Marshall County Independent, Volume 7, Number 32, Plymouth, Marshall County, 19 July 1901 — Page 2
THE WEEKLY IliDEPEIIDE'lT.
C W. MITTEILE!!, Pub. and Prop. 1 L V EU .ft iteivi'r cf Gcrinra! Interest To!d in -Paragraphs COMPLETE NEWS SUMMARY. : Tir I f II ,i iiinx of Mr.ch or Litt' I hip"rlin'e fri,u All I;rt of lh Cl-r- ! i ; ! Vto.-ld I n i lnt- LatererHos, j An. !!., Vrd:ct4. t'rlta arl TYr. V. V y ineyowshi. a widow at : Fouth Ci.iv.auo. III., tried to commit j titaci.-e h.-friti-.- v.earv of the burden I of ?'.i:i:(.rtint; f'.vcn childi'e Saved from dit m wliieh .she had thrown hers-df. j llpwurth leaie party of twenty on j way to -;n Fran iseo mbhl of niony and ta k-t at Ctdorado Sj-ring?. I'iai.k Mi C'roy of Hallstfad. Ta., declared In had di.-eov,.ed lost Egyptian art of hardening copper. C. D. Graham made his fifth trip thro-ijxh tlie Niagara rapids in a barrel Sunday. Strike of steel workers oidereJ by Amalgamated association will be male unifral. Thousands quit work Monday. Nonunion men in two plants joined strikers. Exeursin steamer Julia with several hundred passengers from New York aboard went aground Sunday night off Darren Inland. Many jumped overboard r.nd swam ashore in a panic that followed. Horace rotors, who murdered Peter Emith near Dowaiac. Mich., committed ide on spot where crime was committed. Trial of Earl Russell for bigamy by ! the British House of Lords to b made a social event. Peeresses invited to the hearing. Western vaudeville trust beins lormed at Chicago to include leading western variety theaters. The middle west, and especially the j corn belt, had no relief Sunday from j the intense heat. The corn crop is j about i-n up for lo.-t In many places, and farmers are looking to other prod- j uce. ! Clarence Ikidgr, aged 23, was ! drowned in the t. Jos. ph river near : Nil----. M'ch. : ?':.. Willi ;:n Martin and her three ! daughters are in a critieal rendition at I Marktt.i. O.. frem eatin--- j-.ii-oü d pi". 1 The pu.-iry was raido from canned ' pumpkin. , ' Joseph Tread way and Adolph S;af- ; ford, farmers of Tipton county. Ten- j Efe.'"', '-n-raged in a dispute over their j respective crops and Tivadway killed j Stafford by splitting his luad with a j hoe. Treadway was arrested. j Solomon Haas, residing at Wilburton, Pa., became frenzied by jealousy and shot his wife at their home, afterward sending a bullet through his own heart. Haas died instantly and Mrs. Haas is in a critical state, the bullet having lodged in her back. Hundreds of patients lives have been endangered by the impure milk furnished the county hospital at Chicago. Tests of the milk show that it is far below grade in nutritive qualities, is watered and treated with chemicals. Moore brothers said to have lost con trolling interest in the Rock Island roal by the purchase of ".".000 shans I by J. I ierj.ont Morgan. Boers attacked pes- of south African ! constabulary at lie;:k,.p. and were re- ' pulsed after they killed U,r. Uritish. j Former Judge I). A. Itu.-s 11 of-Pom-eroy, O.. committed suicide in Cincin- ! nati. i Andrew Carnegie offered Lead'dHe i $100,j0 f jr a public library. Judge Tuhy in addres- b fore H'inois State liar Association, declared the problem of the hour is to make corporations and the rich pay their Bhare of taxation. Supreme Lodge of Knights of Pythias at Chicago reorganized the insurance branch of the order and increased the rates of insurance 51 per cent. Assets of the order pledged to pay claims "low due. Investigation of the Seventh National Bank, New York, expected to disclose what became of the $1,000,000 in Spanish coin sent from Cuba bv C. F. W. Neely. G. Stanley Hall, president of Clark university, declared at teachers' convention at Detroit that higher education unfitted women for wifehood and motherhood. He favored schools with sexes separated. Accused murderer of Alice Cothrell engaged attorneys at Fort Wayne, Ind., and will make a strong fight. Chicago sweltered in 102 degrees of heat Wednesday which exceeded all previous records of the local Weather bureau. In some places a temperaturo of 106 degrees at the street level was recorded. Thirty prostrations. Nine men killed by fall of railroad bridge at Springfield, Pa., while a construction train was passing over it. Several others badly injured. A. D. White. United States Ambassador to Germany, will retire from diplomatic service next year. Shocked at son's death. Sultan of Turkey deposited ?9r,000 with American Minister to settle American claims growing out of Armenian troubles. Teachers' national convention at Detroit discussed school fada. Nominating committee selected W. M. Beardshear of Iowa for next President. Senators Cullom and Mason to hold conference on selection of successor to Controller Dawes. Diamond Match plant at Liverpool Fold to English firm for 180.000. Fourteen persons killed by storms in Haytl. Teachers' National convention at Detroit rejected report made by President Harper and the committee adverse to a national university. Members of committee scored. A feature of the Christian Endeavjr convention at Cincinnati was Booker T. Vashington's plea for the negro.
