Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, September 10, 1900, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

- Y l” OMAIA DAILY BEE: MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 10, 1900, N gone ral places in New Mexico and | mainland and up to a late hour tonight|dence establishments are located. The } y th trains have arrived here from | nothing had been heard of It. Mr. Nixon be« | wa located one home which alone cost) the w ¢ Friday night. The Santn Fe|ifeves the train was caught by the hurricane | the owner over $1,000,000. Most of the THE ROLL OF HONOR nd X the same trouble north of El [and was wrecked either on the mainland | residences are of wood, b there are | " Paso. near the gulf or on the bridg many of stonc and brick. In the extre D Rt Jev1od (heIENDTeTeon 1o homI et A Rad PleogP them have been e | Assistant Superintendent W. B. Scott, lo- | eastern end of the city there are many | of thelt fellowa. T have given the world souwetbing original, ingen it One of th HORROR GROWS WORSE HOURLY | cated at Temple, also informed Me. Nison | of what we cail ‘raised cottages’ They | entertainiig s quite enongh to command favorable reogoiton, o relfef t | that the storm was headed north, raging all | are built on piling and stand from eight was 2 W. Clinton, an engineer Small Towns Throughout Texas Re- |the way to Alvin, 100 miles north of Galves- ten feet from the ground as a precau Bu FAL“ B'LL’S ter ant at the Galveston stock port tes of Deaths Due to ton. The hurricane blew go violently that| tion against floods being possible for ards. Mr. Clinton's family consisted of dale and Fiosd, the repalr and relief trains sent to Galves- | the water to sweep under them I his wife and six children. When his house ton by Mr. Scott had to turn back and wait The oniy protection that bas ever been | was warhed away he managed to get two| HOUSTON, Tex., Sept. f.—A train came | until the fury of the gale had subsided provided for the gult side of the city have WAWVILLD WEST ©of his little boys safely to a raft and with on the Columbia Tap rallroad this aft - - been two stone breakwaters, but many times | them b Arified hopelessly' about. Mt | eraoon and 1 crew teil o story of deatn| SEVEN ARE DEAD AT ALVIN | witb oriinary” storus coning in from the| AND CONGRESS OF ROUGH RIDERS OF THE WORLD vaft coliided with wreckage of every de- |and desolation through the country which gulf the high fide water has been hurled Admiratlon o1 toanties thausands o mearms etty rotee AnaHet o scription and was split in two and he Was | they passed. Conductor Ferguson states | Towmn of 1,200 Inhabltants Practically [0ver the low stone walls right to the very | the globe. DIl prni ey R et AL bl o forced to witne irowning of his €ons, | that houses, barns, crops and orchards Wiped Out by Fury of the doors of the residences From Virginia enliata attention, eharma and fascinntes evory beholder. T vat being unable to help them in any WAY. | have been destroyed and great damage | ,,’ do, Point, six miles from Galveston, in ordinary | strength of this extraordinary coudition of things les In the fact that Mf. Clinton says parts of the cily are|has been done conditions of the weather, the city can be| ) &g & Is GENUINE secthing masses of water | L. Forbes, postal clerk, reported that| HOUSTON, Tex., Sept. 0.—Meager re- |Pplainly seco. If it is true that Galveston | There Is no sham of wubterfuge about 1¢, everything fa just as It is repre Mr. Jennings, a slater by trade, Who |a¢ Oyster Creck the train crew and pa. orts are arriving here from the country scen from the point, the situation sented to be, Tl rticipants have all been selected to dtingly fllus. tesides at Thirty-elghth street and Ave- | gongers heard cries coming out of a mass | between Houston and Galveston along the ¥ must be indescribably horrible prate |Ih-‘ny".‘un which they hava heretofors enacied and made ther nue Mig, Galveston, got to the mainland | of debris. Several persons answered the |line of the Santa Fe railroad. The tornadn | When asked as to the wealth of some of | Sago A Savast AMOId Bud et and ‘Fecreation i peviering Sach fn about the seme manner as C1nton. After | cries aud found a negro woman fastencd | was the most destructive in the history of | the principal bus quarters of Galves- o exhibition axala and again, anl more the warvel tt anyoue should Tosing his wife he sct out and by swimming | ynder a roof. They pulled her out and the rtate | ton he said lem & opportuniiy to withews & perfrmance s unlgie to ol that 1t and drifiing around reached the mamland. | ghe {nformed her rescuers that there were| The town of Alvin ix reported to be prac Many