v«asfc* wv •* - » •- * . jjwzm *r '^w* * f < £,. vf> ' • y,--.t K«M» f K V '•". . *'4 • < * < ~ v-Wk. * , H-AINDEALER VAN SLYKK. Editor and Pub. Y. ILLINOIS, WILL PLOW THE SEAS FAMOUS OLD HARTFORD STILL <1 IN COMMISSION. jgBoodeliM «M Incendiary Flames tt Cfcl- ouro-Tr»lo.l«id of Festering CarcMSM :' May Breed Pestilence--Boy's Trick with • Ca^M 'of Gunpowder. * , 1 To Bepair tV H*rtfanl> j THE loss of the kearsarge left but one of the famous old wooden vessels of . the navy, which, under the law, may > t lie retained in seaworthy condition, re- l ; gardless of the cost of repairs, all other ; ' A«sse s baing forced irom the naval ' active list when over 10 per cent, of their first cost is required to fit them ? ' |or sea service. The excepted vessel jb Admiral Farraguts flagship, the ; Hartroud. Not long ago it was de- > «ided that her engines were unfit for further use,--feeing too danger ous to be depended upon for a .' .pea voyage and too antiquated for re- pair. Her muzzle-foadiig guns &lso iprere obsolete. The large sail power ; -Ol- thft Hartford and the fact that her • copper bottom makes it unnecessary to liave her put in a dry dofck every si^ *•4 ttioht hs, especially tit her for duty in f ' j^e South and Central Pacific Ocean, inhere coal is <txpensive, dry docks are scarce and few voyages are -less than , 2,000 miles each. The present naval appropriation bill contains an item of . *1.-0.O;H) f of a" battery of medern ritl&s lor the.Hartford and 8106^00 tefc-her , ? iiew machiaery and boilerar-• ijp-. , ' " Mfn»<e to Health. s« i I 1 ONE df the most serious aspects of -' 1fce Strike frcm the standpoint.^ th(& city officials is that horses are dying in *h% city at,, the rate of from eeventy- • fi\ e to one hundred a day, and there'is, . absolutely no way of removing them Irom the city, tor day a train loid'ef these carcasse s has stood at 38th street i .. on the Michigan Southern tracks*, -*;• consigned ta the Panhandle Road which is t > carry them to ihe -" Establishment of the Union Rendering •'(, Company. The carcasses are festering in the sun and the health of the com- 4 jjaunity is seriously threatened. The * ipame is true in other localities ; where these carcasses are leftlbecause | the city cannot remove them./ Super- Jintendent Schofield, of the bureau of :f street and alley cleaning, said the Strikers were ready and anxious to move thfc? tra'n of dead bodies, but thq c railroads willnot move it. ! and lived at Lee, Mass., whfcre lie wae born. He graduated from Yale a year ago, and rowed in the winning crew in the 'Varsity race last y$ar. He also rowed in the crew of 1$92. The Halifax express leaving Mon treal at 8 o'clock Sunday evening on the Canadian Pacific was wrecked at the bridge over the west outlet of a small stream near Greenville, Me. Five persons were killed and eight injured, some fatally. The dead: Fred Foss, Canadian Paci fic Station assistant at Greenville; G. C. Hoyt. passenger, Fort Fairfield. Me.: Fred Levitt, engi neer, Meeantic, Me.: Walter Starkey, mail clerk, St. J0hns, N. B.; unknown, second-class passenger, still under the wreck. The passenger train on, the Florence and Cripple Creek bound south left the track a short distance frcm Cripple Creek, Colo. W. G. Mila«r,.of Denver, was killed. Several Other persons were hurt. >/•; " . 