The Red Cloud chief. (Red Cloud, Webster Co., Neb.) 1873-1923, June 26, 1891, Image 2

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THE BED CLOUD CHIEF.
m
A. O. HOIMIR, Punllahar.
BED CLOUD. - -
NEBRASKA.
CURRENT COMMENT.
The flow of lava from Mount Vtnu
vius has ceased very Buddenly and un
expectedly.
French imports and export lari
'..
decreased in May over the same month
of last year.
State ComptroixAi CoLoiir, of .Cali
fornia, says he will not sign the waad
rants for the world's fair.
There will be no autumn session of
the British parliament -When it ad
journs it will be to January.
The rate war between Kansas City
and Chicago has been opened. The Chi
cago & Alton is in the lead, and it prom
ises to make a bitter fight.
Because of a rebuke for securing tho
abolition of bells in the Roman Catholic
charch at rriarend, European Turkey,
the Austrian consul, Herr Pclinski, has
committed suicide.
At a meeting of New York Jewish
ministers a complaint was made that
the government had taken no action
in regard to the hardship of Jews in
Russia, whereupon Dr. Maez stated
that Secretary Blaine had sent letters
to St Petersburg which could not have
been stronger had he been a. Jew him
self. The guardian of the five minor chil
dren of the late Charles Achcnhcim has
entered suit at Pittsburgh, Pa., in their
behalf against the Baltimore & Ohio
Railroad Co. for $100,000 damages for
the death of their father. Achcnhcim
was killed in a wreck on the Baltimore
& Ohio railroad June 10, 18'JO, while on
his way from Baltimore to Pittsburgh.
Hon. J. A. Chapleait has
joined the
new Canadian ministry on
condition
that he becomes minister of railways
after tho session. The railway depart
ment will in the meantime be admin
istered by Hon. Mackenzie Bowell, ex
minister of customs. Abbott, premier
elect becomes president of the privy
council. Sir John Thompson will lead
the lower house.
The world's fair fine art building, it
has been definitely decided, is to be put
in Jackson park instead of on the lake
front down town several miles away.
This places the whole exposition at last
on a single site. A new chief of the
horticultural department has been con
firmed by the board of control. Com
missioner William Forsythe, of Cali
fornia, is the man. The local directors
must yet pass upon him, but his success
is said to be assured.
B Kit i.i N advices state that at a
ministerial conference held there,
the recognition of the Chilian in
surgents was tho subject of dis
cussion. Although no decision was
arrived at it is said that the
course of the United States in re
gard to the Itata has aroused deep
anxiety in Berlin, it being feared that
Balmaccda's government will grant
more favorable commercial conditions
for the United StateB to the detriment
of European countries.
Reports presented in the British par
liament for use in the debate on the
factories bill show that th recom
mendations of the Berlin labor confed
eration have been applied in Germany,
Belgium, Holland and tho Scandinavian
countries and partly in France, Switzer
land and Germany. The concensus of
the reports show that the legislation
for protection of women and children
is everywhere progressing. Most coun
tries also are promoting schemes for
the insurance of workmen.
The Duchess of Castro Enriguez, who
is under arrest in Madrid for maltreat
ing her maid servant was arrested
whilo dining in her palaee in the Callc
A renal and taken to prison in a cab late
at night in order to avoid violent dem
onstrations. Bail was refused her, but
she was permitted to have her children
with her in the common jail The ill
treated servant is a child who was en
gaged from a foundling hospital. She
fled from her employer after four days
of ill usage, being found in the streets
by tho police coverod with bruises and
sores.
The jury at Philadelphia in the suit
of Meyer fc Dickinson against the gov
ernment to recover excess of duties
levied on material used as hat trimmings
returned a -verdict of S43-.40 for the
plaintiffs. The government at once
appealed to the supreme court By
the verdict the government is made
liable for from $20,000,000 to $30,000,000,
collected in duties from importers of
millinery materials in various parts
of the country. The suit of Meyer A
Dickinson was a test case, and was in
tended to test the right of the govern
ment to collect duties on goods in dis
pute. Late advices from Zanzibar state
that reports from Mozambique repre
sent growing hostility among the na
tives to Portuguese rule. The chief,
Kuniisa, who was recently conquered
and baptized with all his warriors by a
Portuguese missionary, and who at that
'time discarded all but one wife, has
pulled down the Portuguese flag from
his kraal and taken all his wives back
again and with his fighting men threat
ens to fight any Portuguese who may
invade his dominions. The Portuguese
missionary escaped from a perilous ex
perience, having been nearly torn to
pieces by Kumiss's wives, who were
enraged at him for the separation from
their husband.
Capt. Frank Baldwin, of the Fif
teenth infantry, has returned to Chica
go from Pine Ridge, whither he had
gone to attend a meeting of the com
missioners sent to mark the dividing
line between jthe Rosebud and Pine
RidgVagencies. Twenty-seven chiefs
met the, commissioners, and Capt
Baldwin says there will be no friction
regarding the dividing line, and that
the OgalUlas will agree to have the
line moved sixteen miles to its proper
place. After the meeting 600 Brules
held as prisoners of war since the In
dianiwar will be released. The Indians,
Capt Baldwin says, are well contented.
Their rations are liberal and what the
specifications call for.
A Vienna dispatch says that the em
peror recently spent a day in seclusion,
it "being the twtaty-fourth anniversary
of the death of his brother Ferdinand
Maximilian, 'emperor of Mexico, who
was executed by shooting ajt Queretaro.
The subject of a renewal of diplomatic
relations between Mexico and Austria
was recently broached in Vienna aad
the imperial ministry was strongly in
clined to favor the proposition. The
emperor himself, however, pat a firm
veto mponTtbe project aad ahowed by
the emphasis of his actios that he never
would forgive Mexico for the death of
his brother. With the death of Frwcia
f-Jeeef, however, the persoaaltohjee
i& will dkapper, as the crown will
them go to a nephew to whom the death,
of Maximilian will be a matter of hfe-
t,
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
Gleaned By Telegraph sod Matt.
rasONAL AND POLITICAL.
The O'Gorman Mahon of Ireland is
dead. He entered the British parlia
ment in 1830.
Gen. Grosvenor has resigned riis po
sition on the immigration commission
deputed to visit Europe.
"Ar J.U j-J""e "a P WBa k
the two reptfW Kan "papers e- king-1
fisher, Ok. the New World and Jour
nal. They will be consolidated aad the
publication continued under the name
of the Kiarfisher Free Press.
" Bo .V.1t-..- " aYt .
17th nominated Major MeKialey for
governor.
