Grand Rapids Herald-Review Newspaper, July 26, 1902, Page 6

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— ‘5 THE MARKETS. ‘ The Gerald-Beview. MANY FARMS — |... = an oa (FIFTY LIVES 101 _ Live Stock Centers. By E, C. KILEY. St. Paul, July 23. — Wheat — No. 1] _ ———— Northern, 80 @ 81c; No 2 Northern, i GRAND RAPIDS, - MINNESOTA. "| 75@77c, Oats—No. 8 white, 50@5ic; No, | BXCURSION STEAMER SUNK IN COL- —_—_—«<—_—=—¥—X¥—X———X—XXXXX 8, 48@50c. Corn—No, 3 yellow, 63@64c; LISION ON THE RIVER S No. 3, 61@63c. : Sian ' The man in the moon must have! ross auREADY REACHES SIX MIL-|. Minneapolis, July 23—Wheat—No, 1 ; hard, 808-4c; No. 1 Northern, 78 3-4c; oceans of trouble with his canals. LIONS AND WORST IS NOT No. 2 Northern, 73 1-4c. Mrs. Langtry is now a mother-in- OVER. i Duluta, July 23—Wheat—Cash, No.| IS CUT IN Yaw. The world is no longer at her 1 hard, 77 3-4c; No, 1 Northern, 6 1-4e; wees he tent feet. No. 2 Northern, 733-4c; No. 3 spring, 713-4ce; Manitoba, 711-4c; cats, 32 1-2¢; Germany, Austria and Italy assert rye, 531-4¢; flax, $1,40. Miiwaukee, Wis., July 23. — Wheat — that the triple alliance is still of XXX No. 1. North 78 @ 78 1-2 No. 2 uality, : a fo. rthern, 78 1-2c; ‘0. q y. THE MISSISSIPPI BELOW KEOKUK | Northern, _ 77@77 1-2c; September, } mi 2; SWOLLEN TO A LAKE TEN 713-4c. Rye—No. 1, 6lce. * Barley—No, Mr. Schwab, having money to burn, 2c, Oats—Ng. 2 white, 62 r MILES WIDE, ig? =. : gave $5,000 of it to Pittsburg for “Aahie Cosas cere Sh | Gorn—September, 59 1-2¢. ‘WARSHIPS NEEDED. insurgent Activity in West Indies Worries Navy Department., ‘Washington, July 24. — Unusual in- surgent activity in the West Indies and A DOUBLE HANGING =~ TWO MURDER! 2 PEN= on the shore of the Caribbean sea are ridge caller anaes taxing the resources of the navy de- ALTY OF THEIR CRIMC IN i partment in the matter of ships to MISSISSIPPI, look after American interests. A cablegram received at the state de- partment from Minister Bowen, Ca- tecas, states that the Marietta is pro- ceeding to ascertain the facts connect- . ed with the alleges lockade by the MAJORITY OF PANIC - STRICKEN | Venezuelan government at its own port | EXPRESSES WISH THAT SPUCCTAs PASSENGERS ARE RES- of Carupano. Gye TORS PERISH IN FIRES OF crartaah An. attack upon Puerto Cabello, ae 1 . whiclmlies about seventy miles west of ee i the capital, is expected by the govern- Me ent, and the president may go there from Barcelona, instead of to Caracas | OFFERS REWARD FOR VENGEANCE as he originally intended. The three . ONE CF THEM DIES CURSING (S GROWING WORSE HOURLY BAD STEERING WAS THE CAUSE fireworks. i a Wheat—Nx ara 2 inleaed July sac nee. ent-—-No, United States warships on the Ven- 4 2 red, 761-2@77¢; No. 3 red, 71@73e; No. : Sonalani oaat s Sweet may be the uses of adversity, | FARMS NOW RAGING TORRENTS | 2 nara winter, 74c; No. 3 hard winter, STEAMER’S BOILERS EXPLODE, | _ ESO) Kove Moving DIES ROASTING THAT HE WILL BE : ig ae? ‘4 at the ports where dist e: e .U' ‘. . MOST COSTLY FLOOD IN ‘THE muS- | XO. 3 spring, 70@78c._Cash See % eH SCENE. Poteet Oc pect ‘urbances, an MINUTES. = Some one has named a cigar after TORY OF THE UPPER penta gie ee aie Cash Oats t ge SS coe Meanwhile a cry comes for a ship at 4 5 Mary MacLane. It emits a blue flame ne wt cas sages : Haiti in the shape of a cablegram and sulphirous smoke. = ee ae Tate oe ones eas eee sd Hamburg, July 23.—The steamshipyfrom Minister Livingstone, at Cape | Greenville, Miss. July 24. — With if ia " 3 4 4 Primus, with 185 passengers on board.|Haitien, who reports that troops and | curses on his lips, with eyes bloodshot Haitien warships -are approaching to | and with the expressed wish that the pes rape nent the a people of Greenville perish in the fires ic) ension among ie a - cigners for their safety. Besides the Milde dear thee ea three ships employed in Venezuelan 4 ‘ ¢ waters, the United States has in the | Lauderdale also met his end. Both Caribbean only the Machias at Colon, | Were convicted of the murder of En- and conditions there are so threatening | sineer G. M. Wray and were hanged that the officials are reluctant to move | from the same gallows, and the swing her. In any case it would be impossi- | of a double trap sent both men to their ble to get a ship to Cape Haitien In | qoom. The fatal trigger was snapped