'I THE NORFOLK NEWS ; fflUPAY , JANUARY 24,1002 , The ottfolkfleucts The sugar trust Is undoubtedly a ixiworful combination , but it is not powerful enough to inlluonco congress to the detriment of a growing American industry , It In claimed that an Ohio man win wuoko through his oar. A good many things pans through thoearamlit would mem u though it WIIH an ahUHo of the member to convert It intoumnokn duel in thu bargain. it IMor old HinHi-ll Sage is only worth $1011,000,000 and who ran blame him for himtToilsto nave a little mid miiko mi.ro . to keep the gaunt wolf of Imng-'r from hi door ? HH ! pnnury should call for the sympathy of philanthropists. fl The European nations and their re-p- nwntutlvim Imvo just recently dih- ooxeri'd how much limy love Undo Ham and his children und are exerting thom- Belven to bo grnoIniH. Kaiser 'Wllholm IH not the slowest of Undo Sum's ad- mil urn and his eouiti'sy to a member of I'nNlrtimt.Hio.snvolf's . family is marked. In nations as among individuals thorn IB nothing like strength Hurt ambition to compel Homo of the niprolmnts of the Main putposo to organic ) to light the pure-fin post bill , which is a very proper thing to do if tlinro is any posciblo chnnce of I bo bill becoming a law. The mail order houses and department htorcHhavo Hi i lo regai d for the country meidiant iinil unlehs the latter is prepared to pro tect. his interests it mny bo expoeted that the larger houses will do what they can to injure his business. The mail oid'T bonnes are now a menace to the Hiniill and Independent retailer without giving them further advantages. i ! The Great West is the title of a new monthly publication at Omaha , the first issunof which appeared on Jami- my Ifi. It is published by the Peyton Publishing company , with ,1. B. Lnm > s us editor. As its name indicates the journal is devoted to pushing "tho great west" and more particularly Ne braska. It is a field deserving the effort and "Tho Great West" should bo given Hulistantiul encouragement by those whom it will benefit. A considerable portion of the first number is devoted to "Good Old Knox" , Pierce , Antelope , Boyd and other counties iu north Ne braska. Congress cannot afford to fall in with the trust plan of doing away with the American cane and boot sugar industry , ] not only because it is a growing Ameri can industry and worthy of encourage ment , but they cannot afford to have the imputation rest upon them that they are under the influence of one of the most popularly disliked trusts in the country. The stake is not Inrgo enough to war rant Buoh a risk to the majority party in congress and it is very doubtful if they will favor such action. Havomoyor and liia hirelings have made their boast that congress would fall iu with their wishes Imt it is to bo hoped that they speak without a knowledge of the true situa tion. A Now York dispatch says that in spite of his denunciations of Wall street former Senator Charles A. Towno will engage iu business there , occupying hamlsouio offices whore O. A. Towno & Co. will do a banking and brokerage business. Charley in 189(1 ( , joined with Mr. Bryan and others to save the dear common people from the evils of the money power and the trusts. Now , with others of his kind , ho has deserted the common people and joiued the ranks of the plutocrats. Mr. Bryan with a now $20,000 residence can 8C\t coly bo classed with the common est of common people longer and the c.iuso is simply bereft of its great loaders. It is too bad , but perhaps the common people are not losers. The advocates of free sugar must show that with the almost certain an nexation of Cuba iu the near future , and with that a coming condition of uu- taxed raw sugar , it is bettor now to got tmde concessions with other nations while wo can. They must also show that the removal of all protection from the domestic sugar growing industry is M > inevitable that the benefits to to obtained from reciprocity treaties will sugar raising countries outweigh th losses that would be caused to the American industry. They must furtho show why it is well for the sake ot fro raw sugar to abandon nearly every other form of tax reduction. They have fi nally to show why we should not have free refined sugar if we are to have free raw sugar. Boston Commercial Bulle tin. The isthmian canal commission has reported unanimously in favor of ac- ceptjug the Panama Canal company's offer and the selection of that route by the United States , and the house of representatives - resentatives will probably have their work to do over again. A number of Btatesmen , among them Mr. Hepburn who presented the Nicarauguan bill , are iucliued to believe that the urging of the other route is merely a scheme for delay and that congress is to bo pre vented from taking immediate action. Inasmuch as the proposed canal is to be a permanent improvement to navnga- tlon and the expound of constructing it will bo large , it is perhaps advlmiblo that the best route should bo seleo'cd and all the points considered In detail , tlmtthero may be no cause for regret in the future that the action of