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New Ulm weekly review (New Ulm, Minn.) 1878-1892

May 15, 1878 · Page 1 of 8

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Hew HXm ijtaiiem A TERRIBLE DISASTEE. in 100 consecutive hours. He made the last probably by the carelessness of some hand, of man. Was about twenty-six years old. A wife mile in 13 minutes. ^Y the dust and gases which are the necessary concomitants and ten-months-old child are left in not the of the flouring business. Mills had most desirable circumstances. In the case of Oliver Cummings vs. exploded before from these causes. There John Boyer. who nearly escaped from the JAS. BOBELETETER, Proprietor. The Grand Trunk railway, at Boston, the jury were only two men in the Zenith mill at the Diamond ^mill, Was a married man, about Explosion of Hie Great Washburn Mill |at gave a verdict for $15*708. Commings was time of the explosion, Jmn E. Rosiehius killed, twenty-five years old. Has been here but a Minneapolis^Seventeen Killed and a i NEWULM MINNESOTA and Fred George, badly burned about the engineer, and injured by a collision, with' a short time. Million Dollars Worth of Property Destroyed. face and hands, but will recover. Rosienius Peter Holbey, burned in the Humbolt ruins, wild engine. pi \fep *f leaves a widow and one child, the latter .about was married, leaves a wife and one Child, and ^ti ft At the session of the Vermont M,. E. ight or ten months old. *?'|ItfftJUsi? was about twenty-five years old. Family conference at Woodstock, the committee of STOKY OF A STJBVrVOB^ o&s'fe not in best of circumstances. MIME' fflfD C&IMXfrAL&i TJom St. Paul Globe, May 4th. fc trial in the case of Rey, E. D. Hqpkins,charged Peter Lund, who was first reported as having Then one survivor was met, Joseph Monti From clues obtained Hoffman*,"narresit, on* two: men expelled "There is an earthquake," was the expression hej perished'in the Humboldt mill, escaped Jr.,,,the watchman of the Galaxy' mill, who with forgeries, repor|e.d thajk Thomas E. Rice sftid Barney unharmed. A few moments before the explosion was discovered by the reporter in all the plenitude from the ministry and church membership. and thought of hundreds of persons ed in San Francisco for passing counterfeit occured he was engaged' in a bantering of full health. He said he was in the both in Minneapolis and St. Paul, at 7:20 It is reported that the Commerce insurance conversation with Peter Holberg, who perished, basement of the mill, one story below the half dollars the -U. 8 detective discovered the as to who should go out for a pail,of water. canal, engaged in putting in an alarm bell company of New York, a purely local Thursday evening. Those who. were, in counterfeiters',workshop, and seized a large Lund, fortunately for himself, concluded to upon the shafting. The concussiou lifted him organization, is about to close its. doors. buildings rushed to doors and windows, to quantitj'-of false'cbin, dies, oic. go, and was scarcely outside of the mill before fully six feet, when he fell and was stunned The last statement made Jan. 1, 1878, stated ascertain the cause of the shock, and those _The stockholders ot the Sagamore the explosion occurred. He asserts that the for five minutes. He was in a dazed condition its capital to be $200,000 assests $240,379, explosion occurred in the big mill, and that when he recovered from the shock, and already on terra firrna paused to consider Mills Fall River, Mass., voted to put the concern and surplus $20,008 Humboldt and Diamond mills were blown only heard one explosion. If there were other into barikVivptcy, after considering the the cause of the phenomena. They did not down by the concussion. explosions they must have occurred while he A dispatch from Constantinople, says: statement of irregularities of the late treasurer, have long to wait. Flame and smoke in was stunned. When he realized his position, Jake Rhodes, who lives just below the mills, Gen. Todleben is about to retire to the lines George T. Hathway. The statementshpws he found the water from the canal pouring in, left his home a few minutes before the explosion, dense volumes leaped hundreds of feet heavenward, sma1! force at San and naturally thought the thud of the of Tchotaidja, leaving a and said he was going to a fire. He went the asset? of the corporation to be $655,471 and the word went from lip to lip, plosion was merely the result of toward the mills, and has not since been seen. Stefano. The Russians Offer to fall back behind book liabilities, $616,435 deficiency in