A ttessel from Jacmel brings a re
port that President Hlppolyte was assas
sinated after the recent revolt in HaytL
Ex-Governor Harrison Ludinoton
died at Milwaukee on the 17th, aged 78.
Gen. Charles II. Grosvenoh, of Ohio,
has been appointed an agent of the
treasury department to visit Europe in
the interest of the world's fair.
Mr. Pabnell has been ordered to
pay the sum of $3,500 as costs in the
O'Shea case.
Ex-Chief Justice Sherwood, of Mich
igan, has almost totally lost his mind
and a guardian has been applied for at
Kalamazoo.
The anniversary of the battle of
Bunker Hill was generally observed on
the 17th at Boston. Gov. Bell, of New
Hampshire, delivered the address.
Rev. Isaac Nicholson, of Philadel
phia, has been elected bishop of the
Episcopal diocese of Milwaukee on the
eleventh ballot His election is re
garded as a victory for the high church
men. Minister Carvalho's budget for
Portugal proposes the adoption of a
gold and silver standard; raises the im
port duty on alcohol, and suggests de
partmental reforms for reducing ex
penditures. Gen. John M. Schofield was married
at Keokuk, la., on the 18th to Miss
Gcorgic Kilboiirne.
Elaine Goodale, the poetess, was
married at New York on the 18th to
Dr. Charles A. Eastman, a full blood
Sioux Indian.
The President and Mrs. Harrison and
their grandchildren have left Washing
ton for Cape May, accompanied by Mrs.
Dimmick, Mrs. Williams and Miss War
field. Gov. Pattison, of Pennsylvania, has
vetoed the compulsory education bill,
passed by the recent legislature.
Gen. Aliiert Pike's will makes the
Scottish Rite Masons of the southern
jurisdiction his lcneficiary.
President ia Fonbeca, of Brazil,
proposes to visit Europe in a short
time.
John P. Adriance, head of the Buck
eye mower and reaper works, died in
Poughkeepsic, N. Y.
Advices from Sonora convoy the in
formation that Mexican cavalry pur
sued the Apaches who killed "Catchum
and committed other depredations re
cently '200 miles without sighting them,
though they recovered Catchum's horse.
The pursuit has been abandoned.
The Arabs in Yemen have again de
feated the Turkish troops and have cut
the telegraph wires.
MISCELLANEOUS.
The window glass combine has de
cided to advance prices.
Tin: census returns for England and
Wales indicate that the population of
the countries will aggregate 29,000,000,
an increase in the past ten years of 3,
000,000. The Pittsburgh end of the Sixth
street bridge connecting with Alle
gheny has been burned.
The village of Cassellman, Ont, was
reported on fire.
The supreme lodge, A. O. U. W., met
at Detroit, Mich., on the 10th.
The Times of India asserts that more
than one-third of the pilgrims who go
from Bombay to Mecca never return
that they die owing to overcrowding on
on the steamers or disease or violence
on the land journey from Jcdda.
Seabrioht, N. J., has been devastated
by fire. Loss, $500,000.
The number of killed in the railway
bridge accident in the canton of Basle,
Switzerland, numbered 130. Hundreds
wero injured.
Slavin easily defeated Kilrain in the
recent prize fight at Hobokcn, N. J.
R. YV. Duncan fc Co., commission
merchants, Chicago, have closed up
business.
Great damage was done at Ncuman
ville. Green county, Tenn., by a cloud
burst The flood carried off a 1,500
pound post office safe.
The corn crop of Texas is estimated
to be in shape to yield from forty to
sixty bushels per acre.
Asduut Milton Forton, Jr., a stu
dent at the Renssalacr institute of Troy,
N. Y., was drowned while bathing in
the Mohawk river. His home was at
Los Angeles, Cat, and he was a mem
ber of the class of 94.
A deaf and dumb man who was ar
rested In the village of Brabin, Austria,
for vagrancy on May 23 and who was
put in a cell was forgotten by the
police from the time he was incarcer
ated until June 1 when the cell being
searched it was ...und that he had died
of starvation and thc body had been
eaten by rats.
It is probable that 22,000 mill opera
tives of Fall River, .Mass., will be asked
to submit to a reduction in wages, pos
sibly amounting to 10 per cent
Facts have been revealed that lead
those interested in the search for Gid
eon W. Marsh, the fugitive president of
the Keystone bank, to believe that he
is in Brazil by this time. He is believed
to have sailed for that country May 20,
the day following his disappearance
from Philadelphia.
Belinda, a six-year-old daughter of
Eugene Rourke, of Red Rock, sixty
miles east of Trinidad, CoL, while play
ing among the rocks was bitten by a
rattlesnake. All efforts to counteract
the influence of the poison were ana
vailing. The wreck of a Milwaukee passenger
train at Coon rapids, la, was caused
by miscreants who placed a tie oa the
track.
The confederate monument at Pensa
cola, Fla, was unveiled on the 17th be
fore a great assemblage.
McCrvstol, the New Orleans jury
briber, has been sentenced to one year
in the penitentiary for trying to bribe
Hennessy talesman McCabe.
Surr is to be brought against Andrew
Carnegie and the rest of the South Fork
Hunting and Fishing club for damages
on account of the celebrated Johnstown
floods.
Three men were injured in Yonkers,
N. Y., by a gas explosion. Five per
sons in the city station barely escaped
asphyxiation at the same time.
A waterspout fell on the mountains
in which is situated the Concepcion sil
ver mine, in the state of San Luis Potosi,
Mexico. Twenty-three persons were
killed
Thk Preskleat has denied the appli
cation for a pardon ia the case of fid
ward Belden, convicted ia Kansas of
murder aad sentenced to be hanged
June 26.
John McLean Co., wholesale
milliners of Montreal, Can., hare de
cided to go into liquidation. The 1
bilitles are , aad the
Jacor Schede has been hanged at
Bridgeport, Conn. He murdered a
constable named Drmker at New Cana
an while resisting arrest f
Tax treasurer's atatyeeat snows taat
the cash oeiaacaiefjpM,?. .
-atefc RaLUM ondeooslt with the
national banks aad 9a,359ttte is In
fractional silver, dedactiag which items
the net cash aalaaee iabr$L235,eoe,
the lowest figure yetieaenei, -,
Rumors in circulation la London oTa
revolatkm ia Portugal were caper
atoded
FrvKchil
children beloaaiair to a family
aaaed Lachaace were pUyinn;in a boat
on the St Lawreace river near rorx
Neaf, a few miles from Quebec, whan
waves from a passing steamer caMd
the boat to fill aad four of the children
were drowned.