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PET FHOG FED DYNAMITE. Tatal nu't Follow rii'ldren'a Kist.tUiiijr Kspl.Mlre for l'lltt.T Ar. accident at Albany. Mo., in which three children, a pet frog, and somedynamite figured, r'salttd in o:i death, two persons seriously injured, and part of a dwellin-j el raoli---h d. Th three children of decree McCm ry. a
contractor, found snme dynamite in ; tlie C-ilar Ct tü if ,i; -, a..a. i.a !v..ir, , it was putty, fed it to their pet fro.j. j The pie.es of dynamite n:l ded in- j sect?, and the irog ate tle-m. a larg tool chest f II e!i the fro.; and xplod d the dynamite which v.: V" :"! a;--n. chisel p'.erc 1 the tempi'4 of the : o-mg-est child ard kilkd hin. Anoth.-r child and Mr?. MeC.rrry v.- re s-iiondy hurt and part of the house wrecked. MRS. BROWN DIES IN ITALY. TVif of .luti- of United Stte tuprem" Court Fae Av:iy. General iL M. Duüi' ld received a cablegram at Detroit from Justice II. B. Brown of the United States Supreme Court announcing the death of Mrs. Brown in Italy. The cablegram was dated at Iliva. Mrs. Brown had b?en an invalid for some years, and th Justice sailed for Europe soon after the decision in the insular cases was handed down. Caroline Pitts was Mrs. Brown's maiden name, and she was a daughter of Samuel Pitts, well known in Detroit. Her age was ÖC. Sha is survived by a brother and three sisters Thomas Pitts of Detroit. Mrs. II. M. Dudeld of Detroit, Mrs. Thomas Cranage of Bay City, and Mrs. Daniel Goodwin of Chicago. Not! Writer It a 'Wreck. Isaac G. Reed, for many years well known as a newspaper and magazine writer in New York city, Is in the insane pavilion in Pellevne hospital. His mind is shattered and his physical condition is such that he cannot live Ions. For many years Reed has lived on the bounty of Mrs. M. L. Cummings of Elberton, N. J.. who was known on the stage as Minnie Cummings. She says that much of her stage success was due to Reed's press work and gratitude caused her to maintain him in sanitariums for several years. Reed was born in Philadelphia and came of a wealthy and distinguished family. In addition to his new.-paper and magazine work Reed wrote several books, including "Thirty Years in Gotham" anl '"Our American Aristocracy; or, "Reminist eaccs cf New York's Society." Mlrlilg ii Farmer S!:ln. j Peter Smith. tl" :uo-t prominent ; farmer in the Baii.bridg district, ft f- j teen miles north. as; of St. Joseph, j Mich., was as:ifsir.ated at noon Tours- ; day by an unknown man. Hundreds i of farmers, incensed by the cowardly j murder, are searching tbe woods in the ; vicinity and thrat( n to lynch the mur- j derer when he is apprehended. Smith i was driving through his held on top i of a load of rye when the shot was fired. The assassin was concealed behind a stack of rye, and after Smith had driven past he ros up and fired at a distance of ab ut twenty feet. The entire charge from the shotgun entered Smith's body beneath the shoulder blade and he toppled off the wagon and fell dead. Increase In Jii'in Failure. Classified returns, as reported to R. G. Dun & Co. for the month of June, show failures somewhat heavier than in the three preceding months and the same month in the two preceding years, but prior to 1 '.: last month's liabilities would have been considered extremely light. In manufacturing the total was S1...1S.S17 larger than last year, but a few unusual disasters account for the difference. Depression in the cotton manufacture, lue to overproduction of goods from high-priced raw materia!, had almost passed away without bringing