The Omaha Daily Bee Cents and WORTH IT Cents and WORTH IT VOL. 50 NO. 313. Catsioa h Mf4-CIH Mttter Itt M. IM. at OsmM P. 0. Uasor Art f March S. 17. OMAHA, FRIDAY, JUNE 17, 1921. Until Ibm . ky MaH (I Yr.), DaftV 4 Sua., I7.M: Osllv 0l. N 0Ms 4ta 2.M (I mt). Daily aaa fciasay. Ill: Daily Oaly, 111: Saaday Oaly. W THREE CENTS U vJ j . r f A I I I I i ft 1 I I I I i k. i i i ; Hi Packer Bill Advanced In Senate Less Drastic House Draft Sub- stituted for Committee Measure By a Vote of 37 to 34. Attacks Made On Lobby Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee Leased Wire. Washington, June 16. The senate , tciilav HnrideI hv a vnte nf 37 trt 34 to substitute the less drastic house draft for the packer regulation bill s t t . ; i rccommenaeu oy inc seuaic agricul ture committee. This action was taken in the face of charges by Senator LaFollette of Wisconsin that the house bill was drafted in part by attorneys for the packers. Senator Kenyon of Iowa also asserted that the house bill was favored by the opponents of legisla tion regulating the meat packing in dustry, The main point of difference be tween the two measures lies in the responsibility for enforcement of the act. The house bill vests the sec retary of agriculture with authority to administer the measure while the senate bill creates, under the Depart ment of Agriculture, a federal live stock commissioner, appointed by the president and subject to con firmation by the senate, to regulate the packers. The final roll call on the measure was put off until tomor row. Just when the senate, was uuu iu lane a- jmai tviv ui.ii.wi Mening ot soutn uakota proposta an entirely new substitute and forced an- adjournment. Called Packers' Bill. oenaiur j-arunciic uciidicu mai the house bill was "the packers' bill." "The house bill," he said, "represents the desires Of the packers. They are opposed to the senate bill be cause they arc afraid it really regu lates." V "I have here in my hand," he con tinued, waving a document, "a copy of the house bill as it was originally introduced. It contains also a num ber of suggestions written in hand writing between the lines. This copy -urAa AtimrA intrt the hand cti T. f Atlreenn head of 'the National in npf1! irTT i . .pvrn liic ihum important of these suggestions were adopted and written ito the, house . bill. -This copy was furnished to me, . by Mr. Atkeson." !; V 1 By a vote of 34 to 32 the senate adopted an amendment offered by Senator Norris of Nebraska, provid ing that nothing in the bill should be construed as taking away any of the powers of the federal frade com mission. - - " . An amendment by Senaior Wads Vorth of New York to.-tmove all -" live stock products and byproducts, not used for. food from the applica tion of the bill, was adopted by a Cote of 36 to 33. Kenyon Denounces Lobby, v During the closing debate Senator Kenyon made a fiery " denunciation o: the packers' lobby. "There have never been such a lobby against any bill in the history of legislation as against this bill,. ' aid ;Senator. Kenyon. "When the k-bby investigation comes along, if it does, I hope we may have some light thrown on the packers' lobby." Senator Kenyon charged that the packers had a hand in bringing about the defeat of former Senator Cham berlain of Oregon. ; An amedntnent of Senator Mctor mick of Illinois, providing that com mission men and dealers should be suject to the. same provisions as .. packers, was j adopted. Another amendment adopted at the instance of Senator McCormick provide that purchasers of cattle should have only 60 days in which to make complaints against commission men instead of one year, as provided- in the house bilL . - . ; . . Senator MeCormick characterize!! the packers' bill as long:needed leg islation, althougn ne crmcizca w tain provisions of the senate meas ure, as being altogether too broad and arbitrary in the powers con ferred upon single individuals. America Not to Participate In League Deliberations Washington. June 16. The Ameri can government, it was learned to day, does not contemplate participa tion in the deliberations of the coun cil of the league of nations, winch convened today at Geneva for con sideration of problems arising out of the allocation of mandates. A suggestion that the United States be represented was made by the presi dent of the council after the United States "had protested against . the award of mandates without its con sent "! . ;' Since the United States and Japan have undertaken a settlement by di rect negotiation of pending issues between the two countries, con sideration of the Yap mandate by the council is regarded here as un necessary. ' ; r Assailant of Policemen