Illinois News Index

Downers Grove Reporter, 9 Apr 1896, p. 2

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'mmem-nm .‘w’flthwfllfln " f; plum-mum .~ 1-"! cfiulu Dudhy Wmer an be In no hvorflu Hmong the work- be m m but out an “A Male Journey II no WONG" took not: out of Mn. It w month before he «and thy lulâ€" “ an m «and hm mnnd Clarence madman an: "I have no bums hook or poem “1m «9171th I Mn man. I never no, u think whether one It betw- um: an- Clan Loam Bantam, while rather Inclined to ("or her latest book. Inn on nlwm turn to "Next Door" when no nuts to cm In one Ill autograph 0mm Thlnet like: hot “Stories of I Western Town." while Inn Halâ€" !oel Me Inna "The Chain VII- In. Fauce- Bnrnett says that “Through One Administration" In her strongest work. but Ch! iovet "Little Lord Fauntleroy" be“. Dr. Mun! 1-333an and "The llmier Schoolmuicr" In almost an- mmom but the doctor like. "Roxy” batm- than bin under-piece. Will Carleton loves Ma "Far. Feu- tlull" nd "Clty Bounds" best. be- came they appeal most to the heart. Elizabeth sum: Phelps Ward like: "The Story of Avis" bent, mongh "Cam Afar" rather divide. her Ilecuon. Willi-In Den Howell: think: "A lode": Instance" Ma strongest book, but like: "Indian Summer" better. Ilaflon Crawford‘s proforence is a surprise. He ram "Zorocater" above all M: later works. Archibald Clan-ring Gunter mnsld- nu "Thu Madman" bln strongest work and n In Ilsa his favorite. Robert Lou" Slpwnoona {aroma were ('0 puns ot Dnvld Bailout I ndo ventures. Marx-re! Del-ml prercn "Philip nnd "In WIM" to her "John Wnrd, Panther." Bunley Worm-n says he consider! me "Gentleman o! an‘e " his strong- Bulk Zola Ilka but "Pot-Bonnie." Ella Whoever Wilcox "to! but her “Poe-u of Passion." In Path can. are non popntnr nan Ill-II. Tiny an Domain; and dis- "am And ON nude 0! all. cloth or "Int. m mu XVI. ml worn with I dark mu In the mum and M pit-mum thin. Dun mm.- It [Inn an [or I Ion: um. A mm and duals. ecum- a! I emnbod band 0! am: hid by I luhlu buckle. 0n etch I“. In pill!“ and doom. mhlnp or (In an. Ill! Ihlch flan any (to. lho (hm! nd overlap on. nth". Pun do tyne II the Intel! thing for hrldn' gown II. In a rich nanny tu- mo, with a Illvor than Ilka moonlight on It. It would be am up In the Naples! poulblo um. tub I 14ml. XVI‘ pointed coma. and I Trunc- Ichu of he“ lm. Sleeve. no le- obntnutlvo ind havo x I antral nun; tun-L Tho-a In ; O‘CIIII. gown- nro nude of game or mom-cum do Dole Ind bun colum- , of ribbon. or pearl ulloon to hold them I on (I. ”um". I The useful coat and skirt to be worn with thin vam- or (mum it" In- popu- lar nut-In u noon In the weather per- mm. The can wlll be short, ”now and have bl. button- tor (ml-919nm. My Indy“: new shirt valu- will have cut}: um lurn back from (he wrm. with Iqunre or rounded corners. The col!" will be I standing one 01 white unen. A superb visiting costume In of sev- m blue crepon "m: a from of mania sauce 11cc. The sleeves are 0! plaid mfletn. A unique gambling game was in- augurated is Ostend some time ago. A party of gamblers sat down to dinner and some fresh oysters were brought in. Immediately one of the men waged that his oyster would gape first. The idea was hailed with enthusiasm; each man selected his oyster, impromptu rules were drawn up. stakes were depoaitcd and the game begun. Half an hour passed, and then an hour. and still the oysters made no move. News of the contest had reached the Casino and an interested crowd soon surrounded the table. bets being made for large sums amounting up to thousands. Just as the third hour was completed one oi the oysters gaped teehiy several times and then fell open on its owner's plate. When this man counted his winning: and side bets he had just 335.000. NosentvSur-Marne has rendered it- self Mona by inaugurating a series or running contests {or wooden-logged non. Not long ago. by invitation, six- tyâ€"seven individuals who had lost a leg or a thigh competed for a number 0! prize: over a distance 0! 