millions of dollars are invested in $90° ERGRR 15 SEIMRUKe, VeaL M W atrIRati prpiive sevo Ly Sig Willlam Smith, a boy about 18 years old, | gthers under the roof. A further search|tically demolished. Hitehcock has suffered | the wholesale and retail business of the city. | elvll illitary tactics, conjolned with an aunex of colonial equitation, 1lus whose home Is in West Texas, had a nar- | rogyited in the finding of nine dead bodies, [severcly from the storm, while the little | On Strand etreet alone there are ten blocks | o R g L SRR R LU IR T Tow escape. Young Smith was blown off | gl negroes [town of Alta Loma is reported without a | of business esiablishments that represent an presented by a detachusent of those modern marvels of elvle milltary mefit, the docks and came ore 10 the driftwood. | n the train arrived at Angleton, the | house standing. The town of Pear has |invested capital of $127,000,000. Market 0 all future famed as Despite the ulty he experienced in | 1l the ¥hurches and a number of |[lost one-half of its buildings | street is the heavy retail street and there, | n E [] keeplog afloat he held out to the end and | hoyges had been blown down. Three fa-| L. B. Carlton, the president of the Busi- |in the heart of the flooded district the ln~!ln‘| LT s noufi“ nlnEns reached the shore wafe and sound | talities are known to have occurred at|ness league of Alvin and a prominent mer- | CARnot but reach away into the millions orcethe ompanor o A. England and his wife of Texas CIty. | Angleton, but the train stopped there only |chant there, reports that not a building | The fact, as indicated by the dispatches, that SoToHES, eauTaats Sl ab i iy triots and laureierowned paragons of bravery, who were on the relief train, report thal | 4 fow minutes and the number killed or|is left standing in the town, efther resi- | Water is standing six feet deep in the Tre- the whole of that town s blown away and | {heir names could not be learned |dence or business. Stocks of goods and | mont hotel, furnishes startliing evidance to United. States Regular Cavalrymen a number of lives were lost. There were | sy Angleton the conductor decided to|house furniture are ruined and crops are |me that Galveston has been indeed dread- With whom will appear in aplendidly inaplring contrant, and filusteating the myriad six women known to Mr. F and who | return to Houston and the extent of the|a total lods | tully visited. The hotel is in almost exactly features of the proud old plobeer school, the most varied and unique muster-roll of were drowned and he is satisfied that many | gamage beyond Angleton was not learned Alvin is a town of about 1,200 inhabitants. | the center of the city. Two years ago Gal- 1] . SCHeF Tives - werd 16t | On the return trip the crow saw the debris |Seven persons were Killed in and near the | veston did the heaviest shipping business in e Url s ounted wa Saw 1 reds of Bodies, of dozens of .ll.mulx-m.l Iulunrw. M\\\‘v’y 1"1;. v_[n‘;.‘ s : : :‘Inu\u:n .v’:m grain of ;m,\‘ Hv;nh.;n “'.:‘» \\‘h.‘-., At Sandy Polnt several persons were| MRS, PRATHER, killed in Santa e rai was home two shiploads of cattle were » thoderrrrigndt i Aot ol R T B2 S et [ 4 M. JonNsoN ABBEIN 1 AT Tesns for Melp: United Statos Cavalrymen and Artillerymen, ROt Gam Tt reroened. Thiy sped ] B0 ATCOlL b Dimily DRENA W OEeN e R . A St CHICAGO, Sept. f.-A dispatch to the | German Cuirassier, South Amorican Gauchos, 4 . Mhan six miles of Virginia | S8thered in the second story of their bouse. | SISTER OI* MRS, JOHNSON Chronicle from San Antonio, Tex., says Russian Cossacks. Sloux Indians, not get ;""»_ e T Was covered with | The upper portion of the house was blown | 8. 0. LEW Tha startiing Hews Das just fashed over Arabian Acrobat: Wild West Cowboys, vr.n; B \,, e xrr:t::- hinks and dead | A%ay and Mr. Wofford's mother was in-| JOIN GLASPY | the Wites (ntossting Governor J. D, Bayses Royal Irish Lancers Filipinos, o i "“‘T';”'!”]' : hiel | WO KANED BCHARPEON !IILn a messenger at great risk of his life ' Mexican Vaquero! Hawalians, Cubans ; “Pwo hundrcd corpses were counted from | The hufricane was particulatly severe & | { | has reached Virginia Point from Galveston | and a geaeral “round up* of all Ry | Brookshire, twenty-seven miles west of | BRAZOS VALLEY LAID WASTE | it the report that 2,500 are probably dead THE EQUESTHMN NATIONS OF THE WORLD . * | Houston, on the Missouri, Kansas & Texas | | = ik ‘ A large steamer s stranded two miles | FOVEERn GO 00 o dles b Heah Tk | tvon Mouse e |3 result of the fearful storm. An urgent thin side of Virginia Point, as though | o "ty ARHELE L. WFACKAN BoaNeN RN 1t Lbs + D= | appeal to all Texas for help was made. The And as a fitting climax to this already tremendous exhibition fn which thrown up by a tidal wave L G o 8 il Fields and In- | egenger sald t the grain elevators at OVER 1,200 MEN AND HORSES PARTICIPATE Nothing can be seen of Galveston e e Orchards. the water front are wrecked and hundreds y ! SES HIWGT S0 | YIRS MDIOkUA B, WHOi flok(¥d | '8 SUPUTLEC SaBk ORIV IOUC OUSSS WE€ M| oy e of buildings have collapsed or were carried WIll be presented tho bistoric miltary masterploce of acton o e matntand and they say they | StandIng in Brookshire, which had & popu-| WACO, Tex., Sept. 9.