Escapes From Hiding Place Frankfort, Ky., June 16. John Fallis, grocer, who last night shot six persons while resisting arrest for interfering in an altercation between a policeman and Fallis' son, escaped during the night from the combina tion grocery store and dwelling where it was believed he had barri caded himself. Fallis apparently left the building before the officers had n opportunity to surround V Explanation of Harding Peace Plans Asked by Holt Magazine Writer . and League Advocate Makes Public Letter Written To President. New York, June 16. Hamilton Holt, magazine editor, who headed the delegation of pro-league repub licans that called on former Presi dent Wilson during the last presi dential campaign, today made public a letter he had written President Harding asking him to explain to the American people the terms of the Harding association proposed to supplant the Wilson league of na tions. ! ' "If you delay much further, people everywhere will inevitably conclude that you have no concrete plan at all, else that you propose to put party . harmony above world wel fare," declared Mr. Holt. "In that event there will be noth ing left for those who want America to play its rightful part in stabilizing the world but to organize the coun try so as to capture congress for the league in 1922 and the presidency in 1924." . This, Mr. Holt asserted, could be done. He declared that the league of nations and bolshevism were the only great ideas that had come out of the war as world panacea and asked the president whether he could guarantee that the world would not turn to bolshevism if it became gen erally believed that he had no plan at all for the substitute of the league. Active in Campaign. Mr. Holt, a member of the League to Enforce Peace, took a hand in the last presidential campaign by making public a list of 100 republicans who had bolted the Harding ranks. His letter follows: "It is now six years that the league of nations issue has been before the country.- It is now two years that you as senator, presidential candi date, president-elect and president, have had the league of nations issue officially before you. ' "As senator you voted to have the Eabor Meeting Rejects Plan of One Bijr Union Convention in an Uproar Over Objection to Passing . Resolutions Favored By. Negroes. Denver, Colo., June 16. The American Federation of Labor today unanimously repudiated the "one big union" idea. I- Without discussing the forty-first annual convention oi the federation sustained the action of its commit tee on organization in non-concurring on a resolution calling for "one body of workers through amalga mations, federations and protective agreements."- - . ,; The declaration presented by J. L. Pauley of the West Virginia state federation of labor also, urged all na tional and international unions to insert clauses in their working agree ments wherebey they can "r(enier such assistance as is needed by lmy and all crafts, when called upon to do so." It asked that all unions ar range the dates of their contracts so that they would expire at the same time. The convention was thrown into confusion when several delegates by objection denied the negro delegation permission to introduce a resolution condemning the "mob violence" of the "Klu Klux Klan" or "white caps" of the south. Trouble Restoring Order. President Samuel Gompers had great difficulty in restoring order, as (Tom to Fare Two, Colnma Foor.) The Bee (Celebrates Next Sunday; You're Invited THE BEE will be SO years old next Tuesday, June 21. It is an age that few women admit, and' most men are secretive about. But The Bee's past has been too fully exposed to the public gaze, its development to the half century mark of maturity too obvious and evident to permit of preserving any air of secrecy in the matter. , So the event will be celebrated publicly next Sunday in the form of a 50th Anniversary Edition replete with tales of human and historical interest, covering the development of The Bee and the kaleidosopic changes of the environment in which it grew. It is a "birthday party" to which everyone is invited. The stunts for this party will A. rename of the etlrrlo create t Omaha, hlrtory. fey Alfred . Borensom, A review, hr Albert Watklat, of oTcnU of Xeoraoka history with which Tho Bea haa been connected. A at err of tho development of the Omaha atoek rarde. bjr Bruce McCuIloch. These are a few of the stunts. There will be others. From all of which you will gather that The Bee, while admittedly grow ing old, still retains "young ideas." .This Anniversay Edition is a number that everyone will want." Please favor circulation department by ordering early. , The fiesf . . The