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Tlte ptvaUX. DOWNIE NKILL, Publishers. BIG STONE CITY, DAKOTA pith: of tiik news. EVENTS IN WASIIINOTON. W ash in gtonfgpecial: Col TourtHoire, the staff of the general of the army, received a letter from General Sherman recently, written at one of the stopping places In Yel'oMstone Park. Tne general said tho accident to Chief Justice Waite occurred win n they were going up a hill. A saddle slipped back and tfie horse began acting badly, and succeeded in throwing the chief Justice. He was shocked considerably, but the members of the party and the judge himself thought the injuries sustained were not serious enough to prevent his continuing the trip. Judge Waite decided to return east, however, in order to allay the apprehension of the members of his family, who would probably be alarmed by ex aggerated reports of the accident. New postal orders: Postmasters Com missioned—Minnesota: Frank Torstein, Elbow Lake: Ole Halstead, Marsh River August A. Parish, Holdiiursford. lakota: Julia M. Wheeler, Appomattox. I'ostotlices P'stablished—lakota: Handiotta, Sargeant county Millsburgh, Sargeant county, Montana: Koundup, Yellowstone cnuwtv. Pcstoffice Name Changed—Iowa: Wheel' er's Grove, Pottawattamie county, to Wheeler. Special Service Discontinued— Minnesota: MassileBay, Polk county. Attorney General Brewster is at Klberon, where his predecessor a year ago received tidings which made Chester A. Arthur pres ident. From his cool apartment, overlook ing the ocean, the attorney general holds diiect communication with the depirtment of justice in Washington, and is performing the duties of his office with as much care and celerity as though he were under the blistering sun of the capital. The Second comptroller of the treasury has deciled that the act of Aug. f, lsS2, providing ''mileage" to officials while trav eling under orders in the Cnited States, "does not authorize payment of mileage to 658 miles of the route from Sitka to San Francisco, which is off the coa it of British America." The first victim undtr the order of the postmaster general prohibiting postmasters of the higher grades from being absent from their posts without leave, is Lyman M. Gates of Kalamazoo, Mich, He was suspended to take effect when his successor is appoint ed. The war department is informed that the body of the late Gen. Ord has been em balmed and will remain in Cuba until au tumn, when it will be taken to Washing ton, NEWS OF THE RAILROADS. The Chicago, Milwaukee it St. Paul com pany issues a circular announcing thst persons having live stcck. agricultural iui lements, machinery or other articles for warded for exhibition at the Northwestern fair and exposition, to be held at Minneap olis, Aug. 27 to Sept. 1, inclusive, or at the Minnesota state fair, to be held at Owaton na, Sept, 3 to 8, inclusive, will be required to pay full rates on exhibits but if they be leturned by the origii al shipper within three days after the close of tne exhibitic ns, they will not only be returned free to the forwarding station, but the amount paid for transportation to Minneapolis or Owatonna will be refunded. This makes for exhibit ors in reality, a free rate both ways. General Freight Agent Bird and Traffic Manager Wicker, representing the Mil waukee it St. Paul and Northwestern roads, have agreed upon «ew rates for emigrant movables to Minnesota ard Dakota points from Milwaukee. The present rate of from $4u to $50 per car were advanced from $10 to $20 per'car. The loss by the burning of the Northern Pacific depot and freight house ot Dawson, Dak,, on the 26th, is estimated at $25,000. GENERAL NEWS NOTES. Duluth Tribune: It will be remembered that, some weeks since, several car loads of s'lver bullion were received here from He lena. Mont., to be shipped to Newark, N. J. It is learned that on the night after its arrival one of the cars was broken