I II. I d If ben I- At for I 3I?.ltsmouiIi Journal C W. S1IEKMAN. FnblUIier. I'lATTSMOyTH. fcEBRASlTA. The News Condensed. Important Intelligence From All Parts. CONGRESSIONAL Regular Session. In the senate on 4th t-ills were passed to amend the quarantine regulations so far as they apply to vessels plying between United States ports and foreign ports on or near the frontier and to subject to state taxation na tionul bank notes and United States treasury notes. On the 6th the bill for restricting Immigra tion and for the deportation of anarchists was passed in the senate. A resolution affirming that taxes can only be rightfully imposed to raise revenue for support of the government was offered by Senator Mills In the house Mr. Richards (O.) Introduced a bill providing that every session of the legislative body of the national congress shall be open to the pub lic. A short session In the United States senate was held on the 7th, the most important event being the passage of a resolution direct- ins the president to take steps for the release of American citizens confined in the Island of Cuba for participation In the recent rebellons. In the house a report was made from the judiciary committee against the admission of Japanese to citizenship. In the senate on the 8th a bill was introduced to "prevent professional lobbying." Bills were passed to provide for the opening of certain abandoned military reservations and to fur ther encourage the holding of a world's expo sition at Atlanta. Ga., In 193 In the house a bill was Introduced to regulate the cutting of timber on public lands. Most of the session whs taken up In considering public building bills. A resolution for an investigation of the effects of machinery on la tor was adopted. The senate on the 9th was in session only a little more than an hour and a half and no business of any importance was transacted In the house a favorable report was made on the bill to Biake oleomargarine and all other imitation dairy products subject to the laws of the state or territory into which they are tiansported. and a bill to prevent the free use of timber on public lands was introduced. DOMESTIC Hexkt E. Smith fc Co., wholesale dealers in boots and shoes at Worces ter. Mass., assig-ned, with liabilities of S-00.000. Catt. Apolph Freitsh sailed from ew York in the Nina, a 40-foot boat. in which he proposed to cross the At n lantic. A sailboat in which were Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Campbell, of Burlington, la., capsized in the Mississippi and they sank clasped in each other's arms. Actuated by jealousy, Mrs. F. J. FromaD, at Buffalo, N. Y., threw sul phuric acid in the face of Miss Louise Leber, burning- out her ejes. The Diamond Jo line at Dubuque, la., announced the withdrawal of all boats on account of low water. This is the shortest river season on record. Of the 9S3 deaths in New York city in seven days the unprecedented num ber of fifty-one were due directly to the heat. Delegates from twenty-four Ameri can Railway unions met in Chicago and declared the strike off on all roads but the Santa Fe and Eastern Illinois. Wheelman IIahrt C. Tvlek made a mile with flying start in 1:53 4-5 on the Waltham (Mass.) track, lowering the record a second. The risible supply of grain in the United States on the Cth was: Wheat 60,001,000 bushels; corn. S. 737,000 bush els; oats, 1.597,000 bushels; rye, 214, 000 bushels; barley, 807,000 bushels. Mrs. George Poole, who as Mme. Osborne had wojp operatic laurels, died penniless in Xew York, her wealthy husband having deserted her. Mark Richardson, of the town of New Diggings, Wis., killed his brother George as the result of a ten years' quarrel over their father's estate. Joseph Hunt, of New York, killed his wife because she refused to permit him to pawn his clothes to buy liquor and then shot himself. Ax address to the voters of the United States was issued in Chicago by the A. R. U. It recites the inception and progress of the strike and appeals for the election of legislators pledged to the enactment of arbitration laws. Peter Williams and wife, of Lin wood, Ark., went to church, leaving two children locked up at home. The little ones burned the house and them selves. Thieves broke into the post office at Scranton, Pa., and stole $3,300 worth of stamps. Rev. J. II. Pierce died at Trenton, N. J., after a