13i*ft£tire<t for Life. . n WIL.I-IAM MtRPHY, son of E. J. Muri ]phy, East St. Louis. Republican can didate for Congress lii the Twenty-first Illihdis district, was horribly injured powder explosion. He went on a picnic to Falllhg Springs. He and some comrades put a quantity of poyvder a can of mud and attached a fuse r it.. rThe powder did -not explode fiicSly and Murphy went to see what ras^t^ie matter. While he was looking nto it the powder exploded with ter- rlti • force. The boy's nose was torn off, his cheek bones broken and his left eye put out, and it is probable that he Will lose the sight of his right eye also. It is doubtful if he survives the Ik cident. If he lives he will be dis figured for life and probably be blind. •fi: Three Men Hlllad. J THREE men were killed and five jrouhded; in, the rioting at Chicago Friday. Two deputy marshals are in S; #he list of the dead. Hundreds of "freight cars, loaded ana empty, were f lmrned in the Fanhandle yards, ttnd rioters threatened to set fire to 1J the town of Pullman itself. Hcse was V cut, trains overturned, and engines dis- j| abled. Mayor Hopkins called for troops, Pand three regiments from Chicaso and ^-brigades iron Elgin, Ottawa, Bloom- • fe'tngton, Rockford, Streator, Sterling, '<.~|pFreeport, Galena and Dix< n responded. I; The torch was al oappli d at Kensing- |jton and Englewood. The Building ^ IfTrade^ Council, representing 25,OOD i ^hfieaten to join the strike. ? \ i * BREVITIES, • BY a fearful hail storm and cloud iburst north of Hot Springs, S. D., |renty bridges were washed away. Ex-Gov. BOYD, of Nebraska.it is irned, has accepted a $K,000 position jthe secret service. It is stated from lijib-e source that Boyd has teefl wfcg trips to Mexico as specialagen^ President Cleveland. It is un ler- that the appointment was recom- mended bv Se'c 'et^ry ^icrton. Sl.^CE Sunday eighty cases of chol- ^ era, twenty of whicli were fatal, have been reparted at St. Petersburg. Four . 'V mdfb passengers on beard the steamer J Jo be In. which arrived at Stockholm r" recently from St. Petersburg, are suf fering from cholera. Nineteen pas sengers on the steamer Schwache have •M; bean detained at quarantine tihjdfcr BUS- f ' picion. 11 ' 'COa- ' -k* *' r \ Y* GE9BGE. CK^FT'S dead body %w, H*" "X found hidden in a little bunch of corn in the northern part cf Tahlequab, I. T., with his skull crushed and his neck broken. His watch and $230 ia cash vretfe found on the body. Bhowfng that he was murdered for other pur poses than robbery. .Footprints lead- : ing to acd froia where the corpse was found show that two persons were par ties to the crime, and that after Craft was murdered Tiis body had been car* ried into the corn-fieui for conceal ment. Craft was a barber, about 45 : years old, and came, several yeari ago. from St. Louis, where his rela tives reside. Ex-Gov. EDWIN B. WINAIJS died > suddenly at Hamburg, Mtch., Wednes day night. EHLE ALLEN, who a fewr weeks ago killed John H. Clapp in a row over a i woman, and who was indicted for man- • laughter in the firat degree, commit-' :ed-suicide at Lake Minnetohka. Winn/ JOSEPJH H'JUSCHER, of Chicago, has under arrest on suspicion of mur der at Santos, Brazil, since March. Ha has been examined three times, but no evidence yam. presented against ***• - WESTERNf. Gus WEISBRODT, defaulting ex-City Treasurer of Middletown, Ohio; plead ed guilty to embezzling over $25,000 public money. AT South McAlester, I. T., Louis Bruner, colored, received fifty lashes on the bare back. Bruner got himself mixed up with a cow bell that rang too loud, And the officers found it in his possesaton when it should have been on the neck of <Jfie of his liteigh- bor's cows. THE Standard Oil'Coriapfany^ well on the Andrew Wafe farfli, four miles south of Portland. Ind., has drilled in as a gusher, and is goefd for 8,000,000 feet of gas daily. An effort ^vas made to drill it deeper, but the ftqw .was so strong that the tooJ% eQuld not be kept in the hole. , AT Encn Valley,. O^io, William Wil son, a member of a camping party, in descending from a tree was instantly killed by the accidental discharge of his gun." An hour loiter Howard Sulli van, another member of the party, in trying to board a oassing lreight train with a gun in his hand was thrown under the wheels, sustaining injuries which resulted in his death. WILLIAM BAINES, grlassworker, and William^ Rosser. an ironworker, by agreement engaged in a bloody