Decatur Democrat, Volume 40, Number 12, Decatur, Adams County, 5 June 1896 — Page 6

' STRUGGLE IS OVER Bond Issue Question Is ‘Finally Voted on In the Senate. PASSED BY A VOTE OF 32 TO 25. (‘<>iigr<*«* Must 11. leafier Sanction the Issuing Os interest Bearing Bonds—Several Amendments Defeated Bouse Passed the lllver and Harbor Bill Over the Presidenfs Veto—Walsh t’nseated. Washington, June 3—At 7 o'clock last night the long struggle in the senate over the bill to prohibit the issue of bonds came to an end, and the bill was passed by a vote of 32 to 25. The bill as passed covers only three lines, as follows: “Be it enacted that the issuance of interest 1 bearing bonds of the United States for any purpose whatever without further authority of congress is hereby prohibited.” The voting did not begin until 6,:39 p. ni., at which time the chamber was., dimly lighted and the galleries almost empty. A flood of amendments were first voted down, all being defeated. One by sir. Aldrich (R. I.) gave the ex- / ecutive powers to issue bonus in certain another by Mr. Aldrich proved 1 that.the act should not impair tiie obligation to pay in coin. Mr. Hilfs’ ;/neudmem that treasury notes be retired, ■when redeemed was tabled 43 to 12.. Mr. Quay’s amendment for the substitution 1 > com notes lor treasury mites . was defeatei.'-without a yea ami nay ■ vote. The :st preliminary vote was on Mr. llii/s mot am to postpone the subject until next December, winch was defeated.' ’’’hen canie the final vote, , with the .result state -i. Di bat. Last. d. all Day. • The dvhite on the boipl bill Tasted .throughout tlie. day. and ..was at times very intimated. Mr. Cannon. fl tah.,l, made a'sp rit.ed reply to criticisms of the live lie’.iubijcan seuators,, including himself, who voted against the Dmgley tariff bill and deemred that the measure was a legislative monstrosity. Mr. Cannon asserted that theinter-niountain states toot Henry M. Teller as a leader rather than the senator frOm Ohio ( Sherman;. Mr. Allison expressed his strong belief that she United Stat . s could not ! enter alone up; u the coinage es silver i at* Kitol. Mr. Chandler appealed to senators on the other side of the chamr- ber to jom in a'patriotie measure to sustain the country’s honor. Mr. Chandler also paid a tri Suite to the p ers- nal ihteg- ; rity of President Cleveland arid Secre- ; tary Carlisle. Mr. Teller spoke in favor i of making silver the’first and paramount ' question. ’. ~ I Mr. Burrows declared that it would , have been better had the country gone •down in the storm Os war than that a measure taking away the last prop to its credit should pass. Mr. Palmer (Ills.,; also opposed the bill. - Before the bond lull was taken up Mr. Morrill (Vt.), chairman of tiie finance committee, spoke on tariff and finance. . PASSED OVER THE VETO. House Disposes of the Hirer and Harbor , Bill by a' Large Majority. • Washington, June 3. —The house de- ■ voted itself yesterday to passing the river and harbor bill over the president’s veto and to unseating by a vote as 162 to 39, John J. Walsh, the Demo- . cratic member from the Eight New : York district, whose place, will be filled ( My John Murray Mitchell (Rep.) Both •f these actions wore foregone conclu- ■ sions, so that they excited comparatively little interest, although there was a full house to vote on the river and harbor bill. It was passed by 220 to 60, many more votes than the two-thirds necessary to overrule a vote, and it was passed without debate, although Mr. Dockery (Mo.) protested vehemently that debate had been promised. Thirtynine Democrats voted to override the . presidential objectii a and 26 Repub- ! lieans stood by Mr. Cleveland. The I naval appropriation bill ww reported ' from confeiyne?;. with an agreement on ! all items but tlieinumber of battleships, 1 Incidentally Clfiiirimm Cannon, of the ; committee on appropriations predicted i that congress will adjourn late next j week. * ■ I’resiileut's Tin Wedding Anniversary. Washington, Tune 3. —Ten years ago>' yesterday, president Cleveland was ' married in the white house. There was k . no formal celebration of the .tui wed- j ding yesterday, but Dr. Sunderland, the ■ minister who united the pair, called and ; paid his congratulations to the president and Mrs. Cleveland and the mem- | bers of the cabinet did likewise. The ' ' family have moved into the white house from Woodley preparatory to departing 1 next Thursday for their summer home, at Gray Gables. Recommend Dismissal of a Mint Clerk. Wash: ngton, j June 3.