congress was too precipitate , It Is a largo ( men tion and worthy of earnest study and deep thought , Thoto nro many minor problems minor only in their relative sense to thesovnst OUCH urgently pressing for Holutimi , and Homo are very dose toil , suys Success. Wo want to know how the glowwuim makes heat without heat , and how lo do it ourHnlvrn ; how to mnlu ) the high potential alternating ( inn-nut diivo all the locomotives jhow to const i net nn unsinluible ship ; how to lulcgniph by Iho nthitiiu wnviiM without the potability of inteifeienco by dis turbances in the Minn ) iniditim ; how to extract n 'lids ' from liquids , economically by centrifugal force only and not by nitration ; how to ndapt the Menm tur bine , as a motor , to every day uses , in plaeo of the reciprocating engine ; how to build a cotton pickfias rfl'oolivo in imthctlng cotton as Ihn reaper and mower arn in gathering grain and Iw ; how lo photograph in the colors ef nature , and how to throw high explo sives with Hnl'oly from ordinary guns. The flint issue of the Mndicon Mull , with Wm , V. Allen ns editor and 11. B. Mien luwQciato , ha * been received. It is largely devoted to a write-up of Mad Ison county and particularly of the bus iius.s interests oi the county scat , and iivuH ; indication of being a representa tlvo local publication. The editor's an nnuncomcnt of pjllcy will bo disappoint ing to Home , in that it is not definite and the populists who hud hoped for a strong advocate of party piindples in the Mat will have cause to regiet that it seems to have been launched as a paper free from all party ties , and with no out lined political policy. Those who have followed the political career of the edi tor expected that the editorial policy of the paper would bo laid out on firm lines and that it would bo outspoken for the policies the editor represented and for the party that assisted him to honor and power. Many had tileo hoped that it would attempt to fill n larger than a more local field and its intluonco would bo folt'throughout the state , at least. The editor claims that there is a local field to be filled and proposes to fill it. Jt gives every indication of filling such n field satisfactorily and as a local paper is certainly beyond criticism. Its pat ronage is not largo , but will probably increase as its value is established. Tint Nnws wishes the Mail success. ( Jlvo the Meet Industry a Chance. The boot sugar manufacturers of Michigan are before congress with a strong exhibit for the sugar Industry in that state and a strenuous objection to the trust plan of admitting Cuban raw sugar free. Their memorial iu part says : "Wiihiu two mouths after the Ding- ley law went into effect the contract was lot for the first boot sugar factory in Michigan. This factory took off its first crop iu the fall of 1803. Since that time twelve other factories have boon erected and four more are now in pro cess of construction. The capital in vested is § 10,500,000. In 1898 Miohigati paid the sugar trust $7,000,000 for sugar consumed. In 1001 her own factories pro duced 12rvl9 ( > ,000 pounds of granulated sugar , or 80 per cent of her consump tion , for which she received $5OI7)20. : ) Beets now under contract for the season 1002 will increase the output to 195,501- 000 pounds , or 21 per cent above her consumption. "In 1901 Michigan raised G9..100 acres of beets yielding 51)7,000 ) tons , for whioh 10,818 farmers received fJ ! , 107,520. Iu the boot fields 33,707 persons found em ployment during the growing season , be sides 2,078 factory hands during the manufacturing period. " Havomoyer proposes to save the ( Vmorican people something like $30 000,000 by admitting Cuban raw sugar free , but from the showing made above ho will bo robbing the people in Michi gan alone of the use of $10,500,000 in vested and the farmers in a single year in the 0110 .stato alone of an income of , 107,520 not counting the wages paid to 20,1585 people in that state by the beet industry. Not only will his proposed action rob the people of that amount in one state but other states will suffer iu like proportion and the government rev enues will bo reduced at least the $3G- 000,000. The industry has been established in Michigan but three years and iu that time has but fairly got a start. It would seem particularly unwise for con gress at this time to do anything so vitally disastrous to the young boot in dustry. Sugar Trust Hobs Up'Agttlii. The Lincoln Journal of yesterday con tained a fairy tale from its Omaha cor respondent , which is the most beauti ful mlsstutomout of facts that it has been our pleasure to see for a long timo. It is so untruthful that it is simply ridic ulous. It is not hold together by enough facts to make it stand alone. The bur den of the tale is that the farmers about Norfolk are very much dissatisfied with the treatment they have received from the Bugar factory at this place , and that they propose to hold a meeting soon to protest against the alleged injustice. On the face of it , the article shows that it was written by some one who is wholly unfamiliar with