bare knuckle tight in a' larg« field west of Muncie, Ind. A large crowd of men anil boys watched the bittfc-until the particiiafits were exhausted. They are rivals for the saihe girf, and'thief' fight wa»i tw settle who should take precfedence in her favor. Bath claim the victory and a footi race will now decide the question. . A SUIT-Of great importance has been' transferred frdm Chicago to the Dis trict Court of Hennepin County, Minn. The widow and heirs in law of Jacob Neidlinger are tnte plaintiffs and claim that Isaac Bernheimer sold- worth of property and never turned over to thai* ^festSte. which they as plaintiffs, represent, any of the pro ceeds. They also sue to set aside a deed held by Bernheimer from Jacob Neidlinger on "the gronnds that it was obtained by fraud. The property in dispute, a great deal of which is yet unsold, is scattered about in Henne pin. Ramsey, (k>odhue. Chisago, An oka and Washingtou counties. As THE side show of the'IJalL-Circus was being opened to the public at Butlerville, Ind., Ko-Ko-Mongo, the big goriU^iSprang against its page door, pusliecrft open, grabbed a small boy, who was looking on, open-mouthed, and in an instant escaped from the tent with his victim. A big crowd was soon in pursuit with guns, club 4 and dogs. Ko-Ko-Mongo was over taken just at the edge of town, but his pursuers did not dare fire upon him for fear of killing the small boy, whom he clasped affection ately to his bosom. Two big dogs were set upon the gorilla. One he killed with cheerful alacrity: the other made a bee line for town, with his tail be tween his legs. All this time the Bmall boy was lustily screaming for help. Finally one of Ko-Ko-Mongo's keepers succeeded in getting hold of his chain,while another with true cow boy skill landed a lasso over his neck. Soon the big ape was overpowered-and safely lodged in his cage. Aside from a few scratches, the boy was uninjured. SOUTHERN. CHARLES DUSAX, 21, shot and fatal ly wounded Miss Mattie Hull, 18, near Tolesboro, Ky. JOHN F. DEZENDORFF, ex-member of Congress from Norfolk, Va., died at his home, aged tO years. CHANCELLOR EDWARDS decided at Louisville that the Louisville and Nashville Railroad must- n t absorb the Chesapeake, Ohio and Southewest- ern system. T •«r WASHINGTON. A REPORT" en immigration issued by the Bureau of. Statistics, Treasury Department, shows thatl'3ui*ing eleven months of tho fiscal year ended May SI, the total number of immigrants ax*- I riving in the United States was 28MJ20. ! against . 430.210 fo*- >the ' corre-: sponding period tot last year. The greatest decrease was- frohi Po-! era obnnoeticms track tie railroad strike. Monday tho price of fresh meat took a big jump of from two to four cents a pound by the carcass. The supply of fresh meat and tho sup ply of \V estern cattle on the hoof have been gradually diminishing for a week. There was not an abundant supply when the troubles of the railroad com panies began, so that the prices had alreaiy begun to advance when the strike reached the Western trunk lires. It wa? taid Monday there wai a sufficient supply of meat, killed and unkilled, to last until the end of the week. There is extraordinary demand for eggs, the price of which has advanced Shippers and receivers were informed that the order had gone out from the Now York agents of the trunk lines to take no more perishable freight for Western points excepts at shipper's risk. THE railway strike had assumed greater proportions and new phases Monday morning. The Rock Island Road abandoned all trains. Gov ernor Altgeld sent Illinois State troops to Macon and Vermillion Counties, and Federal troops were dispatched to different Colorado points. The Illinois Guards were sent to protect property, and the United States soldiers to release and guard mail trains. Each of the twenty-three roads in Chicago was affected. Illi nois Central engineers, heretore pas sive, refused to work with non-union crews. There was an apparently authen tic rumor that a six-hour cohferen<S9 was held by President Debs and Vice President Howard, of the Railway Union; with P. E. Studebaker, the South Bend millionaire carriage builder, who is prominent in the Pull man Company. Mr. Studebaker is anxious for peace, and, it is said, ad- mi^ that the Pullman strikers have grievances. deserving arbitration and ;adjfistment.