{ title: 'The Ravena news. (Ravena, N.Y.) 1897-1907, October 27, 1906, Page 6, Image 6', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031158/1906-10-27/ed-1/seq-6/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031158/1906-10-27/ed-1/seq-6.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031158/1906-10-27/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84031158/1906-10-27/ed-1/seq-6/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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'W. L~ DOUCLAS '3.50 & '3.00 Shoes •leT IN THI WOIII.D UNITED STATES SENATOR FROM SOUTH CAROLINA PRAISES PE~RU·NA. HUNDREDS ENGUlfED / nnny 1 ::.::::: 1 :,,::.~:;;:~::~ 1 ~nnk- 8y B 'IG TIDAl WAV·E / 1 Cmps Swt•llt 1\wny, , · Snn SalYIIdOI'.-A t:ompo~t r~tgO!I STANDARD OIL COMPANY IS FOUND GUilTY Troops Sent After Runaway ln. dlans In Wyoming. are why wear th•n any make. , Whorovor you live, you can obtain w. 1.,. uou11u 1hoes, Hl1 n•me and price 11 1t1111W on t11o·bult~ o, .,.hlch protocll yoq arolaot hill prlc• and lnlorlor oh<>oo. T•l<'b 110 aw••tl ,,., •• Aok yOilrdNlor lor W. L, ourl• .. h- •nd lnolot upon havlnr thom. ' fed Oo/<H' fJltlltr H\fi -th•fl. wtl1 not wtar b,.al!llfl r Wrlto tor nluotratod ·Catotor ot Poll 5t)'Jn, W. L 00\!0LAS. Dopt. II, Urvoklon. M1111 The Queen ot Portugal, besides en- couraging her 1>eoplo to lm·provo ~heir dairies, hns for sovel'lll years been ijtudylng tho soils In her king- dom with n view to gra1.oe cultur·e. Dyopopoia I~ q(t~n Cmoo~d Rl( C'a.larrh of tlio Stomnch-1\!rtt>Ja /ld«HM Cn· tan·ll of tho Stomach and 1• 2'hr.r·•fa•·• a Remtdl/ For D]i•P•P•ia, lion. 1\1. C. Dutler, •:~-u. S. Sena· SAVED BABY LYON'S LIFE I tor f1·om South Onrolina for two • terms, in n Iotter from Wa•hin~ton, I>. C., writes to the l'c1·una Mcdrcine .Awlitl \l•ht From Tha&t Dr., 11 cltnl Com• 1 I.a., ns follows: lllalnt, Inr .. ntilf' J~c-zema-~lother ''1 (•(f·tl t'ecomtn.,,ld Pt!t•unn f\oJ' t•rshoo (~ul:l<nr\ llometiloo. <ll/IIJII>pHIIt ·IIIUl ~lfltlltllll< f.rnublfl, ) b l lw·VIl lmen ualng 11'\\' metll.cli!IJ \( ur a·by had that dt•oadfu! complaint, J~lrfi·HIIOI'I fll!'l'llltl tUitllfi'I.'IVIli'IJ , lnf.11ltllc l~c•omn, ll'illl'h afflicted hun !or tll11cl• J•,Heved. lt 18 tmleed a \''\oral month!, oommcncmg at the top of Wlllld.erj'ut tiiiJd'lclne, beside• ,. Ius head, and at lase CO\•ering his whole ooud. t<>llit•,\ body. His sufferings were untold nnd con· h-~..,.~:---......, .. -..~-~-~~-.....,! llant misery, in loll'!, there wao nothm~ C A'I'AHRII (;r the stomach is the co-;,. we would not ha\'e d•>nc to have gil·cn hun i'ect 1111111e for most ruses of drspepsin. relief, \\'e tina·lly pt•ocurcd a lull set ol In order to cure <'atarrb of the atom· tl <: t · , . H d 1 . noh tho catarrh must be cradicntcd. Je u lcutn emo ws, an< ll1 about U1rce Only nn internal catarrh l'em~'<iy 1ucb or. four days he b~gan to show a br1ghl'er as Peruna, is nv 11 ilablc. ' apmt lllld l'eallr laughed, !OJ' the tit•st time l'ct'lma exact!)• meets the indiont.ions. ' m a year. Jn about nmety days he wns ·-· - · --· -- -- ·- ---· ---- ~-- fully rerovet·ed. i'l'aise !'ut• \he Cutirul'B I DROPSY nw DliCOVDt; R • ed · 1 i ~. · ,,,., ••l•k ••ll•r ••• •• ,.. , ...-m lC'S 1a.s a WllY:t uL'C':l1 our gt·cp.test 1 ..... , ou11. 'D .. k •rtMU•••I•I• ••• to Da,.a't.r•at•l4 pleasure, and thrto is n~Jthing too good 1 ...... ~. n. 11. G&lllf'M •_!