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Thomas B. Reed in Rome. Uy And Wore | Of the fitty-firet con 1 Aud boseed that j Megatherian aggregation i As fdid { And that i { die buly | | t . Here in old Cosar’s ¢ I sit me down, and w Iwi Pwoir i Upon the people And then we got it imour’n By gost dear friends, I don't | A little bit Aud Cosar didu’t either, Although he didn’t have # Wort to eny after it was over, For obvious reasons! But Brutus wasn’ta patching To Bpringer of Ilinois, Or Rogers of Arkansas; And Cwaar has something ‘To be thankfal for! I’m with you, Rome, From the Passamaqaoddy’s Tumbling tide of saw logs ‘Lo where the tawny Tiber flows, And we should organize A Reed and Roman trast, And swipe the universe! Are there any objections I hear none The ayes seem to have it: The ayes have it! ‘Then let her go, Gallagher! Bat I shall never think ‘Tat in that elder day To be a Reman } Was greater than a speaker Of the grand old Fifty-first, And don’t you forget it! That’s what! ! through at trod as necks, [New York Sun. AWFUL HAVOC, Fearful Ruin of a lone—A Goodly Section of Central Missouri Laid Waste Numbers ef Persons Either Killed or Seriously Wounded-The Storm Terribly Destructive te Life and Property. Mexico, Mo., May 20.—A terrible cyclone passed three miles northeast of here about three ocleck this af ternoon, striking the Bean Creek neighborhood about six miles north- east of this city and going in rigzag direction northenst. It laid waste the eountry as far as discovered for ten or twelve miles, carrying every- | it. It was the most terrible cyclone that has ever swept thing before over this county, and carrying death and destruction in its wake. The first news of the disister was received in this city about 5 o'clock in shape ofa call for doctors and help. All the docins of the city reportel. The Times cor- respondent at once left for the scene of devastation. The first house visited was Mr. Duffy's, half a mile south of the path of the cyclone were fouud six victims house in the from one storm district —the fam- ily of Jehn Doerger. THE DORRGER FAMILYS WOUNDS. The 6-year-old son was killed in- stautly. He was fearfully mangled, almost beyond recognition and cov- ered with Mr. iis daughter about 12 years of age, were in one bed. The daughter is fatally injured with a large hole in her side, one leg broken, several se- vere cuts in the head and body. Mrs. | Deerger with two children both very | seriously and probably fatally wound- ad. Mrs. Doerger is seriously wound- ed and presents a terrible sight.with head and face cut and covered with mud. Doerger and blood. Mr. Doerger had euts on the | head, body and arms and was prob- ably internally injured \ house was Doerger's swept from existence RW. JAMES. Carriages 1 BUGGIES haser, Wi 1g Wag CATTERLIN OF 3 Doors East of Grange ERA HOU St ' blown down and two horses killed. New Buggies, and Machinery BINDERS, REAPERS, MOWERS AND "E-AS a perfect gale. I was hold nothing ru Was eed amy a 3 TERE nM the house. I was dashed fin Stra Wil- liam Y » baby ly ut 1 - There we fe ple. The vas Pieteher,dau She is fatally w ? being broken and he: ought te receive aid at cuce. producing concussion of yuses are g Caleb Norris is badly, se. way, h id riously hurt His <o: 1 daugh ng apparel, al - ter are very seriously mangled. The!ed and wounded and crops des - daughter's leg is broken and cheek ed. The loss will be cut tothe bone. Mrs Emily Seal, HAVOC ABOUT CENT widow, aged sixty, was fatally Centralia, Mo., May 30.—About 3 hurt and will die, and old lady | oclock this afterno On a des Norris is fatally hurt All these | cyclone passed a mile iu | people wereat F. 5. Norris’ hi use | city sweeping everything in it during the storm, and the house) Ten or twelve dwellings were t was swept entirely uway. The cy | destroyed and many persons ser elone seemed tv bs hardest there. | The house. bedding and furniture are scattered ever the fields for half a mile. The house of Valentine caught fire and was burned. ly injured. Herses, wules aud cat- i | tle were killed and barus and fences joarried away and large tr torn jout by the roots. was a quarter of a mile ia width and A little son of was found a { | . | The storm's path | { Erdle His) ten miles in length. barns and outhouses were demolish- Johu Harrison le fed but no one was hurt The resi | dence of T. B. Hall was blown down but his family were all saved by go- intoacellar. A horse wus carried half a mile and dashed to Thomas Workman's house was swept | away. | his arm. THE RE SOLUTIONS EXPLIC iv pieces. | | Formation et a New Party Calied For. The Ajjtance Demands Reiterated Cc O.. May the convention reassembled in the L. Pol this ¢ | AWFUL FORCE OF THE WIND. | The home of Boston | swept away, the wind being terrible | {there. Mr. Kunkle was picked up ‘and thrown agaist 2 wagon and in stantly killed. His ! was picked completely up aud cari Kunkle was incinnati, 20.