__ FOREIGN. A BLOODY battle is reported near the Pass of Undo in Brazil in which the rebels lost 1,010 n:en. PRESIDENT DUPUY has received at Paris a telegram from Mctta Visconti, Italy, laying the authorities, the'in habitants, apd even the family of Santc eirt>res§. jprOfound indignation at cri>c j GENERAL." " I >k 3»Vax ? • h v . rMSDALSflf(honorhave been awarded to the following named-privates who volunteered for the storming |>arty at; the siege of Vicksburg'1 J. G, Ayers, 8th Missouri, Moorhens, Minn.; A. T. Goldib&'g, 127th Illinois, Maynard, Iowa*. B. W. Schn3neck, 116th Illinois, I^Gatur, I'll.; J. S. Cunningham, 8th Missouri, Burlington, Kansas: Fred Rock, 37th Ohio, Tampa, Fla.; H. F. Frizzell, 6th Missouri, Eredericktown, Mo.; William Qampbell, 30th Ohio, Des Moines, Iqwa; J H. Overlurf, 8hd Indiana. Haltjh, Ind.; Joseph Frantz, 83d Indiana, Dundas, Miiin.; H. G. Trogden, 8th Missouri. Chicago; Uriah Brown, 30th Ohio Infantry, Florence, Ohio; Wilson McGonagle, 30th Ohio, Saxonburg, Pa. THE weekly crop bulletin issued by the Government station for Kansas makes the following showing: The rainfall 'ha? not been so well distrib uted a* during the last two weeks, the eastern half generally receiving a large excess, while o\er much of the western half none occurred. Severe hail-storms occurred in many parts of the eastern division, one of them cut ting a swath two miles \fride in Osage County. The wheat is all harvested and the oat harvest is general. Corn has made a remarkable* growth and presents a much better appearance than usual at this time of year. It is generally tasseling out and much of it has begun to silk. Yet outside of the rain district it i* needing rain. Gar dens, pastures and meadows have con tinued to improve, and the week in sures a much better hay crop than an ticipated. Potatoes generally are very good, though the crop has baen great ly diminished in portions of the West by the Colorado beetle. Apples prom ise a good crop and the early varieties are being marketed. • 1 . : R G. DUN & Co.'s Weekly Review of Trade says: The ureal wtrilce of coal miners has ended at most points, but another threatens to interrrupt business more seriously for a time. On tbe whole, other changes during the week have been for the better. Many manufacturing establishments which were stopped by want of fuel have resumed. The depletion of the Treasury reserve has been checked by the voluntary deposits of Bold by New York banks. Exports of gold, have almost ceased. Congress has made much progress toward final disposition of the tariff question. Crop prospects grow belter aa tha.ii.arrest draws nearer. THE clubi of the National and West ern Leagues stand as follows in the championship race: K*flONAl< LSAOtrt. Per W. L. cent. Baltimore..3tl is .670 Boston. .-...41 20 .67 rk. .Is New Yorlc. Pittsbursj..36 Phlladelp'aw Biooklyji. .93 Per W. L. oent. Clev«laud..K> J7 .618 Ctuoiunatl.37 WSi. Louis...27 PaSSED THE SENATE. tJI _ , . • j, ^ MEASURE QETS A MAJORIT* OF FIVE VOTES. • ' : ' Wli-- j . ; ' . ! ?mtor sail CMts tit VMl# 0emo«nk*ic Toto Against It--President and Federal Jodees Must Pay Tax on Thelr Salaries-- . To Tak* Effect August i. . _,tt.. Tote of 39 to 84. " ttiidst of intense' ex&$t§tiielh:i,: after, having been debated for three months and one day, the tariff bill, amended to take effect Aug. 1, 1894, passed the Senate by a vote of 34 to 39 --a strict party vcte, except