~S.-· a_ .. ~-·~ that we could s,1y in lhcit• l'nvot•, for tbt•y ~ENSION.JOIII!I W,MCIHICI!!t ce•·tainly sa1·ed out· hnhy's hie, tor he \VaoioinK&on, D,()O wa~ the most nwful s•gbt :hat l ever be- r..o.lf.'iP.'P..~l?.~\~l.ftJ:.~.lf.t~~~£ 1 1J:I'.fl held Pl•ior to the treatment of the Cuti· , hraloui,.Llwcu.!l•<llucllcadw!olalw .. •th~ cura Remedies. .\Irs. ~l~ebclie Lyon, IS~6 --·iil;ltty J>ot•t-nguesl' l<'iu•nwrs. Appleton A\'e.,l'al'<Jnl, 1\nn.,July IS,l905.\ · Saviors of Portugal lll'e l'ol·tur.;nl's The oldest bnnlmot. 0 s In the world ! new .farmers. In the south or the llt· are the \flying mon•')',\ or convenient 1 tle kil!gdom a serious attenfpt is be· money, first issuecl in Chinn In 2697 ing made to rednlm about 10,000,· B. c. X.Y.- 43 . 1 000 acres, or forty-four per cent. of the total area of Portugal. Somo energetic people, in combi- It goes straight to the mark nation with the municipnl authori- ties, have set to work in the district of Serpa UJIOII 100,000 ac1·es, divld· ing it Into llllotments of fiftc<'n ncres each, and letting it nt 11 nominal rent, calculated according to the estimated value of the land. The highest quit Hale's Honey of Horehound and Tar . rPnt Is $3.20 and the lowest ·forty i cents per allotment, free of local taxes and rates for ten years. A het- erogeneous mixture or settlers nl· ready has taken possession or their tenements. Carpenters, masons, doc- tors, cheml&ts, barbers, seamstresses, tailors and beggars figure In the mot- ley crowd. The success of the scheme, as far as it has gone, has stirred tho ambition of the residents In a large part or the north of Portugal, where a project on similar lines Is· being set Quickly Cure.s Coughs and Colds Pleasant, effective, harmless Oet It of your Dru~t . I on foot to bring back Into rultivatlon something like half a million acres. -Chicago Tribune. ,.,., Toollloche Dro,o eu,. ln.One Mlnuto STIFFNESS, STITCHES, LAMENESS, 'CRAMP, TWISTS AND TWITCHES, ALL DECAMP WHIN YOU APPLY ST. 'JACOBS TliE OLD·MONK·CURE OIL Soft and· preserving the strength •nd Increasing the life of harness t.nka ....... has no ·equal. Su· perior to other brands because free from •cid. and will not become ran• cid. Penetrates the leather and makes It weather-proof, sweat-proof, soft, strong and durable. Makes old harness look like new. Prevents rot. Gives a glossy black finish. Bostoa Coadl b1e OD makes easy running wheels. Re- duces friction to an absolute mini· mum. Better and more economical than castor oil. Will not gum ot corrode. For use on carriages, cabs.,. buggies. • ln~oP:mntly i'01• ten dal'H t.hl·oup;hou~ Whole Population of Elliott's S.wept to Instant Death. Jtho I'OP\Illllc, ftoodlnt~ tile l'ich Vallo)'•,, Koy prllwlpnlly that or Mtl.lndn, nnd I'O·• ' Rll'ltlng In gl'lll\t loijH ot IICo nnd de· I Htl'\lctlon or Cl'OJlS, Convicted of Conspiracy In Re· stralnt of Trade. 'l'he Slllva!lorenn mrm-of·wnr halco • wnK laM at Aca,jutJ•\, DESTRUCTIVE TORNA·DO IN CUB·A '!'he to)>OA'I'aphy ·ot val'lous (1\IPIII't· · , ment.s bas hoen changed; bullrllnga JURY SANG RELIGIOUS SONGS !llold u~cll'~S l'OlV\\'OW w IIlli t\uptH)o Johnson mnl 'rlwn ltcHIIn\~ ~l'hoir ' 1 11111rch Nol•Um·nr·~l. ha.vo fallon, bUI'Ying thcll· tmmnto In Stot•m 1\IIIH l\lnn)' 011 Vt>sselN OIY l~lm•· ldn-Oroat .Hnvoc In lf1n'a11n- . Snh·:ulor Is lll!vRMtnll!ci-Damltgo htcftlt•lllllblo-J,oss of J,lrc Gl'l!nf.. , th~ ruins, nnd tho iJ•on. IJI'Idgea ove1• Omaha, N'ob.