tess than two or three days, by which | 4+ 41.97 yesterday morning, At 2:41 i mixed, $2.50 stockers and feeders. | 145 out in t _A Kentucky man who proposed to 8] Keokuck, Iowa, July 22—Exploration | $2754.50; yearlings and calves, $2.5004. peice apy ene sous py: ce) <O8 girl in a joke a few days ago has been | 9; . | Hogs, $7.30@7.60; bulk, $7.40@7.50. Hansa on the River Elbe at 12:30 f the flooded districts of the Missis 5 accepted. Serves him right. sippi river from Keokuk south shows Chicago, July 23. — Cattle — Good to| o'clock yesterday morning. So far as conditions beyond the appreciation or prime steers, $7.75@8.75;. poor to medi-| is ascertainable, about fifty persons The fellow who stands on his dig- | realization of any but people of long eit 60@7.60; stockers and feeders,| were drowned. Thirteen bodies al- n'y may discover that dignity is just | €xPerience with the Father of Waters er pga ile rane Ce co ready have been recovered. as. sllppery/asia hansdnranin® in its most destructive mood. i Sevdete. Shee Good. to| .. The Primus Was an excursion steam- Thehe situation is growing worse | Mtavy, $7,80@8.10. Sheep — Good +0] 4. ¢, B ‘ z mae ‘rom Buxtehude, ‘in the Province of That Runsiit peiica ene neat beget hourly and a great conflagration in a croice weth?rs, $3.25@4.10; fair to enciog Hanover, Prussia: Among the passen- ° great city would not be more rapidly | mixed, $2.5003.25; Western sheep, $250] cers were the members of the Bilbtck sued by his butler has bumped up | @estru, @3.75; native lambs, $3@6.60. 2d ctive of values. Th bso- ss 4 . 6 OF eMac nee ae South St. Paul, July 22, — Cattle —| Male Choral ‘society. hard against the hired-girl problem. lutely not the ae slightest chance of stop- UA WE ible thin’siuat eatig: Reoa ay thechles Chole! butcher steers, $7 @'7.80; god, a4 ee an he wees Seer. [Sue os aiade ore Ue alone Cocke was pronounced dead. At 11:43 , If the trusts had made coal as cheap | tory of the great river above St. Louls. | $€-20@6.75; common to fair, $4@6; choice 24, piankenese, from the southern| Washington, July 24. — Secretary of | the pulee of Lauderdale ceased to beat. : cows and heifers, $5.50@6; good, $4.50 @5; fair, $3.25 @ 4.25; good to choice veals, $4.50@5.50; good to choice feeding steers, $3.75@4.75; steers calves $2@3.25. Hogs—Range, $7.25 @ 8; bulk, $7.40 @ 7.50; rough sorts, $6.70. Sheep—Fancy 1ambs, $6 @ 6.10; good to choice fat lambs, $5.50@5.90;* fair to good, $4.50@ 5.25 culls and stock lambs, $2.50 @ 4; War Moody, in a cablegram to Com- | Both bodies were cut down ten minutes mander McCrea, of the gunboat Ma-} later and turned over to their re- chias, now at Colon, directed him to | spective families. Cocke died boasting proceed with his vessel to Cape Hal- | thot he would be in hel] in a few min- tien, in response to the reqest of the r % consul ther. Orders were also sent to | Utes. gnd damning everything and ev- the gunboat Marietta, directing her to | tybody. He said that those who had “ proceed to Colon to take the place of planned his murder would meet their the Machias as soon as she had finished | end, and that $11,000 had been deposited her present work on the Venezuelan | in a bank, $1,000 of which would be const paid for the death of each of the eleven men who prosecuted him. The execu- patcwlie tion was witnessed by 6,000 people. Withdraws Complaint Against Her | Yesterday morning before the time Missing Lover. for the execution, both men appeared New York, July 24.—Wherever Put- | defiant, Cocke especially being very SE ack ea ge pus Ua i go ns O' Cursed Sontinually. grand larceny, made against him bY] aster the death warrant had been read He ae ne oe are te to the men in their cells, Cocke yelled Eeiacde Brie se one aia to | through the window to the great crowd ms ihe sepa $ie.000 and $90,000 was.pata | Walch had gathered outside to witness to Miss Yohe and her lawyer in the Pe office of Job E. Hedges, who for two] 31. coming.” years was private secretary to pee When ‘ie sheriff and the doomed See ee ree a the aaa tne ieee. | men mounted the scaffold Cocke again eae bia ee reiaent vas Yone | began to berate those about him, and and her lawyer went at once to police GENS ieee ed ne damn you headquarters, where they told Capt. ell, Gkmnn’ everybody, Tm going to seal a ghaceede sistas peta die