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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 28 Aug 1902, p. 2

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'11: V.^:. " ̂ T THE MCHENRY PUINOEALER P|y, I' ̂ 'v *f'/,* Ik®**** PLAINDBALER 00. E ip;^.' S&\:-' • IfeT* <;(/,•' .'; Deputy United States Marshal Frank !?|» jfones of Checotah, I. T., shot and mor- ' >»y wounded Sam Baker, • whom he ^Jfras seeking to arrest, and by accident , Shot and seriously wounded two by- ftanders, George B. Howard, a prom- Inent citizen, and John Pox, an Indian. I'Jf Rev. D. G. Murray of Colfax, 111., has „Exchanged pastorates with Rev. A. : f-; liester Hazelett of Colorado City, <Colo., and will remove to the latter , Jlace. Mr. Hazelett was one of the • 'Committee sent to the Philippines by ' f 6ie United States Government to in- ;1 *vestigate the friar question. The governors of Oregon, Washing- ton, Idaho and Montana have prom- ; feed to attend the laying of the corner­ stone for a monument to the memory Of Lewis and Clark to be erected in the city park at Portland, Ore. An in- v Witation was sent to President Roose­ velt, whose response has not yet come to hand. Senator John H. Mitchell, left Port* : land, Ore., for San Francisco, from y •. Which place he will sail for Hawaii - v Aug. 30. The purpose of the visit of |jhe subcommittee of the senate com- ' Uittee on Pacific islands and ports, of - %hich Senator Mitchell is chairman, to the Hawaiian islands is to invest!- Site the general condition of the lands of Hawaii and the administra­ tion of affairs. Strike at the Ashland sheet mill in : ; Jpuntington, W. Va., has been declared "if! #ff, and 600 men returned to work. ,V Mrs. Jane Newell, aged 65, of Spring* 5 s Sold, O., wit killed in a runaway ac- ' ddent In jumping out she fell on vkri^ker head and broke her neck, dying in- •$tantly. jjjv The United States Shipbuilding com- ; irany has Just absorbed the Elizabeth- port, N. J., brass works. It will be ,, Jjeatly enlarged and used as an ad- / •; Janet to the Crescent shipyard. The annual reunion of the surviv- of Quantrell's guerillas was held " at Independence, Kan. Most of those >: present took part in the raid upon ,. . Lawrence, Kan., thirty-nine years ago. • jim Cnmmings was prominent In the ; feunion. ^ G. R. Casty of Missouri has just JHirchased the 14,000-acre ranch of S' ' Thomas Bros., situated in Runnels ^ \, founty, Tex. The consideration was •' #70,000. '-'-WS'lO While sitting in church at Carthage, W.4 . K ' ^ex., Pitman Sample was shot from e4:' ' ' '• the outside by Benjamin Jernigan. , -Sample's arm was amputated and he W" v 'f * 4lied in a short time. | r , ' At a meeting of the board of direc- §h;'tors of the Winona agricultural and s V technical school, held at Winona, Ind., f J1 (announcement was made that the pur- r- ' Vchase of the arsenal grounds at In- '* '\* flianapolis for the use of the school .^as practically assured. Gen. Carna- £ " ' Hfcan of Indianapolis, E. F. Yarnelle of |Tort Wayne and Rev. Turner of Pitts- |>urg were added to the board of dl- :iS •" Jfectors. i ,:'t - At Paducah, Ky„ Clayborn Irvin, 12 years, raised steam in a sealed ^Coffee pot and was fatally scalded in iyv'"J-the explosion that followed. Two £••••:„ ^©ther boys were seriously burned. ' General Fitzhugh Lee, who spoke the Chautauqua at Urbana, I1L, «aid there was a strong possibility r that the United States would acquire ^'M. JCuba in time. X' ^ , R. D. Hudson, aged 76 years, given ^, Jtwenty years in the penitentiary for ;the murder of his son-in-law, died in the county Jail at Bonham, Tex., where he was confined awaiting the result of an appeal. ^ " Samuel Hatcher, son of J. J. Hatch- Mlf- ' «r. accidentally shot himself at Lomi, 1^; > Ul., with a 22-calioer rifle. He may •' recover. The ballet lodged near, the t '0.1. boy's heart. W$<> i ' Suit has been instituted in the pL; i • United States court at Tyler, Tex., by , W. H. Williams et al., citizens of Texas, against Annie W. Campbell ^/it and other citizens of Missouri and Ci'",' p\ /' 'Louisiana, for the recovery of eleven fk'- leagues of land situated in Anderson ||;; ,.t/<i-and Freestone counties, moct of which 3,( ^4vls valuaole farming land, fe ^ The Wabash has awarded a con- % '-'./tract to the Carnegie company for |:.:i 25.000 tons of steel rails to be used ^ . -between Zanesville and Marietta. The I?" - value of the order is about $700,000. ^ President E. R. Nichols of the Kan- pc sas Agricultural College has an* , nounced his declination of the presi- , dency of the Rhode Island College of Agriculture and Mechanical Arts, pr.. |V' % Frank fright, aged 44 years, of Bedford, Ind., through brooding over ' the mistake of paying too much for ' a ^arm- committed suicide by shoot- i "^11^ ieaves a widow and family. William El. Cook, a section foreman i »ear Dalhart, Tex., was killed by a &<$-< f- J sack of bacon thrown from a moving train. I. .'W r v A company has been formed at Du- 7? , buque, la., to mine for zinc ore near Benton, Wis. The mine is reported killed by a cave-In while hauling grav- •1 on the road near Strose, Ind. Clinton Pierce, an iron puddler, crazed with drink and armed with ra­ zors, was shot dead by policemen at Torre Haute, Ind. Rufus K. Cravens and O. P. Nolan, quarrymen, who were deaf, were •truck by a Rock Island passenger train near Kansas City and killed. Mr. and Mrs. Chauacey Gitchell of Leaf River, 111., were struck by a Chi­ cago, Milwaukee and St. Paul train, the latter dying in a few hours. The Psi Upsilon fraternity has es­ tablished a chapter at the University WM- fery rich. Theodore Webb, aged 19 years, was V of California. ./""V... The farm residence and household goods of N. Jour Ion, east of Richview, UL, were destroyed by lf» (if : 'K>' fVi': 4at?" ' - .'f James Vincent, aged 35, of Battle Creek, Mich., leaped from a train near Hinton, W. Va, and was instantly Wiled. Charles HL Wilson, supposed to have been a professional man of Kansas City, was found dead In the railroad yards at Centralia, 111. Standing beside the body of his dead wife, claiming she was shst down by his side, James Masterson of New Albany, Ind., was arrested charged with murder. Lawrence Slaner, an Austrian miner" aged 29, threw himself under a train at Terre Haute, Ind., and was decapi­ tated. He had reported to the police the loss of $160. Town Marshal A. M. Goodwin died at Cairo, Ga., from wounds received while trying to arrest a negro des­ perado named Galey Tyrus. Two other officers were wounded at the same time, and a posse is in pursuit of TyJ rus. Miss Freda Wulfing of Kansas City and Fanatas Wyman, aged 18, of Viro* qua, Wis., were drowned at Battle Island, Wis., while bathing. An unknown man jumped from the steamer City of Sheboygan near She­ boygan, Wis., and was drowned. The powder magazine of the Acadiff Coal Company at Stellarton, one of the largest collieries on the mainland of Nova Scotia, blew up, killing two men and causing much damage. During tne coming year 60,000,000 young salmon will be turned loose from hatcheries in Oregon along the Columbia river and its tributaries, in a determined effort to increase the stock of Chinook salmon. Walter Bailey, colored, was hanged at Selma, Ala., for the murder of Robert Hunter, near Orrville in Oc­ tober, 1899. Ijdward Boyce, former president of the Western Federation of Miners^ will be the candidate of the socialist party for governor of Colorado. The forest fires on the Green Horn mountain range, Colorado, which had destroyed much valuable timber, have been extinguished by rain. Mrs. John Cameron and Mrs. Theo­ dore McDonald were drowned near Sault Ste. Marie, Mich. They were wives of lumbermen operating in the Spanish river county and formerly lived at Bay City. Charles Sieber, a wealthy cattleman and one of the most prominent citi­ zens of Grand Junction, Col., was shot and instantly killed by Joseph Harris of Westwater at a round-up on the Little Dolores river. 'The two men disputed the ownership of oabranded cattle. Will Massey, a farmer, residing near Taylor, Tex., was probably fa­ tally wounded by his stepson, Arthur Ake. He is suffering from two gun­ shot wounds received during a family quarrel. All the millwrights at the large Portland cement works in West Dal­ las, Tex.,s went on strike on account of the wage scale and nours of labor. The union carpenters and millwrights are sending out notices to union men to stay away from Dallas. Capitalists who recently purchased the mountain of iron ore situated 100 miles north of Austin, Tex., will erect a large smelting plant at Llano. It is proposed to use Texas fuel oil for smelting purposes. The convention of the American Op­ ticians' association, which closed at Boston, elected H. E. Ellis of South Bend, Ind., president and William Sommers of Chicago regent. Johanna Jakobson, 30 years old, who registered