0 CAN YOU if Not Don't Go Sioux City To FLOODS ALL AROUND THKRE. r.t. of Life and Damma to Froprrijr Kverywlu-re The Klrere are Grad ually Kluiug- ami Further Damage ID Threatened. Sioux Cm , Iowa, May lit According to the latest telegram the Hood is more disastrous than at first anticipated. The estimate aa to the loss of life vanes from 60 to 10J. No list of the dead can be given. In fact the terrorized people sought refuge in so many quarters that it is impossible to exactly judge what number is on the def th roil. There were some heroic scenes wit nessed it attempts to save the vie lms at Omaha bridge, where the West fam ily met with disaster. Mrs. West and her 5-year-ol 1 girl were unable to get away from the Hood in time. The father and two children were safe and the rescuing party returning for Mrs. West and child, found the waves had swept . ho house away. Thev floated down with the roaring current until the bridge was reached. An engineer succeeded in saving the woman, her strength failed her and she was compelled to relinquish her hold on the child. With a despa ring cry of "mamma" the child disappeared be neath the waves. At a suburb of Leeds directly in the valley, nine persons are known to have drowned, four were drowned at Sprirg dale just below Leeds. An observer on a high bridge counted 15 bodies swept under it. Ono of the men attempted to wado out carrying two children, but was struck by a floating timber and so hurt that ho dropped one of them. Matt Koe, an old sailor, saved the lives of 23 persons. A young woman managed to wade to a i ox car, anil was their siezed with labor pains an 1 gave birth to a child, and two hours later was saved. Sioux City, May 111 The Floy I river was almost back in its banks at noon. Hundreds are returning to their aban doned homes. Scores of houses were swept from their foundations, and others w ere washed away. The damage to mova bles in the houBes not flontod off is large Fifty or s xty retail stocks on tho low ground were deilroyed or badly dam aged. The river cut aero s tlio bend anil scooped out a gr at channel, start ing about Eighth street. All the houses hi that vicinity, except u few, were ut terly wiped out. The lues to tho railroad is estimated at lf200,000. The citizens' relief com mittee is hard at work. All the refu gees were sheltered last night. Sean-I: ing parties to look lor the dead began work early this morning. At noon they had recovered only three bodies, viz: I'eter Anderson, an engi neer in a loundry nnd Mrs. Frank Hen derson and her child of Leeds. Din Moinkh, May 111 The Dus Moines river has risen 10 inches since this morn ing and is still rising. All the lowlands are under water. Hundreds of houses are abandoned north of the city. The river here is several miles wide, sweeping through farms and resi dences with terrilic force. Central Place, South lies Moines, the packing house district, is all under water, lhe railroad tracks and bridges are in great danger. Tho sewers are lilled with backivater; tho collars and the business portion of tho city are full of water. The damage will be enor mous. Already from the country come reports ol stock dm w nod and planted lields ruined. The indications are that the river will riso much higher; some predict two feet more. This will Hood the lower business portion of the city. No loss of life hi! io. Kkoki k, Iowu, May l'.l The Fgyp tiim levee which protects a vast area of bottom hinds broke this morn ing at 5 o'clock. The. waters of the Hes Moines river Hooded the entire district. The high wind prevail ing will cause inestimable damage. The wholo town of Alexandria, .Mo., is com pletely Biibmergod. St. Loi'ih, May 1!) The Noddorhut warehouses entirely collapsed today. They were Idled with thousands of dollais worth of tobacco, sugar, malt and other goods, all of which went into the river and are a total loss. Chk'aoo, May 1! Advices to the As sociated Press from many points west show a dreadful statu of affairs in the Hooded districts. St. Louis reports in addition to a prospective coal famine there is threatened a milk famine, the water on the Illinois side having cut oil' the dairymen from the city. The de serted dwellings in the Hooded districts are systematically robbed of thoir con tents including furniture. The stealing is said to have amounted to ovur tlOO, 000. At Sioux City, among other things, tho stock yards, with animals in them, the corncribs and all buildings were car ried away by tho Hood. At Clariisville, Ark , tho Hood in tho Arkansas river lea to mo drowning on five people. At St. Joe, Mo., the river has .risen , nearly two feet, and is now ut the high est point. At Murysvillo, Kits., tho river, which has been tailing, is atriiiu rising, The city is cut oil' from railroad communi cation, At Texarkanii, Ark., the lied river flood weakened all the railroad bridges, so no trains were run over them. There has hern no mail sinco Saturdav. At Peri yville, Mo., the men employed on the liois llrulo levee have returned and report the water breaking over all along. The bottoms w ill be flooded. At Minneapolis a few more inches of water will cut the log booms loose, causing gre t loss. Cincinnati reports tho rain all to be nearly two inches in the Ohio v.illoy. A tornado passed over the southwestern part of Hamilton county yoat rday after noon plowing a furrow ot destruction nearly three miles long. A number of dwelling houses and barns were de stroyed and several peMons injured. At Dos Moines the Ies Moines river rose three