-Clonernl Grooly 11 ,, tho prhwi•Jllll rivers hnvo boen c:arl'lild l'cn11lty FoP Vhllatlon of Anti·T••n8t auod or(let•a tor 400 ~oldiQt•a lro\' awny. r.aw n l~lno of lt'rom $1m to F t '\ d s )) \' lt wna osthnnted .thnt. t'i,o·oo,ooo •or .,.en °' · ·· to bo rushed· In· \ '-lC)OO, or liiiiii'IHmmaealt ot,l~rmn u 1 f tl 11 tons of water fell. The aq.ueduct.s Sb: to Twelve l\IonUt~. . IO one o 10 ra road nortbw~ 8 t or nnd oloeiTic light plants at. Sonaonl\to Del\dwood·, and thonco by forMd. r~~(!es~nlvadol' have su!terod hon.vy l•'lndlny, Oh-!o,~Art.or Rl·nglng I'C• 'mnrcllos ovorlnnd to wh~re tho run. M hunl, Fla.-'l'hl•a«.> tenlble dlsas· , tel'S oc~url•cd h1 thP ·hurricane that for lllOI'O than two rt:tys r11ged a ion,; tho F'le1•ldn coast. '1'1\o steamer St. I.uclc fouu!lei'Od wltll a loss of twen·' The rnllt·oncls, tal~p;rnpha nnd com· • llglou•· Hongs for n 11orlod of two · nway lltos nro encamped 011 the heM. mo1•ee a1·e parAlyzed, but tJ·nmc Ill ho· honra In tile Court Hom'!e hero, the · wnters of· tho Llttlo· Powder IUver lug reatm·e<l In some towns of the jury In the ca 110 of the Stllto of Ohio In WyomlnR. This dGtllchment le 1 ~ l'OJHihllc. 1 t th 8 l!oMI oft tho Indiana ancl . 11 revent '!'he Witter mnlns at ~ome plaoee · · ltRa 08 11 tandl'll'!l 011 Company ~ncm from getting Into South n 1 • , ty.flve JI\'(OS, f!Hy Pllssangoi'S hnvo' hccn lost 1'1·om n bm·ge, nnd H Is re-, port·ed •by Cuptaln BI'IIVO, ol tho St. I~ucle, thnt Ito saw n tidal w.ri'Ve BweeJ> ove1· the Island of l!llllott's Key, ton, mB<'s -long nnd about one mlle wide,, with l·he Almost ce1·tain death ot tho 25G lnhabitanls. Hosides this lht ·It is I' en red pru•t, of the fleet. of the Flor-, id'll l•'tsh nnd ·J'roduco Compnny hna been lost, havo disappeared. · retnPned a VOI'dlct of ·guilty on the kotn. 'l'he rivera nre :)ringing down the . charge or consplmc)' ·to t•estraln 'l'hl~ Ia the t:hlrd «letnchiMnt to b! bodies ot personR drowned In the tmde In violation· or the. AnU-'l'I'Ust Hent a11alnst the· Utes. So urgent 11 storm nnd the c11rcaasea of oattle, 1 r th St t the Ol'<ler that a portion of the men nnll t-110 •l<>ht o• the•u tnnda t<> II\• ·nwH 0 0 11 ·C. Tho trlnl ·of ,John Ill I ttl • \' L •~ ~ D W ' 1,10 11 llll ·, 0 care, M t·he l'aiJ. , c1·ease the ter1•ot' of the paople. · Rockefollar on the same charge road cannot got enough IJnssencor 'l'he :·ove•·nment has IHBued· orclea•s follows, probably aftm· allJ>onls In t'Oirohos to tro1·t Meade hy tho tlli\a that assistance ·be given to victims the nresent case are taken, tho)' uro needed. · of the sto1•m. Tl l In connection with tho trollblct Ounten1ala •nd Hondlll'a\ also n· avo 10 , lli'Y was ou·t f·hlrtr·f.II'O hotlrS II h tl w o ~ \ and rnttlrnecl thh vordl t r lit t W l C 'Hl al' OJlll'l'tment Is hnvtn• Captain Bl'll\'o said that Ills shl·p wns wt•ecked hy the same wave that swopt OVOI' Elliott's J{ey. He Rll· cho•·ed on tho lee side ot tho Island, which runs north and south along the coast, and about an hour later the wave Almost swam11ed the ahlp. Twenty-five of the 100 IJBI'Sons on board were killed by being borne. agalust the <leek and fittings, while· sixty seriously ln,lnred were brought, hofe on nn extension steamer. The entire cl'ew and all the pas- scngOI'S were Qn deck watching the storm when suddenly the wave i•olled up and )Jroko In hundreds of tons on the ship, The St. Lucie was crushed, !Jy the force of the blow and loft a total wreck. 