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VOL. XI1. FORT MILL, S. C? WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1903. NO. 11. BILL ARP. I M 5 "I nni Jesus Christ, the carpenter's son. My mission is to save sinners. I fought in the civil war front Dalton to Joncsborc. Twice I have been president of thes:' United States since the surrender and have attended all the reunions up to date, hut now they have got me penned up here as a Tennessee lunatic and won't let me go to New Orleans. I can't get a passport because I am .li.s .s Christ. Can't you do something for me? ( want to go and rejoice witii those who rejoice and weep with those who ween." mat poor r How has my sympathy. Maybe it' they had let him go with the veteran, it would have restored ins teason. I know it brightened up our boys and now they can't talk about anything else. Was there ever sti h glowing, growing patriotism? It looks like th? tiumhr:' in rcases at every reunion and that, without pensions. The (itgmd Array of the Republic lies reunions. but it is mainly to keep np the pension grab, the thing that Tom Ronton cclh ti "the bottomless gulf or charities end gratuities." I saw it stated the other day that TO per cent of the federal army were foreigners or foreign-horn and were I lighting only for bounty or booty ot bnncomb. and tlioy get it all and the pensions thrown in. Oh, that was a grand gathering at New Orleans. It seems to me that if 1 was a northern ntan I would say: "Look here, boys, we can't do anything with those rebels down south, an 1 1 move we quit trying. We've been working on 'em for nearly forty years and have never converted on yet." As they march eel through New Oekans 100.000 strong you could hear that same old rebel yell from St Charles to Vleksburg. Old Father Mount* n.ule told me it bursted every telegraph wire couth of Macon and Dixon ., line and away up in Pennsylvania !i>a Western t'nion had to cut down their poises for a hundred miles. Hut I'm distressed about Mississippi. Who is Governor Longlno, anyhow? His name is not in any biography that I've got. 1 reckon it wasent worth putting in. 1 reckon he is a foreigner or he wouldent have invited Roosevelt, the slanderer, down to Jacksonvile to help lay the corner stone of the capitol. Roosevelt said that Jeff Davis was the arch repudiator and while governor \ i toed the bill that made provision to lin? a,,. .. j?W4 .... -i i... i??* in*- i iMiuinmr ucut, UUII II?* iiiiM j never retracted nor apologized for that j lie. 1 wonder if Longino knows that Governor McNut was tlm author of repudiation and gave as his reason tiiat the money was borotvcd from Union Rothschild. in whose veins flowed the blood of Judas and Shyloek, and whose ! mortgages would confiscate our cotton ! fields and make serfs of our children. That's what ho said in his message, but the legislature wonldont vote for it. and it took five years to get the bill through. All the time Mr. Davis was fighting for his country in Mexico and got desperately woun led at Uuena Vista and had to use crutches for six years. He never was In the legislature nor was he over governor, and yet Rosevclt. the slanderer, lets the lie stand and Longino Invites him clown to lay the corner stone. Oh. my country! When will all this toadyism and hypocrisy cease? Oh, Mississippi! How are the mighty fallen! Now those ntt? ranees are my own ? neither the editor nor any paper is responsible for them. My feelings and ( motions are all my own. 1 honor the memory of Mr. Davis and have profound respect for his widow, and there i=! no limit to my contempt for the ! brute who put mnnacles on him or the | convited historian who slandered him. 1 It is a comfort to despise them both. And now. three cheers for Indiana, i the champion state for lynching ne- | croes when they commit outrages on ! their women. Not a week passes hut there is a fresh case and the people turn out and scour the country for the brute. And now they are driving all the negroes out of a county whore an outrage was committed. You spo they have no chain gangs up there and but few negroes. Lynching has almost stopped in Georgia because punishment is ' more speedy and there is a