mafiUM rv& w-2-.Vt-? ANY ONE CAN MAKETtoNEY' V m wmm Advice to Summer Tourists. Who has a good article to sen, and who adver tises vigorously and literally. Advertising Is truly the life of trade. All enterprising and judicious advertisers succeed. -t Don't fall to notify The Dispatch office of your change of location, and your paper will be forwarded to you without extra charge. E&iMMENSia mzm- ' ;b' Bfijfer st I FOETY-OimTH YEAH. A Rising From the Ruins of the Most Unfortunate City of Modern Times. WONDERS HAVE BEEN DONEl But Veritable Miracles Eemain to Be Performed. MILLIONS TET NEEDED FOE THE WORE. The Dliputch Institute! a Comparative In quiry Into the .Amount of Work Ac complished In Rebuilding the Wrecked Iron City of the Mountain A Bird' Eye View ef the Volley Jnt After the Flood and One Token To-Day The Sloney Already Expended leaves Scarcely nn Impressloo Scenes That Remind One uf a Western Mining Camp The Tough Element on Top New Buildings Few and Far Between Scenes Everywhere of Great Rain Large Areas or Wreckago Yet Un touched. '.So much stress has been laid upon the rapid rebuilding of Johnstown that The Dispatch sent an artist and a reporter to the flood-devastated district to see for them selves and describe the appearance of the place. Their report, which is subjoined, shows that, while much may have been ac complished, much yet remains, to be done before Johnstown is itself again. :mOU A STAFF COBEESPOSDIirT.l OHNSTOWN, July 28. A Dispatch re porter who was on duty at Johnstown during the week suc ceeding the disastrous flood of Hay 31, ac companied by a staff artist, has been charged with the task of imparting accurate information as to the progress made in near ly two months of re lief work. Like the thousands of readers of The Dispatch, who have from day to day followed the graphic ac counts of the progress of the task of restor ing the ruined city to a semblance of its former self, the reporter had imbibed the idea, that A VEST MASKED CONTRAST would be presented in the appearance of the city, as compared with the condition of af fairs when the raging waters of the Cone maugh had reluctantly withdrawn them selves from a scene of devastation unpar alleled in the history of this country. This idea had been measurably strengthened by the extremely favorable reports made in in terviews with reporters of this paper by members of the Pittsburg committee, and also by Governor Beaver's commission. It is not overstating the case to say that the current impression among the thousands of Pittsburgers who personally viewed the Johnstown ruins during the ten days nr two weeks succeeding the flood is that Johns town has RISEN FROM ITS RUINS. It will be granted as a matter of course that the roseate views of those who have been in Johnstown day in and day out since Bioret Erected on the Public Square by the Commission. the flood, and have seen the small improve ments gradually rising, and the horrors of the situation gradually diminishing, have some foundation in fact But when one who has carried a mental photograph of that awful scene of ruin for two months, sud denly returns and steps from the train to the side of the Pennsylvania depot, where at one glance what remains of the city can be seen, the sensation is one of great surprise, and recalls most forcibly Treasurer Thompson's remark, quoted in these columns, that "$10,000,000 would not restore the city. ALMOST A SHOCK. The impression was almost painful, almost a shock. In every direction stretch the same broad acres of debris that met the eye in the first days after the flood. It is uni versally admitted that the scene as a whole baffled description, and, it cannot be said that the contrast is so marked as to render easier the task of word-painting the scene. To be sure, the vista of devastation is dotted by new roofs here and there. But so few and far between are these evidences of rebuilding industry that the isolation is ter ribly overwhelming. In general terms, the traces of the work of man are still grimly overshadowed by the footprints of the storm. Here and there can be seen a narrow ribbon of fair ground running through the dr-ary waste of debris. These are the streets which have all been opened by the contractors. But the territory they inclose is seemingly untouched. A NATURAL QUESTION. Involuntarily one propounds the mental query: "What has all the money accom plished?" and this question cannot be an swered by a cursory inspection nothing but a minute and painstaking tour of the ruined district can at all satisfactorily con vey to one's mind an adequate idea of the results of the expenditure, and the conclu sion which comes with irresistible force is NEW JOHNSTOWN Br m - -i sl fL1 while wonders have been accomplished.mlr acles yet remain to be done. Several weeks.since, when General Hast ings formally withdrew from Johnstown, he is on record as having said that the town site was cleaned up; that all the cellars had been uncovered, and that the inhabitants could now proceed in the work of rebuild ing the city, unhampered by debris or rem nants of the wreck. This statement was ' HAILED 'WITH SATISFACTION. at the time, but it must be acknowledged that it had only a slight foundation in fact, for whole square blocks by the dozen yet remain covered from three to ten feet deep with every variety of rubbish. Or it is barely possible that acres of Johnstown's business and dwelling honses were built without cellars. In short, it is a reasonably safe conclusion that a square half mile of the heart of Johnstown has not even been disturbed by those in charge of