Conductors oa the Kaaaaa City Cable
Co. liaea have strack because of the
discharge of Frank Leatz and other
conductors.
It k reported that a tornado occurred
at Avon, in the valley of the Farming
ton river, Conn., which did great dam
age and which wounded or killed three
persons.
The Missouri Pacific directors in ses
sion in New York have declared the
regular quarterly dividend of 1 per
cent
Suit is to be brought against Andrew
Carnegie and the rest of the South Fork
Hunting and Fishing club for damages
on account of the celebrated Johnstown
floods.
E. T. Jordan, natural gas inspector
for Indiana, has returned from Findlay,
0., and reports a heavy loss of both
pressure and volume of gas-in all wells
there. He predicts that in two years
there will be no gas ia Findlay for
manufacturing.
C. F. Gilrert, with his wife and
child, Mrs. Livingstone and Mrs. Dick
crson, started down the river at Derby,
Conn., in a sailboat Nothing was
seen or heard of them afterward.
Great excitement prevailed.
Secretary Noble has declined to in
terfere in favor of the intruders on
Chickasaw lands.
Grasshoppers are reported in large
quantities in Otter Tail county, Minn.,
and much damage will result to crops.
The rapid advance in the price of sil
ver bullion is thought to be due to a
French pool.
The steamer Queen from Sitka brings
news of the drowning of Lieut Robin
son and four of' the crew of the Bear,
and A. C. Moore, of the Russell party,
while the party were trying to make a
landing in Icy bay with the Russcll-Mt
St Elias party.
Utica, I1L, has been swept by a
cloudburst Damage amounted to $150,
000. An Illinois Central fast express was
ditched at Kenner, La, on tho night of
the lVth. fjlx persons were said to be
killed and fifteen or twenty injured.
Opposite Golconda, 111., Will H.
Howischcr and Willie Kreipke, both
under 30, and two colored men were
drowned by the overturning of their
skiff in a sudden windstorm.
Eastern Arkansas has been visited
by a disastrous storm. Two or three
lives were lost
Business failures (Dun's report) for
the seven days ended June 18 numbered
253, compared with 244 the previous
week and 190 the corresponding week
of last year.
The secretarjnof the interior has ap
proved the contract for repairing the
Casa Grande, a prehistoric ruin near
Gila river in Arizona The sum of $2,
000 was appropriated by the last con
gress. Railway telegraphers have elected
the following officers: A. D. Thurston,
of Vinton, Ia, grand chief telegrapher;
S. O. Fox, of Vinton, Ia, grand secre
tary and treasurer; D. G. Ramsey, of
East St Louis, assistant grand chief
telegrapher; J. A. Lecanda, of Celaya,
Mexico, grand senior telegrapher.
Ten artesian wells for irrigation pur
poses are to be drilled about Aberdeen,
S. D., as soon as possible.
At a barn raising near Thornton,
Can., two men were crushed to death
by the fall of a beam.
The Nestor block at Marquette,
Mich., containing four stores and a
number of law offices, was destroyed
by fire. The loss was $150,000. Several
firemen were hurt
Sam Johnson, colored, was hanged
at Charleston, W. Vs., for assaulting
Alice Bailey, a white girl, on April 4.
Herr Most, having lost his appeal,
was resentenced at New York on the
19th to one year's imprisonment
Br a fall of slate in a coal mine near
Des Moines, Ia, Joseph Wasky and his
son William were killed.
The National cordage trust of New
York is said to have bought up all the
cordage works of Canada for $3,000,000.
In a collision between freight trains
at a junction in Upper Sandusky, O.,
many cars were wrecked and other
damage done. No lives were lost
jLDDmOHAIi
jennie urossman, aged 22 years, a
Hungarian; Katie Keefe, aged 17, and
Agnes Sears, aged 18, the latter two
Irish girls, were found dead in bed in
their room at 10 East Eighty-sixth
street New York. They had been
suffocated by gas.
The Siecle of Paris says the cabinets
of Europe are now discussing the ex
pediency of asking for united action
with a view to restoring order in HaytL
Ex-Senator McDonald, the demo
cratic leader of Indiana, died at Indian
apolis on the 21st
Clearing house returns for the week
ended Jane 20 showed an average de
crease of 1L2 compared with the corre
sponding week of last year. Ia New
York the decrease was 15.0.
An excursion train from Cleveland,
O, jumped the track about fifteen miles
west of that city on the afternoon of
the 21st Only one person was killed,
but many were injured, .
Financial matters were extremely
quiet in Europe during the week ended
June 30. In London American railroads
showed a tendency to Improve.
It was reported that a revolution
took place between President Balm a-
ceda's troops at Coqulmbo, aad that the
insurgents killed fonr of their officers.
Stkathmeatb won the Chicago derby
on tne set uurmg me race tiiga
Tariff fell dead.
A partt of colored picnickers were
upset while returning in. a boat at Cur
tis creek, Baltimore, Md, oa the 20th.
Seven of them were drowned.
Carer Justice Joseph R. Reed, of the
recently created court of private land
claims, and his four associates, will
meet in Denver. Jaly L The session is
for the purpose of organizing the court,
aad three officers will be appointed.
The firm of Walters Hodges, doing
basiaess under the aame of the Da
baaue (la)' Brass aad Metal Co.. has
failed There are huge eastern cred
itors of the firm. The .total liabilities
wRl aggregate S13S,afa. The gross as
sets are aot over $7, See.
The French am busdor to the holy
see has preseafced to the pope a letter
from M. Caraot, hi which the preskleat
has expressed his high appreciation of
the pope's eacyclical oa social qaee-
Thxre was a tornado at Cairo. HI..
am the Slat, dsmsgiac maay buOdiags.
In families of A. B, Fkmss, Daa
Whitehead, Joseph Sammers, J. West
aad Bea Smith were poisoned at Perm,
lad, by eatiag imported
Twelve persons were taken
111 aad tour were aa a eritkal
BsiSKA STATE NEWa
the nkfht of the lth a terrible
visited portions of the stats
it loaalitiss mach nawafiai
done. In the vicinity af Norfolk
it was very severe. At Meadow Grove
aad Battle Creek it was ia the aatare
of a cloud-burst the people of Meadow
Mtfbve beinr compelled to leave their
Ihomes in boats and rudely constructed
raits to save their uvea, tae water Be
ing several feet deep ia the atreeta
Great damage was done to crops. John
Lorensen a farmer living eight miles
east of Neligh, while attempting to
cross a flooded ravine ia his wagon was
drowsed A large portion of Broken
Bow was under water, aad at Nordea
two horses were killed byllghtniag.
