Newspaper Page Text
HOME EDITION 1..... '..'. ..',, ...... V -yl'-iiv ; First pictures from flood dis- t r trict on page Bof Time* today * VOL. IX. NO. 93. THRILLING HUNT FOR TORNOW, BEAST-MAN STRIKERS ARE ORDERLY ATTHEST.PAULMILL POLICE ON JOB Commissioner Pet tit—'There has been no necessity yet for the police to take any action in the St. Paul mill strike. We shall see to it that every man who wants to go to work over there is protected, of course. 8o far there has been nothing for the police to do. The pickets were orderly this morning. There was no profanity. Rven the word 'Bcab' wasn't used." nusUimn Agent Hiirns, Centra! 1 ,ab.ii- Council—"Three employes of the St. Paul mill were fired Saturday because they refused to sign a petition for police protec tion. The petition was drawn up In the company offices and taken around to the men for signature." I. W. W. Statement —"Forty men have quit work at the St. Paul mill since Saturday night. We are satisfied with the prog ress. We are insisting on good behavior among the men." Everything was quiet and : PICKETS AND OFFICERS CLASH AT HOQUIAM (Ity Times Staff Hpeclnl.) HOQUIAM, April 8. —Blood flowed In the Hoquiam strike today when special police charged on the pickets around Lytell's mill and drove them back with clubs. Among the pickets were many women and children. The pickets had gathered at the mill before it opened. It had agreed in advance that they were to say nothing, and do nothing to provoke rioting. Ordered to move back they stood silent, immovable. Then the fire hose from the mill was turned on them. The pickets turned their backs and took the drenching. Rocks were then thrown from the mill yards by the special police and striker-breakers, followed up with a change with clubs. Sergeant Hardwick of the city police directed the attack, threatening the crowd with his revolver. For ten minutes last night at a Salvation Army meeting Mayor Ferguson of Hoquiam, a former minister, prayed for justice to the lumber mill strikers and an early settlement. "Gentlemen, while yoH sleep, I talk to God every night," said the mayor. "I pray for justice ugainst Injustice, for want agalnHt greed. The strike here Is the best conducted I have ever seen. I would rather bring about a settle ment through prayer than by any OTHER SIDE OF THE STORY "All the mills are running. The 92 men are getting $2.50. The men are satisfied." This was the statement of Thos. Hutchlnson, manager of the Northwestern mill at Hoquiam, over the long distance telephone today. "The agitation was stirred up by the I. W. W. The mill work ers didn't want to quit, but were afraid to stay at work." Asked about the attack at the American Lady * Peace Guards VIENNA, April 8. —"Hopefully we European peace workers look across the Atlantic to the great American people to aid us in pre venting a general war in Europe, the danger of which Is great— greater perhaps than In many years," says Ilaroness Bertha yon Suttner, Europe's leading peace propagandist, who will start next month for New York to tour the United States under the auspices of the Federated Women's club of America. "I have great faith in the power of the federated organized American women and from the new world help will be brought to the old through example, deeds and support." South NSt $60.00 each for three lots in Hosmer's Add. Street grade, sidewalks and all taxes paid. Abstract and warranty deed. One block from car line. Calvin Philips & Co. California Bldg. Main 22 peaceful today when the em ployes or 11>« Bt. Paul mill rallied to the 7 o'clock whistle. CoinmlßJ'ioner Pettit, Mayor Seymour and 26 policemen were on hand to see what happened. President Kverett Ortggs and Superintendent Hart W. Palmer were there on horseback. The strike pickets were also on hand. "There wasn't anything done that the authorities could take exception to," said Petitt today. "The strikers called out to the men urging them not to work for lees than $2.50 a day, telling them that the mill was on strike and using arguments. That was all." A squad of police were at the mill gates at noon, but there was no disturbance. One or two I. W. W. men were there to see what was going on, but there was no attempt made to get the men to quit work. "The strikers will be at the eates tonight," they said. "That's the best chance to tMk to the men who are working." other method. "Remember Jesus Christ was a member of the carpenters' union, and he never deserted." Dr. H. F. Titus, veteran free speech fighter, is on trial today in the local courts for "intimidat ing strike breakers." A disagree ment is predicted. A similar case in federal court was thrown out by Judge Hanford at Seattle last week. Lytell mill today, Hutchinson de clared it was the fault of the strike pickets. "One man was riding into the mill on his bicycle," he said. "The pickets pulled him off and beat him up. The city police in terfered and the strikers started throwing rocks. Then they turned the hose on them and drove them away. "The strikers have started all the trouble whenever there was any," Hutchinson insisted. LAFOLLETTE IS AROUSED LINCOLN, Neb., April B.