Newspaper Page Text
10
HOffATOUXAIiQ TRAVELS
& PROCESSION OF IHEM WASTED
THE OHIO VALLEY.
They Moved In a Line Parallel With
the Great Cyclonic Storm A Still
Greater Disaster Predicted in the
Lower Mississippi Within Two
Weeks— The Greatest Flood on Rec
ord at Hand, and People Warned to
Seek Refuge— Appearance and Char
acteristics of Tornadoes and Cy
clones— Some of the Freaks They
Perform.
(Copyright.)
New York, April s.—Hundreds of men.
women and children dead, thousands in
jured and millions of dollars in property
destroyed, make the terrible record of the
havoc wrought by the combination of
cyclones and tornadoes that ravaged the
fairest portion of seven western states a
few days ago. Never in the history of the
signal service, nor before its organization,
as far as can be ascertained, has a disaster
of such extent occurred in this country.
Sweeping through Kansas, Missouri, Illi
nois, Kentucky, Indiana,, Ohio and Michi
- VvV- v l Vf ft
gan, the full force of the storm
was expended in the Blue Grass
state and the Ohio valley. Already
the w ires have told pathetic tales of the
disaster at Louisville; the piles of dead
among the heaps of debris, tho thousands of
maimed and suffering victims filling the
hospitals; the clean swath of the giant
through the very heart of the city ,to the
river, mowing down nearly 20U buildings
as though they were but stubble in its path.
It is an appaling record, and coming so
swiftly after the disasters in the flooded dis
tricts of the Mississippi from Cairo to the
drito may well excite the sympathy of the
entire c untry for the stricken west.
It, will be a fortunate thing if these storms
are not the precursors of even greater dan
gers. The signal office some time ago
issued a warning to the dwellers along the
lower Mississippi valley, foreshadowing
floods over a territory fully a thousand
niiies in extent. In many places the note
i t danger was unheeded. Chief Observer
Dunn, the head of the meteorological staff
in New York, yesterday said:
“This has been a season of unprecedented
storms in almost overy part of the country.
Tornadoes have passed over tho lower lakes,
involving Utica, Syracuse, Buffalo, Albany
and all that section of country. In the
south U ey have till lately been rather free
from tornadoes, and with the exception of
a storm in the Mississippi valley some two
weeks ago, this is the first serious storm
of the year that has passed over there.
But its after effects may be still
more serious, as far as the Mississippi
is concerned. That river, already swollen
at every point, is choked up with the de
posit from the late Goods, and is in no con
dition to withstand the tremendous increase
toils volume that must come within the
next few days in the upper part of the
river and wiWun two weeks at the furthest
In the lowt-r part. Tts banks are already I
cashed and its levees broken at many
places, and the incessant rains are agfijna-
VB'ing this condition of matters, All irs
tributaries are at the floodmark. Every
>>“ Points t o a phenomenal flood all
along the Mississippi within fourteen days,
fh.j water is up to the very top of the
leevees, and these iast storms have precipi
tatod vast quantities of the ram that must
be got ri 1 of it somehow. Where is it to go*
It cannot go down the channel. In the
lower Mississippi there shoul.l have been in
the three days’ preceding March liS a fail
of three feet; yet it remained almost -ta
tionary, while the upper part oft e river
rose steaudy. U ben the augmented Ho xl
pours down to the lower river, an inunda
tion of the valleys is inevitable.
“■When the river is fl poded and the cities
along its banks are flo ded, and -ix or seven
great crevass s are pouring their water in
torrents all through Mis issippi, Arkansas
and Louisiana, and still more flooi to come,
and tfce channel choke! and containing ali
th*- water it can contain, what is going to
become of the people of that section i Doubt
less many have already moved out of the
threeten'l territory i .to safe grounds; but
there are very many who remain, and w h n
the w orst comes these poor people will be
the sufferers. The cormrg Hoed wiil be the
highest ever known.”
There is no reason to apprehend that
these are the w *nis of a mere alarmist.
Everything points to the conclusion that
the great tornadoes and cyclones, with the
unusual rainfall accompanying them, have
made the situation along tue Mississippi one
of imminent danger.
I asked the mete urologist if a cyclone hail
ever been photographed.