Near Humphrey Bartholomew Bogus,
a farmer, was killed byllghtniag while
ia the field His horses were also
killed Much damage was done ia the
vicinity of Niobrara. At Tyndall
things were torn up in terrible shape,
while at Tilden the railroad track was
torn up for half a mile, sidewalks swept
sway and dwelling houses flooded
Three children were drowned about
fifteen miles southwest of the town,
and at Orleans trains were all stopped,
crops badly damaged and a number of
bridges washed out At Palmer the
wife and grandmother of Vaclar Lanton
were struck by lightning and killed
MlseeUaaeoaa.
Asa V. Uinkle was lately arrested at
Big Springs on the charge of stealing
twelve tons of coal from the Union Pa
cific cars at that place.
A heavy storm recently did much
damage to crops in the vicinity of Elm
Creek. The hail was very destructive
to the growing crops.
Err Pir -and Billy Ewing, aged
about 17 years, were arrested at Broken
Bow recently on the charge of burglar
izing Wilson Hewitt's hardware store.
George Coles, living near Bingham,
was recently called from his house by
a party of seven or eight men and noti
fied that he and J. W. Anderson must
leave the country on penalty of death.
The two men, it seems, had been active
in assisting a man to recover a pair of
stolen horses, and consequently ob
noxious to certain parties.
In the criminal court at Omaha the
other day John Campion pleaded guilty
to a charge of embezzling $5,400 from
the Consolidated Tank Line Co., and
was sentenced to three years' imprison
ment in the penitentiary. Campion,
who was employed by the company a
bookkeeper, was prominent In religious
circles previous to the discovery of hit
crime.
Tns Central Nebraska national bank
at Broken Bow has been closed by
United States. Bank Examiner Mc
Hughes, of Iowa, who acted under in
structions from the comptroller of the
currency at Washington. The bank's
financial embarrassment had its origin
in the failure of W. II. Cline a few
months ago, in which the bank was 8
heavy loser.
It was recently reported that the
towns of Bennet and Douglas were
quarantined because of a number ol
cases of smallpox in each place. There
were six persons down with the disease
at Bennet two at Douglas and four at
Palmyra. There was a general scare in
that section of tho country, as hundreds
of persons had been exposed. The
public schools were closed.
A most brutal case of cruelty to ani
mals was unearthed at Beatrice a feu
days ago, where one Way ham was
charged with cutting out a portion of
his cow's tongue in a fit of anger.
Way ham claimed that the act was not
done under the impulse of anger, but
he performed the operation to prevent
tne cow irom milking herself. It u
probable that the case will yet get in
to court
The coroner's jury which held an in
quest on the body of Russell Newton,
whose suicide recently occurred neai
Grant found that ho came to his death
from a pistol shot fired by his own
hand. Newton and another boy took a
hand car from the station house at
Madrid and left it on the track. The
car was struck by a passenger train,
doing some damage. This is supposed
to have been the cause of the suicide.
The school at West Emerick, Madi
son county, is situated at the intersec
tion of two small creeks. During a re
cent storm the water rose to such a
height that it was pouring into the win
dows when the teacher and scholars
attempted their escape. Three chil
dren, however, were drowned, their
names being Miles Hamlin and Cox,
aged from eight to eleven years. Young
Miles saved the life of his teacher and
several of the scholars before he was
drowned Another son of Mr. Miles
drifted about eighty rods and finally
saved his lfe by clinging to a mudmill
tower until the water subsided.
At the recent meeting of the regents
of the state university, the resignations
of Profs. Edgren, Howard and Warner
were accepted It was decided to open
the law school with the next fall term.
Prof. Horton was relieved from the
office of professor of chemistry and re
quested to turn over all the property of
that department to the professor of
chemistry. Steps were taken to create
a course of instruction in agriculture.
A course of study in electrical engi
neering was adopted and an Instructor
will be chosen in that branch. A com
mittee was appointed to report a plan
for the reorganization of the experi
mental station. It was also decided to
proceed with plans for improving the
grounds and laying sidewalks.
The charter of the Nebraska City
Starch Co. has been filed with the coun
ty clerk. . The. object is to manufacture
starch and .-fec1 stock. The capital
stock is $100,000. The shareholders rep
resent $1,500,000. Work will be" com
menced on the 'building as soon as the
site is selected! wl
O. B. Runnells lately sustained a
badly mashed leg by a vicious dehorned
bull near Beatrice while undertaking
to remove some catttle from a pasture
southwest of. the city limits. His in
juries were so severe as to necessitate
the amputation of his leg below the
knee. His condition was considered
precarious. .. ,
Bert Oldrotd, of Omaha, aa express
messenger, was killed by the recent
wreck oa the"rMilwsukee express at
Coon Rapids, la. Clarence Grable, f
Omaha, was badly hurt
The total receipts of all the prst of
fices ia Nebraska for the past year were
$B93.9a.97, aad the total expeaditaee
$1,778,016.97, the expenditures exceed
ing the receipts by $716,955.10.
The wife of Peter Laughlia. ef Co
lumbus, recently eloped with M. W.
Corwin. a sewing machine ageat
One niglit recently Lars Peterson
started to visit a young lady Bear Blair
aad has aot been heard of since.
John Floor, aged 55 years, recently
committed" suicide at South Omaha by
shooting himself. He leaves a wife
sad son. Temporary insanity was the
The other aight Frank Truabell got
into a dispute with Hattie Perry at her
house Ia Columbus, aad as he waslear-
iar the woman shot him hi the
fiktiac a painful but net fata!
Tax nsswted valuation of Cedar
county, as shown by completed as
sessors' returns, is $t56.S3. This is
aa iacrease of more than f lSu.aw evar
last year's valuation, aad oa a lower
NEB
ARf
St
A YCUNQ DELUGE.
OlStrriMMTWM By a
" Trmpmtf. $&r
. Fort Scott, Kaa. Juae . A disas
trous raias4arjhitrack tys.esamuaity
last aight at o'clock aad vat volumes
of water fell to the damage of growiag
crops, while it is probable several lives
were lost
Surface water swelled the streams,
which rua through and surround this
city out of all proportioaa.v'aad the
large daau of Mead Jk Hartmann aad
H. H. Lamb broke about flfteea min
utes after the storm began. The bot
tom land settlements were completely
flooded
Hoases were swept away like straws
aad His feared that assay lives have
beealost
The water fas what is kaowa as Beck
rua bottoms is faUr a mile in width.