— Red hot denunciation of- Gifford Pincuot and others, whom he charges with "perverting facts to justify their desertion. of his presidential candidacy, was made here today by Senator Robert M. LaFollette in a telegri'.ni to Ru dolp Spreckels of San Francisco. The telegram said: "The attempt of any' of my former supporters to justify their desertion of my candidacy by making a scapegoat of my cam paign manager, Walter Houser, is a cowardly perversion of the facts. ' They know that- persons authorized the withdrawal of my candidacy and no person ever professed to have such authority. "They knew that I have per sistently refused to withdraw In favor of Roosevelt or anyone else, and I told them again and again that, once having entered into the contest I would not back out. "I told Pinchot and his follow ers that I would not play a double game or be stool pigeon for Roosevelt or anyone else. "I refused absolutely to be a stalkli g horse for the candidacy of any man. If I were to make such a recox? I would not be able to hold up my head or look an honest man in the face." hit ny temu saw. John Demnnski U suing the N. P. In Clifford's court today for .51,999 for being slashed upon the arm by a buzz saw which he s»\ys the company did not have protected in its South ,T«conia uhops The Tacoma Times THE ONLY INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER IN TACOMA Countess Works To Get More Cardinals COUNTESS MAXIM. (By United I'iiks Leaned Wire.) ROME, April 8. —Countess Spottlswood Maklm of St. Louis, Mo., who broke her engagement with Duke of Marlgliauo and went to Paris to live some time ago, has suddenly returned to re new her efforts to get greater representation for America in the sacred college, which will elect the next pope. Her aim is to get three more cardinals. The countess, who was made such by Pope Leo XIII, has done much to stimulate American ideas here and assisted I uorganizlng the Fourth of July club to cele brate the American national holi day. TO PROSECUTE KIDNAPERS LOS ANGELES, Cal., April 8. —Henry T. Gage, former gover nor of California and minis it of the United States to Portugal, has been retained as counsel by Editor A. R. Saver of the San Diego Weekly Herald, who claims he was kldnxped and ordered to leave San Diego. Saver is in Los Angeles. "My counsel says I have the prettiest cas^ he has seen in a long time and we can send the en tire crew to the penitentiary. We're going to have a merry time. They intended to get four of us —Kelly, Woodby, one other and myself, but they got scared and missed, fire." • ROOSKVEIiT 18 TO 1. • • The republican precinct • • commltteeman in the 14th • • precinct of the Fifth ward • • has just completed a very • • significant poll. 0 • He reports 102 republican • • voters out of a registration • •of 122. They lined up 95 • • for Roosevelt to 7 for Taft. • RELIEF FUND GROWS The Early Relief fund has reached $65 and money Is coming in fast. , . .. - The Imperial cafe will give five per cent of the gross receipts all this week. Other contributors, thus far are: H. E. Rawllngs, $3; John T. Price, $5; Montesano Eagles, $1.50; H. J. Pepe, $1; Alex, Shortes, $1; Liberal Engrav ing company, $4. 14THl0AY:l0F~FAST SEATTLE, April B.—At noon today I Dr. -Linda Burfield "., Haz zard, th© fast specialist, began the 14th day of her fast, weighing 18 pounds less than when she be gan. This morning she took a two -mile walk.■■" ■. .'