OCR Text |
Show Ibtv a A WIXOM, rraprittm htaalftiMi of Thirty Thousand Are Dead in Martinique I 5 -- ... j fpc DUMtCCU tJ at Briffcsn City m i Foot OlDoo second clou matter. , Editor.' XM BTANDINO, IsStai to CwiMyndiiti. I r aoUdtod from U porta ttermo ldo of tho HF imci slaialy. proseot too of only jubU enstbl aoraoM OUtbOTL, iMld M olaaod toaU oom- Iflsatlsy of oorrstyoadaata tMdTbsSrbeaoTor doolrad. i OEUbr..ggV CQMVELLE- - WNWLI THURSDAY UTAH STATE NEWS. Frost at .lit. Pleasant tL on 17th did coDsldortble damage to gardan S stuff. work on the men at of force' The , is being constant Leamington ly increased. Two companies have bead formed in Chicago recently to exploit Grand J county oil flalcls, Apostle Heed Smoot, otjtroro, has snsonneed his candidacy for the United States senate to succeed Senator Raw-lin- e: ?, cut-o- lT-- at the necessl has smelter Bingham tated the blowing out of one of ita furnaces. U.1 r ; Once again Hermans, the preacher who is supposed to have murdered two girls in Salt Like, has been located, , this time la Deornai k'. i r Governor IVslls has appointed Alonzo Brinkerhoif rotd supervisor to spend 12,000 appropriated by (be legislature for roads in Emery county. I ..The new chief of police of Salt Lake had leaned an edict against gambling, and all" the gambling houses in the- empltai pity ban been closed. Salt Lake Ian owns a that rom tbf top of a seven story roondrfrs day last unhurt. . Bm cproFTr 'tr'Errnmn A temporary shortage of labor Cob. j E ; y i,e ? (. ' r - 1 V . 1 v vs- - ' X -- i V ? F10 fi t John an Attempt to mur ;'ut tenmlnutea. lion company has ft for the Oregon 1902, covering all irk for the entire 1 i I ! I10 week -- ,f i test between the a and the Univer- in Salt Lake last Is won by a ecore of (I in the tmploy of Salt Lake; are on a ither mnlons of fg on boycotting the i - Ir full Is on in fight Chester. Thou tid hoppers will be and spread the Luciu (den to"he' lake will is now ex-- 1 and tfd, to( work trestle ib thirty days, ond week of the Jed Friday last, fc( r t If drawn and only nil r ( J .j-( The case up to that 1 . ft Btate over 91,000. f tbet State Medical I Lake last week, halt j F f tled for the ensuing W ke Cfity selected as ,. s j , inext Annual meeting. i desperate ypwn.Jtwo pdgJLiiu'the Salt Lake ,C?ed, confessed that Chinaman who was j! I , Ogden some' time on-W- 4. 1 J - p v jt ! , ! I ng man living in Jr Isuiclde Saturday i. tison, but prompt 1 bs life. Despond Ir is said to have il'i naval recruiting t teeded in enlisting out of a total of bts. A good many ned down because son of John Good-Sa- lt Lake City, supposed an empty $ fold o year-ol- d brother and Xr, with the result that ' will lose an arm. i . have been completed . ,'ress Association for a i Iting, beginniug June I I visited being Boise, b le, Sau Francisco, Los er California cities, JfPESSAUft MAP OF ISLAND OF MARTINIQUE. (Mount Pelee and town of St. Pierre, scene of recent volcanic disaster, ehown on northwest end of island.) The work of exploring the ruins for This is the first authentic account of the fearful disaster on the island of the treasure buried beneath them was Martinique. It was sent by cable to going on at the same time with the incineration of the dead. The vaults Paris from Fort de France: of the bank of Martinique were opened afterI visited St. Pierre yesterday cash noon with the first party that has and all the securities, notes and sewere found intact. They were all landed at the site of the destroyed cured, and together with other treascity since Thursday mornings catas- ure have been brought to Fort de trophe. The streets and all the neighborhood around what a few days ago was the largest and most prosperous city in Martinique were found Incumbered wth heaps upon heaps of dead bodies in all directions. All the dead seen were stark' naked, their clothing apparently having burned from their bodies like so much tinder, while they themselves were roasted to death. In the vast majority of instances fires seem to have beam. the sole cause of death. Great numbers of the bodies have been burst asunder by the terrific heat and lie disemboweled. In many instances the faces of the victims are quite calm, as though they were stricken down instantly where they stood, without a moments warn-- , ing or with hardly, time to appreciate for an instant the deadly peril they were id. Others have stamped on their faces an expression of Indescribable terror. The entire city and the nelghbor--' hood all about reeks with a horrible odor of burned flesh. In one instance an entirely family of nine persons