leet dur.ng the night and is still rising. The city water works are surrounded and there is great danger of the water supply being cut oil'. At Dun- comb, live miles soutli, tho suicco mills ! are flooded, and the occupants are flee- orhood. Thev are doing all they can to ing for their Iivjs. Tho reports trom the ; rid themselves of the company oi Dr copntry are contradicloiy but enough is Toed and his fair disciples. known to say the loss of live stock and other property is enormous. The iudi- Solid for Cleveland, cations are thai many persons are Aixanta, tia., May 18 The Denio drowned. The sitnai ion in Litile Sioux ' cratic State convention met ut noon to valley is very serious but not eo bat as Iday. Chairman AlkiiiBon, ot the State that in Floyd valley. Reports from central committee, in calling the body there place the loss oi life at 25 to 100, to order, made a speech in which he and 65 lives wore lost in Sioux City, isaid the Democracy could carry the At Lincoln, Nob., the waters are sub- State for either Cleveland or Hill. siding and communication was opened with Omaha last night over the Bur lington road. The Rock Island is cut off iro u hero. The Union Pacific can start no trains. Its loss in grades and bridges is very heavy. The electric light and gas pla ts are flooded and the city was in darkness last night. The damaze to bus ness is very heavy and the city is caring for four hundred people driven from their homes. At Kansas City the river is rising again. The Kaw rose three feet and Argentine and Aruiourdale are two to seven feet under water, it is still ruing and will pro' ably go two feet higher. The packing houses have suspended. Chicago, May 19 The bicylists ( arry ing General Sides' message to New York, made a fine showi g on the first part of the trip despite the bad weather and muddy roads. They were composed of crack riders from tho various Chicago cycling clubs and carried the document through South Bend, Ind., half an hour ahead of the schedule, thereafter, however, conditions grew even worse and time was lost. Toledo, Ohio, May 1!) F. II. Tuttie, the bicycler bearing General Miles' dis patch, came in on foot at 11 this morn ing five hours late, completely ex hausted. He traveled through the mud six inches to a foot deep and broke a pedal Bolliiieyer took up the journey to Wau- seou along the railroad, as the wagon roads are utterly impassable. Route and Young, of Chicsgo, and Perrin, of Toledo, will take a relay to Perrysburg. The business portion of Sioux City is situated on a flat bounded upon one side by the Missouri river, upon the other by the Floyd river and another by Perry creel;. A range of hills almost entirely encircles the business portion of the city and access to the country beyond the IhIIh is had through the narrow valleys of the river and the creek. The hills rise to a great height on either side and terminate in high table lands upon which the residence portion of the city is located. Near the confluence of the Floyd with the Missouri are located all the large packing houses, s'ock yards and manufacturing industries. lhe rloyd river flows Irom the north east and Perry creek from the north through the city. On the low land ad jacent to the confluence of the Floyd and Missouri are located the stockyards, packing houses and manufactories. Along the banks of the Missouri high bluffs terminato in precipices and it is from the brow ol an immense hill within 3UI) feet of the Floyd river that the approach to the great steel bridge crossing the Missouri is had, the graded roadbed leading thereto passing within an ea-y stone's throw ol the largest packing houses. All along the bulks of the Floyd are situated the plants of the various manufacturing industries, the railway cur shops, mills, etc. The land rises gradually irom the Flovd to the Perry where it. is 10 or 12 feet higher, beyond the Perry it rises abruptly on a ten or 10 per cent, grade. Tho supposition is that a cloud burst in tho narrow valley of the Floyd river some distance from the city caused the narrow valley to fill suddenly with water, and hurst the several small mill dams at intervals along the stream, each adding its volume to the flood until by the time tho water reached the open ing in the hills at the Sioux City fiats it became a veritable wall of water. Reaching this opening tho water spread rapidly over the lower portions ot the city giving no time lor escape to tho thousands employed in the munulactur ing districts and inundating tho homes of the poorer people who dwelt on the low lands. The better class of resi deucs and the most valuable business property have not suffered by the flood, being above tho limit oi possible danger. SALti 1 HiHuliuttli'rA of Oregon TaeUlo r ail Auouptiho Agreement. Micw York, May 10 The bondholders of tho Oregon Pacific Railroad Company liehl a special meeting yesterday to taKe acti n on the decree granted by the Circuit Court ot ihu t inted States for tho district of Oregon against the com pany. Tho Biiit wat brought lor a pro visional injunction to prevent the sale of $l,OO0,00D worth of railroad property and it was grunted. Seepiin Job purchased the property. and it was agreed to refrain from other oris to set aside tho sale, provided no Other litigation was begun by the bond holders or other interested parties. The committee, being given ten days to ac cept the stipuhiMoii, callod a meeting of the boiulholilers. 