200 melon. The champion turned out to be a man whose thigh had been amputated in 1881. He got over the courseâ€"about 220 yards-4n thirty seconds. Proctor calculated that there were no less than 635.013.659.000 ways of deal- In; whllt buds and that more In only one chance In 158.763.389.000 01 holding thirteen trumps and, or course, that In- clude: the dealer’s trump. oowum anon, s muscle. OF A SPORTING NATURE. THEIR FAVORITES. n, warn a mama. FASHION‘S FADS. m; the Inn for 0m Tho first laces-tn] woman editor and Wdlumnmuhmn- cdmnt.’ mu main. no am the Count 1” m m. In nuanced gun: her «mum Oman Wuh- cm of non... mm'n labor commissioner has been gathering nun-cm on the cult of mm: in that mm H. Inru um the "mg. any cost of lmn II n ma 3 day for each Individul In m «can family. no can of living to 1 single Inn, bandits. h 46 mu. The-e Mum com mt, food, he! Ill! HIM. The shop of 3 Damn tohacconm was destroyed by fire. While the owner was gazing into the ruins. he noticed tint ht: neighbors were nthertng the nu! from the miners. Ho tested the uni. Ind dloeoyered thu the fire had largely lmprovod In pungency and ma. no secured mother shop. hum him-ell I lot of mm, mutated the an! to n heath: m an the hand a urticullr mm, m In a few yea-n hem-Io rich through an accident. f 'kh Intel-d try "a... , Chin. in a innd at queer th’inp. Even 1 their lien: are queer. When not on- used In hatching out a hmod otthelr own kind they are put to the additional and novel task of hatching m eggs. Chinese cheap labor collect: the spawn at fish from the wuter'n edge, place. it in In empty eggshell, which in then hermetically sealed with wu. and places it under tho unsuspecting sitting hen. After com any: the eggshell is removed Ind carefully broken, and the spawn which has been warned into life. is emptied into I shallow pool well warmed by m sun. Here the min- nows tint sou- develop are uncann- til strong enough to he turned into I lake or stream. "Ho an to on" worthy m null" hclp: h mm an: all lul- poor III Ind loot can of (hen ludlclouoly: canola-n Ibo girls. am; the boy- I «an la lamina-n. nd halpln their parents; be urn-lied Clo-rule: Ind be altered a run"! of 31.000 lot the full- lly of his and Mend. He never lonnd ll. however. and I Inc, "ll Mend never had I hilly. I sue. he wasn‘t any good, anyway. but. whether he was or not. the any ha look hlmself on no I blmlng lo the old man. and most em- phnllcally to all 0! Illl llln."~â€"\Vul|lng- ton sm. “The not. um unlined. TM card which (in policeman mood our land a hoi- ihrouh it u I! rut by a knife. and Hum was blood ”on! tin can of the all. The olur upwind um it had been town! on the and body of I In in an “do no: in (in alum. with I um driven thmn ii and into tho nn’u Marl. Tim. was Iii the pollu- Illll new. i don't how vim the old mu aid. or how in (on. but i do not (in: from M day ion-rd Io wuacmmm. ! "Anyhow. one day a ragged and l Itlrving man came into his office and ’ united to Ice him alone. He wm him to state his business where he was. The man told a long story of uufloring , Ind want. of n nick and starving wile ’ Ind children and the ustlzll concomi- tant. of that kind of a situation. and then handed my relative u t-nrd. It was yellow and worn and dirty. but It was the same old card that he had given hll boyhood friend. The old mm are the applicant a dime and iold him to [at out and not come back than any more. He obeyed the cruel command Ind went out silently. Tluu analog n policeman cum to tho old man't olco with a note and n urd.‘ All the note uld Ill: '0“. this to my boyhood friend. -â€"â€"-. II. will undmund.’ “Well, they worked together for awhile. and then, by business changes and one way or another. they separ- ated. For a long time they kept up a corrospondenco. but as the years went by that dropped, (or In It few years one was very successful. while the other man was not. and you know how thlnu so under those circumstances. A quar- ter of a century went by. and by that tlmo my relative wan I millionaire many times over. and the nastiest, meme-t. sttngtest. crusttest old cuss In ten states. He couldn't help that. per- haps. and I don't know that he tried. "It seems that when the old man was about 20 he went. west with a young man or his own age, who had been brought with him by the same people, both being orphans. They were as brothers. or even closer, in their nflecâ€" tions, and when they started out to soak their fortunes they each wrote