'fhe· captain says that all lives must have ,perished were u not that the wave l'lll'l'led the ship so fa1· shoreward that when the waters receded the vessel was onl)' 111 one foot. of water. BI'I\VO said that he saw the wave carry 11way houses on tho Island, and he asserts that there is hardly \ sign of vegetation remaining. Relief tugs I have been despatched· to Elliott's Key, · The barge from which fitly al'e Sllld to have been lost was moored 1 near Elliott's Key. There were 100 · I on board, almost all .being engaged in the fishing business In these wat- OI'S, The barge wns almost swamped. l lt Is s11id the waves covered tho ct·nft · completely, but het• buoyancy was so· great she continued to float. 'fhe barge drifted toward the Bahama Isl- ands, an1l the ftft)' survivors were taken otr !Jy a steamer. The steame1• St. Lucie belonged to the fleet of the Florida East Coast naiJWay, and WIIS employed in carl'Y• ing workmen to and rrom tho et ton- sJon w01·k ou the lceJ•s. Despite the storm warning Captain nravo sailed for Key Sargo witll a large numbet• of workmen. The St. r~ucte 's home port was 1'nmpa. She was built In Wllming- · ton, Del., In 1888, was ot 105 net tonnage and 12 2 feet long. Sho was . usually manned by a crew oC thir· teen. Tile St. Lurie had formerly been In service at New Haven. De· tails were lacking. In Havana about fifty houses were Injured, but, owing to the massive coustructlon of roofs and walls, the damages are serious only In a rew inatances. The buildings of the Unl· verslty of Havana .,,stained i.njurleJ amoun~!ng to many thousands of dol- lars. A partition waH In the Ameri· can legation was blown clown. The omce furniture was ruined nnd the books am!. records or the legation were wet L.rough. Sll'ltered severf;ll)', It Is sa'ld ·the lo•so• ~ \ · c · 0 g.u Y 11 with tl • \ • 4.30 o'clor,k a, m, Attaches of the \O runllway Indlnns, a Ill·' there will amount to many millions . COtll't House had p;lvon up 1111 hopo thetlc story was told by the SIQIII of dollnrs. oC an agreement .after t.he jur·ymen Indllln lntel'.pretor to Thomas H. 'rib·· reported to ,Judge Bankor that they hies, of Oma·hll, By Adoption Tlbblii could not agree on a verd'lct. 'Tho In II member or the Omnha I rlbe and judge sent them ·back and told them Is known to every lndlan In tho We 1 t. N·EW l'ORI{ CENTRAL I<'INEJ), Jmlge Holt ;\Jlmlnlster1 Rebuke . to t1•y agnln. The lntorprete1· said thnt sever~\ With a l't\nalt.)' of ••os,ooo. Nothing wu heard from tho j.ury weeks ago runners rame from tbo New York Clty,-J,udge Holt In t.he , room until supper time, when supper Utes to the Sioux Resei'VRtlons In U,nlted States Circuit Court fined the, was served to them. They lmmtodi· ·South Dakota, ·bearing the story or New York Central Raih·oad the sum , ately started argalng the case after tho complaints of tho utes. They of HOS,000-$18,000 on each of six : eating their supper, ami the argu· . told the Sioux that they were actually countij-on the charge of granting ment was kept 1111 moijt of the night. atnrvlng, and orrered themRelvos ns ·rebates to the ~ugar trust. . . Suddenly, when all was stll'l al10ut slaves to tho Sioux, provlf!ccl they Frederick L. Pomeroy, asslstnnt the Court House, a song broke the were permitted to come to live on traftlc manager of the railroad, a 00 ,. Rtlllnesa and the atartled attaches the 81otlt Reservation . defendo!lnt, was ftned UOOO on each· ·. henrd the words of the 'hymn, \Near· The Sioux replied that If count, a total oC $6000, . er, My God, to Thee.