—The wind blew o (o sen, The greatest distress s sald to estimate the loss of lifc up to the time |lation of 600 people. The names of the dead | tempestuously here fro 3 o'clock this | pravay $hév 1600 '5L 5,000 | at Brookshire cannot be learned tonight. [morning until 5 o'clock this afternoon, the . & e above message is addressed to| later rcports recelved from Alvia state | chief damage being to fruit trees aud the | Heavy.Damage About New Orleans. Siberintenaant Pelton, Dullks; ol omes | that many persons were killed there. Eleven | cotton crop. The cotton plantations in| NEW ORLEANS, Sept. 0.—The damage nladi gt ook mager of the Western | bodies have Leen recovered. the Brazos valley look as If armies had |in the storm stricken section along the Soen b Bt Boowten. - . } At Scabrook Mrs. Jane Woodstock was |fought battles in them, the plants being | Mississippi river, ptarting thirty miles A traln aont down the Columbia € ‘klllnl by a falling house; Mrs. Nl Kelson | lajd flat on the ground. The wind blew [below the city and reaching to the gulf, is road this morning as far as Chénango Junc- | And: Louis Broquet were. drowned. §. ‘K. |sixty to sevent miles an hour for four- [$100,000 to the rice crop and a like amount ';,'1?.‘.“..,'3".75575.""".'.?.""".Tx‘?.'“',".‘""'“ |n:n will live forever fo on The tewn was gheatly: damaged and | Mcltheny, wife and duughter, and Mrs. Le- | teen hours before subsiding to truck farms, cattle, poultry and other s ke sdaioR R pyvioRky comples KX piies the bodies of nine negroes were taken from | 0¥ and two children are imdssing. They | The late peaches, which were plentiful |property. The river rose six feet during T By o D e DL 18 Ak the ruins of one house. The train could | are known to have becn in their cottages, |and had been sold in advance, were swept | the storm and flooded the country through e been made (rom photoktapibs and sketehes taken on the apot, at proceed no further and came back to Hous- | Which were destroyed. The dead body of | clean from the trees. In central Texas ;:1"f‘ il "‘“‘f";"‘ Th':' ‘”"""""‘lhr,"'""_"": occasion of the men tle have been strictly adhered to. ton, leaving the fate of the people at|® sailor was found under a cottage. | 30,000 late peach trees have been planted | Oterl was towed fnto Port LALLM Thus It will bo seen that the Wild Weat with all ite military aspect Angleton, Columbla, Brazora, Velasco and | At Brazoria six persons were killed by | within the last three years. The crop of | In€ with all well. It will be towed to this -mm::r:‘«:': “-\-‘:,K'h!:x.'"pm:rlml;lndil‘\'“;vm n ‘lrn"‘n the n‘uu-’ml Quintana uncertain | talling nouses o were drowned last afght, | fruit on these trees ix all gone and lso city for repairs » 'y . present stirriug episodes, is The small town of Broakshire, on the |including George Duft, son of Hon. J. K. |other late fruit. The vineyards present Fesribin INFHIOREs Kt BEPAR: ore complete Than Ever Missour| Kaneas & Texas railrond, was | DUff. Judge Duff was himself severely in- [a scene of desolation. BRYAN, Tex., Sept, 9.~A terrific hurrl- Al b ks The crew | Jured. Reports state that only (he court — . : IF SUCH A THING WERE POSSIBLE. most wiped out Ly the storm Th Lt | cane visited this section today. Trees, 17V Vo rata nrouehn his {nrmation | house aud two otk tuidings re ssad- | HEAVY WIND AT TAYLOR | iences sigm. e wore bown dowo. roots When the train left there the bodies of four | b - torn from brick buildings, show windows porsons had been recovered and the search | A report from Chenango says that eight | Roofs Bloww from Buildings and Tel- | qnaghed and merchandise damaged. The THE GRAND STREET cAVALcADE AND REVIEW OF THE ROUGH RIDERS m”m).. s b \‘..‘...-.m"].( | persons were “7'7‘“‘ caraph a t"‘;":.r‘m--nv Poles greatest .:;‘Im;.w hl'\lh!n vicinity d\, m. m: WILL LEAVE THE EXHIBITION GROUNDS AT 9:30 A. M. empsteac across he countr o o b cotton, whic was blown out and twisted Brookshire, was also greatly damaged. but PORT ARTHUR STORM. SWEPT - in bad shape, involving a loss which can- TWO EXHIBITIONS DAILY, RAIN OR SHINE, 2 AND 8 P. M. s0 far as known no lives were lost g TAYLOR, Tex., Sept. 0.