Sunday Bee HAMILTON HOLT United States enter the existing league provided the Lodge amend ments were made part of the act of ratification. "As presidential candidate you left the country and even your own fol lowers in doubt as to your attitude. Thirty-one pre-eminent republicans among whom were your secretary of state, Mr. Hughes, and your sec retary of commerce, Mr. Hoover assured their fellow-countrymen that you would go into the existing league. Senators Borah and Johnson and other 'irreconcilables' assured them you would not. Repudiated League. "As president-elect you did not see fit to disclose your attitude on the league beyond what you had said during the campaign. Both the 'Thirty-One' and the 'Irreconcilables' claimed you for their own. "As president, however, you have unequivocally repudiated the exist ing league of nations, whose area comprises considerably more than (Tarn to Page Two, Column Two.) Pueblo Appeals Not Necessary, Weeks Declares Secretary of War Explains Conditions as Reported by Army Officers After . Survey. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee leased Wire. Washington, June 16. Secretary of War Weeks is wondering why so many appeals are coming from Col orado for money to relieve suffering resulting from the Pueblo flood when so much relief already has been sent there that it cannot be utilized. . , Noticing today that a committee of Washington citizens, . organized for the purpose, had appealed for funds for Pueblo aid, the, secretary of war determined to acquaint the public with the facts in the situa tion as he knows them. "I want the people to know," said the secretary, "that the relief already sent to Pueblo is more than adequate and I cannot see what is going to be done with the money now being asked for unless the authorities in Pueblo propose to use to-reconstruct buildings and property damaged by the flood." Text of Telegram. - The secretary made public the following telegram from Col. Wil liam G. Caples, corps of engineers, who was ordered to proceed to the devastated district to render assist ance requested by the local author ities: "Essential industries generally un damaged : and operating as usual. - (Torn to Tge Two, Column Three.) include: Article by banker snd Insur ance men on the growth of bank ing; nd Insurance in Omaha and Nebraska. A ' photograph of oao of the earUeot leopiea of Tho Bee. the edi tion of Aacnat 5. 1871. will ho re produced on pace one of tho Botogravare eectioa. Washington Center of Diplomacy Exe of League of Nations Meet ings Finds All Nation Seeking Best of Inter national Came. Japan Seeks Alliance By ARTHUR SEARS HENNING. Chicago Tribune-Omaha Bee, Leased Wire. Washington, June 16. On the eve of the meeting of the league of na tions council to discuss the mandate issue raised by the United States and the meeting of the British imperial conference, which will discuss re newal of the Anglo-Japanese al liance, Washington has become the center of a great international game of diplomatic chess. The British self-governing do minions, fearful of the further ag grandizement of Japan, are far from enthusiastic over a renewal of the alliance. Some of them have ques tioned to what extent they should commit themselves to British' "en tangling alliances," arid all of them insist that the alliance, if renewed, shall not be inimical to the interests of the United States. . Japan is anxious to renew the alliance and is maneuvering to allay the apprehensions of the British dominions. Tokio has instructed Baron Shidehara, the Japanese am bassador here, to open negotiations with Secretary of State Hughes for an immediate settlement of all issues between the United . States and Japan. . Proposals Not Satisfactory. Japanese propaganda is directed toward convincing the British do minions that the ' relations betweert the United States and Japan furnish no sound impediment to a renewal of the alliance, because the contro versies between the two countries are in process of settlement. This, however, is not the fact. BaronShidehara has had several talks with Mr. Hughes and. has dis closed Japan's ardent desire to throw all the controversies into the hopper and settle them by the give and take compromise method. But he has struck a snag. Mr," Hughes 1 !........ .I"- -il bargaining, but he is reported to be far from favorably . impressed with the proposals of settlement made by Japan on any single issue. The Japanese would like to satis fy the United States on the Yap Island question merely by interna tionalizing the cable and radio sta tions and possibly giving America the Yap-Guam cable. Mr. Hughes refuses to take the bait. He insists that Japan alone cannot settle the Yap question. That can be done only by all the allied powers rescinding the disposition which was made without consulting the United States of Yap and the other Pacific Islands. League Not Considered. Not ' even the league of nations can settle this question, Mr. Hughes holds, and he will send no representa tive to discuss the matter with the league council despite the urging of that body. Although the league council passes on the mandates, Mr. Hughes has carried his protest to headquarters the powers in the su preme council which formulate the mandates. '.. France and Italy have evinced a disposition to yield to the conten tions of the United States in the mandate dispute. Great Britain wants the United States and Japan to settle the dispute without dis turbing the fundamental principle of the' mandate, which in the c4se of the Pacific islands permits the extension thereto of the laws of the mandatory. By virtue of this arrangement', Japan can keep the United States out of the north Pacific islands, but Australia and New Zealand likewise can keep Japan out of-the former German islands in the south Pacific. Britain is wary of yielding any thing to the United States in the north Pacific which would impair the bars raised by the British dominions again$t Japan in the south Pacific. Second Reduction in Oil" Prices in Week-Announced Pittsburgh, Pa., June 16. The second reduction in the price of crude oil within a week was announced here today by the principal purchas ing agencies when another cut of 25 cents a barrel on all grades was posted. New prices are: Pennsylvania crude $2.50, Corning $1.40, Cabell $1.31, Somerset $1.10, Somerset light $1.30 and , Ragland 75 cents. , Steadily increasing stocks was given as the cause of the reduction. Secretaries Denby and Fall Plan Big Western Trip Washington, June 16 Plans for an extensive western trip, including all Pacific states, Alaska and Hono 'ulu,' beginning next month, have been made by Secretaries Denby and Fall. Admiral Coontz, chief of raval operations, will occompany tht party. On the return trip the officials will tour the gulf coast. . Chicago Man Elected Head Of Advertising Clubs Atlanta, ! Ga., June 16. Charles Kimry Macintosh of Chicago was elected president of the Associated Advertising Clubs of the World. He was opposed by George W. Hop kins of New York. -The vote was 12b to 698. , Man at Lincoln Suspected of Davis' Murder Detectives .Declare Have Evi dence "Shorty" McLaughlin, Armed, Seen in "WingieV Auto Night of Killing. Persistent work on the mystery veiling the murder of "Wingie" Davis, Omaha taxi driver the night of May 22, and the concealment of his body under a culvert near Grand Island where it was . found a. week later, has led to the completion of a net of circumstantial evidence, de tectives and police said yesterday. , They declined to name the man or men against . whom the charges of murdering Davis will be filed. McLaughlin in Jail. . . They declare they have witnesses who saw , one, "Shorty" McLaugh lin in the car with Davis the night of the murder and that McLaughlin had a revolver in his hands. They also claim to have information that McLaughlin and Davis were in. a fist fight a few days before ' the murder. McLaughlin is under arrest. in Lincoln, held by government officers in connection with charges of steal ing cars and selling narcotics. No Substantial Evidence. George Townley of the Reliable eDtective agency declared yesterday McLaughlin is wanted in connection with Davis' murder and that when another man is in custody the mur der will be solved. Mrs. Davis has told police, they say, that McLaughlin declared Davis had "double-crossed" him. Hans Mortensen, former police officer, arrested last week in connec-, tion with the ' murder, was sent to jail for 10 days on a charge of va grancy, there- being , no substantial evidence to connect him with the Davis affair. v Grand Island Photos THE BEE will publi.h in the Rotofravuro Section for next Sunday a full page of photograph from Grand Iiland. - - .j ' ' i The page will include pho- ' tot' of x the Grand Iiland Auditorium, Pioneer Square, St. Franci hospital, the Y. M. C. A. building:, Grand Ialand college .and ' other picture. . , ' The photograph have been reproduced with an ar tistic effect that makes the page one of the big feature of next Sunday's Bee. The Bee offer the public the only Rotogravure Sec tion publiihed in thia terri tory. The Best The Bee Everybody Happy Case of Keegan In Hands of Jury Attorney Makes General Denial of Implication in Farmer's Robbery. The jury in the case of Frank Kee gan, Omaha attorney, on trial for abetting the robbery ot Hans Jur