the business of clearing up the wreck. But it mast be conceded that in clearing up several miles of streets AVAST AMOUNT OP WRECKAGE . . has been removed. The streets caught the bulk of the floating debris, both from the original onset of the flood and the subse quent backwater from the stone bridge, for the simple reason that the rushing waters took the streets, especially those lined with substantial brick stores, as a natural waterway offering no obstruction to the cur rent. Main street was thus jammed with debris, as were a few other steeets. But those thoroughfares closer to the direct cur rent of the flood were obliterated, being cov ered by sand, bricks and earth, to the depth of from three to five feet The task of re- LOOKING DOWK storing these streets was sot as formidable as if all had been piled nigh with wreckage as were Main, Market, Vine and Clinton streets. scarcity, of netT-IKj ildings. Where was the new city bailt of wood? "Where were the rows of temporary houses? Not visible, certainly. 'Shanties, booths, lean-tos, in some profusion, but not the &. Portable Houses Going to Waste. solid blocks of wooden buildings that were expected to be seen. It must be confessed that outside of the business block on the square of goose pasture in the center of the city, that used to rejoice fn the appellation of "The Park," and some scattered stores of the same description all erected by the commission, and a very useful and valuable addition, just meeting the wants of the community there are very few new build ings. There are at least a dozen very cred itable new wooden buildings, either-erected or in course of erection by firms or individ uals. Last, but by no means least, are the SHANTIES -WHICH HAVE SPRUNG UP all over town, in which the saloon element does business. Taken as a whole, the flimsy character of the buildings, the suggestive heaps of beer kegs, the square-shouldered barkeepers, the gang of hulking ruffians standing abont the doorways, and the brawling in progress in the illy-lighted interior, where a gummy plank fulfils the double purpose of a sup port for the drink and drinkers, this ele ment of Johnstown has al! the racy color of a toagh mining camp in the Booties. Nowhere has the writer been accorded a view of a tougher class of camp followers and all-around thugs than that which in fests Johnstown. Burgess Hoerle says that any of these fellows who gets "in the soup," the current definition for drunk and disor derly, will be- OrVEN TO ANY PEOrERTYHOLDEB for as many days' work as is represented by the amount of fined. Bnt the' property holder might have to . mount guard with a gun to' enforce the working out of that While upon this subject, it may be as well to state that a sort of reign of terror begins at nightfall. Women and children some times Buffer for necessities, through their fear of passing through the streets to reach the various commissaries. The fear has some foundation in fact, as the ruffians have been gunned for on several occasions by angry relatives of women insulted upon the streets. Beturnlng to the matter of actual work done, a detailed tour of the wrecked district was determined upon as the best, and, in fact, the only method of- arriving at an in telligent estimate of the Work accomplished in the p ast two months. A BIBDSETE VIEW. Crossing the Conemaugh on the rude wagon bridge which offers the only means of ingress or egress from the Pennsylvania depot, a few hundred feet brings one to Washington street, which parallels the Cambria offices, the company stores and the Baltimore and Ohio depot. From the bridge to the street both sides of the way are lined with shanties, from which every sort of arti cle is hawked. Washington street rejoiced in 23 saloons before the flood, and has now- WSS5rs sliS; JSS the proud distinction of possessing a series of buildings, each of which is a saloon.. Passing the Cambria offices it is noted with surprise that very little work has been done in fixing up those buildings. The mass of debris which crushed in one side of the company stores of Morell & Co. has been partially removed, and the foundations lay bare awaiting rebuilding. SCENES OF CBEAT BUIN. There is no further point of interest until the Baltimore and Ohio depot is reached. On the Conemaugh side of "Washington street some railroad tracks have been laid as sidings. Otherwise this vast expanse, from the wagon bridge up toward Conemaugh as far as the eye can reach, remains untouched, just as it was after the flood. There is a small cluster of new bouses in the rear of the Baltimore and Ohio depot, and a fer tents show their peaked roofs further up the valley. A -WASTE OF CAPITAL. The Dispatch representative had been looking diligently for some indication of the Chicago portable houses, locally styled "boomer houses," but had not seen any in dication of them until a visit was paid to the rear of the .jl depot There stood one large and one small "boomer," ptpp.IpA ftvidpntlv s Boomer Home. sampler But lining the tracks of the Baltimore and Ohio for fully one-third of a mile were sections of the houses piled upon the ground. There . FRANKLIN BTBEET FBOM BALTIMORE AND must have been fully 300 houses lying there rotting. This state of affairs called for some in aulry. The master carpenter of the Johns town commission, whose office stantls'upoa- the opposite corner to the Baltimore and Ohio depot, informed the reporter that 127 of the houses had been erected up to date. "Where?" "Oh! all around. On the hillsides." "How many are lying on the ground?" "Oh, I couldn't say just how many. The boomer houses