like a man. I am killed for noth- | Capt. Titus dropped the case in haste. wid but I am the bravest man in the tate of Mississippi. There is $11,000 into the northern fairway. According to witnesses aboard the Hansa the movement was made too precipitately. The Primus struck the tug’s engine room, and the Hansa endeavored to push her ashore, but the ‘tug grounded and the ships parted. The Primus then sank. In the interval, however, about fifty of her passengers were able to reach the the Hansa by means of ropes and ladders. Seventy more were picked up by the tug’s boats, while ethers swam ashore, as they have made matches there | People at the river cities give accounts would be far less antipathy for them. | Of losses aggregating many millions of dollars. Hundreds of farmers rich ten It is Sir Charles Wyndham now. It days ago are penniless and homeless. Careful estimates of the territory is pretty safe to guess that this actor covered by the statements of those will never play one knight stands |rest informed indicate the loss so far again. to be about six million dollars, with aE every prospect of two or three mil- A There is no limit to the possibijities | tions additional by the rise above, not | 00d to cholce yearling wethers, $4@ 5. of a country that can have snow- | yet reaching the lower stretches of the | #7 LONG CHASE ENDED. storms in June and _ sunstrokes in | river. Januar; MAY YOHE IS MERCIFUL. Under Raging Torrents. + ¢ = Most of this loss is on the Missouri; Detectives at Last Land Philip Addy, There were no foreign passengers. When the steel trust advanced the | side of the river, between Keokuk and |’ Wanted at Litchfield. Capt. Peterson of the Primus swam wages of its workmen voluntarily it Hannibal. Passing the lumber yards Minneapolis, July 23.—With his hands | ashore and gave himself up to the po- gave the anthracite coal trust a dread- of Kéokuk the mouth of the Des| securely cuffed, carefully watched day lice. Capt. Sachs of the Hansa also ful shock. Moines river is nearly two miles wide. | and night by his captors, Philip Addy, , surrendered, . Normaily there are two mouths, and! charged with having been an accom- Passengers in p Panic. i y a delta covered with farms, which are | plice in the murder of Milton N. Gor- The terrible panic that occurred on The young king of Spain appears to | now under raging torrents. ton and wife at Litchfield, Minn., Dec.| the Primus eianithe aianed alvuck ener be quite a sensible child. He is per- Alexandria was protected to the last; 31, 1901, arrived in Minneapolis on the] rendered the efforts to save her pas- mitting the old men to keep on run- | by the Egyption levee, the breaking of | Northera Pacific train yesterday af-| sengers almost useless. Fortunately ning things. which would send four feet of water] ternoon. Addy, was the prisoner of| the steamer Dolphin came up immedi- pea ricer a Pa cver all the town. Gregory is sub-| William Dexter and Charles D. Brown, | ately ani succeeded in saving sixty of If a seaman’s hail caused trouble in merged, except the white church, in| private detectives of Minneapolis, whO} those on board the sinking steamer, Venice, what would be the result of a which services were held yesterday, | have been on the man’s trail for three} while other boats assisted in the work good, live yankee college yell?—New the "congregation from the country | months.» Over mountains, through | of rescue. York Tribune x reaching the church by the railroad] blizzards, on the edge of precipices,| Some of the passengers furnish 3 track, which is still above the flood in| into mining camps, through miles of | graphic descriptions of the awful sud- a@ waste of waters miles wide. Other] grazing country, they followed clues] genness of the disaster. According to In employing an Italian composer }towns and cities on the island gre be-| until they arrested Addy at Stiles, | their story, the band was playing and to work on his libretto Emperor Wil- | yond the danger line. Idaho, July 9. It likely that Addy will! many couples were dancing on deck liam may have hoped to set the drei- Immense fields are great lakes with | be taken to Litchfield within a day or| when the crash of the collision came don’t be impatient; we bund to music. the shore visible only with a glass, | two. like a thunderbolt. The