account, almost withvthe rapidity f lightning, that the breaking in of the canal. He rushed to a His friends are apprehensive that he is among a straight line drawn between Dedegatch owing to appropriations of cash by window up stairs, and looked for a place to the killed. the Washburn mill, which has long and jus+ly and Adrianople, if the British fleet will withdraw Hathaway, $60,978 notes outstanding not appearing jump. When there he saw JohnG. Rosienius, A stranger called at No. 215 Second street, been the pride of Minneapolis, had exploded of the Zenith mill, looking out of the window. at the time. south, on Thursday, deposited his trunk and on the books, $138,000, and more to Monti called out to him, "Are you going to and was destroyed. How a flouring mill, satchel, took tea, and started towards the A correspondent of the Evening Post, come. The indebtedness shown by the books jump," but Rosienius either did notunderstand scene of the fire, since which time he has not using water power and with no boilers in it writing from Tokio under date of April 5th, is $309,272, to which must be added $138,000 or did not hear, and that was the last seen of been seen, was evidently a mechanic or a could explode was a problem,, but the stern sends the following: The famine in the north him alive. Monti took in the situation, saw of bogus paper. Y... Yr'Y.'i'W-'' i *h un man working about machinery, but was well the elevator in one tremendous sheet of flame, of China rages with increasing severity and reality was so terrible that that was soon forgotten dressed, Wore a dark moustache, and was about The United States grand jury of New and was momentarily paralyzed. Looking below twenty or twenty-five years of age. It is feared mo3t dreadful reports come from the afflicted by the consideration givQu the dead York, has indicted Alex. Barton, ex^cashier of the window, Monti observed an ash heap, he was near the scene of the disaster, and was regions. In one town a man opened a shop theFiskill National bank, tried and acquitted and the efforts to stay the progress of the fifteen feet or so below him. He straddled the among the killed or injured. for the sale of humna flesh and did a good sill, swung himself over, hung by his hands for before Judge Benedict, some time ago, on the flames. It was a night of horror in Minneapolis. THE FRENCH MACHINES/ J business in connibalistic joints and roasts a second or two on the sill as the roar of the The insurance men, or quite a charge of embezzling funds of the bank. The The wild reports of the number killed flames boomed hissingly around him, and then until the local mandarin caused the shop number of them, attribute the explosion indictments -were for false entries to the treas dropped and rolled thence into the seething waters. and of the amount of destruction added to the keeper to be arrested and beheaded. l,: to the use of the French built urer of the currency, and for perjury. Luther Once in the water he swam out despairingly machines for purifying, which was one peculiarity excitement and confusion, and the feeling Vague rumors are afloat of a raid on and exhausted, until he struck a protrud H. Redfield, president of the Tarrytown National of the "A" mill. Mr. Christian, partner that a great calamity had befallen the ing rock, upon which he climbed and rested to Canada by the Irish in case of war between of Mr. Washburn in the "A" mill, and a gentleman bank, for perjury, and for making false recover his presence of mind and courage. His city was universally apparent. As the night Russia and England. It is stated that three who has been largely instrumental in reports to the comptroller, and an indictment senses being gathered, he waded to the paper introducing the "patent process'.' which has wore on a calmer feeling prevailed, and, companies of Irish patriots are armed and for murder was found against Michael Toiler mill. Reaching the under portion of it. he given such world-wide celebrity to Minnesota equipped at Buffalo N. T., ready for service, earlier than might have been supposed, rose before some of the employes engaged in the West Point soldier who killed his room flour, some years ago while in Europe purchased putting out a blaze. As a voice from the dead, and 10,000 western Irishmen have been noti Minneapolis became quiet, leaving her professional the French machines and introduced them into mate a few months since. he asked, "Which way can I get out?" He fiecl, sp that they can be there in twenty-four this mill. It is claimed by soaae that firemen to stand guard over the Nightly