any serious failures, and the fact had been mentioned an remarkable in connection with earlier reports. Shot Wlilla Asleep. At Erwin. Miss.. John Serio. aged 50 years, and his son Vincent were killed and Salvator Liberto was dangerously wounded. They all came from Cefalu. Sicily. The three had been living near Glen Allen, but on account of some trouble, were ordered to leave by citizens. They went to Erwin, a few miley distant from Glen Allen, and decided to locate there. While they were asleep the three were shot. Serio and his son being killed outright. The Italians in the country are wrought up over the matter, but no further trouble is anticipated. Gov. Ixmgino and the Italian consul at New Orleans were notified of the killing. Mall Clerk Admits Theft. James J. Callanan. formerly register clerk in the postoflice in Springfield, Mass., who left June 2, taking with him a number of registered letters, has given himself up to the authorities. iTc says that his conscience troubled him so that when he reached Liverpool he took the next steamer for home. He secured about $700 from the packages he stole. Cincinnati Strike f OfT. The machinists' strike, which was organized May 20 and which involved from r,000 to 7.000 employes in Cincinnati, has practically been declared off. A secret mass meeting of strikers was held, at which a formal report was made that it had been found impossible to procure financial assistance from the headquarters in Washington. As the strike benefit fund is exhausted, the strikers Were advised to return to work. Already about 000 have applied for reinstatement. Kind iolrt on III Farm. E. A. Bottorff. a farmcrl iving in Salisbury township, near Springfield, 111., reports that he has discovered gold on his farm. It Is in a strata of clay which extends back from Richland creek. A sample of the clay sent to assayers in Philadelphia brings the rereport that the noil will assay $29.70 a ton and the owner is advised that it tan be worked for about $2 a Ion. Ilottorff recently purchased the farm on ! which the find was made for $10 an &cre
SR EDI DEAD I!) WRECK
Passenger Train Collides with a Live-Sioc'r Train. MANY ARE BADLY INJURED. kmatlt-Ui Taken 1: co on High KmtmnkwCnt iP N,rtt.... M.,.-taci.M Tnni,,:, Dowil IlliI on lop ot i;uCitti4 JUuj Are Raided. The full horror of the lra:n wreck on Ik? Chicago and Alt-jti railroad near j Norton, Mo.. Wed:;, sday. vlu.u a west- I bound pas-.T.ger train cullkb-d with a ! fast live sto. ! tiaiu. bth g.in.-r a: rap- ! id speed, wa-- ::; rea.h".-;.' -1 at lo' t. I'i' St ; reports of the. ;u- id. nt indicated that j four trainmen and two p.;.-sngcrs j were killed uatrig; t. Of the wmtnd d who started for Kansas City four w;re dead before the train arrived and six more died at the hospitals, making sixteen fatalities up to Wedne. -day night. In St. Joseph's an 1 University hospitals, Kansas City, are thirty persons, at least two of whom arc expected to die. The physicians will not give an opinion as to the condition of the sufferers. Most of them were scalded by the steam that issued from the locomotives, both of which were wrecked and piled up in a heap of wreckage with two cf the passenger cars. Identification of those io died, without regaining consciousness was difficult, owirg to the fact that thrt clothing had been hastily stripped from each of the bodies in order to give relief to the tortured flesh. Two of the bodies arc unidentified one a young woman killed at the wreck, and supposed to be a daughter of Mrs. H. J. Curtis of Geneseo. N. Y., and the other a grayhaired woman who died at St. Joseph's hospital. The bodies arc at various undertaking establishments. The bodies Of four of the dead trainmen are at Slater, Mo. Th wounds of thp victims are excruciatingly painful, being severe scalds and burns. They are receiving the b.