with her husband, re­ puted to be a merchant of New York, committed suicide In Berlin by tak­ ing poison at a hotel. Five children of Charles Nelson of Anson township, Wisconsin, are sick with diphtheria and will die. An 8- year-old girl of the family died from the disease. George Cotton, Jr., a brakeman on a local Pennsylvania train on which His father was conductor, was run down by his own train at Marion, Ind., and fatally injured. William Phelps was found dead in his room at Sycamore, 111. He was In the employ of the Great Western bridge builders. It is thought apo­ plexy caused his death. The longshoremen and lightermen of all classes and the dock laborers at Havana went out on strike. They huve several grievances, one being that coal should be unloaded per ton Instead of by day wages. Lee H. Smith, said to be the, third robber of the Mexican Central train from which $53,000 was taken, has been captured in the mountains of western Chihuahua. Douglas L. Howard and Stephen Doherty of Illinois have passed the mental examinations for entrance as principals to the naval academy at Annapolis. David F. Leavitt, aged 62, a promi­ nent St. Louis coffee broker and treas- nrer of the Episcopal diocese of Mis­ souri, committed suicide because of ill health. A. Appo of Houston, Tex., was shot and seriously wounded by his brother. Appo made an assault on his brother, who acted in self-defense. The last horse car disappeared from Berlin's streets owing to the abolition of that means of transportation in fa- Tor of more modern conveyances. Two men giving the names of Ulin and Wilson, who are suspected of knowing something of the murder of JeBse Tuman and wife a week ago, were arrested near Muscatine, Iowa. The accouchement of the empress of Russia is expected shortly. John Jones, aged 24 years, an em* ploye of a department store at Gas City, Ind., was given his vacation this week. The young man told his father he would walk home and started across the fields. His tracks were fol­ lowed to an old cabin and there the trail was lost and he cannot be found. Morgan L. Jones, aged 70 years, of Dodgeville, Wis., was killed in a runr away. He leaves a large estate. The American Society of Florists, which has been in convention In Ashe- •Ule, N. C., adjourned after selecting Milwaukee as the next meeting place. Albert h'asser, a 9-year-old boy, fell through an elevator hole at the cot* ton mill at Bonham, Tex., and biroke both arms and fractured his skull. R. C. Bliss of Cincinnati been appointed manager of the Western Union Telegraph company In Cm<&fc- aatl In place of C. E. Page, resigned.'^ Operator Says Labor Leaders ^ Cannot Help Men to Better Wages. IN REPLY TO MINISTER'S PLEA Divine Right to the Mines Is the An­ swer Sent by President Baer to an Appeal for a Settlement From a Religious Standpoint. Wllkeebarre, Pa, dispatch: The di­ vine right" of operators is the keynote of the reply sent by President Baer of the Philadelphia and Reading com­ pany to a letter written by W. F. Clark of this city, appealing, fronr a religious standpoint, for the settle­ ment of the strike. President Ba«r*s letter was, in part, as follows: "1 do not know who you are. I see that you are a religious man, but you are evidently biased in favor of the right of the worklngman to control a business in which he has no other in­ terest than to secure fair wages for the work he does. I beg of you not to be discouraged. The rights and in­ terests of the laboring man will be protected and cared for, not by the labor agitators, but by the Christian men to whom God, in his infinite wis­ dom, has given control of the proper­ ty interests of the country and upon the successful management of which so much depends. The Lord Still Reigns. "Do not be discouraged. Pray ear­ nestly that right may triumph, always remembering that the Lord God om­ nipotent still reigns and that his reign is one of the law and order and not of violence and crime." Mr. Clark, in his letter of appeal, had written as follows: "While it is true the strike is not a religious matter, yet it is possible to take Christ into all our business af­ fairs, and by so doing we have noth­ ing to lose and everything to gain. There is no doubt that both sides feel oppressed, but if operators would take Christ in their business and labor unions would take Christ in their unions, this oppression would soon disappear, and each would consider the other a