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L. i- . Does Money-] IIj Herbert N. Casson S GUESS God doesn'i to her mother. "Jus The money-mak< used to be. He ha and his methods ha praised, as he once There have beei respectable to-day i that we are somew *sk. srhe win he the next to stand in > Rven the money- maker himself is Covered that even millions have to b( The mora his money goes op, the lads that his friends have either left He has no privacy. He has no fi to live in a salt of armor. Hie has bnflt ?p a great business inside of it and cannot get out { The pains of dyspepsia, he finds, i pains of starvation. He discovers th; people foolishly imagine. In fact h lies who watch for a chance to snai Mr. Rockefeller's wealth has bec< spectacle pf one little human biped where there are 1,500,000,000 other much longer. Mr. Carnegie, too, has become 01 He is now the Sisyphus of money-ma! Merer In the "simple life" and the ' Able U give nis moncj- awuj u? lam i?' N?; money-making is not what i and unprofitable." It used to be a j It need t? to a sort of recreation be Jo-day it is a tedious drudgery. > Ooce upon a time, when America t grend adventure. Soldiers gave uj ?tep in advance. It is a great deal i money than to take his life, t When Cortes, the Spanish explor session of mare gold and silver tba threw great chunks of solid gold inb home ho unloaded glittering hillocks a!) Europe wild with the craze for m It was tnla hunger for geld and si country. America used to be a Klond But we have played the money?nd we have become tired of it It < It only because we are obliged to do What wa call business Is for the i We serious, grown-up people stand ir aeighbor with one hand and pass it t< It would bo very amusing if we one day a week, or two ihonths a yea the same old line every day, no a moo ** wnrth whilp. W OCCU1 la short, human life is now so vali *X it fSr mowy -New York Evening Si ;+ The Man Eve M W; By Nlxtla Greeley-Sm HAT is he like, the it What are the qi m ' B I all-conquering hero 1 1 f JT I Of course, not loi m \itw with the air of half \B Jf 1 his very latest adt iB M sympathetic woman There are few heart* an abiding b Some fellow may be handsome, thi tnarry, as he adjusts his ready-made re ridher, and still others of sprigh tcomes to girls, he is a winner. They forbids that he answer you. Ask golden-nairea nossie. wuo i tJglit at parting he pressed her hand. Ask the daughter of the boardinj the parlor curtains each evening betv Poor little girl. She thinks he does ?poil the illusion. a*k the fair and vivacious deity quick-lunch place down town. Ask touch his as he shoves his meal checl Ask the winning little telephone < most as many calls on her affectioi knows and responds to his voice fro ker up. Ask the heiress whom he met at who, from the crowd of eager intuitively singled him out as a man 1 f What a nice girl she was, with su shod feet. If only he would think it dare his passion, how sure he would 1 ' And meantime golden-haired Flos ?? Af hta Hen tho fair dflv an uuuiuvu va uu> ?v f the dashing stranger who lives i windows every evening on his w ay hi -> th^^dce old gentleman who forgets li if the man who takes her out to luncbe tec ont to dinner, and the heiress has the world. But the man every girl w: starry him, nevertheless.?New York I > Spinsters and By Agnes Reppller ^ HAT 8Ile suou,tl De c* V ^ers seems unkind a Mgll riage is a delightful ' I duty; nor is it as a fly I B zealously practiced i VI social disease" is lot cclio of an older prol wedding day; again? which Burton fount nvhich La Bruyere calmly and concl French moralist, "a time when even k cannot allow their youthful chances 1 * repentance. The importance of thei tfceir beauty. A young woman, on t and if. added to youth, she posseses c desirable." This is the simplest possible expc Is plain that nothing is farther from a lifelong spinsterhood for even the points out that it would be more reas< i?er youth and her we?lth siuiultanco Making Pay? t v . t care mnch for money.*' said a little gill ;t see the kind of people He gives it to." ?r is no longer the wonderful man that he s become too common to be conspicuous, ve been found out too often for him to be was. n so many Whittaker Wrights?rich and and poor aud disrespectable to-morrowhat suspicious of the money-maker. We ilie dock and swallow a poison tablet? " ?-?