\ eamc on a visit to them t·hey .Tuclgo Holt dell'vored n scathing The song was followed by man)' not be permitted to starve, bn.t that ln1llctment of the practices of tho . lther good old Methodist hymns, sung the Sioux did not wlah shwes, and railroad In sentencing. with tho fervor of revival times. that the Government would not \Such 11 violation of law,\ said 1'hls was kept up from about 2 to 4 mit. them to give tho Utes a .Judge Holt In ·lmsslng sentence, \Is :>'clock a. m. Than one of the jur)'· of their lands. much moro heinous than the ordlnllry men got on his feet and made an ear- Word was receh·ed hera fmm tho common, vulgar crimes usually nest speech to his fellows. Hand scene of tho Indian deprerlations In brought before the criminal courts. claJllllllg And other demonstrations Wyoming thllt Capt. C. P .• Joh '!'hose are crimes of sudden passion or 11pprova1 were heard from the jury of MaJor Grierson's rommnnd. ' and temptation. These crimes we room. an orderly and a scout., ov~rtook the are dealing with were committed by Then came a knock nt the d'oor nn<l Utes on Little Powder RIVfl', abm1t men or education, business exper· the Jury 11nnounced that they were forty miles north of ·Gillette. lence, and standing in the commu· ready to give their verdict. The bal- Three hundred hrav~>s, well nity, 11nd as Sitch they should be ex· lltf summoned ,Juf!ge Ban'ker, County nnd with n large supply of n.mm•inl. pecle«l to set 11a example or obedience Prosecutol' David and Attorney tlon, attended the ron nell. s to the J..~w. on the malntennnce of TrOUJJ, for the defense. around a circle In whlrh f'a which the security of their property .Judge Banker, when he arrived. ,Johnson nnd tho chiefs ot H1~ depends. said: \Gentlemen have you agreed hold their talk. \This corporation receive1 1 large upon 11 verdict?\ • The Indians s11!d t.h~y \1'0\llrl and valuable public privileges. It \Your Honor, we have,\ respond· como war, and wou.ld not rMnrn to was unde1· the highest obligations to ed Foreman Balles. the barren reservation whkh had treat all citizens alike, and not to \What Is the verdict?\ been allotted to them itt l'tah 'rb~ gmut any unjust discriminations. The foreman sent the Court n tvne· older lndlans told Captain .Johnson This was a secret crime, the proof of w1·itten form which had been fllle<l t.hey wonld nil die fightln;; which was difficult to obtain. The out, and the Court l'elld It, as follows: than return whore there was law was ot•iginally passed twenty \We the jury In this rase, find lng but starvntlon for them. ·years ago. The complaints of the the defendant guilt.y In the manne1· insisted on continuing thei'' wny granting of rebates by railways were nnd form as the defendant stands either to the Sioux Indian c.auntrv ol frequ'Jnt and insistent. charged on the Information. South Dakota Ol' the Crow · ' \It Is not too much to say,\ con- \A. J,, DAIJ~ES, Foreman.