chain gang in sighl in almost every county, but let a sure-enough case come up and a Miire-enouch lynching will swiftly follow. There n'e more thun 7.000 men in our state wpo have not bowed the kr.ee to Bnr?l?and the Rev. Newell Dwight Hilli* shouldn't sleep in a bed in my house1 unless l?e was sick unto death. But enough of all this. It sounds like I am mnd wK'h somebody, hut I am not. "We are all lyappy at my house tonight, for our far -away boy is on his way home. We'have Just had a telegram fvom him nfod he will bo here tonight. Me lives In .Mexico City and it has he. n t hree long , years since we have seen him. This i'a Carl, the youngest boy? the pet of his moth "'?the one she I loves the Most and prays the longest I T or every riiif it. He will stay with us n lew days- and then go away again : tnd perhuL>s ntvor see us any more. ?Vfy wife bias been saving the spring ?p htckens fyJr him P.nrl the flowers are foot to he #eut till he tomes, rnd the : itrawbcrrl'%s are still heaving and the -ake ts in' the oven. Nothing is too precious fA?r Carl and he and Jes-ee will slug tjhelr old songs and rehearse their happ^y days w'nm we lived in th country 011 the farm. , Oh. the: happy, hnpp.v days on ihe [fBrpa, n^ibre our boys nil left us and four girls got married! But we are happy still and love everybody, except some?Bill Arp in iAtlanta Constttntfrm. SOUTHERN INDUSTRIAL A Large Addition. The Manufacturers' Record of April 9 referred to the proposition of the Cherokee Falls Manufacturing Co. of Cherokee Falls, S. C.. to increase capital stock from $1100.000 to $1,000,000. A | meeting of the stockholders has been held and confirmed the proposition o? the directors. This $S00,000 additional capital will he expended for further developing the company's water-power and adding f>0.000 spindles. A new mill will he built to hold 40.000 of these spindles, and the remaining 10.000 will be added to the nresent nlant l.nr.n?s to suit, probably about 1300. will also be installed. The company's present plant has 15,520 ring spindles and 5IS narrow looms, manufacturing sheetings, seamless grain bags anil rope. Textile Notes. The report mentioned la.it week that Murphy & Pro.. Sixteenth and Fit*.v.nter streets. Philadelphia. Pa., contemplate locating a branch mill in the South was correct. Hut the firm pro- j pesos buying an established plant for manufacturing white and colored poods, and investigations are now bein;, made. Their Philadelphia plant produces dress goods for men's wear, having 250 looms. The Agricultural and Mechanical College at Bryan. Texas, will erect i nmir.mg ami install equipment /< r its textile department. This department i will train young men in the acta il work of the cotton mill. there bring two courses, ono of two years ami one of four years. The llrst two years of the latter will he the same as the present mechanical engineering conrs?. About $30,000 will be expended for the plant. Iloskins Cotton Mill Co. of Charlotte, N. C.. incorporated last inon.h with an authorized capital of $500,000, has organized and elected K. A. Smith, president and treasurer. A site has been purchased, and probably an equipment of 15,000 spindles and 450 looms will be installed. Messrs. \V. 11. Smith. Whaley & Co. of Boston. Mass.. and Columbia. S. C.. are the engineers In charge. The recent dispatches referred to as stating that H. Frank Mehane and associates had purchased 4.000 acres land at Spray. N. C.. were correct. They have plans in view for additional textile manufacturing plants, and are now burning brick for new structures. Mr. Mebane declines to make any statement at this time. The Emporia (Va.) Band & Investment Co. has Increased its capital stock from $35,000 to $1.00u.lnH) and .emoved its main ofiice to Petersburg, Va. It has purchased for $100,000 the cotton mill of the Ettrick Manu."'."