a card and gave it to the other. Just what the Inscription was I don’t know. but it was enough to signify that it one was in need the other would honor the card under any circumstances, and alter any lapse of time, if he were financially able [0 do 80. "Hordly. But let me tell you the tale. When 1 was a youngster of 15 or is», which is now forty or fifty years ago, I hadn't as much money as I have now. nor did my parents, but we thrived well, and I got the best education that was to he.hnd at the time. owing to the kindness of a millionaire relative of mine. an old chap who died when I was about 20. We never knew the story until he died. and then it all came out in a letter he wrote and left with his will. “Not one of the kind of cud: that Wuhlngtonlana are most famllur with. In It?" Inquired the reporter. try- lng to be racotlous. hut-buo- n! I can. "Thu play of "rho mm Card' we've been having here lately," II“! a Wuh- Inuan merchant. “reminds me at I curd story." A ”I “In. at Ll!- Chum! by III lichen fan-I An Amid-no. BTRANOI STORY. Tho one: were clouly contented from 8 until 10 Three in all me Filled. Inlpier. with the rod winning- me first. and In. Sloan. with the black. the lacuna. The third Ind deciding mo, titer a halt hour at excitement and ma. ended in a dun. n wan almost a haunting as its Indian conn- Tho player «elected [or l-‘ronthurg was Mr. Bush Spler, the tonal champloh at thecltm ballooning. a town near by. rejolced In Mr. D. It. Sloan, hltherto undeleated at the um.‘ On III! behalf the citizens a! mnnoornng took up the challenge, cud last Thursday nIght the game took place In loat'z opera house. I Prontburg. The floor of the opera house had been 9quth to momma a huge checkerboard, and twenty-four young lndlel. twelve In black Ind twelve In rod. took their rupectlve places. and to a crowded house the game begun. Withhrenthlen Intern“ the audience followed the hflllhnt play. Ior both Mr. I Spler nod Hr. Sloan were In hno Iettlo. Al the player- wervo Jumped they re- ared from the board, and the lucky few that reached tho king row were crowned wIth (Ilt than. This mange Ind exciilng story iell lnio (be hands oi some bright young people in Frmibnrg. MIL. and it run determined Ihat It was just the thing in encc for charitable purposes. L‘n- fortunately. 'bile some oi the favored people in Proetburg understood chess, the majority of the townspeople did not. So they compromised on checkers. So the best player in the town was selected and a challenge was sent out to the neighboring cities to produce their best player ior a game with living checkers. 3 Fortunately. the 3mm writer of the tale (whether true or false. we canpot any). lmplred In this dreadful moment, made a hfllllam coup und checkmaw‘l the cruel run: at the lame ulnc. savlng the while queen. A: the game nomad. pawns. knights, castles and bishops were sacri- fléed. As they were lost on the bond Iheir lives and "to forfeit. Then. Ilul a fiendish mining the njah made a move that placed tho whlle queen In new“. The agonlxed fingllahman mutt capture the queen and verifies her or love the name and his own life. and all the "Jun. moving the chug piece. by manager; It the tuber the young English one" wan directing the blacks. The following day the courtyard of the palace was laid out In the form of n gig-mic chessbonrd. and at a given alg- nal the living cheumen took their places. To the Englishman's horror he saw that the while queen. the piece of his adversary. the man. was hla sweet- heart! It was devllllh Ingenuity worthy of an Oriental. However. the some went on. M one The terms‘o! the game were slmplo. As elther slde lost u move the unfor- tunate pawn Was to lose hls Me, the rajah’s executioner handling by to be- 119.