1 tie report ot the committee favored the acceptance of tho proposition anil suggested a clause ex onerating tho complainants from any blame lor bringing suit. The clause gave rise to a heated dis cussion and alter an unavailing effort by tho adherents ol Colonel Hogg to have it stricken out. tit other side got unan imous consent to have the protest re- orded. Tho recommendations oi the committee were adopted and the agree ment was indorsed by the bondholders bv a vote of l),t21 to 1,505. Ilia Unwelcome 1'reneiioe ol-. d by 1. 1 w- tu he Kxor ('mourn, May 18 lr. Cvrus Teed has had an opportunity of explaining his principles to a couiinilteo appointed to inqi iro into them recently. He was ex ,,,l at . ln..ili hist i,i..hi and i .,,. era ,i0eIHl,.,i hie conduct, lienvinif that hu ul , Hiivtliinir but worthy motives in starting ins homo. tonight a mass meeting wilt he held to denounce him. There is also talk of taking legal steps which will lead to the ejection of him self and followers. Dr. Teed is the Messiah of a new reli gion the chief outward feature of which is tho gathering together of the believ ers to live in one building which the Doctor calls "Heaven." He was anx ious to secure a large private residence in a fashionable quarter of Chicago, but the price asked f; 15,000 was too much tor the means of the new associa tion. Dr. iced thorofore made a pilgrimage to Caliiornia where he giuhertd together a number of new con verts. Twonty-tlveot thesewero brought to Chicago on his return, tho remainder being left to spread the light in the Uoldon Slate. As private property is not permitted ill Dr. feed's heaven the twenty-live young women, Bonie of whom were well oil, contributed their money to the cause, and the cause was sullicie itly advanced to enable Dr. Teed to secure the much coveted residence lor his "Heaven." The neighbors are unsympathetic however, and even allude to the society aa a scandal to the neiwh- NORSELAND NEWS. A New Pbaae In Sweden of the Univer. Ity f-xtenaloo etchemn. In learned circles in Sweden the ques tion has been raised, and is eagerly be ing discussed, whether there is hot a node of spreading enlightenment and devoting the thoughts of the general populace of the land, and which would not cost the state a cent. It is pro posed that the students of the universi ties of Upsala and Lund, numbering some 3,000, during the long Bummer va tion should give popular free lectures to the laraiers, mecnanics and laborers in their various places of sojourn. A vast deal of good may be looked for as a re sult from such a great number of young and enthusiastic teachers in their sever al branches, and the promoters may be congratulated upon striking a happy medium, the Eureka between the drivel ings of fanatical cranks and the ravings of anarchial ditto, which at present en gross the attention of the comparatively illiterate multitude. It is already pro posed to induce a few of the wealthier students to visit their equally menially obmscated countrymen in America, which would be a welcome antidote for many p oplo, whodo notyet understand enough Fnglish to benefit by lectures and instructions so liberally suppled in this free and enlightened country. Fifty-four young conscripts have been imprisoned in the city of Stockholm alone during the first three months of the year for having neglected to present themselves for temporary enlistment. The lady teachers in the schools of Schlessoiz have been forbidden to marry by the Prussian minister on public in struction. Should they do bo, however, they will have lo leave their positions at the end of the year. Two hundred and fifty men working at the deepening of the harbor of Copen hagen have struck and the entire num ber at i be Freehaven threaten to follow suit. Hie dravinen who transport bricks have struck and all building is at a standstill. Four hundred diggers and two hundred carmen and a great num ber of bricklayers are without woi k in consequence of the lockout. The ma jority demand a raise in wages ot ten marks. They, however, declare them selves displeased with their socialistic ring-leaders. The governor of Gothenburg has is sued a circular to the bailiffs of his dis trict asking how long a time it would take to mobilize the conscripts of the district. One of the bailiffs answered that "it would titko 21 hours, but that if the matter regarded Norway, they would be ready in 12 hours." The elections to the Danish F'olhe thing resulted in a great victory for the government. The new Folkething con sists oi 102 members. The Radicals have hitherto been in the ascendant, but this time lost eleven because of the union that had been agreed upon be tween the Conservatives and the modor- to Liberals. Among the defeated Radi cals were Air. llicrnp, the editor-in-chief of tho Pohtiken and nis colleages, Rev. llenniug .lensen and Mr. Bing. Hut 1'Mward lirandes, the author, was elected. Tho outcome of the election wns the greatest victory the present cabinet has scored nnd the government will now for a long time be able to carry siKcosslully its reactionary measures. King Oscar has loft Stockholm for Hiarruz. lie is expected to return in the latter-part of Juno. The latter part oi the Bummer lie intends to spend in tho south of Sweden and in Norway. The queen has gone to Germany and is liv ug near Bonn, where she will be visited by her sister the Dowager Prin cess of Wied. She returns to the Chateau of Sophiero in the south of Sweden about midsummer after which she goes for a month to Norway. The Democratic Prineo Engen will visit California shortly to make st.idies for u grand sylvan