-st treatment the city affords. A man who died at St. Joseph's hospital is known to be named Jons, and it is believed he is from Chicago. He was at first supn pod to be a Kan -as Cityan. His clothes wer des: roved. The dead arc: Daniel McAnnn. Slater, Mo., conductor of freight train; P. J. Anderson. Slater, Mo , imir:eer o freight .rain: 1. S. Raiser, Chicago. United Stutfs T'xpress .m;anv m ssenger; Mrs. Ci kind of G.-;od!and, Ind.: D. W. ! ok.r of Syrru-u N. Y died on train: .Mrs. ( w. Snyd -r. Jarprr. N. Y.. d cm train; G. L. Roy, cashier of th" WilmingJoa il'.!.) l;ank, die l f.n train; Sny(h r .Io:k s, dietl in St. Joseph's hosp'tai; Du.-iei Donnelly. Mexico. Mo., fireman of freight train, died at University hospital: Mrs. R J. Curtis. Genes'"). N. Y.. di(l at I'niversity hospital; unidentified young woman, supposed to be a daughter of Mrs. Curtis: Mrs. Dickson. 07 years old. Wilmington. 111., died at University hospital: Miss Lulu Rider, 2", years old. i
CHRIS JENSEN, DENVER MURDERER.
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The police officials Of Denver are still trying to connect Chris Jensen, who admits he killed Mrs. Armenia Bullis, with the slaying of other women. Kvidence tends to show that Jensen is also the assailant of Jessie Kin port, whei was the victim of a "ripper" fiend the same night that Mrs. Hullis was killed. The time of the murder of Mrs. Bullis is not known. If it occurred early In the evening the murderer might easily have made his way. either on foot or by cir. to the Kinport home. The University park car passes within a short distance of where the murder 104 In Nt. l.ouU. At St. Ixmis Thursday the mercury in the weather bureau office at 5 o'clock in the afternoon became stationary at the 101 mark. This is the highest point reached in twenty years, with one exception. On the streets it was several degrees hotter, and as the humidity was much more pronounced than for several days, the heat was well nigh intolerable. At night the air was still and stifling. One death and a dozen prostrations were reported. Itaili for New Homes. Nearly 1,000 people left Oklahoma City, Ok.. Tuesday night to go to Kl Reno to register. Only one train left here In the afternoon for that place, and the coaches were crowded to their utmost capacity. Several hundred people waited at the station until the tTaln came in, when a wild scramble ensued for seats. Women, as well as men, were boosted through the windows of the coaches, which were filled almost as soon as the train had stopped. Others stood on the platforms or climbed to the top of the coaches.
Kentlam!, In:!.; Mrs. Franres V.'aik- r cf Flatbush, Brooklyn, died at p. ra. at St. Jcreph's hospital; aged un-
identified woman, t.ili.-n to St. .Josejfhs j hospital, di' at li o'clock. she n.-vcr ' renamed copiousness, and there was nothing upon hr per.-on to give any hint of her Identity. 1 The train? nv t two mile w, st of , Norton, on a ci'. v-1 sir;-:' irv;:;; a high ; enr-aukm-: nt. Th er.gi!V'-- wer p-l.-d to cither f:.. of the tra 'k and praeii- ; eally t;j r" d. while th ;rva.' d i s of ii' ::.: r tr:iin t-lecopej 'Y.f tr?'