*uiing Co., and will operate same. Thero are 9784 spindles and 262 looms in the plant. New machinery may be added. Messrs. M. 11. Heed. U. M. Evans. W. TI. Badger and others of Marble Falls. Texas, and T. S. Rrvd of Beaumont. Texas, hnvc purchased water-power rights and textile buildings on the Colorado river at Marble Falls, Texas. They contemplate installing an equipment of textile machinery. Banna Cotton "Mill has been incorporated. with capital stock of $100.00(1; Geo. Johnston of Newberry, S. C.. president. and Ij. W. C. Illaloek of Goldville, S. C.. secretary-treasurer. Th's company has purchased the Goldvillo Manufacturing Co.'s mill of 5000 spindles, and may increase the equipment. Springfield Woolen Mills Co., Springfield, Tenn., reported Inst week, will have a capital of $50,000. A two-set woolen-blanket null will be installed, the machinery to include 1440 spindles ar.d twenty broad looms. The company will he in the market for the machinery about June 1. Steele Bros. Company, reported incorporated last week with capital stock cf $100,000. has purchased and will AnAunt/v i KA 1 AM*.A1 m,. ce V X11~ ?'W' Utir ill*" i l (i I *" I Itlllll IAJLIAJ1I .vim.v at Laurel Bluff. near Mt. Airy. N. C. The plant has 3500 spindles, employs sixty operatives, and produces yarns and warps. Durham (X. C.) Hosiery Mills, reported last week as increasing capital XI00.000 to erect addition ami install 400 knitting machines, etc.. has awarded all necessary contracts for buildings and machinery. C. I. Underwood is tee contractor. There is a movement on foot to build a sheeting mill at Louisville. Ky.. and several local capitalists are interested. Probably P. P. Gilnrore. 125 W. Main street, can give information. D. L. Dawson will establish a cotton mill roll covering plant at Huntsvlllc, Ala. R. P. Boswetl of Penfield, Ga.. will build a knitting mill at Greensboro, Ga. Pelhanr (Ga.) Manufacturing Co. wii! expend from $5000 to $10,000 to build and equip a dyeing and finishing plan'. Its mill has 5000 ring spindles and 12S looms. Granlteville (S. C.) Manufacturing Co. will improve its mill and probaMy lnstall additional machinery. It now has 52.380 spindles and 1,674 looms. The Commercial Club of Pilot Point, Texas, is endeavoring to arrange for the establishment of a $200,000 cotton mill. The Commercial Club of Charleston, S. C., Is endeavoring to arrange for the establishment of a bleachcry. - % ' % MACilEN ARRESTED. Manager of Rural Free Delivery Will Face Serious Charges GETS OUT ON VERY HEAVY BAIL Machen is Alleged to Have Received riany Thousand Dollars From Con i tracts Improperly Let. Washington, Special.?By far the i most sensational development of the j postoffiee investigation tip to this time occurred Wednesday, when August W. Machen. the general superintendent of the free delivery service, was arrested ?ju u warrant issued upon the infor- I niation of postofficc inspector charging him with having . eceivcd "rake- i offs" from contracts made with the local firm of Groff Brothers for a pat- ! cut postal box fastener. The warrant specifically charged him with receiving $18,981.78 since August 8. 1900. it is alleged, however, at the Department that this amount does not represent | all that Machen obtained in connection t with these contracts, it being charged j that he had profited by them for eev- | oral years prior to the date of the first ' contract mentioned in the warrant. | Other arrests are to follow. Immediately after Mr. Machen was I taken into custody, the Postmaster I General issued an order removing him I from office, lie had been practically under suspension for a fortnight, pending the investigation into his bureau. The discovery of Maclien's alleged interests in the contracts was made quite accidentally by the inspectors some three weeks ago, and since then their energies had been directed toward making cut a case. I Tuesday night after the authorities j had become convinced that they were I in ntwsrasinn *<f ?lir. I Mr. Machen was notified to appear at j the Department. He did so and was ' subjected to a "sweating" process by | the inspectors and Mr. Bristnw for ! three hours, but no admissions that, lie I had profited by the contracts cou'd lie secured from him. He declined to answer many questions on the ground that they related to his private business. but insisted to the end that he had not received a cent improperly. Nevertheless he was nrn -t< d on the warrant which had boon prepared and taken before a United States commissioner. where his attorney