, seTen eoiumng to the page, eight pages. Our many readers were kind in not complaining of the large atnsuat of arertising earned by the TIMES-DEMOCRAT during the holiday period, the namber of columns of which largely exceed that erer carried by any nesrspaper during a similar period in the history of Lima, and we are Tery glad to gire our patrons extra reading'matter during tbis time to average ap agsfnst tee period when tae advertisers had possession of our cslumns.

BRICE OK eSOKER. ant outlook to thii corporations of Ohio. taxpayers and The whine that goes up from "Washington, every titne congress assembles that the men woo are paid five thousand dciiars for about four months in the year do not receiv? suiiicient compensation" does not appeal very strongly to the sense of least one congressman. Congressman Frank; -M. Eddy, of the Seventh Minnesota district, makes the statement that not a members ci' congress could earn the salary paid them by the government.

This assertion was made while he was addressing the Postal Clerks' Convention at St. Paul, Mine. said he. "I don't believe there are a dozen men in congress who on strict salary basis couid command j'rom private corporations or interests the salaries the government pays them, I act refer, of coarse, to what they might earn as professional roan or in the eoaduct their own business enterprises." In the face of the deficit at Buffalo people of Virginia have the courage to undertake a commemorative exposition at Jamestown, whera, ia 1607, Captain John Sraiih and his English colonists laid the foundation of a town which is hardly more than a memory today. In response to a suggestion in the governor's message and.

in accordance with a legislative measure there has beea incorporated the Jamestown Centennial company, with power to issue bonds and acquire land for exposition uses. The persons abated as incorperators are mostly Norfolk basiness men. The reason for this is that Jamestown Is without people enough to undertake any considerable enterprise, while the town iieu aaar Norfolk acd also near 1'tich- 1'hSs last: fact is a present cause of trouble, bat it hoped that the trouble will be banished and that all Virginia will unite to make the celebration of the first event in the history or the state a memorial one. The city of Xew York ia now under the control of the Seta Low administration, aad a sweep will ba made of the employes in the departments that will be unprecedented. A number of the Democrats of the metropolis charge the defeat of the Democratic ticket upon Richard Croker, the Tammany chieftac.

Among those who attribute the late disaster to is Councilman Stewart Biice, who at a dinner on Tuesday night openly attacked the policy of the Tammany' sachem. A telegram from "New York regarding the attitude of Councilman Brice upon the subject says: Councilman. Stewart M. Briee attacked lllchard Croker in a speech at a dinner given to the councilmen by Guggenhelmer, president of tee council. Mr.

Brice said, amid roars of applauae, that Croker should be ssst back iu Moat House, Wantage, turers of still continuing 'export price Berks, England, there to live and die; while his iuflusnce gene, honesty and decency would triumph in Tammany Hall in an election two years hence, which would sweep the city. Sir. Brice began his remarks ia a semi-serious rein, bat soon was as and Glvinjc Tliem Export Prices --The Other Says Tliey Should Have AH Privl- legcn of Tiiited States CltlxcnH. The war between the two factions of our protected manufacturers goes merrily on. One faction believes that the Hawaiian Islanders became full ficuged Americans as soon as -we annexed Hawaii and that they should be charged full American prices for ail goods ordered from our manufacturers.

The other faction believes that it is impossible to make full blooded Americans of these benighted foreigners with one stroke of the legislative pen and that a little time should be allowed for them to evolute up to a full appreciation of the blessings of American citizenship, including our high tariff trust prices. These manufacturers, therefore, assume that the Hawailaas prefer low prices and put them on their special or foreign price list, which permits them to get our goods at a saving of from 10 per eciit to SO per cent on the cost to i ordinary Americans. i The faction treats Hnwaiians as foreigners is selling goods in Honolulu at such low prices that great quantities of them are being brought back to California and sold there at a profit In competition with similar goods 011 which freight has not been paid to Honolulu and return. This is what makes trouble for the members of the other faction. They nir their grievances in occasional letters to trade papers.