. HEARING IS POSTPONED WASHINGTON, April 8. —An other, petition in the inter moun tain rate case Involving the long and short haul will' be made in October of the present year thus postponing the ' decision - - of -■ the matter until ■ next * winter, accord ing to an order of the United Su preme court here today. TACOMA, WASHINGTON, MONDAY, APRIL 8, 1912. FREE LOT IE! FADE 111 THE NIGHT MAXY flUiUi Mil l> COU. POXS FOR FRKK liOTH IN - CALIFORNIA BUT CAN'T FIND PROMOTERS. • t, : '■ The "Exposition j Development Co." has ceased its philanthropic endeavors In Tacoma. j ; Vi After a lively three j weeks "giving away" lots somewhere] in California, the two young men who were always reticent about giving their names, quietly "beat it" and this morning are gone. Free I «., DrttiviijC- They had an office in the Per kins block. They had drawings at picture shows and nearly every patron won a lot. They asked for $2.50 for the deed from each win ner who was to call at the office later with from $4 to $7 more and get full abstract. > v • * !i£J A lot of. people fell for this philanthropy. Most of them were women. Mrs. J. A. Atchison, 2513 North 2Sth stret, was one. She paid the $2.50 to the young man who called and was to hand over $4 more this morning. •■. •■• ■__, ■. ■ This morning her husband went to 327 Perkins block, the office of the "company," but there was nothing doing. The office was closed.. ■ Over half a dozen citizens call ed up Commissioner Pettit this morning reporting similar experi ences. Atcheson .declares he will de mand the prosecution of the tne aters for their part in the matter. JcitY AGAIN. For the second time the jury disagreed yesterday afternoon In the suit of Casby Canlda for $20,000 against the Pacific Na tional Lumber Co. for the death of her husband, who was injured in the mill of the company In 1910 and died In the Insane asy lum. COUPLE FORFEITS BAIL. Sheriff Longmire yesterday ar rested Edna Mason and Florence Wagner at Elbe for not behaving properly. They put up $50 each to appear this morning In court, but forfeited bail. Tacoma Woma^ Bares Life To Save Accused Robber LOS ANGELES, April 8. —Tryi&g to save Charles Dean from extradition to Canada to be triW for robbing the Hank of Montreal at Westminster, Mrs. WilHnm Griffin of Tacoma, who says she got a divorce from her husband to live with Dean, told the U. S. commissioner that she hrfd lived with Dean as his wife at Portland, Tacoma and New W*»tminster and that Dean was with her at home the night of the robbery. Italian Man and Maid Soon Are Soon To Be Made One "There will be a wedding soon." £. Berti Williams smiled when he said it, and the Italian colony will celebrato the triumph of true loveftfchen It occurs and pretty Delia Ollva becomes his bride. Ip Bertl and John Oliva, brother of the girl returned from the pen yesterday. Williams known that the course^f true love never did run smooth, but the course is generally not so rocky as his. He loved Delia Oliva. So did Joe^Rossl. Important in the case was the fait that Delia loved Williams and not Rossi. "Williams loved you because j^m^are beautiful I will spoil your beauty," shrieked Rossi one night as he slashed the girl with a razor and came near ending Uer lifef- ~ Rossi escaped. Williams and Jain Oliva. her brother, laid for Gatto and filled him full of load. The law seized them and in the meantime grabbed Rossi alao. All three were sent to the pen. She besieged the governor to pardon her brother and lover. The goverior yielded and they came home yesterday. Equal Suffrage In Arizona (By United Press Leased Wire.) PHOBNIX, Ariz., April B.— After a torrid debate the bill pro posing a woman suffrage consti tutional amendment passed tne lower house of the Btate legisla ture today by a vote of 21 to 14. The fate of th« measure in the senate is uncertain. I MU'STIUKS HKSIMKI) LONDON, April B.—Many In dustries resum«d simultaneously with the coal mines throughout England today. It will be two weeks before a normal coal sup ply is re-established. Scotch, mines are working full crews. British and Welsh mines are op erating with half their regular forces. NEW LONDON, Conn., April 8. —Twenty-nine women and chil dren from the burning steamer Ontarlo were landed here today by the tug Tasco. The Ontario carried 90 paMeiigera. Joke Gives Vote To Women In Michigan MRS. C. B. HAMILTON, AN ARDENT MICHIGAN B LOBBY IST, FOR SUFFRAGE. p&V£s I (It* United Frew leased Win.) I ANSING, April 8. —Michigan wol m may get to < vote as '< a re sal of an Intended Joke. -^, , ''. • -1 »$ *tandl>at,jit.ate nonate was tut; ing "down everything the In- R\ir »at' hong passed. Gov. Og bor called one extra session, thei another. So the senate —as a joHc— -nent a suffrage bill down to ,i ill the house's bluff. ■ ■ .Li be; women thronged the capl tol, i».The bill came up In . the hoi c, got a tie vote. Then man urtet man changed his vote and ll:<! flnal count was 75 to 19. .:'.. , S»rtrßK'' will lie voted on now by .