robberies for three weeks past was then directed to a place of safety. while these machines make a great saving in hours, where there is 3,000 more that will checked elements. at Omaha, Neb., and the presence in the city the manufacture of flour, that their use is unsafe, THIRST SAVED DIM. rendezvous for a raid within three days after as through their use the air becomes of an unusual number of tramps necessitateed orders are issued, but nothing authentic can There were other narrow escapes, though not thoroughly charged with the fine particles, and action of citizens. A committee of safety, so thrilling as Monti's. Among these that of be obtained to substantiate these rumors. there being little or no ventilation, that the ex otherwise a vigilance committee, was organized, The Daybreak. Peter Humboldt, of the Humboldt mill, whom plosion is liable to occur at any moment. A dispatch from Pera says petitions and 150 men thoroughly organized, act-' the reporter of the GLOBE interviewed. He escaped Daybreak succeeding the fire revealed the It is easy to theorize, however, though the and protests are reaching the Porte, and embassies by reason of his thirst, having gone for a ing under a well deyise.d plan, searched the exact facts can only be ascertained by a most extent and character of the destruction. The pail of water just before the explosion. He from all sides against the territorial careful and painstaking investigation., city thoroughly. Commencing at 10 o'clock area covered by the conflagration was not so had only a very short distance to go for the water, arrangements of the treaty of San Stefano. the search was continued until morning. It extensive as the completeness of the destruction and when in the act of returning he saw Interview witli C. C. Washhurn. One from Srndjak, of Varna, declares that is not known what disposal will be made of the roof lifted from the big mill. Tfll Diamond was impressive. As the roseate streaks of As had been expected Hon. C. C. Washburn the inhabitants will resist by force Russian and the Humboldt mills were flattened those captured. Legal measures will be adhered morning began to overtop the opposite side of appeared in the city yesterday morning, and at the same instant, before the fire struck them, occupation of the fortress. Another from to until they fail, when desperate the reporter immediately hunted him ir St. Anthony, one gradually realized the flattening and the elevator immediately caught fire and Batoum makes direct appeal to England, and the purpose, of interviewing him upon the remedies will be applied. The committee effect of the dire explosion. The indescribable was a mass of flames. question.of rebuilding. He was down at the reports that the Russians are advancing will continue to act nightly until the tramp masses of flame and masonry of the midnight FORTUNATE ESCAPE OF EAELROAD MEN. ruins when found and gives the following statement: towards the town. Information comes from nuisance is abated. and darkness of the night preceeding He says the Washburn "A" mill cost, Bradley, a locomotive engineer, and Hinds, the Doburdscha that arising in that direction with the land upon which it stood $350,000. began to assume shape and form. The mounds a fireman, both of the Minneapolis & St. is imminent. The lot alone he said was worth $30,000. The Louis railroad, were proceeding homeward together. of smoking embers began to be clearly defined. CASUALTIES. total loss on mill and machinery he set down Mr. Bradley said the two were walking Frank Greenard, Gen. Crook's chief The black phantoms at the ends A. skiff containing three women and at $320,000. If the wheels and pits are all up the track together, when he said to his scout and guide, with a detail of eleven men of hissing nozzles gradually evolved right the loss will probably be reduced to two children, was struck by a raft on the Allaerheny companion, "They are burning bread." "I from the Fifth cavalry, arrived at Deadwood, $300,000. The insurance upon- the property into helmeted firemen. The yellow glare was think it is wheat,"said Hinds. At that moment, riyer, five miles above Pittsburgh, on this amount of1 was $175,500. About $100,000 D. T., on the 7th inst. 