.n v.'hich waa each ct::' wrecked v.' as ewe or tie ger trains in the U?:t fin. r-t passes- . States. MISS CONGER TO MARRY. Miss Laura Cc;:r.er of Des loinS, i daughter of Mrvor U. II. Conger, Unit ed States mir. ister to China, has an nfjur.cca t. nur.t to Lieut. f MISS LAURA CONGER. Fred T. Buchan of Troop K, Third Cavalry. Lieut. Buchan was in the expedition that relieved the besieged legations at Pekin. He became acquainted with the minister'sdaughterand before the Conger's left Pekin he secured a promise of her hand. He is the son of W. I. Iiuchan, a well known Kansas City lawyer. roar Winnipeg "itln Irownel Four citizens of Winnipeg were drowned Thursday at Portage la Prairie. The two young daughters o: Thomas Davidson, a merchant of Winnipeg, were drowned while bathing in the As.-uniboiue. A boy named John j McKenzie, nephew of William McKenzie, the magnate of the Canadian Northern railway, was drowned by the and a man named Alexander MacDonaid. a (onira'tor of Winnipeg, waS , iiny river, near Mine j ;o pa. -s the rapids in J ('( i'ter m t : ::;g n rowroat. .Nun- cu inc Louies nas it yet been re; o ereti. ! DilifH I.I -4 Ii I ii in mi. I strtirk. Philij) Wa'ds. a farm r, sustained prob.ably fa'al inai.ies at Crisii-dd. Md., as the result of a bolt of lightning, while he was defying the storm to do him harm. A thunder storm was raging when Walls procured a piece of lightning rod and. attaching it to his head, went forth, saying he desired to be struck. was committed, and he could have ridden within three blocks of the Kinport home, or he could have made his way on foot. The exact time of the attack upon Jessie Kinport is not yet fixed. It is supposed to have been about 9:40, but if such was the case Jensen could not have been the man. for he was arrested only a few minutes later, if not at that very hour, fully two miles from the Kinport home. But if the attack upon the child was made near 0 o'clock Jensen could easily have made his way to the spot where he was apprehended. The child was seen on the porch of her home near 9 o'clock. Irlll Shooting e Kn I. Late in the afternoon of Jan. 20th, this year, Jos' ph W. Brill, the millionaire Cleveland mine owner, arrived at Ia Porte, Ind.. and, meeting Ellsworth K. Weir, an attorney, in the office of Dr. Dakin. s-hot him, alleging that the attorney and Mrs. Brill had taken a short tour without his knowledge. Wednesday in the circuit court, after almost continuous legal fighting In the courts for upward of six months, Mr. B.111 pleaded guilty to assault and battery and was fined $,"00. Kind l.nn; I -o t Son. John J. Morath, capitalist and laudlord of the Capitol Hotel at Philadelphia, appeared at the Anderson (Ind.) rod mills Thursday morning, made his way among the roaring furnaces and picked out one of the big, brawny men as his son. Joseph Morath. The father lost trace of his boy twenty-one years ago. At. that time the elder Morath was poor. His wife died, and the son, the only child was taken by an aunt to bring up. The aunt died in another city, and the father was never able to locate his son until now.
Hi LOSSES IS!
Premising Fields ct Kar.sr.s Shriveled Up, p OTHER STATES SUFFER. torn vr Wheat. r..tMo, r.'ur. and Vi!l r.i;! r. I..v malrs Iiw.i;e ijim Into lieuvy Lou in Mi-:iri. .l-i'v Til iilion Conservative men who lnv careul'y studied the diitv.; v ;. tts of tLj prevailing drought :n ' eo -e t ; -i " i i ? - e i People of the state h.iv. Uli" ! . d a lo: s iU UU liil. S e.C '( i:-. iU i.. amount of nearly ''. O"0.0'''O sIjh e July 1. They say thai an estimate now of a total of ."0. O'i.i ,. b i.-h .-is ot com would be the top liitre. With fair weather conditions Kansas ra!s--s -m : 000,000 bushels of this cereal. Thus a J j loss of ir.e.OiiOj'00 busiieis of corn at j say :o cents a bushel m-ans a loss in j ! money of 375,""j0,.'