immediately demanded a full hearing. Assistant District Attorney Taggart. however, was not ready to proceed with the case and the hearing was set for June 5th. Mr. Mnchcn gave a $20,000 bond fur- ; nished by a Philadelphia bonding com- ; pany for his appearance, declining to j accept the proffer of friends to go on | his bond. After his release he declined i to make any statement beyond the i single declaration that the whole thing was n grand-stand play and he would i come out. all right. Ilis attorneys do- 1 dared that at the proper time they , would show conclusively that lie had , been guilty of no wrong in connection i with the contracts and. on the con- | trary. they would he able to show that his administration of the free delivery service had hcen characterized by i ability and Integrity. The Department officials claim that thrir evidence is conch'sive. It. is understood that civil suit will he entered to recover from Machen the amount he is alleged to have re- ; t. iven on the contracts. The warrant alleges several and sundry counts against Machen for obtaining money in an improper and illegal man nor. Then followed a number of ether : founts allowing that Mr. Mao.hen ro- j coived the following specific sums for lot tor box fasteners for the govern- I mont: September 20. 1900, $2,501; December 17, 1900, $3,000; August 31. 1901. $1,271; September 9. 1901. $753.50; January 11, 1902. $724.99; January 20. 1902. $2,500; April 9. 1902. $2,300.50; August 22. 1902. $2.S50. Acoord'ng to statements of Tost- j ofllee Dedpartment officials there wa; ; a go-between for the alleged transac- i (ions In connection with the contracts. The Identity of this person is withheld j by the Department and the officials rc- j fuse to tell what steps, if any. have i been taken looking to this apprehension. It is stated that he does not reside in Washington and 13 not here at present. Postmaster General Payne was asked for the name of thi3 man but declined to discuss the subject, adding that he knew nothing about it. The inspectors, however, it is stated, know the identity and movements of the intermediary. He may he arrested at any time. The inspectors say the evidence they have is of tho most comprehensive nature. It includes many drafts of an alleged incriminating character. bearing the signature of Mr. Machen. The evidence was '.vo"k"d up principally in Washington, though much of it was obtained in other parts of ill" country. The r.nal decision to make me arrest' was reached at 3 o'clock thV. morning, after a protracted conference hotv.'jen the United States district attorney and the inspectors. The arrest created a profound sensation at the Po3toriee Department. The news snrend rapidly and within a frw minutes after the sr;? st the fact was known generally. Fo-tmrster General Pavno lest no tim~ in corr.ry.intcntir.g the p.^s to the public, summoning the newspaper men and r.a- inn: "Mr. Vachcn i3 now under arrest, in thi3 building. lie has received a large Bum of money from the contrectors who supply the government with certain articles. The amount he is e'mrrmd with receiving is over S2O.C00. The Department will make a statement later in the day a3 3aoa .13 it can be prepared." 1 OFFICER IS BOUNCED Daniel V. Miller Accused of Accepting a Bribe HE WAS AN ASSISTANT ATTORNEY Is Discharged From the Postal Service and Warrant Issued For Ills Arrest. Washington. Special. ? Postmaster General Payne Monday summarily dismissed Daniel V. Miller, assistant attnrnm* ! t> ?'.?? ??<V!? -* J ... ?..V UUH-C "I nil' AhSl.SUlUl Attorney General for the PostofTice Department for accepting ;? bribe in connection with the case of John J. Ryan Ac Co.. charged with fraudulent use of the malls. A warrant has been issued for Miller's arrest. Another warrant, has been issued for the arrest of a man who Is charged with being the partner, or go-between, in the transaction. A postofficc inspector has gone West from Cincinnati to effect tho arrest. Tho bribe is alleged to have been accepted at Cincinnati, last December. Miller came here from Terro Haute. Ind.. about two years ago. He war. appointed by former Assistant Attorney General James Tyncr. The charge agoir.st Miller has been under investigation for three months. The Kyan Company was a turf investment ??m i-i it ?