brother, for, Indeed, such we are in Christ Jesus." Two Plants in Operation. The Warnke washery at Duryea, un­ der a strong guard, was kept in opera­ tion, and the Maltby breaker of the Lehigh Valley Coal Company prepared a lot of coal which had already been mined for the market. At strike headquarters it is claimed that the output of coal at the washery was small and that fifty or sixty spec­ ial officers were required to protect the few men employed at the place. Nothing was known at strike head­ quarters about the Lehigh Valley Coal company running coal through its breaker. EATS TOO MANY ROASTING EARS Farmer's Inordinate Appetite for Corn Leads to His Death. Thempealeau, Wis., dispatch: Wm. Hafner, a farmer, is dead as a result of eating fifty "roasting ears." Haf­ ner was very fond of green corn and at dinner ate twenty-four ears. He pursued his rogular occupation during the afternoon and at the evening meal disposed of fifteen more ears. No bad resultB were noticed and Hafner re­ tired in his usual health and spirits. He was awakened during the night by an intense craving for more and, ris­ ing, proceeded to devour eleven ears of cold corn. In the morning his wife awoke to find her husband dead. MUST MAKE ANNUAL REPORT8 Illinois Law Regarding Corporations Allows No Evasion. Springfield, 111., dispatch; The law providing that corporations organized under the laws of the state of Illinois must make annual reports to the sec­ retary of state, and providing for a cancellation of charters of corpora­ tions failing to make reports is man­ datory, and the secretary of state has no discretion in the matter. This is the interpretation placed upon the law fey Attorney General Hamlin, in re­ sponse to numerous inquiries directed to hlB department. 18 LULLED TO DEATH BY MU8IC Musicians Comply With Last Request of Their Bandmaster. St. Joseph, Mo., dispatch: Samuel Pryor, founder of Pryor's band, died of a gastric disease. Prof. Pryor was one of the interesting characters of this city--68 years old and had never performed a day's labor at anything except music. In response to a re­ quest of the dying bandmaster, his musicians played lively airs for as he passed away, several pieces be­ ing of his own composition. Points Out the Danger That p Lurks In Great Indus-** r i trial Combines. & DISASTER IS SURE TO FOLLOW When Business Is Centralized In the Hands of the Few He Fears That Financial Mistakes May Involve the Whole Country. . Russell Sage holds some positive views on the trust question, which are completely at variance with those held by J- Plerpont Morgan, America's lead* ing exponent Of the trust problem. Mr. Sage took occasion to utter some emphatic statements concerning the progress of the combination Idea. These vl,cws, spoken by the aged finan­ cier at the time Mr. Morgan began his tirat full busines day after hie Euro­ pean trip, were taken by some finan­ ciers as a note of warning that the trust problem is being overdone. Not Opposed to All Trusts. "First, let me say that I am not antagonistic to Mr. Morgan," Mr. Sage explained this evening. "He and I have been very friendly from a busi­ ness standpoint for many years, but we differ on the trust question. I have been misquoted and my views, exaggerated when I was quoted as say­ ing that combinations of all kinds are a menace to the government. That is not right I believe those which have been formed with the right idea and on a sound basis will live, but the oth­ ers will fail and die of their own poor construction. Fears Inflated Securities* "What I am afraid of is the constant formation of inflated securities which are disposed of to the American peo­ ple with a good brand on them. "Securities -have been made in great quantities and sold at high prices on the idea that economies to be effected will give them the arbi­ trary value which has been placed upon them. This theory will be ex­ ploded later on, for there will always be competition. When the crash comes it will be a national disaster. Everyone will be more or less af­ fected, and the Industrial stagnation will be far greater than if half a dozen small concerns became bank­ rupt. When a great big company goes under thousands will have to bear the loss. Few Should Not Control. "Another thing I fear is the central* iaztlon of big Industries in the hands of five or six men. The control of industries of our country should be more widely distributed, but if the trust idea continues