“! hlm Instantly. Then If. at the end. the Englishman won he was to take the girl and both would be escorted back to the English possesslons. safe and sound: If. however, he lost, he was to lose his Me and the girl must enter the rajnh's harem. The Englishman consented; It was the best he could do. 5 PRETTY amLs A8 PLAYERS Iran I swam cHARrrv. The rajah admiring the bravery of the man made much of him, but refused the boon he asked. Finally finding the Eu. gilshman was an expert chess player he made a fiendish compact with him that they should play a game with living chessmen, the rnjah to Iurnisix the pieces. HERE la a story of the days of Clive in Juan. 0! a young Enghsh girl who was captured hy the marmldons or the rajah of somewhnre or other and car- ried 0|! to his palâ€" gco in the foozhills of Xndia. Her lover. an army other In the Engilsh army, single and alone. round his way to the potentnte‘a court. and demanded her of her captor. Open Home I CHOGKOMAfll'lnIII'OII- In. In» Adlplfll 1qu . Icon of LII. In Inn’sâ€"An Exouln: (mule-t Between um. and Ill-ch. L I V I NG CHECKERS. PRETTY MAID! A8 [.3130 CHECKS” IN A mm: FOR CHARITY. 'md co co mm. It In related at Mlllala, the Royal Academia new president, that when as a boy he took Ma first prize for an» In; he had to stand on a chalt to make him-alt films to the audience. He m naked what he would like to have an a special favor. and named. "Per- nl-lon to co flaking In the Serpen- The stomach of an ostrich that died a few any: no In the mosaic In Cen~ tral Pork, New York. was found to contoin a wooden clothespin. two pieces of gun, a mouth harmonica, a pfeco of amine“: handle {our Inches Ian. 1 metal unto key. a bra: door key. a silk handkerchief. a horn comb. two pieces of con], and three pebbles and a hatchet. Yet the ostrich did not die of Indigestion. but. tuberculousâ€"Daily i ? Intel by “In" mum. How much may depend upon I aims fastening WI. illustrated It one at the Mormon slate quarries in an adventure whirh the person concerned wmiid not care to repeat. lie was a dornrk mnn. - who stood on the brink at am at the great chums from which the time rock in hoisted. tits duty was to hatch hold of the his hook devemiing tram the end of the bottom as it swung over the bank and nttnoh it to the «rate to he ; sent back into the pit. Standing upon the very edge. he reached out to ratrh the hook which dangini near him. it was winter and he wore thick burl:- okin giores, The hook flipper) from him as he leaned out but caught into . the fastening of his store. The swing of the great boom took him on his foot in an Instant. Ind carried him am. into giddy wave with his life depending on the store‘s holding taut. His whole weight was hung on that huttan and there was a clear 175 feet of space hr- tween him and the floor of rock below. The moments that passed before the boom could he swung back over the bank seemed like hours to him but he got there at tut. ate and houndsâ€"Lew- Im Joni-mi. M the Landon Ind nominate": line last year ma mucktntoahu pm! 340 ha!- and caps vet! found among mher mu- clan. Gloves are told very cheap: at one sale 2,000 mm! {or about 2 cents a pair. The purses round on the Soulhwutern trnlnl yield. on an average. 8500 a your. Last year's lost and unclaimed prop- erty in the Great Northern was sold (or 8850. it Included 1.000 walking slick-I and 1.300 umbrellas. so me thingc must hnve gone for almost nothing. Al. B'ng's Cross It takcsrslx weeks to sort out the artlclcs for the annual sale. Umbrellas are sold ln Lots from 6 to 36, and brlng from 810 u lot down. The Great Easiern Rallwaxcompuny sold the following articles last y:ar among the unclaimed lost properly: One hundred and forty handbags. five enormous cases of books. 459 pairs of boots and shoes, 61-} goliars, cuffs and fronts. 252 caps. 506 deerstalker hats. 2.000 single gloves, 230 hats (women's) and bonucts. 94 brushes and combs. 205 pipes. 110 purses, 100 tobacco pouches. 1.006 walking sticks. 300 socks and slocklngs. 108 towels, 172 handker- chleis. 2,301 umbrellas. 128 articles and seven his cases of wearing apparel. A first-class passenger from ' Liver- xmol threw Ms (also teeth out of the window with some plum stones. The track was searched and near it the teeth were round and duly restored ‘0 their owner. ”At tie Ehston mnwfiy station 30,000 articles are received every year. The inquiries for articles that have been lost but not found average over twenty a day. Thu Amount to I Pun, Sun In I Year. The following Interesting items have been gathered about. the articles lost on railroad trains In England: , -Vfiv -_-, _...