vessel gave a “3 where the higs bluffs bound the bot- ——_—__—— great list, her deck taking eabe a bone te net Brie Stare et ue poise waiting for any one who will kill the 3 qjtoms. Islands dotting the river at its CHIEF AMES IN ST. LOUIS. angle that it was impossible for pas- . eleven men who made this plot. I will America will have to hustle around 8) Po! Pi a cablegram to the man with whom |} oy enged, for every one of the ri normal stage - +m ti = and develop a case of perityphlitis. It 38°. pisappearea | Says He Will Not Return to Minne: | Ioy ser to keep their feet. Those be-|che pawned a good many of her jewels | Uaven wit be killed, and no questions | 7 rambled up the companionways " hi hi . { will not do to be behind Great Britain apolis of His Own Will. in Yokohama last year, saying that she] 14 pe asked. They have murdered: vi } in this respect. except for the tops of trees or fringe} 4, iis, July 23--Superintendent | bUt most-of the persons in the saloon) \oujq be in that city just as soon as z y of | pect. 7 inneapolis, ly 5 juperintendel wou in y b r | of willows slight: rotruding like a Pe were drowned. Me f: ht for th wn me, but revenge, revenge, revenge. i Fey nor eaucesionally | of Police Fred W. Ames is in St. Louls | 272+ vent elr ow the next steamer would take her there. | "Ferore he could say more the black At first it was thought that the ctronia penne ae et ee eaeiom uc | 2nd wel not return to Minneapolis vol- matey. egtoe eon omer Mrs. W. L. Strong, the mother of the | ..56 were adjusted - Kansas wheat crop would be a -fail- ms ae bigs te Lashes ea Se to mark | UMtarily. Mrs. Ames received a letter sid hel hy ged docrtnd missing Capt. Putnam Bradlee Stfong, | "a,c you ready?” asked the sheriff. = Mae ek RSTLET RLY CRIS NCe Whee ey from her husband yesterday, but kept| In the midst of the confusion the} jies dangerously il] at the Hotel Gros-| «yes yelled Cocke through the | ure. Now there is not enough binding | the center of farms of corn. the matter a secret until her. small son boilers exploded, adding to the horrors|venor. She calls constantly for her } 4, or SAE ey ven peels of twine to tie it up. On the edge of the flooded river corn had told several people of it. The let- of the scene and many persons are|<zon, and cannot be comforted without | Gccnvine: page te ‘eke A gael see % gradually rises one ie a eee ie ter is said to have stated that Supt. said to have been injured by flying The report that Andrew Carnegie |€ars, stalks appearing in order. {0° Ames did not intend to.return to Min- splinters of metal. More of the Pri- has a pseudonym for use on his stock |™iddle of the present river the aon neapolis unless forced to do so. He|%us’ passengers would have been certificates proves that there may be |°f the St. Louis; pase & area si says the newspapers have treated him| Saved by the ropes thrown from the ern railroad, normally the Missourl};"o, uneair manner, and that it would | Hansa had it not been that before those millions in a name. shire, are but s few inches above 1°) be imposstble tor Dim to got a fatr fiial | WUO selsed the Tope ae or tron When a man sits in the shade and | shore lights for pilots are standing In a cena ey SR ete the lines they Gad) grasped by cies watches those at work in the sun, he |the midst of a waste of waters, where] j(/ yi at St. Louis, and that he will | Persons struggling in the water and all him. Since Thursday her eondition ‘2 “ as hag changed steadily for the worse, | qguneeh into apace S { Story of the Crime. \ The criyme for which they paid the _— death penalty on the gallows was com- mitted on a Yazoo & Mississippi Valley railroad train about 3 o'clock on the | morning of Dec. 30, 1991, near Eliza- { t beth. Ashley Cocke, Tom Lauderdale, JEALOUS HUSBAND'S ACT. William Filer Kills His Wife and Harry Bennett at Stcelton. Harrisburg, Pa., July 24. — William Filer, a steel worker, shot and killed his wife, Clara Filer, and Harry Ben- prefers being called “critic” to “loaf- |steamboats can run over them. The ae were drowned in the hideous confusion. 4 t ‘inneapolis until com- er.”