The Sioux County journal. (Harrison, Nebraska) 1888-1899, July 15, 1897, Image 3

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    TOPICS OF THE TIMES,
A CHOICE SELECTION OF INTER
ESTING ITEMS.
Comments and Cri t icim liaaed Upon
tbe Happening ot the Lay tiie
torical anil Newa Notea.
Women drummers are pr-piilnr n'w In
the West. Tl.ey attend lu their knit
ting lt-itT than the men.
New York how Las a physiognomical
shaving palace." This imii-t be fully
as imposing as Chicago's "lxHtb!ack
iiig cafe."
The Civks apparently lou't know
how to handle tlicir anus to do effective
work, but we muM admit that in work
ing their legs tiny are exports.
A Washington paper Kivf l!"lt t'on
press includes eleven journalls.t''. This
is disci, i-.raging; one newspaper 111:1 u
would have bivu worth more than the
tmire eleven.
The aerograph transmits photo
graphs iustam:incously by wiie. Therv
Is a suspicion tliat it ha-S been tested
Willi pictures of some of those Turks,
and tli.it the wire were crossed.
A special dispatch from New York
Bays that "there, is u tersis1eiit rumor
on Hroadway that Lillian Ilussell is en-giii-d
to be marri'l." This ought to
l.'.r.-rest Miss U us.se IT B presj-Jit hus
band. Lillian Russell Ut to sue for divorce
from hi r luteal huslwuid. There is no
effort, however, to nuike It appejir "a
farewell ni 1 araiice." It is not an
nounced whom she will be divorced
from nest.
Toronto decUhl by a very narrow
margin last week to ran street cars ou
Sunday henceforth. Tho.-e who do not
favor Sunday street cars, however,
wiJ lurt. be interfered with hi their
right to walk as usual.
A Chicago professor has come out
with tlie iiunouiRfiiieiit that all miner
als consist of living eelLs. Inadvert
enly he has rtolve-d the gold-brick prob
lem. That is a living sell that nobody
has ever yet ben able to kill off.
For many years Mrs. Langtry Ikls
been the sole support of a worthy hus
band among othersand it looks like
gros injustice to cut off his base of
supplies Just at a time when he most,
needs a wife's tender care and cosh.
Three great Vienna composers, I!ee
thoven, Schubert and Brahma, are
burial side by side in a cemetery in
that city. If a gn at. monument Is ever
reannl to musical genius 110 other spot
011 earth will have equal claims with
that.
Two Iowa men who started out the
other night to carry the State for pro
hibition by drinking the entire visible
supply of whisky, ended their per
formance by drinking a couple of
quarts of embalming lluid. What's
the use of being In such a hurry?
The "descendant of a titled German
family" who is In a Chicago hospital,
recovering from the effects of a bullet
which he fln'd Into his breast because
a chorus girl refused to marry him, is
furnishing a triumphant vindication of
the young lady's judgment.
Thirteen well known pJiysi:in,ns of
the South are to 1m- tried on tlie charge
of advertising. When the medical pro
fession shall be so far advanx-ed that
all doctors will advertise we shall hear
no more of those contentions, and phy
sicians generally will le more prosper
ous. Prince Klsmarck recently said that
"an advantage of growing old Is that
one becomes Indifferent to hatred, In
sult and calumny, while the capacity
for love and good will Is Increased."
The l'rluice shows 1111 Lucrea-sing bem-v-
olcuce in his old ae, but his traducers
'.111 scamper when he turns his khym
opon them.
" No doubt a few meu acted In a cow
trdly manner at the burning of tlie
Paris bazar, but the great majority In
be building displayed prtfwwe of
jilnd and heroism. An evidence of
this 1 the fact that I'OO women wore
lifted, one by one, ami paaaexl out of
tlie ventilating liole of a French kitch
en adjoining the bazar. One of the un
known dead Is an American or Kn
pIlHhina.n who kept going hack Into the
burning building and bringing out help
less people uutJl he finally perished.
Some remarkable statements are
made on tlie Host mi lecture platform.
One of the latent, which Is crt-dlted to n
woman vegetarian, Ls that murlerers
tud thieves are grcnit eaterM of meat,
while thinker, artists and grnt men
generally are eaters of vegetables, nuta
and fruits. A call for the evidence
would Ite In order. In his life of Shel
ley, Prof, Iowdeu tell how the MMt's
life was Hiivel by n Exiting trjp up tlie
Thames and dropping his ve'ofairlan
Isni for a course of beefsteak.