picture which he intends to exhibit at the Chicago World's Fair. A terrible accident occurred the other day at Uainvik, in the northern part of Norway. I.arly in the morning, when the fishermen just had pushed their boats oil' the shore, a Hidden storm commenced to rage, causing many of tho small crafts to cupsize. As lar as is known at least twelve people were drowned. The third general assemblage in favor of general suffrage in Sweden has met at Stockholm. Seventy delegates and thirty members were present. A reso lution was passed to assemble a411.11 next year before October 1 if at least 20,000 people, half of whom were to be farmers, would unite in electing dele gates. More than 6,000 people emigrated from Sweden during tho first three months of this year, the majority of whom wont to America. Also 800 peo ple, mostly Irom Finland and Russia, joined the Swedish emigrants for our shores. Five American students, of whom two are from Philadelphia, two from Wash ington City anil one from Boston, have arrived at Stockholm, with the intention of botanizing during the summer in tho northern parts of Sweden and Norway. Uddgron is the name of a Swedish journalist and venturesome sportsman. He lately crossed the North sea in an open rowing boat. At present he is giv ing popular lectures to the tislieriuen on tho west coast, lie is ulso an excellent horseman and intends to ride across the American prairies next summer and spend most of his time on horseback until the Chicago fair, when he will write special articles for several Scandi navian newspapers. After that he plans to make a row ing detour among the Grecian archipelago, where smooth water lavors such an undertaking. Receipt for a Good Town. Grit. Vim. Push. Snap. Energy. Schools. Morality, I larmonv. Cordiuli . Advertising. Talk about it. Write about it. Cheap property. Speak we I for it.' Help to improve it. Advertise in its papers. Good country tributary. Patronize its merchants. Fleet good men to otiice. Help all public enterprises. Honest competition in prices. Make the atmosphere healthy. Faith exhibited by good works. Fire all loafers, croakers and dead beats. Let your object be the welfare, growth and promotion of your town and its peo ple. Speak well of tue public spirited men and also he one yourself. Mans field Item. VISSCHER ON EVERETT. Many Facts and Some Prophecy. THE NEW SOUND CITY. The Eloquent and Witty Colonel Obey Onlera and Telia "the Truth" About the City In VI hi oh Henry Hewitt In 8o Largely Interested. JTacoma Dally News. 1 He is indeed a man of limited vision who, knowing anything whatever of the Puget Sound region, cannot see the probability of at least a dozen great cities within the next two or three de cades along the shores of this beautiful and resourceful inland sea. He who hoots at the mighty possibilities of Western Washington generally pro claims himself an owl, and the owl, though he has a wise look and large eyes, is the biggest fool of all birds and he can Bee less than any of them. In the Puget Sound region are gath ered more opulent resources than in any other country of the same area on the iace of the earth, and it has tributary resources that aie incalculable in value. Besides, it is blessed in other advanta geous ways ways that will bring hithe in the future, as it has within the past few years, the best kinds of people (or uie upouuuing oi ine Mate, lue ae ughtlul climate, the excellent water. the grandeur of scenery, the salubrity of the atmosphere, ail of which assist in the cultivation of health, content ment and good taste, are ours, and these are necessary also to the advancement, prosperity and happiness of any popu lation. Concerning climate, i hero seems to be in order. comparison A short time ago, beginning on the 6th day of Janu ary oi this year, this writer was on a trip to the Fast and south until the 16th of March. He left Tacoma ono bright morning when the sun was shining, the grass green, flowers blooming and birds singing. Fourdays afterward he stepped out of a Pullman car and its comfortable temperature at St. Paul, where the mer cury stood 19 degrees below zero. Thence through a series of blizzards, snow storms, sleet and all the chilling dis comforts of winter he went on to Ken tucky and Tennessee, some four weeks on the way, and not until he had reached middle Alabama and Florida d d he find any abatement of miserable winter, and there he found continuous and unpleasant rains. Yet through all this ho was asked by acquaintances whom he met all along: "it rains all the time in Washington, doesn't it?" The question became exasperating and suggested the reply of the parrot vendor who, when asked by a stammering stranger, "O c c can that b b bird t t talk?" he indignantly exclaimeJ, "Supposin' he no talker so besser as you zen I kill um, quick I" The fact is that when wo are having our winter wet on Puget Sound they of the Fast are having rain, snow, sleet, ice, wind and every kind of bad weather that ever vexed humanity. Here we have the last of the best countries in the world to be settled. Here withiu the next ten years we will have a vast population, the present probably quadrupled or sextupled, and here will be many greater cities than even the greatest of those we have now. Among the great cities will be Everett, on the peninsula at the mouth of the Snohomish river and on Kverett harbor, an arm of Puget Sound, 35 miles north of Seattle. Having some other business there, this writer was requested by the editor of the News to write