prolonged attack of hic coughs aged 56 years. A freight train on the Oregon Rail way fc Navigation company's line went through Alto bridge, falling 96 feet, and three men were fatally hurt. A great crowd witnessed the start of the relay bicycle race from Wash ington to Denver, jnessages are car ried for Gov. Waite and Gen. McCook. In the 2-year-old pace at Buffalo, N. Y.. Carbonate forced Directly to pace a mile in 2:12, a new world's record. Extra meetings were necessary to accommodate the crowds of visitors to the Moody conference at East North field, Mass. The farmh ouse of C. O. Ostenson near Willmar, Minn., was burne'd and he and his four children were cre mated. A tractiox engine on which Charles Hudson and Will Dandelien were rid ing broke through a bridge near Spring-field, I1L, and the men were killed. Capt. Richard D. Blinn, one of the country's most noted race-track build ers died in Chicago. The Gossard Investment company at Kansas City, Mo., failed for 8-00.000. Michigan's total tax levy for 1S94 is 81,889.135, or 5242,073 less than last year's levy. (iov. Ckocnse, of Nebraska, was pe titioned to convene the legislature that measures may be taken to relieve the people in the drought-stricken sections of the state. A receiver was appointed for the Warren Live Stock company of Chey enne. Wyo, The liabilities were stated at 5200,000. Fire destroyed 5180,000 worth of property in St. Paul, the North western Fuel company being the heaviest loser. jnon ibecf ed for'; w r:rmtin- thp. Leaaer one i neast. . largesi. a l the largest wuitv," i Mrs. lienry Government reports sbwed that most northwestern states were still suffering from drought. All unhar vested crops had been injuriously af fected. Forest fires were still raging in northern Wisconsin, and great dam age was being done to hay and cran berry marshes. Twenty business buildings and three residences in the center of Adair, la., were burned, causing a loss of $152,000. Henry F. Johnson, was hanged at Allentown, Pa., for the murder of his daughter, and Ilarry Manfredt was hanged at Pottsville, Pa., for the mur der of Georpre Ochs. The governors of three states took part in the celebration of the 100th an niversary of the building of the fort at Defiance, O. The business portion of Franklin, 111., was destroyed by fire. An attempt to hold up a Lake Shore express train at Kessler, Ind., was foiled by the engineer, who ran his train through the obstruction at full speed. Henrt Russell (colored) nearly de capitated his wife with a razor in Chi cago and hurled her body from a win dow and then cut his own throat. The Citizens' savings bank at Ports mouth, O., passed into the hands of a receiver. The total of immigration from the port of New York during the month of July was 19,968. The ninth anniversary of the death of Gen. U. S. Grant was observed at Mount McGregor, N. Y. William Beam, a farmer near Bow ling Green, O., was instantly killed by a bumble bee sting on the temple. The fire loss of the United States and Canada during July aggregated the enormous sum of $16,307,000. For the fire seven months of 1894 the total was 577,920,200. II. II. W'arxer, the patent-medicine man, returned to Rochester, N. Y., from Europe penniless, having lost the remains of his fortune at Monte Carlo. The Hawkeye Commission company of Omaha. Neb., failed for $200,000. Eight of the men who resorted to unlawful tactics in the labor troubles at Paterson, N. J., were given sen tences ranging from three months to six years. Wixneconxe. Wis., a town of 1,000 inhabitants, was practically wiped from the map by a conflagration caused by burning forests. The republic of Ilawaii has been formally recognized by the United States, through the president and sec retary of state. The Stringer Sons Pottery company. one of the largest establishments or the kind in the west, was destroyed by fire at San Jose. Cal. Loss, 5100,000. Harry A. Gardner, cashier of an Al- toona (Pa.) national bank, disappeared with $20,000 of the institution's funds. The Concord and Petrel were ordered to Corea to reenforce the United States fleet. The constitutional convention at Al bany. N. Y., refused to substitute life m prison ment for capital punishment. Insanely jealous, W. D. Jenkins, of Chariton, la-., killed Julia Murphy, his sweetheart, and her 6ister Josie, fatal ly wounded Mrs. Murphy and then took his