- I XI.. lua ! SICK. OL 1115 JUU UliU uiiuociu jlav uuo uio> paid for. more his real satisfaction goes down. He htm or been changed into flunkeys. eedoru. He is like a mar. doomed forever organization, and now he finds that be is are not much of an improvement upon the at wealth does not bring security, as most e feels as If he avcre surrounded by euetch away his millions. >me so great that it is an absurdity. The . running, the only oil shop in a world, bipeds, is too ridiculous to be true very ae of the comic figures of American life, kers. What a fate for a man?to be a be'blessings of poverty." and yet not to be as it comes in! t used to be. It has become "stale, flat deasure, but it has become a compulsion, itwefn wars, hundreds of years ago; but was first discovered, money-making was > war and became money-makers?a long more moral and civilized to take a man's er, captured Mexico, in 1519, he got posn any man had ever owned before. He J bis SDipS lor Daiiasi. w lieu lie uuum of gold and sliver on the docks, and set oney. lver that brought the first colonist to this ike and New York was a Dawson City, making game for several hundred years loos not interest as aoy longer. We play i what the others do. most part a game of "ring-around-a-rosy." i a circle, take money from our righthand j our lefthand neighbor with the other, were not obliged to play It oftener than r; but when we are compelled to stand In mt of success in money-making can make aable that we cannot afford to trade much JournaL , v . JCS w iry Girl ants to Marry lith ' J , mu every girl wants to many? lalities and attributes that make him the le proclaims himself to be2 udly. as some bar-room boaster might, but blushing deprecation with which he tells renture to an interested and seemingly men who have not deep down in their ellef in their power to fascinate women, nks he is the man every girl wants to tie before his hall bedroom mirror; others tlier mien and conversation, but when it all want to many him. Why? Modesty ?miled at hiin so significantly when last ? house, whose brown eyes peep through reen 5 and ({?watching for him, of course, not know she is there, and he will not who presides over the cash register in his her or watch how inevitably her fingers : over the irresponsive counter, central in his office building, who has alls as she has on her keyboard, and yet im whatever quarter of the city he calls the Jones reception?the really charming fortune-hunters that surged about her? who would love her for herself alone, eh?not exactly pretty?but small daintily worth his while to fall at them and debe of being told to rise, her knight forever. ;sie is probably giving her dearest friend ighter of the boarding-house is dreaming serosa the street aud smiles over at her ome, the lunch-counter girl is flirting with is change, the telephone central is telling on what she ate with the man who takes already forgotten there is such a man in ?nts to marry knows that they all want to World. - f . / '* Matrimony . snsured for laying claim to what is truly nd irrational?a tyranny of opiuion. Marthing; but it is not, and never can l>e. a duty that men and women have hitherto t. The outcry against celibacy as a "great ider than the situation warrants. It is an test against the deferring of the inevitable it the perverse "boggling at every object," 1 so exasperating a trait in youth, and lusiveiy condemns. "There is." says the the richest women ought to marry. They to escape them, without the risk of a long r reputed wealth seems to diminish with he contrary, has everything in her favor; ther advantages, she is so much the more isition of the masculine point of view. It La Bruyere's mind that the possibility of most procrastinating heiress. He merely >nable in lier to permit a husband to enjoy us!}\?Harpers Bazar. LIVE ITEMS OF NEWS, Many Matters of General Interest 1i Short Paragraphs. Down In Dixie. Two more negroes were killed in th< race riots in Arkansas, making 11 slair in all. Ex-Secretary of the Interior Hok< Smith has organized a second Parkei club in Atlanta. General Oorbin favors holding th< next ra.^noeuvers of regular and Stat< troops near Manassas, Va. Rev. J. J. Haley, of Richmond, was elected president of the National Congress of the Disciples of Christ at Chicago. Both Governor Jefferson Davis ant Judge Wood claimed to have won ii (he Arkansas primaries, the full re turns not having been received. Elijah W. Campbell, division superintendent of the Texas & Pacific Railway at Marshall, Texas, was caught between two moving cars and killed. A reward of 3200 was offered lasi week by Governor Heyward for tht arrest and conviction of the murder ers of John W. Meetze, the young far mer of Lexington county killed or the 19th of February. A reward ol $100 was offered for the parties whc burned the barn of Sam Berryn ir Orangeburg Feb. 23. At The National Capital. Applications for pensions undei