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# DAY'S NEWS SUMMARIZED Weather for St, Paul and vicinity: Showers Thursday and Friday. POLITICS- David B. Hill speaks in Tammany hall for the first time in ten years. Letters from Mr. Cleveland read. Mr. Rosing addresses a rousing Democratic meeting at Two Harbors. D. B. Hill and Gov. Odell, of New York, have a bitter political quarrel. LOCAL- Supreme Court grants Gov. Lind's application and orders auditor of Hennepin county to strike the designation "Social-Democrat" from the official ballot. President George B. Harris, of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy Railway company, and Frederick Weyerhaeuser testify in the Northern Securities case. Capt. Francis P. Fremont, U. S. A., sues the St. Paul Cold Storage Warehouse company for damages for the loss of valuable heirlooms destroyed by fire. Henry J. Tents, who recently left Spokane to visit a sister in St. Paul, disappears. Figures are given out showing that 77 per cent of the increased valuation of Minnesota real estate is put upon farm lands. Mrs. Neil Gordon, of Winnipeg, has husband arrested and pursues him from Wisconsin. Friend of Cole Younger will seek full pardon for him. James Younger's coffin is whittled by relic hunters. DOMESTIC- Man near Aitkin, Minn., murders his daughter because she was about to marry against his wishes. Coal operators are busy preparing for the resumption of mining. Many men have trouble in getting work again. As a prohibition measure the Adams Express company is indicted at Keokuk, Iowa. Lake Mohonk Indian conference starts in again. Dr. Ellis Duncan, of Louisville, inspector general of the Spanish war veterans, kills a man at Pittsburg. Several lives are lost at a Fairview (B. C.) hotel fire. President Roosevelt's daughter, Alice, is to marry John Greenway, of Hot Springs, Ark. FOREIGN Danish landsthing rejects the treaty for the sale of West India islands to the United States. Andrew Carnegie, in his address on being reinstated as rector of St. Andrews university, Scotland, suggests a "United States of Europe" as a means to repel the American commercial invasion. SPORTING- Naval cadets defeat the University of Pennsylvania, 10 to 6. Princeton wins from Dickinson. WASHINGTON- King Oscar, of Sweden, arbiter, has decided the Anglo-American-German controversy over Samoa in favor of Germany. Government will oust stock raisers that are occupying Western lands illegally. BUSINESS- General liquidation and good weather depress the prices of grain. Stock market is a repetition of that of the previous day, with a small volume of trade. Grand Forks, N. D., and other creditors of the defunct Security Trust company, of Nashua, N. H., will get liberal dividends. Receiver is appointed for Ewart Bros. & Wright, stock brokers, Chicago, who have Iowa creditors. MINNEAPOLIS- Notorious gambling syndicate dissolves and the two surviving members, John Flannagan and Mike Shelley, depart for the Dominion of Canada. "Billy" Edwards and "Charlie" Howard, the "big mitt" men, are released from the county jail. Secretary of the Treasury Leslie M. Shaw addresses a Republican meeting at Exposition hall. MOVEMENTS OF STEAMSHIPS. Port. Arrived. Sailed. New York..... Majestic..... Oceanic. Liverpool.....Bohemian.....Germanic. Liverpool.....Westernland.....Rhyland. Cherbourg.....Pretoria.....Kaiser Wilhelm der Grosse. Naples.....Trave.....Cambroman. Queenstown.....Teutonic. New York.....St. Louis. Rotterdam.....Statendam. Almeria.....Hesperia. Bremen.....Kaiserin Maria Theresa. New York.....Sachem.....Cevic. Liverpool.....Sachem. Hongkong.....China. London.....Rames. Yokohama.....Empress of India. Hongkong.....Olympia. Southampton.....St. Paul. Hongkong.....Shawmut.