aren't very popular." BETTER THAN TnE BOOMERS. A very intelligent young man who came along volunteered some information. The "boomer houses," either large or small, only contained one room. When first brought to Johnstown the large honses were sold to citizens at $250 and the small at $100, but when they proved a drug in the market, the price fell to 5150 and $90. Had any been given away? Not that he knew of. Any one who wanted a "boomer house" had to pay for it out of the amount allowed by the Governor's Com mission. This young man pointed to a rather' J nice looking two-story building of wood near by, and said that it was a sample of the kind of house that Contractor Hughes,of Brie, was going to fur-: nish for $235. Be said he had just put in an application for a A Hughes House. house, and had found 200 odd applicants ahead of him. He also explained that a. train of cars on the siding, HEAVILY LOADED -WITH LUMBER, represented Mr. Hughes' houses, and that work would be started huilding the houses im mediately. Oh, yes; fne commission would deduct the $235 in every case. The factthat any man had an application in for a house was known to Judge Cummin, who held out A New Restaurant. the amount in making settlements. Yes; he had no doubt that the "boomer houses" would rot before ther were used. He thought they would make good wash-houses, alter a while. ( So, after a glance at the capital going to waste the reporter moved on. It may be stated tent no subsequent investigation brought to light anything like "127" of the "boomer houses." Bight adjoining theBal timore and Ohio depot is the new Mansion House under construction, the largest new building In the towp. It occupies the old site, and will soo be orfcn for',theaccommo dation of man and beast. The Baltimore and Ohip people are filling up the yawning gap made byflie flood in the eastern side of the depot building. They hare also erected a handsome freight depot, 150 long and 26 feet wide, covered on the outside with corrugated zinc The old temporary wooden freight depot still does duty indifferently well. MOBS EASILY REPAIRED. Clinton street was next traversed. It runs from Washington street over to the bank of Stony creek, and within a stone's throw of the queer little hotel occupied by Dictator James B. Scott as his headquar ters. The stores on Clinton street, from Washington to Main, a distance of two Continued en Sixth Page. Jpilll MSZ1 NV j-v ..ga PITTSBURG, MONDAY, JULY 29, 1889. HIS FATHER'S SHOES. James E. Garfield, Son of the Mar tyred President, Will bo A CANDIDATE -FOE- CONGRESS In the District Which His Father Belong Represented. A GOOD LAWYER AND TEET POPULAR. Bis Coming 'llUnea a Btronj One, Socially and ftlitlully. James B. Garfield, the favorite son of the late President Garfield, appears to be following his father's footsteps, politically. He is now being talked of as a candidate for Congress from the old Nineteenth dis trict of Ohio, and his coming marriage is expected to strengthen his chances. rSrECI.il. TILEQBAX TO TBI DISPATCHI Cleveland, July 28. Jim Garfield, as the late President used to call his favorite son, James B. Garfield, is in training for politics, and his alliance with Miss Helen Newell, of Chicago, daughter of President John Newell, of the Lake Shore road, will not handicap him on any side. Jim is the brainiest of the boys General Garfield left behind him, and resembles the early pictures of his father very strik ingly, with the exception that he -wears OHIO DEPOT. glasses, while his father did not He is a fine scholar, a fair orator, and is developing into s good lawyer. I ' -WHEN JIM WAS A BOY. 4 About 20 years ago President Gerfield,, then Representative of the old Nineteenth district in Congress, resided in Hiram, and on the adjournment of Congress used to return there with his family. Jim and Hal, the two young lawyers, were then small boys. Jim was about as mischievous as boys ever are, almost the exact counterpart In this re spect of what his father had been'atthe same age. Hal, or Harry, as he has since been called, was of a decidedly sedate nature and easily believed almost anything which his younger brother would tell him. Young James K. Garfield has never lost his residence in the old Nineteeni-h district He lives with his mother at the homestead in Mentor, and goes back and forth every day on the train. He is beginning to take some interest in politics down there, and it will be very strange, if he continues to re side there, if he is not sooner or later sent to Congress. Hon. Ezra B. Taylor, who now represents the district, is quite well along in years. He succeeded General Garfield in 1881, and was eleeted last fall for the fifth time. A PROMINENT DISTRICT. The Nineteenth district takes pride in re turning the same mau over and over, and in this way has always been prominent in the councils of the nation. It has only had five Bepublicans since its organization as a dis trict, viz: Elisha 'Whittlesey, Joshua B. Giddings, John Hutchins, James A. Gar field and Ezra B. Taylor. It is quite probable that the future career of young James Garfield may lie in the same line as that of his father. The alliance he is about to make will be a strong one socially, politically and in a business way. A SUDDEN AWAKENING. Occnpnnts of n Boarding House Aronsedby the Building's Fall. Kansas City, July 28. Early this morning the east wall of the three-story brick" building, at No. 227 West Ninth street, occupied by Mrs. E. Norton as a boarding house, fell outward, carrying with it the adjacent rooms, which were filled with lodgers, who awoke to find themselves being hurled to the ground and buried in the debris of bricks, plaster und household furniture. No one was killed and only four persons were injured, and they but slightly. The injured are: Mr. and Mrs. Campbell, E. B. Hughes and F. D. Pair. The acci dent was caused by an adjacent excavation which weakened the foundation. LOOKING AFTER HIS FRIENDS. Colonel Bayne Attending to the Appoint meats In Bis. District. rsrZCIAZ. TEX.XOHAM TO TK DISPATCH. 