Numbers of atea, women aad childrea
can be seea oa roof tops and in trees,
but it is impossible to reach them.
UTICA RCLNED.
Ottawa, II!., June aa Utica, the lit
tle cement and brick manufacturing
town, and the seat of many cozy and
pretty homes, was devastated by a
cloudburst yesterday.
The cloud broke just north of town,
over a high bluff, and came into the
valley with a roar that created a panic
and caused the inhabitants to rush be
fore it and seek shelter upon high
ground
Buildings were shaken from their
foundations, sidewalks torn up and
fences and outhouses carried away.
No lives were lost and the water soon
receded Not a dwelling or place of
business escaped damage and house
hold goods to the value of many thou
sands of dollars were ruined. Beauti
ful lawns were despoiled and sand and
mnd to the depth of several inches cov
ered the floors and carpet of dwellings.
In the manufacturing portion of the
place a great loss was sustained At
the Utica fire brick works the fires were
put out and the stock in the kilns
ruined The cement company also lost
heavily.
The total loss, it ia thought will ag
gregate $150,000.
RAIN. MAIL AND A CYCLONE.
Chanute, Kan., JnneSO. At 7 o'clock
last evening the worst wind and rain
storm that ever vLnlted this section of
Kansas struck this town, lasting about
forty minutes. The water fell In per
fect sheets, obscuring the view of build
ings from the opposite side of the street
Several buildings were very badly dam
aged, among them being the Presbyte
rian church.
About 2,000 acres of wheat on tho
bottom of the Neosho river east of the
city is given up as a total loss, all being
blown down.
THE WORST EVER KNOWN.
Arkansas City, Kan., June 20. The
hailstorm which visited this section
last evening was the worst ever known
here. Balls of ice fell for a half hour,
many of them thirteen inches in cir
cumference, and few being smaller
than a walnut Windows were broken
in one-fourth of the houses in the city
and other damage done.
Southwest of here near the state line
a cyclone did great damage to property,
but no persons were injured.
PEATn ANI RUIN IN ARKANSAS.
Little Rock, Ark., June U0. A de
structive storm passed over eastern
Arkansas yesterday morning. Houses
were unroofed and blown down, fences
carried away and a large area of tim
ber laid waste.
Mrs. Julia Shadrick was killed by a
falling tree and John Stanley, who was
hauling tics in the woods, was crushed
beneath falling timbers.
Two boys named Hollingsworth are
missing and it is feared have been
killed in the woods.
FARMER IlUOWNEI).
. Omaha, Neb., June 20. The heaviest
rainfall experienced within twenty
eight years in Nebraska fell at Neligh
yesterday, over five and one-hnlf inches
coming down within three hours.
Drains and ravines became torrents
and brooks became rivers. John Loren
sen, a farmer, was washed from his
wagon and drowned while crossing a
flooded ravine.
THREE CHILUHRN PROWNEH.
TiLDEN, Neb, June 20. Three chil
ilren living in Emerick township, about
fifteen miles southeast of here, were
drowned last night during the storm
while trying to reach the house from
school. A ravine which the children
were accustomed to cross suddenly filled
with the flood washing them away.
TO SAVE JOHNSTOWN.
Ptaas te Prevent InaixUtlnn In the
Fat are.
Johnstown, Pa, June 2a For sev
eral months J. J. Cross, of New York,
rivil engineer, has been making a care
ful survey of tho city of Johnstown,
the Concmaugh and Stony Creek rivers
and all its tributaries in order to
devise means to prevent the recur
rence of another flood and avoid
regular inundations of the city. His re
port was presented at a mass meeting
of citizens, officials of the Cambria Iron
company aad all leading business men
being present It recommends the
expenditure of $200,000 in order to
make life and property safe in the
city. The Johnstown lumber log boom
was a menace to the city and should lie
rebuilt or removed The greatest point
of danger lies in the stone bridge
(famous ia the flood), which, the re
port stated, did not have sufficient
waterway to carry off ordinary fresh
ets and backed spring floods into the
town.
JehMtew rtotx! HmWrrm to Use.
Johnstown, Pa, Jane 2a Suit is
about to be brought against the South
fork Fishing club, of Pittsburgh, in
which Andrew Carnegie aad others
were members, by a number of those
who suffered in "the great flood J. J.
Strayer is at the head of the movement
which will be supported by a large
number of others. They have retained
CoL W. D. Moore, of Pittsburgh, as
taeiraUorney. aad the parties feel con
adeat of recovering ia fall for damages
and losses. If this movement is success
ful there is no telling where it will
stop.
TmJnrr
Chicago, June 28. The jary ia the
of State Senator Solomon vaa
Praag. on trial is the federal court oa a
charge of subornation of perjury ia tae
procurement of aaturalixation papers
for aliens, returned into court aad re
ported that they were unable to agree
upea a verdict The jury was dis-
It Slxtv livt
Cm r or Mexico, Juae 21. Latest ad-
about the cloudburst ea Suadsy
oa Ceaceprioa mountain, ia the state of
Saa Luis Potosi. are to the effect that
at least sixty lives were lost
rinstiam.
LonsTiiXa. Kt.. Jaae 3. The East
Tennessee. Virginia A Georgia Kailraad
Co, has applied to the federal court for
protection against sc veateea hrahessea.
who hare strack for higher wages.
The eeasfany claims that the sirasers
have interfered asrionaty with their
tar an
Jane Ml The repubUeaa
ittea last aight adopted
srtmiac approval of the
adopted by the Ohio ceuvea
i of the atsninatiw ef Maj.
McKinley.
NxwYoaav
I
STORMS.
a c it rMt itr
Tsaifl n Bm trsitlw hi IHMn
mm yw jMwr-rirtjr Lit Utt U
Sealeo.
Peoria, III. June A fierce rala
storm swept through the Illinois river
valley doiag great damage to crops,
gardena and fences. Ia Hilton, a assail
town across the river from Peoria,
were washed from their founds
The MhabHaate fled to the rail
road grades aad aHU.
The water" rose in the houses at
Fanadale, east of here to a depth of
three feet aad many people narrowly
drowning. Herds of cows,
sheep said hogs were swept
away. Crops throughout a large tract
ia the valley are utterly ruiaed.
Ia Copperas creek valley just across
the line in Fulton county a family
named Gray had a cabin. When the
flood left the banks the rather took hit
three boys aad started to the hills while
the mother refused to leave the house.