Mr. Hill, who voted with the Republicans against the measure. The Populists divided their strength, Kyle and Allen voting in favor of the bill and Peffer and Stewart against it. At the very opening of the last day of the groat struggle, says a Wash ington dispatch, Mr. Harris in charge of the bill, announced that it would pass that day, or there would be no Fourth of July fcr the Senate of the United States. Until evening there were no sensational incidents. A hard, but hopeless fight was made by the Republicans under the leadership of Mr. She. man to place wool on the du tiable list. Throu.h the instrument ality of Mr. McLaurin iDem., Miss.) the actfon of the committee of the whole in exempting the salaries of United State j Judges anl the Presi dent of the United S'ate3 frcm the ope ation of the income tax was rp- Aersad in the Senale. A very important piece of legisla tion in the shape of an anti-trust law was placed on the 1 ill a3 a rider with out even so much as a div ision. It was designed, as Mr. \ 00 heei, Cha man of the finance Committee, said, tJ in sure integrity in execution of the law, it being admitted 1 hat any tariff sys tem a.iOrdsd abundant opportunity for the formation of trusts and combina tions. 4 Ti.e gallariei wer i filled to oVerllow- ing, many prominent ladiet and gen- tlem n bBing pre^enti to witne s the tii al dispo. al ot the bill, and the scene wa - tru y a brilliant one. Half a hun dred members of the House were on the floor. It was amid such surround ings that the climax occurred, when Senator Allen, of .Nebraska, denounced the Democratic members of the Fi nance Committee and cnarged them with bad faith in laking advantage of his ignorance of parliamentary proce dure to iaduce him to offer the amend ment, thus releasing their Democratic colleagues under the caucus agreement from voting for thc-m. He intimated that he had been tricked. Mr. Vest, on bahalf of 4he commit tee. hotly denied the charges, and up braided Mr. Allen. Mr. Manders6n, Mr. Allen's Republican colleague frojqa Nebraska, seemed to enjoy tne plight of his asscciate, and warned him ;te beware before he again allied himself with the Democrats. Mt\ Jones of Arkansas also challenged the truth Ot Allen's statements, and scored him for attempting to place the committee In a false light. For an hou». after the excit?ment caused' by this ex change of criminations' occurred, tho proceedings wet e extremely dull. HUl Denounces Income Tax. . As the hands of the clock drew to ward the hour of 10 the final speeches began. Mr. Allen, somewhat to the wonderment of the galleries aftar his outbreak early in the evening, told the Senate why he had concludtd to vote for the bill. The most dramatic inci dent of the n'ght occurred when he took his seat and Mr. Hill arose and in ringing and fervid tones entered an eloquent protect against the "income tax," and arraigned his party associates for being false to their party pledge* and their country. The Republicans drew around him as he spoke, the galleries leaned over as he dealt his sledge-hammer blows. When in conclusion he declared theatrically that he would not support' the bill a wave of applause, quickly checked by the Vice President, swept over the gallery. A final word of pretest fol lowed from Aldrich, Chandler and Manderson. The bill Was placed tipon its passage and the roll was called. Upon the announcement of the vote. 34 to 39, the galleries cheered, and amid a scene of rejoicing the Senate adjourned over the Fourth of July. Vote on the Final Passage. The detailed vote on the final passage of the bill is as follows: NEWSPAPER AOVTCRTISINA .435 .333 Mi .371 21 .SMI Chicago....90 23 .S82lWashln<rt'iil8 24 .5T9Lonl8Ville.l6 WESTERN LEAGUE. Pet.' . L. cent.1 w. L. cent. 14 .745;Grd RapldsVQ 3 > .420 23 .S89llndlan'p'll82i is 25 .6691 Detroit 21 34 28 M6r:Mllwa'kefl..U M 'W. Sioux City.41 