1 Washington, July 28. Hon. Thomas M. Bayne has arrived in the city, to remain for i few days on business connected with appointments in his district. Among them are several fourth class post masterships, and these, with one or two- more important offices, will keep him busy making the rounds of the departments lor several days. THEIR FOURTH OF JULT. The Peruvian Republic Celebrates Its Anni versary of National Independence. LIMA, July 28. The sixty-eighth anni versary of the independence of Peru was observed to-day With great enthusiasm. The ordinary Congress has been installed and continues an uninterrupted disousaion of the Graes contract The submittal of this matter to the Senate is expected dally. It has been delayed only by a trifling detail. BIOTOUS STRIKERS. An Armed Mob la Terrifying the Working; Minora at Srreator, III. A Number of TUemlll-TJsed- Fear of Mare Ssrloas Trouble. Stbeatoe, III., Jnly 2& The riotous proceedings' of the striking coal miners at Kangley, near this city, last night has caused forebodings of further trouble. It was the Kangley miners who, at the time of the trouble at No. 3 shalt here a few weeks ago, marched in solid phalanx, 100 strong, and defied the sheriffs of two counties and 50 deputies, and unon dif ferent occasions since that time the Kangley men have been out, bent on mischief. Sat urday night, headed by 150 women, the whole mining population ol the town, aside from the families of the 40 or 50 men at work, marched to the shaft of the Star Coal Company, and with muskets loaded with buckshot and salt, and with revolvers, clubs and stones, defied the miners from below to come to the mouth of the pit Then three men climbed up the ladders, but they were roughly handled, and the others were afraid to come. up. For more than two hours the mob held full sway, and but for the fact that a blinding storm came up, the rain falling and the liehtning flash ing with unabated fury, the frightened miners might have suffered a hard fate. Deputy Sheriff Hugh Hall, who went from this city to disperse the mob, could do nothing to quell the excitement, and but for the storm the worst mizht have happened, for the 300 people were thirsting for blood, which would certainly have been shed had they not been driven away by the rain. Kangley is comparatively without police protection and the mob was therefore enabled to organize without exciting much suspicion. It is feared that Monday they will carry out their threats to injure the men and de stroy the property of those who will not join them in the strikes. Sheriff Morrissey, of yuawa, witn Hugh .Hall and other depu ties, are on the ground prepared for any thing that may come up, but the strikers are determined that these 40 men shall cease work, and as they are a reckless set of for eigners, there is likely to be trouble. DAKOTA POLITICS. Chances In the Calculations of the Party Leaders General Allen's Chief Dan ger Some Splee Added to the Fight for Office. ISFKCIAI. TZLZGSAV TO THK DISPATCH. 1 Bismarck, N. D., July 28. The re fusal of Hon. John Miller to allow his name to' be used in connection with the Governor ship has changed the political calculations of the various party leaders. Miller has been looked to by everybody as a compro mise candidate between Allen and Pancher. The best Bepnblicans have felt that the nomination would be a happy termination of convention difficulties. General Allen's chief danger arises from the avowed determination of the alliance to secure the nomination of farmers for Gov ernor and Lieutenant Governor. It is sup posed that F. B. Fancher, President of the Constitutional Convention, will receive the support of most of the alliance delegates in the State convention. The farmers are not opposed to General Allen except as his can didacy interferes "with the plans above mentioned. Personally he is unobjection able. There is some personal hostility between Fancher and Allen, which adds spice to the political game without endangering the in terest of the party. The sharp canvass in behalf of these two gentlemen promises to divide the convention abont evenly, and a deadlock is possible, which might result in defeating both.. It is apparent that "Miller's withdrawal has strengthened Allen, but at the same time it has caused the Fancher faction to redouble their efforts. While there are 40 counties in the State, 8 of them have dele gates enough to nominate. That the best possible canvass is being made on both sides there is no room to doubt, and while Gen eral Allen believes that his success is almost certain since Miller's withdrawal, Mr. Fancher's friends are equally confident HISSED THE DIAMONDS. A Burglar Steals the Relics of a Dead Husband. rSriCIAL TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH. New York, July 28. Among the "losts" in to-day's papers appeared this notice: If the person who entered the house No. 31 West Twenty-seventh street on Friday morn ing will return the heavily mounted silver bag, they are welcome to the contents, the said bag being the gift of a deceased husband. The owner of the lost bag is, or was, Mrs. Chas. L. Wright It was a velvet