France, which has nil along had
something more than a bare suspicion
of the genuineness of the Czar's pro
fessed friendship for her, lias received
what many are Inclined to accept as
proofs of his lukewamiuejw. It all
tame about from the holocaust which
lias shocked I'aris and the whole world.
No sooner did this terrible tiling occur
than the German emperor sent by wire
to President Fsure a telegram condol
Ins; (be French nation for the calamity
and following this tip with his choci
for $2,000. The Rtissophlles st I'aris
Mid: "Writ till you hear from the
Oamr." But no word cam from St. P-
IM
then this was merely a
couched in the most stilted terms and
apparently written to deny what was
plain to the French, namely: That had.
It not been for the mutterlngs of a cer
tain part of the Paris press the Czar
might not have written at all. The
contrast between ibe acts of tlie two
monarch has ct plainly not iucp-nsed
the popularity of the Czar at the
French capital.
The Mohammedans have a peculiar
belief respecting the three several spir
its which thev believe inhabit the
bodies of all men. Tlie first Is the anl-
tic.l i-i.Ii.lf 1 1. t l .1...
...... r,.,,,,, ,,,11.11 1,111, us se;u in win
train, perieriinng tnrottgii tne nerves
all the action of sense and motion. The :
second Is the vital Hpirit. which lias Its '
seat In the heart and controls the mo
tion, blood and animal heat. The third
Is the i.atnral spirit, which is seated in
the liver and upon which depends the
temper and the general frame of mind.
The spirit which controls the latter in
some men In this eoimtry is known by
the name of spirits frumenti.
A New York woman has applied for
a position In President McKlnley's cab
inet. There is no vacancy at present In
the cabinet, it Is true, but that doesn't
matter; she desires to be added to
the present force. She says that the
reason Lincoln, Gartield and Carnot
fell was because they did not know
enough to have a woman In the cabi
net. She adds that "a woman would
have read the handwriting on the wall.
The night Lincoln was shot I had a
pain In my head, niul when Garfield
was shot I had a pain in my abdomen.
When Carnot got his wound my heart
stood still with pain." It Is very evi
dent that that woman doesn't want a
cabinet position so badly as she wants
a doctor.
Sensational preachers now Insist that
the whole country is going to Hades,
because jieople no longer attend church
regularly, as they once did. It Is not a
hard matter to account for this seem
ing lack of Christian devotion. In old
en times people went to church to hear
the gospel preached. That is the very
last thing sensational preachers think
of doing. They find it a much easier
matter to prepare sermons on base
ball, bicycling, politics and things of
thai kind, than to go into the sacred
scriptures for a text. Such sermons are
not calculated to renew Christian vigor,
and are looked upon kindly by those
who have a desire to travel in the
strait and narrow way. It's not the
jxttple who are going to the devil, it's
the sensationalism.
Chicago Chronicle: The eMxioan con
sul in Chicago objects, to the payment
of water rates, just as another consul
objected to the payment of a dog tax.
Kach of tin se representatives of his
country points, with pride to a treaty
of commerce and amity existing be
tween his own country and the United
States, and says that under Its provis
ions he is entirely exempt from fed
eral tuxes. So he is. P.ut the United
States can no more control the munici
pality of Chicago lu the levy and col
lection of water in tea or dog taxes than
It can dictate the menu for Victoria's
next dinner. The Mcxhau consul has
no more claim on Chicago to deliver
water Into the place of his residence
than he has claim ou this city or the
State of Illinois to supply him during
his resilience in this city with whisky.
Resident consuls are doubtless very
nice gentlemen, but during their stay
In Chicago they are amenable to the
municipal regulations as any other res-1
ident of Chicago is, whether citizen or!
alien, and will be expected to pay as
they go.