“Neve'. I bei.eve, although it possi’ ly
could be done. With a tornado the case is
different. Tho latter is a comparatively
limited affair, although it lias tremendous
power compressed in its narrow funnel. A
tornado’s track will sometimes be not more
than a quarter of a mile wide, while a
cyclone takes in a much lager territory,
frequently many miles. Both are generated
by the intermingling < f cold and warm air
currents, r,nd both have the same rotary
motion. The gyrations of a tornado may
tie distinguished a considerable distane- off
from the actual scene of disturbance. Tor-
nadoes almost invariably follow in the track
of a severe storm, and go in a northeast
erly direction. Their velocity varies from
tiftv to possibly as high as 150 miles an hour.
"In tlie present case, the storm phenomena
were something almost unheard of. There
was a procession of tornadoes following
each other closely through Kansas, Mis
souri, Kentucky, and Ohio and keeping on
a line parallel to that of the great cyclonic
storm which was moving in the same direc
tion, its path, however, lying somewhat
northward of the tornado track. These
tornadoes, driving along with a gyratory
and pulsatory motion, seem to have found a
common center at Louisville and the sur
rounding portion of the Ohio valley.”
Such is the speed of a tornad > that its du
ration at any one point is rarely more than
a minute or two. Sometimes, however, it
makes a dotour mid returns to wreak fresh
havoc. In this country the tendency of all
great inland storms is northeast or north
northeast. The great spiral column of the
tornado, as it rushes along, sways backward
and forward, and anv objects that lie in its
path are suck ’ lip in the vortex and
whirled through i . central funnel, to lie
ejected wi:h territk torce at the top, gener
ally in fragments.
The premonitions of a cyclone are a fresh
breeze setting in from tho south, with a sul
try atmosphere and banking clouds to the
north or northwest. These Indications are
accompanied by a gradual fall of the barom
eter, much more*decided, but less sudden
than in the caso of a tornado. When fairly
started, the cyclone will travel immense
distances. sometimes over a 1,000
miles. Its rotary motion is similar
to that of the t rnado, but less
concentrated, owing to the wider expanse,
its line of progress is marked by curves,
showing a swaying movement where it has
encouutered conflicting conditions, and
either overcome or avoided them. A
peculiarity of all great cyclo iio storms is
that, while the storm itself may he trawl
ing at the slow rate of ten or twelve miles
an hour, the wind may be rushing ahead at
a velocity of 100 miles an hour.
After momentarily shaking New York
and parts of Xew Jersey and Connecticut,
tee great cyclone passed out to sea. In
coming vessels may have a tale to tell of
encounters with the groat gale in the mi l
Atlantic, whore it probably spent its force
and subside ).
An affecting incident in Cue Louisville
disaster occurred during the search f >r the
deni and injured among the debris A
frame building neir the suburb bad been
I overwhelmed by the ‘or. tad i. Tne
searchers, in passing, heard faint sounds
Till-: MORNING NEWS: SUNDAY, APRIL 0. loyO-T'.YELVE PAGES.
OWEN’S ELECTRIC BELT.
VBUdrm* A. OWKPir©
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Coming from the very center of the pile of
hoards anil shingles. As they went to work
the sounds became more distinct. Several
bodies were quickly recovered, being those
of the owner of the cabin and his wife, a
poor shoemaker.
Presently there was a shout of exultation.
In one corner of the ruin, completely
sheltered by the beams and boarding which
had formed an arch above it, sat a chubby
eighteen months old baby. It was covered
with dust and hemmed in on every side,
but not a hair of its littie head was injured.
XVheu the searchers uncovered it, the
pudgy face broke into a merry iaugn and
the little hands dropped the chips of timber
they had boen playing with and were ex
tended to the rescuers.
It was an affecting scene. Tears cams
into the eyes of tho strong men as they
carefully picked up the tiny waif, and ex
amined it to find that it was not even
scratched. Both parents had perished, but
Providence had miraculously protected the
helpless baby amid the general wreck.
One of the best authorities on cyclones
and tornadoes in this country is Lieut. Fin
ley of tho Sis;nal Service Bureau. Ha has
made r study of the atmospheric phenom
ena attendant upon these great disturb
ances forseveral years. In order to prosecute
his researches satisfactorily, lie spent three
years in the southwest—the breeding-place
of the tornado —and familiarized himself
with tho wonder in all its stages, from the
time it is a tiny local disturbance until it
culminates in a heaven-rending and earth
devouring aerial volcano, leaving desolation
in its track.