\ of Montana. tiuued Judge Holt, \that If the busi- ;Tudge Banker addresser} the jUI')': ·As soon as the pow\·ow was ov!r· ness had been rarried on upon this \Please accept my gr·atitndo and thll Indl11ns broke camp and slatted basis an4 the discrimination contln- thanks, which are due you for yout• northwa!'rl again, while ned In favor of one shipper it mll;'ht Jlatlence and close attention to this Johnson retumed to Gllleito hnve been that competitors would c11se,\ he said, \and I \':ant to thank quested the W11r Department. to hnve been driven out of business.\ you, 11nd In that word I exJJress nil him mo;·e troops, there Is In It and all I cnn express, Ranchmen have reported thP , , You may how he discharged and go have had two war' dances since the! to your homes.\ , started northward and are more de· BISHOP'S D.'\CGHTJm A SUICIDE. Eluding Nurse, Mrs. Cowdin Ends l,lfe In Connecticut Sanitarium. New' Hal'en, ·Conn. -Discouraged by a long Illness and su!tering from ne1•vousness, Mrs. Laura Potter Cow- din, daughter of Bishop Henry C. Potter, of New York City, committed suicide in a private sanitarium at Cromwell. Conn. The body was shipped for Intermont to Mount Kls· co, N.Y. Th~ bod)' of Mrs. Cowdln was found by sanitarium attendants hanging from a beam in a remote cor- ner of the cellar. Attorney Troup for the Standanl fiant as they get further from · 011 Company made a motion for a zatlon. They rob sheep and ··new trial. campi with Impunity, making such The penalty f11r violation of the a sho:w of force that the mPn Valentini! law Is tine of not less than charge of the camx1s recognlzr $50 and not more than $5000, or lm· anco Is useless. prlsonment tor from .SilC months to one year, or by both such fino and Imprisonment. Further, any person SJJi\'ERU. SAFE IN Injured by violation of the Valentine law may recover ·damage& double the Expresses Surprlsr nt amount or such Injury. Charge Against Him. Mrs. Cowdln was tho second of Bish011 Potter's children by his first l\lan:y Persons Injured- n .. magc wife and wns forty-four years old. Placed nt $2,000,000. ·Her husba,nd, Winthrop Cowdln, sur· TWENTY Dl!;Ao IN H.o\\\ANA. Seven farmers and five business men made up the jury which thus de· liberated for thirty-two hours before finding the Sta:ndard Oil guilty of conspiracy In restraint of trnde. The acenea accompanying the return or the verdict, which the atlorneys for the prosecution predicted wouM sound the death knell fo~ t,he Stand· ard 011 Company, were sumclently dramatic. The hymn singing was 11tartllng In Itself. The echoes of the speech made In the closed room, and the ap11lause of t·he jurymen them· selves as they reached tho verdict, were plainly heard by the few per· Caracas, Venezueln.-l\lannel volra, the missing !JrokPr, and Yana's agent for the bankrupt ft J. 111. Ceballos & Co., who Is to have ~ 1,000,000 of thP funds, arrived nt Caracas, Y~n HaYaua, Cuba.-A cyclone of 1111 • Ylves her: Their New York home precedented severity, accompanied b)',, was at Eleventh street and Fifth ave· torrents or rain, swept over the prov· nne. Bishop Potter attended the lnces of Havana and Pinardei lt:o atHl funeral services. resulted in twenty deaths in this city · --------- , and the serious injury of a dozen m· I WILLI.UI.SCUJ,LY, EX·WRD, DEAD more persons. The damage Is esti- --- mated at fully $2,000,000. The dead Fornwr I'ngllsh I•eer l~avcs Estate are all Cubans of the poorer class. I \'alued at ~o,ooo,ooo. The United States cruiser Brook· !yn dragged her :\nchor until her stern grounded In the mhd otr' La Regia. She got oft in the morning without injury. • The.sto.:n caused wrecks ancl con- fusion among the shipping In the har- bor. Many buildings were badly dam- aged, and ·nearly all the trees ill the citY and suburbs were uprooted. 