—The director . of mint has directed the. qismissal from the service of A. F. Schaufreau, the weigh clerk of the New Orleans mint, who failed to account for a" small amount of jgold in his possession. The matter lias been placed in the"tamls.of' the Unffi'd ( Sff;ites attorney,.. ._ Vice 'l’resiileut’s Daughter Marries. Washington, June 3.—ln the presence of* a distinguished gathering, of friends from both official and resident society, Miss Julia, the.eldest (laughter ' of Vice President ami Airs. Stevenson, was married last.nigl.t to -Rev. Martin D. Hardin, son• bf Mr. ami Mrs. P. Watt. Jlardin of Danville, Ky. lurks Must Behivc. Athens, JunQ’U.—The .Tints?' lost 75 men and the Christians 40 men during the operations for .’relieving Vaunts, in the Island.'of. Grefd The, commanders of the several warships have wariied Die Turkish autlioritiestin 'Cretp that unless they maintain order in the island, they "mint expiwt ep.crgndic n.u a. ui vs to.be taken. ■ 7

INDIANA BBIEE NOTES. Anderson reports that frost tell there I yesterday m riilna. Wabash i- to have an old-fashioned I loiirth of Jidy celebration. A union mstrngot glass workers into be held in MmivieoU th? 12th. Grasshoppers are ravaging the wheat fields jn the. northern uart.of Laporte , I county. Anderson ha« passed an ordinance prohfbiting liiey’i lists froth riding faster than 10 miles an hour. Another ei lfitiy of Unukirds from the northern part of the state will start for ■ North Dakota next week. The remains of the man found in the woods near Brazil have been identitied as those of G. J. Early of Paleo, Kan. “Bloodhounds have been placed on the track of the burglars who rollbed the general store of William Bolt at Cyclone. Temperance people of Springfield township, Allen county, have succeeded in closing two of the four saloons in that locality and are after the other two. Michigan City is making a determined effort to have the state headquarters of the Catholic Order of Foresters moved from Hammond to that city. DOUBT HIS IDENTITY I Logansport Foresters Think Lispenard Has Not Been Found. SALOON WAR IN HENRY COUNTY, i . ' •' I Applicant For License Alleges That ' Names Were Forged to tile Keinoustranee 1 ormer's Daughter Missing From N.-aV I. ni-pert Injured by the Sting of :i B. e- Imli.imi Notes. Logansi'oet, Ind.. June 3. —Rbliert' Burkett of this-city is in receipt of letters front JOr E. B. Hunter iff Falkville, - Ala., whii'li seems to prove fluff the i\ - ' mail’s of the man ’ discovered in January bu Iskirni No. 1, in Hie Mississippi,were not rh se of Cluirles. Lispenard, 1 tlie missing detective of the 'Order of Foresters. Lispenard is said to be as Cullman. The disinterred remains brought here from the island were not positively identitied by Mrs. Lispenard. . The Foresters .will nor pay the .sj, (too insurance money unless f ull-identification is macle. They believe Li-penard is still alive. '■ ! SALOON W.feK IS ON. Applicant Claims That Names on Beinonstranve Were Forged. Knightstown, Ind., June 3. — The citizens of this town and township have filed a remonstrance against Peter Wagoner, and have precipitated a temperance war. Wagoner and his followers, charge that many names were forged to the remonstrance, and the case is set for trial in the commissioners’ court on Thursday. If the saloonkeeper is defeated he says he will start two quart, shops at Knightstown. At the head of the temperence men is George W. Williams, who ran for representative in the Republican nominating election.' Senator L. P. Newby is with Wagoner and the liquor element. FKEAK OF NATI’RE, I HorfcicultiTr&ts Are Puzzled by Peculiar Blooms ou a Pear Tree. Lebanon, Ind., June 3.