Several have appeared during the last tvro years iu The Iron Afro. The following Ia part of a. letter signed. "Western Manufacturer." which appeared in The Iron Ago of Juno 27, 1001: "It so happens that at present the price of our is about -5 per cent higher for domt-stic consumption tii.in the export prices. Wo had an Inquiry for export prices, 'which we quoted.

The order now comes in to be shipped to Honolulu, is it fair to consider the Hawaiian Islands entitled- to export prices; "Our own opinion is that they have become a of the United States and should bo considered domestic territory na ranch as Alaska; also wo understand our tariff applies to this territory, So that they are prohibited from buying cjtsido, and we are thus enabled to nicstic prices." 'bis manufacturer's r'jasct; pears to be sound, but it Oocs not ap- I pear to have iiad the desired etTe.ct on I the other faction, which, judsrinjj from the following letter in The Iron Age of Dec. 1901. Is still continuing itw pernicious practice of treating Hawaiians ns foreigners: 'Tour journal has from time to i called attention to the duiworaSiz'us practice of many American nianufac- A the Development ot The Iron Age of Dec. 19 contains under the caption "The American Situation, Its Strength.and Weakness, From an English Workman's Standpoint." a long letter from Sheffield, by Stuart littley. Mr.

Uttley has evidently returned to England after a visit to America und is dlscuK.iaig.some the striUins things hi- saw here, especially In the iron and mills. Incidentally mentions the economic und social problems Tvliieh he thinks wo must soon try to solve. Oa tJu'Stt points we take the following extracts from his remarkably able letter: "If American articles arc sold at a loss abroad for the purpose of capturing foreign markets, some one has to pay the piper, is this will not be the manufacturer, then it is obvious it must be the consumer, it is in O'fiwt a bounty, and bounties are like boomerangs-- they invariably strike the ha ad that threw- them. Take the well known case of sugar bounties as Jin illustration. In order to capture the sugar trade France, Germany and other European countries gave substantial bounties on sugar, and the British consumer is thereby enabled to sot his sugar at 2Vi cents per pound, while, on the other hand, the consumers in the bounty giving countries have to pay 0 i cents per pound for theirs.

But do- spite this the British sugar trade has not been absolutely ruined, but latterly has been Improviair, to say cotiiinjr of the enormous confectionery, jam uud biscuit industries which have been created by the introduction of bounty fed sugar. ''So long, therefore, as protection was exclusively applied to (he home trade of the United States it has been a tower of strength, but now that she is iu FAMOUS ENGLISH ACTRESS. Fntrtck Campbell to Dtoplft'r Uer Art America. Mrs. Patrick Campbell, the famous English actress, who with her London company Is making her first American tour, Is said to be a woman of extraordinary fascination.

Enthusiastic, she loves to win applause and hates to be adversely criticised, Mrs. Campbell Is the widow of Patrick Campbell, an English army officer who was killed at Petersfonteiu In LATE Operatoiriifi the Oil Fields, Old Kaintuck Develops Some Valuable Property. Four Wells Drilled in Wildcat Territory Brave Good Ones. Columbus Parties Organize a Company to Prospect for Oil and Gold in Pike County of TMs The oil fraternity of Lima will be interested in the following dispatch from Montice'Jo, regarding the condition of the oil field in that state: Twentv-four oii have ieen drilled in Knox county during year, and nil are good the past first found here about 30 yearp ago. SIRS.

fir.ICK April, 7000. courtship and mar- riase were romantic. She fell in love with young Put Campbell of Strnnmor, (One- wi-ll was drilled here in 1S02, in Ireland. Uer father did nor wish ucr which a srnal! quantity of oii was to marry Campbell, and his parents another was drilled on Stink- a big bid for tho trade of out- i also the match. The lovers creek about throe years ago.