—A heavy wind |00y e egtimated, but which will be great. ©One Ticke Acdmits To.All Children Und:r Ten Years, zsSo. Sabine Pass has not heen heard from vorted an ‘;‘" PORE JEAERL the business part of the town and con- | ATLANTA, Ga., Sept. 8.—A special from BeatonchGmn Drug Co., S, W, Cor, lsth and Farnam Streets, today. Yesterday morni®g the last news Landdd tinuing with a steady gale from the north | Beaumont, Tex., says it is reported there was ieceived from there and at that Ume |y pypygg gept 9.—A special to the [Untl 7 & m. The blow was accompanied | that the city of Sabine Pass was completely — — 1 the water was surrounding the o1 to% i | commercial-Appeal from New Orleans |bY @ continuous and drenching rain. Great | destroyed by the storm. makes them rich, but this is an exception ‘um.- society offered for an exhibit of sev- AMUSE it et ot el Bl Y damage has been done to crops. Electric | The hurricane was the worst ever known. | Al 3¢ the reservation Indians in the south- \41.! two varieties - the waves coming high. From the new |*93% . - LRESCARAC tolinhota: Witeh i wbrat HIEWE " A0P WAR.L1E | A ¢ n Ind \ | ¥ dispatch from St. Charles, La., states | & p west have taken to gambling as their chief| Cant had for years been considered one town, which is some distance back, It was | & Pl iy L el e DEATH RECORD HAY 0 to 8 ( 4 hRditor o4 5 oS reported that the water had reached the |that passsengers from Port Arthur, Tex, |30Ws a1t over town. | The toot was BEoA amusement. Ghost dancing and war danc- |of the hest judges of roses in England and | Tel I u a r gdepot and was running through the streets, | '¢POFt that town four feet under watel e ATEAAL > TS " Waaton LAY ing are only side issues in the great cam- | he frequently served at shows in which | . The people were loaving for the high coun- | O1¢ ©Of the New York Dredge company's able °*‘; "",‘"_" b 4 i @ ‘b_": O "R _ Joseph J. “Heyuol dn. palgn of sport. As soon as thew draw their [he did not have an exhibit. He wuk slow SIS THE TALLEST MAN YOU Iry Known ns the Backridge and It is be.|DOAts was wrecked and several lves have """:"‘" (" "‘“t"“':"'flx‘ )“ & K ONAW la., Sept. f' (Special.)—Jo- | quarterly donations from the government ;m forming his judgment about the eights TER SAW P \n?x{\\.. "IIV‘IP r.nm 10ba@ thut’ ali aebiped. ‘hp-\rn \I'rm( . et number of small buildings were wrecked lar:-:;m.r: :j';,-;n;m:m?{’ l;«:‘;:: S.":,:(l L :l: m.)‘(lmu u]umhl. s 8t once take to uln.. open ..rl £oa® 0 enler v:,.‘].-xx.n,u.”“ circle, but T YESTERDAY? Hie ix | Tomorrow | At Morgan City considerable damage was | soldier and fo y ¥ a own | prairie and go in for poker. As the news|when he once decided in favor of yariety Fn‘::;‘m"“\"“‘“l"": ";"“'I‘\_':N:‘:;“h:')'“:"l‘;"““’f(‘l'l'l.“': done to the rails a.d bridges of the rail-| WAVES RUN HIGH ON GYLFT |resident of Monoua county, died there|spreads that o big game is on the other |there was seldom reason for cnanging his Black CI'()Ok !r % S 2 road by a boat being blown into it g today and will be buried in Onawa Mon- |Indians hie to the scene and get in as opinion. For years he used to reccive . peracuaiare, migsing thore, A Reports rekarding the awful effects of | Incoming Vessels Repord Terrible [day at 10:30 a. m. by Hanscom post, Grand |quickly as possible. Cowboys and profes- |all the new rose varieties which were Three persons were drowned at Morgan's |\, "yiorm which has been raging along Battle with Hurrieane, One Army of the Republic. Mr. Reynolds came | sional white gamblers are the guests of |brought out in France. He would enter b angein 1\ .‘,,, g Thxintancs POINEERRG DINARS A1S “""'""'\'.’_ with ,‘h'; the gulf coast of Texas are just beginning | ing Ashore to Monona county July 22, 1871, and for |honor and tha are expected to take wway | them in a notebook, together with an elab ‘” o : hrospite "‘\'":"‘l’l'“‘:jk""h-."'I‘““;m":f ‘I"h:““l‘.:; to arrive and the story they tell {s fraught many years was one of the best known|the stakes. It one of the Indians should orate opinfon of them. Then he would | V" LNBes ¢ o a8 with horror. First in importance is the | NEW ORLEANS, Sept. §,—The Norwegian | men in the county. | carry off a big winntng he would be so sur- | proceed with his experiments. His friends Pl Balutday. Hritegit 105 Iave ook et badn JasaLPNC news that Galveston was struck by a tidal |steamer Utstein, Captain Aarsvold, arrived o P prised that he might reform [could never understand why he did mot | .15 1 ST and 2. Night: e, 25 Loss at Houston $250,000. wave and that the loss of life there was |from Puerto Cortez today after a