Commissioner Ware's late ruling ar< pouring into his office. The Senate postofflce committee tool up consideration of thep ostoffice ap propriation bill. The Senate devoted much of its tfcnt to consideration of the Indian Appropriation bill. The House^ spent nearly all day wiU the Postoffiae Appropriation bill, disposing of only one page of it. Further testimony was heard by the special Congressional committee investigating references made to member* in one of the postal reports. Most of the time of the House this week, it is expected, will be devoted te up consideration of the postoffice apprlation bill. The Democratic members of the Senate have decided to adopt aggressiv< tactics in dealing with the PostofTice investigation matter. Enemies in the Senate of the Pun Food bill will seek to prevent its con sideration by keeping appropriatior bills to the front. ' The cornerstone of the Memoria Hall of the Daughters of the Americar Revolution will be laid in Washingtoi April tA new treaty with China has beer made necessary by the denouncing or the part of the Chinese Government ol the Chinese Exclusion treaty. At The North. When Charles M. Schwab returned from Europe his chauffeur was held or a charge of smuggling. Hon. William J. Bryan delivered i lecture in rxewnaven, uonn.. againsi war. More than 20 women and childrei were hurt in a panic in an Italiai church in New Haven. Conn. Buffalo, N. Y., Special.?Of th< twenty-four delegates to the Demo cratic State conventions chosen at th< Erie county primaries, twenty-one ar< instructed to vote for Judge Alton B Parker for the presidential nonuna tion. Burton Norville Harrison, -a laryei of New York, and husband of Mr3 Burton Harrison, the authoress, aiv father of Congressman Harrison, o New York city, died at Chicago Tuea day night, aged 65. From Across The Sea. Marquis Ito left Seoul. One Jap was killed in a skirmisi near Anju. Niuchwang was reported to have been declared under martial law. A Turkish army has surrounded 10,? 000 Albanians in Macedonia. Premier Combes, of France, do clared he did not Intend to resign. A great anti-Chinese labor demon stration was held in London on Satur day. The story of the poisoning of the Ameer of Afghanistan was denied ir London. Russia was reported to be anxious tc involve China in the war in order tc secure the aid of France. Lord Curzon of Kedleston. viceroy o India, has been appointed Lord War den of the Clinque Ports, to succeed the late Marquis of Salisbury'. Thomas W. I^awson continued the testimony in the suit in connectioi with the Boston Gas combination. The Combes Ministry, it was believ ed in Paris, cannot long survive, anc M. M. Millerand and Doumer were spoken of to form a new Ministry. It was reported that Major Glasenap] would be recalled from German South vest Africa and court-martialed be cause of his defeat by the negro rebels Mlacelleneou* flatters. Martial law was declared by the Rus si an authorities in Niuchwang. ani American and British flags were or dercd to be hauled down. . The Czar awarded the Cross of SI George to Lieutenant Krinitzki and of fleers of the torpedo boat destroye Silni for heroism in foiling Admira Togo's attempt to bottle up Port Ar thur harbor. | It is announced that the committe in charge of the national Democrati convention which will be held in SI Louis in July, that the $40,000 pledge* to the national committee has beei subscribed by business men of th city. By confessing alleged complicity ii the theft of supplies belonging to th Marine Corps Private McMullen re moved the responsibility for payinj fcr them from Capt. R. J. Wynne,, The Ameer of Afghanistan was no poisoned, as reported, but his brothe was wounded in a quarrel with a half brother at Cabul. THE WAR IN 1 Fighting in a Small Way Reported in I \ I Points It NO DECISIVE BATTLES, HOWEVER 5 Both Sides Seem to Be Playing For Time In Which to Collect All Their i Forces. 1 Tokio, By Cable.?The advance i guard of the Japanese army in, Northwestern Korea occupied the town of Songe Cheng yesterday afternoon . without opposition. Senge Cheng is on the Pekin road. 18 miles west of Clieng-Ju and about forty miles south [ of WijiL ^ When the Japanese drove the Rus. sians out of Cheng-Ju last Monday 1 the Russians withdrew in two col[ umns, one going over the Koak San [ road and the other over the Peking road. The Japanese advance from Chong-Ju was made very rapidly. It was anticipated that the Russians P would resist this advance, but they ? failed to do so. and it is not probable there will be any further opposition : south of the Yalu river. Cheng-Ju, because of its superior , natural surroundings, is the