side markets it will. I venture to as- continued to meet, arranged an elope- wells have been driik-J sort, be a source of wcafciwss and i i TMm TM (i "TMM? succeeded ia getting Ul(fn Uag fw all of them. Ou Cumberland river, two miles ye Bend effectually prevent her views will not find favor i niauy Americans, who reiranl protective tariffs their sheet anc-hor who would as soon i ol the A a i in a wnsiuiib sis fibar in r.oiulon tbenters during i ast decade held ruore of public. 1 iiior. a Mrs Patrick south Barbourvilie, the MIL' had a provincial actress i in l.S!'.'i v'uf: iu the title roie of "Thi- Peeund Taiujnerny." Her success i i i i a bor power aiul feet re-1 i i a i as an tiie 1 aHliotigu the crities iiiereilwsly ilieir favorite protection.

The mains, however, th.it protection si credit for a pood things which it i has bad nothing a do with. I Jt is signllJcact of lier The marvelous mineral wealth of lrii Caiiipbell country, the unrivaled waterways, tbo! is as tbeat rich virgin soil (if the far west. untiring energy of the people, the influx of more enterprising i a from ths old world, 1 splendid climate, the absence of ancient i i i a if i vested interests aad unrestricted monopolies, the freedom from militarism ij Mrs. C.in,p-i in site IVI aud tbo land praclirally free from the grasp of the i i a aristocracy, arc i all advantages whic-U vrotild more tlian outweigh the most mischievous imd narrow fiscal system. I am, of course.

ical manner. Tier acting is imtural. tho poiut of incUVctiveBi'--'; iu wbicli are not i i bell Is i i Paris, where won a scholarship in Her voice is rich and ami uses with great: skill. The American tour of Mrs. Patrick Campbell will last for a i i number at weeks, brief emrajri'inents being to the leailiu-j Her re- in the Hawaiian Islands notwithstanding the fact that these islands are now a part and parcel of the United States.

"There are no custom house restrictions between the two countries to prevent; goods sold at the export price le- expressing myself as an Englishman; pertoire includes "7.1: wbo lias the most coiui- Jlr? donee in free u-rrte, but I unhesita- i rious Mrs. Kla.i:;:U;." tiugly asstrt a from the uwmeut the "Mariana," frvin llu- great republii: adopts the free trade i Human policy yiie Vi'ill becume Kngland's must Tliesf; i iu i i world's bell full opii The fact Is thai British inaniuV.i.-tm-.'is economists really A I dread adoption of stirh a policy Oil Company has two v.v"s. HiUurK was struck at ff-'t irreen at I fret the Ty, driller. may ir.a from 20 to 100 barrels a day. i Four Weils.

The Oii South DiiUata, Iris driiU-d an Stiniv'uu: iTO-crk, lias tic a dry hole yet. wells an 1 ii! payim; nod an of 200 ts. Urst ilriUcd ami flu; c-oinpany has isix nioro It. lias 1" oil i I of oil. waitin-j; for jupo tltat Stanihu-ii.

all Conrpiiny biu; tn'OtiKuod l.i a i Fkii Lick, suvcn m.i!i-'n i a is that the i was organized here days ago, with a capital stock of M. s. WKhite, O. Ji. Waddle, Juflge Charles McConnaghy imd T.

R. Harrison are jthe proaiotera. They thousand acres of land nwir the junc- Uou at and Beaver (sttQif- The weU'oB. the Willlains' famj near Pall Mall, is reported as being the best well yet struc-Jc in Kentncy or Tennessee. The Kentucky: and Ohio Oil and Refining Company, organized atrLexing- ton, a few days ago.

is drilling four wells on tiie Slagle on Beaver creefe, near the Pennsylvania" Lubricating Oil Company's producers. The 5U. Pisgah Oil Company has two gas wells near Mt, Hisgah. and expects to resume operations in a few days. The M'cCoanaghy OH Company has a.

small on the Befl farm, near to the junction of Otter aad "Bvavor creeks. For Oit and Gold. A company of Columbus men is bens formed for the purpose of nrespect- snf on lands In Pike county near Jasper for oil and gas. Nero-Iy a thousand acres of land have been, leased already for the purpose. One woll has sunk to the depth of 900 feet and ajiotiier to 500 feet, both ishoivins; of oii.

