1
2 CIRCUS BLOWN AWAY Gentry's Big Tents Destroyed by Storm at Grand Island. MANY INJURED, TWO FATALLY Straiffht-A wuy Blow Followed by, a Torrent of ' Rain—An limits '.'•' Killed. Grand Island, Neb., July 5.—A tornado •wept over Hall county yesterday after- noon, leaving death and disaster in its path. It was one of the most devastating wind storms this section of the state has ever experienced. Many people were injured in Grand Island, several probably fatally, but great difficulty is being experienced in securing details and names of injured because most of the destruction in this city developed at the Gentry circus, which was complete- ly blown away. The cages were over- turned and many valuable animals killed. The tents were rippe dto pieces, and the circus property is scattered over a space twenty miles long by two miles \u25a0wide. When the tent was ripped to pieces the crowd attempted to escape from the tangle of ropes and wires, and then the •eats collapsed. The high wind was fol- lowed almost immediately by a torrent of rain, and this added to the confusion. The injured could not be relieved for an hour, so fierce was the wind and rain. Contrary to usual cases, however, the twisting motion was absent and the wind \u25a0was a straight-away blow. The velocity was seventy-two miles an hour.- Special to The Journal. In the country districts the destruction wrought was greater than at Grand Island. Stock was killed in large numbers, and crops were totally destroyed for many miles. The storm broke from a practical- ly clear sky, and a few moments before the wind reached the proportions of a tor- nado the sun was shining brightly, and not a breath of air stirring. The mercury stood at 109 in the shade. Among the Injured are: Mrs. John Boyles Anna Boyle, Charles Boyle, Ira Henderson, Alice Duffy, John Cameron, Miller Wait. Harriet Joyce, William Rol- lins, Mary Dougherty, Maggie Swift, Har- ry Mullaney. The last two are perhaps fatally hurt. Most of the injured are country people who were attending the circus. One Is Dead. Grand Island, Neb., July s.—Albert Etevenson, who was injured in yesterday's storm which struck a circus tent in this city, died early to-day. Five names were added to the list of injured to-day, bring- ing the total up to fifty. All injured will recover. WOLVERIXE CLOUDBURST fclucli Property Destroyed and Rall- road Traffic Crippled. Grand Rapids, Mich., July s.—Western Michigan was visited by a disastrous cloudburst early to-day and the damage (Will amount to thousands of dollars. Both the Pere Marquette and Grand Rapids & Indiana railroads are crippled north of here and all north-bound passenger trains are obliged to make long detours, while freight traffic is paralyzed. Between here and Howard City on the Grand Rapids & Indiana, the roadbed is washed out in a dozen places, and the Pere Marquette is In the same condition. The Grand Trunk can get no trains east on account of the washing out of a bridge at Saranac. Dams In the Flat and Rouge rivers, north of here, have been washed out, and many mills along these streams will be idle for days. The Grand river rose three feet and six inches between 6 and 10 o'clock this morning, and is still rising rapidly. Great damage was done to fruit trees and growing crops in the western Michigan peach belt. A FLOOD AT MINTO Tracks o* tue Great Xorthern and Soo Washed Away. Special to The Journal. Mlnot, N. D., July s.—Torrents of rain fell here this week. In an hour the big ravine just west of the Commercial house \u25a0was full to Its banks. The waters rushed madly down the ravine to the Soo track, taking huge stones, timbers, cordwood and all kinds of flood plunder with it. The Great Northern yards looked like a great lake stretching to the east and west. For a time the water rushed over the station platform, which is at least two feet higher than the tracks. The house track leading to the Great Northern main line was washed away for a distance of 100 feet or more. Engineer Fred Almy brought in the east-bound flyer, arriving about 11 o'clock. There were two feet of water about the station.. As soon as his engine was cut loose from the train he started for the roundhouse. No sooner had he been let In en the roundhouse track than the tender seemed to drop out of sight. One ! -or two of the main drivers slid from the ! rail. The derailment of the engine was i due to the washing out of the grade. The Soo came in for its share of trouble. \u25a0The grade just east of the station was \u25a0washed away for a distance of 600 feet. .' The east-bound passenger was detained here several hours. The damage to town •property was slight. A few cellars were filled with water. No damage was done to orops except in a few places. Gardens ! on low lands were injured some, but a little sunshine will soon bring them back j . to their former state of thriftiness. HAIL AND RAIN Fierce Storm Sweeps Down on Fer- gus Falls. Special to The Journal. ;!. Fergus Falls. Minn., July 5.—A terrible rainstorm accompanied by heavy hail set In here Just as the celebration was closing i last night. Gardens ere ruined, but the city seems to have been the center of the .kail area and the damage to the crops -n the vicinity is not great. The rainfall !wa» 3.07 inches. "WIND AND HAIL STORM Crop* Around Miles City, Mont., Are : Completely Destroyed. Special to The Journal. Miles City, Mont., July 5.—A destructive •wind and hail storm struck this city yes- terday. Buildings were unroofed, windows j smashed and houses flooded. Hail de- stroyed all crops in this vicinity. One of i the state reform school buildings was un- roofed; no lives were lost. Church Struck by Lightning. Special to The Journal. Winona, Minn., July During a severe storm last night lightning struck the steeple ' on St. Martin , s Lutheran church, tearing off all the shingles down the west side to the belfry, but fortunately not setting the church .on lire. "Too Much Rain." Special to The Journal. '\u25a0 "\u25a0 Bottineau, N. D., July 5.-The celebration was curtailed by rains last night and yester- < day, the heaviest of the year, almost a cloud- - burst, in fact. There is too much rain now. Houston County Crops Damaged. Special to The Journal. . Caledonia, Minn.; July 5.— terrific rain and windstorm, accompanied by hail passed ! ©Tor this vicinity at 7:20 last evening seri- ously damaging the crops. Trains on the nar- , row gauge are delayed by washout*. EVIDENTLY EXPERIENCED - \u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0="; \u25a0.-•':; Puck. Mr. Hoon—l am convinced that the groom at last night's wedding was either a widower or a bigamist. , Mrs. Hoon—Good gracious! What makes you think so? * Mr. Hoon—Why, didn't you notice that .he looked neither scared nor sneaking | during the" ceremony ? Among the several states and territor- ; iejj. Oklahoma shows the largest percent- al.* of '• Increase, according to \u25a0 the > census ol >§00. LORILLARD'S RECORD Worked Like a Trojan Though Rich by Inheritance HE ECLIPSED ALL SOCIALLY Builneii, Social and Sporting Rec- ord of the Man Now at the Point of Death. Mmw York Sun Sttmolul Smrvlo*. New York, July s.—More than seven years ago Pierre Lorillard, who is lying at the point of death in the Fifth avenue hotel in this city, left New York for the south of France, advised by his physicians to take a protracted rest. He spent the time quietly abroad. Lorillard's connection with the turf began in 1873, when he was advised by his physicians to seek an outdoor life. Before that he had been closely confined to business, as he had bought out his brothers in the tobacco trade and suc- ceeded to his father's business. The Lorillards had been the first in America to make snuff. Their original shop was at Peck Slip and Water stret. Here the foundation of the Lorillard fortune was laid. During the first part of his life, Lorillard showed a fondness for hard work, in spite of the fact that he had in- herited millions. It was said that when his father, Peter Lorillard, died, each of his children—there were five sons and three daughters—received a million. But Pierre was the only one who kept up the business. He married Miss Emily Taylor, noted for her beauty. He bought a house on the northeast corner of Fifth avenue and Thirty-sixth stret, which for years was the social center of New York. In splen- dor of entertainment, in elaborate out- lay and unchecked expenditure the social affairs of Pierre Lorillard eclipsed all others. It was during this time that he bought Ochre Point at Newport, and erected there a cottage marvelous for its design. This he afterward sold to Cornel- ius Vanderbilt. In yachting Lorillard was famous for a time. He built the Vesta, a schooner that entered '.he race from Sandy Hook to Cowes, England.' He built the Pahda and other famed yachts. When he went into racing Lorillard picked up a colt, for which he paid $780. This was a raw-boned specimen named Parole. This horse soon beat everything on this side of the water. He was sent to England, and in one year won the New Market handicap, the City and Suburban, the Great Market handicap, the Epsom and Gold Cup. This was the beginning of a aeries of notable achieve- ments of the turf, followed by the victory of Iroquois in the English derby. Lorillard was the founder of Tuxedo in the Ramapo Hills. Some years ago Lor- illard sold his Fifth avenue home and left suddenly for England. While there has been no legal separation nor any applica- tion for divorce, for some years Mr. and Mrs. Lorillard have lived apart. New York. July 6.—The condition of Pierre Lorillard was resorted to-day to be slightly better. His son-in-law, T. Suf- fern Taylor, said that while Mr. Loril- lard's condition was very serious, hope of his recovery had not beeen given up. JAW BROKEN BY A BULLET A SHOOTING AT FARMIXGTOX Keeling, a Hotel Man, Dangerously Wonndi Smith, Proprietor of a Livery. Special to The Journal. Farmington, Minn., July 5.— H. J. Smith, a liveryman, was shot in the face about £ o'clock this morning by A. J. Keeling, proprietor of the Commercial hotel, and is seriously injured. The men had some trouble last winter and have been enemies ever since. To-day when they met hot words ensued and Keeling drew a revolver and fired at close range. Smith's jaw was broken into pieces and I he has been taken to St. Paul for treat- : ment. He had been drinking and was dis- [ posed to be quarrelsome. Keeling is in jail to await the result of Smith's injuries and action by the courts. Both men are prominent here and the affair has stirred up a good deal of feeling, each having his partizans. The county attorney is here and Keeling will have a hearing at once. He will prob- ably be released on bonds. TEACHERS FOR'PINOS E. J. Donaldson of Spring Valley Is Likely to Be One. Special to The Journal. Winona, Minn., July s.—Congressman Tawney was advised this morning by | Colonel Edwards of the insular division j that if State Superintendent Olson rec- I ommends Professor E. J. Donaldson of Spring Valley for appointment as teacher in the Philippines at a salary of $1,300 a year he will get the place. Peter Loughrey, a graduate of the normal last year, has been recommended for the $900 place. PLANS. Detroit Journal. All his life he labored to the end thet his neighbors might say of him when he was dead and gone: "He did his best!" In pursuance of this purpose he founded schools and libraries. But after all there were those at his funeral who said: "He done his best!" WASTING HIS OPPORTUNITIES. Somerville Journal. "And what is this man here for?" asked a sweet young lady visiting the jail. "He stole a loaf of bread from a bake shop, miss," answered the turnkey grim- ly. "Only a loaf of bread!" exclaimed the sweet young lady in surprise. "Didna the baker have any cake or pie?" Special to The Journal. Kmw York Sun Saoclal Safviom ROBBERS IN A TRAP Sheriff's Posse Said to Have Them Fast Near Wagner. ESTIMATED LOSS IS $30,000 Mm, Pease, a Passenger, Describes the Holdup—Wounded Are Dolns Well. Special to The Journal. Great Falls, Mont., July s.—The three men who held up the Great Northern transcontinental west-baund express near Wagner and secured many thousands of dollars, are surrounded at "Buck" Allen's ranch, about forty miles south of Wag- ner, near the edge of the old Fort Bel- knap reservation on the west Fork of the Pouchette river. It is probable they will not be captured until after a severe fight, and at the latest advices Sheriff Griffith had not made the attack. The bandits are thought to be housed in the ranch buildings, which offer every protection for a siege. The posse may not try to force their capture until reinforc*- ments are received. It is understood that another posse from south of the Mis- souri, in the direction of Fort Hawley, will join Sheriff Griffith at Allen's ranch. Contrary to the first reports, the men are not thought to be experienced train robbers. Information from Wagner and nearby points is that they have been par- tially identified as cowpunchers employed on a ranch south of the Milk river. One is a half-breed, as was thought at the time of the robbery. He is known to be the man who boarded the express east of Wagner and forced the engineer and tb« fireman to bring it to a stop at the head of the ravine in which his confederates were hidden. Story Told by Mrs. Pease. Mrs. M. E. Pease of Galesburg, 111., was one of the passengers on the robbed train. When seen by a Journal correspond- ent, soon after her arrival here, she told a graphic story of the hold-up, and while she was still nervous, she stated that she did not feel at all alarmed during the ex- citement and did not break down until she saw the robbers riding away. "When the train stopped," said Mrs. Pease, "I thought nothing of it until I saw several men moving hurriedly to- ward the door. I was about to raise a window and look out, when a perfect fusillade of shots began and instantly I realized that we were held up. Some one, I don't know whether he was one of the robbers or not, came to the door and shouted for the passengers to remain in their seats; that the robbers were only after the express car, and I can tell you that no passengers wanted to look out, for every lew seconds we could hear the song of a bullet near the windows of the coaches." "The excitement was so gTeat that I cannot tell how long the ghooting was continued, but when the robbers had gone and we looked at the sides of the coaches, we could see many places where the bul- lets had sped along the sides. The track is perfectly straight where the holdup oc- curred and the coaches were perfectly aligned, so that it was not difficult to keep all of them under guard. We did not fully comprehend what was being done until we heard the explosion of dynamite ahead of us. It shook the day coaches severely, but did no great damage to any part of the train except the smoker, all the win- dows in which were shattered. The men who had remained in the smoker came tumbling back into the day coach and were very careful not to get upon the side steps." The First Alarm. Another passenger who was in the Pull- man says that one robber stood on one side of the train and one on another eide, holding the passengers and trainmen in the cars by frequent shooting, while a third man compelled the fireman'to help him blow up the safe. It took four shots before the safe gave way and the first one alarmed a sheep herder who saw the train stop and, supposing something wrong, hurried into Malta. He was the first to give the alarm. While the work of blowing up the safe was progressing &\u25a0 horseman approached and one of the rpbbers remarked: "I don't like the looks of that—l guess I'll take a shot at him." "All right, Billy," said the boss of the gang, "but don't hit him; hit the horse." Thereupon the robber fired and the horseman wheeled and rode away. He was seen by the passengers at Malta, and there was a bullet wound in the fleshy part of the horse's hie showing that the robber was a splendid shot. The horseman was a rancher livine near there and im- mediately after getting hit rode on to Mal- ta and gave the alarm. Only $SO,OOO Secured. After the fourth shot in the express car It did not take the robbers long to put their boodle, which is now estimated at only $30,000, into sacks and, telling the engineer and fireman to remain where they were for fifteen minutes, the robbers took their horses, which were tied near by, and rode leisurely away. The two wounded men are in the hos- pital here. Brakeman Woodside will probably lose an arm, but both he and Auditor Douglass will recover. The lit- tle girl, Gertrude Smith, who received a flesh wound, was carried on to her home in Seattle. FOURTH'S AFTERMATH Blaze at Ironwood, M eh., Started by Firecrackers. Special to The Journal. Ironwood, Mich., July s.—Fireworks in Jussen & Trier's store caught fire this morning. The interior of the store, in- cluding confectionery, fruits and tobacco, was destroyed. The fire caught from fire crackers, which were being set off on the sidewalk by boys. It is supposed a lighted fire cracker went through a hole in the window, setting fire to the window dis- play. The loss is $4,000, partly insured. Plate glass in adjoining stores was shat- tered by sky rockets. From C E. to Mormonism New York, July s.—ln Jersey City and on the shore of New York bay Miss Eliza- both Dickinson, a fo*ner secretary of the Young People's Society of Christian En- deavor of the Port Morris Congregational church, in the Bronx, has been baptized into the Mormon faith. Miss Dickinson wore a bathing robe, which looked like white or cream colored nun's veiling, encircled by Bilken cords. She wore white roses in her dark hair and a bunch of white flowers was fastened at the corsage. Dowieite Egged by lowans Waterloo, lowa, July 5.—A shower of eggs, good and bad, greeted Elder James R. Adams of the Dowieite church last night while he was entering upon a tirade of abuse of the doctors and churches. Despite the unpleasant effects of the missiles the elder stood his ground for some time, but at last was hooted down and sought refuge behind some of his feminine followers and was escorted safely to the taber- nacle. The feeling against the Zionites has been growing here lately, and it is now being asserted that the leaders must leave town. Further trouble is looked for, however Negro-Flavored Drinking Water Huntington, W. Va., July s.—Twenty or more colored youths for weeks have used the city reservoirs on the hill back of the city for a bathing pool. This is the direct cause of the destruction of $200,000 worth of property by fire, the throwing out of employment of 5,000 men and a water famine which existed for three days here this week. When the fact became known that the reservoirs were used as bath- ing pools they were ordered drained. While dry the pumps at the water station broke down and fire could not be put out. THE MINNEAPOLIS JOUKJMAU FIRST AND SECOND Only Regiments to Go Into Camp at Lakeview. THE SECOND WILL COME FIRST First Battalion,. ©I Artillery to Par- ticipate— Improvement* . , ? Made to the Camp. - Special to The Journal. Lake City, Minn., July s.—Beginning next Monday, this city will bear every re- semblance of a military post for the next twenty days, owing to the encampment of the State National Guard. The event is looked forward to each year by the citi- zens of Lake City and surrounding coun- try, as it tends to break a monotony and brings with it much of the martial spirit and enthusiasm always evident where soldiers are bivouacked. On Monday the Second regiment of in- fantry, Colonel Joseph Bobleter com- manding, and the First battalion of artil- lery, Major George C. Lambert command- ing, will arrive. The Second regiment is composed of companies from towns in the southern part of the state. Captain W. H. Hart, brigade quartermaster, has been busy arranging a time schedule for the leaving of the trains at the various com- pany stations, and now has it completed. Itinerary. Company G, Austin, leaves that station on special train, C, M. & St. P. railway, at 8 a. m. Company I, Owatonna, leaves that station on special train, C, M. & St. P. railway, at 9:05 a. m. Company B, Faribault, leaves on special train, C, M. & St. P. railway, at 9:35 a. m. Company D, Northfield, leaves on special train, C, M. & St. P. railway, at 10 a. m. Field staff, noncommissioned staff and band and Company A, New Ulm, leave that station on train No. 4, C. & N. W. rail- way, at 6 a. m., arriving Owatonna, 8:50 a. m., where they will be attached to special train leaving that station at 9:05 a. m. Company E, Pipestone, leaves on special train, C, St. P. M. & O. railway, at 12 o'clock, midnight, arriving Heron Lake 2 a. m., July 8; leaves Heron Lake 2:32 a. m., arriving Owatonna 8:50 a. m., where they will be attached to special train leaving that station at 9:05 a. m. Company H, Mankato, leaves at 6:50 a. m., arriving Owatonna 8:50 a. m., where they will be attached to special train leaving that station at 9:05 a. m. Com- pany F, Rochester, leaves on train No. 51, C. & N. W., at 8:02 a. m., arriving at Red Wing 9:57 a. m., where it will be attached to the special train on C, M. & St. P. railway, at 11:30 a. m. Company C, Winona, leaves on train No. 3, C, M. & St. P. railway, at 8:36 a. m., arriving at the Lake City camp grounds 10:30 a. m. Breaking camp on July 17, the regi- ment will depart on a special train at 1:50 p. m. Companies A, E and H will go to St. Paul and transfer to trains for home. The battalion of artillery is composed of Battery A, St. Paul; Battery B, Min- neapolis, and a company of engineers, lo- cated in St. Paul. The batteries will each take eighty-five men to camp and the engineers sixty. They will arrive on a special train leaving Minneapolis at 7 a. m.; St. Paul, 7:30, and arrive at the camp grounds at 9:25 a. m. Leaving they .will break camp at 1:50 p. m. on July 17, ar- rive in St. Paul at 3:45, and Minneapolis, 4:30. Improvements at Lake view. There have been many improvements in the camp grounds since last year, and some of the older members may have dif- ficulty in locating themselves. The head- quarters building has been moved down beyond and on a line with the hospital. The officers' mess hall has been moved on a line with the other two buildings nearer the camp proper* The south mess hall has been moved back 200 feet towards the infantry bara.'^This will allow more room in the company streets, which will be a great Improvement. A new barn will be erected on the artillery grounds. The artillery mess hall has been moved to where the little guard house stood, and a 38-foot adidtion has been added to it, thus allowing room for the engineer corps. The new range has been completed for shooting, and water connection with Lake City completed. The artillery grounds have been espec- cially fortunate in securing improvements. The quartermaster has astorehouse located back of headquarters, and the officers will have a mess hall to themselves. The changes on the artillery grounds have been made necessary by the addition of new guns to their equipment which neces- sitates more ground room in order to al- low them to be patrolled properly. First Regiment. The First regiment, composed of Com- panies A, B, F and I, Minneapolis; C. D and E, St. Paul; G. Red Wing, and X, Stillwater, will arrive at 9:25 a. m., on July 18. Each company will have forty- five men. They will travel on a special train leaving Minneapolis at 7:00 a. m., St. Paul, 7:30; Red Wing, 8:40. This regi- ment which is the last in camp, will strike tents on July 27, and leave grounds at 1:30 p. m., arrive in Red Wing at 2 p. m.; St. Paul, 3:30, and Minneapolis, 4 p. m. Lake City will miss the Third regiment this year, as it decided to participate in a practice march instead of the annual camp. It is understood here that The Jour- nal will run an excursion to the camp grounds on July 12, via boat and rail. These excursions have become very pop- ular and are looked forward to by the boys as it always brings many friends. TRACK IS IN BAD SHAPE WASHOUTS AND BRIDGES GONE Traffic on the Northern Pacific Sus- pended in the Miles City Country. Helena, Mont., July s.—Two heavy cloudbursts have played havoc with the Northern Pac!sc track between Miles City and Wibaux, in the eastern part of the state. Several large fills have been carr- ried away and five bridges damaged to such an extent that they will have to be rebuilt. Every effort is being made to hurry the repairs. Piling and a pile driver are on the way from the Dakota division. It will probably be twenty-four to thirty-six hours before the track is passable. Special to The Journal. FATAL BLOW Several work trains and thousands of laborers are out cribbing and haul- ing dirt and gravel. Trains Nos. 2 and 4 are held at Miles City. Train No. 1 is at Shirley. Other west- bound trains are at Dickinson. The vigilance of trainmen, trackmen and others prevented the derailment of the trains. TEN THOUSAND THERE Noted Scouts, Pioneers and Every- body at Deadwood's Carnival. Special to The Journal. Deadwood, S. D., July s.—There is just as much enthusiasm to-day as ever at the Doadwood carnival. The crowd is said to live without either sleep or drink. This forenoon the old Indian scouts and pioneers renewed acquaintances. Some of the most noted scouts in the United States are here. The weather has been unusu- ally pleasant. The hotels and restaurants had 10,000 guests yesterday. Bight coaches came over the Elkhorn at noon with standing room even taken. The Burlington last night brought in as large a crowd. "Now you know what a 'tee' Is," said Bunker, explaining the game. "Now, then, a 'caddie'— "Oh, I see!" she interrupted, "that's what you put the tea in. Of course, I know what a 'tea-caddie is." HOW TO GET THEM F. R, Salisbury's Idea of the Way to Secure Conventions. COMMERCIAL CLUB AT WORK The Club's f 10,000 Fnnd Is Growing and Hum Reached the $7,000 Mark. Chairman F. R. Salisbury of the Com- mercial Club's convention committee, is anxious to secure the co-operation of the people of the city in bringing conventions and public gatherings to Minneapolis. The committee is endeavoring to interest all of the church societies and fraternal bodies of the city as well as the* business men's associations in the work. Mr. Salisbury says that local branches of so- cieties or associations about to hold na- tional gatherings can do a great deal #f good by working to secure subsequent conventions for Minneapolis. The Epworth league delegates who go to San Francisco will take with them a large number of attractive badges with which all the delegates who favor Minneapolis as the next place of meeting in 1903 will be decorated. Chairman A. C. Paul of the finance cow- mittee of the Commercial Club announces that subscriptions to the extent of $7,000 have been received toward the $10,000 fund for general purposes. It was the intention of the committee to publish a full list of the subscribers July 1, but it has been thought best to delay this till July 15, when it is hoped that the full amount asked by the committee will have been subscribed. The committee asks all business men who intend to subscribe to have their subscriptions in before July 15. I SOME MINES OF WAX! Facts About Ozocerite Found in Galicia. IT IS A MINERAL PRODUCT It Is Used in the Manufacture of Par- affin, Candles and Phonograph- ic Cylinders. Washington, July s.—United States Consul F. W. Hossfeld at Trieste, Austria, sends to the state department a long re- port on ozocerite, or mineral wax, a res- inous substance resembling beeswax, which is found in Russia, Roumania, Egypt, Algeria, Canada and Mexico, as well as in Austria-Hungary, but which is found in quantities sufficient to pay for mining only in the district of Boryslav, Galicia, and to a limited extent on the west coast of the Caspian sea. Concern- ing the mining of ozocerite, Consul Hoss- feld says: Mining operations are commenced by sink- ing a shaft and connecting it by galleries with the beds, or "nests," containing the wax. Sometimes It happens, when a nest is being opened, that the enormous pressure of gases shut up in the same causes the soft mass of wax to beforced out with great vehe- mence. Such occurrences greatly imperil the lives of the miners, who are compelled to flee to some higher part of the shaft for safety. In some cases the pressure is so powerful that even the deepest shafts are filled with wax up to the surface. Previous to 1884 the average yearly deaths from such accidents were nine per 1,000. In recent years, however, measures have been taken by the government to protect the miners' lives. An official investigation made in 1898 showed that during the previous year the ozocerite beds of Gallcia covered an area of 956,885 square metres, and that there were forty-two different miEing concerns, employing 5,413 operatives. The output in that year - wa3 77,586 quintals, equal to 17,068,920 pounds. Mineral wax is never found in a pure state, and such of the crude material aa is intended for export is usually freed from foreign mat- ter near the mines. It is for this purpose put into tanks, which are heated either by a direct fire or by steam. The greater part of the ozocerite con- sumed in Austria, the consul says, Is man- ufactured into ceresin. Some is also used in the manufacture of shoemakers' wax and paraffin. Ceresin and beeswax are used in the manufacture of wax candles. Ceresin is also used for phonographic cyl- inders, and in galvani-plastic printing and other arts. In 1899 the exports of ozocerite from Austria reached 11,970,860 pounds, valued at $872,494. The shipments to this country, however are insignificant. MISLEADING SONG Says Negroes Should Not Sins "My Country 'Tis of Thee." Galesburg, 111., July 5. —Rev. F. L. Smith of Springfield caused a sensation at the Wood river Baptist Sunday school convention, col- ored, by objecting to the pinging of "Ameri- ca" by colored people. He said that the song, "My Country, 'Tis of Thee," was not intended for the race to sing, and any one who at- tempts to sing it handles the truth carelessly. "As long as negroes are shot, hanged and burned at the stake," he exclaimed, "this is not the sweet land of liberty it claims to be." The announcement that the Olivet and Providence Sunday schools of Chicago had withdrawn from the convention caused com- ment. GLANDERS IN THE CAMP Thirty-nine Horses Put to Death by Montana Authorities. Special to The Journal. Helena, Mont., July 5. —Thirty-nine glandered horses belonging to con- tractors on the Tucola-Cody brsach of the Burlington road on the Crow Indian res- ervation were condemned and shot by State Veterinarian M. E. Knowles. The horses came to Montana recently from Nebraska. The cases were well devel- oped and the most typical Been here in years. Extra precautions in the way of disinfecting harness and burning stables have been taken to prevent spread of tha dread disease. One Insane Patient at Fergus Falls , Kills Another. Special to The Journal. Fergus I Falls, Minn., Julj»- s.—William \u25a0 Cosgrove, a patient from Clay county county, was struck by Walter Mclntyre, another patient,. with a heavy floor brush, at the insane hospital here. The blow struck the back og the neck, breaking the spinal column and causing instant death. Both were chronic cases. Mclntyre is an epileptic from Steams county, and appears to have : no idea that he has ; done - any harm. ..\u25a0".\u25a0-/-,...?,,,.;, DULiUTH OUTCLASSED BY ASHLAND. Special to The Journal. •' \u25a0 Ashland, Wia., July 6.—Ashland defeated Duhith here Wednesday and Thursday. The score on Wednesday was 18 to 4. Batteries— Duluth: Cumminga and Sturgeon; Ashland: Erickson and Gardner. :'j In this game Ashland secured nineteen hits off Cummings, the "boy I •wonder." In yesterday's game the score was Duluth 2. Ashland 8., Batteries— Staubb and Sturgeon, Augustine and Gardner. ! Total at- tendance, 2.100. ; CASTOR IA For Infanta and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought \u25a0 Bears tha - y^TJt^ '^1// mmmmy!^ m \ Signature of LJuz&fy /'&£&&£&£ CHAIR OF CHINESE It Is Endowed by a Friend of Co- lumbia University. RELATIONS OF CHINA AND U. S. Industrial Relations That Are Bound to Grow Make a. Fuller Knowl- edge Necessary. New York, July 5.—A gift of $100,000 from a friend of the university, to be devoted to the establishment of a chair at Columbia . for the study and teaching of the Chinese language, was announced- by President Low during the progress of the commencement exercises. In announc- ing it he said: "It is often said that the Chinese have no religion. If this means only that our religion is not their religion, it nend not be controverted. But if, as I hold, re- ligion may be best denned as emotion concerning itself about our highest obli- gation and duty, then the Chinese may be called a religious people. s>* /':. "And when it is considered that they are made up of several hundred millions, of like origin race, and character, earth- born and firmly rooted in the soil, bound together by the common usage and tradi- tions of incalculable generations, and welded . into a homogeneous nation by many co-operative causes, and especially by the unifying force of a literary lan- guage; that with their unrivalled endur- ance, temperance and industry, their de- votion to family, and almost superstitious love of home, and holding to their purpose with the tenacity of Israel, they are pos- sessed by a patient patriotism equal, per- haps, to that of any other contempora- FKIDAY EVENING, JULY 5, 1901. Surprise Special Sale No. 220 AT THE SURPRISE STORE, 318 AND 320 MICOLLET AY. On Sale One Week, Beginning To-morrow, Saturday, and ''.': Ending Next Friday. : '• "" '\u25a0':? * jgfH^ Boys' Fancy jßflf Crash Caps Tsj / jjT Elegant design, in Golf and Yacht Shapes— T^^-^^JS. nicely made—feather weight—on sale one week, . The Popnlar Line of Men's Snlts "^^r i Durability. In Light and /T^\ Novelty Styles Medium Weights, V*£ *in Rich Materials, $3, $S,/ff\ $10, $12 .$7.50 W $15 Every one of them per- I A The fit, the colorings, fectly reliable in quality < 1 M ; the wear and shape-re- in an unlimited variety M ,- taining qualities of these of styles and materials. , I garments are guaranteed } They're made in The \u25a0 I to be unsurpassed in the Surprise Store's model , I whole world. They are workroom, by skilled W V^^ specimens of high-art Union tailors. 1^ tailoring. ; V" \u25a0 Money Back on Request. -- Clothing Repaired lor on Yonr FREE. Boys' dS£b£!u* Knee* lounfIounf ™SMgi J t Begin at $2.50 for excellent rflflfQ Sill °^ fancy cassi- Cassimere Suits. Better grades lUUU «juii.o meres, serges and are here at $3.50 $4.50 .fancy worsteds atsl, $1.50, $2, $6.50 and up to $12—every $2.50; the very tinest grades are garment reliable in quality, su- here at $3, $4 and $5. perb in make and perfect in fit. Boy Wash Suit* of Crash, Duck and Galatea Cloth 800, 7 80, 91.00 Men's Balbriggan Underwear, plain and fancy 25c. 45c Bedford Cord and Madras Negligee Shirts 50c Light Weight Summer Suspenders 25c - Seamless plain and fancy Hose 10c- 12c High grade Balbriggan Underwear ..:... 95c Rough Braid Straw Hats 25c Every new design in Leather Belts 25c, sOc I Men's Rough-Braid Straw Hats .. 48c. 98c Novelty. Effects Hemstitched Handkerchiefs sc, 8c Madras Shield Bows and String Ties 5c Men's and Boys, Golf and Yacht Caps 25c 48c Men's Fine. Madras Negligee Shirts in every conceivable new design—some »plaited bosom* with attached and dEJ detached cuffs «jp U ££ FLYER —For One Day, Saturday only, AQ A Men's Madras Shirts, large body ' felled fcjC mCU 3 iTlaUlad 311UL3, seams, pat. gussets, Eb^H/Vi9 WHAT NEXT? EVERYBODY ASKS. WHAT NEXT? > T HE Sll RPRiSCSTORE 818 AND 320 \^T!l<<^ BKTWEBN THIRD AMD NfCOLLET AYE. FOURTH STREETS. neous people; that with a common speech, copious and expressive, and older, prob- ably, than any other living tongue now- spoken on the earth, they are also em- inently a literary people, with a great and abundant literature, as old at least as any of the great classical literatures that have done so much to soften and mould our own institutions and manners; that they have an inherited civilization coeval with, if not antedating, those that grew up around the Mediterranean, but les3 sensual and superstitious, and from which there seems to be some evidence tending to show that other archaic civili- zations may have taken, if not their origin, at least some impulse and refine- ment; that they have a complete system of ancient and customary law, admirably fitted to their needs and condition, reg- ulating all the varied relations of civilized life —of family, society and government— a system that had grown up through in- finite experiment, trials and failures, until habit had acquired the force and sanction of natural or divine law, long before the makers of our common law had emerged from their immemorial savagery, without arts or agriculture, and clothed. If at all, with the skins of beasts; that, whether for good or ill, and whether we will If or not—by a manifest destiny, no longer un- revealed, we are brought into familiar neighborhood and intercourse with them; facing each other, and separated only by quick ferry across a Pacific sea hereafter to become in large measure a Chinese- American sea, and with Industrial and commercial relations, already of no mean proportions, and which must steadily grow to billions annually; and, not least, that we claim to have a gospel superior to all others and which in Its own spirit of peace, gentleness and truth, we would carry to all the earth. Considering these things, would it not be a reproach to this proud university, this fountainhead of science and scholarship, this venerable home of the humanities, not to have taken a first step in this direction towards the advancement of International comity and culture and of a humane and beneficent assimilation?" Shoe Specials Bicycle Shoes Men' Shoes k^t^sE ; _ •; \u25a0 , .• i which the regular price was &0 2Q , For Youths eft ° n J/r 10 %n l> |; $s and«. mm ....?. ....**. as*:; make, regular prjS^^close 69c £*£***££}&» $£?&°&* \ Fnr / ftttif**z An tan bike shoe In.', 25 per cent below regular i>jf JQ ' Mut L*auius the store, r gular prices ','\u25a0 price. Ch0ice......... «pi.iro i S^eKetX,cT ke: j| Ladies' SlippersZ Q *:^ri \ ,— > a . ««.«\u25a0 / V.. - ' '•!' " pairyetofttie Ladles' $1.03 Strap Slip- , For Men '-; SSffiSSSat 4TerUslns for 79c ; s!2es some broken, pair;...:. ...«J>-'»^O _. if c+ "en ""-In 1 Boys'Shoes^!^?% 'i "'^^Sr"^™^ i ular $1 value, sizes 12 to S and '^o!;! 1 «Ktoß,6Bo,SKtolU79o,liKto2 O^C ; 5t0^pau........ *5C ,; O/r/s' Canvas Shoes : Boys' Dress Shoes | : Neatly trimmed with leather, sizes 84 to ' uu/a M-TCSa >JHUeS i to 11 and HH to a, our regular prices 7»c ' Nice vicl kid, black . n -- nnn f ,„------- ana-8»c, special vjP^ ' or dark tan, regular >^ w-n-n-^fV^'^s/^^ J^L^^^^ for Saturday "*C»C ( $2 shoes, nearly every -"V-';'::"|fa^B^ <®mMil i 1 \u25a0' pafr P" !; jrSZTTVW^L Z'a£//>S' OeS i \u25a0•"CmT ;Home lraac \S| ? $2, $2.60 and $s vai- ; Ladies* Oxfords \W Shoe Store % sK s'all ! Over 600 pairs at Dear-^, *%v~ »i« »>t u.,~u.t...*r ', sizes; by far the b«st < 1> one-thlra below reg- ;! 2"'*sUl! ifJW !' shoe bargain in the i ular price, at Oj8^» 'i \u25a0\u25a0'^**AiAl:<7n^Bi«p^^-- \u25a0( i- clt>"; 01 AQ <

Minneapolis journal (Minneapolis, Minn. : 1888) …...lowed almost immediately by a torrent of rain, and this added to the confusion. The injured could not be relieved for an hour,

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Page 1: Minneapolis journal (Minneapolis, Minn. : 1888) …...lowed almost immediately by a torrent of rain, and this added to the confusion. The injured could not be relieved for an hour,

2

CIRCUS BLOWN AWAYGentry's Big Tents Destroyed by

Storm at Grand Island.

MANY INJURED, TWO FATALLY

Straiffht-Awuy Blow Followed by, aTorrent of ' Rain—An limits '.'•'

Killed.

Grand Island, Neb., July 5.—A tornado•wept over Hall county yesterday after-noon, leaving death and disaster in itspath. It was one of the most devastating

wind storms this section of the state hasever experienced.

Many people were injured in GrandIsland, several probably fatally, but greatdifficulty is being experienced in securingdetails and names of injured because mostof the destruction in this city developedat the Gentry circus, which was complete-ly blown away. The cages were over-turned and many valuable animals killed.

The tents were rippe dto pieces, andthe circus property is scattered over aspace twenty miles long by two miles

\u25a0wide. When the tent was ripped to piecesthe crowd attempted to escape from thetangle of ropes and wires, and then the•eats collapsed. The high wind was fol-lowed almost immediately by a torrentof rain, and this added to the confusion.The injured could not be relieved for anhour, so fierce was the wind and rain.Contrary to usual cases, however, thetwisting motion was absent and the wind\u25a0was a straight-away blow. The velocitywas seventy-two miles an hour.-

Special to The Journal.

In the country districts the destructionwrought was greater than at Grand Island.Stock was killed in large numbers, andcrops were totally destroyed for manymiles. The storm broke from a practical-ly clear sky, and a few moments beforethe wind reached the proportions of a tor-nado the sun was shining brightly, andnot a breath of air stirring. The mercurystood at 109 in the shade.

Among the Injured are: Mrs. JohnBoyles Anna Boyle, Charles Boyle, IraHenderson, Alice Duffy, John Cameron,Miller Wait. Harriet Joyce, William Rol-lins, Mary Dougherty, Maggie Swift, Har-ry Mullaney. The last two are perhapsfatally hurt. Most of the injured arecountry people who were attending thecircus.

One Is Dead.

Grand Island, Neb., July s.—AlbertEtevenson, who was injured in yesterday'sstorm which struck a circus tent in thiscity, died early to-day. Five names wereadded to the list of injured to-day, bring-ing the total up to fifty. All injured willrecover.

WOLVERIXE CLOUDBURST

fclucli Property Destroyed and Rall-road Traffic Crippled.

Grand Rapids, Mich., July s.—WesternMichigan was visited by a disastrouscloudburst early to-day and the damage(Will amount to thousands of dollars. Boththe Pere Marquette and Grand Rapids &Indiana railroads are crippled north ofhere and all north-bound passenger trainsare obliged to make long detours, whilefreight traffic is paralyzed. Between hereand Howard City on the Grand Rapids &Indiana, the roadbed is washed out in adozen places, and the Pere Marquette isIn the same condition. The Grand Trunkcan get no trains east on account of thewashing out of a bridge at Saranac. DamsIn the Flat and Rouge rivers, north ofhere, have been washed out, and manymills along these streams will be idlefor days. The Grand river rose threefeet and six inches between 6 and 10o'clock this morning, and is still risingrapidly. Great damage was done to fruittrees and growing crops in the westernMichigan peach belt.

A FLOOD AT MINTO

Tracks o* tue Great Xorthern andSoo Washed Away.

Special to The Journal.Mlnot, N. D., July s.—Torrents of rain

fell here this week. In an hour the bigravine just west of the Commercial house\u25a0was full to Its banks. The waters rushedmadly down the ravine to the Soo track,taking huge stones, timbers, cordwoodand all kinds of flood plunder with it.The Great Northern yards looked like agreat lake stretching to the east and west.For a time the water rushed over thestation platform, which is at least twofeet higher than the tracks. The housetrack leading to the Great Northern mainline was washed away for a distance of100 feet or more.

Engineer Fred Almy brought in theeast-bound flyer, arriving about 11 o'clock.There were two feet of water about thestation.. As soon as his engine was cutloose from the train he started for theroundhouse. No sooner had he been letIn en the roundhouse track than thetender seemed to drop out of sight. One !-or two of the main drivers slid from the !rail. The derailment of the engine was idue to the washing out of the grade.

The Soo came in for its share of trouble.\u25a0The grade just east of the station was\u25a0washed away for a distance of 600 feet.

.' The east-bound passenger was detained• here several hours. The damage to town•property was slight. A few cellars werefilled with water. No damage was doneto orops except in a few places. Gardens !on low lands were injured some, but alittle sunshine will soon bring them back j. to their former state of thriftiness.

HAILAND RAINFierce Storm Sweeps Down on Fer-

gus Falls.Special to The Journal.

;!. Fergus Falls. Minn., July 5.—A terriblerainstorm accompanied by heavy hail setIn here Just as the celebration was closing ilast night. Gardens ere ruined, but thecity seems to have been the center of the.kail area and the damage to the crops -nthe vicinity is not great. The rainfall!wa» 3.07 inches.

"WIND AND HAIL STORMCrop* Around Miles City, Mont., Are

: Completely Destroyed.Special to The Journal.

Miles City, Mont., July 5.—A destructive•wind and hail storm struck this city yes-terday. Buildings were unroofed, windows jsmashed and houses flooded. Hail de-stroyed all crops in this vicinity. One of ithe state reform school buildings was un-roofed; no lives were lost.

Church Struck by Lightning.Special to The Journal.

Winona, Minn., July During a severestorm last night lightning struck the steeple 'on St. Martin , s Lutheran church, tearing offall the shingles down the west side to thebelfry, but fortunately not setting the church.on lire.

"Too Much Rain."Special to The Journal. '\u25a0 "\u25a0

Bottineau, N. D., July 5.-The celebrationwas curtailed by rains last night and yester- <day, the heaviest of the year, almost a cloud-- burst, in fact. There is too much rain now.Houston County Crops Damaged.

Special to The Journal. .Caledonia, Minn.; July 5.— terrific rain

and windstorm, accompanied by hail passed !©Tor this vicinity at 7:20 last evening seri-ously damaging the crops. Trains on the nar-

, row gauge are delayed by washout*.EVIDENTLY EXPERIENCED

- \u25a0•\u25a0\u25a0="; \u25a0.-•':; Puck.Mr. Hoon—l am convinced that the

groom at last night's wedding was eithera widower or a bigamist. ,

Mrs. Hoon—Good gracious! What makesyou think so? *Mr. Hoon—Why, didn't you notice that

.he looked neither scared nor sneaking| during the" ceremony ?

Among the several states and territor-;iejj. Oklahoma shows the largest percent-•al.* of

'•Increase, according to \u25a0 the > censusol >§00.

LORILLARD'S RECORDWorked Like a Trojan Though Rich

by Inheritance

HE ECLIPSED ALL SOCIALLY

Builneii, Social and Sporting Rec-ord of the Man Now at the

Point of Death.

MmwYork Sun Sttmolul Smrvlo*.New York, July s.—More than seven

years ago Pierre Lorillard, who is lying atthe point of death in the Fifth avenuehotel in this city, left New York for thesouth of France, advised by his physiciansto take a protracted rest. He spent thetime quietly abroad.

Lorillard's connection with the turfbegan in 1873, when he was advised byhis physicians to seek an outdoor life.Before that he had been closely confinedto business, as he had bought out hisbrothers in the tobacco trade and suc-ceeded to his father's business. TheLorillards had been the first in Americato make snuff. Their original shop wasat Peck Slip and Water stret. Here thefoundation of the Lorillard fortune waslaid. During the first part of his life,Lorillard showed a fondness for hardwork, in spite of the fact that he had in-herited millions. It was said that whenhis father, Peter Lorillard, died, each ofhis children—there were five sons andthree daughters—received a million. ButPierre was the only one who kept up thebusiness.

He married Miss Emily Taylor, notedfor her beauty. He bought a house on thenortheast corner of Fifth avenue andThirty-sixth stret, which for years wasthe social center of New York. In splen-dor of entertainment, in elaborate out-lay and unchecked expenditure the socialaffairs of Pierre Lorillard eclipsed allothers. It was during this time that hebought Ochre Point at Newport, anderected there a cottage marvelous for itsdesign. This he afterward sold to Cornel-ius Vanderbilt.

In yachting Lorillard was famous for atime. He built the Vesta, a schooner thatentered '.he race from Sandy Hook toCowes, England.' He built the Pahda andother famed yachts. When he went intoracing Lorillard picked up a colt, forwhich he paid $780. This was a raw-bonedspecimen named Parole. This horse soonbeat everything on this side of the water.He was sent to England, and in one yearwon the New Market handicap, the Cityand Suburban, the Great Market handicap,the Epsom and Gold Cup. This was thebeginning of a aeries of notable achieve-ments of the turf, followed by the victoryof Iroquois in the English derby.

Lorillard was the founder of Tuxedo inthe Ramapo Hills. Some years ago Lor-illard sold his Fifth avenue home and leftsuddenly for England. While there hasbeen no legal separation nor any applica-tion for divorce, for some years Mr. andMrs. Lorillard have lived apart.

New York. July 6.—The condition ofPierre Lorillard was resorted to-day tobe slightlybetter. His son-in-law, T. Suf-fern Taylor, said that while Mr. Loril-lard's condition was very serious, hope ofhis recovery had not beeen given up.

JAW BROKEN BY A BULLETA SHOOTING AT FARMIXGTOX

Keeling, a Hotel Man, Dangerously

Wonndi Smith, Proprietor

of a Livery.

Special to The Journal.Farmington, Minn., July 5.—H. J. Smith,

a liveryman, was shot in the face about£ o'clock this morning by A. J. Keeling,proprietor of the Commercial hotel, andis seriously injured. The men had sometrouble last winter and have been enemiesever since. To-day when they met hotwords ensued and Keeling drew a revolverand fired at close range.

Smith's jaw was broken into pieces andIhe has been taken to St. Paul for treat-: ment. He had been drinking and was dis-[ posed to be quarrelsome.

Keeling is in jail to await the resultof Smith's injuries and action by thecourts. Both men are prominent here andthe affair has stirred up a good deal offeeling, each having his partizans.

The county attorney is here and Keelingwill have a hearing at once. He will prob-ably be released on bonds.

TEACHERS FOR'PINOSE. J. Donaldson of Spring Valley Is

Likely to Be One.

Special to The Journal.Winona, Minn., July s.—Congressman

Tawney was advised this morning by| Colonel Edwards of the insular divisionjthat if State Superintendent Olson rec-

Iommends Professor E. J. Donaldson ofSpring Valley for appointment as teacherin the Philippines at a salary of $1,300a year he will get the place. PeterLoughrey, a graduate of the normal lastyear, has been recommended for the $900place.

PLANS.Detroit Journal.

All his life he labored to the end thethis neighbors might say of him when hewas dead and gone: "He did his best!"

In pursuance of this purpose he foundedschools and libraries.

• But after all there were those at hisfuneral who said: "He done his best!"

WASTING HIS OPPORTUNITIES.Somerville Journal.

"And what is this man here for?"asked a sweet young lady visiting thejail.

"He stole a loaf of bread from a bakeshop, miss," answered the turnkey grim-ly.

"Only a loaf of bread!" exclaimed thesweet young lady in surprise. "Didna thebaker have any cake or pie?"

Special to The Journal.

Kmw YorkSun Saoclal Safviom

ROBBERS IN A TRAPSheriff's Posse Said to Have Them

Fast Near Wagner.

ESTIMATED LOSS IS $30,000

Mm, Pease, a Passenger, Describes

the Holdup—Wounded Are

Dolns Well.

Special to The Journal.Great Falls, Mont., July s.—The three

men who held up the Great Northerntranscontinental west-baund express nearWagner and secured many thousands ofdollars, are surrounded at "Buck" Allen'sranch, about forty miles south of Wag-

ner, near the edge of the old Fort Bel-knap reservation on the west Fork of thePouchette river. It is probable they willnot be captured until after a severe fight,and at the latest advices Sheriff Griffithhad not made the attack.

The bandits are thought to be housedin the ranch buildings, which offer everyprotection for a siege. The posse may nottry to force their capture until reinforc*-ments are received. It is understoodthat another posse from south of the Mis-souri, in the direction of Fort Hawley,will join Sheriff Griffith at Allen's ranch.

Contrary to the first reports, the menare not thought to be experienced trainrobbers. Information from Wagner andnearby points is that they have been par-tially identified as cowpunchers employedon a ranch south of the Milk river. Oneis a half-breed, as was thought at thetime of the robbery. He is known to bethe man who boarded the express east ofWagner and forced the engineer and tb«fireman to bring it to a stop at the headof the ravine in which his confederateswere hidden.

Story Told by Mrs. Pease.

Mrs. M. E. Pease of Galesburg, 111., wasone of the passengers on the robbed train.When seen by a Journal correspond-ent, soon after her arrival here, she tolda graphic story of the hold-up, and whileshe was still nervous, she stated that shedid not feel at all alarmed during the ex-citement and did not break down untilshe saw the robbers riding away.

"When the train stopped," said Mrs.Pease, "I thought nothing of it until Isaw several men moving hurriedly to-ward the door. I was about to raise awindow and look out, when a perfectfusillade of shots began and instantly Irealized that we were held up. Some one,I don't know whether he was one of therobbers or not, came to the door andshouted for the passengers to remain intheir seats; that the robbers were onlyafter the express car, and I can tell youthat no passengers wanted to look out,for every lew seconds we could hear thesong of a bullet near the windows of thecoaches."

"The excitement was so gTeat that Icannot tell how long the ghooting wascontinued, but when the robbers had goneand we looked at the sides of the coaches,we could see many places where the bul-lets had sped along the sides. The trackis perfectly straight where the holdup oc-curred and the coaches were perfectlyaligned, so that it was not difficult to keepall of them under guard. We did not fullycomprehend what was being done until weheard the explosion of dynamite aheadof us. It shook the day coaches severely,but did no great damage to any part ofthe train except the smoker, all the win-dows in which were shattered. The menwho had remained in the smoker cametumblingback into the day coach and werevery careful not to get upon the sidesteps."

The First Alarm.Another passenger who was in the Pull-

man says that one robber stood on oneside of the train and one on another eide,holding the passengers and trainmen inthe cars by frequent shooting, while athird man compelled the fireman'to helphim blow up the safe. It took four shotsbefore the safe gave way and the first onealarmed a sheep herder who saw the trainstop and, supposing something wrong,hurried into Malta. He was the first togive the alarm.

While the work of blowing up the safewas progressing &\u25a0 horseman approachedand one of the rpbbers remarked:

"I don't like the looks of that—l guessI'll take a shot at him."

"All right, Billy," said the boss of thegang, "but don't hit him; hit the horse."Thereupon the robber fired and the

horseman wheeled and rode away. Hewas seen by the passengers at Malta, andthere was a bullet wound in the fleshypart of the horse's hie showing that therobber was a splendid shot. The horsemanwas a rancher livine near there and im-mediately after getting hit rode on to Mal-ta and gave the alarm.

Only $SO,OOO Secured.After the fourth shot in the express car

It did not take the robbers long to puttheir boodle, which is now estimated atonly $30,000, into sacks and, telling theengineer and fireman to remain wherethey were for fifteen minutes, the robberstook their horses, which were tied nearby, and rode leisurely away.

The two wounded men are in the hos-pital here. Brakeman Woodside willprobably lose an arm, but both he andAuditor Douglass will recover. The lit-tle girl, Gertrude Smith, who received aflesh wound, was carried on to her homein Seattle.

FOURTH'S AFTERMATHBlaze at Ironwood, M eh., Started

by Firecrackers.Special to The Journal.

Ironwood, Mich., July s.—Fireworks inJussen & Trier's store caught fire thismorning. The interior of the store, in-cluding confectionery, fruits and tobacco,was destroyed. The fire caught from firecrackers, which were being set off on thesidewalk by boys. It is supposed a lightedfire cracker went through a hole in thewindow, setting fire to the window dis-play. The loss is $4,000, partly insured.Plate glass in adjoining stores was shat-tered by sky rockets.

From C E. to MormonismNew York, July s.—ln Jersey City and on the shore of New York bay Miss Eliza-both Dickinson, a fo*ner secretary of the Young People's Society of Christian En-deavor of the Port Morris Congregational church, in the Bronx, has been baptized intothe Mormon faith. Miss Dickinson wore a bathing robe, which looked like white orcream colored nun's veiling, encircled by Bilken cords. She wore white roses in herdark hair and a bunch of white flowers was fastened at the corsage.

Dowieite Egged by lowansWaterloo, lowa, July 5.—A shower of eggs, good and bad, greeted Elder JamesR. Adams of the Dowieite church last night while he was entering upon a tiradeof abuse of the doctors and churches. Despite the unpleasant effects of the missilesthe elder stood his ground for some time, but at last was hooted down and sought

refuge behind some of his feminine followers and was escorted safely to the taber-nacle.The feeling against the Zionites has been growing here lately, and it is now being

asserted that the leaders must leave town. Further trouble is looked for, however

Negro-Flavored Drinking WaterHuntington, W. Va., July s.—Twenty or more colored youths for weeks haveused the city reservoirs on the hill back of the city for a bathing pool. This is thedirect cause of the destruction of $200,000 worth of property by fire, the throwingout of employment of 5,000 men and a water famine which existed for three days

here this week. When the fact became known that the reservoirs were used as bath-ing pools they were ordered drained. While dry the pumps at the water station brokedown and fire could not be put out.

THE MINNEAPOLIS JOUKJMAU

FIRST AND SECONDOnly Regiments to Go Into Camp

at Lakeview.

THE SECOND WILL COME FIRST

First Battalion,. ©I Artillery to Par-ticipate— Improvement* . , ?

Made to the Camp. -

Special to The Journal.Lake City, Minn., July s.—Beginning

next Monday, this city will bear every re-semblance of a military post for the nexttwenty days, owing to the encampment ofthe State National Guard. The event islooked forward to each year by the citi-zens of Lake City and surrounding coun-try, as it tends to break a monotony andbrings with it much of the martial spiritand enthusiasm always evident wheresoldiers are bivouacked.

On Monday the Second regiment of in-fantry, Colonel Joseph Bobleter com-manding, and the First battalion of artil-lery, Major George C. Lambert command-ing, will arrive. The Second regiment iscomposed of companies from towns in thesouthern part of the state. Captain W.H. Hart, brigade quartermaster, has beenbusy arranging a time schedule for theleaving of the trains at the various com-pany stations, and now has it completed.

Itinerary.

Company G, Austin, leaves that stationon special train, C, M. & St. P. railway,at 8 a. m. Company I, Owatonna, leavesthat station on special train, C, M. & St.P. railway, at 9:05 a. m. Company B,Faribault, leaves on special train, C, M.& St. P. railway, at 9:35 a. m. CompanyD, Northfield, leaves on special train, C,M. & St. P. railway, at 10 a. m. Fieldstaff, noncommissioned staff and bandand Company A, New Ulm, leave thatstation on train No. 4, C. & N. W. rail-way, at 6 a. m., arriving Owatonna, 8:50a. m., where they will be attached tospecial train leaving that station at 9:05a. m. Company E, Pipestone, leaves onspecial train, C, St. P. M. & O. railway,at 12 o'clock, midnight, arriving HeronLake 2 a. m., July 8; leaves Heron Lake2:32 a. m., arriving Owatonna 8:50 a. m.,where they will be attached to specialtrain leaving that station at 9:05 a. m.Company H, Mankato, leaves at 6:50 a.m., arriving Owatonna 8:50 a. m., wherethey will be attached to special trainleaving that station at 9:05 a. m. Com-pany F, Rochester, leaves on train No.51, C. & N. W., at 8:02 a. m., arriving

at Red Wing 9:57 a. m., where it will beattached to the special train on C, M. &St. P. railway, at 11:30 a. m. CompanyC, Winona, leaves on train No. 3, C, M.& St. P. railway, at 8:36 a. m., arriving

at the Lake City camp grounds 10:30 a. m.Breaking camp on July 17, the regi-

ment will depart on a special train at 1:50p. m. Companies A, E and H will go toSt. Paul and transfer to trains for home.

The battalion of artillery is composedof Battery A, St. Paul; Battery B, Min-neapolis, and a company of engineers, lo-cated in St. Paul. The batteries will eachtake eighty-five men to camp and theengineers sixty. They will arrive on aspecial train leaving Minneapolis at 7 a.m.; St. Paul, 7:30, and arrive at the campgrounds at 9:25 a. m. Leaving they .willbreak camp at 1:50 p. m. on July 17, ar-rive in St. Paul at 3:45, and Minneapolis,4:30.

Improvements at Lake view.

There have been many improvements inthe camp grounds since last year, andsome of the older members may have dif-ficulty in locating themselves. The head-quarters building has been moved downbeyond and on a line with the hospital.The officers' mess hall has been moved ona line with the other two buildings nearerthe camp proper* The south mess hallhas been moved back 200 feet towards theinfantry bara.'^This will allow more roomin the company streets, which will be agreat Improvement. A new barn will beerected on the artillery grounds. Theartillery mess hall has been moved towhere the little guard house stood, anda 38-foot adidtion has been added to it,thus allowing room for the engineer corps.The new range has been completed forshooting, and water connection with LakeCity completed.

The artillery grounds have been espec-cially fortunate in securing improvements.The quartermaster has astorehouse locatedback of headquarters, and the officers willhave a mess hall to themselves. Thechanges on the artillery grounds havebeen made necessary by the addition ofnew guns to their equipment which neces-sitates more ground room in order to al-low them to be patrolled properly.

First Regiment.

The First regiment, composed of Com-panies A, B, F and I, Minneapolis; C. Dand E, St. Paul; G. Red Wing, and X,Stillwater, will arrive at 9:25 a. m., onJuly 18. Each company will have forty-five men. They will travel on a specialtrain leaving Minneapolis at 7:00 a. m.,St. Paul, 7:30; Red Wing, 8:40. This regi-ment which is the last in camp, willstrike tents on July 27, and leave groundsat 1:30 p. m., arrive in Red Wing at 2 p.m.; St. Paul, 3:30, and Minneapolis, 4p. m.

Lake City will miss the Third regimentthis year, as it decided to participate ina practice march instead of the annualcamp.

It is understood here that The Jour-nal will run an excursion to the campgrounds on July 12, via boat and rail.These excursions have become very pop-ular and are looked forward to by theboys as it always brings many friends.

TRACK IS IN BAD SHAPEWASHOUTS AND BRIDGES GONE

Traffic on the Northern Pacific Sus-pended in the Miles City

Country.

Helena, Mont., July s.—Two heavycloudbursts have played havoc with theNorthern Pac!sc track between Miles Cityand Wibaux, in the eastern part of thestate. Several large fills have been carr-ried away and five bridges damaged tosuch an extent that they will have to berebuilt. Every effort is being made tohurry the repairs. Piling and a piledriver are on the way from the Dakotadivision. It will probably be twenty-fourto thirty-six hours before the track ispassable.

Special to The Journal.

FATAL BLOW

Several work trains and thousands oflaborers are out cribbing and haul-ing dirt and gravel. Trains Nos.2 and 4 are held at Miles City.Train No. 1 is at Shirley. Other west-bound trains are at Dickinson. Thevigilance of trainmen, trackmen andothers prevented the derailment of thetrains.

TEN THOUSAND THERENoted Scouts, Pioneers and Every-

body at Deadwood's Carnival.Special to The Journal.

Deadwood, S. D., July s.—There is justas much enthusiasm to-day as ever at theDoadwood carnival. The crowd is said tolive without either sleep or drink. Thisforenoon the old Indian scouts andpioneers renewed acquaintances. Some ofthe most noted scouts in the United Statesare here. The weather has been unusu-ally pleasant.

The hotels and restaurants had 10,000guests yesterday. Bight coaches cameover the Elkhorn at noon with standingroom even taken. The Burlington lastnight brought in as large a crowd.

"Now you know what a 'tee' Is," saidBunker, explaining the game. "Now,then, a 'caddie'—

"Oh, I see!" she interrupted, "that'swhat you put the tea in. Of course, Iknow what a 'tea-caddie is."

HOW TO GET THEMF. R, Salisbury's Idea of the Way

to Secure Conventions.

COMMERCIAL CLUB AT WORK

The Club's f10,000 Fnnd Is Growing

and Hum Reached the$7,000 Mark.

Chairman F. R. Salisbury of the Com-mercial Club's convention committee, isanxious to secure the co-operation of thepeople of the city in bringing conventionsand public gatherings to Minneapolis.The committee is endeavoring to interestall of the church societies and fraternalbodies of the city as well as the* businessmen's associations in the work. Mr.Salisbury says that local branches of so-cieties or associations about to hold na-tional gatherings can do a great deal #fgood by working to secure subsequentconventions for Minneapolis.

The Epworth league delegates who go toSan Francisco will take with them a largenumber of attractive badges with whichall the delegates who favor Minneapolisas the next place of meeting in 1903 willbe decorated.

Chairman A. C. Paul of the finance cow-mittee of the Commercial Club announcesthat subscriptions to the extent of $7,000have been received toward the $10,000fund for general purposes. It was theintention of the committee to publish afull list of the subscribers July 1, but ithas been thought best to delay this tillJuly 15, when it is hoped that the fullamount asked by the committee will havebeen subscribed. The committee asks allbusiness men who intend to subscribe tohave their subscriptions in before July15. I

SOME MINES OF WAX!Facts About Ozocerite Found in

Galicia.

IT IS A MINERAL PRODUCT

It Is Used in the Manufacture of Par-affin, Candles and Phonograph-

ic Cylinders.

Washington, July s.—United StatesConsul F. W. Hossfeld at Trieste, Austria,sends to the state department a long re-port on ozocerite, or mineral wax, a res-inous substance resembling beeswax,which is found in Russia, Roumania,Egypt, Algeria, Canada and Mexico, aswell as in Austria-Hungary, but which isfound in quantities sufficient to pay formining only in the district of Boryslav,Galicia, and to a limited extent on thewest coast of the Caspian sea. Concern-ing the mining of ozocerite, Consul Hoss-feld says:

Mining operations are commenced by sink-ing a shaft and connecting it by gallerieswith the beds, or "nests," containing thewax. Sometimes It happens, when a nest isbeing opened, that the enormous pressure ofgases shut up in the same causes the softmass of wax to beforced out with great vehe-mence. Such occurrences greatly imperil thelives of the miners, who are compelled toflee to some higher part of the shaft forsafety. In some cases the pressure is sopowerful that even the deepest shafts arefilled with wax up to the surface. Previousto 1884 the average yearly deaths from suchaccidents were nine per 1,000. In recentyears, however, measures have been takenby the government to protect the miners'lives.

An official investigation made in 1898 showedthat during the previous year the ozoceritebeds of Gallcia covered an area of 956,885square metres, and that there were forty-twodifferent miEing concerns, employing 5,413operatives. The output in that year - wa377,586 quintals, equal to 17,068,920 pounds.

Mineral wax is never found in a pure state,and such of the crude material aa is intendedfor export is usually freed from foreign mat-ter near the mines. It is for this purposeput into tanks, which are heated either by adirect fire or by steam.

The greater part of the ozocerite con-sumed in Austria, the consul says, Is man-ufactured into ceresin. Some is also usedin the manufacture of shoemakers' waxand paraffin. Ceresin and beeswax areused in the manufacture of wax candles.Ceresin is also used for phonographic cyl-inders, and in galvani-plastic printingand other arts. In 1899 the exports ofozocerite from Austria reached 11,970,860pounds, valued at $872,494. The shipmentsto this country, however are insignificant.

MISLEADING SONGSays Negroes Should Not Sins "My

Country 'Tis of Thee."Galesburg, 111., July 5.—Rev. F. L. Smith

of Springfield caused a sensation at the Woodriver Baptist Sunday school convention, col-ored, by objecting to the pinging of "Ameri-ca" by colored people. He said that the song,"My Country, 'Tis of Thee," was not intendedfor the race to sing, and any one who at-tempts to sing it handles the truth carelessly.

"As long as negroes are shot, hanged andburned at the stake," he exclaimed, "this isnot the sweet land of liberty it claims tobe."

The announcement that the Olivet andProvidence Sunday schools of Chicago hadwithdrawn from the convention caused com-ment.

GLANDERS IN THE CAMPThirty-nine Horses Put to Death by

Montana Authorities.Special to The Journal.

Helena, Mont., July 5.—Thirty-nineglandered horses belonging to con-tractors on the Tucola-Cody brsach of theBurlington road on the Crow Indian res-ervation were condemned and shot byState Veterinarian M. E. Knowles. Thehorses came to Montana recently fromNebraska. The cases were well devel-oped and the most typical Been here inyears. Extra precautions in the way ofdisinfecting harness and burning stableshave been taken to prevent spread of thadread disease.

One Insane Patient at Fergus Falls, Kills Another.

Special to The Journal.Fergus IFalls, Minn., Julj»- s.—William \u25a0

Cosgrove, a patient from Clay countycounty, was struck by Walter Mclntyre,another patient,. with a heavy floor brush,at the insane hospital here. The blowstruck the back og the neck, breaking thespinal column and causing instant death.Both were chronic cases. Mclntyre is anepileptic from Steams county, and appearsto have : no idea that he has ; done - anyharm. • ..\u25a0".\u25a0-/-,...?,,,.;,

DULiUTH OUTCLASSED BY ASHLAND.Special to The Journal. •' • \u25a0

Ashland, Wia., July 6.—Ashland defeatedDuhith here Wednesday and Thursday. Thescore on Wednesday was 18 to 4. Batteries—Duluth: Cumminga and Sturgeon; Ashland:Erickson and Gardner. :'j In this game Ashlandsecured nineteen hits off Cummings, the "boy

I •wonder." In yesterday's game the score wasDuluth 2. Ashland 8., Batteries— Staubb andSturgeon, Augustine and Gardner. ! Total at-tendance, 2.100. ;

CASTOR IAFor Infanta and Children.

The Kind You Have Always Bought\u25a0 Bears tha - y^TJt^ '^1// mmmmy!^ m

\ Signature ofLJuz&fy /'&£&&£&£

CHAIR OF CHINESEIt Is Endowed by a Friend of Co-

lumbia University.

RELATIONS OF CHINA AND U. S.

Industrial Relations That Are Boundto Grow Make a. Fuller Knowl-

edge Necessary.

New York, July 5.—A gift of $100,000from a friend of the university, to bedevoted to the establishment of a chairat Columbia . for the study and teachingof the Chinese language, was announced-by President Low during the progress ofthe commencement exercises. In announc-ing it he said:

"It is often said that the Chinese haveno religion. If this means only that ourreligion is not their religion, it nend notbe controverted. But if, as I hold, re-ligion may be best denned as emotionconcerning itself about our highest obli-gation and duty, then the Chinese may becalled a religious people. s>* /':.

"And when it is considered that theyare made up of several hundred millions,of like origin race, and character, earth-born and firmly rooted in the soil, boundtogether by the common usage and tradi-tions of incalculable generations, andwelded . into a homogeneous nation bymany co-operative causes, and especiallyby the unifying force of a literary lan-guage; that with their unrivalled endur-ance, temperance and industry, their de-votion to family, and almost superstitiouslove of home, and holding to their purposewith the tenacity of Israel, they are pos-sessed by a patient patriotism equal, per-haps, to that of any other contempora-

FKIDAY EVENING, JULY 5, 1901.

Surprise Special Sale No. 220AT THE SURPRISE STORE, 318 AND 320 MICOLLET AY.

On Sale One Week, Beginning To-morrow, Saturday, and''.': Ending Next Friday. : '• ""'\u25a0':? *

jgfH^ Boys' Fancyjßflf Crash CapsTsj / jjT Elegant design, in Golf and Yacht Shapes—

T^^-^^JS. nicely made—feather weight—onsale one week, .

The Popnlar Line ofMen's Snlts "^^ri Durability.

In Light and /T^\ Novelty StylesMedium Weights, V*£ *inRich Materials,

$3, $S,/ff\ $10, $12.$7.50 W $15

Every one of them per- I A The fit, the colorings,fectlyreliable in quality < 1 M ; the wear and shape-re-in an unlimited variety M ,- taining qualities of theseof styles and materials. , • I garments are guaranteed

}They're made in The \u25a0 I to be unsurpassed in theSurprise Store's model , I whole world. They areworkroom, by skilled W V^^ specimens of high-artUnion tailors. 1^ tailoring. ;V" \u25a0

Money Back on Request. - - Clothing Repaired lor on Yonr FREE.

Boys' dS£b£!u* Knee* lounfIounf ™SMgiJt

Begin at $2.50 for excellentrflflfQ Sill °^ fancy cassi- Cassimere Suits. Better gradeslUUU «juii.o meres, serges and are here at $3.50 $4.50

.fancy worsteds atsl, $1.50, $2, $6.50 and up to $12—every$2.50; the very tinest grades are garment reliable in quality, su-here at $3, $4 and $5. perb in make and perfect in fit.

Boy Wash Suit*of Crash, Duck and Galatea Cloth 800, 7 80, 91.00

Men's Balbriggan Underwear, plain and fancy 25c. 45cBedford Cord and Madras Negligee Shirts 50cLight Weight Summer Suspenders 25c- Seamless plain and fancy Hose 10c- 12cHigh grade Balbriggan Underwear ..:... 95cRough Braid Straw Hats 25cEvery new design in Leather Belts 25c, sOcI Men's Rough-Braid Straw Hats .. 48c. 98cNovelty. Effects Hemstitched Handkerchiefs sc, 8cMadras Shield Bows and String Ties 5cMen's and Boys, Golf and Yacht Caps 25c 48cMen's Fine. Madras Negligee Shirts in every conceivable newdesign—some »plaited bosom* with attached and dEJdetached cuffs «jp U ££

FLYER —For One Day, Saturday only, AQAMen's Madras Shirts, large body

' felled fcjCmCU 3 iTlaUlad 311UL3, seams, pat. gussets, Eb^H/Vi9WHAT NEXT? EVERYBODY ASKS. WHAT NEXT?>

T HE SllRPRiSCSTORE818 AND 320 \^T!l<<^ BKTWEBN THIRD AMD

NfCOLLET AYE. FOURTH STREETS.

neous people; that with a common speech,copious and expressive, and older, prob-ably, than any other living tongue now-spoken on the earth, they are also em-inently a literary people, with a greatand abundant literature, as old at leastas any of the great classical literaturesthat have done so much to soften andmould our own institutions and manners;that they have an inherited civilizationcoeval with, if not antedating, those thatgrew up around the Mediterranean, butles3 sensual and superstitious, and fromwhich there seems to be some evidencetending to show that other archaic civili-zations may have taken, if not theirorigin, at least some impulse and refine-ment; that they have a complete systemof ancient and customary law, admirablyfitted to their needs and condition, reg-ulating all the varied relations of civilizedlife—of family, society and government—a system that had grown up through in-finite experiment, trials and failures, untilhabit had acquired the force and sanctionof natural or divine law, long before themakers of our common law had emergedfrom their immemorial savagery, withoutarts or agriculture, and clothed. Ifat all,with the skins of beasts; that, whetherfor good or ill, and whether we will Ifornot—by a manifest destiny, no longer un-revealed, we are brought into familiarneighborhood and intercourse with them;facing each other, and separated only byquick ferry across a Pacific sea hereafterto become in large measure a Chinese-American sea, and with Industrial andcommercial relations, already of no meanproportions, and which must steadily growto billions annually; and, not least, thatwe claim to have a gospel superior to allothers and which in Its own spirit ofpeace, gentleness and truth, we wouldcarry to all the earth. Considering thesethings, would it not be a reproach to thisproud university, this fountainhead ofscience and scholarship, this venerablehome of the humanities, not to have takena first step in this direction towards theadvancement of International comity andculture and of a humane and beneficentassimilation?"

Shoe SpecialsBicycle Shoes Men' Shoes k^t^sE ;_ •; \u25a0 , .• i which the regular price was &0 2Q ,For Youths eft°nJ/r

10 %nl> |; $s and«. mm ....?. ....**.as*:;make, regular prjS^^close 69c £*£***££}&»$£?&°&* \

Fnr / ftttif**zAn tan bike shoe In.', 25 per cent below regular i>jf JQ 'Mut L*auius the store, r gular prices ','\u25a0 price. Ch0ice......... «pi.iro i

S^eKetX,cT ke: j| Ladies' SlippersZ Q*:^ri \,— > a . ««.«\u25a0 / V.. - ' '•!' " pairyetofttie Ladles' $1.03 Strap Slip- ,For Men '-; SSffiSSSat 4TerUslns for 79c ;

s!2es some broken, pair;...:. ...«J>-'»^O ,» _.if c+ "en ""-In 1

Boys'Shoes^!^?% 'i "'^^Sr"^™^iular $1 value, sizes 12 to Sand '^o!;!1 «Ktoß,6Bo,SKtolU79o,liKto2 O^C ;5t0^pau........ *5C ,; O/r/s' Canvas Shoes :

Boys' Dress Shoes | : Neatly trimmed with leather, sizes 84 to 'uu/a M-TCSa >JHUeS i to 11 and HH to a, our regular prices 7»c 'Nice vicl kid, black . n -- nnnf ,„------- ana-8»c, special vjP^ 'or dark tan, regular >^w-n-n-^fV^'^s/^^J^L^^^^ for Saturday "*C»C (

$2 shoes, nearly every-"V-';'::"|fa^B^ <®mMili1\u25a0'pafr P" !; jrSZTTVW^L Z'a£//>S' OeS i\u25a0•"CmT ;Home lraac \S| ? $2, $2.60 and $s vai- ;

Ladies* Oxfords \W Shoe Store % sKs'all !Over 600 pairs at Dear-^, *%v~ »i« »>t u.,~u.t...*r ', sizes; by far the b«st <1> one-thlra below reg- ;! 2"'*sUl! ifJW !' shoe bargain in the iular price, at Oj8^» 'i \u25a0\u25a0'^**AiAl:<7n^Bi«p^^-- \u25a0( i- clt>"; 01 AQ <