the truth about Everett. The writer went to the p ace prejudiced against it for several reasons, among them because he had only Been that portion of it through which the railroad runs; because he had been frequently told that it was simply "a boom," and because in its start it had enticed away from the young city he was deeply interested in seeing advance Fairhaven on llcllingham bay a very large part of its business popula tion, lie was, however, astonished, impressed, even delighted with the things he saw there, and which had lor thor effect the entire eradication of his prejudices. Riding in a cab from the dock on the bayside, over a broad and substantial street, to East Everett, on the river Bide of the peninsula, a vigor ous and well-built town of perhaps 3,000 population came in view. All along the route laborers and mechanics, by the hundred, were excavating for the found ations of great buildings, erecting others, completing others, and yet ten months ago a gentleman, who was then in the same cab, had, with a party of friends, been lost in the woods on the same ground occupied now by these graded and paved streets that are mar gined by homes and business houses, and where sewer and water and gas systems are being placed underneath, and telegraph, telephone and other elec tric wires are suspended and being sus pended above, and over which, on every hand, the spirits of Energy and Enter prise are stalking and planting, and w here with the besom of progress the forests have been swept away. Kverett is a many-sided place. Its location, aside from Iwing a beautiful and convenient one, is remarkably well adapted to the building of a great city, and it must be that, in a comparatively short time, else every indication must be an unnatural and far-fetched lailure. At present there are four separate and distinct settlements within the purview of the proposition. The first Been bv the visitor is the comparatively small town at the docks, on the bay side. where the present railway station of the Great Northern is located and where are also the nail works, a bank, some general business houses and on the hill above the handsome new hotel, "The Colby." East Fverett is the largest settlement. That is on the river side of the peninsula as before remarked, a busy place with all the accessories of a live city and rapidly increasing them in every direction. Further east and south about two miles up the river, is Lowell, where the great paper and pulp mills are being completed, and at the north end of the peninsula lie the docks and works of the Pacific Coast Steel Barge Company. On the area lying between the paper mills, the nail works and the barge works lies the projected and rapid ly building city of Everett, of which all these great works are part and parcel, while many other and almost as import ant enterprises, respectively, are com ing. Among the latter is a great smelter, the material for which bas been purchased, and will be erected at an expense of two millions oi dollars. This smelter is being constructed by the parties in interest at the Monte Cristo mines to which great treas ury of precious metals a railway, called the Everett and Monte Cristo Railroad, is now in course of con struction. To these mining enter prises more than any other one thing the people of Everett look for material advancement, and with good warrant. The writer visited the town of Lowell and made a thorough examination of the vast concern called the paper and pulp works, and when told that some antagonistic person had said that the works were simply an r,vereiv wijeuu for a boom and that tne maoumery ns simply a lot of second-hand refuse, etc., he knew at once that any one saying such a thing could not have seen the works or was else a wiuui nar or law ful tool. Having been engaged at one time for neadv a year for the sole pur pose of writing up the manufactories of Indianapolis, th greatest manufactur ing centre in the Mississippi valley out side of St. Louis and Chicago, and having been brought up about a ma chine shop, the writer claims to have some knowledge of such things, and he aeserts that the paper mills at Lowell, or South Everett, are positively be wildering in their vastness, and every part of the machinery from belts to boilers are of the very newest and best improved pattern and make, and the works are the largest in the United States and moit probablv in the entire world. The ereat buildings are over 500 feet in length with an average width ol perhaps 100 leet, of brick and stone as to the superstructure, and altogether it is an enterprise that will reflect credit udoi. the State and the nation. Already many thousand cords of wood have been cut that are to be use! for pulp, and the processes will be such that fir and other resinous woods will be used for that material as well as cottonwood and other deciduous woods. The com pany have, even now, standing orders for the product of these mills from Aus tralia that will work them to almost their best capacity for years nnd absorb a large part of their output. Even greater as an employing factor will be the works of the Steel Barge Company, the whaleback vessels which will shortly be concerned in the com merce of every sea. The nailworks incorporated under the style and name of The Puget Sound Wire Nail and Steel Company has a working capital of $300,000, and its officers are A. R. Whitney, president; Henry Hewitt, Jr., vice-president, and A. R. Whitney, Jr., general manager. The main building at these works