'lhey came out from Bradley saw, as he described it, "puff, puff," supplanted by the white light of God's precious the 6th inst., and capsized. Two of the women was written by Chicago agencies. from the big mill, and it instantly exploded. Fort McKinuy, in quest of a angof thieves day until, creep, creep, creeping with Aurora's were drowned. The other three were rescued He was thrown down by the concussion, but REBUILDING BIG MILL. whom they tracked to within 40 miles of that footsteps, the suddenness and completeness of by parties on shore. recovered. Some of the falling debris caught Mr. Wasburn says the big mill will be place, where the trail was lost. Greenard the explosion filled the mind of the observer. him and imprisoned him, but he was rescued rebuilt without delay. The running capacity A portable engine in Memphis, Tennessee, states that information was jrainedfrom straggling with some injury, but not seriously. Hinds The stones, which had composed the towering will be equal to if not greater than before. The on the 0th inst, exploded with escaped without the slightest injury. bands of friendly Indians to the effect new structure will not, however, be built so edifices of the previous day, had been scattered terrific force, instantly killing Tom Hoist, the high, but will be a great improvement upon that a portion of Sitting Bull's band had with the caprice of a playful fairy and engineer, and probably fatally injuring Jim the old. Probably a different system of manufacturing The at) After. crossed over the line into the United States, with the fury of a demented demon. While flonr will be adopted, i. e. using Kennedy, the fireman. The following laborers The day after the calamity is always horrible. and thought it very likely that the Indians huge blocks of masonry were resolved into more hand labor and less machinery. In the heat and excitement of the first were also wounded Barney Blerns, leg would be very troublesome during the com During the^meantime the mill will be sand, the frailest particles of office furniture rush, while question and answer are passing broken Tom Steene.arm broken and scalded completed and enlarged to forty run of^stone. ing summer on the upper Missouri. remained intact. Here was the top of a brick rapidly from lip to lip, those who have no individual Jas. Zahone, arm broken and severely scalded equal in capacity to the A mill. grief can scarce take time to sorrow chimney lifted bodily and entire until placed Gen. McDowell has been instructed to In reference to the elevator he said the structure Friday Gullen, colored, who was passing the with those that are afflicted. But of all the alongside of a flimsy waste paper basket institute a vigilant watchfulness along the cost $63,000, and had a capacity of 300,000 thousands who visited the ruins of the mill spot on the way to his work, was severely bushels, of which 100,000 was allotted to the and both were entire. The huge, southern boader of Arizona and southern disaster yesterday, the one who could have scalded. various millers, and 200,000 reserved for storage ponderous and fire-proof safe, all shattered California, to prevent violation of the witnessed the many scenes of agony unaffected, purposes. A fire at Keokuk',', Jowa on the Gth must indeed have been strong-hearted. A and torn, was a near neighbor neutrality laws by Lcrdo revolutionists, and As an investment it had never paid, but if woman weeping makes her way through the inst., destroyed the Keokuk & Des Moines in reckless ruin with the elegantly cushioned to arrest any and all parties who are suspected the millers really desired it he would rebuild, crowd down to the little stone building used as a railway company's general office, the Athenaeum, stool of the exquisite clerk of the mght before. of congregating on the border for that purpose. with a capacity equal to the one destroj'ed. morgue. The crowd respectfully make way for -in-which was situated Burkett's wholesale The iron work of the machinery of the destroyed Gen. Ord has notified the war department her/and her over-charged heart breaks out with, notion house, a Uiree story brick building. "My husband my husband He has not come mills began, with the advancing morn, that he has made such distribution pf The Mills Destroyed and Mills Kcmavning. home to me Was he in the mill? Have you The Keokuk & Des Moines loses everything to protrude through the masses of 6tone debris the force under his command as will in his The Tribune, last evening, gave the following found his body?" The poor woman cannot except such books, papers, etc., as were interesting summary: their Gordian-knot shapes into stern and common-place judgement with the co-operation of other realize that the cruel flames had so destroyed Hobart, Shuler & Co. are 'in "running order, in the safe. Burkett's stock was- valued at reality. Railroad rails were found federal officials and State officials, prevent any what had once been the body of her husband with no damage to machinery and no loss by $45,000. The insurance will more than cover that recognition would be impossible. to be twisted like the capital letter W, while serious violation of the neutrality laws. He the destruction of the elevator. what was lost. The building occupied by the "He was my only brother," said a large, fragments of torn envelopes remained unscorched. has directed the prompt arrest of all suspected Goodrich & Co. are uninjured and are in running strong man with an English accent, "and God K.