open, and two bars, weighing about 000 pounds, and worth hundreds of dollars were stolen. Last Saturday the bars were discovered bur ied in the sand near the Northern 1'acitic tracks, Ri^'s Point. The discovery was accidental, the rain having washed away the sand until the silver was not covered. It appears that the importation of Rus sian Jews has proved a sorry failure. About a fifth of the twenty thousand who came have been sent back. The manager of the Hebrew Emigrant Aid society in New York says a Russian Jew, owing to early mar riage and hardship, is an oid man at thir ty-five and forty. He comes over here with a big family hanging to him, is dull, and it is next to impossible to wake him up and get hiin to learn or do anything. A Cleveland dispatch says tke Ward Iron company of Niles and New Philadelphia has failed, liabilities estimated at $.'o0 OOO available assets said to be less than $5,000. The company consists of Mrs. Eliza Ward, mother of James Ward. The company em ployed about 4,000 men and operated mills Niles, bought on co' tract from and now revertin to Cleveland,Brown it Co., of that city. The mill in new Philadelphia, costing $150,000, will be involved in litigatioa- At Miles City,a notice was found posted on Charles Brown's door, saying: "Bullard, Burleigh, Ringer, Dear, Van Gaskin, Jiussell and others—murderers—You're marked.'' On the 30th inst., a placard ap peared in the same place, bearing the le gend: "Stranglers, beware! You are well known." Both signs were written in red ink, and were signed in figures which were mere date numbers, or e'se a new cabilistic cipher for Miles City vigilantes. The steamer Alaska arrived at Queens town, the 31st o July, having made one of the quickest runs on record—six days and twenty hours irorn Sandy Hook to Queens town. Among the passengers were Judge Wilson of Winona with his family, Eugene Wilson and family of Minneapolis, also J. A. WTheelock and family of St. Paul. New York Special: It stated that Col. William Crooks of St. Paul, Minnesota, who is at present in this city, had sent twenty- four messages since the strike began, to his her in more than one direction, for urnong home being anxious find out the con dition of bis wife, who is ill. He o e.ea $500 if the company would get him an an swer, but it was unable to do so. The 27th was another big day for the St. Paul rowing men. At the Pullman races thev carried off two more prizes, winning the'junior double and the u n i o four, i certainlv looks as though the Minnesota* were going to place themselves at the head of this year's list. At Denver, Robert B. Beath of Philadel phia was elected commander-in-chief of the Grand Armv of the Republic on the second ballot, Many grand army men attribute Gen. Barnum's defeat to his expressed opin ion on the Fitz-Johti Porter case. Mayor Edson of New York has suspended the license of John Jones, the expressman who was accused of an atUnipt to extort money from James Kane of Green Isle, Minn* The members of the firm of L. B. Day fc Co., of Milwaukee, which failed a short time ago, were arrested on the charge or getting goods under false pretenses. Mr. Col field of Minneapolis is building a store-house at Duluth with a cai-.i holding .30,000 bushels of oats. The Ward Iron company of Niles, ohio, ascended the bankruptcy flume for $.500,000. The Minneapolis water board wants $52. 704,09 to complete work already beirun. Commodore Kittson's Minnie R. was dis tance 1 at Pittsburg. f'RIMES AND Clll M!