terrific HYMENEAL The reason the Indlans are not a success | rajse seedling roses, but he seemed con wo Artists Tel In Houston one person was killed, Henry |between 2,500 and 3,000 vattle with wind and’waves. The Utstein |at card playing, say the cow punchers, is|tent with improving the quality of the | BIG BUNCH OF REAL COMEDIA Black, & hack driver. The property dam- | The water is fifteen feet deep over Vir- [reports that the steamer Joseph Oteri, Jr Jacks-Smothers. that they do not know the art of cheatIng | varieties which others brought out. He | = age I6 great, a conservative estimate pl ginla Point with her rudder post gone, is anchored PLATTSMOUTH b.. Sept -(Special.) | or catching a cheater. Stacking the cards|is credited with the discovery that S o0 VEsa A0 A Ing it at $250,000. The Merchants and | Every effort is being made out of New [about forty miles south of Southwest Pass. | _ast evening, at the home of the bride's | or under dealing are beyond their compre- | dryish land a loose surface around rose BOYD b Mgrs Plant ofl mill was wrecked, entailing a | Orleans to get tolegraphic or eable com- [A towboat bas been sent to the relief of | pavants, Judge Archer united in marr hension. But gamblers in the tribal ranks | plants was equal to a good application of b 4 loss of $40,000. The Dickson carwheel [munication with the wrecked city, but to | the disabled steamer [ Clyde Jacks and Miss Minnie Smothers. |are @etting thicker. It is a disease that |water. He was also the first rosarian to \.\...w.”“\u'-')‘dl W works was damaged to the extent of |Iittle avail. One message was received this i Mr. Jacks works in the B. & M. shops | spreads with the influx of white men to|discover that a change from a green crop cial Matinee Thursday $10,000. The big Masonic temple, which |cveniug fixing the loss of life at 2500 1t | DEATH LIST AT GALVESTON — — | their lands. £ ohligop barley brought. AtoUPe mors EODIE FOY in is the property of the grand lodge of the |came by cable from Vera Cruz and was Pulpit and the Concer TarRCIRYORN state, was partly wrecked. Nearly every [later confirmed in a general way Governor Sayres of Texaw Smyw That | A musical featire of the services wl the | For the last few years Cant had always “A NIG“T IN Towu“ church in the city was damaged. The| Great damage and considerable loss of at Leant | morning wis Bellstedt's rendition on the been sp J{ amoNg rose Krowers First Baptist, Southern Methodist and |life is reported along the line of the Mis- of his solo entitled, “The Holy | Benjami His L Mr. Ben," to distinguish him from his [ FPrices: 2c, o 8 sw M. Matinee: 2 D Trinity Methodist. the latter a negro |souri, Kansas & Texus railroad. There is ol City.” 1t war (horoughly enjoyed by the | ‘ R B ol Scu'ts on sale toduy church, will have fo be rebuilt before they | much anxiety about Sabine Pass and Port| NEW YORK, Sept, 8.—~The World to-| “Xi% (il IEE worship the | Rosarians in Eng America have | (80" 1 U ae & fine, fatherly looking old | NEXT ATTRACTION can be used agaln. Many business houses [ Arth The last news recefved from | mor will print the following | pastor. the Rev. refz, announced | been grieved by the death of Benjamin|man, and retained much of his youthful " HOYT'S LATEST were unroofed. The residence portion of | Sabine Pass was yesterday at noon and at | “AUSTLN, Tex., Sept. 9.—Information has | (hat there would be no wervices ot the | povett Cant, who was for years the premier [activity. His hair was perfectly white A Dl' AND A NIGHT” the town has a dilapidated appearance, | that hour the town was entirely surrounded | just reached me that about 3,000 lives have | members to attend the sacred concert 1o | roge grower of England and the most suc- | and flowing white side whiskers adorned his | Opening Mday T RIEhe atne T sale but the damage in this city has not been [by water. The storm had not then reached | been lust at Galvesion, with enormous de- | be given by Mr. Tollstedt. = 05T ibior English rose sociecies | CheCkE: e was Kind and geaial Uy na Wednesday #0 great as some others. The streets are |its hoight nor had the tidal wave come, |struction of property. No information | M Trefs remarked that doubtioss many | teee O nown. He died at his home, | (T and had a large le of friends | e = almost impassable because of the litter of | which is supposed to have swept over [from other points. but that for his own part he was r Colch on July 7 at the age of among Englist pge growers. He made Col DARKY'S AWE OF GEVERAL LEE. telegraph and telephone poles, wires, ete. | Galveston “(Signed) JOSEPH . SAYRES to bear the Imputation, exnectally | Zo05 RCRTRER B SHRC L i roke | chester the