&D.M. was owned by S. S. Vail, and is persons who may attempt to cross from the order. knows I would rather have died with him." and were valued at W. H. Cahill & Co.'s mill is also uninjured valued at $10,000. -The other -buildings were United States into Mexico. Vai1 A reporter of the GLOBE was on the spot Such incidents were occurring constantly lJfy!MfS*i and in running order. also owned along with the sweet breaking of early j'esterday, while an army of workmen were engaged The report of the committee appointed D. 11. Barber & Co.'s mill was running this $3 000. On these there is an insurance of in clearing away the debris and making dawn. The air was nipping keen, to adjust southwestern freight rates was morning. the various railway tracks passable. $4,000. The Athenaeum building cost $35,000 and the wind blew freshly, but that Empire, C. A. Pillsbury, report no serious adopted by the association at Chicago on the damage. They will start up to-morrow. and was once sold for $28,000. It was worth did not deter the usual heterogeneous 4th inst. It names the combined roads. The Dead and Their Families. Crocker, Fisk & Co. were running this morning. crowd from collecting, and rushing into, all about $12,000 when destroyed. Insurance "The Southwestern Railway Association." The GLOBE reporters were busily engaged positions of danger. Men and women seemed $5,000 The total damage is estimated-at yesterday in looking up further particulars concerning The Chicago roads are entitled to 45 per cent, The Dakota mill, S. S. Brown, was somewhat to delight in getting under the tottering, gaping those who met their death in the disaster $60,000. '_ shaken up. The burrs were not started. The of the gross business, the St. Louis roads to of the 2d inst., and the condition of their walls still uprearing on the east side of the machinery is not seriously damaged. the same, and the Hannibal and St. Joe 10 bereaved families,, 1'EliSONAL AND POLITICAL, i'.. The Anchor mill of C. A. Pillsbury & Co. is canal. The timber covering up the canal had per cent. This applies to all tonage to or The greater portion .of the families are in running order. It will be started to-morrow. The vestry of Trinity church, New York been upheaved into a hundred protruding and through Kansas City, Leavenworth, St. Joe middling well provided for, as the millers have The Pillsbury mill is running in good order. gaping wounds, but the eager mass of humanity have selected Rev. Dr. De Koven of the Uni. been employed, at good wages, for some time The City mill of Solon Armstrong & Co. is and Atchison^on the west or to or through still persisted in thronging over it. vereity of.Racine, Wis., as successor to the past, and were a saving class of men. badly shattered, but to what extent cannot be St. Louis, Louisiana, Hannibal. Quincy, Davenport, A few of them, however, are in a rather destitute Odd nooks and sheltered corners were gradually ascertained this morning. late Dr. Oglesby as assistant minister. Burlington or Chicago, on the east. condition. Several of the millers were The Cataract mill of L. Day & Co. was considerably pre-empted and filled, as lucky claims from the Information has been received that the The associatedlines are to charge full local members of one or more secret organizations injured, but the machinery was kept pitilessly chilly breeze. But among all the Chiiiese minister accredited to "Washington, of a benevolent character, and their widows lates on Colorado business. Anyroad receiving running during the night, and it is believed, is crowd, the relatives of the dead or missing will receive aid from that source. all right. accompanied by members of the legation and more than its allotted proportion may retain were conspicuous by their absence. There was IN THE BIG' MILL. i The Washburn "B" mill is badly shattered, consuls'for the principal ports of th's country, 40 per cent, of their earnings therefrom. Charles Henry was a married manj about neither weeping nor mourning in the crowd, and will