to progress at the same speed that it has done with­ in the last year all the leading indus­ tries of the nation will be left in the control, as I spid before, of half a doz­ en men. ^ "When half a dozen men direct the busines and financial policies of the great industries there Is danger that they may qmke a mistake in judg­ ment It would be different if a hundred or a thousand men controlled these Industries. Designates Bad Combine. "If a part of them erred the rest might be affected, but they would be able to stand it. If, however, a mis­ take was made by this small group of powerful men then the whole na­ tion Would be plunged in financial loss and ruin. "Of course, some combinations are good things. I do not know any par­ ticular instance that I can cite which could illustrate my idea of what con­ solidation is good business, but I can give one that has been a bad thing. That is the copper combination." ' TRIE8 ANTITOXIN ON PORKER8 Drowns While Fishing. Fort Williams, Ont, dispatch: ffr> skine Andrews of Chicago was drowned in Lake Nlpigon, sixty miles east of here. The young man and his father were capsized in a canoe while fishing. The fattier was rescued. Indiana Man Experiments With a Cure for Hog Cholera. Cambridge City, Ind., special: Fred Kemmer, a veterinarian, has made public the result of experiments with a new virus, which it is claimed not only will cure hog cholera, but will make the animal Immune. For ten days Kemmer has been vaccinating hogs afflicted with the disease and the experiments have been entirely suc­ cessful. He has not lost an animal. Concerning the remedy, Kemmer says it Is not a vaccine, but an antitoxin made from cholera germs that are first dried, then pulverized. The liquid Is made fiom the powder. From three to ten drops are Injected into one of the hind legs of the animal. Kemmer says the meat of the hogs is not af­ fected by the treatment Boy Drowns in River. Elgin, 111., special: Eddie and Jo­ seph Weidner, aged three and five years respectively, fell from a raft while paddling on Fox River. Dr. L. S. Taylor rescued Joseph and then tried to bring Eddie out alive but the little fellow was past help. Aged 103, 8H«l Drives Far. Corry, Pa, dispatch: Mrs. Mary Boreas, aged 103 years, drove here from Carter Hill, her home, a dis­ tance of six miles, and attended the funeral of her son, Fred, aged 54. Girls and Rescuer Drown. Bridgeton, N. J., dispatch: Nellie and Bertha Fraelinger and Peter De- gar were drowned at Cumberland Causeway. The two young women fell overboard. Degar jumped after them and all three sank. , Republicans Name Moss. Bowtlng Green, Ky., special: Hon­ orable J. McKerzie Moss was renom­ inated by the Republicans for Con­ gress from the Third district. Bl had no opposition. Mad Dcg Bites Six. Elgin, 111., dispatch: After several days' chase a mad dog with a record of biting six people, was shot Two canines which the dog bit several days ago were killed because they began to show signs of rabies. To Cross 8ea in Balloon* Paris cablegram: Count de la Vaulx will make a second attempt to cross the Mediterranean in a balloon about Sept 18. His first attempt last Oc­ tober failed because of adverse winds. Kenosha Bank Is Assured. Kenosha, Wis., dispatch: The last step necessary for the organization of the Kenosha* State bank was complet­ ed when State Bank Examiner Bergh of Madison approved the articles of organization. Enterprising Hackman Gets Soldier to Make a ^ | Hurry-Up Trip. > V BELLBOY GREETS THE FIGHTER Instead of Reception Coipmlttee Pur­ veyor of Ice Water, Etc., to Hotel Quests Is Only One on Hand fo Receive Distinguished Visitor. .Lieutenant General Nelson A. Miles' anxiety not to disappoint the people of Fitchburg, Mass., whom he sup­ posed to be waiting to welcome him, enabled a Leominster hackman to bunko him out of $4. The general was in Leominster visiting his sister, Mrs. Mary J. Merriam. The hack* man hunted him up and said the gen­ eral was wanted at once at the John- sonia Hotel in Fitchburg, and that ho was to come by hack. Dons Best Bib and Tucker. Donning his best uniform, acoom- panled by Mrs. Miles and Mrs. Mer­ riam, he entered the hack and drove to Fitchburg. Arriving at the Johnsonia, the gen­ eral expected to be greeted by most of the city's population and was con­ siderably surprised when no one but a bellboy came down to hand the dis­ tinguished visitor out. However, still supposing the plans of