—A freak of nature which is a.source- of much interest to local horticulturists is displayed on a pear tree in Benjamin Booher’s yard on east Main street. Blooms entirely foreign to the nature of the tree appear from two different branches, i The branches in question are natural ; and of this year’s growth. The tree) , bore a nice lot of fruit last year, and as no pears are -yet in sight speculation is active as to what Mr. Booher will feed 1 his palate on from this tree. A proses-I sor from Purdue University will investigate the phenomenon. Girl Missing From Home. Logansport, Ind., June 3. —Flora 1 Weaver, the 13-year-old daughter of Jacob Weaver, a farmer of Clay town- ; I ship, has been missing for two weeks ; and cannot be found, although every j effort has been made by tire Logansport I police ■to locate .her. The authorities j.have kept the affair secret without avail aim have acknowledged that they are unable to get trace of her. Considerable anxiety is f.-it concerning heron : account of Jes youth and ihexperielice. . Aged Coiiple I iltiappy, Valparaiso, Ind.', June 3. —Susan ■ Eiisign, 71 y- ars old, Ims filed suit for ; divorce from Simon Ensign, 76 years i | old. Tire (lei’endant-one yuar ago re-! ' ceived considerable notoriety through i the metropolitan press by claiming to ' i have just eseiqx-d from a Cuban prison, 1 I where he liad been confined for 20 | years. He left hi re and Went to Michigan. where, a sinirt time ago, he filed a - claim against the Spanish government for .$200,000 damages - . 1 Stung by a lloney v Bee. Falmocth, Ind., Juire3. —Eva. Wurth, 3 years old, daughter of Daniel Wurth |;'of this place, was stung by a honey bbe ;on the sole of her tout. Her body i swelled to an unnatural size and turned : purple in color, with i‘( ; d "spots. -Her | tongue swelled also until she could scarcely hold it in her mouth.' After several hours' ;itt< iitii»ii the little girl’s life wks kaved. The Unusual result of the stingers attracted attention. Scaflohling Gave W’ay. Valparaiso, lud., June 3. —By the 1 giving vvay of a e l-r, used ' in erecting the new I. O. O. F. building, j three men were t hrown to the ground, a distance of 2N to-t. Isaac Cole had a ■ leg broken ah-d was hurt internally. He |. will prob? ir . (ii ( ., Humes and A. E. Bnjkeswtr -'ivertTy injured. ' ’,r— — - Two Jail Br.-alu is Csfptured. Vincennes, Ind.,'* June-3. .-- Three ' , ■ prisoners in th'. ir.imy jail overpowered , Bah if Jauu-s King, took his revolver' ( and escapi <l. 1 eey were Rufus Myers, colored; Ir;fnk Ailliams and: William , Itfll'T. „Ihclaii ii wo were recaptured, Myers . - at. w A.. . 1 • ' ' ’ ‘ „

IS NOT A CANDIDATE a I , Kentucky Governor Out of the Presidejitial Race, HE DOES NOT FAVOR SILVER. I t GoVtuinn- bsr:i<lley the Time Ila-* Come For Fiivorlles and l*<u*Moiinl | l*rvfere!ir<*’< to Be iziid A’ddv —He >»ays i [ the (’oininerriiil IsUervM 4 «»t the Count ry Arc In Danger. Lorisviu.E, June 3.—A special from ' Frankfort contains an interview with Governor Bradley, which is his official withdrawal as a presidential candidate. - He announced to his friends that his i inline would not be presented to the St. 1 Louis convention, although the Ken- ! tueky delegates-at-large and some district delegates are instructed for him. Governor Bradley looks on the growth of free silver among the southern and western Democrats with alarm, as ' threatening the interests of the country. He urges the Republicans |o meet . the issue squarely and closes his interI view thus: “The nominee as Sr. Louis should have the undivided supn at of tiie party for Ide commerenff ’-i, ?r< st of the republic is m much Hupper ;:s in 1861. 