^people ,in November ,with a Cttt[ chance to pass..<■>■*•'. F. R. Denounces Sen* Lorimer (Ily I'nlted Press l*-ns ( -ii Wire.) CLINTON, 111., April B.—More than 8,000 people heard Colonel Theodore Roosevelt here today. 3* denounced Lorimer roundly, 'hen Colonel Roosevelt arrived fti Springfield Saturday night the rkthlicih of the local Roosevelt organization asked him not to de nounce Lor'mer. "I'll rpp Lqrlruer" Roosevelt re plied "if I lose every vote in this district." Roosevelt roasted Taffs action in having politicians like McKin ley, Penrose, Tawney, Barnes, Balllnger, Cannon, Guggenheim and Loriraer hk his managers. TAFT i\BOO, ROOSBVKIiT TOO. LOUISVILLE. Ky., April B.— Tabulated returns of the county republican conventions held Sat urday throughout Kentucky today Indicate that President Taft will have 1,600 vote* at the state con vention to be held Wednesday wad Roosevelt 700. DRAMATIC LIFE STORY OF MOST DESPERATE AND REMARKABLE OUTLAW SINCE HARRY TRACY It) Kreil Iloalt. First of all, try to picture John Tornow, the beast liinii. Your mental picture should he of dead-black eyes glowing through lids narrowvd to slits. From them shines a hate insensate of all humankind. For John Tornow is made with hate and loneliness. In his hate he has slain six men, if accounts be true, in cold blood. Two were of his own blood— his sister's sous. Two were strangers whom lie slew for gain. And two were deputies who had dared to match their forest cunning against the matchless cunning of the beast-man. You should visualise those dead-black eyes as Bhlnlng from un der heavy, frowning brows. The beast-ninn's cheeks are thin his cheek-bones high, his nose aquiline. He Btnudfi well over six feet in his nioccassins, and his Bhoulders are broad and his chest deep- but In these evidences of strength there 1b no hint of awkwardness. Ills loins are as slim, comparatively, as a greyhound'B, and when he moves it is with the swift stealthlness of the panther. Picture him now moving silently through the forest gloom He lopes, rather than walks, with a long, swinging, distance-killing stride, and never a twig snaps or « leaf rustles to herald his pro*- He is hatlegß, and his block hair liaiKK In dark locks over his shoulders*. His clothes are sod den with wet, caked with mud, and In tatt«>rs. A rifle rests In the crook of his arm. He glides through the brush until he comes to a natural clear- Ing where the sun's rays, hl.ua ing through the leafy roof, cast mottled patterns on the forest floor. There he pauses, crouch ing, his strong, nervous hands fondling the stock of the rifle, his nostrils qutveiin* like a stag's, liUs dead-black eyes alert and menacing. Then he moves on and melts into the dark gloom. That Is John To mow as only three living humans have seen him. Others saw him thus and died. This Is the story of . how he became a beast-man and the most remarkable outlaw of modern times. . . , TornowV Life Htory. John Tornow wag born on his father's ranch 16 miles north of the village of Satsop. Chehaliß county, 32 years ago. j His parents were German-born. His mother was a hard-working, frugal, com' monsense woman of the German peasant type. His father was a dreamer, a lover of solitude; his practical spouse held him stern ly to the duties of the farm when he would have gone a-huntlag. ' In this John took after " his father, while his brothers— Bill and Fred—and sister were ax practical and unromantlc as their mother. John became a hunter when he was 12 years old. *; It Is related of him that' he would slip away from the ranch and be gone for days at a time. The neighbors'said John was a "queer" boy. •; ** • ■ -V- ' ■ • Trappers and cruisers reported coming upon him 1 deep '.*' In the wodos, but when they tried to question him the boy .would press his lips together and return their stares of wonder and amuse ment with stares of-sullen defi ance. And sometimes they came upon him when he paid no atten tion to them at all. At these times he talked to beings which the woodmen could not see, heard voices which the wodsmen could not hear, and talked- In a lang uage which' the woodsman could not understand. • • ■ • : His • llrt.thers '.Practical. ' ' His brothers raved and railed at him for what they.termed h:s "shif tlessness." They .'complain ed that he did not do his share of work on the farm. ( And their talk was all of crops, and prices, and soils, and land values. ",.