the local com­ mittee were not quite well settled, the general paid the hackman his fare of $4 and entered the hotel office to make inquiries. Tht* clerk didn't know anything about any reception to General Miles. The general returned to the street to sound the hackman for further information, but that In­ dividual had disappeared; Makes 8ome Remarks. Then it dawned on the head of the army that he had been made the vic­ tim of a bunko game. He made some violent remarks in a quiet tone of voice and joined his wife and sister in the hotel parlor, where they held a consultation. The clerk of the hotel by this time had spread the news of General Miles' arrival and the local reception committee hastily got to­ gether and called at the hotel to offer apologies to the guest. Then it came out that the committee had planned to send a carriage to Leominster to bring the general to Fitchburg. The Leominster hackman heard of this plan and adopted a subterfuge to get the best of a Fitchburg hackman. REFERENDUM LEAGUE TO MEET Call Issued for Friends to Assemble at Springfield. Springfield, 111., dispatch: The Ref­ erendum League oi Illinois, through Daniel L. Cruice, president, and Dan. W. Richmond, secretary, have issued a call for all friends of the Initiative and referendum to assemble in Spring­ field Sept. 3 to S to petition the legis­ lature to submit to a vote of the peo­ ple of the state the question of a con­ stitutional amendment to make the initiative an<) referendum part of the organic law of the state. HERD 8UFFER8 FROM BLACKLEG Johnson County Cattle Afflicted With The Dread Disease. Springfield, 111., dispatch: Dr. L. C. Tiffany, assistant state veterinarian, returned • from Johnson county, where he was called to examine a herd of cattle suffering from a disease un­ known to the local authorities. Dr. Tif­ fany says the disease is blackleg. Steps have been taken to prevent its spread to other herds. Texas fever Is reported at Girard, Macoupin county, and several deaths have occurred. DEATH FOR THE CAT8 AND DOG8 Animals Held Responsible for the 8pread of Diphtheria. Strtnh, Ind., dispatch: Every dog and ckt within the confines of the town iias been killed by order of the health authorities, who believe that the canines and felines are respon­ sible for an epidemic of diphtheria, which is raging in the village. The quarantine established failed to con­ fine the disease and an Investigation proved that dogs and cats suffering from the disease were spreading the contagion everywhere. 8HERIFF'8 WIFE COWE8 BAD MEN Drives Rebellious Prisoners to Their Cells With an Ax. Centrevllle, Iowa, dispatch: A mu­ tiny occurred in the county jail, result­ ing in the serious wounding of Sheriff Davis. The sheriff's wife seized an ax and with the assistance of Deputy Bevington, who had a revolver, forced the prisoners back to their cells. The mutiny followed a series oi attempts ..o break Jail within the last week, two of which were successful, Ecuador Town Destroyed. Guayaquil, Ecuador, telegram: The The Town of Babahoyo, capital of the province of Los Rios, was destroyed by fire. Much merchandise la transit to the interior was burned. Moors Attack French. Oran, Algeria cable: A party of Moors recently attacked a French military supply column near Ain Del- kelil and many were killed or wound* ed on both sides. Troops have gone in pursuit of the Moors. , Alxth Fire Victim Dies. New York special: Moses Rosen­ berg, 2 1-2 years old, died from burns making the sixth death that resulted from the fire that swept through the double tenement at 35 Essex street Drops Dead In Carriage. Bow en, III., dispatch: Shiver Gar­ ner, a pioneer settler and a wealthy former of Hancock county, dropped dead as he was leaving town in a carriage, accompanied by his wife, on the road home. Largest 8hlp In the World* ~ Belfast, Ireland, cablegram: Tfce White Star vessel Cedric, the largest In the world, has been launched. The Cedric is a vessel of 11,000 tons' dl» placement. Trolley Accident In Virginia % Due tr Carelessness site :S the Motorman. i FREIGHT TRAIN BREAKS AWAY Three Die as a Result of "Cut" of Cars Running Down a Steep Grade and Over a Trestle Near Georgetown, Ind. Three persons were kllled and forty Injured in a trolley collision on the Bay Shore terminal line just beyond Norfolk, Va The cars were shattered and telescoped and between them were wedged the bodies of a motor- man and a passenger. The dead