A meeting of the men interested was neld Monday night and it decided try and lease more before the "ompany is formed for business, A. is being- operated in the neigh- xrhooJ of tbe kind which it is claimed is producing gold and it is thought anc! perhaps other ore may bo Occurred at Dnpont, 0.. Yesterday Which Mr. E. Becldey, of This City, aptured for His Bride Miss Artie May Prowant, of Dopont--The Bride and Groom Now at Home is.

Tbis City. rtv.nity io ber art. POLITICS. launched on a vigorous protest against present conditions in Tammany Hall. He woke up the sleepers and rivited i renders.

the attention of those manj eonYiyial II spirits who had grown wearr hearing mutual a-Imiratioa speeches "from the cowncilmen. people have come to me recently and said thst since tbe election they supposed that I was glad to be out of politics. I am not out of politics. I was never more in politics than I am at the present time. "There is a beautiful cottage is ETMT- land snrrounded by a moat and ia ing re-entered in the which has been and is United States, belup dune, to thy United iStaies.

"Xow, I veuturo to think America's most, seridtis danser is the ini; development of trusts. Hootli Ta.rl.-tnf: ton I of a the Field Iiupojjit, iAr. i i' UUP city, uad i'liw. of tlw li.ippy p-ooiri aad i i rnij'tial event, JFr. Bc-eklL-y is son and i of P.

Uvftkiey. of UK- store I'-rni i i.K]jaiai' it circlo who 1.10 jiloa'-cd to ami wishes, i i i is atj'i young- wrote Dooib Tarkiugton. the author, "The Gcntli-iium From Indiana'' the great detriment of many ot your be proper thins if all lives a man who thinks he can put his ear to the ground and hear what is going on here. We won't have it. The moat surrounds a space large enough to contain the gentleman aad we'll send him there to remain the rest of his life.

"I've beea talking for the last three years about the way things were going wroag ia Tamiaaay Hall and against the cwwd that is in control. I wasn't hesrd, but there are more i manufacturers would take- same of it as a leading TV bo reccatlj- wrote a letttr as follows: discontinued tbo use of export prices for the Hawaiian Islands some ngo, as we BOIV consider tlmt tbis united country is a pan of tbe great republic. We do not see any logical render, vrhy its Inhabitants, in consid- of tbe- p-Rat privilege of flying and stripes, should not pay tbe high American values on the commodities they The Iron Age says that "this bits tbo nail on tbe bead, ami tve hope the pub- 1 lication of tbis letter vrill enlighten some American manufacturers do r.ot sootn to know that the Hawaiian Islands are DO longer t-xport but domestic trade." The sitaatioii Js clear-, tercd "infants" have "Hightly or Englishmen be- and followed it i there these 1 gipaulic monopoliea to lie unich -wonder amoap literary folk tbe direct outcome of protective (nriftV. itbat tbe same luau i indeed is so certain as that if works in fcuch widely different styles. such a state of things Sngljiud i iis clnsstuates at rrinccKui, howcvor.

there be fierce and su.vess[ui were not as in college ho Now us tbe L'liiSB. Tarkinclon versatile I agitation for parliament to interfere lo I abuse of power by lies. (Treat Britain orsani-cd car-Hal 'another surprise for bis friends. He and labor are both snttieiently suons bas aniiouiicod lhat be will be a catidi- to respect each other's opinions anl to date for the legislature of Indiana, lend a wlliisig ear to the voice of eon- Booth TarlclBjftoii 1st a native of Indi- clliarlon, but from TV-hat 1 saw and jauapolis nnd is tbirty-one years of npe. beard in the States organized capital Is Kc is an man throujrb to the the giant and organized labor the i backbone uud in fees a lively Interest dwarf.

i in tbe welfare of his tsstlve state. His "Allow me, however, ia closing to say that nothing so impressed me while In States as the collective impotence of labor and the growing uud crushing might of the trusts." Gar tariff fos- becotcc over- THE NEED OF SUBSIDY. jrown, dictatorial trusts. Thej charge Than to Grunt Ami-rii-nt! with me now, and we will be heard and the men responsible for the ticke which caused the fall of our friecrlE will with that ticket, and the hen est and deeeiu men in Tammany will prevail, and we'll nominate and a ticket which will carry them to honor and victory two years from BOW." Wheeler on the Philippines. Lcuisvilte, Jan.