thu conditions at thU piano or of I ho contract under which beuts arn grown. In truth the article is HI full of glaring errors that only ono conclusion can bo readied , and that is that it was either inspired or written by an emissary of the sugar trust who utterly failed to gain enough information of the real facts to tell oven a plausible story. It was not so long ago that the sugar trust is reputed to have purchased space on the patent side of country nowspapeiH throughout the westmn slates , in which it told of the disadvantages of boot raising to the farmer. It would now heom that it is trying the same tactics with the city press , ami while wo do not behove the management of the H6nte Journal would Hell its Hjmcu in a manner ho discreditable atthii , yet we will uuarnntoo that the Omaha coiroFpoi.dent cither might ily imposed upon or that ho received something Htinngcr than beer from the alleged "heavy land owner of Norfolk" to secure the publication of an aiticlo so olearly donignril to Injiiro the bi-et sugar industry of Nobraslm. The Journal is blamable for publishing the article , in that it Hhould have investigated the truth of the Etati'inonts made , when the whi'lo ' animus wan so uvid-ntly to hi'lp the sugar ttust cripple a valuable homo industry. The dlaimjintid" by thu agent of Uio sugar trust , and written by the correspondent pendent that there is dissatisfaction among beet growois is absolutely groundless HO lar UH wo Invvo been nblo toleutn. In luith , the contract of 11)01 ) was moro satisfactory to the farmer than my under which beets huvo over been irown ; for the Norfolk laotory. Every grower who raised beets last year has pronounced the contract the very be t that ho has ever woikcd under , and al most to a man they have pronounced thumselves well pleased. Instead of protesting against the treatment ac corded them by the factory , they have been keen to enter into contract for an other crop this year , and when it scorned doubtful whether the factory would make such contracts on account of threatened adverse congressional action they expressed almost as much anxiety and disappointment as the manager himself. Only ono or two sont6nces need bo quoted to show that the correspondent either deliberately lied in the interest of the sugar trust or that hq did not know what ho was talking about. He says : "Their boots are cultivated with the understanding that if they contain a designated percentage of sugar with a designated percentage of fineness , they will commaud a fixed' price. " There is nothing iu the contract which could by any possible stretch of imagination bo construed into anything like the lan guage stated. It is true that a number of years ago the contract did require a certain percentage of purity ( not flue- ness note the difference ) , but that has long since been entirely eliminated , and nothing of the kiud was iu the contract in 11)01 ) nor is in the contract of 1902. Wo have a copy of the contract before us which has just boon issued for this season and here is just what it says , and all it says , in regard to price that shall bo paid for beets : "All sound beets will bo ordered in , bought ami paid for by said factory at the follow ing rates , to-wit : All beets containing M per cent of sugar or loss , 1 00 per ton , and an additional 25 cents per ton for each and every ono per cent of sugar above M per cent , fractious in proper tion. An additional sum of 20 cents per ton will ba paid for each and every ton of beets siloed , when delivered at the factory after November 15. " Nothing is iu this about requiring beets to con- am a certain percentage of purity or liioness not an intimation of it. The auguagoof the contract is identical with ho ono of last year , and no test was made of purity during the whole season n settling with farmers. This would ndicato that the agent of the sugar trust must have had copy of a contract a number of years old when ho figured out the schema to injure the boot indus try in the underhanded manner under taken. \uother alleged ground of cpinplnint 19 that the chemical tests made at. the factory are not fairly conducted , but that "having no means of making their own tests , of course the farmers have no alternative but to accept that of the factory. " No alternative , eh ? Let us see what the contract says on that point : 'The growers are at liberty to select aud employ nt their own expense , any competent chemist and weigh master , to whom the factory shall give free access to its laboratory and weigh house for the purpose of cheeking the tests or weighings made by the chemist or weigh master of the factory. " And those tests figured out an average price of more than $4,60 per ton for the whole of the 1001 crop. The sugar trust should become better posted before it makes such wild statements. Instead of there being such dissatis faction as reported , the largest acreage of boots that has over boon grown for the Norfolk factory will bo planted the coming season. Farmers are well pleased with the contract and they are very willing to raise boots under its pro visions , which are simple , fair and clean cut , with no possible chance for contro versy or misunderstanding. „ _ The sugar trust should guess again. The Sioux City Tribune suggests that the Nebraska Spaniard who blew up the Maine has gone to keep Pat Qrowo com pany. Governor S.ivago should couio homo and feel the public pulse. He would find it quite feverish us far as ho is con cerned , If it was as easy to run a newspaper as it is to tell t-omeone how to do it , the editor and publisher would indeed have a sinecure. Thu sugar trust is pret'y shrewd , and its poisloteiit argument that it is "the people" is not the least fetching of its assertions. The love of the sugar trust for the people is a beautiful thing to think about , but wait until their theory is put into practice. The record of real estate transfers continues to eloquently spoil ; in behalf of north Nebraska realtyindicating that it id in active demand. Perhaps Governor Savage will bo per mitted lo go into partnership with iku Ban ley in the loan business after next January. Even private dtiv.ens need Homo tort of employment. Perhaps Governor Savage is in New Orleans to cutt-r into negotiations look ing towaid the removal of Nobfiuka to Louisiana , from which it was separated after the purchnse of that territory. Two Kansas men uio endeavoiing to combine all the creameri's of the country Into a trust. They may sue coed but they cannot hop'o to control the entire product. The hand churn and the farmer's cow will continuo to bo a factor. It is said that an acre of sago palm which is ono of India's valuable products gives nourishment equal to 103 acres of wheat. There uro probably few Ne jraska farmers , however , who would bo willing to exchange lit ( ! acres of Nebraska braska laud for an aero in India. Another Pat Crowe , who was not Pat Orowe.huB been brought to Chief Doiia hue's attention this time from Cole rado. These Crowes are not discovered with the regularity they were befori the prize money was taken down , bn this incident is a reminder that tin omnipresent kidnaper is not entirely for gotten. In the future railroads will bo in clined to treat with greater considera tion the fellow who steals rides , if the case of Theodore Johnson against the O. St. P. M. & O. road recently decided by the Iowa supreme court is to govern. Johnson was trying to steal a ride on a freight of that road in Nebraska. He was twice put off by the conductor but again appeared aud when put off the third time he fell under the car wheels aud his leg was cut off. The judgment was for $2,000 damages. The hotel aud restaurant men in Ne braska and other states are experiencing considerable difficulty in supplying their guests with quail aud grouse. The old dodge of serving those birds under the name of plover , snipe on stubble duck don't go any moro. The proprietors of the Bon Ton restaurant at Omaha have recently been arrested for , violating the law and are confronted with a SI00 penalty. The propriators of the Des Moines hotel who served "plover" at the Shaw banquet , have just settled with the game warden by paying § 100 fine. Evidence is accumulating to the effect that the present game laws are to bo enforced and not act merely as an in- cumbrauco to the statutes. A boarding house guest at New Castle , Pa. , has sued the landlady for damages , alleging that the board is insufficient for the money paid. What possibilities such a suit brings up I If the boarding house keeper can bo regulated by law what a rejoicing there will bo among the boarders ! If an extra tough piece of beef steak is served , sue her for dam ages ; if the Thanksgiving turkey ap pears on the table longer than a week after that holiday , charge up damages against the landlady ; cockroaches served in the tea should bo grounds for dam ages , lleally it is quite an entrancing possibility that this suit presents and the boarders should form an association to urge favorable legislation. Eavesdropping , as far as the telephone business is concerned , is a risky undertaking. In Iowa a 'man ' was re cently fined $25 for listening to a tele phone message passing over a line on which ho owned a telephone and afterward - ward telling what he overheard. The reason given by the court for imposing the penalty was that messages or con versations over the wire are confidential aud the fact that ho owned a telephone gave him no right' to repeat anything he might have heard by accident or other wise. Perhaps there are no subscribers to the Norfolk exchange who are laying themselves liable to this penalty and they may not bo tempted to run the risk if they are given to understand what the penalty has been in Iowa. The Morwin Publishing company has combined the Beaver Oity Times , in its 28th year , and the Beaver Valley Tri- bunecstnblished for moro than 10 years , under the name of the Beaver Oity Times-Tribune. While Editor Morwin will continuo to advocate republican principles , a department is sot apart for the use of Will M Muupln , formerly of the World Herald , who will support with Ids customary zeal , the opinions ol Bryan democracy. The