gens, farmer living three miles north west of Florence, went out at 3 yes terday afternoon. Keegan was taken to the county jail to await their ver dict. ' ' - ; Keegan has been on trial since last Monday for abetting the robbery which occurred the night of Decem ber 10, last ' i Conviction on this charge carries a penalty of three to 15 years. Attorneys began their arguments to the jury at 10 yesterday morning. Keegan's defense was a general denial of the long and detailed story told by Walter Slangerup and oth ers, who confessed to a part in the robbery of Jurgens, which occurred December 10, 1920. Keegan admitted that he was liv ing at the Mangerup home, oau Mayberry avenue, in a drunken con dition for weeks, but both he and his wife denied hearing or participating in any conversation regarding the robbery. A. R. Bailey, William Kyan. Wal ter Peterson and Leopold Doll were character witnesses for Keegan this morning. Mrs. Anna Wallace, sis ter of Mrs. Keegan, testified that the Keegans were at - her home last Thanksgiving day, a -date on which Slangerup testified they were at his home. " ' Petitions for New Temples Granted at y ' Final Shrine Session Des Moines, June 16. (Special Telegram.)--Seyen petitions for new temples - and dispensations were granted at the closing session of the Imperial Shrine council here today. Temples, which had been under dis pensation for a year and were grant ed charters Thursday were Pueblo, Cokjf; Wichita Falls, Tex.; Amaril lo, Tex. .Cities granted dispensa tions were: Miami, Fla.; Billings, Mont.; Bangorj Me.; Syracuse, N. Y. After a year of dispensation a vote is taken for a charter. Cities refused dispensations were: Enid, Okl; Everett, -Wash.; Ard more, Okl.; Fort Dodge, la.? Akron, O.; Kansas City, Kan.; Ottumwa, la.; Ottawa, Canada; Danville, 111.; Pocatello, Idaho; Columbus, Ga.; Cavington, Ky. Paris, Tex., with drew its petition for a charter. . The council voted $10,000 for the relief of Pueblo flood sufferers and voted Frank M. Mills, 90, a life rep resentative of the Imperial council. Mills, who is with the Sioux Falls, S. D., delegation, was formerly of Des Moines. Bathing Beaches Open., Chicago, June 16. Predictions of extremely warrn weather for the rest of the week caused issuance of an or der opening Chicago bathine beaches today, ' . Mail Bandit Who Escaped Guards TakenbyPo Tells of Movement After Es cape From Train Wore Bandage Over Face to Hide Identity. r Centralia, Wash., June 16. Roy Gardner, under two sentences of 25 years each for robbing the mails and who escaped twice from federal guards while being taken to the fed eral prison on McNeill's Islandwas captured here today by Louis. Son ny, a city policeman. He admitted fiis identity in jail. Gardner -escaped the last time at Castle Rock, Wash., Saturday morn ing and said he. came here Tuesday night on a freight train. At no time between the time he escaped and the time he left Castle ock was he more than a mile from the town and often possemen were within a few feet of him, he said, " ' - Wihle in Centralia he wore a band age on his face giving the appearance he had been injured. ; When United States Marshal Holohan of San' Fran cisco, "who led a posse in search, of Gardner, appeared at the jail, Gard ner exclaimed. "Hello, marshal,' it's been a good joke on you." f Gardner also greeted a postoffice inspector who captured him in Cali fornia. Late today Gardner once . more started for McNeill's Island peniten tiary. . Gives Interview. Portland, Ore., June 16. In an in terview with the Portland Telegram by telephone, Roy Gardner explained his movements from the time he es caped from a train at Castle Rock, Wash., last Saturday morning, after holding up . his two guards, to the time of his, arrest. He declared he had boarded a train at the Castle Rock depot the night following his appearance at the Royal -estauraht Tuesday morning. ; . ; . "It was a good chase while it lasted," said Gardner, "only :t was too short. "I'd like to have kept it up for a couple of months, at. least. "I was never more than , a mile from Castle Rock from the time I left the train there with Pyron, after we got the drop on Mulhall and that other guard. . i ". "That was me, all right, in the Royal restauranr. "I'd had nothing to eat for three nights and two days and I just had to take a chance. "I had been lying out a short dis tance from there and I was forced to eat. When I saw that fellow looking in the window at me I knew he had me spotted, so I had to leave my grub and beat it. - The Weather Forecast' ' ' Fair and continued warm Friday. Hourly Temperatures. 5 a. m. a. m. 7 a. at. m .m. a. m. 1A a. m. Mil 1st 7A.S 1U SOS fit ft SJ'7 SS . ...SS Hi ... 