.;. alone. The loss j j of the hay crop is anoth- r .uoooj i The loss of the potato and vegetable j crops will run over $'Jo.0u0,000, while i the total failure of oats and the deBtruction of pastures, which will force thousands of head of tattle on the marI ket. will amount to another $2.",000,000. ! It is the worst affliction tint has bei fallen the state in its history, and but for the 70,000,000-bushel wheat crop j Kansas would be in a serious condi tion. Oats are mostlv harvested In Mi3THE MAN WHO HOLDS Jrffe v,, i - "The (American Farmer," says John "W. Bookwalter of Ohio, in an interview in lxmdon. "is the uncrowned souri and 10 per cent will cover this crop. Potatoes are not more than 25 per cent, with hay less than 25 per cent. Berries, vegetables and fruit, and all garden products are practically lost, not over per cent to the good. The total estimated average voatme of Missouri crop products for j the past ten y; t-s has been :rom $ra"a,j OoO.OoO to ?".f..ea . Th vh: at c op I is normal. Tie- other crop prosnrcts j were good up t dune 1. hence a loss I rf nt lii-ict ' I'l lull fiilil (, "Wio-nri tt51 Wl HC I U.H ,t ............ .... ...l-. 't.. pies since that time is a low estimate. The effect in dancg- f growing crops in Nebraska is partly guesswork. J That injury has been done since the j 1st of Julv is net denied, but the pro- i portion, compared to the damage done j by the drought in June, cannot aceur- ; ately be measured. If the estimate that half the oats and half the potato crop is ruined is correct, it means a yie:d in oats of but 3"..0fi0.e)00 bushels, com pared with a normal yield of 70,oo(.oao, a loss in dollars of over ä.OOO.OOö.and a cutting down of the potato crop from 8,000,000 to LOaO.OtfO bushels, repre senting a monetary loss of $1,500.000. Spring wheat is damaged to the extent, probably, of $3.000,000. Farmers, grain men and statistical experts differ greatly as to the condition of the corn crop, the consensus of opinion being that it has not yet been appreciably 1 1 If 1 II 1 : U lr-. mill, ui ii ai an su r-iifciii as iu iiiaivc in uuuii iui in &tai nut iu VAceea si.uuu.uuu. loss in nay ana innt , . , , . . i.: prouHuiy amounts 10 vu.uuu. uuimhk the total for all of $11,000,000. ToDDKtr Brothers Will lie Paroled. The Minnesota state pardon board has approved the parole of Coleman and James Younger, who have been in the Stillwater penitentiary for the past twenty-five years for complicity in the robbery and murder at the time of the raid on the Northfield (Minn.) bank. Three Hurt liv Itunaway. At Noblesville.. Ind.. Mrs. Charles Sowerwine. Miss Alma and Master Ieo Sowerwine were seriously and probably fatally injured in a runaway. Their horse became frightened at an automobile and the three were thrown violently to 4he ground. Mrs. Sowerwine was injured Internally. Miss Sowerwine's head struck a telegraph pole and concussion ff the brain is feared. Leo received injuries which rendered him unconscious for several hours. Train rmder Fr 13 Kill. The Kansas City flyer on the Wabash railroad, south-bound from Chicago, scattered fire and terror through the American bottom in Illinois Sunday afternoon. From Kdwardsville south to East St. Ixmis the train left a trail of llame. Both sides of the right of way were sown with blazing pieces. The train covered the distance from Elwardsville Junction to Granite City 13.4 miles In 13.5 minutes, and in that time half a hundred fields through the richest section of Madison county were set ablaze.