<iiu ii opi'rau i ni t?i. i.ouis ami Covingtgon, Kv. lis methods and working operations are said to be similar to those of the Arnold Company, which has figured conspicuously in the poatof'iee investigation. The inspectors have lim n quietly at work on the ease and action was delayed so they might get together all the papers and evidenct wh'eh in their opinion was necessary. Prstoffico inspector W. .f. Vi -keiy. at Cincinnati, and rostofiice Inspector Fulton, at St. I am is. recently were given full charge of the case. Complaint was made by Inspector Fulton before a United States Commissioner in Cincinnati Saturday, and a warrant was then issued for Miller and for the other party, inspector Fulton immediately came to Washington while mother inspector went to make the arrest. Terrible Storms. Hastings, Nob., Special.?A series of heavy storms, two of which developed into the worst tornadoes that have visited southern Nebraska in years, passed over portions of Clay. Franklin and Kearney counties Sunday evening. Fifteen persons are known to have lost their lives and over a score of persons were more or less seriously inlurcd. Near Norman at the homo of Daniel Mc Curdy, a number cf relatives and friends were spending the day and not one in the house escaped s< ricus injury. Two miles south of Upland, a Lutheran service was being held in the school house when the storm struck and demolished it, killing four of the 'occupants, including the minister, nil I injuring a nu.nb.r of others. The storm was equally destructive at Fairfield, but the people were warned of its coming and sought cellars for safety. Six dwellings were blown to pieces at that place, but their occupants escaped injury, with a few exceptions. Every dwelling and outbuilding in the path of the tornado was blown to pieces, and the financial loss thus far accounted f ir, will reach ahout $00,000. Jumped From liridg-. New YorK. Special.?An unknown man sitting in an open ear crossing Brooklyn bridge Sunday, suddenly alighted* when the ear was in the middle of the center span, and running to the side of the bridge jumped into th" river, lie threw his hat in the face of n lireman who tried to seise him as no stood poised on the edge of the trestle work and then dived head first. holding a lighted elgar between his teeth. His body rose to tie* surfa'-e imnu- j ulateiy after the plunge and was carried away ity the current. A Village Drs<roved. I^nndon. TJy Cable.?The Sofa correspondent of The Morning leader teh graphs that the Macedonian committee reports that the Turks have burned the village of naclt7.1, near S< rc.?. Only 48 of the 500 inhabitants escaped ar.d many women and girls were outraged | and murdered and their bodies cast in- j to the water. Track Wrecked. ^ Tliehnmnd. Special.?By the bursting of the dams of two lakes near fileti Allen, a few miles above the city, early Monday, (lie bank of the north track of the Richmond, Fredericksburg & Potomac Railroad was washed a Way. As a freight train of 20 ears was parsing over the weakened place, 12 of them went down, and most of tbe.se were totally wrecked. The engine did not leave the track but got Safely over. Engineer C. M. Kcdon. of Richmond, was injured, but not curiously. The track was damaged for 1,100 feet. LIVE ITEMS OF NEWS. Many Matters of General Interest In Short Paragraphs. Down In Dixie. North Carolina will spend $300,000 on its capital, plans having been furnished for that purpose by a Columbia architect. I PltPlic InO TM ...... ... ?i aim i KVMiiiis ime were arraigned on the charge of assassinating .J. it. Mnrcuni at Jaokson, Kv.. the attack on the jail the night previous having been repulsed by troops. .Mrs. Kate Taylor. charged whh shooting her husband and chopping up his body, was a witness in her own behalf. At The National Capital. A warrant has born issued for the arrest of Hani* I V. Miller. Assistant \ttornev in tlie o'Vuv of the Assistant A; torney-th net al to the I'ostollice Ih'pai timnt. charging conspiracy. Some f Senator l'oraker's friends declare they believe Senator Ilanni would accept the Presidential notnin,.tion. if so requested in an emergen v. f'.en. Frederick Fr.nston says thesta-vation reported among Alaska Rs. kinics is due to their improvident slaughter of animals and to indolence. At The North. The Irish Agricultural Organization Socictv was ftiein.