'f}le 2000 American soldiers, and marines at Camp Columbia were put to gre~:.t Inconvenience by the storm. Nearly all of the 4 o 0 tents tn camp were blown down, hut the damage was small. Harry ~osdlck, an army teamster, with the Twenty-eighth In- fantry, from Sioux City, Iowa, was· probably fatally::urt. He was crushed by a tree, which fell t·hrough tbe ilar- racks where he was sleeping. Fred Sutcliiie. of Fort Snelling, was ser·' .Lincoln, 111.-WIIIIam Scully, well known as \Lord Scully,\ <lied In Lon- don, England. He was eighty-five years old and possessed an estate val· ned at $5Q,OOO,OOO, Including about 2 00,000· acres of land In Illinois, Mis- souri, Kansas and Nebraska. He owned 46,000 acres In Illinois, 60,000 acres in Nebraska, 50,000 acres In Kansas and about 40,000 acres In Missouri. \Lord Scully\ was a peer until 1900, when he renounced his nne. glnnce to Great Britain and became a citizen of this ()ountr)', taking resl· dence In Washington, )). C. He went to England a year 'iater. He leaves a widow, who was hl11 second wife, two daughters and one son. YAI,E RAISES SALARIES. lously injured in the head. Thomas Thlrt•··flvc Professors Are to Get Shq,nealt, of Reading, Pa., was hurt • 111 fhe hack. • $!000 a Year. One hundred n:nd fifty tobacco barns in the Alqnizar District ha·ve been destroyed. 'l'he recently planted tobacco crop also has been seriously damaged. Great damage Is reported fro·a the Gulra section, the centre of . the hannna and plantain grQwln:.:; ln- dq~try. These crops are sa14 to have been practically totally destroyed. Many .amaH farmers bave .lost theh· all and are In great distress. Cremating ·Washington Paupers, Bodies of the pauper dead In the District of ColuinlJia are not to bo burled In the potter's field, but are to be cremated. , for Congress hns ap- Jiroprlated U5.,000 for building a suitable crematory.'' New Haven, Conn. - Salaries of Yale full professors have been rals.:~d to '4000 In the case of thli'ty:nve members of the faculty. The ftgure , heretofore paid hi'S been between $3000 and $3600. · The salarlea ·of Yale professors are , , aald to be twenty-ll.ve per cent. small-' er than those In Harvard and Hft1 per cent. smaller than those at the University of Chicago. Half N.UUon Fire at Altoona. Fire which started ·in the furniture building of Oliver Rothert, at AI· toona, Pa., caused a loss of nearly $503,000. The Rothert building and. the new theatre of I. C. Mishler were destroyed and the building of the Or· d~r of Elks was badly stama,ed. Ojater Famine in, IJalilmore. Dominican Inauraente Routed. sons remaining outside. ~------.- Ull\UGRANTS FOR THE SOUTH. 238 Flemish We1vcrsand Their Fam· ntes Start For Amerlca. Brussels, Belgium.