When half way across the valley a
floating log struck Orsy snd stunned
him, and the rushing waters drowned
the boys aged 12. 8 and i. The father
narrowly escaped by clinging to the
log. His wife climbed to the roof of
the house snd was rescued
About noon a terrific storm struck
the village of Utica, eight miles went of
this city, and for four hours a solid
sheet of rain fell without ceasing. A
the hours went by and the torrent did
not abate, the water commenced rising
in the streets and the people made
preparations to move to the bluffs at
PittAtichL Heavy rains all along the
Illinois river and in the hills added their
waters to the already inundated village.
A courier who arrived from Utica
shortly after 8 o'clock reported .several
children missing and one drowned
destructive storm in new jkuset.
Paterson, N. J., June Itf. A terrific
wind, hail and electrical storm struck
Hawthorn, a village a few miles north
of this city, from the northwest about
4 o'clock and during the hour of its du
ration the place was in almost total
darkness. Whole fields of wheat and
rye were beaten down and much wa
broken off. Gardens were tripped of
flowers, potato pstches divested of their
plants, which broke off close to the
ground, the scores of beautiful shade
and fruit trees were leveled One of
the finest dwellings in the place was
unroofed and a barn In the rear iplit
in two by the wind. A grapo grower
was left without a vistage of his valua
ble fruit gardena
rirrv ijves lost.
St. Louis, June 19. Additional par
ticulars of the terrible catastrophe
which occurred on Sunday last near the
mining city of Catorce, in the stite of
San Luis Potosi, Mexico, arc to the
effect that the cloud burst on Con
hences mountain and a great stream
poured down the mountain side,
sweeping everything in its course.
The habitations occupied by tho
miners were swept away and the tunnel
of Guadalupo mine filled with water,
drowning several miners who were
working inside. A number of people
living in cliiT dwellings were buried
alive. At Las Cruces and El Potrero
on one side of the mountain and Los
Catorce on the other, fifteen dfad
bodies havu been recovered and
there arc beliuvcd to l many more.
The mining companies' losses are
heavy. Largo quantities of high grade
metal were carried away by the flood at
the Concepcion property. Hundreds of
pack animals were drowned and the
road destroyed
These are the meager details so far
received from this remote district
though people here knowing the local
ity believe that there must hnve been at
least fifty lives lost
CHEYENNE LANDS
First Installment to Open th Territory
Uor Forward.
KlxoriBiir.il, Ok., June 19. The first
installment of the ?U50.(XK) due tho
Cheyenne and Arapahoe Indians under
the act of congress adopted March 3,
1891, went to Darlington yesterday.
The installment consisted of .V).000 sli
ver dollars, and four more of the same
character and magnitudo arc to follow.
Payment of the Indians will commence
at once. It will require the remainder
of this month and probably a portion of
Julv to complete the payment After
this the allotment of lands to these In
dians will commence. The allotting
agents have been on the ground, under
pay, for a month, waiting for the
work to liegin, but the Indians refused
to accept their lands, or have any thing
to do with the allotting agents, until
they had received their pay in cash.
It is estimated that the- allotting will
require from four to six months. After
this the great Cheyenne snd Arapahoe
reservation, embracing some of the
finest lends In the Indian territory and
consisting of 4,000,000 acres, will he
thrown open to homestead settlers.
The set of congress provided thst the
allotment of lands to the Indians should
be made in ninety days from the pasv
sge of the act March 3, 1691, and the
delay in the work is the occasion of
great dissatisfaction among the people
of Oklahoma and the western states
generally.
CoL Co ptoa to hm Trle4.
Washixotox, June 19. In accordance
with the findings of the court of inquiry
in the case of the lynching of Hunt by
United States troops at Fort Walla
Walla. Wash., Secretary iVoctor has
ordered a court martial to try CoL
Charles Corapton, Fourth cavalry, for
negligence in falling to take proper
steps to prevent the lynching. The
court will meet July 1. next
Cotttoa- mm It A .
TorxKA. Kaa., June 19. The United
States savings bank, which failed some
time ago aad which is now in the hand
of Byron Roberts as receiver, has Sled
a motion in the district court tor the
discharge of the receiver, la order that
business might be resumed The mo
tion will be heard Saturday morning.
The bank claims to bare received
eaough subscriptions to its stock since
the failure to pay sll of it isdebted
aess. It is now asserted that it can re
opea with from 911&.&W to SI49.W Is
cash la Its vaults, nearly all the stock
holders having subscribed f or per
eeat additional stock.
TW V
9rt. Josxr. Ma. June It. Omcer
Martin, charged with interrupting aa
oaculatory performsace betweea Miss
Churchill aad her lance, was exoner
ated by the police beard yesterday.
The mother of the girl who made the
com plaiat said they were simply part
hag for the aight according to aa estab
lished custom of which she was cog
nisant The oflcer. on the other hand,
declared that he scharged his gua,
aot far tan asose of alarming the
aelghhorheea, hat that he might cut
short what he believed to ha aa Imprs-
priety betweea the
r
Baat xniME, CoL, J
IX Yes
Mkhler fteraar eveaiaa- whDe
driving m a I aneral
that aLaec, his horse
away,
out of
His
a rude, !ajurissJ so severely
thai he
FIERCE
Tnrte 1 T 1
Xew OauAJH. June IH Bernard
Claaat. aaavictad aasae days age ef
hai'mcaU ptrdto bribe Tales Juror
Miliary at Atwaed in the Hwmwary
saae. was seateaeed by Judge Marr to
am jaar in the seaitsatiaiy.
LIGHTNING'S WORK.
MMi
Sr. Loirta, Jane IT. Duriag a severa
Latorm which eame up between I ami l
o'clock yesterday afternoon awe
twenty-five picnickers were hadMad to
gether la aa outhoasa in Forest Park
near the police station for protection
from the rain which came down ia tor
reVta They had scarcely got inside the
building when there was a sham
flash of lightning, aad then shrieks aad
rrsa-i aad cries for help Usard from
the hulMiag ia which the people
had congregated to escape the storm's
fury. A wild scene of enn fusion fol
lowed aad policemen hurried to the
scene. Nearly all of the occupants of
the outhouse were more or lesa injured,
one be lag killed and three very serious
ly Injured. Following is a list of casu
alties: Miss Sadie Mc Arthur, aged 13 years,
desd
Mrs. LLuio Oolden, badly Injured.
MUs Kste lieader. burned ami other
wise seriously hurt.
Miss I .aura Hcaucleric. seriously in
jured All the injured were taken home aad
medical asUtance summoned None
of them are fatally injured
UnilTNINd's WORK AUorT riTTIU?aJlt.