own iife. At his home in Hope, Tnd., James Hardy (colored) died at the age of 100 years. liaray was Jenerson Davis valet during the war. He was married six times and the father of forty-six children. William N. Evais, of Philadelphia, fatally wounded his wife, killed Louis Hecht, her uncle, with whom she was living, and sent a bullet through his own heart. He was jealous. At Scranton, Ta., a deserted mine C8ved in for a distance of three blocks. wrecking twenty-three houses and causing a loss of $250,000. An express train on the Chicago, Rock Island & Pacific plunged through a trestle 50 feet high into a creek near Lincoln, Neb., killing eight persons and wounding many othres. Over one-third of the village of Daw son. .Minn., was destroyed by hre. Thousands of acres of valuable tim ber were destroyed by a forest fire 50 miles in length in Wisconsin. Twenty-one stores, two grain eleva tors and lumber sheds were destroj-ed by fire at Gifford, 111., the loss being $100,000. During a temperance camp meeting at Purcellville, Vs., a tent was blown down, killing one man and fatally in juring five women. Twexty-five persons were injured, some of them seriously, in an electric car collision near Oakdale, Pa. Miss Vernie Mayer and Miss Barn hart, young ladies about 16 years old, were .drowned in the lake at Benton Harbor, Mich. Sevkn members of the family of J. Walker at Oelwein, la., were poisoned by a summer drink. Three were dead and the others were dangerously ill. Rev. Charlks England, a Swedish minister at Michigan City, Ind., was drowned in the lake while bathing- in the surf. Charles Hexdrickson and Charles Heg-lan, young men of Batavia, 111., were drowned in Fox river while rowing. Work was resumed in all but two of the departments of the Pullman car works at Pullman. IlL, virtually end ing the long strike. Fantasy trotted a mile at Buffalo, N. Y., in 2:08?, beating all 4-year-old marks save that of Directum. The Second national bank of Altoo na, Pa., closed its doors. A mom r m ent to the memory of Fred erick J. Frelinghuj-sen was unveiled at Newark, N. J. PERSONAL AND POLITICAL CANDIDATES for congress were named as follows: Iowa, Sixth district. Rev. Allen Clark (pop.). Michigan, Fourth district, Henry F. Thomas (rep.). Mis souri. Sixth district. Robert E. Lewis (rep.). North Carolina, Fifth district, A. W. Graham (dem.). Wisconsin, First district, Hamilton Utley (pop.); Tenth, J. J. Jenkins (rep. The "Lily White" republicans of Texas nominated a state ticket, headed by G. D. Smith for governor. I o'clock a. m- anu children ' . ..o.in iieuiyci - mmaaa ato.w t-. The following congressional nomi nations were made: Illinois, Second district, William Lorimer (rep.). Iowa, Eighth district, F. O. Stuart (dem.); Ninth, J. B. Weaver (dem. -pop.). Mis souri, Fourth, district, E. G. Crowther (rep.). Virginia, Third district, Taze well Ellett (dem.). Nebraska, Fourth district, W. L. Stark (pop.). Texas, Tenth district. Miles Crowley (dem.). In convention at Kalamazoo tha Michigan prohibitionists nominated a full state ticket, headed by Albert M. Todd, of Kalamazoo, for governor. The platform declares against any party that does not openly oppose the liquor traffic; demands the issue of money by government only; the free and unlimited coinage of gold and sil ver; female suffrage and the election of president, vice president and United States senator by direct vote of the people. Ex-Gov. Austin Blair was buried at Jackson, Mich., the funeral services being attended by many men promi nent in politics. Congressional nominations were made as follows: Iowa, Sixth dis trict, ex-Senator Taylor (dem.). In diana, Eighth district, G. W. Faris (rep.). Texas, Seventh district, G. C. Pendleton (dem.) renominated. Vir ginia, Fifth district, G. W. Cornell (rep); Ninth, Judge Morrison (dem.). Idaho, Edgar Wilson (rep.). Wyoming, S. E. Seeley (pop.). Georgia, Fourth district, C. L. Moses (dem.) renom inated; Ninth, Carter Tate (dem.) re nominated. Maryland, Second dis trict, J. D. Parker (pro.); Fifth, W. II. Silk (pro.); Sixth, A. O. Shoemaker (pro.); Sixth, Horace Risley (pop.). The New York democrats will hold their state convention at Saratoga Springs on September 25. Judge Caswell Bennett, chief jus tice of the Kentucky court of appeals, died suddenly of rheumatism at Hopkinsville. PoruLiSTS in Wyoming declined a proposition