is 450 feet long by 100 feet wide, with a nrick boiler house 42 by 30. There are also buildings 100 feet square, the clean ing house and a coopering establishment connected with the works, 40 by 90 feet, beside large warehouses and an immense dock and wharf. This is the only nail factory on the Pacific coast except a small affair at San Francisco. These are a few of the fixed facts con cerning Everett and the certain enter prises projected will make it a mighty manufacturing center. There really is nothing of a boom nature connected with this place. It is simply a great be ginning of a great thing. The land com pany there is grading and paving streets without expense to real estate owners, other than the company itself. The water and light systems a e being put in in the same way. The people are ac tive, energetic and one-minded, here being no local jealousies but all working together to one end. The place has an intelligent, patriotic and enterprising population, and advantages in the mat ters of topographic and geographic situ ation, as well as picturesqueness that are admirable and valuable in a remark able degree, and if this article shall be read in a few years from now the reader will find it was prophetic at the time of its indilement. Moreover, it is noi written as an advertisement or with any hope of pay, but simply as a follow, ng out of the editor'a adjuration "to tell tne truth about Everett." All of the very favorable truths cannot be crowded into tne space allowed. Will L. Vissoiif.r. POLITICAL PAillCIIAPilS. Cleveland still continues to get dele gates. Hill's name is scarcely ever mentioned in the Democratic State con vention as a probable candidate. Port Angeles Tribune-Times. a Senator Long is being referred to in the State papers as a man who knows all about politics that is worth knowing. The Centralia News seems to be respon sible tor all this. It has taken a mean advantage of tne Senator, and not even the Nugget can uphold it. The Senator knows absolutely nothing a! out politics and thinks he is too old to learn. Che halis Nugget. . A nickname has made many a man. James Hamilton Lewis may be "Dude," and he also may be the next governor of the state ot Washington. ' lie is very taking with the people. Aberdeen Herald. . The Democratic indorsement of John Collins for the position of delegate to the Chicago convention ought to have been given more gracefully. Mr. Col lins has been a faithful worker lor the Democratic party in King county lor many years, and certainly did as much as any other man to keep it alive when it apparently had little to live for. His modest ambition to go to Chicago should have met wiih no opposition from his brethren in the faith. Seattle Tele graph. a. The country is getting as full of can didates as a colt gets full cf ticks and cockleburrs in a Missouri pasture. This county has ber full quota and several precincts to bear from. The candidates who desire otiice most are the ones who say iu a crowd that they are not in the field, and that the otiice must seek the man. It has ever been thus "since childhood's happy hours." Pomeroy Independent. Allen Weir has abandoned for the time being bis ambition to put M. C. after his name, and will now be content with being continued in the office of secretary of state, it is to be feared that Alien will be disappointed even in this modest desire and that he will be given an opportunity to obtain in pri vate life the laurels which he cannot win in public life. Seattle Spectator. Fred Grant will not be a candidate for the lieutenant governorship, but he aspires to be a member of the national committee lor the State of Washington. Seattle Spectator. Fred R. Reed is strongly talked of for lieutenant governor. Reed would make an excellent run. He is popular, ener getic, and just the typo of man to suc ceed in capturing the office. He would run welt in Central Washington. He is identified with the upbuilding of Cen tral Washington, and has helped to make it what it is, and is a good man, too. Ellensburgh Localizer. Oloud-Burat at ttiojx City. Omaha, May 18 It is reported here that many live) have been lost in a cloud-burst at Sioux City, Iowa, Tne wires are down and particulars are unobtainable. HIE PRESBYTERIANS. Opening Day of Conference. the BRIGCb' case to come it. Ur. Green Auient ou Aeooulit of Illneea aiul Ilia Sermon Read fur Illiu A K view of the Urla Csie An Im portant Conference. Portland, Or., May 19 The one hun dred and fourth session of the Presby terian general assembly opened today with an invocation by Dr. John U. Riheldoffer, of Redwood Falls, Minn., the oldest clerical commissioner pres ;nt, because of the absence of Dr. Green, of Princeton, the moderato-, on account of illness. Dr. Rulus S. Green, of Orange, N. J., followed with a scripture reading. A prayer was then delivered by John M. C. Holmes, of Albany, N. Y. The sermon of the retiring moderator was read by -tilted clerk. Dr. Roberts. Following is a synopsis of the sermon : Isaiah xlv :15 "Verily thou art a God that hiilest thyself, O, God of Israel, the Savior." The doctor said the Hebrew prophets were men of faith. God did not interpose to rescue them from their present foes and from the troubles that then threatened them. He himselt was hidden from their sight. The mystery of his ways they were unable to lathom, but that he was, nevertheless, pervad ing, directing, controlling all, they never for one moment doubted. Their faith was that to which Isaiah gives utterance in the text. The laitli