metropolis of the rose growing 3 5 Much damage was done to window glass [ However, at the time the last report was iGoverpor.t || MIRHSH Ot 88 HeNEy NIRRT Howoner had bl ol e oy V116 [business in England, and was tamous for | Feaved the Efect of the Commander's and furniture. Many Darrow escapes are |sent out the people were fleeing to the —— = , B exhibition. was made nt the National |the interesting talks on roses to which he Thoushis. recorded : highlands for eafety and it is hoped that | FACTS AS TO STRICKEN CITY CCat an Artery e elety e ahow I 160 and his ropes | freauently treated those who came to visit | In a group of old contederates Another train has left here for Galveston, | they may have found refuge in time e Ao K S8 | ot only won the two champlonship tro- |him. He leaves two sons, avho have been [ered around the campfire at the he making he (hird today. The two preceding | Port Arthur is not so exposed (0 the | peatdent of Galveaton Tells of Ta [ iives at Thirteenth and Williame: " He was | 5 M horer, bt alvo carrl 7y e | Drouaht up in the business and Who Will | quariera, No. 41 Went Jefforson stree ones bave pot been heard from as all wires | waves as Sabine Pass, but the damage there Loeation, Business snd Former 'v'rll-v:'lll: ;,T,lfy‘"}”',‘f;f,l.'l\m'.'\'Kl.’xj.mt\"ymm o [ N ot e th i, susoasalyo yeary| eadsavosito X : the fame of the rose | L% 00 S0 i ara prostrated. | 13 believed to have been great st Visttntions. i rikht wrist® was severely cat. The| The Cant rose gardens at Colchester | KLOWINg house of Cant PTG e St s ¢ The Santa Fe train which left here at| Telegraphic wires are down to Port R ek tvarad ROd ki it Bot ! B i . al « as an aptain o 7:55 Saturday night was wrecked at a point | Lavaca, Rockport, Aransas Pass, Corpus 9 AP 3, S 0.-D. B, Clark-| been for nrompt medical attention Ander- [ ®ere established 135 years ago, reports the IN ¥ 10N LIFE. Stonewall Jackson's foot cavalry The bout tw fles north of Alvin. Mrs. | Chr Brountvila 48] INDIANAPOLIS, Sept _ ark- | e nd have quickie bled to death. He | New York Tribune, but did not attain par IR han T A GITtAd To iHa Ty a tii L A aads abou o m nor > Christi and Brownsville, on the lower | 4on of Galveston, whose family is probably | Wik “taken o' the police station. where | tioular distinction until “Ben” Cant took T of the southern army horo for their leader Frather of Rosenberg, \Tex., was Killed, and | coast. and gravo fears are entertained re- | qyopt away, was an anxious fnquirer at| ity Physieln Raiph and Police Surgeon | aree © Ho first came into prominence atehad Over oL ina 6outhory ATy e nd for Shetp |andn ""I':':rllr“l‘lr:v”\:m“l):;.nllllllr‘\.“:lllu\\I\ AT i e P O 4he 13pabitants 0C | Amsosliiad Brasd haatqlineierd ere toniaht. | Menas et 1o Gk About the AEAlr | by introducing French roses in England was a tragedy enacted at the recent [some little incident in which that love h ¥ K 0 hose towns Speaking of the sunken city, its location, | furcher thun to say that he had acclden- | [n 1853 he brought out the Gloire de Dijon. | pearborn street fire where four women lost | bad manifested itsell. Then the cap :;“m“v”d kil Nmyl :ml‘l“ 1«'vl T ’|.| flfl‘ T population, business interests and former | tally fallen through a_window General Jacqueminot and Jules Margottin ‘,'.“ lm" y “;ll\ . v“ nou m‘ th . | tain_ apo) 2 hat the train was literally lifted from the | A “eltbt S 5 ! ; PROLIR | hoir Tives Fe R R P I e R e E NiEhor Thes sald: ) |, donn Nelson was arrested near ‘Twenty- | manner. A friend named Penrose (rom 4 ror-atricken b theY BU¥ | ven of the south had for General Lee, ¢ a o Sup intendent Nixon Fears Tha It Galveston 1s situated on an island ex-{ fourth «H'l‘ln Il'\' .\\an”I I“ .0“‘ I‘”‘" n the nelghboring city of Dedham made a|Wen an women climbing afe along but 1 remember a conversation with an ihe oar weaireached it was found that ber| TROETEHCE e e e lih tending eust and west for twenty-soven [ (uy night by 1atroiman Groarihh T B8 | visit to France. He was an enthusiastic | narrow ledges of the bullding frout. In a |14 negro, who, I believe, had u trucr ap 2‘.‘,:‘\,:';' Rosn’ Undbr water. and sbe wes of the Dridges ut Galveston, miles and s seven miles in its test | was helped by hiw fri nl-l,"l‘hh;.'),lh‘.w‘:-r’mn:\ horticulturist and a great lover of fine|recess at one end of the large, overhanging | preciation of his worth thun any of you width north and south. No city could be | Goodrich wus compellad to SRR BAth, Of | roses. In France he visited Laffay, a lead- [ cornice, relates the Chicago Inter Ocean, was | v years ako 1 visited Lexington, Va :""w""f-(:\h‘vvnI‘:flr”‘n::h.::;.. CHICAGO, Sept. 9.