\ A s. Three prisoners of no'e confined in jail at Dubuque, Iowa, succeeded in making their escape. One of them Ed. Williams is an ac complished burglar, who was awaiting trial on a charge of breaking into a residence in Peru township and abstracting $3,000. Another, Ed. Beach, was jailed on a charge 0* counterfeiting at West Union. The third, I). Erin, was awaiting tria! for using the United States mails for fraudulent purposes. The president was, it seems, attacked by a miscreant, who hurled a stone through the window of the car in which he was rid ing while en route to Louisville on the 30th inst. He was no doubt much alarmed as, according to the best obtainable story of the occurrence, the missile crashed through the car only a few feet from where in* vas standing. Charles Cowles, medical examiner at Baraboo, Wis., was arrested on the 31s', charged with taking money in consideration of procuring pensions for applicants. The arrest caused quite a sensation, the doctor being a prominent member of the Cougre gatio lal church and one of the oldest set tlers. Am He vl, a farmer living near Rush ville, kans., has been lynched by his neigh bors for persistent horse stealing. RECORD OF CASUALTIES, The hail and rain storms around Lancas ter, Pa., on the 29th were more destruc tive than indicated by earlier reports. Over l.Ow acres of growing tobacco were com pletely destroyed. The streams are greatly swoolen and several bridges were carried away. A fire at Lincoln, Nebraska, on the L'nth, destroyed ten business buildings. Loss, $250,000, Leighton it Brown, wholesale drugs, are the heaviest losers. Insurance about half the valuation. The city, hall building at Minneapolis, including the Tribune, was damaged by fire on the 30th to the amount of about $5,060. PERSONA MENTION. Gen. Grant in speaking of Gen. Ord, says "I knew Gen. Ord for forty years. He graduated from West Point the year I en tered. He was a man of genuis, and of some eccentricities. He was honorable in all his dealings and high-toned in every sense. He married late in life, and leaves his family in destitute circumstances."' Senator Crane of Kansas offered the Ma rine Ladies' Aid society $5 if they would make a quilt without speaking a word. Twenty-three ladies met at the parsonage, made the quilt, and earned the money in two hours. Mr. and Mrs. Northcote, nee Fish, daugh ter of the ex-secretary of state, are in Eng land on their bridal tour, and the bride groom s family have given some elegant entertainments in honor of his return with a beautiful American wife. Rev. O. De Witt White, a son of the founder of the city of Indianajolis, who died in Chicago on the 28th, was ouried with Masonic honors at Clinton, Iowa. Hs waschaplain of the Ninety-second lllinoi volunteers. Miss Minnie Benmen and Chaales Deni by of Brooklyn join in asking a divorce The say they flirted, and one night the girl's uncle compelled them to marry. They had parted at once and never met afterward. Ex-Congressmanj William E. Lansing died suddenly of heart disease at Syracuse, N. Y., recently. He was a member of the Thirty-seventh and Forty-second and For ty-third congress. Marcus Newman of New Albany, Ind., was married to Miss Emma Demerest on the 23 inst., and three days latter she ran away from him, and joined the Salvation army. Three capitalists of Joliet, 111., have to gether bought 50 000 acres of land in Flori da for $120,000. The tract has a flourishing village upon it called Mt. Carroll. AntorJo Meucci of Clifton, R'aten Island, claims to be the original inventor of the telephone, and shows in proof three caveats issued to him in 1871-2-3. Emory W. Cobb of the Bozeman (Mon.,) National bank, has presented the city of Kankakee, 111., with an opera house, to cost over $100,000. The late Daniel Hersey ofNashau N. H., left $ 000 for a public librarv. on con dition that the citv purchase a suitable site. Henry L. Dawes,Jr., eon of the Massa chusetts senator, has joined the Montana geological survey. FORE!UN NEWS (JOSSTP. New York Herald: Poor Turkey is floun dering about at the present time in a very whirlpool of political troubles, from which, turn where she may, there is apparently no outlet. No helping hard is tendered, though beseeching looks have been cast by those witnessing the struggle the unde.