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or: V t ,;li In'r k de " v.. . 1 o: '!..::: :i' '( A. ;. as to t at :-: - of d!:'i. in a n ü pk(( ;o !'Vic ! a';: v.. :i')!'is ai'ithere bJi!.g : n crown dorru terns, some of the:: of fo:-ei cr deviations differing from th.- V, ish. Tliat now be adopt ami to b-v I come the sealed patt rn for the a: my is the Tudor '"Henry Y!l." eu:vn. s ated to have been rkosi n an 1 alw::ys usrd by Queen Yictoria P-rsonaLy. and all other patterns are to be abolished. Tv.vnty-five persons injuri in a U1k ou the Ban-Handle at Columbus, i O., due tu a defective switch. Fifteen thousand acres of Kansas wheat destroyed by re started by cigar stub. THE HORN OF PLENTY. I - v - L lmH : : king of Herald. Uurope."- Chicago Record- ' JH OLD AND THE NEW. i Abd FA Aziz tlu, sultan of Morocc0 j lis bi(.V(.( Ttl sultan hag just j scnt an ininosilli, delegation to lxmdon to bear his greetings to King Edward VII., on the occasion of his accession to the throne. This sk'etch is taken from the first photograph of the sultan which was ever taken of that dusky ruler for whose favors Frauce and England are now coquetting. KU1 for Cur-lnr. ror gomp wooks past A I paimei.f ... , . , . I a CI 11 ( HS"" "i 1 v iik .isu, riigju in . ... . v...".. tral railroad in .Mississippi, ana William Nolan, a locomotive engineer, have both been desperately in love with the telegraph operator at Anding. Miss. Thursday evening Palm.-r ccrsed in the presence of the young woman and was shot and instantly killed by Nolan, who then made his esca pe. bis Druwnnl V4hll Italhlur. Six persons of Savannah, Georgia, were drowned while .surf bathing at a picnic tfi the Hebrew Gamahl llasad, at Iauftiskie Peach. The dead are: Mrs. Abe Dickstein, aged 23; Annie Horowitz, aged 13; Annie Kronstadt, aged 10; Ida Kronstadt, aged lt; Leah Silverstein. aged 17; Isaac Zacht, aged 22. Mrs. Dicksteia's body was found floating in the surf an hour after the tragedy, but the; others were swept out to sea. I'lwooii Krowu lte-KIcted. Less than twenty delegates attended the session of the Antl-C:garette league at Buffalo. Elwood Brown of Chicago was re-elected president. Ho will have a cabinet like that of the President of the United States. Mlnarl Midrt Are VTw.l.leil. At Maryville, Mo., Samuel Hülse, a wealthy farmer of Andrew county, 34 years old and weighing 47 pounds, was married to Miss Sarah Stephens, aged 29 and weighing 53 pounds.
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i Ti 1 .". V'O. 1(S, 0 i . ? . - ar a ' ' ::. it . in:r ti.J s T f r t : y OT I :. . in )' e.; ; . '.r.d d-'-t: ! of -k: : w...vw is to bs perm. ;t el. It is a coat-.-v.:: an! It provided w:;k duph.-x T.si' 0i-..- S:t of tails is w;?::in the tit.u-o'd-fa.sl.ie:,. .; w.;y. Ti. tha sot danub s ie;r.- : ; jut as if T.: - ur-rad-ing as co.it 'a: -. The.-.- eu. ! s "nave ci'iars atta bed. .ki.-r l:i-. shirts wo-n by tho ean'ful ore---, i . :!t th- M :r."roMtan club. They on like a it -at. how ever. Either s'isj .e-d- rs or ': t may be worn with them. The cr l- rs are that they m ide cut of liziit weight summer irr. i.eyiril, p--r-eo:lv wa-:ab!o and of u uiform i lor. Somo of tha more eons' : vaiive posnp n who ars content, to wear a ; oat on d-ity ar- gljd that the ::se uf the daphx 'ail shirt uaist-cea; is not compuisory. but most of the ad vane.-,- dr ss--r? u f post olkce force ::'. soon a.p:' ar on heir ni'ii;.:? in tiie new er- r'ie-: The nam or tic ii:v.-:,tor is ke; : a .- - PASSENGER TRAIN' WRECKED. i:ii:u:cr -a. l m ti; i rU e-i i; i ,- ir I.-m'l i ImI!i- i, At ' I.-- : Te ;.. . : . . wa.- do. a. c a . . . , "u. a potti-.i: of .i : ;ra.':. .t; V . iKH.i. ;;, .. ir : . a ir;.;-;. ;t X. t'.,;l ! .1 . ; i'ol : ; in :.) ; : :. . ! .1 :.:. r two ens., rs v.'. .