—When Jafterno na letter from L |which was read, advising i address aud de rt orel ferenee to issue au jfer action on a third party uutil IS92 - ards: r Os j ed several hundred yards and de} when a motion j caused a b eeze, and A farmer named | to refer it tot and several oth- names could not be ed injured of killed. © The 'the wind was s> great that it blew) barb wire fenc d and laid the ! wheat fields as flat wed harvest. lread.ng of a number of A farmer named Crane in a wagoa | ited in the ereek. couvnittee on resoe sd th | de oo Fores oF! s ratio —that he put more forcibly |The tinued from time to tu he | Rogers was killed lutions Was ers whose learn fy ta dele ss des demand was re: as ifm in miscellane- Ous telegrams. literal ly | Mr. Fish was caughtin the storm and | ef Minnesota, blown to pieces. Joweph Kemali’s house and warn were Mr. Kendall had a escape He had just left the house an | to the blown down. that would and claimed al barrow useless it be to refer the seve! third party question to the meeting barn as it was blown down, |in 1892 at which he and his ow: Jor lifted up, leaving him unharmed. Jers would be leading spirits The mules in the le were not} Tonatins Donnelly. chairman of hurt. The bara was scattered all} the committee om resolutions, clinb- over the ticlds ipou the rostrum at this juucture James Dillard's house was blown! and almost his first words caused a down as was Frauk Carter's new ivicind Ol excieuen z barn, where thtre was a movin laration that he was there to report chine carried about 100 yards aud | that the committee ou platform was | literally torn to pieces. while a large!a unit for the organi i the iron roller weighing 1.000 pounds} third party. He evidently felt that was taken up and carried 100 yards | jis moment of tri wph had come in and broken to pieces, aud a calf wasjthe struegle which he himself so taken up avd carried over a quarter | deftly becan just twency-four hears of a mile. Several horses were kill- | before 1 for which he ht. Twenty-tive chickens | publicly castigated by Gene: were plucked clean of their feathers j ver. Anew wagon belonging to Mr. Kun- | had beeu so al We Two alternatives were present jed, he said, either to ignore a third kel was literally torn to pieces, the | | party or divide the friends of refor:r. spokes being twisted and broken. Mr. Donnelly then j Robert Schilling of ed outrig gave way Wiscon to THE WORST PROBABLY NOT TOLD T ewe a ya sad oT - i : 1 } The cyclone passed on east pas-| re tary of the committee, who read ing Rush Hill, one mile north, earry-| the platform as fo lows: ing destruction to houses and fene ' Your committee on resolutiens ing. Thereis no doubi that great | begs to submit the following: destruction of property and proba-| First—That in view of the great ‘ : atin vi f g bly life has oceurred terther east, | social, industrial and economics but the lateness of the hour pre | olution now dawning upon the civil- more information. | vented getting jized world and the new and living Great trees were taken up by the) confronting the roote and broken off. The scene at these places are certainly heart rend- jing in the extreme. issues jarrived for a crystalization of the At Mr. E. B. Norris’ house F. § try and the formation of what | Norris sat ina chair with his baby |jshould be known as the people's | in his arms. He said: “When I | party of the United States of Amer- first noticed the storm the wind blew | joa. - Second—That indorse the demands of the platform we most heartily J.C. MCCONNELT $2 as adopted at St. Louis. Mo. in Spring Wz = | Omaha, Neb.. in 1891, by the in e@ represent- Road Carts. Such as: lows a, B= Meal. JAMES & McCONNELL. cial adv eet toany ae or calling, | | such notes to be legal tender in pay- jfrom the house with a stick through { argued | that Mr. Polk's letter was. ill-tuned | \2 showed Low! rev-| American | | people, we belieye that the time has | | nN i | political reform forces of our coun- i special privileges to | i that ta muui . We tional, state or e used to build up interest or one se of another id that al county. ite E—We nith state limited tot the lemar venues, shall be ne n2ce3s wy expenses of and mal, oc goverment economiculy ‘honestly administered. F—We demand a just and equita- bie system of graduated tix on in ene Sao demand the and just national control and Vision of the most rigid, s supe means of public ‘eommunieation and transportation, and if this controt and supervision does not remove the abuses now ex- isting we demand tke government ownership of communication ad transportation H—We demand that the election of president.vice-president and Unit- ed States sou: by a Lrect vote ors be of th lat we urge the uriied | action of progressive or gan zZa- tions i trending the confera:ce ebraary 22, 1892, by six ¢ reform org .n’zations. a national central be appointed by this con- -That committe: \ferenes, t composed of a chair. “d by subers from each state rep- resented, to be uam-d by each state delegation. Fifth—That this central com- | mittee shall represent this body, at- ‘tend the uational confere: e2 of Feb- man to be ele | three this body and ruary 22, 1892, and if possible unite with that and all other reform or- ranizatious there assembled. If no satisfactory arrangement can be ef- evod this committee shall call ana tional ¢ ation not later than June 1 i522, the purpose of nominat- 1 dates for president and ve resident Six Phat the members of the central committes for each state where there is no indeper dent po- liieal or gauization, conduet an active system of political agitation in their resolutions not parts were presented. recommended favorable con versal suffrage, de notes to pay sol » favors eight hours a day and condemns the action of the world’s fair comum‘ssion with fer the platform ‘They ot sideration of on enee to wages. A HORSE WHO CAN TALK! Everybody has heard of a “horse langh,” but who has ever seen an equine gifted with | the power o be pronoun tele ‘raph an but so would the h an animal would | a hundred years ago. ya cure for con- sumption, ly acknowledged to be scrofu the lungs, would have been lox raculous, but now peo= ple are that the disease as net 8 Goiden Medical MED. Ass S500 ——— | : nufactur- ers of "s Catarrh Remedy. for ap Sage’ | Gicuruble case of Catasra in ‘the Head. ‘sca Tompany, 77 = wz cic Always pay t] Produces AO AOD WIddvs Sole Agent for the 6 HLERY C2 ? é es <T Ay?’ TOBACCO, Tom st market price fer Country East Side Square. Butler, Mo al HN HH ‘dast Avrora Watehe-, billed Cases. Very Cheap. Rock fe in ENGRAVING NEATL* EXECUTE nH E POSITIVE CURE. ELY BROTHERS, 66 Warren St. New York. Price svc! -_