'Personal pivi-■:<-:k e •'iumhi be laid aside and petty animosities forgotten and patriotic 1 ---'.niH'rats wo-' st ,u<t tor the advancement mid prosperity of the nation ; should be appeared t > a—.st in the d<. - 1 fe.ff of tli ■si who w'ohid lower Die ! standard of our money and t'Areby m’cessarily strain toe nation's Lom.r. Keiitiieiiy w<m a signal triumph iast I.:.! on u'ringn.g declaration tor sound m irey. Hies should stand by.riieir guns, ioigettiug ail mtercire' strife ami march shmilder to slumhier ton grand victory in November. ’ ’ (<(iv<Tiinr Bruni y’s tri isi- siv he stat. ii. as-('oil as tlfcdefur.i-. of the shyer tiila! wave last Saturday cahie m, that the tim? had come tor the state favorites ami personal pieieiences to be laid asine. j OREGON ELECTION. I! . - Republicans Claim the Legislature, but ; It Will Be ( lose. i PoRTLANii, CU’-. June '3. — Returns from rhe^'PetimM—ate still incomplete, amt it will be late tonight before-the detinite results are known. i Ex-Governor Pennoyer has been elected mayor of Portland by a pluarality of about-- L'-’Oto. The vote , for congressmen in tlie First and Second dtk- : tricts is very close between the Republicails and the Populists. The • Republican state central com-i mittee claims the legislature, insuring election for a Republican United States senator. Returns from the interior show large Populist gains in nearly j every county in the state. The Repub- . lieans have elected Bean, supreme judge, by from 5,090 to 19,000. The i two congresmen are indoubt, the con- I test being between the Republican and Populist nc-minees in bqch districts. ; The First district gives Tongue (Rep.) ' ; 7,6*14; Vanderburg (Pop.) 7,645; Meyers j i (Deni I 3,264. The vote in the Second ' district gives Ellis (Rep.) 1,929; Quinn ' (Pop.) 1,820; Northrup (Ind.) 857; Ben- j nett (Dem.) 1,606. The legislature will ! be closed, but at the present time.the indicSßions favor the Republicans. The Democrats and Populists fused in several counties and it is possible that the Democrats and Populists together will have a majority in the house. The senate is Republican by at least five ! majority. WAS PROBABLY MURDERED. ' _____ Schoolteacher's Hody Found Lying on the I Lake Shore at Conneaut. O. I Cleveland, June 3.—Mrs. Eleanor ■ McClellan wag found dead on the lake ! shore at Conneaut, 0., last Sunday morning and it is now believed she was murdered. Mrs. McClellan, who was about 50 years old, was formerly a , schoolteacher at some place in New ' York, but had been employed as it domestic in this city for some time. She disappeared a few days ago. Before her I dead body was found at Conneaut she I told several persons, with whom she 1 came in contact, that she had run aw;uy j from Clevei'und to escape her divorced husband. She had evidently been struck | on the head with some blunt instrument. . The coroner decided that she had come , I to her death at thefiand<of anuhkiiown ' 1 person. The police are trying to djs- | cover a clew to the'murderer. ; TORNADO CAUSES FORECLOSURE. | Suit Instituted’"'Against tlie St. Louis i I nited Elevator Company. i- Springfield, Ills., June ?3.—Suit-has ‘ been instituted in the United States circuit court by tlie Chicago, Burlington and Quincy railway and R P. Tansey of this city against the St. Louis United j Elevator company and William E. Burr | of St. Louis, trustee for the bondholtlers, ' to foreclose rhe mortgage given by the elevator company and for the appoint- ! ment of a receiver. Thp mortgages i were made tq,secure band'stfor $682,000, ' issued in October, 1889. Plaintiffs own ■ SIOO,OOO of the.se bonds... The defendant is Owner of four . elevafors in St. Loins and four in East St'. Louis. These elevators were damaged tn the amount of $300,000 by Wednesday’s tornado, and this is the reason this suit is brought. ORDERED TO SHOOT. Flood IXistrict Officers Intend to • Stop Looting Os Goods. •Seneca, Mo.,' June. 3.—A1l setts.of evil persons from tire territory ijitered Seneca yesterday iiiidMogan lootiig the wreckage, thrown up lietwecn lulu and the territory Jim’ by _i-iie flood. Mju -hull ■ Shearer of Seneca, has placed deputies on gnard'with orders to shoot aiiy pilferer caught in tjie act. --Aid ibr the destitute families is slow in coming in. | Fifty families arti jlimncless aid 199 , ■ families are absolutely. dbstitutU The ; sky continues gloomy .and cvednigLt people whp‘s f nerves suffered mm the , experifnee of Saturday, canip iidm tire ’ Tiills surrounding Seneca, feaiiig ul- I other flood. j.