Jt-’
ii j'-fP' ii a
-T $ K ! -v
WIIECK OF THE UNION DEPOT, LOUISVILLE.
“I was a good deal with Finley when he
was out in Kansas.” said Col. Stevens of
Kansas City, yesterday, “and I took a deep
interest in his investigations. I remember
particularly that he had about concluded
that there was no electricity in cyclones or
tornadoes. Ho had doubtless heard of the
experiments by an Ann Arbor professor
who claimed that those disturbances were
electrical, and-that ha could, by means of a
copper piate and electric apparatus under
neath, produce all the cyclonic phenomena
on a small scale, including oven the atmos
pheric whirl These theories were discarded
by Finley, who doalt with nature’s own
forces out on the plains, and not with deli
cate apparatus in a room.
|§ f L, Sk
“Personally, I have had not a little ex
perience with tornadoes. Care should be
taken not to confuse the tornado and the
cyclone. The first is a baby cyclone, a
miniature affair that is powerful enough,
but which moves in a very limited compass.
The other takes in a wide swath, and I
imagine that the Louisville visitor must
have been an aggregation of tornadoes or a
full-fledged cyclone. A tornado comes sud
denly, and one is hardly warned by the
barometer before it is at hand. This shows
how limited and local is its extent,
vet it may travel a great distance.
*
jyjpjk
J c f ■ 5^
“I have known of tornadoes in the west
doing wonderful things. In one place, such
was the force of the wind, that straws we-e
forced through the t ark of oak tree* and
into the wood; the outer course of brick
w as stripped from the face of buildings and
the inner course left uninjured, and a heavy
be nil of timber was driven through the
front and rear walls of a building, cutting
a clean broach, yet without breaking down
tho walls. Pieces of trees, good sized limbs,
1 have known to be blown at least five
miles. A barn at the back of my house was
demolished, while the house was untouched,
showing that the edge ot that
tornado must have be?u just
between the two. i have seen them
cut a clean path through the forest, leveling
the trees, and even pulling up the roots.
Great bales of hay, each weighing probably
a ton. I have seen picked up, torn in pieces
and blown out of sight; roofs lifted and
sent scuddiing thro :gh the air with such
velocity that when they struck the ground
they were dashed to pieces as fine as parlor
matches. tSome houses would be cm-bed
as flat as though a great hydraulic force
had driven them into the earth. These in
cidents only serve to show the force of
western tornadoes, ot which most people
who never encountered one of thorn have
little or no comprehension.
“Altho igh the Louisville cyclone struck
that, city late at night, it originuted long
lieforo, and must have traveled many hun
dred miles. No cyclone nr tornado over
begins earlier than'" o’clock in tho after
noon. The atmospheric conditions are
never present before that hour. Nor will
a cyclone ever ori.-iuate later than
suudown. .Should on > come after that you
may set it down as a visitor that has trav
eled ever since afternoon, and wrtich will
keep on traveling until the simply of ma
terial is exhausted. lathe southwest we
can tell by the apuearaice of the sky
whether there is any likelihood of a tornado.
If, during the afeern >on, there is a warm,
s mth west wind and the sky is full of cirrhus
clouds, and if at tho same time there is
a bank of dark clou l gradually rising
in the northwest, th so signs m*nn
infallibly that who i the cold storm from
the northwest any m iters tho hot wind the
two, rushing together, will stare a tor-
mtdo spinning on its travels. Bv day, tho
color of the tornado as it is seen atp-cach
ing is almost brassy: by night it presents a
coppery hue, and can tie quickly detected by
experienced eyes. The only thing to do at
such times is to make for the cellar unless
one is confident that he is already m a place
of safety.” H. Sandiho.v.
Ireland’s Great Champion.
Pittsburg Post's Sen- York Mter.