- standing ter exists that she is to be allowed to sh Those who are loudest n their in vective against her are those ui^ respon^ ble for the situation they so affect to plore. Cardinal McCabe, receiving the clergy in Dublin, on the 22d inst, condemned the false teachers who asserted rnt the pope, in issuing his late circular, was exceeding his legitimate sphere of authority or had been influenced by secular motives disobeying the circular, he said, the guilt of heresy. The cholera in London is claimed to be simple, and not Asiatic, though the Wash ington marine service is advised differently. Cholera is depopulating Cairo at ilie rate of 1,500 a day. _____ Horrible Itailoail Accident in Vu York. A terrible accident on the Rome, Water town & Ogdensburg railroad occurred at Carlyon station, N. Y., at 9:30 o'clock on be 27th inst, by which nineteen were killed ,t thirty wounded. The train, a doubU eatler, was an excursion train No. 53 and wnind lor Clayton with "Thousand island" tourists, mostly from Michigan. It was be hind time, and at the time of the collision was running at the rate of forty miles an hour. The wind was blowing a gale, and had blown a freight car of!' a side track partly on to the main track. When the ex cursion train came thundering along, a collision'.ame. throwing one of the en gines on its end and tlie other into the ditch. The baggage car and two sleepers wer completely demolished. Cars were piUd upon one another until it was one va.-i heap of ruins. At the time a heavy thun der shower was passing over, and the night was dark. The cries and shrieks of t!*e dy ing and wounded were terrible. The crash was heard three miles away. The count .-y is but thinly settled, and it was some time before assistance could he obtained. The coroner, Dr. Cochrane of Albion, was sent tor, and the work of recovering the bodies commenced. Following are the nanus of the persons killed, who have been identified: Thomas Hayne, Chicago Louis Trout, fireman A. Taylor, Water town N. Y. Jane t'ari, Lansing. Mich. Prof. C. W. Stone Battle C-eek, Mich. Lute J. ranees, O-we go. N. Y Willie Lafevre, Bay City Mich. Ashley Tyler, N. Y. Thomas Stalls, Water town, N. V. O. B. Troop and grail Jdaughfer Mary Troop. Schoharie, N. Y. j. C. SchenK. Cleveland, Ohio Thomas Dixon 211) Pearl Street, Cleveland, Ohio. A lady with a ring marked "Cornelia to Louis," and thought to be Mrs, Booth, of Bay City, Mich. Mrs. Louis J. Boos, Philadelphia J.J. Wor.eh ', Saline, Mich. Henry McCormick, Benton, Mich. An unknown body thought to be Mr. Booth, of Bay City. The fireman was in-tantly killed, and Engineer James McCarthy, ot the second engine was terribly scalded. The following are injured: Minerva Mun dav, Bay City, terribly bruised, thought she will never recover. Mrs. W. F. Hall and daughter, Leslie, Mirh. Mrs. Hall, injured about the head, daughter, spinal injury. Both will recover. .Mrs. B. Salisbury, Bat tle Creek, Mich,, hip dislocated, double fracture of the right side, neck ami h*ad badly bruise 1 Thought she will recover Rev. E. S. Gould, Cartilage, Mo., sevet gash in bacfc of bead:will recover. Mis. J, P. Ireland, Granite Fall*, Minn., bruiitfl about the head. Mrs. Moses Sweeter, Parkersburg, Va., spine bruised and head cut, will move Mrs. T. G. Fi?ld, Parkersburg, Va., eye contused, ankle sprained and injured about the hip will recover Mrs. A. L. Briggs, Saline, Mich., cut about the head will re cover, She is at Lyi.donville. Mrs. Mc Masters, of Ireland, wrist iractured and ear cutoff: Mrs. Alice Jennison, Philadelphia, broken ankle: Mrs Prof. C. W. Stone, Bat tie Creek. Mich., fracture of arm and oth erwise bruised- Alex. Tower, Lansing, Mich., injured in head, will recover. lie is a brother of Mis. Elizabeth Jane Carl. Total hilled, twenty-two. The list of th wounded will reacn thirty-five persons Reports from twenty-three of the wounded do not indicate that over three will die The dead were placed in