was found, all tightly locked in each others' arms' and the bodies in a horrible state of decomposition. AlmoBt.the first thing done was to Thake preparations for the cremation of the dead. Fatigue parties of soldiers built enormous pyres of wood and branches of trees upon which they heaped the dead bodies by scores and burned them as rapidly as possible. The total number of dead is now estimated at fully 30,000. The disaster itself took place within thirty seconds, and in that half minute the vast majority of all these people were killed. It is supposed, for there is nobody living apparently to tell the exact facts, that there was suddenly shot down from the mountain a great sheet of flame, accompanied by a terrible gaseous whirlwind and flashes of lightning, precisely such as are reported as playing about the summit of La Soufrlere, on the Island of St. Vin-.ceWhat horrible revelations of the havoc wrought to human life which these grim mounds are yet to reveal can hardly be imagined. In these two quarters of the city not a trace of the streets that existed there can be seen. They are buried as completely out of sight as were those of Pompeii. Along the water front there are a few walls standing and the ruins of were found. the custom-hous- e Curiously enough, the face and hands of the clock on the hospital were not destroyed, and they furnish an important record In the history of this terrible catastrophe. The hands of the clock had stopped at precisely ten minutes to 8, showing that it was at that moment that the city was overwhelmed and all these thousands of people within it, and in its environs, were destroyed. France. As much help as possible has been sent to the surviving people in the vicinity of the city. Steamers loaded with men, women and children from districts in the neighborhood of St Pierre are constantly here. Steamers also are going back as rapidly as possible to the scene of the disaster, carrying with them provisions and clothing. The 450 people brought here by the cable ship Pouyer Quertier were from the neighborhood of jthe village of Le Precheur. They were entirely without shelter when found, but none of them was burned. Every ship In the harbor at the time of the disaster, with the single exception of the English steamer Roddam, was burned with all on board lost, excepting one captain, who was saved. In relating his escape he says that the onlv way in which he managed to save life was by repeatedly diving. He was an expert swimmer and was able to remain under water for a considerable length of time. He returned again and again to the surface, barely exposing his face for a moment or two to the terrific heat and thus getting enough breath for another long dive. Ever since the 23d of April last the volcano Mont Pelee, which finally wrought all the havoc, has been man! testing disquieting symptoms. A great column of smoke kept mounting from it, and there were from time to time showers of ashes and cinders falling. Finally, on the 5th of May, there was a terrific eruption, which hurled into the air vast volumes of mud, which completely swallowed up the Guerin sugar factory, which stood near the River Blanche. The first that was known here at Fort de France of the disaster was at 8 oclock in the morning of the 8th day of May. At that hour there suddenly spread over the town of Fort de France a thick cloud of smoke, cinders and ashes, which came from the direction of St Pierre. The cloud swept over the city with terrifying swiftness, turning bright daylight into the darkness of night, with hardly a moments warning. From this cloud a rain of rocks poured upon the town and threw the entire population into the wildest panic. The sea suddenly swept back in a great wave for a distance of between fifty and sixty feet and vessels fastened to the wharves were set crashing against each other with great force. Twice the great wave swept in and out from the shore, and finally the waters settled down to their normal level. As quickly as possible in the confusion the government authorities and the mayor of the city, realizing what need there was, began to organize some system for carrying help to those known to be in dire distress. The French cruiser Suchet, which happened to be lying in the harbor. half-craze- d rglariea in St. George d to tbe person of In the Shebite tribe. The )th rascal who has be ha. county, is Invaded of caterpillars, pest f over the trees by year, and it is this ' y - 'en miles of the Sa- -' k ' It is expected that be employed on this short time. Supplies tig sent down to Salina isde daily, f