'JU ....I . . .'.All .... . ... Ill It a. m. aooa THFEE CARS INTO HIGH WATER Three Omaha Men Among 30 Injured Rushed to Hos pital at Hot Springs, S. D. CLOUDBURST CAUSES BRIDGE TO GIVE WAY Smoker, Pinned Under Chair Car, Is Death Trap for Four of Five Falali-lies.- A sudden cloudburst which flood cd an ordinarily-"dry" creek bed ii northwestern Nebraska is blamec for the plunge of the Northwesterr passenger train from a trestle bridge, over Big Cottonwood creek near Chadron Wednesday iht. Five persons are known to be dead two persons perhaps fatally injurec and 30 persons hurt as a result o: the wreck. Northwestern passangcr train No 606, bound from Lander, Wyo.. tc Ontaha, was rolling along the trael on schedule time, when at 10:15 tin locomotive pounded across the wood en ' trestle bridge over Cottonwooc creek, 15 miles west of Chadron, 461 miles northwest of Omaha. Supports Give Way. The bridge sagged. With a roar and a crash the supports oi the bridge gave way and four cars plunged into the crerk bed. J Breaking of the connection threw on the air brakes and with a screech of the wheels tlie Pullman car on the rear of the train came to a stand still with the . sleeper perilously hanging over the creek bank. All were wooden cars except the chair car, which ivas steel. , The bag gage car was the first to fall and was buried in the water underneath the chair car. The baggage car was completely demolished, leaviiig only a pile of splinters. The chair car was hurled into the middle of the stream and stood in upright position, leaning against the1aggiige car. The smoking car was hurled 60 feet south of the chair car, one end resting on the bank and the other in the river. The mail car landed on end about the middle of the stream and top pled over against the smoking car. More than 100 feet of bridge crashed down. The flood waters receded rapidly and workmen helped injured by first aid and rushed them by spe cial train to Chadron. The body of Baggageman Scott was found sitting upright in a chair which had crashed through the lid of a trunk. His head was split open, his watch had stopped at 10:16. One of the unidentified victims had a hole three inches in diameter torn through the back of his head. Other victims were badly mangled and tke bag gage car and smoker were spattered with blood, inside and out. Members of the train crew, bruised themselves, were unable to assist the (Tura to Page Two, Column Five.) - Dead and Injured In Railway Wreck The following is a complete list of the dead and injured in the Crawford railroad wreck as given out by H. E. Dickinson, general superintendent of the Northwestern Enes: DEAD. imC'. J1- '"!. lmaa. Grand ' Ialand. Illol from lnjurirs. Frank Boomer. Minima, Lander. Wto. Ntewart, aalramnn, Gordon, Xrb. 5" ' i10' bairann. Chadron. B. F. Ski In, mail ewk Chadron, died from injury),-. . ' SEVERELY IN J IKED. Dick Arnold. Chadron. Jitw agent. In. rerniil Injuriea. Walter (ioodell. rxpreaa meaaenser, Chudron. Severe body injorle. , INJCBED. . 'J.'', Webster atreet. fltnalia. Body bruiae. dor E. Keefe. 1 North Nineteenth street, Omaha. Back and arm bruised. II. H. rirkhohm, Pullman conductor CMS North SUty-foortb .tree. BratMt ' atmnt head and internal Injuries. Mrs. A. M. t.ustafaon, Alnsworth, Neb Body bralaea. ,.t!-, Bandholta, engineer. Chadroa Shoulders and arms brulaed. VV. L. Leaser, gaa Francisco. Bod) bruises. . J. H. Lessley, Sprlncflrld, Mo. Umbi Injured. II. M. Plnmmer. Chadron. Knees In jured. William Bryant, Blair, Neb.' Body Charles Duntae, Cheyenne. Wyo. Silent Injuries. kwh,,'' 18 ' en. ler. Shoulder bruised. . . VV". W. White. 13f West Tlr(lata stteet. Denver, l-ein Injured. T. J. Horan. bra kr man. Chadron. Head and arma allghtl- injured. B. R. Lyons, fireman, Chadron. . Blbi erwahed. Elmer B. Smith. SIS KoaoeU atreet, Portland. Ore. Bruised abont head nd ls. J. J. Feldhaosen, brakeman, Chadron. BneL injured. . . K. 8. Wefso, Harrison, Neb. Hips la. Jurtd. P H. I nltt. Harrison, Neb. inlarrd about head and arm. J. W. Meyer. Crawford. Hand allchtlv Injured. S. H. Potter, in Ronton bulldlnc. Dea rer. Internal Injuries. K. Mday. Olft Kidire Court, Evaastoa, III. Arma and Iran Hrulked. D. O. Koherta. brakemaa, Chadroa. BKrk and hips Injured. Oeorire G. GilrltrUt, 4 Oaa and Eire. trie buildinc, Denver. Kklaned. C heeler T. Smyth. Rapid City, S. O. General tajuriea. C N. Barker, brakemaa. Chadron. lf injured. d. W. Flnnea-an. conductor, Caaper, H yo. General hrulaea. Grant llnrnmlnv. Hamilton. Ont. Head anil body injured. I.. 8. Glow, Yankton, S, D. Lets and chest bruised. Mrs. c. C. Carey. Crawford. Limbs biulned. . ,K,rl Hn. Tomahawk, Wlf- Ml(b Injuries. PLUIE