caskets and boxes and shipped to their homes. Conflicting testimony of witnesses is so great that the jury have been unable to agree up n a ver dict yet, and adjourned until Wednesday. Evangelist Miiiiips' Mtieid-. Noi.th Weymouth, Mass., Special ram, Juiv 27, Kneeling on iho grass a* if in prayer, Daniel 13. Phillies, tie: well-known Boston evangelist, was found dead beneath a tree in an or: n field yesterday morning. The body was nude, and va* suspended fnain the tree bv a rope hastily iniido frotn & night shirt whbdi had been torn into sirips and knot^-d tightly about the neck. Tlie feet and lunl .s were terribly laceravd by thorns ami bramble*. wi:e known. Those irred The action of the British House of Com mons on the Suez canal question sat isfaction to the press and people ol 1-ranit and is considered a guarantee of peace. Last week Mr. Andrew Carnegie gave a brilliant dinner to Matthew Arnold in view of his approaching departure for America to lecture on Sweetness and Light. Some Phillip* complained of not feeling well during Wednesday. About 9 o'clock he retired, but shortly afterward came down in his night shirt, ami pacing into the front yard, started on a run up street, and wjw soon out of sight. He was forty-one years of age, and had for years been actively engaged in miseioiiary work- A Desperote Encounter With Iltir glars. A special from Wisconsin Junction, Wis., says: Lorenzo Crandall, keeper of the farm ers' co-operative store and postmaster of the village, was attacked at his home on the 28 inst., by three masked men, who rushed into the sitting room while he was lying on the sofa talking to his wife. The men carried cocked revolvers, and ordered him o throw up his hands. Crandall was lying on his back with his hands in .s jockets, in one of which he carried a revolver. Throwing throwing himself upon the floor he whipped out his pistol and fired at the lead er, shooting him through the right breast. One of the assailants fired in re turn, the ball passing through the finger of Crandall's left hand. The light was put out by the robbers, who tired half a dozen shots, one ball imbedding itself in Crandall's right wrist, 1'hey fled, but Crandall followed, and being joired by friends he ran down the leader of ti e gang, who died as he seized him from the effects of the wound he received in the house. The others es caped. Crandall was presented with a purse of money by the citizens and res olutions applauding his bravery were passed to-day at a mass meeting. Cran dall had only $50 in his possession The burirla: shot is u: A HOIIRIBIjIO KARTHQUAKI:. Ca.santiCC!,0'a' iHc-hia, lacco, Forin, on the Island of of the inhabitants of ttie town es caped to the sea at the first shock. Thev ,,iade their way to Naples with the news of the calamity. "The center of the area of the shock was I-chla is a vol anic i-land situ'iUd at the north entrance oi the B.iy of Naples. Tht circumference is about tr.Hetec.i mihs, and the superficial are:i abjiu twenty six '-•poire miles. Monte Kpi meo. or ^an Niclo, the aneimt l-lpopseus, or Epopeu-*. is lln* trgh est point, ising 2o mi H:!d country and along the sea coast, of life was about 200. A Bit FA IM'It The liabilities are now stated by Ihe au thority of counsel of the firm to be $3,500, 000 and nominal assets $.ri,000,0tn. The assets include tanneries in northern Maine. New York State, New limns wick anil (Quebec and l,,00,0o0 acres of land in Maine. From 10,000 to 15,OOO people we.reeniploved by the concern. The immediate cause of ihe failure was thd suspension of Copeland it Co., who owe the Shaw Hros. JlUUioO. The failure can be traced to the suspension of the Pacific bank a year ago. 8haw Ilros., at the time of the collapse of the bank, field a number of shoe end leather firms above water. The failure occasioned great excitement throughout New England and New York, and caused s.veral smaller nuspe: sions in the