—Atchison (Kan.) Globe. river is five to ten miles wide and an- nell ie eae 10m coms Estimates of the number of dead vary|nett, a machinist, yesterday at Steel-| Will Blackburn. and G. M. Phipps | other great lake is added to the PR ope a ae eS from fifty to sixty. lton, near here. The Filers and Ben-|toarded the north-bound possenger | nett boarded at the same house, and it] train. C. M. Wray, an engineer, was t Alfred Austin may have a chance |Seosraphy. MILLIONS IN FARMS. to wri noth ‘All this territory «was practically cov- Wabdppimcetinsb arensior s sest ri ered with corn a fortnight ago, esti- there is small reason to hope that he i mated to make seventy-five to a hun- will be ‘able to do any better next | Greq bushels to the acre. Previous es- eaiaa timates of the loss have been greatly increased by the prospective yield be- Science is doing the world a good |ing found much greater than ever -be-| United States for the year 1900. It turn every day. The newest discovery | fore, experts telling of many farms | shows there were at that time 5,739,657 is that the ashes of the West Indian | that were good for 100 bushels of corn| farms in the entire country, which a passenger on the car entered by - i Cocke and his party. Cocke and his ” companions were more or less under the influence of liquor. Phipps fell against Wray, who was asleep on a seat in the coach. Wray asked Phipps shot Bennett, killing him instantly.| what he meant, and the reply came Mrs. Filer ran into the street, followed | from Cocke that it meant that he py her husband, who shot her through | (Wray) must leave the coach. As Wray is alleged that Filer was jealous of Bennett’s attentions to his wife. The perties’ had a bitter quarrel and Filer left the house. He returned in the morning and the quarrel was renewed. The husband drew his revolver and WAR ON IN HAITI. Large Amount of Capital Represent- ed in Nation’s Holdings. Washington, July 23. — The census bureau has issued a bulletin giving the condition of agriculture in the The Adherents of Firmin Are Bound to Make Trouble. Cape Haitien, Haiti, July 23. — The department of Artibonite has pro- claimed M. Firmin, thé former minis- ter of Haiti at Paris, president, and the inhabitants of the arrondissement voleanoes are not good for fertilizing | to the acre before the flood. were valued at $16,074,694,247. Of this the heart. Filer escaped and is sti!l at] started to walk out, Cocke, Lauderdale purposes. The Loss Is Total. amount $3,560,198,191 represented the| of St. Michel and the commune Of} jarge. 5 and Blackburn began shooting’ at him, The river is rising all the time, six | value of the buildings, and $2.114492,-| Marmelade have jolned with those of Ree HESS and he fell dead in the aisle of the car. Artibonite with a view of marching on FOR CONSCIENCE FUND, Cocke and Lauderdale were tried to- Thi tS _ inches during the day in the immense | 056 represented the value of lands and ae mie wenreerne ane ple ee area of 700 square miles and the worst|the improvements other than build- mote the fact thatmany-of!ah: is to come by the extension of the}ings. The value of farm implements any of the graves |jogeq area by the waters passing| and machinery was $761,261,550, and of of our notable men are unmarked and | jeyees, which it is now topping. live stock, $3,078,050,041. These valucs almost unknown. The chief flood thus far is on the] added to the value of the farm gives a ESM MOTS HA ya Missouri side from Keokuk to Louisi-| total value of farm property amount- While the Ph. D’s, D. D. D.’s and LL, | ana, with Canton and West Quincy aS] ing to $20,514,001,838. D.’s are flying around these classic | centers of the country most injured. days, the C. O. D.’s also have their in-,| On the Mlinois side are three continuous nings at nearly every man’s door af. | levees for forty miles from ‘Warsaw to faa Quincy, above the waters, which are ter his wife gets home from a shop {thus tar safe, but farmers are afraid bamiedaar of crevasses from muskrat holes, and every rod of the redoubt is watched day A man who had married the heiress | and night. to $17,000,000 died suddenly in Boston The breaking of these levees would Carolina dec'ining the proffered en the other day. Even if hc has gone to | flood 175 square miles in Illinois and Joanie pigdie to the vacancy on the i lee mansions in the skies how can he be | destroy $2,000.00 to $3,000,000 worth of | °° the ors Pasay eee a ae expected to find it much of an im-|¢orm. The levees below Quincy are in| The La ae ose wing pate provement? the same sitaation except that they are| frets Senator McLaurin is 5 Senator McLaurin’s letter is couched lower and less firm. Opposite Quincy dente in Missouri {s still another center of| in the most positive terms and eviden| The Moorish representative ex- | gnecial devastation which is appalling.