It is newly rumored that Charles Stewart
Parnell will soon couie to America for dol
lars. He will get them, it is said, toy lectur
ing. Simeof the descriptions of Parnell
are remarkable for inaccuracy. Scarcely
one agrees with another on the make-up and
prasentability of the Irish leader, and vet
there is nothing remarkable about him. "He
is tall, slender and courteous, and has the
air of confirmed ill health. His cheeks are
pallid, his neck thin and his shoulders
bowed. In manner he is absolutely and
indubitably the most imperturbable man
in the British parliament, ar.d when it is
remembered that he is the target night and
day for aa endless amount of abuse and
assailment bis composure is all the more
wonderful. His popularity is not only with
the people, but with the great men of
England as wed. No mat er how bitter
the denouncement of the Irish leader may
ba by the conservatives, there is always a
deep and wholesome sentiment of admira
tion for the uncrowned king of Ireland. Ali
the talk about the great sun of money
which he receives is absurd. If he had an
income of $li),000,(W0 a year it would not be
couducive to his comfort in the slightest
degree, for Ids diet is restricted to the com
monest food, he does not care for fine
clothes, and his life is passed constantly in
study and work.
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MIND SUPERSEDES INSTINCT.
How Man Has Dost Many Instincts
Possessed by the Animals.
If the doctrine be true that mao is realiy
the heir of all the various species and gen
era of the animal kingdom, it seems a lii
tle hard upon us, says the .1 meric an
Analyst, that even by way of exception
we inherit none of the most marvel
ous instincts of those species uud
geaeru, and have to be content with those
greater but purely human faculties by
which even the most wonderful of animal
instincts have been somehow , xtiu
guiahed. Sir John Lubbock maintains
with a good deal of plausibility that there
are insect;, and very likely eve i higher
animals, which perceive colors of which we
have no glimpse and hear sounds which are
to u; inaudible. Yet wo never hear of a
human retina tha includes in its vision
those colors depending on vibrations of the
ether which are to > slow or too rapid for
our ordinary eyes, nor of a human ear
which is entranced with music that to the
great majority of our species is absolutely
inaudible.
Again, wo never hear of a human being
who could perform the feat, of which we
were told only recently, of a bloodhound.
In a dark night it foi lowed up for three
miles the trail of a thief with whom the
bloodhounds could have never been in con
tact (he had ju t purloiue i some roll of tan
from tha tan yard m which the dag was
chained upt.aud finally sat down under
ttie tree in which the man had tale i refug ■.
Why, we wonder, are those ti er powers
for discriminating and following tne track
of the scent wt.icu so many of the lower
animals pos ess e itirely extinguished in
man, if man be the real heir of ail the vari
ous genera which show power inferior to
his own!
We sea no trace in animals of that high
enjoyment of the finer scents which make
the blossoming of the spring flowers so
great a delight to human beings, and yet
men are entirely destitute of that almost
u erring power of tracking the path of au
odor, whicn seras to be one of the principal
gifts of many quadrupeds and some birds.
It is the same with tne power of a dog or
cat to find its way back to a home to which
it is attached, but from which it has been
taken bv a route that it cannot posiioly
follow on its return, even if it had the
power; f observing tb it route, which usually
it ha-, not. Nothing could be more conve
nient than such a power to a lost child.
But no one ever heard of any child who
IKOssessei it.
Still more enviable is that instinct pos
sessed by so many birds of crossing great
t acts of land ana sea without apparently
auv landmarks or seamarks to guide them,
and of reaching a quarter of the globe
which many of them have never visited
before, while those who hive visited it
before have no: visited it often enough to
earn the way—at least by any rule which,
in like circumstances, would be of any use
to human intelligence. The migratory
birds must certainly be in possession of
either senses or instinct- entirely beyond
the range of human imagination, and yet
no one ever heard of the survival of such a
sense of instinct iu any member of our race.
It may be said, indeed, that man have
either inherited or reproduced tha slave
making iustinct of some of the military
ants, though that unfortunate and
degrading instinct does not appe ir ro have
been inherited by any of the higher ani
mals which intervene between the insects
and our own race; but this only e haucas
the irony of cur destiny, if we "do, indeed,
iu aay sense inherit from these insect aris
tocracies oae of tiie most disastrous in
stincts of the audacious but indolent crea
tures which fight so muc'.i better than they
work. If we have not inherited tae archi
tectural instincts of bees or beavers, nor
the spinning instincts of spiders, nor the
power of the dog to track out his hone, it is
a little sad that we should have inherited
the one disastrous instinct of the ant by
which it makes itself dependent on a more
timid aid industrious species of its own
race, and thereby loses the power to help
itself.