- _. -w- The Journal' a picture was drawn from a. diagram of the hall and photo- graphs of the young women who were the living checkers. The tournament wlll berepeatedlntho near future. and all or the young Indie» 0! Froslburz have thelr hearts set upon being la the game, elther as red or black places. They have no choice. _ tomrt with the twins channels, .1- thonzh, 0! course, no fan- young lives were sacrificed. LOST ARTICLES. Exâ€"Congrnglman Barter. who com- mitted mIcIde, once described Mum" as "I Jeflemnlnn whose Influence po- Imcany In comemtlve. for safe mm- um and again: ndlcnl. unsound. med- dle-one letluhuon, n quiet man In manners. a plum an In dren no I Itaanul man by him." > "Not only In Blaine» rnprowontwd in : tiw minen." mid Mr. W. hiwr, "but "in I majority of the men from Lininer‘s .Ltmdinx. across the British t‘oiumhla Iborder. are pouring norms and mnnlnz : out the din of the Point Roberts hills. é These are not the only discoveries oi .goid that have contributed in the can- E tagion of fortune hunting in tho north- ; west corner at the state. Another i rancher. whose namv I do not remem- 1 her. while sinking a well at him plan on Lulu island. am: rearhlnx a depth . of thirteen feet. brought to the Etlrfafl' i dirt that panned ant $1.600 to the inn. 1 He is still digging the well. but it is inot for water. "Those who had already squatted and staked on: claims in connection with the Goodtenows and myself hair! a meeting and named their and the Clid- ‘ 1am mining district. which name the : new papers recognizing the tiling: will Prince Ghikn. who has been ap- pointed Roumanhn minister at Paris. belongs to one o! the most famous Inm- ilm of his country. In the last ten yam there have been three Ghikaa oc- cupying pout: u ministersâ€"one at Ber- lin. one it London Ind the one now ap- pointed It Paris. In his younger days Ambrose Thomas had some celebrity as an athlete. and In M: old age he was extremely fond of physical exercise and of outdoor We. The {net that he lived to be 8?) shows the benefit be derived from It. mantlme Goodfello'. who Is not :- citizen at tho l'nlled 81mm. had sinned his non Io Whah-om In Mice mu his ncturnlixauon paper: In order In be able '0 file upon claims for hlmsrlf. When passing through Blame 3mm: Gcodtellol’ Iold the story and In In.- than an hour half the populallnn n! that town can on Ila way to the new Eldorado. Goodtellow pointed out the place where he had first made his discover- ‘ lea. and Mr. Weblier. scooping up a pan ‘0! the dirt. went to a creek near the place and began washing it. The first thing after the soil and surface dirt had been removed was in black sand lying at the bottom of the pun. After this had been washed out Mr. Wehber states‘ that he could hardly believe his eyes. ‘ for tho'hottom oi' the pan was covered ‘ with shot gold. Having in mind rev- 1 oral “suiting" propositions. Mr. Webber ] again took up a pan of earth at a. con- siderable distance from the place where l Goodt‘ellow claimed to have made his discoveries. This second pan was even I more prollncoi the yellow metal than the first. and upon convincing himself] that Goodteiiow had told the truth ho ! jumped into his buggy and an taut as. possible made (or Blaine. from whit-ht place he proceeded to Whntcom. where . he rccorded two mining claima. nnd' then returned to Point Roberts. )1: the ‘ Dunn of I Gm! “Find" of Wealth Nu: Blaine. George Webber, a United States can. terns inspector, arrived in this city re- cently from Blaine and tells of a great excitement among the people there and across the British Columbia line over a “gold‘flnd.” says the Seattle Post- Inteiiigencer. Mr. Webber'a story sounds like a tale of fiction. and. while there is nothing romantic about it. ‘ there are exciting suggestions oi wealth to be got from the earth. Mr. Webber says that a rancher named James Good- iellow, whose acquaintance the inspec- tor made while on duty at Point Rob- erts. came to Blaine and asked him to return to Point Roberts with him and pass an opinion on what Goodieiiow considered gold in the sand and dirt in the hills in the neighborhood of the can- neries oi! the Alaska Packers' nusocia- tion. Mr. Webber. who was at first: skeptical. having had a number at years practical experience as a miner, at inst consented, and. hiring a .teum. accompanied by Goodfeiiow, made the fourteenâ€"mile drive to Point Roberts. He procured a pan and went to the hills. dernted by the excited rancher. MEN OF “ARK. OEAZY OVER GOLD. I ”While you any with us In "no I” . arm night I uhlll him-Ina your con- ?dm-I during "In any. Aholuh-Iy Ir« | untouchable huh-Nor will he ”waded by I nun infer. Any «mm III-do- mnnr um be (can: Mom! at by I mlorrd val". A black tutor will man that you have done Dom-Illa: mall: rmnx and mu I an: displeased cm: um. Now an 10 had. my an! >- .-: mud, mop ml, and u rm: mvm dren- n ,1 lat It be of uhlte tuna." T In] years ago Barney Damn rented a little house In one of the from tier towns of South All-lea. Bull! spent considerable In Improvlng I“ bone. but he quarreled wlth III: bli‘ lord and declded to move. By Install: tho tollowlng advertlnment In QI'O local poper. the prospective mum, am In some measure got even with n- landlord. 'Wanted. by z antic. who agreed to leave dwolllng M by him In eondluon In wllch he and n. moon llvely black beetles." not followed Bmey'n mum and .. San Puncher Argon“. MILDRED A. BUTLER. Gallery Art Society and the Wnter Oolv or SocMy of Ireland. For mm! your: pm Mm Butler's paintings have but has at the academy and the Ron! inmate. Her work in been chiefly In the line of studies In landscapu ad «we. painted with singular (am an dime-mm and in a manner that h all her own. which won her tame. no lvlch (ml of Inunu-tlcm Mb: .mmrm A. ltutkw. who It” just ‘ bun ('lfl‘it‘d an associate of the Royal Boom)- o! l’alnten- In Water t'olnn. II :3 Irish Inn. She was born in Thom.- ‘tmm. County Kiln-nay. and paced most of her life in that locality. SD. was Iatgel)‘ own) In htr mrly mom by the Invaluable insttuctlnn “Ivan Int by tho late Paul Nailel. She also studied for a few months with “n. :scmmn Gnmln and [or one tenn It Frlnlt (‘alxlomn' a school (or am“! . pointing. Mm Butler Is I manner a! i the Society of Lady Artists, the Dudley One of tho lnmumvlu n! Combo Hon-y la; n handw m: - um: hum] half filled with «‘ulmul Inter-s. am In In If" that In [rm-ml uw wt vhptv: [cum and plum! In Hm rrnlrr n! sydnoy 8mm) bun "max tabla jun! Inland I "pnunmlun" lolumml u.’ mun-Ho um". of which no won an km (can! 0! Inflation. on tho uomn; Ill-t our arrival at the rectory. when Ind. mm sounded (or me». and I weal up to the do" on! mum to hm hm good night. tu- cool: am human ‘ ‘c Imus. On. "an bowl Iowan! him and. met- qu cut I white ram. tan-nod u bard own my tmhoad. saying: Anna-u- u! shun-v qull. . "I h“ own. 01 u-u.n.-. M Mr. Bonny Klmwun nlzm-n 11-... puuuut «or; of mam-y .‘IIHLIL GEL MK‘ARRAGA. muhinnuons ol‘ the war mlnésn‘r. who, although having no 3mm power In the nclual conduct a! the munpmgn. had farco enough to mu Hm; Inst “all In (Ion. Campos’ mflln by 11mm: him to- called. 'I‘hc re r-ro runny up! and down: In «mum-mu! mum-s. mpocmlly tn lho Lnlln muntri-r. I: my“ 14- nu- Cuban campaign-‘1' MI! 3:! Inn -.'.-- present wnr lulni'xlI-I'u. luv" 410. In leh cal. (Vt-n. (\u'urrnn-u 71.:3‘ "2‘" ' m l..- «mt m ('l'JLI. ernnmr u L..- ix..u- haw maul. . home in disgrace were Joe! of learn to Antone-no. General Ausrrua. the Spanish min- ister oi war, has shown himselt to be ’an adept intriguer. it not an able direc- tor of armies. For many years he and the disgraced General Campos were at dsuers' points. The feeling between them was bitter to a degree. and. al- though Azcnrraga tried every means in his power to cloud the soldier. his; op- portunity did not seem to come until the war in Cuba presented itself tor solution. Azearrsga knew well the real situation, and it was through his advice or petition. that Campos was made commander of the Spanish troops In Cuba. In Cuba Campos was a dead lion. so {or as home intrigue went, and his enemy at Madrid watched every chance to finish him on. The cause of Cuba. prospered. and the reports were never favorable to Cnmpos' campaign. It was here that Azcarmga tightened his grip about the throat of his enemy in a thoroughly cflectual way. Cam- poo might never have been ordered .4, ALâ€" A In Win: Ill» 14".), Noon. on 0.- SPAIN’G MINISTER OF WAR. not for tha

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