bag, such as ladies wear attached to a belt, and the clasp was of heavy silver. On retiring Thursday night Mrs. Wright left the windows unfastened. The bag, which contained $42 50 in gold, was lying on top of a bureau near a roll of $10 bills, and behind it a pincushion containing $1,000 worth of diamond ornaments. When she arose in the morning the bag and bills were gone, but the diamonds remained. There were muddy tracks of bare feet on the car pet and on the balcony. ' THE PRESIDENTAL SUNDAY. Mr. Harrison Attends Church and Then Takes a (tulet Little Stroll. Deer Pabk, Md.. July 28. About 10 this morning the President, accompanied by Attorney General Miller and ex-Senator Davis, drove to Oakland and attended the Presbyterian Church. BeV. John S. Foulk, the pastor, preached on the, transfiguration of Christ The news had got abroad that the President was coming and the church was crowded. Secretary 'Windom and Mr. Halford rep resented the 'Washington officials at the hotel chapel, where they heard a sermon by Eev. George Morrison, of Baltimore. Dr. Scott, Mrs. Harrison's father, made the closing prayer. President Harrison rested during the afternoon, and in the early even ing he strolled over to the Davis villa with Mrs. Harrison and Mrs. McKee. The Attorney General accompanied him home and spent the evening at the White House cottage. B0ULANGER BEATEN. The General Loses More Elections Than no Wins In France. Paris, Julv 28. Elections for members of the Councils General were held through out France to-day. General Boulanger con tested 451 cantons. He has been successful in Bordeaux, where he polled 3316 votes against 2,691 for his opponent He was de feated in Montpeller and Bonen. Belurns from 550 cantons show that Gen eral Boulanger has been successful In only 12. Beturns are still awaited from 903 can tons. The police raided the office of La Presse to-day and seized a number of letters directed to General Boulanger. HUNDREDS OF LIVES LOST. A Terrlblo Cyelone Sweeps Over Two Districts of Austria. Vienna, July 28. A cyelone In Hun gary, Transilvania and Bukovina to-day sw4pt over several thousand square miles of territory. Hundreds of persons were killed, the crops were destroyed and enormous dam age was done to houses ana churehes. The districts of Grosswondein Szegdin and Mo hacs were completely ravaged, i THEIR HANDS FULL. The Cincinnati Police Endeavor Close All the Saloons. to A COUPLE OP LIVELY EIOTS. One Hundredand Fifty Persons Were Taken in Charge, and SOME WERE PULLED MORE THAN ONCE. Hona of the Concert Halls Were Allowed to Ciie Any FerfomUBces. The police of Cincinnati made a vigorous effort to reform the city yesterday. All sa loons which sold openly were raided. A large number of arrests were made. Several disturbances resulted. Cincinnati, July 28. To-day has been a regular field day between the saloon keep ers and the police. Ot the 212 saloonists that met at Turner Hall last week all, with the exception of abont 40, tried to keep open. In consequence there were about 150 arrests. The police had orders to re-arrest all who attempted to keep open, but there were not more than 30 cases of this kind. By far the greater part ol the saloons were, to all appearances, closed. In the suburbs there was comparatively little trouble, as the police had warned the sa loonists on Saturday night not to keep open to-day. Most of the arrests were made down town and over the Bhlne. only soft dblnks. The saloonist Eichler, who has made himself famous by his vigorous resistance of the Owen law, kept his saloon open, sell ing only "soft" drinks, such as lemonade, mineral water, etc., and was not arrested. Druggists, however, were not permitted to sell soda water, lemonade or cigars. Over the Bbine two or three-riots took place this afternoon. At Fifteenth and V ive streets, about 4 o'clock this afternoon, the police undertook to arrest a man for dis orderly conduct A crowd of 1,600, com posed chiefly of hoodlums that infest that neighborhood, quickly gathered and the cry ol "Mob the police" was raised. The mob set upon the police with clubs and fists and one policeman was badly beaten, his scalp being cut, but he was not seriously injured. About a dozen policemen kept the crowd back with their clubs, while an officer ar rested the man. On the corner of Walnut and Twelfth street, at Warwinger's saloon, an unsuc cessful attempt to resist the police was made. This saloon was always considered a rendezvous for Anarchists and Socialists and is looked on as a dangerous place. Three reporters who went over the Rhine this evening to look up matters had quite an adventure. SUNNING THE GAUNTLET. They were suspected of being spies and the crowd demanded that they give an account of themselves. Two of them gave satisfac tory reasons, but the third was obliged to turn and run down Vine street, followed by the mob, and he only escaped serious injury by being rescued by the police. Throughout the city the work of the police has been admirable. The entire force of the city is on duty. Most of these, however, are hed in reserve At the various station houses in case of an outbreak. The question of whether the Sun day closing law is to be obeyed or not is becoming one of universal interest People arc taking one side or the other, but to the credit of tbe !city be it said that a great many, even the saloon keepers, are in favor of the enforcement of the law, and tbe greatest indignation exists on ac count of the riotous proceeding of the hoodlums. More saloons have been closed to-day than on any previous Sunday since the at tempt was first made to enforce