—W, C. Nixon, general | in greater danger with such a horrible visi- "'they. wore subdued thit 1t was broken | 08 French rose grower of that time, who |a pigeon home. The father and mother birds | 1o sec the grave of Lee. wio lies buried LA R e superintendent of the Gulf, Colorado & tation as has now come to Galveston. Ininto etinters, Nelson and Peterson wore | had just completed some successful ex- | wer ven from thelr posts by the heat |in the family vault of the university Fngtaeer Jack Martin, badly burt about|Santa e ralway, of which Galveston is a|no part of the city, with its 68,000 I'"I‘n-]'“v:‘l\;‘ i, ae Cmes egaics, mtatioh: | periments with the three varietics men- |and smoke, but the three nestlings perished. | (gl The janitor w then & chakt dnd 8 2 torminal, who has been visiting in Chicago, | lation, is it v‘nlw- ”rlm'v A‘“n‘x above n‘n- wolnda :lunwl {I';-l\rmw was impre 11 “lun the| After the V:'r;'uu had W’ work and the | e B Aot ™ | 1eft tonight for Texas to assist in restoring | sea level. The flat condition wmot only o heauty of the new varieties and took seed- | excitement had died d the parent pig- | qelight in life w PRI P 2 briord l”\;’"\il X“_“"‘H'K‘l,“‘, el L ey by the destruc- | pointed to the desperation of the situation INDIANS AS GAMHLERS, lings back to England. He turned them|eons came back to seek their young. The v RS S L L A0Sk Saveril: mihor masm ngers wore also|t1Ve Etorm which swept the Gulf city. Tele- | of the peor e at such @ time as (his, but |, Oamen: Aot Moservatfan | 0XED to/Xin frls |‘\4I Cant, who ralsed them l:""“lu'\'l-;‘(-‘\ up w;. raw and o L‘ of | General Lee's. His accent in speakiog olightly injured | grams, were received by Mr. Nixon before | their danger may be considered cmpha [ Braves in the Southwest. with phenomensl succes which the u as built an youns Masé Baharti' w ot aadts i e | leaving for the south saying that the last|sized when it is known that exactly where| (owhoys have a great many things to an The only rose which Cant really produced | were mere crisps. Toward evening the | ponce™ | aicig y LT e Heavy Floods at Kl Pasoe. | passenger train left Galveston Saturday | the city is built the island is only one and | gwer for, both good and bad, and perhaps |and Which be uamed Is the Prince Arthur, | mother bird began fivfug over ihe rulis. She fyjong and found that b AT e EL PASO, Tex, Sept. 9.—The heaviest|morning on the Santa Fe system. Since | one-quarter miles wide [Tt would not be right to blame them with & sport from the General Jacqueminot. The |circled for a time, and fivally landed on the | " oianel on Lee At aet e At floods known in several years have occurred | then trafic had’ been entirely stopped. Mr On the bay, or nort. side of the city, is | having taught the Indian how to gamble, [ Variety is a peculiar crimson in color, but [roof of the wrecked bullding ¢ 8| omployed as o co VE Juarter | north, south and west of El Paso during the | Nixon was greatly worried that nothing had | the commercial section with wharves | But net until the cowboyk came among|for some reason Cant s t person | Joined by her mate. The a gre & RDIEIE ? bantss 1 RNked bici (r b Had past few days. The Mexican Central tracks | been heard from passenger train No. b, |stretching along for nearly two miles, lined | then did the Indians on the reservations | Who has been able to raise uccesa- | puzzled at the ehange the f T i ey S e nre washed away in several places this side | which was due in Galveston on Saturday | with sheds 1 large storage house In | know the art of throwing the pasteboards. | fully. The varieties which brought | The heat had melted the ts of the gal pectful about General 1 Ha soratolisd of Chiheihua and trains running very | night at 9 o'clock. 1t was last reported at | that portion of Galveston there are three | Since then they have hecome as skillful at [ him fame have become common in Englana | vanize 1 dron cornice, which b L3 BTOM Inis hand raflectively and then asid Irregularly. The S ivacke @i a4 small station forty miles north on the| clavators: one of 1,500,000 Lushels capacity, | it as they are lazy [@nd America and are considered among the | 8'rips over the window 4l the top stor Seais ‘ain faat ond time one of 1,000,000 and the third of 7500 One of the chicf occupations of the reser- | finest garden roses Tho pigeona looked over tho wrecked coraioe Haw. wa I d - . . —— . bushels. The fsland from the north side | vation Indlans in the southwest today, r i Cant was ono of the founders of the Na- | 4ucking their heads and appearing to talk We v, ‘twas d ay. One night u‘ & is connected with the mainlapd by railroad | lates the New York Tribune, s poker and | tional Rose wociety, from which he won ir "I‘"‘ 5 W i widdla ob dp w 1 seed 8 @flflflfl““flflflfl“fl“fl““u bridges and the longest wagon bridge in |monte playing. Indeed, it requires so much [ many medals and trophies. In December, | i U CARR AR 19 AR o Inter de Ginl's te He the world, the latter nearly two miles in | of their time that they do not care for the | 1876, he joined with H. H. 