-Two hundred and !lfty-elght skilled Flemish weav- . ers, with their families, left Ghent for Bremen, whence they win san on a steamer of the North German Lloyd Line dlt'ect for Char Ieaton, S. C. This Is the first Installment of a considerable Immigration movement arranged under the auspices of tlie Government of Belgium and the au· thorltles ·of South Carolina. )lother and Babies Die in Fire. M~•. Clinton Bryan and her two sons, one ejght months old, the other two years, were burned to death In their home at Lima, Ohio. T·he fire Is believed to ha:ve resuited from a gasoline explosion. Hydrophobia Kills a Woman. Mrs. A. W. Esleeck died at Green- field, MasS:, of hydropbol!la, result· lng from a .bite upon tho arm by a small dog. Mrs. Esleeclt was the wife of A. W. Ealeeck, a Mlllera Falls· paper manufacturer. 'l'he Esleeeka moved to Greenfield trom Holyoke, where the family had been· promln· ent ·socially for many years. · , Thlllk Negroes ))eatroJed Town. Seneca, S~ C., Wll practlcatly de· atroyed by fire, negroes .being accused· :>f starting It In revenge for the re· ci~Jlt dynamiting of their school there. Bank President lndleled. Charged with causing the. failure . of the Middleport Bank, former Pre~ ldont E. C. Cox bas been Indicted a. · Pomeroy, Ohio. a few da~ s ago, and cxpresst'd h l'•lrprlse at the news or t.h~ fail ll!!d the charges against him. The fugitive, who has lal·;;:~ Interests In Caracas, has l'\ bouse In a fashionable street, nnd been warmly received by the ful Venezuelan cattle kings. Silveira says he comes to zuela temporarily to restore health, which Is broken sinre his tomoblle accident, and derlares left his llrm solvent, with $1 assets to cover $700,000 owed to M. Ceballos & Co. THHEE LOST LJWT AmfS, Had Them Hanging 'Fmm W iudOir 0\'«WtUrnl'd f'Ju·. Schcnectn.!ly, N. Y.-One of big trolley cars· running f1·om city to Troy falled to tak<\ the at Union and McClellan dashed Into a pole und turn on Its side, Three passenge1·s with their arn1s out or ths \1' were the principal su !fercrs. beiJ:!g: William Lacore, Cohoes; left mangled, amputated near shou Frederick Jones, Troy; left eompletely severed; in serious dltlon. William H. Rile I', TroY: left mangled, amputated n~ar' shou Other~ hurt were S. .T. M and .John Br11nd, who hn,-c .injuries. · Santos :Dumont Wins l't·f~(,, M. Santos Dumont won the .deacon prize in Paris recentlY successfully flying 166 foal with· aeroplane. Hi!!;h I'l'i«'t'<l Jlor~rs. Prict>s fol' a few rlosely pairs of carriage horses went, to tile $600 mark in :\ew York ~nil singles sold front $200 to A num be1· of fast trotthig road ·1\'ere <3aslly diepoAcd or al from to $270. Owing to the stormy , weathet' In a battle between Dominican which prevailed .over Cbeaapealte Bay j Go:vernme!lt troops and ll)eurcenta, · · • for ten da:ya, pr.etlcall:t an oya~r ·near :Monte Chrt•u. the rebeJa were famloe exlata ill Ut.e IR&rltet tllere. <\efeated ancl 1184 ,to the hlll1. · ------~· Coneumptlon of Peanuts. Kanaa• ctt:r llODiumea. lll6 carloatls ef oaanuta ·•'•r:r· rear. '. .. . ......... -· \Rqua• to gat· the ·ll' trncts '!'he olfttl, found theY I ally 1 theY~ that ' havlnl on it. lund 1 a lugs Ponta1 ··w· Insane someb asked UBE \he Is ·lng tt med.'~ ••Ar ed ge think hQ Is· a cleo. H] I •4\V HDE regarc com pi Propb Bits. Job the A was p tbrout when dant with . strap tour Is• quest! The \Say chin f• The Is to answe :per's · Good The etlll l drugs the p: helps tlcB. Indi by wh the WI that S< gestiv« cripplE Wbc sort tc tired I addltlt lash 1 IUOVe Try ott hE and ta dl,;estc and t There' when \I Grape. food,\ 61 1 l au ru1 d~ me lng aD and, a It, felt