are: Charles B. Golden, Linwood Fentress, William S. Yandle. Among the injured, many of whom were sent to their homes in carriages, was a party of relatives of Major L. T. W. Waller of the marine corps. Motorman Was Careless. The wreck occurred in a clear space. Motoncp.n Yandle of the outbound car, passengers-say, was talking to a wo­ man and passed the switch where he should have waited for the car from Ocean View. When he saw it the cars were within a few feet of each other. The car from Ocean View was under control, but the one from the city dashed into it at full speed. Many Cut by Glass. The motorman whose carelessness caused the collision tried to jump, but was caught on the platform gate. The woman to whom he was talking was taken unconscious from the debris that pinned down Motorman Yandle. The cars were crowded and a panic ensued. Many persons were cut by flying glass. THREE ARE KILLED. Fourteen Cars Loaded With Wheat Are Demolished. In a disastrous freight wreck on the Southern railway near Georgetown, Ind., the following were killed: Dud­ ley Cox, "Red" Duval, Menso Ross. The Injured are Harry Goodall, George Meyers. Fourteen box cars loaded with wheat, together with two locomotives, were tumbled over a trestle into a ra­ vine and fell forty feet. All were de* mollshed. Two sections of the through freight were coming east and the first section had stopped at Duncan to switch, leav­ ing a "cut" of cars on the main track. There is a heavy grade at this point and by some means the cars broke away and rolled down the track, gain­ ing momentum at each revolution of the wheels. Just as the runaway cars were approaching the trestle the sec­ ond section, drawn by two big engines came thundering over the hill and the crash occurred a moment later. Both Duval and Cox went down with their engine. Ross was on one of the runaway cars and was crushed be­ neath it Engineer Goodall and Fire­ man Myers, In charge of the other en­ gine, jumped, and were fatally Injured. Tnere was great difficulty in extricat­ ing Myers, His voice could be heard for hours and it took several to locate him. FATAL TRIAL RUN. Alton Engineer's First Outing Ends In Locomotive Explosion. One man was killed and four were Injured when the boiler of a big en* gine on the Alton railway blew up near Rush Hill.' The dead: H. O. Markwell. The Injured: G. J. Mc- Mahon, M. C. Page and L. C. Shallen- berger. Shallenberger had been sick and was making a trial run to see If he was able to resume work. He will probably die. 8EIZE8 A VALUABLE NECKLACE Customs Official Takes Society Wom­ an's Jewelry for Duty. New York dispatch: "I know ex­ actly where you have concealed that pearl necklace you bought in Paris and I advise you to give it up to me without delay," said Customs Agent Theobald to one of two women stand­ ing in the line on the arrival of Kron Prinz Wilhelm. The Implied threat resulted in the seizure of a pearl necklace, with two diamond clasps, worth $20,000. The Identity of the woman from whom the necklace was taken has been withheld by the cus­ toms authorities, but it Is admitted that both she and her companion are well-known in society in this city and are wealthy. 8eek Church pata. London cablegram: A deputation from the Congregational union has left England to inquire into the con­ dition of the Congregational churches In Canada. The deputation will travel across the dominion to Vancouver, Find Woman's Body. Cornish, Me., special: The body of Miss Olive Broad, a middle aged wom­ an who resided on the outskirts of this town, was found in a clump of bushes with the skull crushed. The woman had evidently been murdered. Too Fast for the Shah. ' London cablegram: The Shah Of- Persia started on a train to meet King Edward at Portsmouth. He stopped the train ten miles out, de­ claring it was going too fast, though only twenty miles an hour. . $oldiers Restored to Duty. Springfield, 111., special: Adjt-Geli. Smith has restored to duty without trial Privates Arthur McDonald, J. T. Breaky and Chester Green, Go. K, Seventh infantry, who were dropped for desertion. f Charged With Murder*^.'.? iMf'sey City, N. J., dispatch? Wolf was arrested charged with a murder committed in Vienna, Austria He was remanded to await the action of the United States author!tiea Pana, Hi:, js Visited by f! Destructive Electrically ^ Storm. MILLERSVILLE IS WIPED Reports Reoeived 8tate That the tire Village Was Destroyed by thB^-v4^ Elements, Causing Qreat Loss 0#^- * , Life--Two Killed in Train Wreck. ,V •i- --- li . Pana, OL, dispatch: A tarrifltt tav^ nado and cloudburst swept this pok, ̂ tion of the state. A report ha&,;i ^ reached here irom Millersvllle, stj|v^'-.S:- miles northwest, that the entire vil» lage was blown away with great losii!