|!¥ was based in particular upon & claimed on leaving England for his | North twelve miles to La Grange, and| Rewsbaper article “which accompanied own country, “I am glad I am return- | couth to Holton, large prairies are well| the letter. The article stated that the ing to civilization again.” Which once | under water, reaching from the Illinois | Senator had sold himself for the pros- more emphasizes the fact that it’s al] | bluffs to the Missouri bluffs, at least rect of getting such an office as that in the point o. view. “ ten miles. . offered to him. » 1 ihe nies nadwat Teonternne gether, convicted and sentenced to be IE ee TG or HEpALEeE tee (EEE ree sa cinee cane supreme Washington, July 24.— One of the court reviewed the case of Cocke and aaet pial contributions to the Lauderdale, affirming the decision of conscience fund ever. chronicled in the the lower court and fixing yesterday as —— t history of the treasury department was one day ‘for the execution. Gov. teceived yesterday. Some possessor of ngino refused to interfere with the an uneasy conscience sent to the de- sentence. Blackburn was given a life partirent a twenty-dollar gold certifi- sentence on account of his previous vate in sections. One part was mailed | 8004 character. to the collector of customs in New York and the other from Jersey City to the treasury department. Accom- vwanying this part of the bill was @ letter signed ‘“‘Conscientia.” When both pieces of the bill were received they were exchanged for a new twen- bureau's weekly summary of crop con- ty-dollar bill, which has been placed it | ditions says the lower Missouri and up- # the “conscience fund.” per Mississippi valleys and lake re- Ree ean gion have continued to suffer from ICING ON HIS FEET, excessive rains, which have interrupted farm work also in the Ohio valley and portions. ‘of the Middle Atlantic and New England states. Much injury to crops and other property has resulted from overflows in Iowa, portions of Illinois, Missouri and Mississippi. The corn crop has made splendid progress Cape Haitien. Gen. Jean Jumeau, who is supporting M. Firmin, has received at Gonaives, by the steamer Velencig from New York, 200 tons of coal and war muni- tions for the cruiser Pierrot. The situation here is alarming. The general opinion is that Gen. Jean Ju- SENATOR M’LAURIN DECLINES. rreau imtends marching on Port-au- Prince, and that he will send the Pier- rot there with troops. Situation Grows Worse. Port-au-Prince, Haiti, July 23.—The situation in Haiti has become worse. Gen, Jean Jumeau, who supports the candidacy for the presidency of M. Firmin, is on his way to the capital, and Gen. Salnave, with a considerable force, has started for Cape Haitien in order to attack Gen. Nord, the war minister. The provisional government here if divided into four parts—the Firminist and three anti-Firminist groups—and is without any authority. The popula- tion is also divided and it is generally believed that M. Firmin will not meet with any serious resistance in his ad- vance on the capital. Was Offered Position on the Court of * Claims. Oyster Bay, July 23, — President Roosevelt is in receipt of a letter from Senator John L. MeLaurin of South RAINS DAMAGE ~“ROTS5, ‘Weekly Summary of Weather Eu- reau Is None Too Bright. i Washington, July 24.—The weather Will Seon Hold a Cabinet Council on Hix Yacht. | London, July 24.—The. weather" war lesa disagreeable at Cowes, Isle of Wight. yesterday, and the reports from the royal yacht Victoria and Albert continue to chronicle King Edward's ; ry NING. : The philanthropist who thinks it is PROBE eRe: aoe | ee Imrrovement, It is said that he walked} 1 ne ota tn centrations cr Min- d | necessary to teach youth the Te Womn da Guest From Min- Many Leave Ireland. a few steps yesterday. The king wil! lowa an ‘ed portions o! is- 4 Me art of | muimois River Hrs Already Caused | Tows Woman an : London, July 23.—The final summars | hold his first council since A. J. Balfour souri and Illinois, the condition of the * a sae play probably hasn’t had the Grest D: f. nesota Are Inimre?