require considerable repairs before it will sobhleave China foi'the United States. The Wtabash road is recognized aslthe Eastern forty years of age, and leaves a wife and one will be in running order, but it is thought that but there was an immeasurable amount connection of the Haunibal & St. Joe road. child. He resided at No. 613 Third street There'seems ipbe little doubt that Hon. two weeks will be sufficient to place the old of unquenchable curiosity. In the latter South, and leaves Bis family in rather reduced The organization is to continue till January part in operation. This will give the following John St. Bipekley of Milwauke eex-assistant attorney quality, the women bore the most evident circumstances. He was a member of Hermon mills for the summer work: next. The following are the rates on westbound of thei United States,who has been missing traces. Their appearance was, taken all and Lodge No. 18, K. of P. Yesterday afternoon Run' freight from Chicago: First class, 85 for some.time,conimitted suicide by drowning the lodge gave his family $50. all, eminently suggestive of down-at-the-heel North Star, East Side 5 second, 70 third, 43 fourth, 30 special, 25, Fred Merrill, a single man, aged twentyeight in the lake hear St. Francis seminary, at Phcenix, East Side 5 stockings, and a general state of demi-toilette. years, perished. The Merrill boys came From St. Louis the rates are: First class, 65 Artie 6 the south side of the bay. He left several while the morning airpinched their nostrils into to Minneapolis some time since and wished to Union 6 rtWo second, 50 third, 35 fourth, 35 special 20. letters addressed to different pariets of that redness and inquisitiveness, and one or locate here permanently. Therefore his parents Holly 5 persevered through the rough ruins, with the city, the contents of which show conclusively' were sent for and arrived in the' city and commenced Cataract 10 housekeeping about two weeks ago. inevitable baby-ridden perambulator. The -.1: his intent to suicide. Alt efforts tp recover his Dakota 6 Ed. Merrill, brother of Fred, also perishedi Empire 9 CONGRESSIONAL. men wore a more anxious aspect, and eagerly body have thus far been of no avail. The immediate He was a single man twenty years old. Minneapolis 9 discussed the Whys and wherefores of the catastrophe, cause of his rash'act is attributed to f. Clark Wilber was a married man, aged fortyfive Pillsbury ix EN1TE, May 6.The bill to'repeal and the mill owners themselves, at a menta 1 abearation, brought on by .domestic years,* and has a wife and two girls living City 5 the bankrupt law and that for the repeal of later hour, began to mingle with the throng. in Vermont. trouble's.' Mr. Binckley's family', consist Anchor 12 the specie resumption act came up alternately,'Mrl August Smith, aged forty-five years, leaves a And it was astonishing from what Palifeade Gordon making a speech on the latter. ed of a wife, from whom he was separated, wife and one child to mourn his loss. He resided Washburn When his speech was concluded, the pension a distan.ee some of the congregation arid four child! en, who are now at Krioxville, at 313 Eighth avenue south. Family in New MorrisonMr. Pillsbury says will be appropriation bill came up and was discussed. had traveled. The country, within moderate circumstances. running in 10 days 14 The amendment of the committee on appropriations long radius, was largely represented, having E. H. Grundman, a millright, about fifty chauging the House provision that R. P. Russell 5 Of l6fe MXSCELLANEOUS.f ^ui been attracted by the shock and flames of the years of age, perished. He resided at 1,211 pension agencies shall be filled by disabled Specie in the Bank of France increased Harmon place, and leaves a wife and eleven night previous. Parties from Hamntond, Wis., Total 130 soldiers created some discussion. children to mourn his loss. His family were 12,.300,000 francs last week.' some sixty miles away, had been drawn to the MILLS DESTROYED, for."v' HotiSE.Bills were introduced, among quite well provided The following are the names of the mills1 spot, W^iile country boys and lasses of varying The steamship Scythia from New York them one tor the appointment f an agricultural William Leslie, twenty-eight years old, leaves destroyed and their capacity: degree and from varying directions were in commission to investigate diseases of for Liverpool took out $100,000 in gold. a wife and ope child. He resided on Seventh Washburn A *.\..'.'....'