"The Shazs of RepuHean Reciprocity," by Xorraaa F. HesseHine. issued by the Americau Trade League calmly but clearly exposes the bad faith of what, vra will term "Protection Reciprocity." He says: Tiie conduct of the ultra protectionists ana of their pretorian guard in the senate is fast, satisfying aJI intelligent men that the reciprocity provisions of the republican platforms and in the Dingiey tariff act were 'eery cunningly contrived to prevent any lowering of. the tariff wail, la- stead of facilitating reciprocity, these proTigiona confine it within the narrowest limits, and give the small Wheeler, who lectured "I have some of my people on the question of our new possesstions. but I arn con- that ihe retention -of the Philippines, Guam and Hawaii are absolutely esstalia! to our commercial development.

Tlifs couatry. during tiie past year, --ss the greatest procinner of articles, including cotton, steel, pe- trol-eura and wheat. Our population fonns 5 per cent of the world's people. In the great oceident half or the world's population lire. They are great producers.

They prod-ice what we and they in turn want what we produce. My contention, then. Is that. possession of Hawaii. Guam and Philippines give to the United States an indispensable advantage in -he struggle for commercial power In tlte east." us two prices for their goods iintl point The present tonnage of our merchant to the tariff wall which we have put marine has boc-u exceeded but oiu-o iu around ourselves to show our dotesta- tion of cheap foreign goods.

our history. ft re In 1S01. Our larpo profits everrwherc from our legislation, it certainly is a I oxcopt in the trade with Europe, where I fair inference that we de-test cheap- freights have boon severely cut be- you ness and love high prices. It is not strange, therefore, that Sir. Charles M.

Schwab, president of our billion dollar steel infant, told the industrial commission in a burst of confidence that "ex-port prices" are 'made at a very much lower rate than those for tlc consumption. i think can safely say this-- that There a a export business is done nearly all the people from whom supplies are bought for that purpose give you a good price for the materials that go into the exports. Tbo railroads wii! carry them a little cheaper, and so on dowu tin- lino. "What is true of the iron and stool business is true of every other. Exporters must take less for their a they receive at borne, and tlmt is only isatural.

this connection. however, I want to say that American steel bns been sold in flic American market at us low prices in times of extreme depression as in foreign markets, but it has been sold without ft profit" it is really consoling; to iearn officially that there are times "of extreme depression" jvben are permitted, cause of oversupply of ships. Our ship- builders! are working to tbo limit and making enormous profits. As fast as possible they are enlarging' their plants and improving methods and apparatus. Our shipyards are the best equipped yards in tbe world today.

That our i builders can construct ships as cheaply i as the English or Germans is proved i by the fact that we have underbid them in several That our own- i crs can sail ships as cheaply as the English or any other people is shown by the fact a we do compete with other nations in foreign trade and are building more vessels for tbo foreign I trade as rapidly as our shipyards can; BOOTH TABEISOTOJJ. turn them our. advent Into politics will be watched in view of these facts it Is worse! with interest, by his friends, who pro- than useless to jrraut subsidies diet for him further honors In the American merchant shipping. Of course: field of statesmanship, wo cannot to the lending place in As an illustration" of Tarkimuon's the foreign carrying trade at a slugiej versatility it Is related that when pre- boimd. It is neither necessary nor do-! paring for Princeton at Pnrdne uni- sirablc that we should become the Drat; verslty he one evening amused a crowd freight carrier of the nations.