strongest place between Ping Yang and Wiju. Besides these natural advantages there is an old Korean fort there which, had it been defended with spirit, would have been hard to take. J The Japanese are gratified with the . comparative ease with which they drove the Russians from this fort. 3 Russian patrols are reported to be } in the country east of the Peking road, but it is not probable that there is any considerable force of Russians , in that section. The patrols are > withdrawing gradually to the northward toward Yalu. , , 5 It is reported that the ice on the j t j Yalu is well broken up, and in the fu- a ture the river must be crossed either , 1 in junks or over pontoon bridges. j A dispatch from Tokio to the Asso- n ciated Press, dated April 1, said information had been received from a 1 private lodging the enemy at Cheng- c ! Ju had advanced to the Yong Chun t (about 45 miles west of Cheng-Ju), p from which place they drove the Rus- c sians after a brief engagement. It is possible that the many different spellings given to Korean names in * 1 gazeteers and on maps have led to t i confusion and that Seng Cheng in j the above message and Yong Chun. . i referred to in the dispatch of April i 1, should be the same place. The 3 two towns, however, are quite dis- f , tinct, being about 25 miles apart. p 1 St. Petersburg, By Cable.?The Novi r Kroi. of Port Arthur, thus describes e 1 1 ? J nvxatoA** TJ avin h U1C- scene on Doaru iuc ci uioci : during the recent bombardment in ' wblch she distinguished herself: "Bursting shells bowled over man af- t ter man until decks were slippery s r with Wood. Amidst this hell the cap- l; , tain stood unmoved in the conning t * tower calmly telephoning his orders to f I the gun captains. His wonderful calm- r ' ness had a marvelous influence upon all the officers. " "The cockpit was soon crowded, 38 fi men being there before the fight end- p ed; but amidst the crash of the guns, t t the hiss of flying splinters, and the direction of the working engines, the c . surgeons labored over the sick as at p the hospital operating tables. Although a some of the men suffered frightful irnro fovr erroans. in spite Hf^ULiiKZO iu?>v T.vi w a.w.. 0 r _ cf the fact that anaesthetics were ad- c . ministered in only one case. r "When the battle ended and the ene- f my began to draw off the officers on [ the bridge cheered and the cheering c extended down into the hold, the utok- s i New Trustees. Nashville Special.?Col. W. C. Ta- | > torn and Commissioner of Agriculture ! p ) Ogilvie, trustees of the University of J s Tennessee, speaking with reference j \ ' to the card of Joshua W. Caldwell,; a 5 advocate the featuring of the meehan- J n ical, technical and agricultural de-1 \ ? partments of the University. Both j t j prefer a Tennessean and an alumnus j f for president. J I I None But Union flen. i Washington, Special.?National Secretary James Duncan, of the Granite p ' Cutters' National Union, today effec- t " ted a settlement with the Mt. Airy g i, Granite Company, of Mt. Airy, N. C., j. which provides that hereafter none , but union granite cutters shall do , their work and that union wages shall v j be paid for the customary eight-hour j c day of the trade. The settlement j f closes a contention which has covered j * a period of nine years, and more or * ontHr>v in the I i less euaieu giauuv ? - building trades In practically every r city along the coast from New York a I to Philadelphia. The contention arose ^ - over the company's refusal to recog- 1 nize the union and union conditions, j s 6 c Residence Burned. t j Ottawa, Ont., Special?The new wing II of Rideau Hall, the official residence of I e the governor general, was destroyed by I 3 Are Sunday. Some anxiety was at first 1 e felt for the safety of Lady Minto, who j c - was lying in one of the apartments i ' ? with a fractured kg. hut her removal : f was accomplished without difficulty. ! i I Rideau Hali was purchased as the vice- " r regal residence 36 years ago and has , j . cost about $200,000. The damage by ,c fire was about $30,000. , t HE FAR EAST ts and even the wounded joining in t. _ "The captain signaled ior iuh ?pc<-u ihead after the retreating Japanese, jut. the Bavan had not gone far before :he flagship signaled to return." St. Petersburg, By Cable.?Reports eceived by the ministry of the inte*ior indicate that the precautionary measures taken to prevent anti-Jewish listurbance during Easter week, when :he ignorant are aroused easily to a >crt of religious frenzy against the Tews by the dissemination of false stoies regarding "blood atonement" will esult in the avoidance of serious :rouble. In spite of the precautions, icwever, it Is considered possible there r.ay be attempts at rioting, but the uithorities will suppress these with a iirong hand. The following private telegram was eceived today from Odessa: "Reports of anti-Jewish disturbances .vhich always are common at Easter :ime, causes more alarm than usual his year because of the occurrences ast year. The Jews here are nervous, jut the authorities have confidence in Governor Edhardt, who is an energetc and humane man, as well as in 3aron Kaulbars, commander-in-chief if the troops in Russia. Under the clr:umstances, therefore, anything like a icrious disturbance is regarded" as imjosslble. "The official newspapers have pubished strongly-worded warnings and he city is placarded with notices that ill who disturb the peace will be severely punished." St. Petersburg, Special.?A corres>ondent at Yin Kow says the opinion irevails there that the Japanese will tot bombard that place because 99 per ent. of the population is made up of Chinese who are not at war with the Fapanese and because a shell from the ' nr/Mii/i Via onra tn strike iu.pa.nrae ?uipo nuuiu ? he residence of the United States coniul, who is safeguarding the Japanese nterests. The same correspondent huoorously describes the speculation imong the British correspondents here as .to whether the victorious Japanese after defeating the Russian army fill stop in China or go on the Irkutsk. St. Petersburg, By Cable.?As soon s the Neva is clear of ice the battlehip Souvaroff and Slava, in course of onstruction at the Baltic Works, the ?attleships Borodino and Orel, at the 'ranco-Russian Works, and the ruiser Meleg and the transport Kamthatka, at the new admiralty yard, rill be sent to Kronstadt for compleion. The cruisers Seemchug and zumrud and the battleship Sissoi Veli;y and Imperator Alexander III, are .lready there and are being prepared or commission. These ships will form (art of the fleet which is destined to e-inforce Vice Admiral Makaroff's fleet text summer. Important Decisions, Two decisions have been rendered ty the United States Supreme Court, ays the Springfield Republican, withn a few days, both going to establish he rule that a person traveling on a ree railroad pass, or his heirs, canlot recover damages in case of accilent, where such a condition is speciled in the terms printed upon the >ass. It makes no difference whether he user of the pass understood the ondlticns or not. It might be suplosed that this would tend to discourse the demand for and use of passes, >ut such will probably not be the ase. So strong is the passion in nost persons for getting something or nothing that almost any amount ?f risk would be ventured for the aHe of riding free. Porto Ricnn Messengers. New York, Special.?Among the >assengers who arrived on board the teamer Coamo from Porto Rico were V. F. Willoughby, treasurer; R. Post, iuditor. and Manuel S. Domesech, uember of the House of Delegates, rho came to counsel the Secretary of he Treasury about placing a loan or general improvements in Porto tico. May Lose His Official Head. Carthage Special.?EL McDonald, or a number of years a member of he county court, is in imminent dan;er of losing his official head. A bill las been filed charging McDonald vith speculating in county warrants vhile a member of the county court t-hich issued them. McDonald at ine time represented this county in he Legislature, and has for a long Ime been a prominent figure in the ounty court. By his opposition to ill enterprises requiring an appropriLtlon he has been christened "the vatchdog of the treasury." He says hat he will be able to exonerate himelf. flayer Released. Teliuride, Colo., Special.?Charles I. Moyer, president of the Western Vderation of Miners, who has been leld in jail here since Saturday on a barge of desecrating the flag, was reeased by County Judge Waidlaw, on urnlshing a bond for $600, but was mmediately re-arrested by a squad of oldiers. acting under orders of Adutant General Sherman. The nature i the charge on which he is held by be militia has not been made public. LOST IN LAND FIGHT Engagement Said to Have Occurred llonday Disastrous to Russians. St Petersburg, By Cable.?General Kuropatkin. in his first dispatch to the"~ Emperor from the scene of war, announced that offensive land operations had taken place against the Japanese upon the sixth anniversary of the oei cupatlon of Port Arthur by the Russians. There operations took the form of a cavalry attack Tuesday by six companies of Cossacks, led personally by General Mishtchenko against four squadrons of Japjnese cavalry which the general believed to be beyond