toyon, near Price, powder, an old man -- Mospector, accident-tic- k of it in his hand ss blown to atoms. i;tated above tbe ,ilI'lcoVer. UPON HIM Romance of the Fee rage of th United Kingdom. The succession of the new Earl of Stamford recalls one of the most recent romances of the peerage. How far away he was removed from the direct line is shown by the fact that, whereas he Is the ninth earl, his father, the Rev. William Grey, was the of the fourth earl. The last Lord Stamford was an eccentric character, who never took his seat at Westminster, but lived for forty years in South Africa, where he married a Zulu belle and became practically a Zulu himself. At his death the opponents of the hereditary house were pleased at the prospect of a half-castwoolly headed peer presenting himself to the Lord Chancellor, but the committee of privilege found the rightful heir in William Grey, a native of Newfoundland, and professor of classics and philosophy in Codrington college Barbadoes. The present Lord Stamford Is best known for Us religious and philanthropic activities. He belongs to the e, X v VOLCANIC PEAKS NEAR ST, LUCIA, 36,-00- In Match, 1S39, the great storm to the harbor of Apia, Samoa, electrified the world with its appalling loss ol life. The German gunboats Olga, Eber and Adler, and the United Statesmen-of-wa- r Nipsic, Tienton and Vandalia went to pieces on the reefs, and fifteen merchant vessels either went to the bottom or stranded. One hundred and forty-twmen from the warships in the harbor were lest. Japan has proven itself a veritable home of earthquakes, the latest gigantic loss of life occurring in 1891, and resulted in a loss of 4,000 lives, 5,000 injured, and 50,000 homes destroyed. The great Johnstown flood was the first of two great disasters in recent years which has come home to the people of the United States with crushing force. On May 29, 18S9, by the bursting of the dam of the Conemaugh river, Johnstown and surrounding tow-nwere swept out of existence, and a loss of life approximating 10,000 souls took place in the twinkling of an eye. The calamity which befell Galveston on the 8th of September, 1900, ranks with Johnstown as the most appalling within the memory of present generations. Beginning with a storm of moderate proportions, the increasing wind rolled the waves higher and higher upon the beach, until, after a sudden shift of winds near nightfall, the island city was completely submerged, and great waves from the sea rolled over the town site. It w as a night ol the most terrible suffering and misery, in which nearly 50,000 souls In and near Galveston expected every moment to die. Between 8,000 and 10,000 people lost their lives in the storm, and millions of dollars worth of property was destroyed. The visitation of fire from neighboring volcanoes has wrought a destruction of life and property upon St Pierre which is yet to be definitely determined, but promises to be one of the greatest in the worlds history. The islands off the Chink coast, and the Malay Hortas, being of volcanic origin, have been especially subject to earthquakes. It used to be said of the Philippines that shocks were constant there, and it is true that the needle in the seismograph in the Jesuit observatory in Manila is always writing. But there has been no extremely disastrous disturbances, and none serious since 1884, when the tower of the great cathedral was thrown down and many lives were lost. explosion in a coal mine. NEGROES USE GATLING GUN IN FIGHT WITH POLICEMEN MINERS TWENTY-FIV- E TWO HUNDRED AND COLLIERY. TENNESSEE A IN KILLE0 Desperate Battle Between NgrMt In Dee- - - Of the Entire Number of Men and Boys Who VI ent to Work ! the Morning, But OneCnme Out Alive, and he Is so llndly Injured be Cannot Live. o s Between 175 and 225 men and boys met instant death at the Fraterville, exTenn., coal mine, because of a gas plosion. Of the large number of men and boys who went to work in tbe morning, inonly one is alive, and he is so badly man This live. cannot he jured that is William Morgan, an aged Englishman, who was a roadman in the mine. He was blown out of tbe entrance by the force of the explosion. The Fraterville mine is the oldest havin the Coal Creek, Tenn., district, is 1870. in It fully ing been opened three miles from the opening of the mine to tbe point where the men were at work. They had not been at work oclong before the terrible explosion and roar fearful There was a curred. then flames shot from tbe entrance and the air shafts. Rescue parties were at work in a ehort time, but no lives could be saved. , Every