to fuse with the democrats and nominated a complete state ticket headed by L. C. Tidball for governor. David Haiin, who drove coaches across the Alleghenies before the ad vent of the railroads, died at Ports mouth, O., aged 94 years. In convention at Boise City the Idaho republicans nominated a full state ticket headed by Edgar Wilson for governor. FOREIGN. A London paper claims withdrawal of British capital from the United States is due to distrust of the coun try's financial future. Shinichiro Kurixo, chief of the diplomatic bureau of the department for foreign affairs of Japan, has been appointed minister to the United States. He studied at Harvard. A mob of French-Canadian Catholics wrecked the mission houses of the Baptist and Anglican churches and the Salvation Army barracks in Quebec. Francis H. Underwood, United States consul at Leith, Scotland, and a noted literary man, died at Edin burg of blood poisoning. Great Britain, in an extraordinary gazette, assumes a neutral position in the war between China and Japan. Felix Geoffrion. who had been a member of the Canadian parliament for thirty-one years, died at Montreal. Earthquakes in Sicily destroyed many houses at Aci Reale and at Zaf farano and killed ten persons. Saxdow, the "strong man," was married at Manchester, England, to Miss Blanche Brooks, the daughter of a local photographer. LATER. A resolution- was offered in the United States senate on the 10th di recting the committee on privileges and elections to investigate the recent elec tion in Alabama and aseertainif frauds were committed. Senator Hill offered a resolution for information as to the work of the conferrees on the tariff bill, which went over for the day. The remainder of the session was devoted to the consideration of the Chinese treaty. In the house the time was oc cupied in discussinir projects for a government exhibit to cost $200,000 at the Atlanta exposition and to give each of the arid land states 1,000,000 acres of arid lands to encourage the reclamation of these deserts. Almost the entire business portion cf Fithian, 111., a town of 600 inhab itants, was destroyed by fire. Four children of William Watts, from 6 months to years of age, were burned to death near Williston, S. D., on a ranch. The town of Yerinton, Nev., on the Carson & Colorado railroad, was com pletely destroyed by fire. The removal of the battle flags of Iowa from the arsenal to the state capitol in Des Moines was made the occasion for a great demonstration. J. W. Reixhart, president and one of the receivers of the Atchison road, resigned to promote harmony. There were 251 business failures In the United States in the seven days ended on the 10th, against 219 the week previous and 394 in the corresponding time in 1893. Titus and Cabanne broke the world's mile tandem bicj-cle record at Minne apolis, covering the distance in 1:524-5. Investigation shows that twenty four persons were killed and eleven injured in the Rock Island railway wreck at Lincoln, Neb. Miss Lulu Randall, an aeronaut of Detroit, Mich., was thrown from her parachute by a tree and killed at Nash ville, Tenn. Eight thousand persons witnessed the hanging of Madkins, a negro exe cuted for criminal assault at Ilaleisrh, N. C. Seven men and boys seeking shelter under a, tree during a storm at Du Kalb, Tex., were killed by lightning. The following " congressional nom inations were made: Illinois, Fourth district, J. Simmington (pro.); Sev enth, H. A. Lloyd (pop.). Iowa, Tenth district, E. F. Baker (pop. -dem.). Ne braska. Fifth district, W. E. Andrews (rep.). Virginia, Ninth district, H. S. K. Morrison (dem.). ' ron m. TERMS trw WORK OF FIENDS. The Recent Rock Island Disaster Due to Train-Wreckers. The Coroner Reports the Death-List Twenty-Four Eleven Persons In juredScenes of Horror at the Wreck. THE VICTIMS. Lincoln, Neb., Aug. 11. Twenty four dead and eleven inlured is the re sult of Thursday night's frightful dis aster on the Kojk Island railroad near here as reported by the coroner. The names of the known killed follow: Dr. C. H. Pinney. Council Bluffs: J. D. Mat thews, commercial man, Omnha; Harry Mon roe. Kansas City; Isaac Pepew. engineer. Council Bluffs: W. O. Hambell, lawyer. Fair bury, Neb.; C. D. Stannard, conductor, St, Joseph; John Munger, grain dealer, Omaha: H.R.Peters, merchant. Council Bluffs: K. H. Zernlke, lawyer, Lincoln, Neb.: two unknown farmers; five unknown men; Charles Unruh, mother and son, Janscn. Neb.; A. B. Edde, merchant. Pawnee. Neb.; M. Beaver, mer chant. Pawnee. Neb.; two unknown farmers from Jansen, Neb. Those marked as unknown are those passengers known to have been on the train by the brakeman and unac counted for. Late Friday night the remains of Andrew Hensen, a farmer of McPher- son county, Neb., were identified by a watch found lying in the midst of human bones. All of the bodies, or parts of those mentioned by name in the list of killed, have been recovered. The injured are: Col. C J. Bliss, Second reiriment, Nebraska national guards. Falrbury, deep fiesu wounds in left leg; Henry C. Foot, brakeman. Council Bluffs, leg broken: Jay McLowell. Falrbury. legs cut and face bruised: C. H. Cherry, mall clerk, Kearney, badly bruised and cut; F. F. Scott, express messenger, injurod in ternally. Mrs. Fish, wife of a Burlington St Missouri engineer, badly bruised; O. S. Bell, traveling man. Lincoln, internal Injuries; J. E. Puetz, traveling man, Lincoln, internal injur ies; Somret. passenger, hurt about the head; Mrs. Fritz and sister-in-law, Lincoln, bruised. The police have arrested a colored man named George Davis, who is sus pected of wrecking the train. Shortly after the wreck he applied to a hack man and asked to be driven up-town, saying he had been on the train and lost his coat. He was seen with a crowbar near the place where the wreck occurred, it is asserted. The police say they have evidence sufficient to convict. His motive is not known. One victim, whose name will never be known, lay under the tender, the upper edge of which rested across his thighs, crushing them into the hard gravel. As Col. Bills approached he begged piteously toNbe released and saved from the flames. Col. Bills is a man of nerve and decision, but he was confronted by a terrible alternative. To move the tender was an utter impossibility, and the long tongues of hungry flames were reaching out greedily for their victim. For an in stant he thought that only one of the man's legs was pinned down and he thought about amputat ing it. Then he saw both were fast, and while he hesitated help lessly for a : moment a gust of wind drove the names and smoke upon him, blistering his face and scorching his clothes. Before he could recover him self the long fiery tongues had wrapped themselves about the body and head of their intended victim and stilled his screams. There are two theories as to the wrecking of the train, it being con ceded that the train was derailed by the removal of the rails for a part of the way across the trestle. One the ory is that strikers from South Omaha did the work believing that a company of state troops, who were to have boarded the train at Fairbury, were aboard. The company missed connection, however. This is not as generally i credited as the other that the ele ment that has been causing so much trouble in Oklahoma, who are bitter against the Rock Island, did the job, though why they should have come this distance to wreck a train that might have been wrecked nearer home is not explained. The Rock Island officials offer $1,000 reward for the capture of the train wreckers. KILLED BY LIGHTNING. Beven Hall IUajera Meet Frightful Death at Ie Kalb, Tex. De Kalb, Tex., Aug. 11. About S o'clock Friday afternoon a crowd of boys and men met in a small prairie 9 miles south of town and begau to play baseball. A shower came up and they all ran to a large oak. Lightning struck the tree and the following were killed outright: John Jacobs, Walter Atchley, Thomas Blanchard, William Hentley, John Jackson. Chris Fetty and William Walse. About a dozen others were hurt and it is thought some of them will die. UNDER THE LASH. A 'Woman Whipped by Masked Men In Writ Virginia. Grantville, W. Va., Aug. 11. At a lonely place near Minnor, in the Wash ington district, forty masked men raided the cabinof a lone woman named "Sis" King, of doubtful reputation, and dragged the terrified woman from her bed in her night-clothes. The raiders stripped her, and while one man held her hands the other thirty-nine took turns at giving her two blows each with hickory switches over her bare back. After she had been given seventy-eight cuts she was left senseless on the ground. A Servant tilrl Perishes In m Fire Near Elkhorn, Wis. Elkiiorn, Wis., Aug. 