- I::;', d. T'. i ; j are: Frank A;;d--; :; en:ir.i er ';", pas-seiig-u-tc.in. of l'.uffato. O. : . MeCullen of r;a,-ir:;:'ti mail ci- riv. The in jured: William Ulliott o fireman of j.ias.- v.ur tr.ii::: P.ufial-'J. i:: probau.v die. w . .M . Raker oi i : :m!;-n, 1 . man chuk. injured on head .nl body, noi sei ions. K. U. Loveless. Cincinnati, mail derks: sliaht. Two unknown, tramps; badly hurt. Th- shock to the passenger coaches was Terrific, and although the occupants were badly shaken up. no one was hurt. The engineer met his death by being pinioned under his engine. McCuIlcn. the mail clerk, was crushed between the side of
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the car and coal Tender. LATEST MARKET QUOTATIONS. Winter who,! X-.) irate LarJ ue rhd? ird. -.- -IV Xe. ':. iv.l. -' :. No. 2 r -!. .JPc: X-... .: h.sr. Spi il. ;.?j: --X . , .j . 'if u 1 : X , .', 'i"2t'o::i Ni- ::. : Xe. :; ('.!. .a. ; No. r, v. hit-.-. 4-a,. - . . .. i?, t'j, , ta'.- X- X. !. . ; X-. 4 w bite, u X.'. ". ;.. . . X- ä v. i. t-. :.:' r: . ; N- 2. v.c: x r. .. . lr..vi.-.(-i- t. rk. ii Lira. Si.-i'.-yr :;(! i !.-. ?:.::." r.K to f:s!a. I'fe-i, tl":-; t l At. .et :. : ' .e; tv:ii. : , 'u.i !. -i!' I 1 1 .."- err, u!i,i. ; - , . : tu .-t. : .- : t - : . i. . ', . i.. . ; : i . , .. e l.tkfi. v..-' ,. ,; rs. -'- k(-s. T'-i : ! e t :? y.s. iS ; , . . h (tl., :'; I .. -; r :is. :!. !:'. . loi. tl!' '": ;!!;" s. Seel to tie -. ' . : ,! '2 Zol iai;fbfI ! ti s. Wis . ;; .jts. ?!." 'IT'; tl.iik-t-ercie. U ii ..-" ü - ; c "i 1C -jts, 75 -'ii 1 ! . 1 " : r ! t pi f rnrs-. 1:4 t 's. fl IT-II'. Cnttle Nat.-. -'i-itk, S i.7." ' r 7", Teiin and It!(h;.n. ?t 1 70: Teas i;rais pters, JP.. ''O'l .'!.!'; nütiv- ews aüd betters. Ni J 4. sr.: suvk'-rs au1 il. rs. J:-4-"mj4 7"; bull. f2.i".')'("r4 e calves. ?:i..ejf4.P(l. He?s -HRr jr. jrt.fdiTi j.,.7,; r.irl..-:. j:S',;3.rtt: n.ixf-J J:.7S ;5.s5; Imlit. f 7e ., ys : pigs, $5 SOi Shi'cp-Mutt.irs, $'t.7". u4.40: lns. ? ! K$ 5.10; Teus gr.iss b. t, J:f '.'Li: i i"
ICnli to Oklahoma Inrrea. The number of persons regist-r. d in the entries for the new Kiowj. eoraanehe and Apache lands total 17.000 up to date. Despite certain report, there has been no marked amount of suffering. It is a fact tha there are 20,000 strangers at El Reno. Ofcla.. but the majority of them have secured their certificates and are gone. Every train carries hundreds to town, but all the late comers seem to have an ample supply of money and seem to be ia no hurry to register. The drawing will be begun July 29. The officers are naw registering between 5.000 and 5.000 applicants a day and at this rate there will be plenty of time to register all. Satisfaction is expressed on all sides now at the manner in which the registration is being conducted. Unit f lCht ! Wrath. A storm of protest has been aroused against the alleged Intention of the South Omaha street fair managers to arrange for a regular bull fight. V. C. Maddon. the concessioner, says that If It should happen that a bull were killed his prospects for taking his show to other expositions in this country would be ruined. On the other hand. It Is said that the toreadors will not necessarily carry out his instructions if they are properly "tipped." Some narrow escapes were features of Fridavs bull fight. Ueorge c. Tll.len Insane. George C Tilden, a well-known mineralogist, has been committed to th State Hospital for the Insane at Stockton, Cal. While making an expert examination of mining property In Salvador Tilden was attacked with fever and later mental trouble developed. The United States Consul at San Salvador had him removed to this city. At the time it was announced that he would eventually recover his health. In the last few days he has displayed suicidal mania. Tilden was formerly stat mineralogist of New York.