man had perished. WORK OF WIND IN TEXAS. People Killed and One Hundred and Tbree Injured at Goliad. The latest reports from Goliad.Texas, state that ninety-eigpersons were killed and 103 injured by the tornado which passed over that city Sunday afternoon. The property loss in tbe city ond surrounding country will probably reach $200,000. The storm swept tbe city from end to end and demolished 150 stores and residences. The tornado, which was preceded by a terrific downpour of hail, lasted only a few minutes. The bailbtoues drove the people into their houses, wher they were caught when the death-deing wind came upon them with terrific force, leveling everything in its path. DThu tornado swept an area 250 yards wide for a distance of a mile and a half. Houses collapsed as if Juilt of cardboard, covering the dead and injured with debris, which necessarily made the work of rescue slow. Ninety-Eig- ht ht al DEAD AT ST. PIERRE. First Official Estimate Places Number aS 88,000. The first official estimate of the results of the explosion of Mont Pelee This gives have been announced. 28,000 as the number of people bdried Six thousin the ruins of SL Pierre. and persons were rescued by steamships or lied to places of safety. Three thousand probably were drowned. This is the most complete estimate made so far. Mont Pelee continues to throw up large quanties of cinders, which are covering the country districts of tbe island. Attempted. to Assassinate Emperor Fraaels Joseph. The corespondent of the London Daily Chronicle at Budapest reports the frustration of a plot against tbe life of Emperor Francis Joseph. The Emperor was recently going on anight train from Vienna to Budapest. In the final inspection of the imperial train at the terminus of the state rail road at Vienna, made ten minutes before his majesty's arrival there, a bomb covered with paper was found in the emperors compartment. It was calculated that this bomb would explode the moment his majesty entered the car. An investigation of the matter led to the dismissal of several railroad employees. d great-grandso- n kll the towns entire Resides denndiug the tir foliage, traction company baa I Earthquake!, Flood and Battles That Have Slain Their Thotuanda. This is the third time the island of Martinique has suffered disasters of volcanic origin. In 1767 there was a great earthquake which cost the lives of more than 1,600 persons. That was the greatest disaster in the history of the island previous to this now reported. There was an earthquake in 1839 which destroyed nearly half of Port Royal, the present capital of the isThe land, and killed 700 persons. damage resulting from that shock extended all over the island. Historys pages are full of disasters which have befallen the human race, but no calamity of its kind in recent years can even approximate the terrible loss of life which has made notable the destruction of St. Pierre on the island of Martinique. Of events which have shocked the world by the enormity of the destruction which followed in their wake, none but tlje battle of Gettysburg can approach the recent disaster for loss of life. Instances where whole towns and communities have been wiped out are comparatively few, but all have been terrific in their consequences. St. Pierre has been no exception. Among the calamities which are most notable, the destruction of Pompeii and Herculaneuin in the year 79 stands as the most ancient of which there is a complete account extant Strangely enough, the destruction of these cities is the nearest approach in history to the disaster which befell St. Pierre. The work of the Vesuvius on this occasion was as slow Herculaneum as it was complete. was literally swept froip the earth by a stream of molten lava, while Pompeii wa3 suffocated by the cinders and ashes. The eruption lasted for days and covered the two cities to a depth of from eighteen to twenty feet, and so changed the topography of the country that it was centuries before topographers were able to locate the lost cities. The loss of life on thi3 occasion was never known, but it must have reached far into the thousands. Not until 1755 was the world again shocked by a catastrophe of similar proportions, although there were many throughout Italy, Sicily, South America and the Orient where the loss of life has been estimated at much higher figures, which were impossible of verification. The great earthquake and tidal wave of Lisbon in 1755 was one of the most and destructive phenomena of nature which has come down in history. It was a festal day in the city and all Portugal