11. By the burning of the summer cottage of Mr. Charles E. Ilollenbeck. of Rockford, at Lauderdale lakes, 6 miles north of here, a servant girl named Sadie Fallon, of Rockford, was burned to death. Mrs. Ilollenbeck was severely burned and her spine in jured. Her mother, Mrs. Browu, had her hip and ankle broken and may die from her injuries. The fire was caused by the falling of a hanging lamp, the flames spreading so quickly the in mates only escaped by jumping from the windows. TRADE REVIEW. Condition of Affairs In tha Business World Effect of the Loss of Corn. New York, Aug. 11. R. G. Dun fc Co.'s weekly review of trade says: The advance in corn discloses a general be lief that the injury to this most important crop has been so great as to affect materially the traffic of railroads, the demand for manu factured products, and the cost of meats for the coming years. Unless the markets de ceive and are entirely deceived our country will have to face a real calamity in the loss of something like 600.000,000 bushels of corn and this loss consumers have to share through the advance of 14 cents in two weeks and 9 cents since Friday of last week. Neither official nor unofficial statements as yet preclude the hope that the loss may prove less serious, but at current prices l.SOO.Ouo.000 bushels would contjas much as S.OOO.OOO.Ouo bushels would have cost a fortnight ago. Wheat has risen 8V4 cents in the fortnight and 2!4 during the week, although western receipts have been 5,228,128 bushels, against 8,1C2,CM last year. Atlantic exports fere still about half as large as a year ago, I,3VQ,4S5 bushels, against 2.734.7M last year. Pork products are a little stronger, as Is natural. Cotton has twice risen and again de clined a sixteenth, with increasing prospects Of a very large yield, closing without change for the week. The Iron and Steel Manufacturer records a great Increase of nearly 30,000 tons in weekly output In July and the production is 115,366 tons weekly, about 11.000 tons less than In April, but 8.0(0 tons more than a year ago, when the prostration had nearly reached Its worst. The decrease in unsold stocks 8 only 6.137 tons for the month, showing a consumption in manufacture not quite equal to the present output. Prices sus tain this view, having changed only in the di rection of weakness; the disappointing de mand for finished products is still the main factor. The failures for the five weeks ended August 1 showed liabilities or $11,144,713. of which fo. 626.594 were of manufacturing and $5,220,247 of trading concerns. The failures during the last week have been 251 In the United States, against 3S4 last year, and 54 in Canada, against 5 lust year. Bradstreet's sa3-s: Evidence continues to accumulate that the earlier portion of July witnesbed the lowest point in the ebb of the commercial tide in the reaction after the moderate revival In the spring. The practical cessation of industrial disturbances of the year has emphasized the tendency to improvement reported by telegraph from leading manufactur ing and commercial centers this week. A further indication of the tendency to im provement is seen in the week's advance of 50 cents per ton for steel billets and in the fact that domestic wool markets to-day are more in favor of the seller than they have been for a year, and that wool Is Arm at the 2 cent advance scored in the last few weeks. Ketlned sugar is 4 cent higher, possibly for reasons not directly con nected with questions of demand and supply, but prices or pig iron at St. Louis are higher, and for cotton are 1 l-6c up on reports or damage to the crop and the Improved feel ing in commercial circles south. Panic and unreasoning speculative Interest in Indian corn has put up the price nearly 8 cents a bushel this week, about 25 cents above low water mark for this year. Bradstreet's telegrams from those In a posi tion to know as much as can be learned in the great corn growing states are at variance with more sensatlonul dispatches bearing on dam age to the corn crop and Indicate that most of the bull views as to that staple are ex aggerated, the Increased corn acreage south and west pointing to a prob able crop as large as either or the two preceding years. In each of which the out turn was not more than 6 per cent, below the average for nine years past. Wheat has jumped 2S cents this week in sympathy with corn, and oats cents. While hay Is no higher at New York, it and other breadstuffs have advanced briskly at the west because of alleged scarcity of corn Exports of wheat. United States and Canada. both coasts, this week aggregate 3.417.000 bush els, against 2.677,000 bushels last week. 5.O08.0UO bushels in the week a year ago. 4.14H.00O bush els in the week two years ago, 5. 