^ of life. As all wires are down thji-W"^ report cannot be confirmed. Maarf'^^ buildings in this city are wrecked;-.; :; and almost every Jhade tree is hlom(:c^ down. ' %r. ?•;%; The storm broke In full fury on tW» ' |j city at 4:30 o'clock p. m. Wind ana - rain were accompanied by a brilliant electrical display. The storm was thdj': most destructive that has ever vtstt»t ed the city, not excepting the of 1867 and 1868. i ^ : y • Church Steeple Blown Oveiw The steeple of the Catholic church|": 125 feet In height, was blown overf' and the bell, which was one of thi largest In the state, was torn from It* place. The roofs are torn from th# Union block, the largest business block in the city, 'i iie Y. M. C. A* building, which cost $25,000 to erecV is almost a complete wreck. ThA steeple of the Baptist church is als® blown down. Apple trees for miles around are completely stripped, and scarcely ft grain or hay stack is left standing, and corn is beaten into the ground* Much stock has also been burned. „ Loss Is Heavy. The loss in this section will raadl hundreds of thousands of dollar* The storm commenced with the ap» proach of a greenish colored bank of storm clouds near the ground. Th« , wind and rain reached the city at thd same time, fully two inches of rain falling in less than half an hour. Thft wind blew at the rate of eighty miles an hour for a tull half hour, durins which time nearly all the shade trees in the city were broken down. Two Dead at Rock Falls. Rock Falls, 111?, dispatch: Two art'! dead and one badly injured as a re*;'c suit of the heavy cloudburst whldi' swept Whiteside county. Two miles of the Chicago, Burlington ft Qulncy track north of Fen ton was washed out Freight train No. 46 was ditchetf*" all of the cars rolling over the en* > bankment. t.eorge Wells and Georgo ̂ Murray were killed and William Mor* - riaon was injured. Big Loss in Nebraska. Omaha, Neb., dispatch: An eleo< trical storm and cloudburst swept Jt over this portion of Nebraska. Th» greatest amount of damage done was at Plattsmouth, where buildings wero * wrecked and crops laid flat on tho ground. The loss there is estimated at $50,000. THE LATEST MARKET REPORT Wheat. New York--No. 2 red, 7«%0. , Chicago--No. 3 red, 67%c. St Louis--No. 2 red, 68c. Kansas City--No. 2 hard, Q5966& Milwaukee--No. 1 northern, 78© 78%c. Duluth--No. 1 hard, 75c. Minneapolis--No. 1 northern, 0M1 7«tt@76%c. Corn. New York--No. 2, 64c. Chicago--No. 2, 55c. f St. Louis--No. 2, 64c. v Kansas City--No. 2 mixed, 410^ 4»ttc. Peoria--No. 8, 68c. Oats. New York--No. 2, new, ,89041tb Chicago--Standard, 32V&C. St. Louis.--No. 2, 27c. Kansas City--No. 2 white, 32c. Milwaukee--Standard, 35@45c. Peoria--No. 3 white, 88©8Sti*» Cattle. 1 Chicago--$4.00@9.00. Kansas City--$2.00@8.20. St. Louis--$1.75@8.00. Buffalo--$8.60® 7.75. Omaha--$1.25 @ 8.30. Hog*. Chicago--$5.40@7.10. Kansas City--$6,0007.10. St. Louis--$6.25@7.10. Buffalo--$4.75@7.10, Omaha--$6.60 @6.80. 1 Sheep and Lambs. Chicago--$3.60 @6.75. Kansas City--$2.10@5.7§. St Louis--$1.50@5.80. Buffalo--$2.25@6.00. Expects to Win Merger 8ult* Washington dispatch: The attariMp general Is expecting a decision fav­ orable to the government in th« Northern Securities merger sul^ which case is to be heard on the first Monday in September in St PauL Death for Chinese Reformer. ; | Shanghai cablegram: It is learnsdi tfint Wang-Chia Chun, the new gov­ ernor of Kwanksi, has deceived secret instructions from the einpreg* .. dowager to secure the death of tM v|| reformer Kung-Yu-WeL *78 Wisconsin Athlete Weda. ™ lfadison, Wis., dispatch: E. B. Oo> | chems, one of the best athletes of tho ^ University of Wisconsin, was rled to May Louise Mullen at St phael's church, Rev. Father J. H* . ̂ Naughton officiating. v, .•« Germania Reaches Port. * Queenstown cablegram: The Star liner Germania, from New Yorltjr Aug. 13, has arrived. She reports the vessel broke down on aeoou damage to her air pumps. mailto:4.00@9.00 mailto:2.00@8.20 mailto:1.75@8.00 mailto:5.40@7.10 mailto:6.25@7.10 mailto:4.75@7.10 mailto:1.50@5.80 mailto:2.25@6.00

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