The bringing home of tlie log of tho
Mayflower by Mr. Bayard has given
ImtM'tus to the movement to recover
tertil.urjr until the 12th of
other documents connected with earlv..Mis8 Nellie West, an American woman,
1
New England history which are still! was severely beaten by two Japanese
held in old world archives. One of the marines from the warship Naniwa re
most lutercNtlng of thee k Cuv. Brad-( cently, while trying to assist her brother,
ford's description of the Mayflower who bad been set upon by a number of
trip, which tha.t worthy wrote and sent 1 man-of-war men from the Japanese
back to England by that other pilgrim ' navy She was confined to her bed
vessel, the Fortune. This manuscript Bext morning and unable to appear
Is supposed to be In Prance and the ' l-lllit ner a.fliaUant8 in the police
State Deimrtment has been requested C0U1.t, where they were charged with
to Instruct Ambassador Porter to make lgHau'it and battery. Feeling there
diligent search for It In Parla. If It Is ; rung hj . QV(Jr the matter.
In the possession of the K.-cjich Oov-. knQWn buHine()9 m8n knocked
enuneut there will be no trouble 111 , , ,u. ,u
, , dow n three Nam w sailors on the street
securing It, but If, rs Is much more : , . . ,
likely, It U owned by private persons, j 01 owln mo:",n? " ntequence,
it will be difficult to get It. It is both American bluejacke s were hunt
thoughtful a.nl patriotic of the Maasa, for the Rleade" of the Japanese
ehusctu HlHtorU-aJ S-Iety to set about who made the assault. One, who was
the task of colletlj the scattered and p anted out to them as being guilty, was
valuable data of our beginnings, but It severely beaten by them that his life
would be safer if tlieso Interesting pa- now depends on the result of a delicate
liers were Kept at ashingtxui. Hay
State pride might object to this, how
ever.
Language of American Negroes.
That the mlspronu nebulous of Amer
ican negrom should really Is; wound
KiigllSh pronunciation of centuries; ago
seems trt range, but one can easily mi
how It may well lw, says an Engllh
iwiper. The language of the neventccnth
century was taken to America by the
early settlers, and the tongue wlrk'h the
Illiterate ncgro- then learned to speak
thoy have preserved, wlthmt nny ma
terial change, clown to 1'he nrcnf gen
eration. Since this la the disc, one cwn
not then lie surprised to find ummi ex
am I nation that many of their pronun
ciation arv to be traced lxick toclnwilc
authors of an earlier period, and erwi
to Shakapeare himself, lu tbl mefme
It la donbtlres twio that many ot thw
pronunclatlona are much nearer the lan
guage of, and would be much more lu
tcltlfftble to, Shakapeere and Mil too,
than tl preswBt atandard Bimltah.
You can't, tail If a woman la a
houaekepar until you have taatad hei
atBWed prunes. If they don't trail
(ittty, ah la ail rtht.
"ULL OF HOPE.
I
Confident That the Strike Will prT '
a Eucoeat'al More. 1
XINERS CONTROL THE SITUATION.
OperMtori fiqi.t Prrinia-I in to Open
Mlneg Rt tlie Wage Sca ' ttemnuded
Ohio Operutoia DcpeuU on Plus
bur. 1
Ooi.umbls, O., July 6. President ! U.A.Makly, employed in circula
Katchforl of the united mine workers tiou department of the Timea. snaln laid
: . .
eaid not many retorts were
receivea
; from ti,e
vnrioua mining district!
throughout the country aa to the prog
ress ol the strike. President Hatch ford
said it would require several days to re
ceive full information on this . point, as
the district president" would necessarily
have to have time to communicxte with
tlie numeroii" locals before reporting to
national headquarters as to the com
pletenesR of the suspension. Monday
being observed n many places as a na
tional holioay will naturally retirci the
rep irts to some extent. Tlie informa
tion which the national ollicials hav) at
hand is of a general nature and is to tlx
effect that the miners have generallj
suspended work and tu tlrike promise
to be a success.
The success of the whole movement
seems to d&volve upon the men in ihs
Pittsburg district, and judging from the
last advices received frcm that field tl
miners there propose to do their pirr.
Ko fa' as can be learned the operators
in both the Pittsburg and Ohio districts
io not intend to put forth any effort to
start iheir mines, but have concluded to
quietly close down and await develope
nieii's. At least it will require several
jaya for t3 operators to determine up
on what course to pursue.
President Hatch ford said he had been
asbmi hed at the great number of tele
grams received from operators request
ing permbeion to operate their mines
by paying tlie price demanded by the
miners. Thei-e requests could not be
granted for the reason that to do to
would be defeating the very object which
the strike is intended to accomplish.