What is stiil more curious in that even
where human beings have wholly excep
tional and unbeird-of powers, they betray
n > traces of the exceptional ami unheard-of
powers of the races whoso vital organisa
tion we are sai Ito inherit. The occasional
appearance of very rare mathematical
powers, for instance, st far from being in
any souse explicable from below, looks
much more tike inspiration from above. The
calculating bay who could not even give any
account of the process whereby ho arrived
at correct results which the educated
mathematician took some time to verify,
certainly was not reviving in himself any of
the rare powers of the lower tribes of
animals. Nor do the prodigies in music
who show such ma velous power in infancy
recall to us any instinct of the birl; the only
musical creature except ourselves. Still
less, of course, does great moral genius—the
genius of a Howard or a Clarks >u —suggest
auy reminiscence of what happens in the
world of animal life.
A Tariff Poem.
From the Kingman {Kan.)Democrat.
He sat at his door at noonday, lonely and
gloomy and sad, brooding over the price nf
his corn crop and figuring how much he
ha 1. He had worked from early spring
time, early and late and hard, and he was
ecu ting his asset* and figuring i.ut his re
ward. He figured that it took two acres to
buy his two boys new boots, and ten acres
more on top of Ibis to fit them out with new
suits. To buy Lis wife a protected dress
took 100 bushels more, while five acres went
in a solid lump for the carpet, on the floor.
His tax and Ills grocery bill absorbed Ids
crop of oats, while the interest on bis farm
mortgage took all his fattened sne ii-. The
shingles on his cowshed and the lumber lor
his barn bad eaten up his lieef steers and the
balance of his com. So he sat in liis door at
noonday, lonely and gloomy an i sore, as
he figured up his wealtu a little less than it
was the year before, “by gum, they say
I’m protected, but I know thero’s something
wrong; I’ve been dtejivod and gulled and
hoodwinked by this high protection song.
They t dd of rebellious traitors, and held ur>
the bloody rag. and I followed along like a
pumpkin, and now Ia n holding the bag.
But from this time oil IM invest gate, a id
get to the bottom of facts, and I’ll bet *4 to
begin with that the tariff is a tax,''
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MEDICAL.
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coxs J MPTIO X,
y Scrofula, and a3 a. Flesh Producer!
5 there is nothing like SCOTT'S EMULSION. *
• it is sold by ail Druggists. Let no one by j
, profuse explanation or impudent entreaty {
f induce you to accept a substitute. *
PETERMAN’S ROACH FOOD.
r pHE people who have used PETERMAN’S
L KUAOH FOOD highly recommend it ta
their friends and neighbors. It lias no equal in
the world, as it attracts th- Roaches and Water
Bug- as a food which they like better than any
thing else. They all eat it, any die. Put. up in
2ac.. 50c. and 75c. mailable cans. Sold by all
the principal druggists in the United States.
tV)!. PETERMAN. MTU CHEMIST
Office, No. <i Kas 14th street. New York.
LIPPMAN BROS.. Agents, Savannah.
eastJiaSn W
lIH.G.C
At Wholesale by LIPPMAN BROS.. Sava,.
'■•IV. 1 -1
rrTTTO MORNING NEWS carriers nMt
I fi I P every part of the city early.
4 il la Ore cent* a week pay* for tlMMflft
-MEDICAL.
Pimples
Blotches
and
Old Sores
Are Entirely Removed by P. P. P.,
Prickly Asb, Poke Root and Potassium, the
greatest blood purifier on earth.
Boils, erysipelas, syphilis, rheumatism, scrn r
ilia, blood poison, mercurial poison, and all
other impurities of the blood are cured by p.
P. P.
Randall Pope, the retired druggist, of Ma li
son, Fla., says P. P. P. is the best alterative
and blood medicine on the market. He being n
druggist and having sold all kinds of medicine
bis unsolicited testimonial is of great import
ance to the sick and suffering.
Capt. J. D. Johnston.