was- - there. Late in the afternoon a giant wave swept over the doomed city, and in eight minutes, when the wave had receded, it carried with-i- t 50,000 people into the sea. The survivors crowded the stone wharves along the water front, many only to be carried away by the tremendous swell which followed the movement of the first gigantic mass of water. The disturbance reached the shores of Spain, Morocco, Madeira, and many other islands in the archipelago, carrying death and destruction with it wherever it went. The shock of the earthquake was felt over a territory 5,000 miles long. A Recent iinbera of his tribe 41 THE WORLDS GREATEST DISASTERS HIGH POSITION THRUST fjrjcustody for such Vr ar-riv- became instantly alive with activity. It was made ready for sea' as quickly as possible and started away at full speed up along the coast in the direction of St Pierre and the great column of smoke and fire. There were several boats that had arrived at Fort de France that same morning, and they, too, made instant preparations to return. Troops and provisions were hurried aboard of them, and they started away in the wake of the Suchet. They had not been gone over two hours when they returned, bringing back the tidings that St. Pierre was utterly destroyed and that the entire seashore from the suburb of Le Corbet as far as the Village of Le Precheur was on fire, and that it was impossible to land at any point on account of the intense heat. Along the shore the spectacle was appalling. It looked as though the whole of the northern part of the island was one mass of flame. The cruiser Suchet got back to Fort de France some time after the other boats which had followed in the effort to reach the scene of the disaster. On board the Suchet were thirty survivors, who were picked up in the St Pierre suburb of Le Corbet All of them were frightfully 'burned and wounded, and nine of them died on board the cruiser before it reached this port Every preparation has been made in the hospital at Fort de France to take care of as many wounded as possible. The work of rendering aid has been put on an organized basis, provisions have been requisitioned and the principal stores, banks, and even the bakeries, are guarded by soldiers. About the beginning of the seventeenth century Central America was visited by an earthquake which killed 40,000 people, scattered over a wide territory. Naples at the same time began to feel a series of earthquake shocks which continued intermittently for seventy-fiv- e years and eventually amassed a total of 111,000 people slain. Not until the battle of Gettysburg was reached, however, has such a tremendous list of casualties occurred in such a limited space of time and territory as at St Pierre. In the three days fighting before Gettysburg, in July, 1863, the Union los was 23,190, of whom 2,384 were killed and 13,713 wounded. The Confederate loss for the same engagement has never been officially stated, but was approximate-e- d 36,000, of whom 5,000 were killed and 23,000 wounded. By far the worst of recent seismic shocks, however, occurred in the region of the Malay archipelago in 1883. It accompanied the explosive eruptions of the volcano Krakatoa, on the island of the same name, in the strait of Sunda, between Java and Sumatra. The eruption, which began in May, continued for nearly four months. Nearly the entire island was destroyed. The wonderful phenomena which followed this disturbance are still well remembered. The ashes and dust were thrown so high as to mark the upper air currents and be carried completely around the globe, producing a peculiar effect in the air, like a twilight glow, that continued for many months. The sound of the explosions of old Krakatoa was heard at a distance of 2,250 miles, and it was estimated that the air waves traveled four and a half 0 times around the earth. Between and 37,000 lives were lost, and 160 villages were destroyed. Two years later the first earthquake imin the United States of world-wid- e portance occurred in Charleston. On the night of August 31 an earthquake shock was felt along the entire Atlantic coast of the United tSates, and several hundred miles Into the interior especially in the southern states. Before morning it was known that Charleston had suffered an unusual visitation, and when the final news was known it was found that forty-on- e lives had been lost in the falling walls of the city and property to the amount of 95,000,000 had been destroyed, Yost Is Beaten by Dubois. The senate in executive session Mon day voted on the proposition to con firm the nomination of