The Ohio operators w'll be giverned in
their course entirely by the actions of
the Pittsburg operators. If the latter
agree to an advance in tlie price the
Ohio operators will not object, but will
readily pay the advance.
Fireworks C use Ueth.
New Pkdfokd. Mass., July 6. Henry
B. Stone, formerly pres-iilent of the Chi
jago, Burlington & Quincy, and presi
:le,nt of tho Chicago Telephone company,
was instantly killed at, Nonquitt yester
Jay morning- by an explosion of fire
works. M.. Stone, with his family and
Dther summer residents of Nonquitt,
aaq rele.bratine the Holiday with a
handsome display of day fireworks.
Among thim was a mine, which was so
devised as to scatter paper animals of
various colors. Mr. S one bad applied
the torch to this piece, but for some
reason it did not appear as if the spark
r us going to reach the mine. Mr,
ikone advanced and took the piecrt up
in hit hands, when it exploded, striking
him full in the face. His features) were
badly mutilated and he pustained
compound fraetire of the skull.
Nonquitt is shrouded in gloom. Mr.
?tone was a regular summer visitor
with his family, owning a cottage there.
! he leaves a widow and four children.
J He had been ontemnlating a trip to
Europe in thn course of a few weeks.
I it:. mill tin aent tn ChicacrO for
(113 iriiiauic . ' -5
interment.
K.bi i.l the lim .It.
Vancouver, B. C, July 6.-The latest
mail advises from Honolulu say tnat
operation.
Sank Into thi atigr:
CAi.currA, July C The British bark
Overdate, bound for South America,
came into collison with the steamer
Pandus, near the mouth of the western
most branch of the Ganges and sank al
most immediately. All on board were
drowned except the captain, pilot and
one seaman.
I'onanl'a Inghtr Ilrad.
Baltimore, July 6. A cable to the
American announces the death in Drea
den of Miss Rose Gary II, eldest daughter
of William 8. Caryll, United States con
sol-general In that city.
I'oatpona the Match.
Niw York, July 6. The exhibition
sparring bout between Robert Kitisim
in ins and John L. Sullivan, scheduled (or
yesterday afternen at Ambrose park,
Brooklyn, did not take place. Martin
Julian announced io a large crowd of
spectators that the) polios had forbtddra
theeonteet and that therefore the
principals had concluded to withdraw
rather than violate tha law. Sollivao
poke in the tame atrain as Julian and
added that both ha and Fitatimmooi
ware ant-tons (or tha contest.
A TI.OI.I.KV WKM
funibr ara Killed and Injured at Pitta
bu(. PirriiBUBo, Pa., July 7. Four people
"ere fatally injured and eighteen or
twenty others more or less injured in
itreet car wreck last night on the Forbes
eveet line of the Consolidated Traction
'''ii.pany. The names of those seriously
lojured are :
Michael Doyle, mortorman, top of
liead tern away ; two ribs and a leg
brnken; will die.
; dare and hurt internallv: will nrnhahlv
die.
r- j
Miss Smith, Ekull fractured; will die.
C. D. Roukkh. leg and arm broken
and hu.-t internally ; will die.
Mas. Mary H. Wn. n, two ribs,
right le$, nd left ankie uroken ; may re
cover. The wreck ocsuned at Soho bill at the
t ine when the immense crowds which
atteridea the fireworks display at Schen
ley park wag return ng home.
An Atwood street car had gone about
hall way down the bill when it jumped
1 oc track. Closely following it came an
pf n rummer car with a trailer, both
densely packed wito people. Before
thet-econd train could be stopped it
c-ashed into the derailed car Hardly
hud the first collision iiappened before
third car, heavily laden, came down
the hill at full speed and forced its way
into the wreck ahead. It was the sec
ond crash t .at did most of the damage,
aui the (cane was indescribable.
' he injured are :
iidwurd Biersch.
Mrs. Ei! ward Bier?ch.
W. H. Eisenbeis.
John Mc.Elroy.
Henry Mcllenry.
John Carr.
Miss Alice Mooney.
Miss Carrie Keightlinger.
Joseph Mackie.
Peter Gay.
Mis Lizzie Smith.
Mi;js Anna Smith.
Two unknown women.
One unknown man.