thus commended in a God unseen is de manded of u , of all, and in every situa tion. Faith refuses to admit that the corporeal senses are the sole test of truth, or that the invisible ana intangi ble is therefore non-existent and unreal. The religious life is onlv maintained by constant exercise of taith in the unseen, If some palpable result invariably and promptly followed which we could trace to God's immediate agency and associate it with our act ot wor ship it would be an unspeakable relief. lint it our 1 a i tli is thus maintained, what is there to test the reality and strength of our faith in God's ward, where that word stands timple and alone? He demands our implicit, un reserved unreasoning faith. This abso lute submission of ourselves is a funda mental requisite of true discipleship. Hence it is that God hides himself. God hides himself likewise in his providen tial dispensations. The unequal distrib ution of good and evil in the world is one of the inexplicable mysteries con nected with his moral government. But the Most High gives no account to us ol his sovereign dealings. This, however, answers an important end in moral training and the discipline of men. But it is peihaps in the afflictive dispensation of God'a providence thai the most distress is felt and the most perplexity created by His hiding llim sell as lie does. One thing, however, ib evident: We cannot divine the issue of the various paths that open beiore us. Our wisdom is to commit all into His hands for the present and for the future, content with the assurance that what we know not now we shall know here after. The Lord further hides Himsell in his relations to His church, wnich is its mystical body and He is its invisible, though ever-present head. But when we turn Irom the ideal cluire.i to the church as it actually is and has been, how strange the contrast. la it strange that the world fails to see it in its true light? Yet the church is the Lord's, oniy He hides Himself from natural sight. And it is with each member ol the church us with the church at large. 11 has the promise of the Lord's presence with Him. Nevertheless He sees nolruit or little fruit from long and faithiul labor. Where is his promised helper? God has hidden Himself again. He has not forsaken his Bervant. God is thus training you to walk by faith but God still hides Himself even when He makes the amplest disclosures and confers the largest benefits. To whatever extent He makes Himself known the revelation is but partial and far more is kept in re serve than is shown forth. All that we have ever discovered or can discover is as nothing to that which lies beyond. The Infinite must be ever i lfinite and incomprehensible, must remain incom prehensible. And forever and forever more the confession of the heavenly hosts will re-echo the universal experi ence of this lower world. Verily, Thou art a God that hidest Thyself. O, God of Israel, the Saviour. After the sermon the assembly was constituted with a prayer by Dr.- Rihel doffer, the temporary moderator. Dr. Brown, of Portland, Or., then presented the report of the committee on arrange ments. The report provides for sessions to be held from 9 iu the morning until noon and from 2 in tho afternoon until 5, and in the evening, popular meeting at 7:45; for the sacrament tonight served by Dr. C. Parsons, Nichols and Dr. Herman D. Jenkins, and lor subjects of popular meeting in the evenings as follows. Friday, Sabbath school work ; Mon day, freedmen; Tuesday, home mis sions; Wednesday, foreign missions; Thursday, higher education; Friday, temperance. The report also includes invitations for a trip up the Columbia river on Saturday next and down the river to Astoria on Saturday week and the other side trips at the convenience of the commissioners. The morning session closed with prayer. The first business of the afternoon session will be the election of moderator. Probably no general assembly of the Presbyterian church in the United States was ever more fateful to the church at large, or excited more interest than this. Aside from the great interest taken in the revision of the confession of faith, the celebrated Briggs case, as it is called the question, substantially, whether Dr. Briggs is orthodox or unorthodox in his teachings as professor of systematic theology in the Union Theological Sem inary, aa judged by his writings will also come beiore the assembly ; and on the decision or determination reached by the general assembly in that case de pends, according to the very general be lief, wheth r there shall be another division in the church, a division be tween the old and the new school and the consequent creation or organization of another church. The Briggs case cannot very well coma up in the general assembly until the 23d nst , and it is more than likely it will not be reached until the end of the month. The only way in which it can come before the assembly is on the ap peal of the prosecuting committee of the New York Presbytery against the de cision of that body dismissing the case, that appeal will probably in the first in stance be referred to the judicial com mittee when appointed. The general assembly, however, may .decline to en tertain the appeal. In any event it will be very difficult for the tieneral assem bly to prevent a discussion to some ex tent on the merits of the case, even on the question whether the appeal shall be entertained or not. It is believed that the committee of prosecution will find themselves checkmated at the gen