itLEGRAPH TICKS. Arthqr t’ooleof Yale yesterday won the : New England tennis dhipupiiHiship, defeating Midc.iilm Chase. , I A i yeur-old son of Adolph Audiye of | Petersburg, Ills., fell from a boat into the | haligamqn river and was draw neii. Majur Luther Day, u leading -hoe manI ufacturer i>! 1 Haverhill, Mass., dropped dead j e-terday. He was 63 years ni age. 1 Calvin Garner, aged '(0 years, yf Kite I niiindv. Ilh., was fiitidly injured by fright - | cited burses. He was a Veteran of the civil o 1 war. News has been received in New York , that Kiser, Murphy and Wheeler, the i three Ameriian racing men, have arrived hi Paris. Dan McLeod, the California wrestler, last night defeated Ed Atherton of Cuba, N. Y., in two strangle falls for a purse of $590 a side. Frank Rice, convicted of forgery at Owosso, Mich., has been sentenced to five , years in the penitentiary. His companion, ' -Frank Thompson, is now serving a 2-years’ sentence. TAKING OUT BODIES « Work of Rescue Still Going On In St. ‘ Louis. — MANY OFFERS OF ASSISTANCE. ! j • V. Kyuipjithctir Telegram’* Being Hourly Received by the Mayor ot the Mound Citj Esideavors Being M ide to .<«rt Along Without Outside Aid—Arrests j Made In East st, Louis. Sr. L.OI IS, May <0, —Las. night, 4S hours after the tornado of Wednesday tore its way t-hrortiyh the city, th re existed abpar as much une.ilaii ty as t i the aet'.uiHiumber of the people killed r and the amount of property destroyed as oii the first morning of the disaster, j Scores of dead have been identified, but , no oiie i- willing to venture a guess as to how many bodies may be in the ruins of the hundreds of buildings ’ll.- yet unexplored. The total number of dead in ' 4 St. Louis identified up to last night is I' 162 and in East St.-Louis 127. In St. Louis there are 22 bodies still | Unidentified and in East St. Louis two. 1 It is believed that the deaths of the injured and the future recovery of bodies , will bring the St. Louis death list well i up to 26(1. In East St. Louis The city officials declare that they havo hope I that the death roll on that side of the j river will not exceed 150, but tlie rii'ins : upon which the rescuers have not yet ' ..by'gUji to work may swell the total far ■ beyond that figure. The estimates upon property loss have grown Wilder and further apart. Guesses were made ail the way front 82,000,000 to -*50,000,000 for this city and from 8500,000 to 820,000,000 tor East St. Louis. , I The nihst popular estimate is in the ' - neighborhood of 825.000,000 lor both cities, including railroad buildings dam- ; aged. The building contractors of the I city have been overwhelmed, with or- I j ders for rebuilding, and the work of ’ i wiping out the havoc of the storm will I ' be pushed with all energy. I The committee in charge announces I : that the auditorium; to be used for tire I ' Republican national convention, has I i been repaired and now shows not the I ■' slightest effect of the storm. Milita Patrolling the Levee. Two companies of the Illinois state militia from Greenville and Belleville, Ills., in all about 100 men, patrolled the levee district of East St. Louis all day. I Dead lines were established and no one was allowed to pass without a permit. “I wired Governor Altgeld Thursday to take this action,” said Mayor Bader. “It was done in order to protect the exposed property, for our force was inI sufficient to properly guard it. In a case of this kind, the criminal element come in very quickly for the purpose of pillage and they frequently resort to incendiarism, and although we' have not been troubled much as yet, it was done as a measure of precaution and to prevent a beginning of thievery. I telegraphed to Chief of Police Harrigan in I St. Louis to prevent, as much as possible, • the influx of thugs. This lie has done ; and has sent a number of detectievs and ' officers to help us out. Heims also sfy:- ! | ti< med mciron the other sidfe and unless'' a trail appeals affright he is refused per- I j mission to cross. There is nothing, I however in the report that martial law I i has been declared. ” i The effect <>f these stringent meas- ■ ures was soon seen in the greatly de- ■ creased number of people in the (ievusI tiffed district. Ovi r 60 suspects have 1 already been arrested and were sent out