PrrrsRrROH. Pa, June IT. The hljrh
thermometer reached at 3 o'clock ys
tcnlay waw V I at 3 o'clock, when storms
in the surrounding districts rapidly
lowered the temperature Many case
of prostration ttecurred. but one being
fatal.
Kcports from all section indicate
a severe electrical storm. At Alliance,
O., A. Itarnhardt while plowing, was
struck by lightning and killed In llut
ler county a ly received an electric
bolt and wa. killed. Near Kmlenton
Clarence Ashburgh was struck and
killed and several derricks throughout
the oil country were struck and bnrncd
DISASTROUS FIRE.
A Xw Irrejr Summer KM ttr veil
Pour Muntlrral Untitling !turnet Th
VTmtk of m Vrmmkrm Man.
Newark, X. J., June 17. The ruled
summer resort Scabrlght N. J., was
visited by a disastrous lire last night
which reduced to ashes tho large por
tion of the town, 400 buildings being
burned and several hundred families
rendered homeless. The los was 5,-
ooa.
The fire broke out In a livery stable
on Hirer street and soon a large or
tloa of tho southern part of Scabrlght
was in flames. Women aad children
ran through the streets crj ing and
wringing their hands in a frantic man
ner, while tho men aided the nrcmen to
stop the flames.
Among the buildings burned were the
jtost otllce, Seabrlght and Plunger's
hotels, the Methodist church, the school
house and building occupied by the
New Jersey Telephone and a steamlat
company and part of the Octagon hotel.
It is alleged that a drunken man de
liberately threw a lighted match on a
bale of hay In the stable which ignited.
The flames spread with great rapidity
to the adjoining buildings on (ceau
avenue, and by 1 o'clock more than 400
building were consumed. No lives
were lost
LANGTRY BLACK EYES.
Tho fimnui I4ljr Haiti tat Have Hoen lloalen
Mr m Young- HImmI."
LoNimi.v, June 17. A story Is being
told in Paris about Mrs. Laniftry and
her mont recent admirer, John Italrd, a
young Scotch millionaire known on the
turf as "Abingdon" and one of the bent
"gentlemen" riders and amntctir lex
ers in KuelaniL Mrs. Iani;tr is said
to have displeased llalnl by paying too
much attention to one of his rival.
He, according to the story, taxed
her with this and h reunited his
langunge, whereupon he struck her
twice, and as a result of the encounter
she is wearing two blsck eyes. Italrd
Is the fellow who was esprllrd from
the Pelican club for hiring a gang of
rulUans to "queer" the Srnlth-Slavln
prize fight at llruges eighteen months
or so ago.
An incident of the tirand Prix rare In
Paris last Sunday was the chastisement
of Howell (Htorn by Mabel Jordan at
the track lefore sereral thousand spec,
tators. The young woman attacked
him with a paravd and got in several
telling blown before the bewildered
youth recogniz-ed tho feasibility of
immediate absence. Mrs. Fay Tem
plcton OsUirn Is cxpccel in Paris and
all of (Nborn' friend are invited to a
grand banquet in honor of her return.
SERIOUSRAILWAY ACCIDENT.
Moog-er I'artlralara of a IMMkatmoa Wrorh
no tho Nllwanaoo a C I'aol.
CnirAcio, June 17. Information has
1-ecn received of a disastrous wreck on
tho Milwaukee A St. Paul road about
half a mile east of Coon itapids, la.
A passenger train consisting of sn
engine, bsggage snd mall and express
cars, several coaches sad two sleepers
crsahed through tle bridge over Coon
river. Only the rrsr sleeper remsined
on the track.
Two passenger sre known to have
been killed and a large nnmbn injured.
The engineer was unhurt but the con
ductor snd one brakemaa are reported
badly Injured H?lp from adjoining
towns was seat and a corps of phjl
clans sre now on the scene.
It was raining hard at the time of the
accideat aad darkness sad storm in
creased the cm fa tloa. Details receive
here are rmrj meager, no nsssea being
given snd those at the scene being toe
busy rrsculng paaseager is ebtsia
particulars.
Two Youac. rerun R tao L'oo4l!o
of a nop t.
Kassa Citt. Mo.. Jane 1?. The
electric light of Tnxwt park were
glimmering at ifcSe o'clock Isat night on
hundred of asrrry pleasure seeker, a
pavHiea crowded wHh daaeers aad a
dark spot on Echo lake where three
young men. thrown from a casulsed
boat were struggling for their Uvea.
Two of the youar as ea were drowned,
th third was rescu- jaat ia the aiek
of time. There were only a few
boats oa the lake aad few people about
the shore. Tomfoolery la rocking the
boat is ssH to hsrecsased the accident
KHratoa
New Yon. Juae 17. The Song -discussed
aad muca-lo&bed-ferwardto
bosiar match betweea Jsk Kllraia.
of Haiti-ore. aad Frank Mavis, of
Australia, for a s e of 9!,M, offered
by the Granite asan da tloa. took place
last aight at their club house, Slavia
forced the fghtiag from the start
drnwiag blosd fcs Use f rat rmusaV After
the second round k eoukl ae elearly
seea taat KHraia was rrrgrmslrhwl
Ia the aiath roaad SUvla til Jake a
terrible Mow hi the aeek aad he weat
dowa as if shot He failed to come to
aad Stavia was awarded the aght.
IaMAXAroua, lad. Juae IT. There
bus a very aeenf nl saaagu for the
reran iaea-Seunlar MeDsnalda
urkMa the last twenty-four
acts now m enfeebled that aa
k entertained af his recovery.
He saJTers vary tittle pain aad is nates
eaearfaL
Daring the
of
TerrMl
ILL, a black bear brofca leas from Ha
la ias anmili ami raa fcrto tho
tent It seiasdaUchH4 of
George txf.aaA hag aad bit it ae
that wU wuensir M
NARROW ESCAPE.
Trato Cm eo Jtear a
ttf m Waterfront Thot Canht
arnScbt a r ! Loie-wt-
arCt Wora.
Omaka. NcK, Jan 1.-The hearUst
rala for years fell sll ovur the stat.
Along the line of the It A M. in sonth
era Nebraska and northern Kan v
ral washouts resulted, the most seri
ous being In the vicinity of OrUsn.
Several small washouts occurred on th
branch line between Orleans and Ox
ford. Trains on that branch ar do
Uyrd and some have been abandoned
altogether.