-.t ill Vn,v v..-! Strikes and lockouts in Now York arc iho rails--s of 200.000 workmen lining idle. At least IT. persons are known to have lost their lives in a Nebraska to tiado. Contractor .1. !t. McDonald stated that he expected to have the New York subway finished by Christinas. Many Knights Templar arrived in Philadelphia for the fiftieth anniversary of the Pennsylvania Grand Comnmndery. Charles M. ShoafTor, superintendent of telegraph for th - Pennsylvania Railroad Company, estimates the Pennsylvania's losses in its polo and wire war with the Western Colon at $20,000. The American college professor was declared to he onlv "a hired man to a cage" in a lecture by M. Chicago. Much damage to life and property has been done to large areas on the I..il....... I c -I... ??? ? I "* Of ill u HJIIUII it;i \)i nil" lYllSSIb'3l|Jpi. Evidence aceuinmulates in the postolflce fraud rases. Arrivals in San Francisco from Patagonia tell of the escape of .30 convicts who have secured arms and are terrorizing a large part of Ten*' del Fuogo. It Is sail tln.ye are no idle men in Kansas to harvest the wheat crop. From Across The Sen. Mrs. Gunning S. Hedf >rd pioadoi guilty in London to fasely certifying a child's birth and was lined $30. About 1.30 Macedonians perished at the village of Smeni sh, which was set nn li e during a fight with Turks. Fnited States Minister Herbert. \V. Powen arrived at Caracas on his return front the I'nited States. The Congtelation of the Propaganda in Home derided to recommend division of the Arrhdi jeese of Oregon. According to Russian aeeounts disorder lias followed the partial evacuation of Manchuria. The i'ostolflie lie pa rtmrnt is investigating the increase in salaries of assis- ' tant postmasters and clerks. Tito sea. gulf and lake coasts of the I'nited States have lifii apportioned into 13 districts for naval defense. it is said Secretary I'o t has decid"d the charge that Major R. I.. llowjte was cruel to Filipino prisotte s was not sustained. Col. Johnston I... De Peyste- died at Tivoli-on-lludson, aged r>7 years. An earthquake in Asiatic Turkey de stroyvd a whole village near Krzroom and killed practically all its 2,000 inhabitants. Miscellaneous flatters. President Roosevelt is traveling eastward through Washington. Gen. Rarnardo Reyes, Governor of Nettvo lX'on. will, it is believed, be exonerated by tic Mexican Congress for his course in the riots of April 2 in Monterey, when the matter comes up The revolver factory of Smith /i Wesson, was closed for the reason, it was said, that the men joined a labor union. Marguerite Royenval died at Thenclles, France, after living unconscious for over 20 vrarr. A revised list of the casualties in me first stage of the Pari -Madrid automobile race shown that <? were killed <md 13 injured. Premier Haifour, i;i answering an n'tack on Sir Charles; Dilkc. declared tliar there was no division of opinion between himself and C lonial Sec >. tary Chamberlain and hints that he mi -ht favor protection. Lady Henry gam*, met has retired fr< m the Presidency o' the MiMi'th T r.iperanee A-s .ciatlon because o* Lad health. Andrew Middleton. colored, a lineman employed by the Southern Stai s Tel; phone Company, was killed by electricity at Herkloy, eWdnesday aiterncon. A wire he was handling came in contact with a live wire. -i CHANGE IS OPPOSED, l j Strong Resolutions on Marriage and Divorce Adopted. THE SOUTHERN ASSEMBLY ACTS. After a Heated Debate an Overturs From the New Orleans Presbytery Was Adopted. Iioxington. Ya.. Special.?The session of the Southern Presbyterian As. sembly Tuesday morning was addressed by Rev. Dr. John Haleom Shaw, of New York, a member of the committee to forward the evangelistic movement in the Northern Presbyterian Assembly in the interest of that cause. The overtures from the Synods of * , i Tennessee, Alabama. Missouri, and the Presbyteries of Maryland, ltrazos. Fort Worth and Red river for