If gov-j of students by his skill with tho piano i 1 by 1 Sable 8S He pictures. th6 erfortBa by drawing 'K-r-: ol' tbr.K" on si.i«l;jig croek that an: vmnli nroiiiicera ami one orj Ricli- laiid creek a cyme in last the larsev.t well yet struck in Sfvoral other pro- p-irlng to and land or, r-ers in ami iiround oi-tious to M-il retisonabU- In Sandstone Formation. In Knox rouitty oil is in samistonf! formrition. lr, Wayne county tie oii cornw from a lijncs.t.oue sf.ra.Uim. Tbe Poplcr a i Oii Company's woll Xo.

I on tho Crockf.l farm, near Savage, Clinton cotirilr. 'vas ariiUxi in I last. At a of S-lrt feet I fine flow of amber oil was struck is standing to the top of t.lif- casing. This well is three miles west of the'Sunnybrook field and is in entirely new territory. Tin's is the first mit- ber oil a has struck in This part of tb-e i Guffy, Gnliey Co.

arc feot. on thoir No. on the Dowoli farm, a Parnell. The Standard is increasing- its uvuUast 1 at fit- of its and iontU't-Ki-f lino, to 70,000 Hie TarnvH Oii Company oreantz- cd hci-f. la.st i capital stock of 120.000, with Dr.

W. E. Woodrow! hue of Louisville, president: T. of Russell Springs, vice presi- L. Phillips secretary: McCouRagliy, treasurer, and P.

JI. Benvald. general manager. This company owns stvera.1 hundred ar.rcs near thft Pa.rncU producers, and worU on rigs will commence inuncdiately. The Columbia Oil Company, on tho Dr.

Powers form at Fowersbtsrg, struck a good well at 1,000 feet, going only one foot in tho oil satir). The oil is stand-, ing 75 feet hi tho hole. This well is in a district that, has been condemned by oil men on account of two dry holes being drilled in the immediate territory. This is tho Columbia Oil Company's second well, the first, on tho same farm, that was put down 1,250 feet, being a duster. The- Home Oii Company's No.

1. on the Turner farm at Parnell, was pumped this week. It made eight barrels per liour, filling a 250-barrel tank in 30 hours. Work has been commenced on a how rig on the same farm. New Companies Formed.

The Wflhlte OH D. .1.1. Proivtil.it. of Mrrf. r.oi i i and ruv horn" .1.007 arc- now to friejuls Rooscveit'c Reception.

Jan. 2. Pr a thr.r; a i'iirn'n'-r of tho i Mr. on bvinK ia oui- NV'hit a that the ftatrs he uiosed i tho last p.cr- snin to do so had an opportunity to pay Tbe i ivas in every liciriK really bvatitiful, i.ii. nrrnngirinents aad prc.s'.- in To each ptr- son lio OKU-nacU a cordial, happy Year.

Eiul Mrs. It was r-qually to of those who 1 tiled past in tin? blue parlor, Wtiorv receiving party slootl. iilss Alice was ihosc assisting at She rc'Ccr-tson. Emperor William's Request. Berlin, Jan.

2, Emperor i i a (It-sires that his now yacht, now i ing in the United States shall bo Chris- tcnsd by Preside- nt Roosevelt's tcr Allcp, and at tho New Year's at the old palace ho rcquostf-d the United Slates ansbassartor.Acdrev-- D. White, to ask the presiuont to allow- Miss Roosevelt to christen the vessel. FAUROT ise Saturday, Jan. 4th. MATINEE NIGHT.

Tills Won't Jar You. Tho Forever Favorite, Musical Fnree Comedy. "Peck's Bad Boy" Ii. M. HEATH.

PIIOI-. AllIiRuglisI NoOry; The Bout Acting Company. The Host Singing Company, The Funniest Corned Tin Best Laugh Wlti lOcnnd Jfic; Kvenlng, too, and HOC..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Lima News Archive

Pages Available:
1,266,581
Years Available:
1884-2024