■ As John - approached ' young manhood he spent lees and less time *on the farm and more ana more In", the i woods. - * Sometimes he worked at logging, but ne made no friends in the camps. He would work feverishly all weeK, and on .Saturday, take his rine and ' disappear, returning Monday morning, dog-tired but at peace with himself. ...In these years lie learnt wood craft. .. He became a <lea<T-sliot. In Western, Washington ■ tney claim there Is no better shot lin the world than John T«r»<nr. •■«■ fg Of all who knew him I j have been unable ,to find more than one man who < was ">n terms ap proaching intimacy .-. with s tne beast-man," and that man was O. L. ■, Watson, . of . Montenano, the county seat. Watson told me this story - : as Illustrative of Tornow'B marksmanship. . .-'. Tornow-a Dead Shot. ; ' "There J were live |of us in an automobile on the valley road," said .*« Watson, "and V;- we \ were bumping along over a bad stretch at a good 80 miles an hour. The going was so bad we could hardly keep, our ' seats. Suddenly a . deer got up close to the road and went tearing off. through the brush. We could scarcely nee him. John, who was In the back- Beat with me, grabbed up nig rifle and let fly five times as taut as be could pull the trigger., Ami when wo found th«. deer he hud five IniI lot« through his In-art, and you could have covered all five wounds with a silver dollar." , Sheriff K.I Payette, who has charge of the hunt for Tornow, said: "I have never seen Tor now'« equal with a-:rifle, and there are many good shots In this section. - He never wastes a cart ridge. If he were standing In a road 1 vfeet wide, with thick brush on both Rides, and 20 deer were to try to cross the road at full speed, one behind another, he would get" them all at 200 yards." ...:,-, ; Tornow has two ■ friends In the world— Watson and an old hound. He hated women because, aB he said, "they talk too much," and he found' men nearly as 'bad for the same reason. >' He liked Watson because the latter appre ciated his distaste for talk. Wat son surprised him, on hunting and fishing trips, into little out bursts of friendliness of which he seemed ashamed. . "You ain't like the others," he said one*. "You don't yap all the time. . , Generally, however, he proved hi* friendship In other ways. "You fish here: It's the best place," he would say. Or, If he had killed a deer, he would say, "You can have It." • . •:■■ •,.;•■ He Never Missed. ■ A very few times he was per suaded to «o hunting with a par ty. : When a deer was started, he would let all the others shoot first, and if they missed, he would drop the animal Just before It reached cover. He would not ever take the trouble to keep his rifle loaded. He loaded and fired with one lightning motion. gjgW I "Yes, John's crazy, I guess," said Watson. "I hate to think it. He must 'be if he killed. all those men. He always was queer.V, I was at. the Tornows' one evening when he made a table dance with out touching it In a darkened room. There were some 'girls there and they squealed, the-way girls do, and it made John mad, I suppose. Anyway, when tne lights were turned up he was gone. He' didn't'.show up for a month." • AJbout three years ago a.trap per "reported that John was: liv ing In a cabin 2d: miles'inane woods and that show up for a ith." Lbout three years ago a trap reported that John was llv in a cabin 20 miles in tne >ds and that he was crazy, Ed, with whom John had quar reled most frequently and violent ly, had him arrested and placed in i sanitarium. in : Portland, }\ ' John' took French | leave, and, as the authorities had their doubts about his being insane, they let him go. He tramped the 160 miles back to Satsop in a line as straight ias the crow files, scorn ing- trains arid" even roads. "~ - V j. From as the he spent scorn trains and even roads. »ni then he spent practl aclly all - his time in the woods. His mother died in 1910, * and they Bent for Jonh to come to the funeral. He came as far as the edge >. of the clearing • only. r-- Hi» father died soon after. He refus ed to come to the house. :j--i; ■ .Quarreled. Over jPog.'sfv-siwj' -■•On one of his infrequent visits to the homestead he asked for Ed. r "Ed's gone hunting with one of the dogs,"! was the \ reply. *' ." "Whose dog?" : iiSi^ij|Sfi' .'»-VYOur».'. t; : 't'M H ■ .