New Ulm weekly review (New Ulm, Minn.) 1878-1892
April 21, 1886 · Page 1 of 8
OCR Text
mm&m HBBH w*wi "W '3 A f^W^^^^^S^^^W^^^^^^f'^W-^' New TUm Review. A majority of them hare not one board of the depot The heavily laden freight can tee can draw on me for $5,000 for aid to nay be .even higher than forty. A good aid. The pastor who performed the marriage upon another, but were scattered to the were lifted from the tracks and turned cyclone sufferer*. L. Hubbard, Governor.*' day'8 wtck will be .necessary to get anything" service and his wife were among the up on their sidea Th track was This is onlv a sample of the ma ny telegramsreceived. four winds. The detatchment of physicians like a correct list of the dead and wounded. ead, but their little girl escaped injury, being JOa BOBLETEB, Publisher. also ripped up for a distance o! Gen. Washburn wired to draw oru from Minneapolis was a boon to survivors oi one of the children who sought a safe It is an impossible task to-night Everything several roda The heavy iron rails were him for $500, and Anthony Kelly eave $200. the ruined city. The corps was organized place under the chicken coop. The other is excitement and confusion, and one forced from the ties and were bent into all Certain it is that money is needed by the iNE"WULM, MINNESOTA. pastor. Rev. Henry Seder, was bid.y under Dr. Kilvington, and consisted of Drs. can hardly tell who was his next door neighbor. sorts of shapes as if thev were so mu ch flexible homeless. and as much now- as it ever will wounded, sustaining a compound fracture of Higbee, Freeman, C. D. Allen. Lee,'Bunker Thei Grand Central hotel at midnight wood. CYCLONE. be again. the thigh and a nnmber of severe cuts about fichuley and Miller. The doctors were mel is filled with people discussing ithe awful ST. CLOCD CASUALTIES-. the face and head, .besides numerous bruises b^ a gladened committee near where th Those wounded and likely to die are: event, and rumors from the surrounding on various parts oif the body. The groom, THE LATER REPORTS. depot formerly stood. They were eeeortel William Shortbridge, bro'uher of Jacob Short country are coming in about disasters to Henry .Friday, was ikilled instantly, as were bridge, both legs amputated William Libby. over the ruins of Broadway to theBeattj the xaother and a brother of .the bride, but life and property, but little of a reliable nan off: Willie Ross, aged seven, internally hotel, which was one of the very few-largt the latter escaped with a few bad cuts about character, however, can be gleaned. Tom injured: Marv Fehr, injured internally. THE DEATH LIST. the face and head and a broken collar bona buildings which escaped the wrecking element ihose more or less injured, other than Van Etten of Sauk Rapids, who weighs over A Frightful Calamity Befalls St. Cloud Her father, John Schulz, was badly hurt very slightly, are: The hotel was used as a receptack 300 pounds, was picked up bodily and carried Sauk Rapids and Rice's Mrs. Hiner, arm will have* to be amputated about the head and had several*ribs broken. for the wounded, and its inmates were .nn- some 400 feet He was badly bruised, Mrs. Annie Oster. badly hurt in the It is Uaought.iiowever, that he will .recover. Station. Mrs. MARY STEIN. tiriug in their efforts to alienate the sufferings head Mrs. Laura Mdler, head and but not seriously injured. was .eovered t Mrs. TREMP. side injured: Eva Jordan, injured internally THE VICTIMS. of those unfortunates who were brought from head to foot with yellow mud. The Joe Youngler, injured about the head Joe JACOB SHORTRLDGE. Foil-swing is a complete list of the dead: to the house for treatment Youngler'g little boy, badlv injured Casper depot sign, "Sauk Rapids," was ifound HENRY FRIDAY, the croom. NICK JUNEMANN. G!oue breast crushed: William Kelper, headinjured: A Cyclone of Tremendous Power Sweeps at Rice's, thirteen miles away, and A tour of the stricken village revealed She Mrs. Siebold, badly hurt Joseph Doer's CHARLES SCHULZ, brother of bri&e. CLARA BERG. Through the Towns, Destroying son. both lees broken J.West, cut about the JOHN teAUERS, farmer. also a basket full of law books fact that no less than twenty-five persons FRANK OMESKY. head: Mike Moess and two children, badly injured REV. SMITH. AH in Its Path. from the same place. Tha air was full of had been instantly killed, and whose bodies Jacob Brown, wife and babv, badly injured: JOE GUYGOFFSKY. MRS. REV. SMITH. Bernhard Scherli, hurt