'Ombrian re Finally she plugked up. cayrags | on whin he ot uptsr whar I wua ‘ d length | festive dance nor the mysterions medicine | Dean Hole of Rochester in organizing this | B9 o Y1 er-rippin’ en er-roarin' and er send thlS COIIpOtl an “In 1872 the entire cast end of the city | making, as they once did. They scan the |society, which hax since grown Into great | R AREE AN R SRR nortin was swept away by the tidal wave that|broad fields with a disdainful look and turn | prominence. The Americ o soclety, | MO8 10 MAS “:"‘ 4y “.,” ”‘ 90 karg_ ek | Wh le trubble?" | sez ter ‘im tollowed a terrific storm that swept the|to the ecene of gambling with the air.of | Which was organized a fow years ago and [ 5 ’; it “W Loy ’ | Trut oz h I jes' ‘got orders n C gulf coast for three full days rhen the |a king The fields, all their own, are left [ which gave a essful rose show in this ""' + : ; i »‘M'”‘ o “‘j',; ap pifis far mi ight wid er t eastern land on which buildings stood was | untilled, while they seat themselves for a [ city n.~'x ]\\nm s ndelled o8 §06/ge | pE SRS, D DARLETR SONS SR W Saniies: e Hs P awin' en er . literally torn away. The work of replacing | quiet game clety which Cant helped to fou iR e ARROEIED. § on or-slestin’ lak all hell to The Bee Publishing Co., Omaha, ot it has since been going on and Fort Point,| For quiet a ubtle are their plays, | The basis of Cant's fame g DR -ALAR 4 ,,‘{,’:u. RARERDES enned. I'm 1 ef | A which guards the entrance to the harbor, | Never cheating and always thinking char- | g10wers is really his suceess as an exhibitor, | 000 g 0 encouraged by her mate, | 1¢'s er-thinkin’ erbe has since becn bullt nd on its parapets | acterize the Indian poker player. He sits| Which is well testified to by ( fact that | oVl ant along to the recess in th . Wi 11 3 Uncle Tom? M& | are mounted some of the heaviest coast|and chews his tobacco, grunts out his bids|he had more than 2,000 medals. froph 3 e o 8 el B | usked of the old fanitor q For part. treesee ¥ | detenso ordnance used by tho government. | and blufts, rakes i the stakes or foeds e | UPS and other prizes from various shows | oo S S L Loy T L ead. offsoring. | ' tor he replied. ‘Well By the force of the wtorm of 1872 six cn- | jackpot, as the case may he, with silent|n which he had entered plants. He devoted | i 50 oy ciens inianin o e e rol 1Anlait ek it an e oh e aian Paris Exposition Pictures. E AN R SLANN R of ATH NIB s | NANmic AR SR O B M e s catabt Laaps | Cn st hog B grom midly lalo the Al er 4 minpican 1t s on the south side of the city, being [ were playing for lives i 1 of a few|entirely out of do 1 e nautlinan s miat Ak A er does know whut Gin'l 1 hinkin 2 within fifty yards of the medium gulf tide | blankets or a couple of dollars, They sel- [ England, where hoth atsing has not S Oams Ay and e | Mar v, ¢f one er Gin'l Lee's » Sent postpald to any uddrege J& [ that the woalthy resident portion of the ) look at each other te it they can|yet obtained a fim hold, T ek ann | I e A A e et et | 2 tor get inte v 1 ‘twonld ‘ Stay at home and enjoy the great exposition. 10 te 20 views & -"In';' 1 ];K;i'.du;;m|la“|m n”\l\.;(; “u.r.‘ m“‘ ..“‘\'\:l.““;, ataanng uu”-: ,'h'“'r""i;"{.\l'l}" ;tl\’;: of |;: 0884 oame. U 19 he ideal [ onee v 'M, and, atter comforting h o esto e stric v the | any mind reader to whethe dian { of perfection. He wa O ATEALES | tiath (i tathax mimdot et 20 3 orery week, covering all polnte of intercet. ~ Altogether there will & | ful force®or the recent storm and flood | thinks about killing you or glving you his| ment of hit st 1 ahawad are at| Eas KIS AAE RN BAN ARG T be 20 parts containing 350 views. The cntire set mailed for 82. All of th@ eastern end of the city must|favorite wife. so inexpressive is his face. an artist in every exhibition He fir (211 tnta) the GimkCEEAE S LBETITEAY A Lazative Bromo Quiniae T All b ] *# | Certainly be washed away and in this quar- | That is why the Indians are fond of poker. | hibited In 1547 and was successful from the | post i s gl lliial v lat i tatlaia N ’N””’N'” ter. hetween Broadway and [ street, some | It taxes their facial power—it makes them | start. In I881 he wa winner of | yiy when the day closcd on the scene of re. B. W. Grove's signature is op each

Other pages from this issue: