1
SOLDIER BOYS OF MINNESOTA. TWO BATTALIONS MOVE NOT ON SPANISH FOES, BUT AWAY FROM TYPHOID Col. LeonbnnKer Moved a Large Sec- tiuu of the Fifteenth Ret^tntent From !(» Former Local lon There Are Over 100 of the Men - in the Hospitals of the Two Cities Xott. Col. Leonhauser too ka hand at fight- Ins typhoid fever himself yesterday ; ard moved two battalions of his regi- j nient away, where he hopes the men Will not be contaminated further. They are encamped down near the Como- i Harriet interurban lire on the south ! side of the fair grounds. The companies left back near the old camp grounds are F. H. M and K. They moved over to the east slope close to Snelling- avenue, where they hope to miss a few germs. It was a bad day for the boys, as forty-four of them wore transferred to different hospitals in the cities, most of them coming to S:. Paul. Reports from those in Min- neapolis are that all are doing well excepting Tollefson and Williams, of Company K. Their condition is very eerious. The Fifteenth hospital \u25a0was not moved. All the fever patients were taken away at 3 p. m., and at 7 p. m. only one new case had appeared. Dr. Fry is in charge of the hospital. All the old debris of the camp was burned last night and 12.800 pounds of new straw was issued to the men for beddinp. One hundred and six men in all are in the hospital of the two cities, enough to fill up a company. The names of the patients now in the different hospitals in the Twin Cities, with their companies, is given below: COMPANY A. Andrew Booth, Northwestern hospital. J. C. Butalla, city hospital, Minneapolis. COMPANY B. Wm. E. McKenzie. Northwestern hospital. Alfred Tausher, cl"y hospital, St. Paul. COMPANY C. O;to Anderberg. Northwestern hospital. COMPANY D. Anton Tygeson, Northwestern hospital. Thomas O'Brien, Northwestern hospital. Samuel Oblinger, Northwestern hospital. COMPANY E. George Di lon. Northwestern hospital. John Yost, Northwestern hospital. John M. Rejncn, city hospital, St. Paul. COMPANY F. William Hurst, Asbury hospital, Minne- apolis. James Milburn, Asbury hospital, Minne- apol s. Thomas Killian, Asbury hospital, Minne- srolE. John Whalen, Asbury hospital, Minne- apolis. Matthew Young, city hosplta'., St. Paul. Frank E. Orton, city hospital, St. Paul. John O. Nelson, city hospital. St. Paul. William Boeger, city hospital, St. Paul. Conrad Grinds-, city hospital, St. Paul. John Lamed, city hospital. St. Paul. Frank P.cnham. city hospital. St. Paul. Frank Letson, city hcspHa;, St. Paul. Bert Olson. Northwest, m hospital. Alexander Brunn. Ncrthwcstcrn hospital. Chris Morn. Northwestern hospital Herbert Mark. St. Barnabas hospital. Antoine M. Olson. St. Barnabas hospital. Thomas Ntlson. S", Barnabas hospital August Anderson, St. Barnabas hospita'. George 11. Newton, St. Birnabas hospita!. Andrew Anderson, Northwestern hospital. COMPANY G. Ben Johnson, city hcsp'tal, St. Paul. Teele Johnson, city hospital, St. Paul. COMPANY H. Frederick Knuth, Northwestern hospital. John Bierman. Northwestern hospital. Clarence Faragher. Nort u .wjst<rn h-sp til. G. L. Michael, Northwestern hospitair Irvin Bripss, St. Barrabas' hcs;ltal. Pan ONeil. A.«=bury. Theodore Sncdrustron, Northwestern hospi- Lionel Vaught, dry hospital, St. Paul. Harry H. Burmeister. city hospital, St. William F. Norman, city hospital ?t- Paul Austin Kindred, city hospital, St. Paul. Howard Child.*, city hospi al, St. Paul. Morris Miller, city hospital. St. Paul.' G. C. Mufflt. city hospital, St. Paul. Thecdore Suiditrom, city hospital. St. Paul James F. Byrne. 0 , city hospital, St. Paul Andrew Bigelow, city hospital, St. Pau'. Ja^ob A, Glenn, city hospital. St. Paul. John E. Buss, city hospital. St. Paul Timcthy Cox, city hospiba!, St. Paul Charles Klimder, city hospital. St. Paul Eugene Campbell, city hospital, St. Paul. COMPANY I. August Peterson, city hospital, St. Paul. Ward Weiring, city hospital, St. Paul. COMPANY K. Joseph Warner, Northwestern hospltil. George W. Steep, Northwestern hospital. Herman Plahm, Northwt stern hospital. Frank McLaughlin, Northwestern hospital. Oscar Christopnerson, Northwestern hospi- Ralph Maxwell. Northwestern hospital. Thomas Ralsheim, Northwestern hospital. Michael Kiefer. Northwestern hospital. Peter Selle?, Northwestern hospital. Peter Sodergren. Northwestern hospital. Odin Hans. Northwestern hospital. H. Olsc-n, Northwestern hospita:. Mathew Ledwein, Northwestern hospital. C. A. Johr.son, St. Barnibas' hospital. Leo Coweil, St. Barnabas' hospital. George Palmer, St. Barnabas' hospital. John Anderson, St. Barnabas' hospital. Patrick Connolly. St. Barnabas' hospital. Louis Twf-rdal. Asbury. C-arl Tollefson, City hospital, Minneapolis W. W. Williams, City hospital. Minneapolis Fred A. Holmes. City hospital. St. Paul John Wachuta. City hospitaJ, St. Paul. COMPANY L,. Olaf Ludgard, Northwestern hospital. Charles Scott, City hospital, St. Paul. Edward Larson, City hospital, St. Panl. John Showalter, City hospital, St. Paul. Emanuel Peterson, City hosiptal, St. Paul. a The athletic Jfy£; SfU, ]| woman is the wo- flt&Sk Wk man of the day- w2^vi s^\ a - v asi twent y vSSiisL^ e> 1 >"ears nas seen f 'wonderful pro- H '*ny~Tr \^r>/\ fness in tins re- JRr\/£^/'^r A I spect. That this f tendency will re- Itfr\ 1/ Sult in a mOre rO * A<f?stlb-£*£/ bust womanhood, effi lS^-^f, better able to bear Rs? wT/i the burdens and «S fill \ duties and pleas- /?/ I l\ ures of life> tliere 7 5 I/I l\\ can be no quea- Sr 1 (l\ I\\ tion. But thia fcM P\j \u25a0V\ result will be ac- fkj - I s\ complished by Vf^JL -^yV tae building up 1 Jl/^bT* r^ °^ those woman already in rea- Ig |B son ably robust e| H health, and the » fc killingoffof their G' weaker sisters. Athletics will make a naturally strong woman stronger and healthier ; they will make a naturally weak, sickly woman weaker and more eickly, and if indulged in to excess, may result fatally. A woman who suffers from weakness ana disease of the delicate and important or- gans distinctly feminine, cannot hope to recover her general health through ath- letics, 80 long as she remains locally weak. A woman suffering In this way is unfitted to bear the strain of athletics just as much as she is unfitted to bear the duties and burdens of wifchood and motherhood. There is a sure, safe, speedy apd perma- nent cure for ail disorders of descrip- tion. It is Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescrip- tion. It acts directly on the organs con- cerned in wifehood and maternity, making them strong and healthy and vigorous. It soothes pain, allays inflammation, heals nlceration and tones the nerves. It fits a woman to indulge in, and be benefited by, athletics. All good medicine stores sell it. " Your valuable ' Favorite Prescription ' cured me of female weakness and a catarrhal dis- charge from the lining membrane of iKe^pedal Jarts,' writes Mrs. T. H. Parker, ofißtQoklyn, ackson Co., Mich. "I am now perfectly well." Dr. Pierces Pleasant Pellets cure consti- pation. Constipation is the cause of many diseases. Cure the cause and you cure the disease. One "Pellet" is a gentle laxa- tive, and two a mild cathartic. Druggists #t-U them, and nothing is "just as good." Fever Larson, City hospital, St. Paul. Edward Mahling, City hosiptal, St. Paul. Robert J. Whit side, City hospital, St. Paul. William Williams, City hospital, St. Paul. COMPANY M. Pearl E. Oxley, Northwestern hospital. fears Chrlstensen, Northwestern hospital. Henry §udlef, rJor'.Rwestern hospital. Donald Cpusins, Northwestern hospital. Odin Loseth, Northwestern hospital. Svend F. BjornlHd, Northwestern ho-pltal. Mark M. Tisdale. Northwestern hospital. Isaac K. Smith. Northwestern hospital. Andrew L. Oorder, Noithwestern hospital. J. M. Holland, City hospital. St. Paul. Theodore Israelson, City hospital. St. Paul. * Charles Peterson, City hospital, St. Paul. Howard Bateman. City hosplUl, St. Paul. Martin Rinde. City hospital, St. Paul. Herman P. Hanson, City hospital, St. Pa'M. Today the paymaster will make the hearts of one-half the regiment glad. He will arrive at the camp at 11 a. m. and will pay companies B, C, D, H, I and X Immediately. It Is not certain when the other six companies will be 1 paid, but they will not have to wait long. Lieut. Vincent, of Company A, with a squad of five non-coms. Ser- geant Clark and Corporal Pond, of Company A: Corporal Maginnls, Com- pany L; Corporal Honk, Company C, and Corporal Rafferty, Company C, will leave camp at 9 a. m. and report at the government building at 10 to act as guard to the paymaster to the camp. The field and staff officers will be paid today also. The guard mount yesterday was: Officer of the day, Capt. Brandt. Company F; officer of the puird. Lieut. Dewey, Com- pany C; junior officer of the guard. Lei t. Vincent, Company A; sergeant of the guar3, Sergeant F. A. Clarke. Company I; ju->'or sergeant of the gaurd W. B Net- tleton, Company L. First relief. Corpora.l Guy S. Porter. Privates Wilson. Baur, Z kmund, Wordle, Company G; Warren, Wetherby, Welsh, Arel, Company H; C. Capp. Co'o- man, J. Copp, Company I; Ed Sargent. W. Sargent. Company X; W. QualntaTia, Com- pany M. Second relief. Corporal Gea. M C. Place, Privates Mustinger, Ccmnany X: H. Riekett Geo. Price. .1. Rickctt Comnanv M; Stracher, Peterson, Sfnes. S.ege t. Company L: Peterson, Tys3el, Company B T. O son, F. Olson, Company A: Monogan, Giblin. Com- pany C. Third relief. Coiporal N. J. Perron, Company F; Privates Pinkus, Company P; Hesler, Hirsliey. Bic' ma.'., C mpaoy C; Martin, Hurteren, L'.nsq;ilst. C mpaiv D: Lennon, Mcßride, Mececk, McCarly, Tekvo'd, Oakes, Company E; Carlson. Com any I. Orderles, A. F. Roberts. Com^qnv X; 'ohi O'Farrell, Com;.any B; -£dw. Eusto.n, C.m- pany F. PRIVATE CALVARED DEAD. Firnt Death in Cajnp Ramsey's Ty- phoid Epidemic. Private Everett Calrared of Company H, of Worthington, was the first to die in the Fifteenth Minnesota regiment. At, midnight the young man Who has hern so low w th typhoid fever at the city hos- pital for a few days died. The physic'ons attending him had given up hope early In the evening, there being r.o apparent salvation for the sick man. Matthew Young, of Company F. of Efst Grand Fc-rks. is also in a critical condition at the same hos-p t?l. Calvarcd was twenty-three years of a^e and a farmer by occupation before he en- listed. WHEEE IS PETTIT? DUnpiiearanoe of the Queen's Fl- iiniifiiil Aki'til Still a Mystery. NEW YORK, Aug. 15.—John Pettlfs disappearance remains a mystery. The former millionaire and real estate king and reputed agent and confiden- tial investor for Queen Victoria will continue to furnish sensations in finan- cial circles for many days to come, un- less he voluntarily comes out of his hidin? and makea his own explanation Certain developments during: the last two days make it very improbable that Pettit will figure in this capacity. That the eccentric and darinar real estate speculator is financially * embarrassed has been proved by the wrangle among his employes and the attorneys in the superior court, wfcere a suit has teen brought to secure the appointment of a receiver for the rentals of his numer- ous properties. Pettit dropped out of sight early last June. Not even his most . intimate friends and confidential employes could offer a plausible explanation for. his disappearance. It was beyond all ac- counting' for that a man owning such enormous real interests should suddenly sink into oblivion, leaving- \u25a0\u2666hore ir- terests in the care of an office clerk who had been in his employ not quite a year. When it became known that Pettit's estate was to be the subject of litigation the mystery deepened, for it was the general belief that he was in no sense a bankrupt. Real estate men acquainted with the extent of Pet- tit's holdings said at the time of his disappearance that he was worth all the way from $2,000,000 to $5,000,000. Few were ready to believe that Pettit had made away with himself. He had disappeared once before and caused a sensation in financial circles for a brief while. Then it was discovered that he had been no further away than Har- lem, and that he was in daily tele- phonic communication with his office. The news leaked out that he had trou- bles of various kinds to harass him, and that he had sinro.iy run 9 way from them for a rest. Hence, when Pettit disappeared last June ri second time the theory of suicide did not seem a probable one. SETTLED WITH JAPAN. Hawaii Han Paid Indemnity of 975,000. WASHINGTON. Aug. 15.—Minister Scwail. at Hawaii, hie informed the sate department that Hawaii has paid to Japan $75,000 as In- demnity for the refusal of the Hawaiian gov- ernment to allow certain Japanese to land in H.wati at various times during the past three years. Quite a eomnllcatlon aroso over the claim of Japan for a larger amount about the time the new treaty of annexation was negrotiated, but this payment ro doubt clears it all up. _ WAR'S REAL HERO. The Yonngr Lieutenant Who De- manded Surrender hy Telephone. From the Army and Navy Journal. The absolute, real, undoubted hero of this war is not Admiral Dewey sinking all the Spanish fleet at Manila, nor Hob3on sinking a portion of the American fleet at Santiago, nor Shatter driving out the fleet of Cervera and capturing an army double that of his own, nor Sampson and his subordinates send- ing Cervera to destruction, nor twenty others we oould name, but it is Ensign Curtln, land- Ing at the port of Ponce, and with inimitable cheek sending his ultimatum to the com- mander of the Spanish rorces at Pocce by telephone! O-f all the astonishing incidents of this war nothing for novelty approaches this, and Mr. Curtin should go down in his- tory as the originator of the "hello" method of reaching military results. The illimitable gall of this youth deserves to be crystallized In history. Murat and Cannes, by their capture of the tete de pont at Vienna, have been handed down as the typical Gascons, but Mr. Curtin has out- braved them all. The Army and Navy Jour- nal, which expects to chronicle the official reports of the battle of Armageddon, hardly hopes to record anything hereafter which for pure impudence will exceed this occurrence The only thing which could rival It wtmld be for another ensign to send a district messen- ger boy to S&sasta with en ultimatum to be answered In fifteen minutes. Prairie Dhickens Are Numerous At Marietta, Minn., Revlllo, Troy, Waverly and Watertown, 3. D. The birds have never been so plentiful before, and the attention ot hunters Is especially invited to these points which are located along the Minneapolis & St. Louis Railroad, Watertown division Season opens In South Dakota, Aug. 18, and no license Is required. Dogs and guns car- ried free. For tickets call on P. P. Rutherford, 0. T. A., 396 Robert street. Russia's Woolen Industry. Russia has 60,000,000 sheep, of which one- fourth are merinos, averaging Biz pounds of wool each; and the 450 woolen mills of Eu- ropean Russia employ 60,000 workmen and produce goods valued at 45,000,000 rubles. Eartli'a Annual Rainfall. It is estimated that the amount of water precipitated on the globe annually In th» of rain, snow, etc., la 29,000 cums mU«. SENDS INHIS RESIGNATION COL SHANDREWS CONNECTION WITH THE FIFTEENTH CEASES Lieut. Col. leonhanier Given the Command Maj. Got Elan Sue- ceedn to the Lieutenancy Other Promotions Are Made Gov. dough. Receive* a Teleicrnni Prom Washington and Answers It. Col. J. C. Shaiulrew yesterday sent his resignation to Gov. Clougrh. While the condition of the Fifteenth's com- ma nder has been somewhat Improved during the last week, the change haa not been sufficient to warrant the pre- sumption that his health would per- mit him to assume command of his regiment In t)he near future. Tho news of Col. Shandrew's resig- nation was received at the camp with considerable regret, although it caused no surprise. HSa resignation caused quite a list of promotions right down the line. The slate published in The Globe ten days ago, went through without a miss. Gov. Cloug'h accepted the resignation of the colonel and named In his place Lieut. Col. Harry A. Leonhaueer, who bos been in command of the Fifteenth since Col. Shandrew left his post. Senior Major Paul H. Gotzian was appointed as lieutenant colonel and Maj. D. W. Hand was advanced to thj rank of first major. Capt. James Elwetl, of Company A, Minneapolis, was made major, and Lieut. F. C. Barrows was co-mm'ssion- ed as captain of the same company. Second Lieutenant F. J. C. Vincent, of the same company, was advanced to the first lieutenancy. John C. Sweet was made secc-nd lieu- tenant of 00-mpany A in the place of Lieut. Vir»cent, advanced. Lieut. Sweet's commission was one of the first Issued by the governor, but, owing to the fact that two extra lieu- tenants were commissioned, Lieut. Sweet was not arsigned until yenter- day. Gov. dough also commissioned an- other Minneapol's man, expect! :g that b? could be put in Lieut. Hubbard's place, who w?s recently detailed on his father's staff at Jacksonville. This, however, could not be done as the war department advissd the governor that Lieut. Hubbard's detail was only tem- porary, a.n-d that be still belonged to thf Fifteenth Minnesota volunteers. The governor therefore still has Irs on hands one lieutenant, who has not been assigned and who will be in line for assignment as soon as the next vacancy o»curp. WIRES WASHINGTON AGAIN. L.sst Saturday Gov. Clough wired Adjt. Gen. Corb!n, at Washington, ask- ing him to make some disposition of the Fifteenth regiment, owing to the fact that a large number were down with the fever and the sanitary con- ditions of the camp were assuming alarming proportions. Yesterday he received the following reply from the adjutant general: Gov. L>. M. Cl-ugh: Since receipt of your telegram, 12th, Java been try.ng to make disposition of your regiment. Now that peace is declared, am mo.c at s:a thaa tve \u25a0. A=i soon as definite conclusion Is reached will wire you. Hope this will b? in a day o/ two. H. C. Corbin, Adjutant Gjntr.il. Upon receipt of this Liac Rovera >r worded the following telegram to Washington with a view to keeping the matter before the department of- ficials: H. C. Corb'.n, Adjutant General: Please do not \u25a0 overlook the fact that the flftrenth Minnesota, now at Camp Ramsey, Is a 1 tfe the bsst regiment in the Unt?d State, vo.un- teer service. I hope it will bs mate} ac- cordingly. ' D. M. Clougj, Governor. The necessity of getting the Fifteenth regiment away from its present loca- tion Is paramount to all other consid- eration, and, as far as Gov. Clough is concerned, he has done everything in his power .to I>reak through the red tape of the war department and have something done immediately v to relieve the situation. The distressing condi- tion of the regiment is brought daily tc the attention of the governor. Dr. Bracken, of the state board of health, yesterday sent to the governor's office for a plat of the location of the vari- ous companies in the regiment, which the governor was unable to supply. Unless relief is given by the war de- partment in a few days the state board of health will adopt some radical meas- ures to improve the sanitary condition of the camp and cheek the epidemic. Gov. Clough stated yesterday that no reply had been received from President McKinley to his message of last week asking that some immediate disposi- tion be made of the Twelfth and Four- teenth regiments, which have been at Chickamau^a for several months. Last night Gov. Clough and a small paity drove out to Camp Ramsey. .The governor requested Lieut. Col. Leon- hauser to summon Maj. Hand, Capt. Elwin, Lieut. . Barrows and Lieut. Vin- cent to his quarters. Maj. Gotzian, as the governor had ascertained, was spending the afternoon at home it be- ing Mrs. Gotzlan's 'birthday. The of- ficers lined up before the governor, and, with one of the neatest little speeches ever heard on the fair grounds, he pre- sented each one his commissicfn as above. Each recipient briefly thanked him. After the commissions had been given out, the governor outlined his policy for future promotions in the Fifteenth. After telling- them that John C. Sweet would be the second lieuten- ant of Company A, he told them that the next commission would go to Otto Lang-urn, and that after Langum was placed every man man would go up in order just as fast as his turn came, but that no man would be given a com- mission in the Fifteenth without the approval of Col. Leonhauser. That one thing is what every "non-cam" has been wanting to know for a month, and it will be good news to them. Ev- erybody took a hand at congratulating everybody else after the talk was over, for all felt that they had gone up a step, anyway. The band serenaded the new staff, and, after the hard work of the day. a sort of undercurrent of joy spread over the regiment as they pre- pared their quarters for the night. MORAL OLD BELLEVILLE. The Town Cannot Stand I.lttieEgypt Without Long Skirts. BELLEVILLE, 111., Aug. IB.— ln look- ing up attractions for the "street fair" to be held In this town the latter part of next month, one of the committee- men made an offer to "Little Egypt," the young woman \u25a0wvho danced at the fceely dinner in New York some time tugo, and about whom tjiere was con- siderable scandal. "Little Egypt" ac- cepted the proposition In. a letter to the committee, and Inquired 'how her num- ber on the programme should be filled "with skirts or guuze." The commltiteeinan put the question- to a vote and it was unanimously de- cided to request "Little Egypt" to be generous in the length of her skirts, which is interpreted to mean that they Brrall t>e of a, heavy fall pattern and come at least 'below the khae. Staldi and moral old Belleville, they said, would hardly stand anything else. IN THE PUBLIC EYE. WASHINGTON, Aug. 15,-^Robert P. Porter. the superintendent of the last general cen- sus of the United States, has been appointed a commissioner to examine and report on the finance*, banking system and banking laws of Cuba and Porto lUco. London, Aug. 16.—The lord mayor of Lon- don, the Right Hon. David Davis, has post- poned his American tour Indefinitely on ao- count of the illneaa of his wife. Washington, Aug. 15.—Secretary of State Day left Washington this afternoon for At- lantic City. It la not known bow long be win be absent. bassador and most of the members of bis staff went to Mount Vernon today for a visit to the tomb of Washington. Washington, Aug. 15.—Brig. Gen. Bancroft, of the Seventh army corps, at Jacksonville, has tendered his resignation, and it has been accepted. He will return to his business. Austin. Tex., Aug. 16.— Gov. Culbereon and his entire cabinet, accompanied by forty prominent state politicians; left here today for the Omaha exposition on a special train. GEN. BOYNTON, LN JAU. Maiden of Some EtgrWty Sunimer» the Cauae of His Woe. NEW YORK, Aug. IS.—Gem. Sylvamus Cobb Boyntooi is in LfUdlow street jail because Miss Camlll^^erre, of come eighty odd summers, wished revenge. Curiously enouigh he offered himself for arrest because he wished to turn the table and be ayenged upon Misa Serre. She thought that he would Shrink from the disgrace of i imprisonment. He sought imprisonment because he knew that Miss Serre would rejoice to have him humiliated. Now he poses as a victim of persecution and Bays to Miss Serre: "You have done your worst, which is n>ot as bad as you planned. I am on your trail and will make life misera- ble for you." Gen. Boynton Is held at Ludlow street jailunder a judgment am'oumting to more than $10,00) obtained against him by M'ss Oam.ille S>rre. It is al- leged by Gen. Boynton that this sum represents money whiCh Miss Serre placed with him for investment and speculation, risking all upon his judg- ment. Mis 3Serre, on the other hand, alleged that She placed the money with G6n. Boyiaton for specific invest- ment at 6 per cswt, and that he lost th? n:on*y by departing from these in- structions. She cairkd the care to the courts and wen. A body judgment was finally o'btaicied. Few have enjoyed careers more in- teresting than this man who Is young at sever.Cy years. He has made and lost a fortune and is planning to make another. He secured a positloa in the treasury department under President Pierce, ard at th? personal request of Daniel Webstpr, who was a friend of the Boyntoin family. He often played whist with Herry Clay at the Na.tiTnal hotel at Wa.Fhirigt^n. Oliy called him "My Little Ya.nke?," and was extreme- ly fond of him. His title of "general" is of the same mature £3 that of col- onel in Kentucky. HER LIFE A NOBLE ONE. Mrs. Maria D. Marltpc i-end at White Bear l.skc, 'Maria D. Markoe, who'dirfl' at Wh'ts Bear yesterday at the rlDe old Vg? of s?venty- four years, was the daughter' of James Cox, of Philadelphia, for many years the- presi- dent of the Lehigli Coal and Navi?a'.ion company. She was married Id William Mar- koe July 3, 1849, and thev'Wouli have cele- brated their golden wedding ntxt S-im.ner. For sevc-ra'. years she letid/e'J in Wisc:n ia near the Nashotah ruisslcn, where Mr. Mar- kce was the Episcopal re r .tor;o! the be^u i v' little Gothic church erected JSy her broth' r. Aug. 2, 1555, however.. Laving re igrud M 3 charge, she was received w.'th him into thi Rcovan Catholic church, of which she re- mained a d?vcut and tt s mp'a,y c mmuni- cant to the last. She removed to SL Paul Jane 2, 185', wh 'rj she has since led an unosten'p.ticus Christ a i life, devoted to her husband an c'ui'd c \ Almost to the last brea h her on'y ihought seemed to b<? for their comfort aid welfare, and her death, like her life, v as a b- aut ; fu' illustration of tee virtuts o* Crris iari y A husband and five sons survive her, Dr. J. s. C. Markoe being the third scn v MEXICO CITY, Aug. 15 —The to?y rf Mrs Romero, wtfp of the Mexi-an minister at Washirpto-n, whirh w-s brou<!Tit fere by her dlstlnpruis'hed husbard. r-as be~n burl-jd. and the fuueral wai a endsd by pe:ple of the highest offlciel eire'es." NEW YORK, Aug. IS.— Ch2r'e3 H. M-y r, German consul in this city, Is dead at hii hcune h^re of apoplexy, aged seventy-two years. Mr. Meyer was a member o ? the wholesale dry goods firm' of Meyer & Dick- inson. MILWAUKEE, Wig.. Aug. 15—Wo-d was rcceivr-d in tMs city tw'iv of t*e de°th of Prof. John Fillmore at Xew London. Prnf. F-illmore was a notpd authority on Ind a l music. He formerly l'.vfd in Mi'wuk c e, from which city he mived to California some time ago. ERATNERD, Minn., Aug. 16 'Spe'liM— Oeorgp R. Treraaine. prorrie'or of "Tn-r From New York to Jerusalem." died tonfght at Stratton house, from heart disease. TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES. CLEVELAND, 0., Aug. 15 —The ett-rney general has decided to bring an action against the American Steel and Wire company, und*r the anti-trust law. Saratoga., N. V.. Aur. 15. The official g-n- --eral conference of legally constituted conw's- sioners for linlformitv of taw ire in session here, presided over by Ju^ce Brew^ter. Jamestown.N.Y.— Prof. LUchfield. a bil-o-- ist p.ivlo^e his life as th° result of a ml Mn at his ascension at Clarendon yesterday after- noon. San Francisco, Ca'. Thee has ju t pa??ed over this section a hot ways that ha.s nevr I">1 a nor.niipi h°*-p •"•I th!-i the tirnvry o p man. The maximum has been 112, 103,' 107 103. 106 104 »r>d 10i for S'^ven days To add to the disagreeableness of the weather the-« ha<! been a very low barome'er. Wartraee. Term. I. R. RqylinKs, a promi- nent business man of Miliersburer. 'nas been murdered on the mart near h!= home. San Francisco. President Wi'fnrd Wood- ruff. Bishop H. F. Clawson and Counsellor Georpre Q. CaDnon. three of the leaders of the Mormon church are In the city, th 3 guests of Col. Isaic Trumbo. Pt. T^u's. Mo. As tfe result of a wager. Miles McDora'd. a te^imt-r. dived from the top railing of Ead<? bridre into th? M'=si sippl Br fl came out un'njured and; triumphant. Dover, Pol. The croner's 'nquest to^Hy failed to throw «ny 'i'g'-t oh th= mysterious "lison^ng of Mrs. J. D. Deane and her s;s:er, Mrs. Downing. MORPHY AND THE DEVIL. How tlie Great Cliens Player Defeat- ed Ills Satanic Majesty. From the American Chess Magazine. On reading the notes in the July number on Paul Morphy's visit to Philadelphia. I am reminded of an lncid-nt 'n connest'ou with his visit to Richmond, Va., about the same time, which was related to me years ago by Rev. Mr. H., of that city. I do not remember ever to have sren it In priDt. Mr. Morphy was Mr. H.s guest while In the city, and on his arrival was at once attracted by a painting over the man- tel, which was a fine copy of a eel bra'ei painting representing a gam? of chesi be- tween a young man and the devil, the stake being the young man's saul. The artist had most graphically deoi tei the point in the game where it was apparent- ly the young man's move, and he 6eerel just to realize the fact that he had lost the game, the agony of despair being shown in every line of his features arid attitude, while the devil, from th» opposite side of the table, gloated over him with fiendish deligbt. The position of the game appeared utterly hopeless for the young man, and Mr. H. sild he had often set It up and g mil d It with his chess friends, and all aareed the young man's game wae certainly losf. Mr. Morphy walkcd-.tp to t've picture and studied it for several mrnufes, when finally, turning to Mr. H., he' said:' "I can win the game for the young man." Mr. H. was, of course; 1 !astonished, and said: "Is it possible?" a Mr. Morphy repllel: : "Get out the men and board and let us look t fit It." The position was set up, and in a few rapid mores he demonstrated a win lor the young man. and the tlevil was check- mated. Bey. Mr. H. was wont to apply the evi- dent and beautiful mopai.^which I leive to each one of your readers to think over. : h 9l Bears the The 'Kind ¥« Have Always Bought t 1~9l ~ 9^ '\u25a0* Chinese Burglars. Ina recent book on China the author says that Chinese burglars ore difficult to catch, as they oil bodies all over, and twist their pig-tells toto bunches stuck full of needle*. A Royal Excursion. Tou can make the round Mp over th« Soo from the Twin Cities to Toronto and return for $30. am Use Ticket Office, 398 Robert CAMP CALLED PESTHOLE THE RED CROSS REPORT SE- VERE ON CHICKAMAUGA Natural Condition* Such That It la Not Possible to Prevent the Ger- mination and Spread of Feverg \u25a0 The Hospitals Are Overcrowded and the Nurses Overworked*-— Newt* of the Camp. NEW YORK, Aug. 15.— Agenie of the Red Cross sent to investigate the army camps In which that organization is a: work have returned to the city and report a deplorable state of affairs at Chictoamauga. They say it is a peet hole and fever incubator. F. A. Schernierhorn and Archibald D. Rub- sell were commissioned by Stephen Barton, vice president of the American Red Cross association, to make the in- spection, and they declare the camp site unfit. In their report they say: "All of the larger or division hospi- tals, including the Letter hospital, at present are fairly well equipped to ac- commodate aJbouit 1,000 patients, but there are over 1,200 seriously ill in the camp, the number probably increasing, and consequently all the hospitals are overcrowded and Inadequately nursed. The men nurses and attendants are so overworked that many of them fall il] themiselvee, thereby increasing the number of patients while diminish- ing the number of attendants. "Another consequence of this over- crowding is Chat many of the serverer cafes have to be retained in the regi- mental hospitals, which, in turn, are overcrowded, so that many of the ligh- ter cases have to be now treated In the men's ordinary quarters, without any of the comforts or conveniences of a hospital. Besides the 1,200 under treatment, there are many who, though not realiy ill, can hardly ba called well, and to the layman visitor the troops generally do net >»eem to have the full vigor of robust health. The heat and monotony of camp life and the conse- quent depression of spirits may pos- sibly explain this co-ditlon. "Of the 1,200 at present ill, about 300 have typhoid. There are also many cas-es of a bad form of malaria, to- gether with a fever b:et described as malarial typhoid. The first f_ver sesim to have come to the camp about six or eight weeks ago, with some troops ar- riving from malarial territory. Thla beautiful Chickamauga park would on first view appear to be an ideal site for a permanent camp. But the soil ifi clay, almost impermeable to water, and underlaid at a depth often of not more than a couple of feet, by an al- most continuous stratum of rock. WATER INFECTED. "The flow of surface water, after a shower of heavy rain, washing what is the equivalent of a city of over 40,000 inhabitants, and flowing over the sur- face, too, as it might over a surface of asphaltum, carries with it, of neces- sity, much pollution—though all of the camps are well policed and as clear as they can be expected to be. Much of this pollution finds its way eventually into Ohickamauga creek, or river, some of it above the point from which the water which supplies the whole water system of the park is taken. Conse- quently, pure as this water originally nvay have been, it must thus be pol- luted and a source of disease. "The above facts explain, no doubt, the main cawse of typhMd in the camp, but there are others. Because of this underlying stratum of rock, the sinks cannot be dug as deeply as they should I be: they become rapidly filled; they are not always covered over as deeply aw they should be, or new ones made and old ones abandoned as frequently as they milght be. The myriads of flies, now daily increasing, and passing con- tinually from such impure localities to the men's kitchens and mees tables, carry germs of disease, no doubt, and materially swell the list of fever pa- tients. From all of these conditions it is feared that fevers are for some time likely to be on the increase. "Your committee visited nearly all of the hospitals, and is happy to report that, as yet, the percentage of deaths is low, when taking- into consideration the want of comforts* and facilities in a field hospital. I heard nothing but the highest praise of the efforts and success of the Red Cross. "Your committee suggests that can- vas screens be supplied to shut off from the ill the view of their dying com- rades. The sight of such a death in a cot immediately adjoining must leave the mo=t distressing and injurious im- pression and ill effect. Every surgeon consulted expressed himself in favor of employing trained women nurses as the solution of many difficulties." MINNESOTA MEN. Personal Items of News Picked Up at Camp Thomas. CAMP THOMAS, Ga., Aug. 15.—Cap- tains Bartlett, Resehe and Eva, Four- teenth Minnesota, have been appoint- ed a board of survey to pass upon the condition of the old uniforms furnished by the state. When the regimentts left Camp Ramsey it was reported that the state of Minnesota had given each man a uniform free. It now transpires that a>H these uniforms are charged up to the different commanders, and that th?y will be held to a strict accounta- bilityfor the same. The officers are all under bonds of $10,000 to the state. Lieut. Col. Johnson has been sick, butt is again in command. Maj. E. S. Person has secured a leave of absence for a period of five days, and in company with his wife will visit his orange groves in Florda. Capt. Resehe is commanding the battalion in his absence. Private Peterson, of Company E, i 3 in the hospital suffering with malarial fever. Private Sam Scarvie, who was given a dishonorable discharge a few days ago, has been given his papers and has left the camp. Private Moline, of Company E, has been detached from the company and will be put on the Second division hos- pital corps. Privates Dudley and Mitchell, who are In the division hospital suffering with ' malarial fever, are recovering. Private Florence, who strained Ms knee cap while at drill a few days ago, had to have his whole leg bound In plaster of Paris. He will have to walk with the use of crutches, and it is lia- ble to lay him up for some time. QIIET DAY IN CAMP. Nothing Ont of the Ordinary Ran at Chlckamnugra. CHIOKAMATJOA, Ga.. Aug. 15.—There were no changes in the usual run of matters at Camp Thomas today, except that an order came from tha war department for the First Vermont Infantry to return to Vermont an-d go Into camp there. .The regiment will camp the latter part of the week. Lieut. Col. Mtmrns, in command of the regiment, was not in a position to explain the order, and Said that I* it meant to be mustered out it would suit the men, but that if the regi- ment is to remain in the service It would prefer to remala South. It was learned at headquarters this even- ing that the Third Kentucky, One- hundredT and-sixtleth Indiana and Fifth Illinois, now at Newport News, are to proceed to Lex- ington, Ky., to go into camp. This is taken as an evidence that arrangements have been perfected for a camp at Lexington, and It is therefore expected that Gen. Sanger, now at .Lexington, will recommend the Third division First corps at this camp proceeding to Lex- ington at one*. TO CURF. A COLD IN ONE DAY Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All drucciau refund money if it falls to cure. J&o. Tht soauia* om v B. Q. oa Meh ÜbltU BILL AGAINST UNCLE SAM MINNESOTA SAYS HE OWES HER OVER $200,000 It Was for Fitting: Up tbe Troops Tbat She Sent to (he Late War With Spain It Will Be Present. Ed to Congreat by Senator Davis When Congress Convenes In De- cember. The claim of the state of Minnesota against the United States government for $200,000 expended In fitting up the four regiments of the volunteer army organized In this state will be presented at the next session of congress in De- cember. Directly following the close of the Civil war the Northern states all pre- sented claims to congress for the amounts spent by them during the war, and a general act was passed which authorized the payment of all such claims. Whether Minnesota's claim will be taken* care of under a general law, or whether by special law. is not known, but Adjt. Gen. Muehlberg is inclined to the belief that the state will be re- imbursed partly in equipment for the national guard and partly in cash. In view of the fact that the wheels of the legislative body at the nation's capitol do not move very fast, and this is especially true in regards to claims, the very, earliest relief sought for could not be obtained until some time next year. The next session of the state legislature will, therefora, be asked to appropriate anywhere from $50,000 to $100,000 to fit out the .new national guard. Adjt. Gen. Muehlberg received notice from the war department yesterday that the annual government appro- priation of $7,763 to assist in maintain- ing the state guard was available. Gen. Muehlberg stated that the state purchased all the uniforms for the men and that the government furnished, through the annual appropriation, all other equipment and ammunition. The first regiment in the new nation- al guard will be organized within a very short time and will have to have something new in the way of uniforms and equipment, which will entail a large expenditure on the part of the state. Gov. Clough has been holding off in hopes that the Fifteenth regiment might be mustered out of the volun- teer service and its equipment be util- ized in the formation of the First reg- iment of the new state guard. It costs about $100,000 to thoroughly equip a full regiment with uniforms and all of the essentials for active field work, yet the equipment such as will be needed by the new state guard can be had for much less. The government appropriation of $7,000 cannot be used for the purchase of uniforms, which is the state's share of the expense of maintaining the state guard. With the plain uniforms, caps and capes, it will cost the state about $15,000 to equip the first regiment and the camp outfit, which is also 'bought by the state,, will materially increase this amount. One regiment of state militia will not be sufficient for a state as large as SHE ST. PAUL GLOBE -TUESDAY -^AUGUST 16. 1898. 3 >^ COMBINED TREATMENT Ui G -OF THE GREAT CURATIVE PQVjflgjv * * Permanently located, holding a lease of premises for a term of years at 301 Hennepln Avenue (corner Third street), Minneapolis, of E. L. Bidwell & Co. We give refer- ence to the beat banks, business men and merchants of this city. WHEN ALL OTHERS FAIL, remember the wonderfully successful treatment of the specialists of thin Institute combines the two greatest factor* of the healing art known to the medical profession— ELECTRICITY and MEDICINE. It is the largest most thorough and completely equipped Institute, both electrically and medically, ever established In the West for the treatment andl abeolire cure of all nervous chronic and private diseases of MEN and WOMEN. Honorable and fair dealing accorded to all. These Doctolra Can Care You. PLAIN TALK TO MEN! IT WILL PAY EVERY MAN WHO IS SUFFERING FROM WEAKNESS OR PRIVATE DISEASES OF ANY KIND TO READ THE FOLLOWING. It may come as a mes- sage of hope to him, and save him many years of bitter regret and suffering: We want, in these- few words, to appeal to the common sense and good judgment of every man who reads them. There is not a man or boy living, who is suffering from the results of follies or ex- cesses, but what is seeking anxiously and earnestly for relief from a condiion almost worse than death kself. You may have tried medicines and medical treatment a'one time and time again. Did they help you? You may have tried electricity Did it he.p you? In a great majority of cases the answer will be emphatically "NO " Why were you not benefited or cured? Medicine will not help you because it could not of its own limited force and power reach the seat of disease. There are nerve trunks and nerve centers ABSOLUTELY governing and controlling the vital parts and sexual or- gans of men that cannot be effectively reached by medicine alone. Electricity did not help you, but for probable temporary relief, because it lacks that nutritive and nour- ishing power which proper medication must supply. But electricity and proper medicines acting together as in our combined Electro-Medical treatment, will reach The very remot- est nerve cells of the system; cells and tissues that have never been reached before. This is why our SPECIAL system of treatment, combining electricity and medicine, has such wonderful effects in all weakening and private diseases of men, and why It is such a success In restoring weak, shrunken and undeveloped organs to their natural size and vigor. These organs are controlled by the sympathetic system of nerves and it is just as impossible to reach and remove diseases of these nerves with single-handed treat- ment as it would be for one horse to move a two-horse load up a hill. Now, you can readily see, and your good Judgment will tell you, that a combination of theke two great curative powers— force and matter (electricity and medicine)— is necessary in order to effect cures wfcere failures have resulted from all efforts heretofore, and that in all cases, whether obstinate or not, a more prompt, complete and satisfactory cure can be - made. This Is not a new theory, but it remained for the Specialists of the Sta'e Electro- Medical Institute of Minneapolis to first give to the world this perfected system and today the only place IN THE NORTHWEST where this treatment can be administered is at this Institute. To all sufferers, either men or women, from Nervous, Chronic or Private diseases, we sr.y as follows: Investigate our combined system of treatment. It is only necessary for you to use your own good common sense. If you will do this we have no doubt a3 to the result, feeling certain that your power of discrimination and good judgment will tell you that it is founded on common sens principles. Open— I>aily, from 8 a. m. to 8 p.m.; Sunday*, 10a. m. to 1 p. m. WRITE IF YOU CANNOT CALL—AH Correspondence In Plain Envelope*. Confidential No lUedlcal Literature Sent to Patient* without Special Heqaest. STATE ELEGTRO-ffiEDICAL INSTITUTE, 301 Hennepin Avenue, Corner Third Street, Minneaptfis. Minn. 1 Minnesota, and provision will be made by the next legislature for the com- plete reorganization of the national guard with four and possibly five regl- merits. When the Twelfth and Four- teenth regiments are mustered out of the service, a large amount of old equipment will be brought back into the state, and will probably be offered by the government as part payment of the state's claim. However, the equipment brought back will be incon- siderable on account of hard usage, and any outlay authorized by the leg- islature will be partially paid back to the state, if not in its entirety, by the payment of the state's claim by the government. There will doubtless be a disposition on the part of the war department to retain some of the volunteer resiments for active service, and Minnesota's two at Chickainauga being admittedly among the best raised under the pres- ident's first call, It would not be sur- prising if they were selected for per- manent duty. Adjt. Gen. Muehlberg is preparing a detailed statement of the expenditure by the state, to be forwarded to Wash- ington in care of Senator Davis. As yet, all the bills against the state have not been presented, but the Adjt. Gen. says they will easily exceed $20J,000. Ura. Win. low*Soothing Syrup Has been uged for over fifty years by million* Of hiothers for tholr children whileteething, with perfect nucoess. It «oothes tbe child, softens the gumx, allays all pain : euros wind colic, and Is the bast remedy for Dlarrhcea. Sold by Druggists In eTery part of the world. Be sure and nglc for " Mrs. Wlnalow's Boothinpr Bynip." and t«ks no other kind. Twenty-fit > cents a bottle. Only $8.00 To Chicago via Chicago Great Western, the favorite tout*. Ticket office, corner Robert, and Fifth streets, St. Paul. « I have been uslns CASCARETS nnd as a ralld and effeot*YO laxative they are Bimplv wou- ddr'ul. My daughter and 1 were bothered with sick stomach an<J oar breath wat, very bad. After taking a, fa*doses of Casoarets we Lave improved wonderfully. They nre :i srreat help lv the family." WtLHELMIXA NAGEL. 1137 ttlttennouse St., Cincinnati, Ohio. S^f Jt3 CATHARTIC TRADE MARK RSOI3TIREO r^^ Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. Do iooU,Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c. ... CURS CONSTIPATION. ... SUrMnj Rtgtrd; CoMpanj, Chkngo, Hontrral, S*w York. Sift I 30-TO-BAG i Munyon's Headache and InJigestbi Cure. Is the only remedy on the market that will cure every form of Headache in 3 . to 10 minutes, correct Indigestion, stimulate the nerves and build up the system. It should be in every homa ' and every traveller's gripsack. At all Druggists. 25 cures 25c.

SOLDIER BOYS OF MINNESOTA. · SOLDIER BOYS OF MINNESOTA. TWO BATTALIONS MOVE NOT ON SPANISH FOES, BUT AWAY FROM TYPHOID Col. LeonbnnKer Moved a Large Sec-tiuu of the Fifteenth Ret^tntent

  • Upload
    others

  • View
    0

  • Download
    0

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: SOLDIER BOYS OF MINNESOTA. · SOLDIER BOYS OF MINNESOTA. TWO BATTALIONS MOVE NOT ON SPANISH FOES, BUT AWAY FROM TYPHOID Col. LeonbnnKer Moved a Large Sec-tiuu of the Fifteenth Ret^tntent

SOLDIER BOYS OF MINNESOTA.

TWO BATTALIONS MOVE

NOT ON SPANISH FOES, BUT

AWAY FROM TYPHOID

Col. LeonbnnKer Moved a Large Sec-tiuu of the Fifteenth Ret^tntentFrom !(» Former Local lonThere Are Over 100 of the Men

-in the Hospitals of the TwoCities Xott.

Col. Leonhauser too ka hand at fight-

Ins typhoid fever himself yesterday ;

ard moved two battalions of his regi- jnient away, where he hopes the menWill not be contaminated further. Theyare encamped down near the Como- i

Harriet interurban lire on the south !side of the fair grounds.

The companies left back near theold camp grounds are F. H. M and K.They moved over to the east slope closeto Snelling- avenue, where they hope tomiss a few germs. It was a bad dayfor the boys, as forty-four of themwore transferred to different hospitalsin the cities, most of them coming toS:. Paul. Reports from those in Min-neapolis are that all are doing wellexcepting Tollefson and Williams, ofCompany K. Their condition is veryeerious. The Fifteenth hospital\u25a0was not moved. All the feverpatients were taken away at 3 p. m.,

and at 7 p. m. only one new case hadappeared. Dr. Fry is in charge of thehospital. All the old debris of the campwas burned last night and 12.800 poundsof new straw was issued to the menfor beddinp. One hundred and six menin all are in the hospital of the twocities, enough to fill up a company.

The names of the patients now in thedifferent hospitals in the Twin Cities,with their companies, is given below:

COMPANY A.Andrew Booth, Northwestern hospital.J. C. Butalla, city hospital, Minneapolis.

COMPANY B.Wm. E. McKenzie. Northwestern hospital.Alfred Tausher, cl"y hospital, St. Paul.

COMPANY C.O;to Anderberg. Northwestern hospital.

COMPANY D.Anton Tygeson, Northwestern hospital.Thomas O'Brien, Northwestern hospital.Samuel Oblinger, Northwestern hospital.

COMPANY E.George Di lon. Northwestern hospital.John Yost, Northwestern hospital.John M. Rejncn, city hospital, St. Paul.

COMPANY F.

William Hurst, Asbury hospital, Minne-apolis.

James Milburn, Asbury hospital, Minne-apol s.

Thomas Killian, Asbury hospital, Minne-srolE.

John Whalen, Asbury hospital, Minne-apolis.Matthew Young, city hosplta'., St. Paul.Frank E. Orton, city hospital, St. Paul.John O. Nelson, city hospital. St. Paul.William Boeger, city hospital, St. Paul.Conrad Grinds-, city hospital, St. Paul.John Lamed, city hospital. St. Paul.Frank P.cnham. city hospital. St. Paul.Frank Letson, city hcspHa;, St. Paul.Bert Olson. Northwest, m hospital.Alexander Brunn. Ncrthwcstcrn hospital.Chris Morn. Northwestern hospitalHerbert Mark. St. Barnabas hospital.Antoine M. Olson. St. Barnabas hospital.Thomas Ntlson. S", Barnabas hospitalAugust Anderson, St. Barnabas hospita'.George 11. Newton, St. Birnabas hospita!.Andrew Anderson, Northwestern hospital.

COMPANY G.Ben Johnson, city hcsp'tal, St. Paul.Teele Johnson, city hospital, St. Paul.

COMPANY H.Frederick Knuth, Northwestern hospital.John Bierman. Northwestern hospital.Clarence Faragher. Nortu.wjst<rn h-sp til.G. L. Michael, Northwestern hospitairIrvin Bripss, St. Barrabas' hcs;ltal.Pan ONeil. A.«=bury.Theodore Sncdrustron, Northwestern hospi-

Lionel Vaught, dry hospital, St. Paul.Harry H. Burmeister. city hospital, St.William F. Norman, city hospital ?t- PaulAustin Kindred, city hospital, St. Paul.Howard Child.*, city hospi al, St. Paul.Morris Miller, city hospital. St. Paul.'G. C. Mufflt. city hospital, St. Paul.Thecdore Suiditrom, city hospital. St. PaulJames F. Byrne.0, city hospital, St. PaulAndrew Bigelow, city hospital, St. Pau'.Ja^ob A, Glenn, city hospital. St. Paul.John E. Buss, city hospital. St. PaulTimcthy Cox, city hospiba!, St. PaulCharles Klimder, city hospital. St. PaulEugene Campbell, city hospital, St. Paul.

COMPANY I.August Peterson, city hospital, St. Paul.Ward Weiring, city hospital, St. Paul.

COMPANY K.Joseph Warner, Northwestern hospltil.George W. Steep, Northwestern hospital.Herman Plahm, Northwtstern hospital.Frank McLaughlin, Northwestern hospital.Oscar Christopnerson, Northwestern hospi-

Ralph Maxwell. Northwestern hospital.Thomas Ralsheim, Northwestern hospital.Michael Kiefer. Northwestern hospital.Peter Selle?, Northwestern hospital.Peter Sodergren. Northwestern hospital.Odin Hans. Northwestern hospital.H. Olsc-n, Northwestern hospita:.Mathew Ledwein, Northwestern hospital.C. A. Johr.son, St. Barnibas' hospital.Leo Coweil, St. Barnabas' hospital.George Palmer, St. Barnabas' hospital.John Anderson, St. Barnabas' hospital.Patrick Connolly. St. Barnabas' hospital.Louis Twf-rdal. Asbury.C-arl Tollefson, City hospital, MinneapolisW. W. Williams, City hospital. MinneapolisFred A. Holmes. City hospital. St. PaulJohn Wachuta. City hospitaJ, St. Paul.

COMPANY L,.

Olaf Ludgard, Northwestern hospital.Charles Scott, City hospital, St. Paul.Edward Larson, City hospital, St. Panl.John Showalter, City hospital, St. Paul.Emanuel Peterson, City hosiptal, St. Paul.

a The athleticJfy£; SfU, ]| woman is the wo-

flt&Sk Wk man of the day-

w2^vi s^\ a - vasi twent yvSSiisL^ e> 1

>"ears nas seenf 'wonderful pro-

H'*ny~Tr \^r>/\ fness in tins re-JRr\/£^/'^r AIspect. That this

f tendency will re-Itfr\1/ Sult in a mOre rO*

A<f?stlb-£*£/ bust womanhood,effi lS^-^f, better able to bearRs? wT/i the burdens and«S fill \ duties and pleas-

/?/ I• l\ ures of life> tliere7 5 I/I l\\ can be no quea-Sr 1 (l\ I\\ tion. But thiafcM P\j \u25a0V\ result will be ac-fkj

-I s\ complished by

Vf^JL-^yV tae building up1 Jl/^bT* r^ °^ those woman

already in rea-Ig |B son ably robuste| H health, and the» fc killingoffof their

G' weaker sisters.Athletics will

make a naturally strong woman strongerand healthier ;they willmake a naturallyweak, sickly woman weaker and moreeickly, and if indulged in to excess, mayresult fatally.

A woman who suffers from weakness anadisease of the delicate and important or-gans distinctly feminine, cannot hope torecover her general health through ath-letics, 80 long as she remains locally weak.A woman suffering In this way is unfittedtobear the strain of athletics just as muchas she is unfitted to bear the duties andburdens of wifchood and motherhood.There is a sure, safe, speedy apd perma-nent cure for ail disorders of descrip-tion. Itis Dr. Pierces Favorite Prescrip-tion. It acts directly on the organs con-cerned in wifehood and maternity, makingthem strong and healthy and vigorous. Itsoothes pain, allays inflammation, healsnlceration and tones the nerves. It fits awoman to indulge in, and be benefited by,athletics. Allgood medicine stores sell it."

Your valuable'Favorite Prescription

'curedme of female weakness and a catarrhal dis-charge from the liningmembrane of iKe^pedal

Jarts,' writes Mrs. T. H. Parker, ofißtQoklyn,ackson Co., Mich. "Iam now perfectly well."Dr.Pierces Pleasant Pellets cure consti-

pation. Constipation is the cause of manydiseases. Cure the cause and you cure thedisease. One "Pellet" is a gentle laxa-tive, and two a mild cathartic. Druggists#t-U them, and nothing is "just as good."

Fever Larson, City hospital, St. Paul.Edward Mahling, City hosiptal, St. Paul.Robert J. Whit side, City hospital, St. Paul.William Williams, City hospital, St. Paul.

COMPANY M.Pearl E. Oxley, Northwestern hospital.

fears Chrlstensen, Northwestern hospital.Henry §udlef, rJor'.Rwestern hospital.Donald Cpusins, Northwestern hospital.Odin Loseth, Northwestern hospital.Svend F. BjornlHd, Northwestern ho-pltal.Mark M. Tisdale. Northwestern hospital.Isaac K. Smith. Northwestern hospital.Andrew L. Oorder, Noithwestern hospital.J. M. Holland, City hospital. St. Paul.Theodore Israelson, City hospital. St. Paul.*Charles Peterson, City hospital, St. Paul.Howard Bateman. City hosplUl, St. Paul.Martin Rinde. City hospital, St. Paul.Herman P. Hanson, City hospital, St. Pa'M.Today the paymaster will make the

hearts of one-half the regiment glad.He will arrive at the camp at 11 a. m.and will pay companies B, C, D, H, Iand X Immediately. It Is not certainwhen the other six companies will be 1

paid, but they will not have to waitlong. Lieut. Vincent, of Company A,with a squad of five non-coms. Ser-geant Clark and Corporal Pond, ofCompany A: Corporal Maginnls, Com-pany L;Corporal Honk, Company C,and Corporal Rafferty, Company C, willleave camp at 9 a. m. and report at thegovernment building at 10 to act asguard to the paymaster to the camp.The field and staff officers will be paidtoday also.

The guard mount yesterday was:Officer of the day, Capt. Brandt. CompanyF; officer of the puird. Lieut. Dewey, Com-

pany C; junior officer of the guard. Lei t.Vincent, Company A; sergeant of the guar3,Sergeant F. A. Clarke. Company I; ju->'orsergeant of the gaurd W. B Net-tleton, Company L. First relief. Corpora.l GuyS. Porter. Privates Wilson. Baur, Z kmund,Wordle, Company G; Warren, Wetherby,Welsh, Arel, Company H; C. Capp. Co'o-man, J. Copp, Company I; Ed Sargent. W.Sargent. Company X; W. QualntaTia, Com-pany M. Second relief. Corporal Gea. M C.Place, Privates Mustinger, Ccmnany X: H.Riekett Geo. Price. .1. Rickctt Comnanv M;Stracher, Peterson, Sfnes. S.ege t. CompanyL: Peterson, Tys3el, Company B T. O son,F. Olson, Company A: Monogan, Giblin. Com-pany C. Third relief. Coiporal N. J. Perron,Company F; Privates Pinkus, Company P;Hesler, Hirsliey. Bic' ma.'., C mpaoy C;Martin, Hurteren, L'.nsq;ilst. C mpaiv D:Lennon, Mcßride, Mececk, McCarly, Tekvo'd,Oakes, Company E; Carlson. Com any I.Orderles, A. F. Roberts. Com^qnv X; 'ohiO'Farrell, Com;.any B; -£dw. Eusto.n, C.m-pany F.

PRIVATE CALVARED DEAD.

Firnt Death in Cajnp Ramsey's Ty-

phoid Epidemic.

Private Everett Calrared of Company H,of Worthington, was the first to die in theFifteenth Minnesota regiment.

At, midnight the young man Who has hernso low w th typhoid fever at the city hos-pital for a few days died.

The physic'ons attending him had given uphope early In the evening, there being r.oapparent salvation for the sick man.

Matthew Young, of Company F. of EfstGrand Fc-rks. is also in a critical conditionat the same hos-p t?l.

Calvarcd was twenty-three years of a^eand a farmer by occupation before he en-listed.

WHEEE IS PETTIT?DUnpiiearanoe of the Queen's Fl-

iiniifiiilAki'til Still a Mystery.

NEW YORK, Aug. 15.—John Pettlfsdisappearance remains a mystery.The former millionaire and real estateking and reputed agent and confiden-tial investor for Queen Victoria willcontinue to furnish sensations in finan-cial circles for many days to come, un-less he voluntarily comes out of hishidin? and makea his own explanationCertain developments during: the lasttwo days make it very improbable thatPettit will figure in this capacity. Thatthe eccentric and darinar real estatespeculator is financially

*embarrassed

has been proved by the wrangle amonghis employes and the attorneys in thesuperior court, wfcere a suit has teenbrought to secure the appointment of areceiver for the rentals of his numer-ous properties.

Pettit dropped out of sight early lastJune. Not even his most . intimatefriends and confidential employes couldoffer a plausible explanation for.hisdisappearance. It was beyond all ac-counting' for that a man owning suchenormous real interests should suddenlysink into oblivion, leaving- \u25a0\u2666hore ir-terests in the care of an office clerkwho had been in his employ not quitea year. When it became known thatPettit's estate was to be the subjectof litigation the mystery deepened, forit was the general belief that he wasin no sense a bankrupt. Real estatemen acquainted with the extent of Pet-tit's holdings said at the time of hisdisappearance that he was worth allthe way from $2,000,000 to $5,000,000.Few were ready to believe that Pettithad made away with himself. He haddisappeared once before and caused asensation in financial circles for a briefwhile. Then it was discovered that hehad been no further away than Har-lem, and that he was in daily tele-phonic communication with his office.The news leaked out that he had trou-bles of various kinds to harass him,and that he had sinro.iy run 9way fromthem for a rest. Hence, when Pettitdisappeared last June ri second timethe theory of suicide did not seem aprobable one.

SETTLED WITH JAPAN.Hawaii Han Paid Indemnity of

975,000.

WASHINGTON. Aug. 15.—Minister Scwail.at Hawaii, hie informed the sate departmentthat Hawaii has paid to Japan $75,000 as In-demnity for the refusal of the Hawaiian gov-ernment to allow certain Japanese to land inH.wati at various times during the pastthree years. Quite a eomnllcatlon aroso overthe claim of Japan for a larger amount aboutthe time the new treaty of annexation wasnegrotiated, but this payment ro doubt clearsit all up. _

WAR'S REAL HERO.The Yonngr Lieutenant Who De-

manded Surrender hy Telephone.From the Army and Navy Journal.

The absolute, real, undoubted hero of thiswar is not Admiral Dewey sinking all theSpanish fleet at Manila, nor Hob3on sinkinga portion of the American fleet at Santiago,nor Shatter driving out the fleet of Cerveraand capturing an army double that of hisown, nor Sampson and his subordinates send-ing Cervera to destruction, nor twenty otherswe oould name, but it is Ensign Curtln, land-Ing at the port of Ponce, and with inimitablecheek sending his ultimatum to the com-mander of the Spanish rorces at Pocce bytelephone! O-f all the astonishing incidentsof this war nothing for novelty approachesthis, and Mr. Curtin should go down in his-tory as the originator of the "hello" methodof reaching military results.

The illimitable gall of this youth deservesto be crystallized In history. Murat andCannes, by their capture of the tete de pontat Vienna, have been handed down as thetypical Gascons, but Mr. Curtin has out-braved them all. The Army and Navy Jour-nal, which expects to chronicle the officialreports of the battle of Armageddon, hardlyhopes to record anything hereafter which forpure impudence will exceed this occurrenceThe only thing which could rivalIt wtmld befor another ensign to send a district messen-ger boy to S&sasta with en ultimatum to beanswered In fifteen minutes.

Prairie Dhickens Are NumerousAt Marietta, Minn., Revlllo, Troy, Waverlyand Watertown, 3. D. The birds have neverbeen so plentifulbefore, and the attention othunters Is especially invited to these pointswhich are located along the Minneapolis &St. Louis Railroad, Watertown divisionSeason opens In South Dakota, Aug. 18, andno license Is required. Dogs and guns car-ried free.

For tickets call on P. P. Rutherford, 0. T.A., 396 Robert street.

Russia's Woolen Industry.Russia has 60,000,000 sheep, of which one-

fourth are merinos, averaging Biz pounds ofwool each; and the 450 woolen mills of Eu-ropean Russia employ 60,000 workmen andproduce goods valued at 45,000,000 rubles.

Eartli'a Annual Rainfall.It is estimated that the amount of waterprecipitated on the globe annually In th»

of rain, snow, etc., la 29,000 cums mU«.

SENDS INHIS RESIGNATION

COL SHANDREWS CONNECTIONWITHTHE FIFTEENTH CEASES

Lieut. Col. leonhanier Given theCommand Maj. GotElan Sue-ceedn to the Lieutenancy OtherPromotions Are Made Gov.dough. Receive* a TeleicrnniProm Washington and Answers It.

Col. J. C. Shaiulrew yesterday senthis resignation to Gov. Clougrh. Whilethe condition of the Fifteenth's com-ma nder has been somewhat Improvedduring the last week, the change haanot been sufficient to warrant the pre-sumption that his health would per-mit him to assume command of hisregiment In t)he near future.

Tho news of Col. Shandrew's resig-nation was received at the camp withconsiderable regret, although it causedno surprise. HSa resignation causedquite a list of promotions right downthe line. The slate published in TheGlobe ten days ago, went throughwithout a miss.

Gov. Cloug'h accepted the resignationof the colonel and named In his placeLieut. Col. Harry A. Leonhaueer, whobos been in command of the Fifteenthsince Col. Shandrew left his post.

Senior Major Paul H. Gotzian wasappointed as lieutenant colonel andMaj.D. W. Hand was advanced to thjrank of first major.

Capt. James Elwetl, of Company A,Minneapolis, was made major, andLieut. F. C. Barrows was co-mm'ssion-ed as captain of the same company.Second Lieutenant F. J. C. Vincent, ofthe same company, was advanced tothe first lieutenancy.

John C. Sweet was made secc-nd lieu-tenant of 00-mpany A in the place ofLieut. Vir»cent, advanced.

Lieut. Sweet's commission was one ofthe first Issued by the governor, but,owing to the fact that two extra lieu-tenants were commissioned, Lieut.Sweet was not arsigned until yenter-day.

Gov. dough also commissioned an-other Minneapol's man, expect! :g thatb? could be put in Lieut. Hubbard'splace, who w?s recently detailed onhis father's staff at Jacksonville. This,however, could not be done as the wardepartment advissd the governor thatLieut. Hubbard's detail was only tem-porary, a.n-d that be still belonged tothf Fifteenth Minnesota volunteers.The governor therefore still has Irson hands one lieutenant, who has notbeen assigned and who will be in linefor assignment as soon as the nextvacancy o»curp.

WIRES WASHINGTON AGAIN.L.sst Saturday Gov. Clough wired

Adjt. Gen. Corb!n, at Washington, ask-ing him to make some disposition ofthe Fifteenth regiment, owing to thefact that a large number were downwith the fever and the sanitary con-ditions of the camp were assumingalarming proportions. Yesterday hereceived the following reply from theadjutant general:

Gov. L>. M. Cl-ugh: Since receipt of yourtelegram, 12th, Java been try.ng to makedisposition of your regiment. Now that peaceis declared, am mo.c at s:a thaa tve \u25a0. A=isoon as definite conclusion Is reached willwire you. Hope this will b? in a day o/ two.—

H. C. Corbin, Adjutant Gjntr.il.Upon receipt of this Liac Rovera >r

worded the following telegram toWashington with a view to keepingthe matter before the department of-ficials:

H. C. Corb'.n, Adjutant General: Pleasedo not \u25a0 overlook the fact that the flftrenthMinnesota, now at Camp Ramsey, Is a 1 tfethe bsst regiment in the Unt?d State, vo.un-teer service. Ihope it will bs mate} ac-cordingly.

' —D. M. Clougj, Governor.

The necessity of getting the Fifteenthregiment away from its present loca-tion Is paramount to all other consid-eration, and, as far as Gov. Cloughis concerned, he has done everythingin his power .to I>reak through the redtape of the war department and havesomething done immediately v

to relievethe situation. The distressing condi-tion of the regiment is brought dailytc the attention of the governor. Dr.Bracken, of the state board of health,yesterday sent to the governor's officefor a plat of the location of the vari-ous companies in the regiment, whichthe governor was unable to supply.Unless relief is given by the war de-partment in a few days the state boardof health willadopt some radical meas-ures to improve the sanitary conditionof the camp and cheek the epidemic.

Gov. Clough stated yesterday that noreply had been received from PresidentMcKinley to his message of last weekasking that some immediate disposi-tion be made of the Twelfth and Four-teenth regiments, which have been atChickamau^a for several months.

Last night Gov. Clough and a smallpaity drove out to Camp Ramsey. .Thegovernor requested Lieut. Col. Leon-hauser to summon Maj. Hand, Capt.Elwin, Lieut..Barrows and Lieut. Vin-cent to his quarters. Maj. Gotzian, asthe governor had ascertained, wasspending the afternoon at home it be-ing Mrs. Gotzlan's 'birthday. The of-ficers lined up before the governor, and,with one of the neatest little speechesever heard on the fair grounds, he pre-sented each one his commissicfn asabove. Each recipient briefly thankedhim. After the commissions had beengiven out, the governor outlined hispolicy for future promotions in theFifteenth. After telling-them that JohnC. Sweet would be the second lieuten-ant of Company A, he told them thatthe next commission would go to OttoLang-urn, and that after Langum wasplaced every man man would go upin order just as fast as his turn came,but that no man would be given a com-mission in the Fifteenth without theapproval of Col. Leonhauser. That onething is what every "non-cam" hasbeen wanting to know for a month,and it willbe good news to them. Ev-erybody took a hand at congratulatingeverybody else after the talk was over,for all felt that they had gone up astep, anyway. The band serenaded thenew staff, and, after the hard work ofthe day. a sort of undercurrent of joyspread over the regiment as they pre-pared their quarters for the night.

MORAL OLD BELLEVILLE.The Town Cannot Stand I.lttieEgypt

Without Long Skirts.BELLEVILLE,111., Aug. IB.—lnlook-

ing up attractions for the "street fair"to be held In this town the latter partof next month, one of the committee-men made an offer to "Little Egypt,"the young woman \u25a0wvho danced at thefceely dinner in New York some timetugo, and about whom tjiere was con-siderable scandal. "Little Egypt" ac-cepted the proposition In. aletter to thecommittee, and Inquired 'how her num-ber on the programme should be filled—

"with skirts or guuze."The commltiteeinan put the question-

to a vote and it was unanimously de-cided to request "Little Egypt" to begenerous in the length of her skirts,which is interpreted to mean that theyBrrall t>e of a, heavy fall pattern andcome at least 'below the khae. Staldiand moral old Belleville, they said,would hardly stand anything else.

IN THE PUBLIC EYE.WASHINGTON, Aug. 15,-^Robert P. Porter.

the superintendent of the last general cen-sus of the United States, has been appointeda commissioner to examine and report on thefinance*, banking system and banking lawsof Cuba and Porto lUco.London, Aug. 16.—The lord mayor of Lon-don, the Right Hon. David Davis, has post-poned his American tour Indefinitely on ao-count of the illneaa of his wife.Washington, Aug. 15.—Secretary of StateDay left Washington this afternoon for At-lantic City. It la not known bow long bewin be absent.

bassador and most of the members of bisstaff went to Mount Vernon today for a visitto the tomb of Washington.

Washington, Aug. 15.—Brig. Gen. Bancroft,of the Seventh army corps, at Jacksonville,has tendered his resignation, and ithas beenaccepted. He will return to his business.

Austin. Tex., Aug. 16.—Gov. Culbereon andhis entire cabinet, accompanied by fortyprominent state politicians; left here todayfor the Omaha exposition on a special train.

GEN. BOYNTON, LN JAU.Maiden of Some EtgrWty Sunimer» the

Cauae of His Woe.

NEW YORK, Aug. IS.—Gem. SylvamusCobb Boyntooi is in LfUdlow street jailbecause Miss Camlll^^erre, of comeeighty odd summers, wished revenge.Curiously enouigh he offered himselffor arrest because he wished to turnthe table and be ayenged upon MisaSerre.

She thought that he would Shrinkfrom the disgrace ofi imprisonment.He sought imprisonment because heknew that Miss Serre would rejoice to

have him humiliated. Now he poses asa victim of persecution and Bays toMiss Serre:

"You have done your worst, whichis n>ot as bad as you planned. Iam onyour trail and will make life misera-ble for you."

Gen. Boynton Is held at Ludlowstreet jailunder a judgment am'oumtingto more than $10,00) obtained againsthim by M'ss Oam.ille S>rre. It is al-leged by Gen. Boynton that this sumrepresents money whiCh Miss Serreplaced with him for investment andspeculation, risking all upon his judg-ment. Mis 3Serre, on the other hand,alleged that She placed the moneywith G6n. Boyiaton for specific invest-ment at 6 per cswt, and that he lost th?n:on*y by departing from these in-structions. She cairkd the care to thecourts and wen. A body judgment wasfinally o'btaicied.

Few have enjoyed careers more in-teresting than this man who Is youngat sever.Cy years. He has made andlost a fortune and is planning to makeanother. He secured a positloa in thetreasury department under PresidentPierce, ard at th? personal request ofDaniel Webstpr, who was a friend ofthe Boyntoin family. He often playedwhist with Herry Clay at the Na.tiTnalhotel at Wa.Fhirigt^n. Oliy called him"MyLittle Ya.nke?," and was extreme-ly fond of him. His title of "general"is of the same mature £3 that of col-onel in Kentucky.

HER LIFE A NOBLE ONE.Mrs. Maria D. Marltpc i-end at White

Bear l.skc,

'Maria D. Markoe, who'dirfl' at Wh'ts Bearyesterday at the rlDe old Vg? of s?venty-four years, was the daughter' of James Cox,of Philadelphia, for many years the- presi-dent of the Lehigli Coal and Navi?a'.ioncompany. She was married Id William Mar-koe July 3, 1849, and thev'Wouli have cele-brated their golden wedding ntxt S-im.ner.For sevc-ra'. years she letid/e'J in Wisc:n ianear the Nashotah ruisslcn, where Mr. Mar-kce was the Episcopal rer.tor;o! the be^u iv'little Gothic church erected JSy her broth' r.

Aug. 2, 1555, however.. Laving re igrud M3charge, she was received w.'th him into thiRcovan Catholic church, of which she re-mained a d?vcut and ttsmp'a,y c mmuni-cant to the last.

She removed to SL Paul Jane 2, 185', wh'rjshe has since led an unosten'p.ticus Christ ailife, devoted to her husband an c'ui'd c \Almost to the last brea h her on'y ihoughtseemed to b<? for their comfort aid welfare,and her death, like her life, v as a b- aut ;fu'illustration of tee virtuts o* Crris iariy Ahusband and five sons survive her, Dr. J. s.C. Markoe being the third scnv

MEXICO CITY, Aug. 15 —The to?y rfMrs Romero, wtfp of the Mexi-an ministerat Washirpto-n, whirh w-s brou<!Tit fere byher dlstlnpruis'hed husbard. r-as be~n burl-jd.and the fuueral wai a endsd by pe:ple ofthe highest offlciel eire'es."

NEW YORK, Aug. IS.—Ch2r'e3 H. M-y r,German consul in this city, Is dead at hiihcune h^re of apoplexy, aged seventy-twoyears. Mr. Meyer was a member o? thewholesale dry goods firm' of Meyer & Dick-inson.

MILWAUKEE, Wig.. Aug. 15— Wo-d wasrcceivr-d in tMs city tw'iv of t*e de°th ofProf. John Fillmore at Xew London. Prnf.F-illmore was a notpd authority on Ind almusic. He formerly l'.vfd in Mi'wukce,from which city he mived to Californiasome time ago.

ERATNERD, Minn., Aug. 16—

'Spe'liM—Oeorgp R. Treraaine. prorrie'or of "Tn-rFrom New York to Jerusalem." died tonfghtat Stratton house, from heart disease.

TELEGRAPHIC BREVITIES.

CLEVELAND, 0., Aug. 15 —The ett-rneygeneral has decided to bring an action againstthe American Steel and Wire company, und*rthe anti-trust law.

Saratoga., N. V.. Aur. 15.—

The official g-n---eral conference of legally constituted conw's-sioners for linlformitv of taw ire in sessionhere, presided over by Ju^ce Brew^ter.

Jamestown.N.Y.— Prof. LUchfield. a bil-o--ist p.ivlo^e his life as th° result of a mlMnat his ascension at Clarendon yesterday after-noon.

San Francisco, Ca'.—

Thee has ju t pa??edover this section a hot ways that ha.s nevrI">1 a nor.niipi h°*-p •"•Ith!-i the tirnvry opman. The maximum has been 112, 103,' 107103. 106 104 »r>d 10i for S'^ven days To addto the disagreeableness of the weather the-«ha<! been a very low barome'er.

Wartraee. Term.—I.R. RqylinKs, a promi-

nent business man of Miliersburer. 'nas beenmurdered on the mart near h!= home.

San Francisco.—

President Wi'fnrd Wood-ruff. Bishop H. F. Clawson and CounsellorGeorpre Q. CaDnon. three of the leaders ofthe Mormon church are In the city, th3guests of Col. Isaic Trumbo.

Pt. T^u's. Mo.—

As tfe result of a wager.Miles McDora'd. a te^imt-r. dived from thetop railing of Ead<? bridre into th? M'=si sipplBrfl came out un'njured and; triumphant.

Dover, Pol.—

The croner's 'nquest to^Hyfailed to throw «ny 'i'g'-t oh th= mysterious"lison^ng of Mrs. J. D. Deane and her s;s:er,Mrs. Downing.

MORPHY AND THE DEVIL.How tlie Great Cliens Player Defeat-

ed Ills Satanic Majesty.

From the American Chess Magazine.On reading the notes in the July number

on Paul Morphy's visit to Philadelphia. Iam reminded of an lncid-nt 'n connest'ouwith his visit to Richmond, Va., about thesame time, which was related to meyears ago by Rev. Mr. H., of that city. Ido not remember ever to have sren it InpriDt. Mr. Morphy was Mr. H.s guestwhile In the city, and on his arrival was atonce attracted by a painting over the man-tel, which was a fine copy of a eel bra'eipainting representing a gam? of chesi be-tween a young man and the devil, the stakebeing the young man's saul.

The artist had most graphically deoi teithe point in the game where it was apparent-ly the young man's move, and he 6eereljust to realize the fact that he had lost thegame, the agony of despair being shown inevery line of his features arid attitude, whilethe devil, from th» opposite side of thetable, gloated over him with fiendish deligbt.The position of the game appeared utterlyhopeless for the young man, and Mr. H. sildhe had often set Itup and gmil d It withhis chess friends, and all aareed the youngman's game wae certainly losf.

Mr. Morphy walkcd-.tp to t've picture andstudied it for several mrnufes, when finally,turning to Mr. H., he' said:'"Ican win the game for the young man."Mr. H. was, of course; 1!astonished, and

said: "Is it possible?" aMr. Morphy repllel: : "Get out the men

and board and let us look tfit It."The position was set up, and in a few rapid

mores he demonstrated a win lorthe young man. and the tlevil was check-mated.

Bey. Mr. H. was wont to apply the evi-dent and beautiful mopai.^which Ileive toeach one of your readers to think over.

:h 9l

Bears the <»The 'Kind ¥«Have Always Bought

t 1~9l~9^—

'\u25a0*—

Chinese Burglars.Ina recent book on China the author says

that Chinese burglars ore difficult to catch,as they oil bodies all over, and twisttheir pig-tells toto bunches stuck full ofneedle*.

A Royal Excursion.Tou can make the round Mp over th« Soo

from the Twin Cities to Toronto and returnfor $30. am Use Ticket Office, 398 Robert

CAMP CALLED PESTHOLE

THE RED CROSS REPORT SE-VERE ON CHICKAMAUGA

Natural Condition* Such That It laNot Possible to Prevent the Ger-mination and Spread of Feverg \u25a0

The Hospitals Are Overcrowdedand the Nurses Overworked*-—Newt* of the Camp.

NEW YORK, Aug. 15.— Agenie of theRed Cross sent to investigate the armycamps In which that organization isa: work have returned to the city andreport a deplorable state of affairs atChictoamauga. They say it is a peethole and fever incubator. F. A.Schernierhorn and Archibald D. Rub-sell were commissioned by StephenBarton, vice president of the AmericanRed Cross association, to make the in-spection, and they declare the campsite unfit. In their report they say:

"All of the larger or division hospi-tals, including the Letter hospital, atpresent are fairly well equipped to ac-commodate aJbouit 1,000 patients, butthere are over 1,200 seriously illin thecamp, the number probably increasing,and consequently all the hospitals areovercrowded and Inadequately nursed.The men nurses and attendants areso overworked that many of themfall il] themiselvee, thereby increasingthe number of patients while diminish-ing the number of attendants.

"Another consequence of this over-crowding is Chat many of the serverercafes have to be retained in the regi-mental hospitals, which, in turn, areovercrowded, so that many of the ligh-ter cases have to be now treated Inthe men's ordinary quarters, withoutany of the comforts or conveniences ofa hospital. Besides the 1,200 undertreatment, there are many who, thoughnot realiy ill, can hardly ba called well,and to the layman visitor the troopsgenerally do net >»eem to have the fullvigor of robust health. The heat andmonotony of camp life and the conse-quent depression of spirits may pos-sibly explain this co-ditlon.

"Of the 1,200 at present ill,about 300have typhoid. There are also manycas-es of a bad form of malaria, to-gether with a fever b:et described asmalarial typhoid. The first f_ver sesimto have come to the camp about six oreight weeks ago, with some troops ar-riving from malarial territory. Thlabeautiful Chickamauga park would onfirst view appear to be an ideal sitefor a permanent camp. But the soilifi clay, almost impermeable to water,and underlaid at a depth often of notmore than a couple of feet, by an al-most continuous stratum of rock.

WATER INFECTED."The flow of surface water, after a

shower of heavy rain, washing what isthe equivalent of a city of over 40,000inhabitants, and flowing over the sur-face, too, as it might over a surfaceof asphaltum, carries with it, of neces-sity, much pollution—though all of thecamps are well policed and as clear asthey can be expected to be. Much ofthis pollution finds its way eventuallyinto Ohickamauga creek, or river, someof it above the point from which thewater which supplies the whole watersystem of the park is taken. Conse-quently, pure as this water originallynvay have been, it must thus be pol-luted and a source of disease.

"The above facts explain, no doubt,the main cawse of typhMdin the camp,but there are others. Because of thisunderlying stratum of rock, the sinkscannot be dug as deeply as they should

Ibe: they become rapidly filled; theyare not always covered over as deeplyaw they should be, or new ones madeand old ones abandoned as frequentlyas they milght be. The myriads of flies,now daily increasing, and passing con-tinually from such impure localities tothe men's kitchens and mees tables,carry germs of disease, no doubt, andmaterially swell the list of fever pa-tients. From all of these conditionsit is feared that fevers are for sometime likely to be on the increase.

"Your committee visited nearly allof the hospitals, and is happy to reportthat, as yet, the percentage of deathsis low, when taking- into considerationthe want of comforts* and facilities ina field hospital. Iheard nothing butthe highest praise of the efforts andsuccess of the Red Cross.

"Your committee suggests that can-vas screens be supplied toshut off fromthe ill the view of their dying com-rades. The sight of such a death in acot immediately adjoining must leavethe mo=t distressing and injurious im-pression and illeffect. Every surgeonconsulted expressed himself in favorof employing trained women nurses asthe solution of many difficulties."

MINNESOTA MEN.

Personal Items of News Picked Upat Camp Thomas.

CAMP THOMAS, Ga., Aug. 15.—Cap-tains Bartlett, Resehe and Eva, Four-teenth Minnesota, have been appoint-ed a board of survey to pass upon thecondition of the old uniforms furnishedby the state. When the regimentts leftCamp Ramsey it was reported that thestate of Minnesota had given each mana uniform free. It now transpires thata>H these uniforms are charged up tothe different commanders, and thatth?y will be held to a strict accounta-bilityfor the same. The officers are allunder bonds of $10,000 to the state.

Lieut. Col. Johnson has been sick,butt is again in command.

Maj.E. S. Person has secured a leaveof absence for a period of five days,and in company with his wife willvisithis orange groves in Florda. Capt.Resehe is commanding the battalion inhis absence.

Private Peterson, of Company E,i3in the hospital suffering with malarialfever.

Private Sam Scarvie, who was givena dishonorable discharge a few daysago, has been given his papers and hasleft the camp.

Private Moline, of Company E, hasbeen detached from the company andwillbe put on the Second division hos-pital corps.

Privates Dudley and Mitchell, whoare In the division hospital sufferingwith

'malarial fever, are recovering.

Private Florence, who strained Msknee cap while at drill a few days ago,had to have his whole leg bound Inplaster of Paris. He willhave to walkwith the use of crutches, and it is lia-ble to lay him up for some time.

QIIET DAY IN CAMP.

Nothing Ont of the Ordinary Ran atChlckamnugra.

CHIOKAMATJOA, Ga.. Aug. 15.— There wereno changes in the usual run of matters atCamp Thomas today, except that an ordercame from tha war department for the FirstVermont Infantry to return to Vermont an-dgo Into camp there. .The regiment will campthe latter part of the week. Lieut. Col.Mtmrns, in command of the regiment, wasnot in a position to explain the order, andSaid that I* it meant to be mustered outit would suit the men, but that if the regi-ment is to remain in the service It wouldprefer to remala South.It was learned at headquarters this even-

ing that the Third Kentucky, One- hundredTand-sixtleth Indiana and Fifth Illinois, nowat Newport News, are to proceed to Lex-ington, Ky., to go into camp. This is takenas an evidence that arrangements have beenperfected for a camp at Lexington, and It istherefore expected that Gen. Sanger, now at

.Lexington, will recommend the Third divisionFirst corps at this camp proceeding to Lex-ington at one*.

TO CURF. A COLD IN ONE DAYTake Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. Alldrucciau refund money ifit falls to cure. J&o.Tht soauia* om v B. Q. oa Meh ÜbltU

BILL AGAINST UNCLE SAM

MINNESOTA SAYS HE OWES HER

OVER $200,000

It Was for Fitting: Up tbe Troops

Tbat She Sent to (he Late War

With Spain It Will Be Present.

Ed to Congreat by Senator Davis

When Congress Convenes In De-cember.

The claim of the state of Minnesotaagainst the United States governmentfor $200,000 expended In fitting up thefour regiments of the volunteer armyorganized In this state willbe presentedat the next session of congress in De-cember.

Directly following the close of theCivil war the Northern states all pre-sented claims to congress for theamounts spent by them during the war,and a general act was passed whichauthorized the payment of all suchclaims.

Whether Minnesota's claim will betaken* care of under a general law, orwhether by special law. is not known,but Adjt. Gen. Muehlberg is inclinedto the belief that the state will be re-imbursed partly in equipment for thenational guard and partly in cash.In view of the fact that the wheels

of the legislative body at the nation'scapitol do not move very fast, andthis is especially true in regards toclaims, the very, earliest relief soughtfor could not be obtained until sometime next year. The next session ofthe state legislature will, therefora, beasked to appropriate anywhere from$50,000 to $100,000 to fit out the .newnational guard.

Adjt.Gen. Muehlberg received noticefrom the war department yesterdaythat the annual government appro-priation of $7,763 to assist in maintain-ing the state guard was available.Gen. Muehlberg stated that the statepurchased all the uniforms for the menand that the government furnished,through the annual appropriation, allother equipment and ammunition.

The first regiment in the new nation-al guard will be organized within avery short time and will have to havesomething new in the way of uniformsand equipment, which will entail alarge expenditure on the part of thestate.

Gov. Clough has been holding off inhopes that the Fifteenth regimentmight be mustered out of the volun-teer service and its equipment be util-ized in the formation of the First reg-iment of the new state guard.It costs about $100,000 to thoroughly

equip a full regiment with uniformsand all of the essentials for active fieldwork, yet the equipment such as willbe needed by the new state guard canbe had for much less.

The government appropriation of$7,000 cannot be used for the purchaseof uniforms, which is the state's shareof the expense of maintaining the stateguard. With the plain uniforms, capsand capes, it will cost the state about$15,000 to equip the first regiment andthe camp outfit, which is also 'boughtby the state,, will materially increasethis amount.

One regiment of state militia willnotbe sufficient for a state as large as

SHE ST. PAUL GLOBE—

-TUESDAY-^AUGUST 16. 1898. 3

>^ COMBINED TREATMENT UiG-OF THE GREAT CURATIVEPQVjflgjv * *

Permanently located, holding a lease of premises for a term of years at 301 HenneplnAvenue (corner Third street), Minneapolis, of E. L. Bidwell & Co. We give refer-ence to the beat banks, business men and merchants of this city.WHEN ALL OTHERS FAIL, remember the wonderfully successful treatment of

the specialists of thin Institute combines the two greatest factor* of the healing artknown to the medical profession— ELECTRICITY and MEDICINE. It is the largestmost thorough and completely equipped Institute, both electrically and medically, everestablished In the West for the treatment andl abeolire cure of all nervous chronic andprivate diseases of MEN and WOMEN. Honorable and fair dealing accorded to all.These Doctolra Can Care You.

PLAIN TALK TO MEN!IT WILL PAY EVERY MAN WHO IS SUFFERING FROMWEAKNESS OR PRIVATE DISEASES OF ANY KINDTO READ THE FOLLOWING. Itmay come as a mes-sage of hope to him, and save him many years ofbitter regret and suffering:

We want, in these- few words, to appeal to the common sense and good judgment ofevery man who reads them.There is not a man or boy living,who is suffering from the results of follies or ex-cesses, but what is seeking anxiously and earnestly for relief from a condiion almostworse than death kself. You may have tried medicines and medical treatment a'onetime and time again. • Did they help you? You may have tried electricity Did ithe.p you? In a great majority of cases the answer will be emphatically "NO

"Why

were you not benefited or cured? Medicine will not help you because it could not ofits own limited force and power reach the seat of disease. There are nerve trunks andnerve centers ABSOLUTELY governing and controlling the vital parts and sexual or-gans of men that cannot be effectively reached by medicine alone. Electricity did nothelp you, but for probable temporary relief, because it lacks that nutritive and nour-ishing power which proper medication must supply. But electricity and proper medicinesacting together as in our combined Electro-Medical treatment, will reach The very remot-est nerve cells of the system; cells and tissues that have never been reached before.This is why our SPECIAL system of treatment, combining electricity and medicine, hassuch wonderful effects in all weakening and private diseases of men, and why It is sucha success In restoring weak, shrunken and undeveloped organs to their natural size andvigor. These organs are controlled by the sympathetic system of nerves and it is justas impossible to reach and remove diseases of these nerves with single-handed treat-ment as it would be for one horse to move a two-horse load up a hill. Now, you canreadily see, and your good Judgment will tell you, that a combination of theke twogreat curative powers— force and matter (electricity and medicine)— is necessary in orderto effect cures wfcere failures have resulted from all efforts heretofore, and that in allcases, whether obstinate or not, a more prompt, complete and satisfactory cure can be-made.

This Is not a new theory, but it remained for the Specialists of the Sta'e Electro-Medical Institute of Minneapolis to first give to the world this perfected system andtoday the only place IN THE NORTHWEST where this treatment can be administeredis at this Institute.

To all sufferers, either men or women, from Nervous, Chronic or Private diseases,we sr.y as follows: Investigate our combined system of treatment. It is only necessaryfor you to use your own good common sense. Ifyou will do this we have no doubt a3to the result, feeling certain that your power of discrimination and good judgment willtell you that it is founded on common sens principles.

Open— I>aily, from 8 a. m. to 8 p.m.; Sunday*, 10a. m. to 1 p. m.WRITE IF YOU CANNOT CALL—AH Correspondence In Plain Envelope*.

ConfidentialNo lUedlcal Literature Sent to Patient* without Special Heqaest.

STATE ELEGTRO-ffiEDICAL INSTITUTE,301 Hennepin Avenue, Corner Third Street, Minneaptfis. Minn.

1

Minnesota, and provision will be madeby the next legislature for the com-plete reorganization of the nationalguard with four and possibly five regl- •merits. When the Twelfth and Four-teenth regiments are mustered out ofthe service, a large amount of oldequipment will be brought back intothe state, and will probably be offeredby the government as part paymentof the state's claim. However, theequipment brought back will be incon-siderable on account of hard usage,and any outlay authorized by the leg-islature will be partially paid back tothe state, if not in its entirety, by thepayment of the state's claim by thegovernment.

There will doubtless be a dispositionon the part of the war department toretain some of the volunteer resimentsfor active service, and Minnesota's twoat Chickainauga being admittedlyamong the best raised under the pres-ident's first call, It would not be sur-prising if they were selected for per-manent duty.

Adjt. Gen. Muehlberg is preparing adetailed statement of the expenditureby the state, to be forwarded to Wash-ington in care of Senator Davis. Asyet, all the bills against the state havenot been presented, but the Adjt. Gen.says they willeasily exceed $20J,000.

Ura. Win. low*Soothing SyrupHas been uged for over fifty years by million*Of hiothers for tholr children whileteething, withperfect nucoess. It«oothes tbe child, softens thegumx, allays all pain : euros wind colic, and Isthe bast remedy for Dlarrhcea. Sold by DruggistsIn eTery part of the world. Be sure and nglc for"

Mrs. Wlnalow's Boothinpr Bynip." and t«ks noother kind. Twenty-fit> cents a bottle.

Only $8.00To Chicago via Chicago Great Western, thefavorite tout*. Ticket office, corner Robert,and Fifth streets, St. Paul.

«Ihave been uslns CASCARETS nnd asaralldand effeot*YO laxative they are Bimplv wou-ddr'ul. Mydaughter and 1 were bothered withsick stomach an<J oar breath wat, very bad. Aftertakinga, fa*doses of Casoarets we Lave improvedwonderfully. They nre :isrreat help lv the family."

WtLHELMIXA NAGEL.1137 ttlttennouse St., Cincinnati, Ohio.

S^f Jt3 CATHARTIC

TRADE MARK RSOI3TIREO r^^

Pleasant, Palatable. Potent. Taste Good. DoiooU,Never Sicken. Weaken, or Gripe. 10c. 25c. 50c.... CURS CONSTIPATION. ...SUrMnjRtgtrd; CoMpanj, Chkngo, Hontrral, S*w York. Sift I

30-TO-BAG i

Munyon's Headache and InJigestbi Cure.Is the only remedy on the market thatwillcure every form of Headache in 3 .to 10 minutes, correct Indigestion,stimulate the nerves and build up thesystem. It should be in every homa

'and every traveller's gripsack. At allDruggists. 25 cures 25c.