about thehfcad flying boards and timbers at Rices, earned were recovered from the mass of rains. MRS. GAUMLANTS. JOSEPH C. and MARY ZENS. Joseph Wegler, severely injured. by the cyclone from Sauk Rapids. Andrews, They were as follows: MRS. SCHULZ, mother of bride. The wounds of the others are not worth VAN HOESEN. A DISASTROUS TOBNADO. JOHN RENARD, conntv auditor. MRS. KOEHLER. employed as a clerk on the boarding car of mentioning. AUGUST KROLL'S infant ST. CLOUD, Special Telegram, April 14. GREGG LINDLEY. register of deeds. A girl named TRIVOERTS. the Manitoba road, had his skull crushed in RELIEF. C. L. ANDREWS. S Cloud cannot longer congratulate iteell EDWARD HALL, banker of S Cloud. One woman, name not ascertained. by a heavy timber, and he was past all aid. Very prempt measures are taken to relieve upon being north of the track of cyclones, GERTRUDE G. FLETCHER, visiting relatives. JOHN RENARD. Those wounded were: the buffering at St Cloud and SaukRapids. He was in the boardiug car, which was FRED YOGT, farmer slight bruises about for it was this afternoon 6wept by one of GREGORY LINDLEY. on. Ed Rice, Mayor of St standing on the track near the freight house, S. P. CARPENTER and two children. head. the most horrible tornadoes in the history of EDGAR HULL. Paul, called a special meeting of the council, Mrs. FRINK and four children. OTTO GAUMLANTS, bov: slightly. with several other at the trine, and the car he donated $5,000 at onoe. Carloads of Minnesota. Sharp points were first seen tc Mrs. SAMUEL FLETCHER, CARRIE SWART, domestic at Mrs. Woods. CHARLES FRIDAY, nerhew of groom compound was completely demolished and all of the occupants provisions went also. Minneapolis, Owatonna, HERMAN BEAGH'S two children. ERNEST ALBRIGHT. dart down from the clouds, and so far as this fracture of the thigh. Wabsha, St. Peter, Stillwater, Duluth either Mrs. DEVIE E. ALBRIGHT. REV. HENRY A SEDER fracture of thigh. A. W. LAKE. town is concerned the cyclone had its commencement and various orher places-sent contributions. '9 A W. LAKE. FREDERICK TJJERMAN, carpenter severe WINS LOW PAPPENFUS, wife about 3 o'clock in the basin ol KILLED OB SEEIOUSLT WOUNDED. Mr. SCHULEB, scalp wounds and face badly disfigured. ancl three children. the Masonic cemetery, forming' a whirlwind Mrs. SEVERSON. Edgar Hull, the banker of this place who WILLIAM GAUMLANTS, farmer spine injured. .Capt. ABNER ST. CYR Mr. PAPENFUS, wife and two children. here about a thousand feet in diameter. It was killed at Sauk Rapids, took out a $5,000 OLLIE CARPENTER Child of ABNER ST. AYR. MICHAEL KOEHLER farmer: fracture a took almost every tree in its circle from the on his life in the New York Life Insurance .FRANK CLARK. base of brain and badly hurt internally. Theoe are several of the wounded who HOUSEHOLD HINTS. ground or twisted it off at the trunk. company about an hour before he left for JENNIE JUNGELER JOHN TRABANT, farmer: right arm broken. will doubtless die. There are many persons Great stones were torn up from the Sauk Rapids. The risk was written by JOHN SCHULZ, father of the bride severe MARY JUNGELER too who are missing, and who are supposed earth and dragged along. Moving slowly contusions on head and four ribs broken. Parsnip FrittersScrape and boil' Halburt of S Paul, manager for that company AUGUST JUNGELER to be beneath the deadly ruins, and it would from here and confining itself tc tender, rub through a colander to get LIST OF LOSSES. Minnesota and Dakota. Hull and ED MEHAN. not be surprising if the list of dead would a space of 100 feet across, it passed northeast rid of the tough and stringy portions, The following is a correct list of the individual Halburt both went over to Sauk Rapids to reach thirty or thirty-five. The third An unknown tramp. over Calvary hill, wrecking the Catholic losses, as estimated approximately beat in a egg, a tablespoonful of milk, a get here, and were walking along the street of S. P. Carpenter's children is mortally Mrs. MAGGLE DYER by a committee of Sauk Rapids gentlemen, chapel a nd shattering the crucifix. The teaspoonful (heaping) of prepared flour, when the cyclone reached there. Hull was wounded. The child is eleven years of age. Miss MARY STREIT. who made a thorough investigation yesterday, with a little pepper and salt make into first house taken was Nick Jumemann's, and instantly killed Halburt so badly hurt that and had a large splinter driven through the with a view of enlightening people as Mrs. BARTL FEHR small, flat cakes, flour and fry in good it entered the city at John W. Tennford's be cannot live He is still alive, but has body. Mr. Hurlburt, traveling agent ol to the extent of the damage to property. It SOJU of PHILLIP WALDORF. dripping or lard. place,taking the rear part of the house, and, not yet recovered consciousness. Hull's wife is generally believed that the estimates are, the Mutual Life-insurance Company oi Mrs. MATTIE FINK crossing S Germain street, completely demolished HominySoak a cup of small hominy in the great majority of cases, too low: Is absent in Grand Bapids, Jficb., and was New York, at 11 o'clock to-night was lying CARL F. FINK. John Schwartz's large brick house. for two hours in enough cold water Rodger Bell, Law office S300 notified. in an insensible condition in the Beatty M. Hale, who represents the JOHN H. FINK From here it swept straight across the to cover it. Drain, put over the fire in G. W Benedict, drugs 2.000 house. He was riding with Mr. Hull, the Cedar Bapids Pump company, went from AUGUST L. FINK J. H. Moody, diugs ^w a farina kettle, with a quart of warm prairie, scattering fifty or more smaller frame dead banker, when the latter was here to Sauk Rapids this afternoon. He was Odd Fellows' hall building 300 ATTILLA FINK water sligtly salted, and cook for half houses like so many feathers. In most cases C. A. Moodv, office building i oo killed Mr. Hurlbert's injuries are at B. & Knowlton's residence, and got the MORRIS ST. CYR James Beatty. buildmss yno an hour alter it reaches the boil. If it nothing was left to mark the site of dwellings about the heod and face, his arms badly injured, family into the cellar. He says they had not Thomas Van Steene. building 3.5K LILLIE BERG. has not soaked up all the water, pour it but the cellars. The prairies were H. Beaupen, crocery MOO and his physicians expect that he cannot descended to the place of safety a minute SAMUEL SORENSON. oft' and supply the place with a cup of August Wetzel, two buildings 1,*500 strewn with timbers, furniture and clothing. possibly survive until morning. The Augut Wetzel, giocerv 1,500 too soon, as the house was raised off the Mrs. W. E. DAVEE. warm milk. Bring it to a boil and Mr-. Julia Wood, buildmg l.ooo prevalence of a terrible storm made the ground and carried away. All those in the EVA 1EMPLIN. serve. Eat with sugar and cream. Free Pics 1,'JOO work of looking for the dead and DAMAGE TO THE MANITOBA PBOPEBTY. Dennes Milane li.uoo cellar escaped injury. Mr. Hale had a simiilar H. W. OELMS' two children. Baked HalibutBuy apiece of halibut Miller, black-mith l.lo wounded all the more trying, The freight depot of the Manitoba railway narrow escape in the Rochester cyclone. HENRY BEHRENS. Wihiam H. Bell, flour and teed iiuo cut square and thick, not in slices, and the storm finally became so severe thai was directly in its path, and portions of it E. A. Brenchlev, builduijr !)00 His team, which had been left standing on Unknown Polish boy, 7 years old. put it on the wire frame for roasting in Thomas Van Etten, building 400 the grief-stricken, sad searcheis had tc and the cars on the track were blown half a the street, was killed. Henry Gilbert, another HENRY CHELGREN'S child. Anna Hortz, building and stock 3,300 the dripping pan, and pour a pint of abandon their task, and the physicians mile. Long lines of cars loaded with freight Masonic hall 5(H) commercial traveler employed by H. C. Burbank LEWIS LAUNDR1E. well-salted water into the pan, lay the of S Cloud, although having Gust Kern, boots and ^hoes, stock 1,500 were blown from the track and the rails of S Paul, had just opened his samples HENRY FRIDAY. halibut on the cut side, and on theother S. N. Wright, on buildmtr 2,ooo more than they could possibly wrenched from place. I passed the limit Charles A. Dirok ,~o and displayed them preparatory to doing or upper bide, lay enough slices CHARLES SCHULZ. attend to in their own afflicted city, nobly P. G. Skeile, feed store (M of the town juRt west of Lieut Gov. Gilinan' of thinly cut salt pork to cover the business, and was In C. G. Wood's store at JOHN SAUERS. Lvdia Sutkin, on building ioo divided themselves, and seveial of them residence, taking part of his fence and killing George W. Sweet, store building 1,JOO IWi bake till the iish is thoroughly Sauk Rapids whsn the noise of the approaching REV. SMITH. hurriedly drove to the seenes of still greater Mrs. Dr. Jenekp.. millinery -JOO horses. It crossed the Mississippi at tlie done, half an hour at least, occasionally terror was heard, and a hasty stampede MRS. REV. SMITH. E. E Phelps, buildms tioo horrors in the opposite side of the river. Sauk Rapids wagon bridge, taking the two Mrs. A. Stevens, bmldmc U.ooo basting it with the salted water. made for the cellar. Ihe store was badly MRS. GAUMLANTS. Their services were most certainly needed A. St. Cvr, saloon fixtures 1,000 east spans. I here widened to GOO feet Broiled ShadMake your marketman wrecked, but those in the cellar escaped injury. A. E. Scheuler, drues 2,000 MRS. SCHULZ. for there were the wounded and the dying Stanton's grist mills took the full force, ancl E. Beal, building l.'JOO split the shad down the belly this One of Mr. Gilbert's horses was killed MRS KOHLER who needed prompt and intelligent treatment Berg Bros bank building -too were leveled. The cyclone swept from there brings the thickest part over the greatest and another injured so badly as to necessitate Beig Bros., hardware 4,00(1 Young Miss TRIVOUTS. Doctors Jordan," Giddings and Dunham through the center of the town,taking the best Berg Bros, building 3,000 heat of the lire, and it is nicer to killing it Unknown Woman. of Anoka were also early on the scene. Dr. Jenckes, hbiaiv 150 of the business .part of it, including Berg's help .served in this manner. Puf it on J. A. Semme, library 500 Two additional at Rice's. A later dispatch announces the death of Mr. BICE'S STATION. hardware store, Beaupre Bros.' grocery, the E. Cross, meat market 1,200 a well greased gridiron and turn quite Hulbert Total, 02. The report that the little settlement at E. Cross, building 1,000 court house and hotel near by, the public often to know when it is done separate W. L. Neiman, Sentinel 3,500 Rice's Station, sixteen miles from here, had school building, part of the brewery, unci the flakes of the thick part with a knife, W. L. Neiman, dwelling 2,000 SOME OF THE INJURED. been destroyed was incorrect, but people C. Bell, blaeksmith 200 every important business house in the ity and if it is at all pink or translucent G. S. Reeder, stone-cut ting 300 Among those who are injured as far as there saw the cyclone pass by at a short distance except C. G. Woods' store. The village is return it to the fire. When done lay A KICK'S STATION. Mrs. A. J. Demules 5,000 could be ascertained in the confusion were to the east Late last night S. 0. Fred Daggett, furn lture 500 virtually wiped out of existence, four-fifths A SAD BRIDAL DAY. on a hot platter, skin side down strew Fred Daggett, 1,000 bushels wheat 700 the following: Grper, traveling for Donaldson Ogden of RICE'S STATION, Special, April 15.The reports of the buildings being leveled. The course with salt only, put on bits of softened S. Chrysler, wagon shop 200 Mrs. HERMAN BERG, badly crushed and injured of the terrible disaster that had befallen T. J. Schute, blacksmith shop 1,000 St. Paul, came from Rice's to S Cloud and of the storm through S Cloud was witnessed butter and serve. internally, and will probably die. T. J. Schute, dwelling 500 a wedding party near Rice's Station, sixteen by hundreds of citizens. There had mtormed a PIONEER PKESS reporter that the Mrs. Harrington, house 150 THOMAS BERG, severely cut about the bead, Veal Cutlets, with Butter SauceDip miles north of S Cloud, last night, were not J. Staunton, flouring mills 40,000 been short, sharp showers during the past jyclone had demolished a house about four arm broken and otherwise injured, but is each cutlet in a beaten egg, then in greatly exaggerated, but proved to be correct, Sauk Rapids Machine shop 4.00C thought that he will recover. twenty-four hours, and a warm south wind miles ease of that station, where a wedding except in regard to the number killed, Bridge over Mississippi 0,000 peppered and salted cracker dust, and. Depot 1.500 blowing at the time. The clouds were Reen ROGER BELL, aged sixty-eight years, badly party as in progress, and nearly all the it having been variously stated that from fry in hot dripping to a rich golden S. Walker, dwelling 500 cut about ths head and face and internally. His sixteen to twenty-two were killed, which to form just southwest of the citydark, sruests were killed or badly wounded. The C. G. Wood, building 300 brown. Lay each as it is done on recovery is doubtful. was in excess, there being, in fact, but ten Henry Goedker. dwelling 40C overhanging masses. Then news was brought into Rice's Station paper to absorb the grease. Arrange Mrs. RODGER BELL, badly b.uised, but escaped Saloon building and bar hOO among the dead. All sorts of rumors and by a badly scared boy, who was on horseback. a hot dish and put on every cutUt a injury from the heavier timbers, and not H. BrownA Son 4,OOC SHABP TONGUKS OF LIGHTNING stones concerning the affair were in circulation, S. Ellis, building 500 seriously wounded. He was badly hurt himself, and said generous spoonful of sauce. lak it darted down, and the terrible whirlwind began but as the wires were down telegraphic J. W. Rarder, building and stock 800 PHILLIP BEAUPRE, judge of probate, badly that the cyclone struck the house without by beating two tablespoonfuls of butter information could not be obtained. A reporter its fatal course, passing along slowly L. Mayo, building 2,80C injured by being pounded about by the water Morris Davis, saloon 2.00C the slightest warning. There were about to a cream with a tablespoonful of of the PIONEER PRESS visited the scene early and majestically. Whenever any warning spout. F. W. Conrad, furniture 1,700 this morning, driving from S Cloud, and lemon juice and a tablespoonful of thirty persons in the house, and he was the ABNER ST. CYR had apiece of timber driven Eagle Brewing and Malt house 4,000 could be given all escaped safely, but in thence to the former site of the farm house E. D. Wood, dwelling 200 into his head, and cannot live. minced parsley. only one that was not seriously hurt The most instances nothing was known of the G. W. Benedict, dwelling 1 ,G00 in which such disastrous and fatal termination A. J. STANTON, severely shaken up, but not bov said that nearly all were dead. Several Roger Bell, two dwellings 1,000 Broiled ChickenDo not attempt to approaching destroyer until its awful roar to the bridal festivities occurred. It seriously troubled. Roger Bell, goods 400 broil an old or full grown fowl take_a Citizens and a couple of physicians started was heard too late tor flight The part of was owned by a farmer named John Schulz J. J. LANDRE, both legs broken amputated Buckman house bd.ru 1.50C young chicken, split it down the back out to the place, where a horrible sight met and occupied by himself and family, consisting P. N. Fink, dwellinsr 2,000 above the knees. the town struck was that of the poorer residents E. C. Holden, dwelling Sor of his wife and four childrentwo always, wipe the inside dry after removing Mrs. RUSSELL and two daughters, badly injured their gaze. The dead were strewn about for living in clumps of small frame houses, Skatirg rink ro at Moody's boarding house. daughters and two sona The wedding of the giblets, and place it on the a distance of fully 600 feet I was found G. W. Benedict, dwelling 500 often several families being in one house. GEORGE DAME, leg broken. his daughter, Louisa, to Henry Friday, a G. W.Rorder 200 gridiron with the inside down keep it that sixteen were dead, and since then it is The men were nearly all laborers or railroad G. W. Benedict, building 700 young farmer of the vicinity, had taken so till it begins to grow very brown, EXTENT OP THE PBOPEBTY DESTROYED. said that six more have died. The details at B. Knol ton. dwelling 2.000 men and away at their work, and only the place during the afternoon, the ceremony then turn it, but the moment the skin E. W. Hubbard, dwelling 600 There are less than a dozen business buildings this writing are very meager, and cannot be having been performed by Rev. Smith, the women and children left in the houses. The Joseph Campbell 3,500 threatens to burn, reverse it again. To left standing. The great majority of Lutheran minister of S Cloud, assisted by Courthouse 8,000 obtained, as the telegraph wireB are all fatalities in S Cloud, though great, are not find how it is cooking, insert a sharp the buildings destroyed were business A Beal, dwelling. 300 Rev. Henry A. Seder, a German Methodist down. Dr. W. W. Day of S Paul was detailed equal in number to those in Sauk Rapids, W. Pappenfas 500 structurea Th total number knife into the thickest breast, if the pastor of the neighboring village of Royalton. Central-hotel 5,700 to visit a house about a mile from but a complete list there cannot now be obtained. of buildings demolished is upwards flesh is pink at all, l-eturn it to the fire Nearly all of the residents of the neighborhood H. Woelan, dwelling 700 here to see a family that had been In every house almost all the inmates of seventy-five. They represented about George Dpme, dwelling 200 were present, and the festivities when well done and browned, lay it on Josh Hoffman, dwelling 600 injured. Their name was Junnemann. The $300,000. Among the principal losses were more or less hurt, and their escapes were at their height when the dreadful a platter, inside down butter, salt and E.Cross, dwelling 800 i\ are the fine iron combination bridge man was dead and the wife seriously injured. cyclone swept down upon the place without & from death were marvelous. 6erve. School building 1,200 which spanned the Mississippi, and which scarce a moment's warning, and no time John Jone. dwelling. 800 Five out of six children were badly THE ST. CLOUD FATALITIE& Grace Episcopal church 1,200 cost $30,000. This immense iron structure, Stewed FowlCut an old hen, or a was had by the unfortunate bridal party and hurt S Boniface's hospital at S Cloud Mrs. STEIN, widow. S. P. Carpenter, dwelling 2,200 which was about 1,200 feet long, was lifted hapless guests to tough fowl of any age, in pieces, singe Mrs. STBAUSS. H. Chederen 1,500 was right in the path of the storm, and its from its foundation and broken into a hundred Liverv stable 2,500 and wash carefully, and put into a covered MINNIE STEIN, ten years old. escape from destruction was something astonishing. Roger Bell, dwelling 800 piecea The county court house was Mrs. TREMP MEHAN,wif of a railroad laborer pot or saucepan, pepper well and SEEK A PLACE OF SAFETY. D. W. Palmer, house goods 600 A house on one side of it was completely destroyed. Not one piece of timber JACOB SHORTKIDGE. The structure was almost totally annihilated, pour on hot water enough to cover A. W. Lake, dwelling 1,000 If remains on the other. I cost about carried off, and another on the opposite side NICK JIMNEMANN, an old farmer. C. A. Buckman, dwelling 2,500 and every occupant either killed or well, let it stew slowly on the back oi Mrs. WEISMANN, an old lady. P. J. Rushton, dwelling 800 $15,000. The following is a list of the of the hospital completely demolished, but badly hurt The only ones to escape the stove all day, filling up witlLjgater C. A. and M. W. Moody, dwelling 1,000 Son of B. O. MERSKE, four years old. buildings: were two children who were playing the home of the sick was not in any way in. C. G. Woods, dwelling 4,200 when needed, till even the grisHe is JOE GIXSKOFFSKI, seven years old. Mrs. Jenks, millinery store. William Koutz, dwelling 1,000 in the yard, and who were frightened jured. There were numerous JOSEPH C. and MARY ZINS, a little girl. tender. It is better to put:in a wtlole G. W. Sweet, two-story frame building. Frank Walker, dwelling 700 by the approach of the huge black VAN H0ESEN, railroad laborer. P. G. Skeats. feed store. John Russel 700 onion with the fowl, asitstews'allaway WONDERFUL AND THRILLING ESCAPEa inverted funnel, and sought refuge under a Cay Wooers harness snop. AUGUST KROLLS, babv. Elmer Lawrence 1.000 aud adds richness to the gravy, but this H. Walker, saloon. chicken coop. The coop was carried away, Adam Jochman, dwelling 3,000 SAUK KAi'IOS. F. ANDREWS of Owatonna, supposed to be a H. Bell's law office. can be omitted. Next day carefully remove H. Berg, dwelling 3,000 and nothing left of it, but, strange to say, traveling teacher of penmanship. Moody's drug store. E. Cross, dwelling and stock 4,500 TRIGKTFUL DEVASTATION. all the fat from the surface of the the two children were not injured. Another Fifteen dead are known so far. Van Etten's store building. Miss Hallenbeck 2,000 child, a boy about twelve years old, who Charles Oilman's dwelling. gravy, add some chopped celery, or a James Cross 500 THE SAUK BAPIDS VICTIMS. ST. CLOUD, Special Telegram, April 14. Wetzel's store building. The following were killed at Sauk Rapids: was in the kitchen of the hou&e at the time, teaspoon of celery salt common &alt The one once prosperous village of Sauk Postoffice building, belonging to Mrs. Woods. Total $218,100 Babv of AUGUST KROLL. escaped without serious injuiy. but he was enough to make it palatable, and two D. Milain's saloon building. Rapids, due north of St Cloud, is now the There was but $4,400 cyclone insurance J. BERG, merchant, and two children. badly scratched and bruised. I was he that Blacksmith shop. grates of nutmeg to the gravy, and scene of utter ruin and demolition. I is on this entire property. C. A. Moodv had JOHN KENARD. county auditor. Bell's feed store. rode into the village at Rice's and gave the when it is hot thicken it with a heaped F. Hart's brick building. $1,000. Mr. Ruehtin $1,000, and Mr. Smith GEORGE LINDLEY, county treasurer. reasonable to say that no town of its size information. Assistance was at once procaved I G. Mayo's store building. tablespoonful of Hour rubbed in one of 2,400. Two children ot C. G. WOOD, merchant. and started tor the scene. The bodies was ever devasted to the same terrible extent. H. Brown & Son's two-story building. butter till smooth put in the chicken ABNER ST. CYR, tatally hurt. of the dead and wounded, terribly bruised Mrs, Ellis, store building. THE DEAD AT SAUK RAPIDS. The pictute presented last evening Child ot P. CARPENTER, clerk of court. Mr. Davis, saloon. The following is the correct list of those when the gravy is thick and hot, and and mutilated, were strewn about the ground when the detachment from the Minneapolis J. W. Readers, barber shop. P. BEAUPRE. judge of probate, badly hurt. kLled so tar as known: heat it through. Serve very hot for a distance ot several hundred feet The Jochems & Bergs' brewerv. WBECKED HOUSED IN ST. CLOUD. physicians, accompanied by several Mrs. Mattie Fink, thirtv-eisht years Carl F. wounded were first looked after, and every Grand Street Central hotel. Fink, fourteen vears John H. Fink, twelve The houses wrecked this city were: police officers and a representative Mr. Wright's dwelling. attention given them. ve rs: August L. Fink, eleven years Attilla Nick Juneinann's farm house and barn, total. County court house. What You Have a Right to Know. of the PIOXEEE PBEE S, reached Fink, fifteen years all of one family, only the WELL CARED FOR. W. Tenford, Irame house, partial. Joseph Campbell's dwelling. lather surviving OUie 'Carpenter, six vears Snmp wfrp removed to convenient farm the scene, was one which certainly h. K. Knownon. dwelling. John Schwartz, larjre brick, total. How much have we a right to know Earnest Albright, twenty-eight A ears Capt. W. Benedict, livery stable. houses and others were taken into the hotels bevond description. The earlier dispatches John Platte's brick house, partial. Aimer St. Cyr. fifty years Morris St. Cvr, nine of the private affairs of our friends and Mrs. White, millinery store. at the station, and given the best care that vears: Mrs. Pappenfus, seventy years Winslow Mike Moos, Jacob Brown, Mike Weismann. irom the unfortunate city were by no means G. W. -nediet, dwelling. acquaintances? This is a delicate question Panpentus and three children: John Renrd, could be had under the circumstancea Dr. Chris Putz, each a small house, total. B. S'de .ts, kafciusr rmk. exaggerations. Terrible as seems the. tale county attorney, forty-eight vears Rathbun, the local physician, had more than John Blnacnburg, Irame, unroofed. E. Bell, i, we! inz. to answer. Where to draw the line i' Giegory Lindley, register ot deeds, thirtyai which the telegraph told, it was not half related. B. P. Be^i, dwe ling. Joseph Dueber, frame, total. he could attend to. and worked like a beaver ne years Clara Berg, four years depends so much on the degree of intimacy. Speucer dwelling The loss of life, the number of injured Frank Knuth, frame, total. Lillie Berg, I I vears: AW. L.ike, 55 ears Mrs. trying to alleviate the pain and suffering of Kg- Mr. Dames' dwtllinar. But in order to make social Samuel Fletcher, 22 years Samuel Sorensen, 35 Anton KlouskowsSn, Boniface Omerski, Frank and the loss of property was much the wounded. Every assistance possible ON W/BBEN STREET: vears Mrs. W. E. Dave*. 20 vear Eva Templin, Dolder. Martin Yangelski, each frame house, intercourse satisfactory, easy and secure, was rendered by the people of the place, but R. Bell's dwelling. greater than the meagre dispatches late in 17 vears H. W. Oelms, two childea: Henrv total. C. B. Buckman, two-story dwelling. outside aid was impossible under the circumstances, we certainly ought to know something. Behrdus. aPoie: unknown Polish boy, 7 yeais the afternoon would lead the sympathizing A. Gorham, two-storv dwelling. J. O. Shindler, large frame, unroofed, and barn Heary Ciielgren's child Lewis Laundre, 18 as there was no way of sending in A. Bergs, two-storv dwelling. people of S Paul, Minneapolis and of wrecked. vea.s: Edgar Hull of St. Cloud, 50 years Mr. word to S Cloud. After the wounded had Bassent, Willie Bartwick, A. E. Schiiber, missing. ON CLIFF STBEET, Frank Guiskoffski, Mrs. Stein, Georee Koskowski, We are bound in fairness to our fellowman Minnesota to believe. The death-dealing been looked after the work of E. Cross's dwelling Mrs. Streitz, William Bennewitz, Mat to give our credentials, our passport, elements struck the town at the northern Ben Ru-hton's two-storv dwelling. RELIEVING THE DISTRESSED. GATHERING UP THE DEAD Brantry, Ed Atkins, P. Waldorf, Bartel Tehr, E. A. W. Lake's two-story dwelling. so to speak, our nationality, oui commencement of its business section, and At a meeting of thecit.zensof Sauk Rapids bodies and conveying them into the village C. Getchell, each frame, total, Mr*. Schulgren's two-story dwelling. calling, our domestic condition, inordei went through with such force that practically this morning, the following relief committee S. P. Carpenter's two-story dwelling. W was begun, lc was found, upon count, that i Manitoba freight depot, total loss: twenty or to save him from the mortification oi Episcopal church building. nothing of the business portion of the was appointed: W. L. Nieman. chairman thirty freight cars, flats and boarding cars, nine had been killed outright, or at least Bell's residence. treading on delicate ground, or at least M. P. Trace, secretary C. G. Wood, A W. f- badly lmged. Manitoba carpenter shops and city remains to tell the story of its former were dead when the succoring party arrived. Russell house and barn. to save him from the restraint which Gordon and John A. Senn. The committeee ?"roII mills, unroofed. One lady. Mis Gaumiants, died after pride. The cyclone crossed the Mississippi ON BORUP STREET. uncertainty involves. Of course there fy'y George Doerr, Fritz Johnson, Bernard Scharla, immediately went to work and established G. W. Benedict's store building. being found, making the tenth victim. The river at a point about one mile G. W. Sweet's store building and a number ol arc many private matters which a man ^Christian Fisher, William Meilke, E. Budler, S. headquarters in a partly demolished building, bodies were laid side by side on cots in the the city, and its terrible ravage? Pole tenement houses. ha aright to keep secret, according to t^ oiebold, E. Bentler, Mike Moorfc, John Wimmer, in the midst of the ruins. Provisions little frame buildmg at Rice's that serves as A considerable number of other structures, coveis a territory extending the whole |^J. P. Martin, Andrew Press, Mrs. Cms, Thomas our recognized code of social laws were dealt out to from 300 to 400 persons, the town hall of the village, and this morning many of them out of the line of the cyclone, ijKnifkoffski, John Kempeis, William Trattman. of the city, and leaving a width of about though we think the less secrecy there and it is probable no one will be compelled the bodies were prepared tor burial, were demolished. Among them were -^Sebastian Klal, August Kroll. Aneil Eraser, Peter fifty rods. The dead number between to go hungry for an hour. Soon is in the world the better, since' all secrets which will probably occur to-morrow, although C. G. Wood's residence, William ^Benewitz, Mrs. Gerard, Joseph Wegeler, Messrs. after noon a telegram was received from are lies by implication.Texas twenty-five and thirty, while the injured that has not been definitely arranged Cowt's residence and Frank Walker's Keocher and Kobel, each lost a dwelling house, Gov. Hubbard, stating th at an appeal for aid if tings. vet Assistance was sent to-day from S will probably reach at least sixty. About residence. The terrific force of the storm all frame. bad been made to the mayors of the principal Cioud, three physicians and a corps one hundred structures, some of them quite was apparent on ail hands. The telegraph Koechler & Kobal's cooper shop, total wreck. towns of the state, and shortly after, of assistants being dispatched on a noble buildings for a town of the pretensions poles were flattened and telegraphic communication California newspapers are beginning to kick y^r The total loss of property in S Cloud can another was received which read as follows: special train of the Northern Pacific was entirely cut off. The $\'0 be far from $60,000. of Sauk Rapids,were completely demolished. against the large influx of Italians who have theroad, in answer to the appeal for surgical C. B. Buckman, Esy. Your_ relief commit 1 most remarkable work of i5S JHB NUMBER OP WOUNDED been imported by vineyardists. elements, however, was seen in the vicinity i muf fe&to^pjS*^^ si*. *^jmmmmmwmM |4|SLu y-*^-