- '•> The Tornow • i boys, all t crack Khotti, kept ' many hounds on I the place. Some of them were llior (iiiKhbredM and valuable. -''Matter of-fact . Kit ! appraised a dog ,by . Its hunting ability and market Value. Therefore, lie laughed at Join's old old '- hound, . n crotchety, grulncd, rheumatic, wheesy. PAGE THREE He °<*^'M I |l[ WKATK Fair tonight V > 30 CENTS A mangy old brute. John loved <»>•■ lionnil liih'hiin.- It too, loved auli tude, anil roultln't talk.! ;;.-.;. V'.'j • John sat on the doorstop and waited/,-"*• j : ■; ,_,■;./. ■ : --) vM •When Rd returned ho said to John: "1 got tired of having that do* of yours give out on inn and.' having to carry him, so I ■; shot him." At that Instant there came. to the cars of the brothers the Joy ous yapping or a hound. .It war Kd's thoroughbred—a beautiful; bitch—delighted that her master had returned and hurrying to his. side. The graceful animal raced ; aorosg a distant field, and gath ered her muscles to clear the fence. She leapt. Killed it tin -I- 1, Dor. > And when she. was In midair*' John Tornow's rifle cracked.',;.lt*' was a' wonderful j shot—from' the hip. And the hound fell and lay " ■till, a bullet through her brain. '< Ed's cry of surprise and anger; choked In his throat. Steely y dead-black eyes were biasing into-' his. "SHOT MY IWKJ!" .»; i ;In that jii-.tniii the white heat of his >«•)» worked as a subtle-' iil.lieniy Inr the soul of John Tor now. In that liiMimt he became ■ lx-H»t-innn. . .; • . "I'm going bark •' Into ■", the n-nod*," he Mild In a dead voice. "And 1 'ain't ever coming out. Don't Mend for me, for I won't i come. Don't come after me; I'll' kill yon if you do." . ._•.;.;. Without a word of parting he turned on his heel. , Ed saw him take the path that leads down the hill to the river bottom. He,dl«— i appeared I over v the #dtge ,of ' the- \ hill. • He waded the Hatsop an<T crossed' * plouged field beyond.•<} He ill not turn his head. ,ii; He reached the edge of the clearing and the forest swallowed him up. . He Is there now, mad ruler or a territory m large' as' the Ger- , man • empire. He la . there .;•;'nowS: •worn Cm- of all humankind. He flit* through the forest shadows an silently and eerleljr as the uplr itt< with whom he holds converse. The trapper* say that one of the- NpliitH Is the soul of a cross-grain* *fr <■•!, rheumatic old hnuod. 3 . Foreigner Loves Our Flag *'"In the*old country I pay"'tax: and pay more. tax ."and have *m> ci freedom,' l.llke this country .'This a free country. Anybody, who raises a red. flag.-around-me," I».'■ start something quick, f I love th» I Our from my heart, 1' %%■ In tho old country I pay tax pay more tax and have no dom. 1 like this country. This cc country. Anybody who 98 a r«d> flag around me, I t something quick. I love th» irican flag from my heart," Bald Maurice Kaphalowlti -in Kasterday's \ court this * • morning applying for 'citizenship." :, > ;>: *il 'He made a hit with John Speed Smith, federal Inspector, and gotsgi his I papers. So did M. B.■> Ling- ~; limn, John.ZHkovich, Anton Marl- -•. vlvh," Charles' Blum, Peder • John son; John Whltmore. • '.-;.'( ;j 1 :'; "-'•'■:'»'' .',,,. —: —,'... ••- ' -.'*.» • ■:' Father.Daughter, -Same Jury n A.*r. vHoska;»sgr.,V and ?his> I Same Jury < . F. Hoska, dr., and his ghter, Mrs. Anglne Anderson, are. both ■on - the " jury: that * today is wrestling;; with J the ■"* case >-. or ,'■ Anna and Dominick Oliva against the T. R. & P. company., The- ■ Olivas ask 2,500 for damages-" sustained by Mrs. Ollva, who wan- - tlyown-by the.premature starting:, of a car,and.had,her back hurt. They are the premature starting:, "j --car and had her back hurt. ' are the parents of Delia. Oliva.","" ~. ---—. • — - 7-"'::rc;~v.; "CHUCHU" ARRESTED (Ily United Press r Leased Wlre-T f, *" PARIS, April j B.— Raymand Callentlne, ■ the <• second/ of 'i* ■ th« -^ "phantom bandits," ...,; who have been terrorizing Paris 1 for months/^ past, Is < under arrest here today. His capture was as skillfully ef- ' f fected as was that of Eduard Cal-*i^« loul last was that of Eduard Cal last week. Callentine Is ftßaymond;• the Scientist," on ac count of his ! fondness ! for scien tific terms in hia conversation. • • • • • • • • ••••'• « ••■-■J,. • c • Toll of death ' and: damage [•'v'-'. 9 exacted by the flood waters •' • of the Mississippi river: si c/r g> .^ •>. Thirty • persons reported !•%;>' • drowned. •!■/•"'■•. • ;: '-*;'. r^*^::•>'#*' • •;; Thirty- \ thousand ' persons;®-'% 9 homeless. C:' 1 ,-*;J ;; 1 :£ ;'■•;' ■, .■; • V • *:V Two y,:-. thousand square ■0' • miles of territory Inundated. #«| • . Damage estimated at $10, • 0 ? 000,000. s '^^•■^.^-.'^♦■■'i*! 9 • •••••••••••••••