the law. Kissell's and two other large concert halls have the lights turned on, bnt the front part is closed and there are no concerts any where In the city. BEADY FOB ARREST. All the saloon keepers who were arrested gave bail for their appearance. There was a pre-arrangement by those saloon keepers who had agreed to remain open to-day, so that those who were arrested had no trouble in getting bail. At the Bremen street police station, which is in the center of the Over-thc-Khine district, a crowd of from 200 to 300 hung about all day, and after the arrest at Vine and Fifteenth streets their number increased to fully 1,500 per sons. Chief of Police Phil Deitsch remained at his headquarters till midnight The Po lice Commissioners were all within tele phone call, and from time to time received his reports on the situation. The number in favor of Sunday closing are constantly increasing, and the riotous proceedings of to-day have made many ac cessions to the law-abiding class. The major ity of the saloon keepers openly favor not only the enforcement of the law to-day. but are also in favor of Sunday closing. Mem beis of the Saloon Keepers' Association are expressing their disgust with the faction which has brought their association into disrepute. At 11 o'ejock to-night Vine street has been pretty well cleared, and that without serious resistance. The whole city is now quiet and no more trouble is ex pected. AT KANSAS CITY. . The Police Commissioners Finally Succeed In Closing Up Nearly All the Saloons on Sunday Just Outside the Limits a Big Business Was Done All Day. Kansas City, July 28. The Police Commissioners are finding it very difficult to enforce the Sunday law. Arrests were first made under the old city ordinance, but it was found to be unconstitu tional. Then a later city ordinance was tried, but Police Judge Boland, who has jurisdiction over such cases, made the penalty only nominal. Last Sunday arrests were made under the Downing law, which was intended to be very severe. It fixes the penalty at revocation of the license and a fine of any amount not exceeding $500. The Judge of the Circuit Court is the only authority who can revoke a license under that law, andfenother State law makes it necessary that all cases where the prisoner has been arrested by tbe municipal police be taken 'to the City Police Judge, who, that he might have jurisdiction over State cases, was made justice of the peace ex officio. But the Police Judge Boland can not take away a licence uniler the Down ing law, and he saw fit to place the fines as low as $1 and costs. Tbe Police, Commissioners were at a loss to know what' to do alter they had found three laws inef fective, until they stumbled upon a city or dinance which is exactly like the Downing law, with the exception that it gives the Po lice Judge the power and makes it obligatory upon him to revoke the license where the accused Is lound guilty. Word was given out last night that ar rests would be made to-day under the lat ter crdinance. The severe penalty prescribed in the ordinance hadits effect and there were but few cared to take the chances of being obliged to suffer it The down town saloons were all closed. In the outlying precincts the police found seven who disregarded tbe law and arrested them. The parks and re sorts just out of the city limits did a thriv ing business. Ther were about the only places where any beverage could be bought I more stimulating than temperance drinks, and it was there that thousands went to in dulge their appetites. BLUE LAWS Of MN Some Almost Forgotten Statutes VS?- Out Saloon Keepers Threat' enlug Revenge. . rSTXCIAI. TELrOEAM TO TUB DISFATCH.V g BANGOR, Me., July 28. Unless eL (T.itb anil rtw9.. T ..... ft .1.M, va Anevl K Jn viuci J-sCagUC. WUW ato w'' ing at Bar Harbor, make a radical change. in their methods of procedure, that resort win see iuu oeiore tne season is over, aueir object is apparently to drive certain saloon keepers out of Bar Harbor and allow certain others to remain and sell all the liquor they please. The former are those who keep tbe commoner class of saloons, while the latter are the hotel proprietors and the keepers of a few gilt edge restau rants who furnish drinks to the tourist trade. Certain saloon keepers of the tabooed class have been closely watched by the Law, and Order people, arrested, tried, "fined, and then ordered to get off Mt Desert Island alto gether and for all time. The evicted saloon keepers, who declare that they are going to have everybody treated alike, have engaged eminent counsel and taken other measures to shnt up the favored liquor dealers, while for the hotel keepers, shop and stable keepers, and the people in general of the town who sup port the Law and Order League, they have dug up a section of the blue "laws which is calculated to make a deserted village of the resort in no time. Here are a couple of samples: Section 20, of chanter 124, Bevised Stat utes: Whoever on the Lord's day keeps open his shop, workshop or place of business, travels, or does any work, labor or business on that day. except works of necessity or charity; uses any sport, game or recreation, or Is present at any dancing, public diversion, show or entertain ment, encouraging tbe same, shall be punished by a fine not exceeding $10. Section 21, of the same chapter: IX any inn-holder or victualer on the Lord's day suffers any persons, except 'travelers, strangers or lodgers, to abide in his house, yard or field, drinking or spending their time idly, at play, or doing any secular business, except works of necessity or charity, he