lof town or locked up. Several pick-j i pickets and confidence men have also ; - been arrested. In addition-to the militia and police force Chief of Police Ga- | noy swore in 50 deputies, who were placed in different parts, of the city. OIpTS of Aid. The dbslitutioii, misery and want here has touched the hcarts of the peoi pie in all parts' of the count ry and, as a ; result, ever since the. storm of Wediics- j day, offers of help and contributions 1 1 have been pouring in. Up to the late | hour yesterday $45,(M)() was tlie total ' amount, of donations received. A large number <>f, messages show ' that the purses as well as fire sympathy ; of the people of the United States a i at the disposal of thb helpless unfortunates, of tst.' Louis. But St. Louis is a proud city. Sliejs always ready'to give biff never begs, unless* it squid become necessary by abject w alit. The people of St. Louis who escaped tlto ravages of [ the tornado will see that their In etliren do no! stiffer for the necessities 01' life , or for ai'i-y needy assistance. The mayor of the Mound ('ily, well knowing her ‘civic pride’nas Uniformly , returned thanks, to the senders of all the telegrams and ansffered- that St.., "Louis can carb for her own and while the kind offer of financial assistance lire u]>pre.ci;iicff, no out sine aid will be needed. From far <»ff Loi.idon Sir I Henry Iryiiig, Olga Nelhcrsole a’ml ; Wilson Barrett have cabled money, . sympathy and offers of benefit perform- [ ances if- needed. Others art),,.as generous and no doubt t honsaitds .of dollars I cbuld b"e raised ill a few days if if were pccv.--".>.rr,,. ' . . I . ' ' ~ ‘. • ■ S" - z ‘ , "w - - ■ • '

j VIEWED THE WRECK ‘Thousands of People Visited St. Louis i _ Out of Curiosity. ’-TPXI . MORGUES LINED BY STRANGERS. | One llniidml or More I niiemN .Occurred Yistcriliiy Every llviintc In, (he City Kept In ( oiistnnt Further I’lirticuliirs ot the Storm In and Arouml Carlyle. 11U. St. Loris, June I.—Every railroad entering this storm stricken city rati excursion trains'yosterday. They brought scores of thousands of people to view 1 the devastation and ruin wrought by the awful storm of Wednesday. The streets-strewn district was thronged with visitors all day. They came from ■ almost every town and city within a radius of 100 miles, and all day a cold, ' drizzling rain fell. Lowering, threatening clouds overcast the sky, and a more I dismal seem* than the ruined portion of | this city presented could scarcely bo I imagined. And through the crowded streets all day long funeral precessions were [ii-sing. O.ne hundred burial perI mits were issued by the health depart--1 ment Saturo.ay and every hearse in the city was kept in constant use, | At early dawn the peOpl ■ began to crowd in the city in >rgue. Mai.iy came in search of friends, but for ( lie most I part people who visited tin m were drawn by <i nierbid desire to seethe: mangled s of tfie nut.•rtunnte vic- 1 t ins of the t.-riiad i. All day long the officers on duty weTe busy keeping the people 'moving in line‘“ajid out. if the . viewing room of t'.ia mor Everj few mim.t.-s- so,n,?oire would think t hey liad discovered someone they i knew among the bodies exposed fir view. i SuDeriiitendont Mack' of the morgue ' had a trying time i.tatn ivering questions in regard to the bodies and taking mimes and descriptions of persons who i have not been seeii .by their frietids since tiie storm. There were people there from points in till directions i'?r .and near, Cbie tgo, Cincinnati, Louisville, Indianapolis, Kansas City and ■ scores of smallei places were represented. Froni such towns etimes anxious people inquiring for lost friends. BEIUION ON THE STORM. Rev. Tipples of New York Token (he St. I Louis Tornado For llis Subject. I New York-, June I.