J. B. Yost for the Lewiston, Idaho, land office. It is said that Senator Dubois carried the fight onto the floor of the senate ad the senate committee had made .a favorable report upon tbe nomination. Certain parties had filed protests against the appointment which were The supported by Senator Dubois. presumption is that National Committeeman Stanrod will ask for the appointment of another man immediately. School Building Unroofed by Windstorm and Pupils Have Narrow Escape. fierce windstorm, coming from the southwest, passed over St. Joseph, Mo., Monday afternoon, wrecking the roof of tbe Garfield school building, razing many small outhouses and doing much damage. At the Garfield school, which Is located in the fashionable residence section of the city, 200 n children escaped as if by a miracle and ran out uninjured into the rain, which attained almost the proportions of a x cloudburst. Persons An effort by officers of the law u Atlanta, Ga., to arrest negro outlaws who had barricaded themselves i store, resulted in a riot in which eiri men were killed, including tbr, policemen, a white citizen and fon, negroes, and six persons, black and white, were wounded, an entire bloel of buildings was burned before.ii,, conflict ended. The scene of the tragedy was on Mg Daniel street, a few hundred yanj, outside the city limits. The polk, first attempted to raid tbe place who, xtha negroes had taken refuge, ad later tbe city police were called up,, for aid. Still later the governor appealed to and the military wen ordered ont. In the barricaded store were three negroes. The store was a small arsenal in which were a number of Winches, ter rifles and a small gatling gag, was a rendezvous for a gang of thieve, and murderers. Within were sharpshooters, who picked off men on the outside with precision and dead), effect. Every time a man showed himself he was shot to death. The torch was finally brought lot requisition and amidst flames wu heard the crack of rifles. The flame, accomplished Iwhat the bullets fafied to do. Two members of the gaag rushed out to death, and the other, the leader, was burned, after his body hid been riddled with bullets. Before tbe riot was ended, (brie officers had fallen with rifles ioeh bands, four negroes were killed sad many others wounded. Daring tbe whole affray at least Id shots were fired. Citizens had joined the police, armed with shotguns and rifles. IS MOST PELEE THE DISTANCE. order of Sfitocesan ' readers under the FEW FUNERALS FROM THE HOTELS JurisdictionNaf the Bishop of London, and has delivered open-ai- r addresses They Art Infrequent, Because Objected in the Postmens park and elsewhere. to by Landlords. He is also a of the Landlords of hotels object to fuBible society, and has been a member nerals, for their houses arc eminently of thrf Metropolitan asylum board, the places of good cheer, and on that suncouncil of the Metropolitan hospital shine of good cheer they want . no fund, and the council of the Queen shadow of sorrow cast. Hence, when Victoria clergy fund. New York Triba guest dies under the root of one une. of the landlords he uses all means possible to have the funeral services Hii Explanation. At the dinner of the Jewelers the held elsewhere. other night, James B. Hill praised-And, as a rule, the landlord has no laugh by explaining a certain difficult difficulty in achieving that, because the dead guests family Wishes his problem In the matter of angels. A little child asked me the other body to be buried from his home. For he is always a transient guest, day, said Mr. Hill, Why is it that and Itnearly would seem both heartless and you dont ever see angels with whiskers? Most men have whiskers, sho irreverent to bury him otherwise. But, if he is a resident guest (a thing that went on. I dont understand. once or twice in a thousand That was rather a poser to me, but happens the landlord easily arranges years), after some reflection I explained it with the undertaker to hold the serthis way: vices In the latters parlors. You see, my dear. Its because And thus it happens, concluded most men have such a close shave to the not one man In a that observer, get to heaven at alL New York thousand ever sees a funeral from a Tribune. hoteL" Baltimore Herald, a Slaughter an Entire Family, Crazed by his infatuation for little Abitha McCulloch, a thirteen-year-ol- d girl, William Austin, aged 25, killed the girl and four other persons and then committed suicide In the farmhouse of William Wilkinson near HastThe crime was discovings, Florida. ered by John Keller, who found tbe six corpses scarcely