shall be pun ished by a Sne not exceeding H for each person thus suffered to abide; and If, after conviction he is again guilty, by a. One not exceeding 110 for each offense; and upon a third conviction he shall be incapable of hold ing any license, and any person so abiding shall be fined not exceeding $4 for each offense. TWICE THRASHED FOR HUSHING. A Yankee Jeweler Done Up by a Girl's Two Defenders. rsrZCIAf. TXLXGKAM TO TILE DISPATCH. Chelsea,Mass., July 28. Ayearago G. W. White, a jeweler in this city, indulged in a little "mashing," just for fun, and the result has been two of the worst thrashings he has ever had. His "mash" was the pretty daughter of Edgar W. Wyman. She told her father of White's attention, and the irate parent gave the masher a severe flogging. That was a year ago. To-day White swore out a warrant for Mr. Wy man's arrest on account of that old assault and the papers were served, Mr. Wyman being immediately released on bail. But White's triumph was short lived. During the year Miss Wyman married George Foils, and when the latter heard of bis father-in-law's arrest and all the circum stances in the case, he hunted out the man who tried to mash his prospective bride, and settled the old score by giving him auother thrashing. He, too, was arrested, and White will have to faceioth men in court to-morrow. .SHOT HISllOTJNSER BROTHER, viJ A 14-Year-Old Boy Whose Temper Has Blade Blm a Murderer. lEFXCXAC TELKQHAlf TO TITS DISPATCH. 1 Campbell, N. Y., July 28. Charles Daniels, a 14-year-old boy, living with his parents about two miles from here, is sup posed to have shotand killed his 10-year-old brother on Thursday. The two boys were alone at home. On the return of his parents the boy said that he had Iward a shot from the direction of the woods, and saw his brother fall dead from the fence on which he was sitting. As the supposed murderer has always been of a vicious disposition, and varied h'is story in many ways, he is not believed, especially as the autopsy at the Coroner's inquest revealed tbe fact that the bullet lay 34 inches deep in the head, and was a 22 caliber revolver bullet. The depth of the wound and the nature of the bullet show that the shot could not have been a stray one from a hunter's rifle. The boy has been held to await the action of the grand jury. HENRT GEORGE RETURNS HOME. Ho la Welcomed Heartily By Crowds of His Single-Tax Adherents. IBrZCIAL TILXOBAU TO TUX DISFATCILl Netv York, July 28. Henry George came home to-day, with his face as red as his beard, and a generally brisk and breezy air that betokens good health and fine spir its. He had much to tell and was as glib as ever. About 100 single-tax men met the returned leader at the Canard wharf and cheered him. One enthusiast had a little United States flag to wave. With Louis F. Post, Thomas G. Shear man, William C. Crossdale, and other New Yorkers, were many Presidents and Secre taries of single tax clubs from Brooklyn, Jersey City, Philadelphia, New Haven. Newark, Paterson, Bavonne, Cohoes and Elizabeth. They will entertain Mr. George with speeches and a dinner at Brighton Beach Hotel, to-morrow night UNBUSINESSLIKE PRACTICES That Will Rcsalt In Several Buffalo Men Suffering- the Consequences. ISrXCIAI. TXXXOBAif TO TUB DISFATCS.1 Buffalo, July 28. The trustees of the Merchants' exchange will hold a meeting to-morrow, at which it is expected that sev eral members will be expelled or otherwise punished for connection with the sensational qnarter-million-dollor grain shortage of Sherman Brothers & Co. The charge is ir regular business practices, and the persons mentioned are Stephen F. Sherman, Wilson H. Sherman, F. H. Tyler, E. O. Loveridge and E. D. Wilbur. Since the disclosures were first made in the Sherman matter, the persons interested have refused to give any Information. No criminal proceedings have been taken against the Sherman people, bnt Mr. Wil bur is under indictment on another tran saction. HE MAI LITE AFTER ALL. An Attempt at Salcldo Will Not Cat Short a Sentence. Chicago, July 28. James W. Smitn, the assailant of little Annie Louise Hee, who attempted suicide in Judge McCon nell's courtroom at midnight last night, when given nine years in State's prison by the jury, was removed from the Jail to the county hospital this afternoon. The stab, which he thought would result in his im mediate death, is pronounced as not as dan gerous as at first supposed. The blade was driven into the breast three Inches above the left nipple, and it is thought punctured a blood vessel. Strange as it may seem, his wife, who first started the ugly rumors of her husband's crime, re mains near him sight and day. He may recover. THREE CENTS IT WAS A HPBRICAKE That Carried Death and Destruction Through Chicago's Streets. xFOUBTEEff PEOPLE WEBE KILLED, , d a Score or More Others Injnred & ' Are Almost Sure to Die. Three 0 .g. Ay" IE ON THE WATER YERI SETERB, TrVOne Entire Slriiion of the Windy City ni Etarm-Swept The Chicago police report 14 people killed by Saturday night's storm, and 20 injured, three of whom will probably die. Consid erable property was badly damaged. rsrXCIAI. TZLXOKAUTO TUX DISPATCH.! Chicago, July 23. The wreckr wrought by the furious storm of last night was seen in nearly every portion of the city to-day. In the West division tbe wind blew with the violence of a hurricane. It demolished buildings, uprooted trees and scattered fences and sidewalks in every direction. Four new brick houses at Bockwelland Sixteenth streets were demolished in an in stant, and it is said two men who had sought refuge from the storm in one of