On the Klkhom Valley road a bad
was) wit occurred at lUttle creoV,
emucd by a waterpnt Tb creok
suddenly roe at T50 a, . and
Inundated the town, sweeping away
several houses ami endangering1 a nam
ber of Uvea All la danger were helped
out in wagons and no live wcro bwt
The town is overflowed at pre rnt ad
people bave to go about In boaU. It i
thought that tho mill dam will ftv
lrge datnagv has alrealy been done
to crops. N-veral mlle of truck ami
everal bridges have been washed out.
which will delay tho trains for two
days.
At Oakdale tho precipitation was ftvn
inchev Cellars were filled. ldewlk
washed away. WB fret of rallrd tnek
removed with one brklcv near town
gornv The damaj to crops is not
known. It U Mill raining.
At Humphrey llartholomcw lUv
a farmer, wa killed with lightning, at
wa aUo the team with which hn was
plowing.
At Palmer tho wife and grandmother
of Vaclay I ,a it ton were struck by light
nlng and klllrl
About 100 miles eal of this city and
not a great warn from rnlnff la.. l
Plum creek At daybreak till lltllo
stream of water hoel no sign of
going out of It banks. Abut A o'eUek
a dark, threatening clottd moved pe
that Keetiou f nun the eL The eloud
seemed to W deceudliig a- It traveled
and when It reached the miUklrU of
the valley it appeared to drop to tho
ground A horl lime later lturllugton
avenger train Ntv '4 eame along,
bearing an unusually largw numlor
of travelers The train took ordor
at Corning ntatlou and inveeded on
the journey to the city. A mile wot
of Corning It cned ttie brtdgo that
spanned Plum creek even minute
later a freight train followed. Ttio
freight was under good headway whn
it nearvd the bridge and Kngineor
Power looked ahead at tho utruoturr
He saw that an attempt to oro. meant
death and he iovcred the engine ami
called for brake. The train lackenel
peed materially but Power did not
succeed In preventing a partial wreeW
and he wa forced to jump for life jnl
aa the locomotive ami three ear foil
with a terrible crash into the oh&m.
The creek which only a few moment
I xi fore wa but a minor tream, hod
carried away the brldgo kurni after tho
aflsacngcr train erMeL Kiiglnoer
rsvwers in jumping landed In IwoUn
feet of water but eoiod.
THE IOWA WHECK.
It Wst tho Work t Somo Moltrlwwa l. I,
Who I'loroit m T1e on a Trrtl. -Tun Mrtof
Klllelonl Many Olhrr tojo-t. AM
Cimi.n H.M-IHft, la.. June W Psrtle
ular of the wreck on the ("hleago, Mti
waukee A St. Paul road how that two
(torsous were killed outright sod an
other will die from Id Injurle. while
nineteen others worn more or le hurt.
The wreck waa undoubtedly malleloii.
The wreck wa tanned by iwitiio tin
known cron placing a tie ii(ion tiio
trestle work just lnfom reselling tho
bridge. At the point where tho for
ward trucksof tho engine left the track
the trestle work 1 almtit forty feet
hlgli. A sudden shock wa ctirl
enced by the paAaeugem when the tie
was struck, after which the eoiwhr rn
alul two car lengths and left tho
track and englno and mall ear went
through Uie bridge, a dUtanreof atiut
fifty feet Into the river Tho baggage
car, chair car, sinokrr and one lrejer
fell f rom the trestle, a dUtanee of frtjr
feet The baggagn and miklng ear
turned upside down In their doeent
the chair car and tho forward I'ullmsn
falling on their sldea.
The passengers who were not hurt
scrambled out a let they could. A
soon as thecltlcensof thlplce learned
of the accident they hstenrd to tho
spot with lantern and for two hour
worked in a pouring rain reiwiulng tlw
who were unable to get mil. fionie f
the unfortunate were pinned lown by
broken tlmWrs, which It wa nerery
to chop away to release them,
Henry Candon. of Perry. Ia. and -press
meaaenger OWllwtwd wero In
stantly killed and John McCarthy fa
tally injured
In addition eighteen irvtu wero b
jured A storm wa raging at the tlinn
of tho aecklent This. In addition to
the darkaesa and crlea of the winded.
made tho scene a terrible one
Tho bridge Is a Howe tru snd pn
the Coon river, which at thU plae- !
mrrv rivulet. A storm wa ragtnvr t
the time, The rain and darkn- ami
cries of the wounded fnad the wenr a
terrifying one. A 'm a the moI
jarvd regained prrwaee of ralml tho
wounded were aasialM a far a po
ble and meBgrr btsrrWlly 4
patehed to Coon kapM. whirh tod
about one-half mile wrt of th no
of the wreck. Meage were wirl
trvm there to Perry, tho eastern end f
the division where nvt of lb Uo
men reside, and physician and vdsa
tcers quickly left on a spectst fr '
scene of th disaster
REPORT AROUT MIPPOtYTC
to Mm W JUmmImM AfW -
Wo4 U-t-
Saw Yon. Juar is. -A v f
Jacmel brings a report that Preldeat
Hfpuolyto wa alnatl alv
1 recent revolt In HaytL
lfippolyie bca-- pir.itxVnt
republic of Hsytl by virtoe of a rro.
tloa two years sgo b which L!mo
was depoCrd and Illpp'djVr a r"
aVnt One of hi latest act wa th fewUifc.
ry of some VM pcrvras ia Um t &
ef Port is Prince, ordered by th Uii
president to qsell a rt--Ul"-
ihKtioc t'ctr-
Hajtta Vk, M. J !.-?
psat anas-re sirouw.
bunds of AsseM fadk t-
sea sloar the Usrier ot Arlxo
Sew Mexico ia ifc vWaity of th i
range. where th btoodthttty
kt chief Victoria aftd
fcnad sssde their tr4 rbrn
ia lsj. TW tCrassrWrs he t- t
baguaiy aad threatealag wUlff- A
aallkJ company ha t r orxs
aad at the ftr tadiralhm trm t ,siJ
diss thai they aswsa treaid asoO--
war will W eomasroerd waka will
drive them out of thr Urritor r.
To rt- a
Masos CfTT. Is-. Juae lL -Aa t-
asay ha huen oorsalsrd hro
aad wKI ha iaeevpeeated under tho
laws of the state, -wrth erapitsl of fsa.
aas. Tho asoat modem sad approved
wMl he pat ia the fer-tory
mill at Keck Falls, IL Smiik.
of the first yatlnaiT Wak.
vBl take shsJf IsUmi C VL HrSUtr
J. a Marmoa take ahXack f tha
aataiiiti sad lmlnw'n ia
the viciaky of tW -HI take the bal
sas. J. a RermsAv of Do .
kaa been esrod aa ssaaagrr, This is
rafbt ia the ecater of the eat belt
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