- a aly 22 The: Keokuk, Towa, July 28—Miss Mary rience of trying to keep a small boy’s Peoria, Ill., July 22.—The Illinofs river knee trousers and ribbed stockings | ®tands in imminent danger of causing | Stevens was struck by lightning ang in an unperforated condition, thousands of dollars worth of damage| °" left foot was badly torn. mise to buildings and manufacturies in Pe- Frarence Tanner of Cannon City. Winn.. her grest, was alen struct, ond oria. The damage already caused The Sultan of Turkey says Turkey | along the lowlands by the floods will be| lt her hearing as a result of shock. thas enough books and he has pro- | but a drop in the bucket as compared | hibited the publication of any new | With what it will be if the water gets | literary works. This edict proves | me foot higher, and river men say | Towa crop being fairly good on the i well-tilled uplands, but. great damage ; has resulted from floods in the river } bottoms. Highly favorable reports are x ; received from Nebraska, Kansas, the greater part of Missouri and Illinois. became premier on board the yacht shortly. It is expected that the name of the new lord lieutenant of Ireland to succeed Earl Cadogan, whose resic- ration was made public July 17, will then be announced. of the Irish census returns have beer presented to parliament. It shows that during a half century over 3,000,00( persons have emigrated from Ireland and that 80 per cent of these emigrants have gone to the United States. GAVE LIFE FOR HER DOG. Gigentic Hail Stones. Hastings, Neb., July 23. — A terrific hailstorm prevailed over a considerable part of tke farming country in this pe RMSE SSO a O'REILLY PROMOTED. AT THE PISTOL’S POINT. La Salle Woman Saves Her Pet but Is Crashed by Train. there is no possibility of the water re- | Ia Appointed Sarmeon General of the Two Xen Driven Out of Mining Camp that there are so! a yoheaale ie ried pens * which | coding in ‘the next thirtyatlx, hours, ‘Army From Sert. 7. oo tee Li i ahead of @ re! Yesterday the river stood 20.5 feet! Weshington, July £3.—The president Sounty -.yemerany jemvernent: Chunks Our: July 24—Ten masked Te tN Te an ee eee pabllc: Shave lov water inahic ena Wee wetupl tba Aestenered Gok on: Ms: Ovnenify: ta] elem Weimumnm Braue egearten Of 8) 8 777: , suly 24. 24] Wright of this city last her life here in iis 1 of th pound fell for fifteen minutes. Chick | men went to the Oregon Navigation] an attempt to protect her pet dog. She, with her sister, Mrs. John Madison, and after destroying the private tele-| were walking along the Illinois Central phone that connected the mine with] railroad tracks in this city. A passen- _ Ouray, took from the bunk house twc| ger train was almost upon the dog, Cholera at Tokio. , employes, marched them down’ hill ai} when Mrs. Wright leaped to the dog’s Washington, July 23.—Minister Buck] the muzzles of guns and made them} rescue. She tossed the animal to safe- reports from Tokio to the state de-| leave the camp. The motive for ty, but was unable to avoid the train, partment by cable, dated yesterday 3 which crushed her to death, “i ‘that cholera has broken out there. _ ‘ p 3 up at the rate of half an inch an hour. rgeon geveral of the army, to Involuntary servitude except fei | Should it continue at that are until be fea ee Forwood, who one re- crime is all wrong and the Constita | to-day noon it will have passed the] tfre on Sept. 7 next. Col. O'Reilly will ft tion says £0, but there is no populer | high water mark for this river, which} have until January. 1909, to “serve af how] of rage at the news that Kan-|18 21-4, attained at this point in the] cureenn general. He was appointed sas farmers are putting tramps to | 00d of 1892. People living along the| frem Pennsylvania as a medical cadet ‘work in the harvest fields against the | oWlands. both above and below Peoria, | in 1864. He is a graduate of the medi- wrotests of said pilgrims. have sought the highlands and have} eal Cerartment of the University of , driyen their stock with them. Pennsylvania. — ens were killed and young stock in-] tunnel, about three miles north of here. jured. Oats and corn were driven intc the ground and are beyond redemption.

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