....41 stock. The house then considered the bill to attendance. street and Cedar avenue. He was a member ^Application has been made for' a receiver Pettit-Robinson *ig provide a government for the District of Columbia. of the Ancient Order of United Workmen and Galaxy JJ for the'New York Evening-Mail'. X' Several amendments were adopted, the Knights of Pythias. Thus his STATEMENTS OP EYE WITNESSES. irfirtt Zenith. but the house adjourned without action. family will be provided for by the order. The British co'js'ul' at Portland has gone Hennepin 6 Among the components of, the crowd, of Cyrus E. Wing was a single man thirty-four to Southwest harbor to watch the movement Humboldt 6 SENATE, May 7th.The house bill forbidding course, were some who were immediate participants years old. steamer Cambria. further retirement of legal tenders the1 of in the catastrophe, or who had immediately Ole Shei was a married man, residing at south was given a second reading by a vote of 83 to 86 l- i seen it. Among them was Mr. Mortimer* The' cerempny of laying the 'Cforner end of Wasffinfton avenue! His family are in 25 Mr. Ho we, from the committee on foreign The total loss is estimated at about a million B. Rollins, of Day, Rollins & Co., proprietors moderate circumstances, bdt* depended Upon* stone ef .e post chapel atFor Leavenworth dollars, and insurance at $560000 relations, reported a substitute for the senate of the Zenith mills, who,was encountered Chines immigration." A him for support. took p^ace on, the 5th inst. jointr.esoluUou.on: by a GLOBE reporter. He said he Walter Savage, a married man, twenty-three large part of the, remainder pf the day was was on the East Side when the explosion took Milwaukee Produce Market. &&*" Three companies of mounted finfantry, years old, leaves a wife and one child. He resided taken up in discussion' ofthe 'pension appropriation place. Turning round,on hearing the noise, he Li*7 at No. 1,313 South Third steeet.'and leaves that go outttd'superintend the removal of the sv bilL^ closed 1 saW the'debris fly, fully five hundred feet into his family nearly destitute. Ute Indian6,.lefKon the7th inst. HOUSE, May 3-After, some .skirmishing No. the air^tod- said"to his wife, "That is the big Charles Kimball a single man aged twenty over amendments, the District of C&1/ No. 3, 1.06^. Corn m" fa# rMTOst":'" No?* 2 *4ks' mill." He scouted the i,dea of there being any In viewiof fW-rticeht disturbances in years, was new arrival in the city, and. had fcv new 38/ Nod.2, firmer mea. jumbia government bill was massed. Mr. Oats firmfer. 264c. Bye' nitro-glycerine about the mills or the cars upon been working but a short time. 8ha Montreal the Canadian government has' taken Barleay No. l,59Vic.m scarce,' wanted So' Woodmoyed to &o into committee' of the mall the railroad tracks. The cars running among r^ Henry Hicks was a married, man. aged forty ilS i?foS LJ mleas'uresWpfeVent'the carrying of arms. whole on the tariff bill, and after several votes the mills never contained anything but wheat years. He was not living with his wife, and it being taken the'motion was carried by a bare pork,$^.6254. Lardfjprunesteam, and the products of the-mills. -Some powder The majn! bpjlding and office of the is updeistoM was, about applying or". a ~tdivorce,, $6.87&c. majority.' Mr. Banks-took thefloorand spoke was being used in blasting out the foundations Foreign Produ ce Market. f^\^j -s,Li Albion lcaU(. wqrlEfl/ at Dighton, Mass., wasagainst the bill at considerable Jength.. At for the new~Washbufn mill. There was not/ E. M. Burbank was the oldest, man "in the burned on.tlie 2d inst! Loss $150,000 insuredthe conclusion of his remarks the, .committee however,- sufficient of that explod^t mill, being past sixty. He leaves a wife and @ns 8d do club, lis 6d@T2s 2d red western V? rose. TlAj. bill relatinst to distribution of the '.I spring, No. 2 to 1,10s 2d@10s 8d red western winter. two* daughters. for$80,00.0.', to do any material injury. Besi4, 1 No. 2 to 1, lis 6d. Oats* American, 3s 3d. Bar^ revised statutes was passed.' Mr. Butler introduced a matt* he was'positive the explosion was in the big THE OTHER HILLS. 'v *1 In Atlanta, Gku, n the' 2d inst. American, 3s 8d. a biil to provide for a tariff commission, mill, and he was equally positive that the Those in the other mills were John E. Rossienus, PBOVISIONS-Beef, 80s. Lard, American, 16s fUL named Codsigney finished "a walk of 500 miles and the house adjourned. cause of all the disaster, was in the firing, of the Zenith mill, who was a married Cheese, 64s. Bacon,' long clear, 26s short, 27s.-" 1TC i~.!iifiij'iirii irrr-~J fr'n _jn Mi'niimmnt.