To all whom it may concern:—! take great
pleasure in testifying to the efficient qualities .
the popular remedy for eruptions of the skin
known as P. P. T. (Prickly Ash, Poke Root an 1
Potassium.) I suffered tor several years with
an unsightly and disagreeable eruption on m
face, and tried various remedies to remove ii,
none of which accomplished the object, imtn
this valuable preparation was resorted to. After
taking three bottles, in accordance with direc
tions, I am now entirely cured.
J. D. JOHNSTON,
Of the firm of Johnston & Douglas,
Savannah. U i.
Henry Winter, superintendent of the Savan
nah Brewery, says ru-has had rheumatism ~f
the heart for several years, often tillable in
walk, his pain was so Intense, he hadjprotessois
in Philadelphia, but received no relief until In
cam e to Savannah and tried P. P. P. T
bottles made him a well man and he rend:i
thanks to P. I’. P. For sale by alt druggists.
LIPPMAN BROS., "Proprietors,
Lippmau s Block. Savannah, Ua.
LOTTERY.
LOTTERY
OK THE PUBLIC CHARITY.
ESTABLISHED IN 1877, BY THE
MEXICAN
national government.
Operated Under a Twenty Years' Contract
by the Mexican International Ine
provement Company.
Grand Monthly Drawings held in the 3loreque
Pavilion in the Alameda Parle. City of Mexieo,
and publicly conducted by Government Offi
cials appointed for the purpose by the Secre
tary of the Interior and the Treasury.
Grand Semi-Annual Drawing May 5, 1390
t-r* V •
CAPITAL PRIZE.
#120,000.
ittHMMM) Tickets ni (S, rSBIO.OIiO.
Wholes, Halves, @1; Quarters, *2;
Eighths, £l.
Club Rates: $55 Worth of Tickets for
S3O V. S. Currency.
I.IST or PRIZES.
I CAPITAL PRIZE OF $120,000 is $130,0. i
1 CAPITAL PRIZE OK 10,000 is .... 10,OV
1 CAP! TYL PRIZE OF 30,000 is 20.00. i
1 GRAND PRIZE OF.. s.oft) is. ... .5.901
2 PRIZES OF 2,0 >0 are 4,000
5 PRIZES OF 1,000 are....
20 PRIZES OF 500 are. . 10,00.'
100 PRIZES OF 200 are. . 2"."""
380 PRIZES OF. lfti are.... ss.OtVl
529 PRIZES OF 40 are.... 21,160
APPROXIMATION PRIZES.
150 Prizes of $l2O app. to $120,000 Prize $ 18,00'
150 Prizes of 100 app. to 40,000 Prize. 15,0"'
l'O Prizes of 60 app. to 20.000 Prize 9, no'
799 Terminals of $-10 decidod by $120,000
Prize 31.00"
Prizes tmonnQnT to
All Prizes sold in the United States full pai 1
In U. S. Currency.
SPECIAL FEATURES
By terms of contract the Companv must de
posit the sum of all prizes included in tbs
scheme before selling a single ticket, and re
ceive the following official permit:
CERTIFICATE.—I hereby certify that the
Rank of London and Mexico has on specuU
depo it the necessary funds to yuaranlee the
payment of all prizes drawn by the Loteris
de la Bene/icencia Publica.
.4. CASTILLO. Interventor.
Further, the Company is required to distrib
ate 56 t>er cent, of the value of a!! the tickets is
prizes a larger proportion than in given by any
othor Lottery.
Finally, it..- tmralvr of tickets is limited to
90.000 - 20,000 less than are sold by other lot
teries using the same scheme.
For full particulars address U. BamotSU
Apartado 736. City of Mexico, Mexico.
SHIPPING.
Sayannah, Beaufort and Way Landing
THE STEAMER
“ BELLEVUE,”
Capt. T. E. BALDWIN.
*\I7TLL LEAVE steamer Katie's wharf every
▼ ▼ WEDNESDAY and FRIDAY at 10:30 a m
landing at BlufTton on the Wednesday trip.
Returning. leave Beaufort every MONDAY an l
THURSDAY at 3 a. m., landing at Bluflfton on
the Monday trip.
FARE $1 00 1 ROUND TRIP -
For further information apply to J. G. MEI>
LOCK, Agent,