147. OHO bushels in the week three years ago, and 1.9&3.000 in the week four years ago. - The underlying facts in the speculative situ ation are that stocks are firmly held and there Is a general belief that the settlement of the tariff controversy will be followed by a speculative movement of considerable force. While the extent of the damage to crops from the drought is appreciated there is at present a disposition to minimize the effects on the railroads, particu larly as current earnings exhibit comparative ly small decreases while the actual movement or traffic Is described as quite brisk. TO EVICT AT PULLMAN. The Company Decides to Turn Tenants Out of Their Homes. Chicago, Aug. 11. Pullman's ten ants will be evicted. ice President Wickes says so. The company claims that it must find houses for its new employes to live in, and as the strikers have been camping1 in the Pullman flats without paying a cent of rent for the last three months they must get out. This move is the very last in the big strike, and it will forever dis comfit the employes. The company's bouses cover about 3,000 people at present. These 3,000 consist of the striking workmen and their families. There are about 1,000 new men in the shop that h&ve families, and that desire to live near their work. The old emploj-es must make way for the new. This will be a death blow to the tenants who are strikers. They have no money and very little food. When their scant supplies of house hold furniture are set out on the broad streets by the constables it will be impossible for them to move it away. Even now the' cannot afford to buy a pound of coal to cook the raw potatoes they get from the relief committee. The prospects are gloomy indeed for the poverty stricken occupants of the company's barracks-like rows of houses. But Mr. Wickes as sertion as to the company's intention of beginning the work of eviction was very positive and unmistakable. It meant volumes to anyone who under stands the condition of the Pullman strikers at this time. Took a Long Time to Choose. Springfield, IlL, Aug. 11. After taking more than 3,000 ballots demo crats of the Thirty-fifth Illinois dis trict nominated L. H. DeForest for rep resentative. Cured by a Flash of Lightning. Denison, Tex., Aug. 10. L. Zimmer man, who is in the city en route to Montague county, relates a singular occurrence which happened in Lamar county. Five years ago a married woman named Griggs was stricken with paralysis and has been con fined to the house ever since. Last week the house was strucic by light ning and Mrs. Griggs received a shock which, 6he says, passed through her body. Since then her malady has dis appeared and she is pert as ever, being able to get in and out of a wagon. She went to church last Sunday. A NEW NAUTICAL VOCABULARY. Additions Made by Young Women From Fresh Water" Regions. The yachtsman's vocabulary is a lan guage in itself, and the landsman often runs tfoul of it. He doesn't see why one rope should be called a sheet, an other a halyard, a third a downhaul and a forth a clewline. One boat owner, whose hospitable deck is trod den by many of his friends, has modi fled his terms to confirm with the sug gestions or mistakes of his guests who are not expert sailors. For instance, one landlubber who had gone below for a drink of water was asked what he had done with the cup. "I hung It on the post," he said in nocently. Everyone roared at the idea that he could be so "green" as not to know what the mast was called, but on that yacht the mast is now known as "the post." A pretty girl from a "fresh water" district was responsible for another nautical word. The strips of canvas used in tying up the sails are called stops. Some one wanted the stops and could not find them for the instant. "What are you looking for?"' asked the young woman. "I am looking for the stops. They were here a little while ago." "The stops? Oh, you mean the tapes. They're under this rug." And now the sails are bound with "tapes." Another young woman from an in terior state had read enough nautical stories to have caught a few phrases here and there. For one thing, she knew that "hard tack" was a staple article of diet at sea. On a visit to the east Ihis damsel went sailing. She was anxious to learn, and when she heard the man at the wheel say "hard a lee," 6he asked some questions, and found out what it meant. A little later the steersman said the yacht was going about. Some of the guests were payingf no attention, and seemed in danger of being struck by the boom as it swept over to the other c'.iie of the yacht. "Hard tack! hard tack!" cried out the young woman, exeitedlj-. All managed to duck their heads in time to escape the spar, if they didn't know what the maiden meant by '"hard tack," and another joke was added to the yacht's store of them." N. Y. Trib une. SOULS OF SECLUDED SPOTS. Dim Temples Haunted by the Mystio Spirit Which Outlasts All Age. The genius loci of the ancients is not altogether a myth. A truer mysticism than their mythology teaches us that places retain for ages something of the lives that have been lived in them, an echo of the voices that have made them musical, a fleeting shadow of the men and women who found in them their happiness or their sorrow. Those who have spent much time in secluded spots learn to feel that lonely places have souls; and the soul of a place is indeed its genius loci, its familiar spirit, its peculiar essence, as real a thing as the scent of a rose or the smell of the sea. There are rose gardens in the east that are fair with the accumulated happiness of past gen erations. There are shady ilex groves in Italy wherein still dwells the silent spirit of contemplation; perhaps the phantasms of tragic loves sigh out their little day beneath the ancient trees. In Italy, in Greece, in Asia, in distant In dian glens, dim temples stand to this day, haunted or blessed, perhaps by the presence of that mj-stic spirit which outlasts all ages. And the market place has its familiar genius also, the busy center of the crowded city, the broad thoroughfare of the great me tropolis, silent for a few hours under the summer moonlight or the winter rain. Old castles, too, deserted villages, uninhabited homes of dead populations all have wraiths, the ghosts of what they have been, silent to the many, but more eloquent to the few than any hu man speech can ever be. And besides all these, there are spots where nature has never been molded by man, where she is sovereign and he is subject lonely places by the sea, great sunlit silences where man has not dared to dwell be cause nature there would give him nothing, nor was he able to take any thing from her. And the spirit of those places is more lonely, and grander, and mightier, than the genius loci of the market-place, or of the deserted Italian villa, "where the red-star cracks the speechless statues," or even of the shady cloister or of the wind-swept temples of banished gods. The song of songs is still unwritten, thoug-h na ture's music makes man's grandest symphonies ridiculous, and sounds night and morning in the ears of him who has ears to hear. Marion Craw ford, in Century. The Cat's Breath. A recent publication criticises the notion that "a cat sucks away a child's breath." This is merely an expression erroneous in its form of a physiological fact. All the felidae possess poisonous breaths, intended by nature to act as an anaesthetic on their prey. If a per son cares to experiment by inhaling, for instance, a cat's breath, they can easily realize the truth of this state ment. Carefully watch a cat playing with a captured mouse. You will dis cover that the mouse does not suffer, but is sort of stupefied, as if by chloro form. In the "Life of Livingstone," written bv himself, ho states that once when he was seized by a lion and his arm broken, the crunching of the broken arm gave him no pain, so be numbered were his senses by the ani mal's breath. A cat seeks the child, its soft bed and the warmth of its body, and lies down on the chest of the infant. Us weight impedes respira tion, its breath anaesthetizes the child, and death follows. This circumstance has actually occurred and medical rec ords conclusively prove it -ooklyD Standard-Union. The amplest knowledge has th largest faith. Wilmott. 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