closer relations with the Reform Church of America wnm 1 ... .... v |>ui mi ?mi uie rerommendntion that tho Assembly appoint a committee of conference .., m whenever the Reformed Church should "t> indicate its readiness to reeeivo the eoniniittee and tlie report was adopted. l)r. Graham was appointed a delegate to lay the matter before the Reformed Church. Cpon the recommendation of the auditing committee the bequest of Mrs. Stewart of Alexander, was placed to the credit of the endowment fund for ministerial r< lief. The request of the .. Pr< sbyterian Society of Philadelphia for historical papers relating to tho Assembly was agreed to. Telegrams of greeting were received from the Cumberland Presbyterian Assembly and the Northern Presbyterian As- ? sembly. Cpon the recommendation of ' the foreign correspondence committee the Assembly declined to appoint an ^ evangelistic committee for co-operation with similar committees of allied bodies, and declined to appoint a delegate to the "joint conference on divorce and re marriage." Strong resolutions were adopted on the subject I of marriage and divorce. The Assem- > I bly then took a recess until afternoon. v At the afternoon session an address, f \ ou Christian education was delivared-by Rev. Dr. Theron H. Rice, of A' lanta. to one of the largest congr j tlons yet assemble^ during the *x~. r sembly. A speelal committee was appointed to consider the anti-saloon leaguo's communication on the advisability of proposed action. * The New Orleans Presbytery in an overture to the Assembly asked that I no change he made in the Confession of Faitfl. The Assembly, finallv after a heated debate, participated in by a large number of commissioners, adopted the overture. Tornadoes in Iowa. Dea Moines, Iowa, Special.?Iowa has been storm-swept for the past 24 hours. Three tornadoes, two Monday nijvht and one Tuesday night, resulted in the loss of six lives, the fatal in| jury of three score of people, besido eat property less. The dead: At j Glennwond?Maggie Bietnor, of Adair. lo.va. aged II years; Hazel Wright, of j Adair, aged in years. Near Buxton: ' ihorgta Bueklry. Herl>ert Rhodes. At I South I)cs Moines: Russell A. Knauff. \ aged 30 years; Floyd Knauff. infant. J I T!i?> injured: At Olennwood?Mary Ke.keit, Anna D^laney, JJyrtle Dickinson. Ktta Newton, Harrison Johnson. Near Buxton: Moleutious Rhodes, fatal; Mollie Rhodes, fatal: Eliza Blnk| cly, fatal; Amphy and Minnie Blakely; Sewart. Dm y. Cbo'-ge and Addison Rhodes; Buddie Reashy: Mary Walki r. At South Dos Moines: Mrs. Knauff. bruised ami cut; Mrs. Margaret Boston, skull fractured by falling brick; Charles MeNutt. hurt by (lying tree limbs; Mrs John McCoy, breast and heat! cut by flying glass. The victims at Glenn wood were all inmates of the School for the EeebleMint'.od. The tornado struck the girls' ucrnmory. The roof was torn olY and with a terrific, terrible crash fell back again upon the wrecked building. All | tlie buildings of the group, including the hospital, dormitory, boys' building. J custodians' building, farm cottages and I the boiler-room -wore more or less damaged by the storm. The superintendent estimated that the loss will be at least $75,000. There is no insurance. The buildings of tho institution are situated on a slight rise and wdrc a mark for tho heavy wind, which swept ) down on the structure with terrible 1 fury. The boiler-room, including some fine machinery, lately installed. !.?? weo'.-ed. The eleven Rir'.s who were lnjr.ivd are being oared f<rr in the hospital, which is intact. _ y+y K llcd in Wreck. Charlottesville, Va., Special.?The Oh- f;apenl:e &. Ohio local mssenanr tirJn. rart bound, far Rlchn.ond, wap . v.rreke.l one mile cast of Cbnr'otV.Jvilh ct ? o'clock Tr.csJay nftcnoon. by I' a tip-ending of (he rails at a sh^rp J ve. The train wits half nn l>our , !" and v.t endeavoring to id ; In :ot>. I ! i:.tr>. Two r* r.ior.s were *killed: Tf -i). !?all, of Richmond, Va.t the engineer, t ft end C. nr.. Snyder, of Richmond, V'a., 'ircinan of ike wrecked Irain. N > oao ' w?.3 seriously Injured, but some persons suffered brulcts. The engine in :i complete wreck. The mail coach and two passenger tars were dcmoll.-djed.