cold, and the only living witness to the tragedy a helpless infant Austin bad been infatuated with the McCullochmadly girl and, it is said, killed the family because his advances were rejected.. Children Drowned by Hater Spout. The water-spo- ut that struck near Preston. Minn., flooded the country for miles around and cauaed the death by drowning of four children near Forestville, and the death by lightning of Alderman Gonkcy of Preston. The property loss will be heavy. Reports from the western part of the country say it was ope of Ahe worst storms ever witnessed in that section. On the level prairies in the twonship of York farmers lost a great dpal of and near Granger about twentystock, buildings Were demolished. Wlllian achusettf eral at L been an Mr. Os ident Me pointed March 1 office wi .ton, of (self was PLOT AGAINST KING OF SPAIN, Scheme ot Anarehlata to Mnrder Alton, la Nipped In the Bud. if An Anarchist plot against King A) fonso has been discovered and six ir rests, including that of Gabriel Lopei, an employee 6f an insurance company, have been made. Dynamitecartridgn were found on tbe premises when Lopez was arrested. Lopez says he received a packaged cartridges from another Anarchiit with instructions to throw them stile mpinent of the passage of the royil carriage in Saturdays procession. The discovery of the plot against tin king is confirmed by tbe newspapen in Madrid. It is now said that sin dynamite cartridges were seized. Further arrests have been made,tni the prisoners include six medical slv .Presidei dents, a printer, a carpenter ty, Ohlc Academ and wai .MRS. I News iAbazuzs I Mlnlstei lator Cu I favorab Iclal cin Mrs. court s t admirei She n Senator can me and th and then ri PERISH IN CYCLONE. resultei Don Spanlsl States Mrs. Chlcag ciety. , Ninety People Reported Killed In Stan Which Visits Texas. A disastrous cyclone swept ovtt Texas Sunday, causing great loss d life and almost incalculable damage to property. The cyclone is believed to have originated on the Gulf coast sti point almoSYdirectly south of Goliad, and traveled in a northeasterly diret-tio-n as far as Kentucky. It left desolation behind it in four states, bet Texas seems to have suffered mott than the others. A special from Goliad says: Ninety are dead; 128 wounded. In addition there is a gaping wound is the town the path of one of the most destructive cyclones ever known it Texas. Panic ou a ittimer. A Los Angeles dispatch says: 0. Widow mason. noblern I talk in I nesota I resent at the She f Tlx roughness of the sea, caused by a gait which prevailed all day, produced I panic among the 150 passengers on the j steamer Warrior, which was returninf from Santa Catalina island to Sul Pedro, Saturday evening. Luring tin! excitement S. S. Knight, a conducts: in the employ of the Salt Lake railroad, was washed overboard and drowned. K. C. Herrick, of Spokane, Wash,, jumped overboard, under the imprw-sioto at hia wife had been swept into the sea. He.kept afloat until rescued by a boats crew. n Earthquakes In Portugal. Earthquakes are reported from tb southern part of Portugal, but M fatalities occurred. The disturbance! are supposed to be connected'-witupheavals in the West Indies. the T1 BABY STUNQ TO DEATH. Fourteen-Montha-Ol- A panio-stricke- CIV Child la Killed d Bes The child of Mr. id) Mrs. Geo. Malory, who reside at Fen t four miles southeast of Shelby viliA I ld Ind., was fatally stung by beps SuS-- J day. It was playing near a number of hives, and one of these was disturbed. In a second a swarm of beea emerged, alighting on the child, stinging tt about the head and face to such extent that it died from the i juries. SNOW IN IDAHO. Southern Portion of tha State Visited . ' j Iff Severe Storm. The southern portion of Idaho hat been visited by a snowstorm, which t commenced some time during Saturday night, covering the gronnd. Again at 11:30 oclock Sunday morning it started to snow and there has been a steady and heavy fall, covering the ground about two inches. Fears are entei tained for the safety of fruits and garden vegetables, fruit , trees and shrubbery being in blossom. Jf Increase Court Power. The United , States Philippine cobJ mission has passed an act conferrio; marine jurisdiction upon the courts ad first instance, which permits thecoirto to punish crimes dn tbe sea. The mil , itary orders and acts of the provaJ courts referring to such crimes. -- Servian Cabinet Crist. King Alexander has sccepted resignation of the Servian cabinet Paaslnos, formerly a radical, has b entrusted with the formation of a ' ministry. t- - ai H et l |