the door ways were carried down in the wreck About the same time two large new brick buildings collapsed on Twenty-first street They fell upon adjoining cottages and killed seven people and injured six others. Two families were almost obliterated in this dis aster. - James Lusk's cottage, at Fifteenth street and Washtenaw avenue, was blown' to pieces, but the family miraculously escaped death. Water POURED INTO EVERY BASEMENT and drove thousands of poor people into the street Every police station-house was flooded, the prisoners being compelled to hang to the bars to escape drowning. A big stream poured into the basement of the Palmer House and stopped the dynamos. The fires in the boilers of the Grand Pacific Hotel were extinguished. The electrio lights in all the theaters went out, and there was danger of panics. The Brewer, Hoff man & Co. engine room on Green street was flooded and the fires put out. The district out beyond Western avenue was completely under water. In many cases the road3 could be found only by the currents on either side, indicating tbe loca tion of the ditches. The water crept into the boilers of the Sontbside Cable Bailroad Company and at 9 o'clock the system was paralyzed. Van Buren street car No. 557 was cut in two by a lalljng tree. The car was crowded. Two women were slightly injured. As Offi cer Thomas Dorgan was reporting from a patrol box HE WAS KNOCKED DOWN by an electrical discbarge. He was carried to the armory unconscious. He is danger ously injured. Maggie Austin was being swept along Lake street, when she was res cued by policemen. A wooden viaduct for foot passengers at Sacramento avenue and Kinzie street was blown down. The tracks of the Galena Di vision of the Chicago and Northwestern Bailway were blocked three hours. Charles Shaffer sitting in his barn inYorktou, street, when a bolt of lightning pierced the building and killed him. A bolt struck a new brick building at Twenty-first street and Oakley avenue and dolcolisnetj ltTc. ' "Two children were caught fd therrfclaVof-s- - a cottage as the bricks crushed it down. Michael Hayes, aged 14 years, was fatally hurt. John Hayes, 8 years old, will live. Ernest Bloctor, the owner of the lumber yard at Sixty-sixth and Wallace streets, was instantly killed by an Eastern Illinois en gine, and Henry Dues, one of his employes, was fatally hurt while rain blinded. The police report 14 persons dead and about 20 injured, 3 of them fatally. DAMAGE ON THE "WATEB. The propeller Boston, of the New York Central and Hudson Biver line, dropped down the south branch from the Santa Fo elevators about 10 o'clock last night It was heavily grain laden, and the rapid current rendered1 it unmanageable. At Twenty first street the Fort Wayne Bail road bridge was open and the steam barge in the west draw was unload ing coal. Two tugs endeavored to get -the propeller through the east draw, but the current swung the big boat around until her stern was grinding against the dock on one side of the river and her nose was poking the bridge abutment on the other. There she ' stuck crosswise of the river, her side resting against the bridge piling. The water, dammed by the steamer, was at least two feet deeper above the boat than below it The Boston remained in that position until 5 o'clock this afternoon, when she was finally pulled around by two railroad en--gines, with an elaborate complication of tackle, two tugs, and 30 men working at the capstans. While all this was going on the passage of a boat up or down and railroad traffio were completely interrupted. REPAIRING THE -WIRES. Gangs of men were at work to-day re pairing the damage done by the storm to the Western "Union, fire department and telephone wires, and by night the wires were working all right They were par ticularly tangled upat the corn erof Twenty second street and Western avenue, where hun dreds ot telegraph and telephone wires cross and recross each other. A new line of nearly 100 telephone and fire department wires on the West Side on West Fortieth street, from Horizon street north, was thrown to the street, poles and all. THE REMAINS OF MISS CRAWFORD Were Not Shipped From Rome In a Bolt Labeled Plate Glass. (SPECIAL TILEOnAM TO THK DISrATCII.l New York, July 28. The steamship Australia, of the Anchor Line, arrived to day with the remains of Miss Madge Craw ford, who died in Borne recently, while traveling with her brother and mother, the widow of the late Dr. Crawford, cf Pitts burg. Mrs. Crawford and her son were la the city awaiting the remains, having jour neyed homeward by a faster boat They have arranged for the immediate transporta tion of the coffin to Kittanning, Pa. Miss Crawford's death was due to com plications following au attack of typhoid fever, and a report was current that the Italian authorities had endeavored to pre vent the shipment of the body, and that the box had to be marked and shipped as plate glass. There was no truth in tbe story. On the ship's manifest appears the entry: "One case, containing the mortal remains of Miss. M. Crawford." MRS. ALEX. SULLITAN ARRITES. She Crosses the Ocean Under Her Staldea Name of Phyfe. nrXCTAI. TXLIORAM TO TBS DtSrATCS.l NEW York, July 28. Mrs. Alex. Sulli van and her daughter arrived on the Inman steamship City of Berlin to-day, appearing on the passenger list as Mrs. and Hiss Pbyfe. That was Mr. Sullivan's wife's name before she married him. Mrs. Sullivan telegraphed from quaran tine to her husband in Chicago, and it was understood on the ship that she would taka the first train West on landing. tS I. it, ,'Aj ' J J& 'Elites . 'A L i$Llmtii