ooot and shoe trade. Northwestern Patents. Tlie following patents have been issued: Edmund .T Brent, Muscatine. Iowa, win dow screen frame Libbie A. Call, Oslikosh, Wis., dress chart (ieorge S. Dean, Inde pendence, Iowa, wire stretcher Julius Goldstein, Waterloo, Iowa, salt eding device Jonathan ll. Hamilton, Kingston, Minn., corn shelier L. llartsharn, Wyoiu- |!)1: 1,ai» the same as that of two ytars ago, but the radius was wider. The shock i tin was felt at sea, and according to some ac counts even at NapVs. The ground oiened in wany places, while in other places there was no movement 1 •water gushed out of springs, and several boiiers ns the bathing houses burst. The theater, which was a wooden structure, was literal!} torn open, allowing the audience to scape. Steamers loaded with injured people are constantly arriving here Irom the scene of the calamity. Eight ships are already tilled with suiLre-s. The minister of public works has gone to Casamiceola to organize measures of relief. Ttie stories told by the survivors are hor rible. Many Romans having villas at lo chia are known to have been lo t. The de.nl are fearfully mutilated. In some eases the forests are painly discernible through the ruins, but tney cannot be ex tricated. It ii sur.nised liiat S'''ee are still alive in the cellars. A eorr:spomient telegraph'- t! that, judging from report n1 i t: the calamity will infit Chiie-e Arthijiiake in l—V Tlie bishop of Casamicci...«i, 1 of Home, ami the prefect uf H. and l'm»l: N.S.p vv^llura «Rii' William ]or,j f1/ '"Ml! IM-Iiia, Destroyed by an Kartluinake—The Former City KntirHy Destroyed—Ji OOO People Known to Have Periwhed. Naples, Special Cable, July 29.—The town of Casamicciola, on the island of lschia, near Naples, was almost entirely destroyed by an earthquake last nipht. The neigh boring towns of Forio and Lacciaincno were ereatlv damaged. The shocks began at o'clock last nifsht. At that hour a majority of the people of the upper clashes were at the theater. Nearlj all of the tiouses the town eol'apsed. It is«stimnted that. Whi per sons were injured. It is impossible, as ye\ to "ive the exact number of the dead at Casmiii ciola. In the latest accounts the number is estimated at uoo The Hotel l'iccola Sentinel la sank the earth and tnanv of its inmates were buried. turns of the nat: soldiers in the 1 America] 74.48 per cent, aartera as neai ins 17»,80G, or 14,200, or 7.14 cans 58,300, or h'aclun/kafcive Iowa, weatln. I n'.on, amJ borse sh0« A :\Vn!l raii«a, s s e a n .. \50fX), or 2.26 ),,!sners C,c,0()0, •v 1 oi ran. try is full of it: ways .gr.i* i K'-enee of a tor and at w' "ifeiuhborhooti They are his o!!V U1 On the oth( idan weatliel because his meterology,J liim-elf w i-iV ^ter and MJflered a A to ofserv ^logical studu %\d be encou at frnn free ,• ta "Whs Inate for the O( S N If*' uil!,,„traces the yii |h is l,t)00,000 stan«t is made most know 1- 1 v Hint of I.um *. jie acreage of was st.ivi:ij- a arc reported, to be among the dead. There were very tew 11 'i.'li.-h wsiiora on she island at the time ot the disaster. None the special dispatches mention American Uanits am :v the killed or woirvb'd The Naji.es cornsp-unl thef\rsal iere telegraph* as fuiiows I have just re turmd from I-chia. Casinou iola, Sao v and Forio have been dest-.oyed. l'hey were three of the s flourishing commu nitits on the Island, which was na'f over thrown. The road b.tw.en the town. of lschia and C.isatuieciola is mpa-sable The per!»ci of Naples It iegrapiis that tne town of Casamiceioia has reased in exist. Th» train Irom this city to Naples to-day was crowded w:th passengers i:omg to in quire as to the fate of their friend". None of tlie special dispa'che* mentioned An.er can names among tin killed or injured. I than that of itin wI itti, unite un-* e to talk i low SI ..jiS in a grea lip the plant large tracts •y are much 1 1' seridai tlv hie. lancial Chror out