Chong Ju, but which he found to be in occupation of that town. Despite a cross fire which General Mishtchenko cleverly directed against i the enemy, he pays tribute to their tenacity and bravery, the Japanese only ceasing to fire after a combat which, lasted for half an hour. Before the Russians could follow up their advance three squadrons galloped toward the town, of which two succeeded In entering, while the third was driven back In disorder, men and horses falling, i The Cossacks have been endeavoring ipr some days to come in contact with the Japanese patrols, but the latter refused to combat. This skirmish will have the effect of encouraging the Russians to retard as much as possible the advance of the Japanese army,1 General Kuropatkin's dispatch, reporting General Mishtchenko'0 .operations, as published, does not give the '* place of its origin, but it is presumed that the commander-in-chief (8 either at Liao Yang or enroute to New, Chwang. Gen. Kuropatkin's report is as fellows: "I have the honor to respectfully communicate to Your Majesty the report of Gen. Mlshtchenko, dated March 28, at 10 p. m., which says: M 'For three consecutive days small outposts attempted to draw the Japanese cavalry into action, but their patrol after contact was established, retired beyond Chong Ju (about fifty miles northwest of Ping Yang). " 'Having learned that four squadrons of the enemy were,posted five versts beyond Chong Ju, on March 27 six companies marched toward Kasan, and on March 28 reached Chong Ju at 10:30 a. m. As socn as our scouts approached the town the enemy opened fire from behind the wall. Two squadrons promptly dismouted and occupied the heights 600 yards distant. An engagement ensued. Fire at Blltmore. Asheville Special?A disastrous Are occurred on teh Biltmore estate Tuesday morning about 3.30 o'clock, when the mule stables and the residence of Bert Halyburton were completely destroyed, entailing a loss of from J10.000 to 120,000. The origin of the fire Is unknown. The fire was first discovered shortly after three o'clock, and the stables were then ablaze. By hard work all th stock in the barns was gotten out with the exception of two horses, which were burned to death. A large number of farming Implements were housed in the buildings, and these, together with a con" * * 1 nrnro alcA siaeraoie amuuui. ui mu, saved. The residence of Mr. Halvburton was situated about three hundred yards from the stables, and the high winds carried the blaze fto this building, which was soon ignited, and was completely destroyed. The house of the keeper of the stables is located ?. on the opposite side of the barn from where Mr. Halyburton's residence stood, and as the wind was blowing in the opposite direction this building was damaged. The stables and the residence that were destroyed this morning were comparatively new, they having been built only about two years ago, and were splendid structures. The mule barn was a large and modern structure and had a capacitiy for the stablnig of from 60 to 75 head of mules or horses. The loss to the estate is covered by insurance, and the buildings will probably be replaced in the near future. Conditions Improving. Lancaster, Special.?The Jury entrusted with the case of Walter Mc Manus, white, charged with the murder of John Leech, colored, at the Blackmore mine, in this county, last fall, after deliberating about five hours, brought in a verdict of manslaughter with a recommendation to mercy. McManus claimed that be shot under apprehension that his life was in danger. He - also swore that the negro had cursed him in unendurable terms the day before. McManus escaped from jail shortly after being arrested, and was at large for several months, but Sheriff Hunter located him in Florida and brought him to justice. A Schooner Disabled. Beaufort, Special.?The schooner William Churchill, Capt Byrnes, lumber laden, from Georgetown, S. C., bound for New York, encountered a heavy gale and shiftel her cargo. Part of the deck load was lost, as were toe jim stays and main chains. The vessel put Into Cape Lookout oove leaking badly. She will have to be towed t?> her destination. The crew is all safe. Assistance has been wired for. Correspondents Held Up. St. Petersburg, By Cable.?The cor- / * respondent of The Russky Viedomostl. writing from Harbin, Manchuria, says he has not been permitted to proceed to Port Arthur, and adds that he will not be allowed to go to the front from Harbin until April 2. All the correspondents have been expelled from Port Arthur because one of them mentioned in his dispatch important information regarding the movements of Russian troops.