John Hoover.
Edward Kinney.
The seriously injured were removed
to the hospitals and the others were
taken to their homes.
Tea Ctil ur, ii This C'oiiniry.
Washington, July .--Secretary of
Agriculture Wilson bus rec ived a re
port from a veteran agriculturist, whom
he sent recently to invtstigate tlie tea
farming industry carried on at Summer
ville, S. C, with a view ;o ascertaining
the prospects of pro li table grow tli to tlie
tea plant in this country. The report
says the labor question is the most im
portant one in the economics of this
business in thia country. II estimates
the minimum coat at about efght times
as much to pick one pound of tea in
South Carolina as thatpaiu for the same
service in Asia.
In districts favored with eurficient
heat and rains the plants furnish from
til teen to twenty pickings yearly. In
the Sown Carolina fields the conserva
tion of m lirture by ibaiuii g in enhanced
by Kysiematic nui face culture. The re
port suggests that it seems impractica
ble to compete with the cheap oriental
labor, and while fome of the processes
of development have been delegated to
machinery, the picking of the leaves re
quires discrimination, but the problem
lias been met by establishing a small
Bcho'jl, where tea p cuing is included.
Seeds have bejn imported from all
tea regions, etpecially from high alti
tudes. A vegetation of one-tbird of the
seeds ia a general average and the loss
of a whole importation is no novelty.
With careful pruning plants here
should maintain their pristine vigor for
forty years, but pruning is a cosily
manipulation. The report urges the
development of knowledge as to tea
raising by means of schools.
.Me Kin ley at Home
Canton, O., July 7. President Mc
Kinley arose at an early hour yesterday
morning. The thermometer has been in
the SKIs and did not get much below
that during the night, The president
undertook to take a stroll through the
yard before the sun was high in the
heavens, and shortly after joined his
mother, who was sitting on the front
porch.
Mother McICinley met with an acci
dent, serious for one of her age. In
walking on the porch she stumbled in a
piece of straw carpeting as she took a
Step and fell to the floor, striking her
forehead over the eyes on a doorstep.
Although eighty-eight years old, she
was n )t so stunned but that she was
able to arise in a few moments and
walk to a stand, where she washed
away trio blood. She makes light of
the occurence. A doctor was summoned
however, and he found tho cut so deep
as to require sewing up. This she
insisted on having done without taking
an anaesthetic. At noon she did not
eeem to be suffering seriously from the
hock and was resting easily. The
string of callars at the house did not be
gin until sometime after the ac ident,
the newa of which did not leach the
citiseos for some hours.
Volcano lo Action.
Taooma, Wash., July 7. Alaska pa
pers of June 20, just received, state
that the volcano on Douglas island, op
poelte Juneau, ia in a state of eruption.
The entire town of Juneau waa watch
ing with interest the immense clondi
mitted irom the crater. This volcano
has no name, but ia one of the highest
peaks on Donglaa, and situated a little
aorth of the Tread well mines.
THE BILL PASSES.
Tariff Bill at Last Gets Through iti
Stay in the Senate.
IT IS CARRIED BY A VUTE OF 38 TO 28-
No Kxeitfiuent 1b nanifiited ami the K(c
alt of tlie Ballot lo not Ar ue Great
u.huMfaiii fioutse tu Coufer.
Washington, July 8. By the decisive
vote of 38 to 28 the tariff bill was passed
in the oenate shortly before 5 o'clock
yesterday.
The culmination of the ion? and ar
duona struggle had excited the .Leanest
intei est and the floor and the gjleries
of the senate chamber were crowded bj
those anxious to witness the closing
scene. Speaker Reed, Chairman Dingley
and many of the members of the houat
of representatives were in the rear area,
while every seat in the galleries, save
e reserved for foreign representa
tives, was occupied.
The main interest centered in the final
vote, and aside from this there wa9 lit
tle of a dramatic character in the de
bate. The early part of the day was
spent on amendments of comparatively
minor importance, the debate brandl
ing into financial and anti-trust chan
nels. By 4 o'clock the senators began
manifesting their impatience by calls
'for vote," and soon thereafter the last
amendment was disposed of and the
final vote began. There were many in
terruptions as pairs were arranged and
then at 4:55 the vice president arose
and announced the passage of the bill
yeas 38, miys 28. There was no demon
stration but a few scattering handclaps
were given as the crowds dispersed.
Ibe vote was as follows:
Yeas Allison, Bakei, Burrows, Car
ter, Clark, Cullom, Davis, Deboe, El
kins, Fairbanks, Foraker, Gallinger.
Hale, Hanna, Hawley, Jones (Nev.),
Lodge, Mcbride, Mc.Enery, McMillan,
Mantle, Mason, Morrill, Nelson, Pen
rose, Piatt (Conn.), Piatt (N. J.), Prit
chard, Proctor, Quay, Sewell, Shoup,
Ppooner, Warren, Wellington, Wetmore
and Vjlgon 38.
Nays Bacon. Bate, Berry, Caffery,
Cannon, Ohilton, Clay, Cockrell, Faulk
ner, Gray, Harris (Kas.), Jones (Ark.),
Kenney, Lindsay, Mallory, Martin,
Mills, Mitchell. Morgan, Pasco, Pettus,
RawlinB, Roach, Turner, Turpie, Vest,
Waltbail and White 28.
An analysis of the first vote shows
that the affirmative wag cast by thirty
five r- publicans, two silver republicans,
Jones of Nevada and Mantle and one
democrat, Mc.Enery.
The negative vote was cast by twenty
five democrats, two populists, Harris of
Kansas and Turner, and one silver re
publican, Cannon. Eight republicans
were paired for the bill and eight demo
crats against ic. The senators present
and not voting were: Populists five,
via., Allen, Butler, Heitfeld, Kyle and
Stewart; silver re. ublicans, two via ,
Teller and Pettigrew.
Following the passage of the bill a
resolution was agreed to asking the
house for a conference, and Senators
Allison, Aldrich, Piatt of Connecticut,
Burrows, Jones of v evada, Ve.it, Jones
of Aakansas and White were named as
conferees on the part of the senate.
Oaich One of H e 1 ooiln Gang.
Ottumwa, la., July 8. James H.
Black, one of the Doolin gang, was capt
ured at the home of his grandfather
near here yesterday. He will be taken
to Guthrie, Okla., where the gang broke
jail.
New York .lurler Case-
New York, July 8, Positive identifi
cation of the man arrested Tuesday
night as Martin Thorn, the alleged con
federate in the murder and dismember
ment of William Guldensuppe, was
made yesterday. Mrs. Haften of Wood
side, L. I., called at the police station,
and after seeing Thorn, said she had
seen him about the house at Woodside
wh ere Gusdensuppe is supposed to have
been butchered
Acting Inspector ''Brien, said to-day
that he had in his possession a full con
fession from Thorne, admitting that he
had murdered Guldensuppe, and giving
all the details of the crime.
Killed iirolherio Savn 1 atba
St. Louts, July 8. Herb, it i.drriwull
was siiot and killed by his brother. Dr.
Richard Cornwall, between 8 and 9
o'clock yesterday morning at the tonic
beer depot of their father, Dr. John C.
Cornwall, 1109 North Broadway. It an.
pears tbst Herhert Cornwall was a very
dissolute young man, and his father
chided him for persisting in his had
hab'its. This enraged him and he as
saulted his father who is old and feeble.
Dr Richard Cornwall interfered in be
half of his father, and a fight ensued be
tween hirn and Herbert, in which the
latter was shot five times and had had
his head and face badly mashed by b
ing heated by a stone jug. He died in
very few minutes. Dr. Cornwall stir
rendered to the police and was locked
up. He is a practicing physician of
Kansas City.
Down into the Klver.
Bay Citv, Mich., July 8. -An inter
urban electric car bound for Saginaw
from this city crashed through the open
draw of the high iron bridge two miles
south of this city at 11 o'clock yesterday
and the seven pasengers were carried
down into the river. A woman and
th-ee children from this city were
drowned. Tbe three other passengers
were men. The latter were seriously
injured, bnt will recover. The river
W" d7eTd Dd th bdy ' th" '""N'
ItAlW l.M) WINU.
Cnlta toGl MinnrMta Paopia C
able Troubla.
DuM'Tn, Minn., July 9. Fourteen
people are now known to have been
killed in the tornado and cloudburst in
this section of Minnesota Wednoday
and yesterday. Th- storm was general
ani it is impossible to estimate the
amount of damage with any degree of
certainty. The tornado, which was
central near Glenwood, was the worst
! that ever Btruck the state. The telegraph
: lines are down for seventy-five miles
j each side of there and particu'ars are
i hard to get. The list at Glenwood, so
J far as known is as follows :
Lavan Toliff.
Thomas Morrow.
Mrs. Samuel Morrow,
Samuel Morrow.
Winnie Morrow.
Oswald M'Gowan.
Aside from these Alfred Morrow and
a one-year-old baby were probably fatal
ly in jund.
The trainmen say a number of other
houses were blown from their founda
tions by the storm and undoubtedly
more lives lo3t.
William Noriis and wife are reported
lo have been killed. Railroad traffic is
paralyzed because of the heavy fall of
rain. It came so suddenly and so fiei-ce-1
in some places that many trains ran
into washouts before they had any in
timation of danger.
A bad wreck on Great Northern road
is reported about eight miles west of frit.
Cloud, twenty freight cars being ditched.
Charles Washburn was instantly killed
and W. H. Pepper, the engineer of the
, train was seriously injured.
The Great Northern west bound pas
senger train, which left St. Cloud last
night, was caught between two washouts
and lay for twelve hours. The train
was crowded with passengers, who very
narrowly escaped death.
Hector, Minn., is under water about
a foot and damage to the amount of $50,
000 has been done. Straight river at
Fairbault rose twenty feet and was
within two feet of the danger line. A
number of railroad and wagon bridges
have gone out.
Japan D'scusteg Force.
Saw Fbancisco, July 9 The Japan
Herald, commenting editorially on the
Hawaiian situation, says :
"Unless Japan's claims are promptly
met and a promise oi good behavior
promptly made regarding the Sandwich
islands ve will soon hear that the
flag of Japan has replaced that of the
present shaky republic. The Japanese
government has a just claim against the
Hawaiian republic. That the Japanese
will press tbe claim there isJittle doubt.
Who will take sides with Hawaii?
America. What will be the result?
With Japan's strong fleet of topedo
boats, America could not land a single
man in the Hawaiian islands. They
would meet the fate of the Chinese on
board the Kow-Shong in tbe late war."
Iudi mnlty Must ba Paid.
Washington, July 9. The senate
committee on foreign relations, through
Senator Lodge, adopted a resolution in
structing the president to take such
measures as he may deem necess
ary to obtain indemnity frcm the Span
ish government for the wrongs and in
juries suffered by August Bolton and
Guetave Richellieu, two naturalized
American citizens, by reason of their
wrongful arrest by Spanish authorities
at Santiage de Cuba in 1895. The reso
lution further authorizes the president
to employ such means or exercise such
power as may be necessary. The reso
lution is based upan the disclosures
made in correspondence forwarded to
the senate by the president last April in
which it is made to appear, according to
the preamble of the resolution reported
today by Senator Lodge that "all the
diplomatic efforts of the government of
tbe United States exerted for an amica
ble adjustment and payment of a just
indemnity have proved entirely unavail
ing." The resolution reported is considered
by tbe members of the committee an
important step and is construed as an
other intimation from the committee
that force should, if necessary, be used
in protecting Americans in Cuba.
The amount of indemnity asked in
10,000 each.
Gills Burned to Death.
Springfield, p., July 9 Two daugh
ters, aged six and eight, of David Hart
man, farmer, were burned to death by
an explosion of coal oil, whi'e starting a
fire.
ChrlHtlnn Union Meeting
Dktkoit, Mich., July 9 Young peo
ple representing nearly all the state of
the union, to the number of over 1,000,
were present last evening at the open
ing session of the eighth annual conven
tion of the young people's Christian
nnion of the Universalist churches.
Welcoming addresses were followed by
the routine work of the organization.
The convention then adjourned until
today.
Commit Dreadful Act.
St. Pktkksburo, July 9. The Russian
government has decided not to proceed
with the trial of Feodore Kova left", the
chief actor in the dreadful immuring
tragedy near Tiraspol, where the polio
discovered some weeks ago the bodies 0
aiz persons, members of tbe fanatical
act known aa tbe raskalnlkl, who had
been walled up alive by Kovaleff that
they might secure salvation by self Ioh
notation. Kovaleff will be interned ia
a rttnoU convent.