railroad ix months of hey go, indi n a long Hal incipal roai pears, with in«f^ase of I w'rth the •t of the gui ilea^e, but: to the absac allness of la come of the year was 3 ad for evei States. to $205,56 }0 over the king the su It is very it to be red .iled, but among subject w There isi with in rhaps, the ian an ove have a ha \e for i'j i' Wi nt ner an* Stir. !eet above the sen level. The principal summit is surround ed bv twelve inferior voletnic cone*. J- :. one of which the last truprioa took n e in i o2. Casamiceiola is locat«d at the foot ot Mount Eponilo, near Naples, and had a •opuiation of about It was famed throughout. Italy for i thermal springs and baths. JY.-io is a seaport town on the western era* rtf hchia, with a population of about N i l«sg A I lost on Sensation—Failure nit Largest Tanning l-'irni in tho World —lii il»iliUes OOO. The I'.oston .Journal of the 'Kith savs Stedman A:, (\)., shoe dealer- of New York, have suspended in connection with Cope land & Co., of which house they are a branch. It is also announced that \V. N. Taylor .t Co., shoe dealers of Baltimore, have suspended in connection with the Copelaud failure, and that llollnieyer A 8on of Norfolk, W. Y t.. are in trouble from the same cause. The house of Charles W. Coppland A' Co., was established under Ihe title of I', k, I". Copeland it Co., in iK3.r, and now consists of Charles W. Copeland and Arthur W. iSte lman, a branch firm being located in New York under the title of Stedman & Co. Copeland states that their liabilities amounted to $7o0,00ii, and the assets, if cer tain large claims which he will not at pres ent sperify, could be secured, would leave a surplus of $2(KJ.(K:0. Their chief business has been the manufacture of men's boots and shoes. tated that ^sses from ourney to via the statement authori tt on his the tick* lioa pay instead o whole pa lid statei •#nd occi state an k«nd in Facet Sol. Oft Kll 1 W1 has mineral baths: which are much resorted to. The e .rth(4uake at Caaniicco!a in 1881 was upon Friday, March 4, of that year. There weretwo si nekvthe first occurring at 1 .'M p. m. and the second an hour later. The whole upper part of the town was de stroyed, and two thermal establishment* destroyed. The second, which was the fa tal shuck, and was accompanied by a noi&f like subterranean thund»r. ThenVame the crash of tallin: houses, accompanied by the shrieks of the victims. The soldiers "from Naples city rescued many from the ruins. The $| opuiation fled to the surrounding A man to hii to sai'i 'A-- —Ti.. bewlU-' ,r. re w Haccepta jj|cannot |t, buttt i| Ahe app A pre'ty oil" ingtoii, and wh Iiihle Ptories niatntna the otn "(h, miinitna, pi« tv story again :i the bulls rush!! "I)ad, werey individual thu? i chin and gazed the bov in ^i1' "Oli, dont get ii ing you spring. endem if storm •nces, i hen th ed by what of terri xue, -Bil dami texagge contr,. •Mrs. t'--: had none ycstK^v would do 11 y .".clone ol laughed and sau. as good a sauirt'11 are.'' his wav hou-e |kv and ration prope: age fro rrore ol On 11, trip, the Itev.Poc® man knew, aud arpr tbe politely if Ito n Sturges. man. ami nil'. traveled too The doctor np )o you kining is I nulled w No von do®]., ud ii Voii don't to fa d'riiig if fHii'^^ttOthing niueii n is kii 8n,, ld he can Dm ",!,V.rT.»«.«fl 1." «n and than 1 the Kev ihe L'^spt OJAUMILATETL TH*1 through! I th-uiiibtb from l!eiio. cnougli m1II'"s!t'r If [-a '0 ountr] Id. renbu i 'il0l fioker i~~Ztgene game a Yon go and s wer janoeA}""- lie Fo«!ht f«r Neb., nde lili'fe Ii o« i)MAllA, At Sidney this curred between H''u,.v Tho trouble tickets' diingb:,. ii.^o, who u ai'r1' fj lilg ofcwal fconti a-po« d. N tchai the ninot M»b )ast ig d'jtenninc' i.-rded in 1 abuU» ftl Iiavnor and v#' and Bend her learned of if, ra» 0 I cuo his wife, a''d shouting, the res uit W1 it a linger shot off anJ was arretted. ^abisl Grace Greenwood*' of Victoria. flaw mute