two editors are in the front ranks of Nebraska journal ism and If the Bchunio can bo iiiudo to Hticccud , it certainly should under their editorial management , but it is nn exceedingly - ceodingly questionable experiment. Brethern of diil'erent political faiths Hhould dwell in harmony on ordinary subjects but when it COIIUH to operating under the same roof and through the HIUIIU publication the harmony becomes altogether two thick ami is likely to smother indivitality and independent opinion. If that d rs not happen , the scriptural injunction "A house divided against ihulf must fall , " is recommended to tluir consideration. Sioux Oity people arc urging n move ment that will result , in beautifying the municipality. It ia urged that the streets lire not necessarily laid out to bo used for barn yards and for the stoiuRorf vehicles , old boxes and -other unsightly things. Speaking of the subject Rabbi Joseph Leiser said : "A mioko daubed sky is a nuiwinco and live wires tire dai.gc.ronx , and telegraph poles hideous. Advertisements tire other features ro- striotlvo measuios must handle. Theat rical advertisements chiefly are the shortest blotches , especially when they tire pasted on toppling , slovenly bill- boardH. No resilience property ought to tolurnto an unsightly billboard. Com meroial signs , too , ought to bo regulated , so that no hideous business sign ob structs the view of sky or street. Then every city is attractive in so far as it has planted trees. In this respect our city has sinned most shamefully. Every street ought to bo lined with trees. The lovely chronicle of timous it shows itself on trees , the play of shadow on the pavement is one of nature's most charming features. Trees tire inexpensive and no tree hiudors progress. Trees and parking should adorn every street , whether it bo devoted - voted to business or residences. " President Henry T. Oximrd of the American Beet Sugar association in an address on Cuban reciprocity before the ways and means committee at Wash ington Wednesday said : "Stripped of sentimentality and all extraneous con siderations and reducing the Cuban de mands for free or freer sugar to its equa tion , it is this : Shall the United States , through its agriculturists , produce its raw sugar and in its factories , scattered from the Atlantic to the Pacific , refine its products , or shall it permit foreign lauds to export to it the raw material and content itself merely with refining. That is what I fear would eventually come to pass if you interfere in any way at the present time with the existing production of home sugar. Capital is timid to a great degree , and should con gress decide that Oubau sugar must bo helped at the expense of American beet sugar then it will at first hesitate and eventually turn its back upon the future farther development of beet sugar and throw its full force into the tropical island which wo have unduly fa vored and stimulated. Sugar produc tion in Cuba today is firmly established and the chief industry of the island. Even our enemies must admit that bf.et sugar is nt the very inception of its de velopment in the United States. " Savage Given to Reasoning. If Governor Savage had set out to choose an action that would have still further added to his unpopularity in Nebraska and especially in the north part of the state , and Norfolk iu partic ular , he could scarcely have done worse than to slur at the beet sugar industry as he did iu Now Orleans the other day when interviewed by a representative of the press of that city to whom ho said : "As for the beet sugar industry of Nebraska , I feel the same about that as I do about the cane sugar industry of Louisiana. The number engaged in that industry is so small , compared with the masses to be benefited by free sugar , that there is little choice. " As all the beet factories are north of the Platte river his excellency evidently saw another excellent opportunity of making a stab at this part of the state without injury to the south half. Iu speaking for the trust the governor has talked as foolishly as oven Have- inoyor himself could desire. Perhaps the industry is small , but infants are never largo , and a youth as young as the industry in Nebraska could not be ex pected to have attained the full growth of manhood's estate , nor will it with such encouragement as the governor oilers. With the cane industry ju Louisiana it is different. That is old enough to have developed its full possi bilities. The governor talks of "the masses to be benefited by free sugar. " It has before been shown what a grand benefit this is which is offered by the trust , which will reap the lion's share of "benefit. " Take the trust's own figures and the "people" are to bo bene fited $30,000,000 worth , which divided among 80,000,000 of population , will bo something less than 50 cents each. This is the magnificent saving , or promised saving , for which bis excellency would sacrifice one of the leading industries of his state with the remark that it don't amount to much. The governor's reasoning powers are truly magnificent. Ho abandons