eral assembly by the complaint to the Synod of Dr. Briggs and his friends against the ruling of the Presbytery last fall when the case against him was dis missed. It will be remembered that after the case was dismissed a motion was made to dismiss the committee. The mod erator declared the motion out of order on t e ground that the committee was a committee of prosecution, represent ing the Presbyterian church in the nnv. dr. HHiaas. United States of America, and there lore an original party independent of tho presbytery. On an appeal being made to the house against that ruling. the moderator was sustained by a vote of 64 to 57. Against that decision Dr. Brown and others gave notice of a com plaint to the synod. That body meets next autumn. According to the law of the church, the general assembly must. in obedience to its own laws, reject the appeal of the committee against the de cision of the Presbytery, while the question is sub judice before the synod. and, in the langunge of one divine friendly to Dr. Briggs, "pack the com mittee of prosecution off home again." The complaint of Dr. Briggs and his friends to the Synod against the ruling of the Presbytery has been regularly made. It shows clearly the strength of Dr. Briggs's position, and also the inter esting fact that the Presbytery has al ready practically reversed its own judg ment iu the matter. According to sec tion 85 of the Book of Discipline, "when ever a complaint, in cases non-judicial, is entered against a decision of a judi catory, signed by at least one-third of the members recorded as present when the action was taken, the execution of such decision shall be stayed until the final issue of the case by the superior judicatory." The complaint of Dr. Br ggs and his friends against the ruling referred to has teen regularly taken, all the forms accordin i to the Book of Dis cipline have been complied with, and it is believed that it will prevent the Gen eral Assembly entertaining the appeal of the committee of prosecution, espe cially as that committee has itself also a complaint before the Synod in the same matter, and are thus appealing on the same matter to two different bodies at the same time. They are supposed to have taken that course so that if they fail before one judicatory, they can fall back on the other. The most interesting thing, however, in the complaint of the Rev. Dr. Briggs and his friends against the ruling of the New York Presbytery on the question whether the Committee of Prosecution was au original party or not is the fact that it is signed by 114 members of the l'reabytery, many more thau the re quired number. The Moderator's rul ing, it will be remembered, was sus tained by 04 votes to 57, the total num ber of those voting being therefore 121. Of these 121 members of the Presbytery 06 have actually signed Dr. Briggs' com plaint, thereby patctically reversing the Presbytery's ruling, and consequently overruling the Moderator by 06 votes to 55. From this it is clear that nine men who voted on the question of sustaining the decision of the chair have changed their minds, presumably because they did not understand the question. The question, Shull the Chair be sustained? is always decided without debate. Among the 114 signatures to the com plaint are those of the Rev. Dr. Francis Brown, the Rev. Dr. Thomas S. Hast ings, the Rev. Dr. John R. Paxton, the Rev. Dr. Henry van Dyke, the Rev. Dr. Charles L. Thompson, the Rev. Dr. C. H. Parkhurstj the Rev. Dr. John H. Mcllvaine, the Rev. Dr. George Alex ander, Stealy B. Rossiter, C. P. Leggett, William E. Dodge, D. Willis James, John Crosby Brown, Cleveland H. Dodge, William A. Ewing, W. W. Atter bury, Henry 13. Chapin, Theron G. Strong, Charles H. Woodbury, Robert Jalfray and others. THE CIRCULAR A FRAUD. Sau Frauclsea la Not In Need of Labor era From the Sound. San Francisco, May 19 A circular calling for 3,000 men to come to San i'rancisco for work on the cable road has been distributed at Seattle on steamers sailing to this. port. It has created a good deal of curiosity in the Sound city, so much bo, indeed, that a resident of that p. ace has made inquiries regarding it. The circulars read as follows: "Help Wanted Three thousand men wanted to work on a new cable road. Apply at office, International hotel, San Francisco." One of the hotel proprietors was shown the paper last night. He said he knew nothing about it, but believed it was the work of an enemy named Swan Lewis, who keeps a lodging house at Seatt e. So far there have been no ap plications in reply to tho call, which is thought to be either a practical joke or a vengeful trick. It is certainly a fraud. rue Miners at Koslyn Uluer Widely iu Their Oplntoua. Vary Roslvn, Wash., Mav 18 At the cor oner's inquest yesterday the testimony adduced did not tend to satisfactorily explain the origin oi the explosion. The miners wno nave investigated claim that the explosion originated in the seventh east level, at the very bottom of the mine or on the fourth east near the top. The management and experts insist upon their original theory that a uiast was nrea at tne sixth east by Wright and Deuster, Inveatlg-atiugr the Landing Chinese in Mexloit, San Dieqo, Cal., May 18 Three United States officials arrived here Sun day and took a boat lor a trip of two or three weeks down the coast. The offi cials appeared to be on a secret mission, for the object of the trip wag not di- vuigeu vu any one. 11 is believed that the landing of Chinese at Mexican ports is to be investigated.