—The lesson taught by tire recent terrible storm at 1 St. Louis was the rheme of the sermon delivered yesterday iiy Rev. R. S. Tipples at the Grace Methodist, Episcopal church. He took as his text Jeremiah xxiii, 19, “Behold a whirlwind of the Lord is gone forth in fury, even a grievous whirlwind.” i “Seven years ago today, about 225 miles from here, lying in a,narrow valley between ridges of mountains, was a happy City of 2JIOO homes. Ten thousand people lived and worked there It I was a city of thrift. Just above it in • the valley was an immense reservoir of water. ' Without any warning the clam ' that held the water broke away and i swept the town before it. I “The chief city ot the country west ; of the Mississippi—St. Louis —today sets in the gloom of a great calamity and the world weeps with her. .Why is the sackcloth Os the nations worn today? ‘Behold a whirlwind of the Lord is gone forth in fury, even a grievous whirlwind. ’• “One cannot consider such a catastrophe without asking who is responsible. At Johnstown it was the fault of the owners of the reservoir. The dam was not- strong enough. But man has no control over a tornado. Has God anything to do with these terrible overturnings of nature? Why does he permit such destruction to come upon the ! people if He has control over nature? These and other bewildering questions come into our minds and we feel that it it is hard to understand them.” The speaker went on to explain that as one xis the results of the disaster men would be taught to look away from tlie minor details of life and think more and more of God and the future life. Another Tile-sing would be found in the increased sympathy among them. Already offerings of assistance liad been I received from all sections of this coum- ■ try, from European cities, and evn : China*and the fieojfldof the ()rient were offering aid to unfertuffate St. Louis, _._Z. ; LIST OF IH-rAD SWELLING. Further Details of the Storm In the I icinity of Carlyle, Ills. St. Lot.'is, June 1.-—Additional reports I received at’Carlyle, Ills, of the havoc i wrought in that vicinity by the tornado I Wednesday evening Continue to swell I the list-of dead and injured.. A rnmor was afloat here that Ricl.ivijew, a small place situated on the Illinois Central had been entirely demolished and 20 persons had been killed, but it escaped with small injury in comparison with i neighboring towns northwest. The I full extent of the loss of property canI not be ascertained for weeks to come. ' Many orchards have been' destroyed, | thus entailing a loss of thousands of dollars. Tire tornado was also a visitor in the ' vicinity of Ashley, 'three miles south ot' Richview, and demolished houses, barns and orchards. It seems that the storm parted before .reacjiing fhis_pla.ee, one half going north of it and, the other south. Oakville, 18 jgiiles south of Carlyle, was v-isited. Rain fall in torrents, ■ swelling the small streams to rivers. Shade trees are strewn in profusion over the town, ! Emma, Krause, aged 19 died y< sterday. .Her parelitD; G <•;■< . killed. This'inakes total number of ib-ad 15. ft (jiieri! s Physician Head. London, .lune 1. —Sir J.’ Rnssell -Reynold, M. D., F. R. S., etc. jihysiciun in ordinary to her -iiiajesty’s hotisiMiold, and tlie author (if many valuable medical works, is dead,.aged 65 yeitrift Weilllx-r. ... Indiana and-lllinois- —(tenerally fairin northern portiong) Ipcftl t|,mnrierstornisMfollowed by cle/u cig woathev in south-ern-portions.

■ rmuT rm 1 Hl* View. .1 The necessity, or the apparent neccßI sity, of making a living may 1 ‘ l!i Uy in ' I (luce a KtrtU gu habit of thought. It ’ find it difficult, to get bread, we nal"" rally h ok askance at whutiver stuiids in oiir way. Edward lb at'e ti lls in his i “Autobiography” if gonni flown to I Ramsgati, v.hcie lie Kean.e greatly in- [ D resD.ii in (lie English bcat.imn. 260 of I whCmj wore entirety di pend< nt on tho I chalice of helping sliips in distress I tho <h odwin Sands. So poor Wire they 1 that it had bec< me with some of them a habit of life to think mi re of their earnings than of tlie human beings- they saved. One bitterly cold morning Mr. Heart) met, an old boiitniun of hits .acquaintmice, mid said to him, after passing the greetings of the day: ** “And how are you getting ou?” “Ah,” said the man, ‘‘now that they've got their lights and buoys ami chain cables, there’s nothing left for an honest man to do. ” “What do you mean?” “Widl, hire’s u case. There wo were at tliescuth end of the sands about 3 o’clock this morning, when up came one of these fori ign chaps, and wqsrunning as pretty upon the Goodwin Sands as ev( r you’d wish to see, -when, all of a ; sudden, he saw one ot tlu.se here naaty I staring buoys. Fort helm and oft!” No one wi uld guess from bis tone of i disgust that- be had spent the best iff or is ' of bis life m trying to save Irem disaster tin vt .'seis for which he s-. emed to > court it. ’J I'cto.plc A’ h<> Fat Nothfrig Cold. Th < "'liin i stt ein si .’ mips above all cthi r tb>n;.s. At a well s.irviii table i t-lay ai? i riaiglit mi su immii.g about in a glass 11 wff ( 1 wuterffluv. red with oil 1 and vine.aar, whicli nmb is the creatui'. s hyst- ncally alivi. With an unerring ilmmti ■■ -.r.il lorelibgi r the Chinese di.rer -out p-ueks Kg th the Srit-.gghng fi.-li, nips oil tire t..il at cae bite and casts-1 he ns( !( ss head behind him. ; _>!;( ( k ; ng as it. may sei.in to an English houst k< ep..r\ the. older the .egg in ( hina tin- moie j? i In-1 ha man epicun an stand; i mt dies it Is come, tor no Cliimiman vlio Las a right regard for his pa lute eat.; :i fresh, boiled egg. t Taken in sh, eggs are sent to soak, after having b( > n washid, in a tub of aromatic waler. 'After a tilne liny are removed-, and the waff Ur used in mixing u paste of lime and salt, in whicli the • eggs are packed, m jars. These are hern.i tically siah. d and set aside to stand for a nn nth, whin they are supposed to be fit ft r eating. Tlit >-• lift packed in salt ti'nd lime for 12 months or more, when'opciit it, me fcur.d to have changed - color, soliililhti partly and are odorless. Tlie chnf caio if tlieChinese is toeat nothing cold. Warm or hot feed they absorb in abundance, Hut rightly they maintain t hat cold food lowers the temperature of the stomach beyond tho point--where digestion ciui continue, aiid so the whole health if the body is endangered. —Pearson’s Wi ekly. It 1* SurpriKiUE. “In a horse trade,’’said the lawyer thoughtfully, "it has been gent rally cbneeddtl 11. at a man would cheat his own lather ii opportunity offered.” “True,” 1 plied the merchant. “And not only that—he would think it a gotxl juke ami boast of it afterward. ” “It is admitted,” continued the lawyer, “that there is no such thing as real out-and out honesty in a horse trade. ” “That is beyond the question,” returned the merchant. “But what of it? Why do you harp on it so much?” '"I have been wondering,” said the lawyer, “why the bicycle makers never used this fact as an argument in advertising their wheels. Tire passion for trading horses and lies must be disappearing, anu in consequence -it.seems to me it is about time for sonlu -one to bob up und demonstrate that the. bicycle is a great moral agent and is daily saving men’s souls by keeping them out of” temptation. ’ ’ I don’t know that I exactly agree with all that you say”— not advocating it as a truth. I merely say that it is surprising that the bicycle makers have notsprung it.” “Yes. I agree with you there.” — Chicago Post. One Hundred Million Stars. The latest computation on the stars visibly .in both hemispheres puts the number of such shiuii-g orbs up to the high mark of 100,900,090. The astronomers have odd ways of estimating the number of these brilliant points of light-. By figuring from the apparent diameter of the full lilt.on it is shown that theJurea of the whole sky visible toman in, both hemispheres is 41,255 square The area of -the whole star space, according to this .mode of reckoning, is only equal to about 200,000 times the area of a full moon, figuring that the moon’s apparent diameter j at that time is slightly over half a degree. This would give 2,424 stars to each square degree, or a total of 100,000,000, which would be equal to 500 stars on each space in the sky as large as a full moon. —Ist. Louis Republic. The Test of Brute Friendship. The hardestotest of the friendship of a pet animal is to call it away from its food while it is yet hungry—not order it front its meal, but merely call it. A real friend of a dog, for instance, will not have to call a dog; it will conin’ without calling whether eating or not. If a gentle master has been away for a week the demonstrations of joy will be of.u most lively character. But the upproach of a ciTu 1 master I'uakes a dumb, creature flinch and shrink away in fear* and trembling, and caresses are received ’ with bowed head and quivering body.— New York Sun. a I’reof'Positive. “How do yoji know, daughter, that young Tyson does pot drink?” “Because, papa,' his breath always Rin"!ls of fresh ebwes. ” —Detroit. Free 1,- ‘ (