thous- . iitids of dollars worth of property at Norfolk to save a small annual expendi ture ; ho pardons the defaulting state treasurer with the apparent conviction that ho is n worthy and philanthropic oltl'/on unjustly convicted by the courts and persecuted by the people , and now ho signified a willingness to generously stab a leading state industry in the baoki for less than a pound of sugar increase to the average purchase. His is tho. hort of reaboning that uitulo Esau fa mous for selling his birthright for a mess of pottugo , and perhaps if ho had the power ho would trade the state for a - jitckkiiife. The governor is an expen sive luxury at home , and when ho goes on a visit. Iho people have decided what they will do with him when the opportun ty presents itselt but until that time his ( Ji > poMtion has assumed the importance of a paramount issue. EXPLOSION WRECKS TRAIN. uollcr Bursts as Denver Limited Rushes Through Victor , In. Victor , la. . Jan. 20. While racing down grade through this village at the rate of 40 miles an hour the boiler of the big engine drawing the Denver limited No. 5 on the Hock Island rail way exploded Saturday , killing Engi neer Williams and Fireman Iloure and shaking up the passengers. The Denver limited does not stop nt Victor. It came roaring down the grade Into the village , whirled past the station and striking the grade that de scends Into the valley of Hear crook gained more speed. Three hundred feet from the station the boiler exploded with a nolso that awakened the entire village. The en gine was torn to pieces and great chunks of iron were hurled over the town. The train , with speed checked by the shock rolled and wallowed on ward. The seven passenger coaches were thrown from the track and bounded along over the ties , with the passengers bolng bounced around in- Bide them like rorn in a hopper. The Des Molnes sleeper , which was nt the rear end of the train , was over turned and rolled into the ditch , but no one was seriously hurt. The wrecked engine was strewn over the ground for 200 feet and the mangled bodies of the engineer and fireman were found close together a short distance from the place of the explosion. WOMAN KILLS TWO MUSICIANS. Colored Inebrlcte Shoots Because She Was Anxious for Ragtime. Montgomery , W. Va. , Jan. 20. At a colored dance last night six miles south of this place , William Slaughter and William Johnson were shot and killed by Lillian Williams. Powell CalloWay was mortally wounded , be ing struck by a stray bullet. The murderess is in jail. About midnight the Williams wom an entered the house , evidently under the Influence of liquor. Proceeding to the center of the room , she ordered the musicians to play some ragtime music , and play It quick. When her demand was not complied with she whipped out a revolver and began firing at the orchestra. Slaughter and Johnson were almost Instantly killed. Galloway was an onlooker at the dance and one of the bullets Intended for a musician penetrated his back. Physi cians pronounce his wound fatal. The murderess escaped lynching by the timely arrival of officers , who suc ceeded in getting her away and lodg ing her In jail at this place. ENGINEER FALLS ASLEEP IN CAB. Costly Wreck on the Missouri Pacific Is the Result. Kansas City , Jan. 20. Westbound Missouri Pacific passenger train No. 3 , j „ from St. Louis , collided head-on with an eastbound freight train one mile east of Etlah , Mo. , yesterday. The wreck proved a costly one for the road. Engineer William Maseo of the freight train had fallen asleep in his cab and ran past Etlah , where he had been ordered to meet the passenger. But one persons was injured , Judge Elijah Robinson of Kansas City , who escaped with severe bruises. Half a doEen other passengers wore shaken up. Engineer Maseo , when ho awoke and realized that he was passed Etlah and that It was too late to pull back , stopped his train and running ahead , endeavored to flag the passenger train. The passenger train was upon him , however , before he succeeded. SPARKS FROM THE WIRES. Judge William E. Dowltt , a distin guished members pf the Montana bar , died at Butte Sunday of acute heart trouble. B. B. Hunt of Huntsvllle , Mo , , was hot and killed at Shawnee , O. T. , Sun day by John Seville , who mistook him for an enemy. Frank Rakowski , a private in the army at Fort Canby , who threatened President Roosevelt , was degraded and sent to prison for ten years. The White Earth agency hospital and the Woman's Guild hall in con nection with St. Columbus hospital mission were destroyed by fire Sun day. day.A A diplomatic secret regarding a pro posed coalition of European forces to defeat the United States in the war with Spain is to be exposed in the house of commons. Professor W. C. Grossman and his 15-year-old son , William , were caught on a trestle near Breiihara , Tex. , Sunday - day and run down by a passenger train. Both were killed. Frederick Kralnhardt , a Catholic priest residing at .Tosophsulle , Mo. , committed suicide Sunday at the Alex ander hospital at St. Louis by hanglne himself with a bed sheet.