Toledo 83 land, tho number being * enly | Kantotfc'y.au l,37l>, against 13.0-M) during the fiistl eleven months of 18!)3. The number! from.Italy decreased from to-.0,- 338. ^ During the ten months endtd April 30, l>v..4, the whole number of im migrants barred from entering the United States was 1', 102, of -whom 1,420 weie contract laborers and (55J paupers. Of tho whole ni mber barre I l?JHy, wera men, ejghty-thiee woman and fceventy children. A WA6H1NNTON dispatch aays that the general impre sion about the Seri ate seetns to be that the anti-option bill, which passed the House not lbng < \V"HE 1? H° • • • • ago, will not receive any consideration] OOBN"NO a wfte at this-sessidn of Congress in thatxjats-TKo. a Whtte^!^.' body. Senator Washburn, of Miri- nesota, " who made the' fight and secured the passage 'of3' the l>ill in the Senate "in the Hast Con gress, savs ho realizes th^t tho long time w.hfch ha^ elapsed btefjore any of the ajjpropriatiqn * ,bi Is have been Per- .417 .401 .980 TEAS. Gorman. Gray. Harris. Hnnton. Irby. Jar vis. Jones (Arte.). KTI.E. Undsay. McLaurin. Martin. Mills. Morgan. Murphy. Palmer. Pasco. Ransom. Roach. Smith. Tarple. Vest. Vilas. Voorhecs. Walsh. Mitchell (Wis.). White-39. NATS. Kansbrough, Hawley. ffir" Jpneg (Ncv.). Jjodae. McMillan. . Marnier son:- . _ Mitchell (Qre.). BTKWAET. Patton. . Teller. Wi PughS Piatt. Power, Proctor. Quay. tiherman, Shonp. Squire. PBFFEB. aahburn--M. MARKET REPOF.TS. CHICAGO. CATTLK--Common to Prime 13 no & 6 21 Hoos--Shipping Grades.. 4 0) (<< 6 25 SHEEP--Pair to Choice t.. 2 I'M.*® 4 00 WHEAT--No. 2 Red ft..... »7»4@ 68ft COKN--No. 2 i..... « ^ 42 OATS--No. 2 1?:... #7 @ 3S RYE--No. 2 4H & 4SH 1}UTTEH--Choice CreameTy 17 & 17!^ I EGGS--Fresh Wft POTATOES--New per brl 1 75 <3 » 2i I INDIANAPOLIS. ' OATTLE'-fihippintf HOGS--Choice Light tBken' trp will me th&,t all the time 0f tbe Senate f+dm riow uhtil adjourn ment will.be occupied with npproprla- ! ? 21*51^• tions, and that it wiil be almost,im- os- i RXE-NO?'2 _ _ . BT. LOUIS. CATTIJE HOGS J..... • '• • *' Wheat--Nok 1 OOEN--No: ... i.. . .. ; < » A T B -- N O . a I * " ' 3 » - N O k - J a i i i ' . ' J -:D CINCIUNATIJ" CATTLE., Bo'i«.. . SHKEP...., WHBAT~NO. 2 Red 9 CO « AO 3 00 a 44 47 3 00 U M) 41 41 & 4 £0 4) 6 25 0 S 60 t* 65V4 « 44H & 47)4 J® 4 75.^.. Sft - (57 '< (3.(41^.: 42; -d 61;^ 04. r Wire "jU W. SIlEZ^DOir, - OF MARENGO, ILL. ;the slK}v« Pence in the Eastiialf ?' County. All correspondence •wered. Write to him, I; sible to get sufficient tima to consider the auAi-optien,- bill, although if atjy opportunity should preeeit itself he will be ready to call it up. The bill will prpbably taKe the sami course in the Senate as before, and will be first con sidered by the Judiciary Committee and af erward 1 y the Committee on Agriculture beforo being reported to the Ftnate. INDUSTRIAL. strike situation Thurida^' morn- % tlig had not materially changed. 'Federal troops, w(ere in charge at Blyg •gQteland. Traifts 'were still running j*eguiarl.y, and freight traffic in ^iCago was completely blocked. The hopeful feature was that the [te had 'not spread perceptibly [IEKE will be a fresh meat fa: iw York, unless some of the, r lines dUentasfle their ^ ^ DETROIT. CATTLE......',. < . Hoaa 4, Sheep ,, j ^ AVHEAT-^.S'O. 1 White....-."I..*.". Cobn--No, 2 Vdlow..^..., OATS--No. 2 Mixed TOLEDO. WHEAT--No. 2Ked COBN--No. 2 Yellow OATS--No. 2 White RYE--No. 2. BUFFALO. WHEAT--No. 1 White No. Red COBN--No. 2 Yellow OATS--No. 2 White MILWAUKEE. WHEAT--No. 2 Spring CORK--No. 3 OATB--NO. 2 White....;....... BABIiET--NO. 2 RYE--No. l Pons--Meaa MEW YORK. ... -No. 2 Red 2 . . . . . . . . . . a ao '4 00 2 00 M 46 40 62 2 60 4 00 68 44 49 67 44 46 61 tt 47 47 60 & 4 60 & 6 23 •S s 75 C<4 67 . & 45 >4 <3 42/2 <0 64 a 4 60 (<* 5 25 @ 3 76 19 [tu 49 C8 44* 46^ 62 02H 67 4W 60H ALLEN. Bate. Berry. Blackbnrn. Blanohard. Caffery. Call. Cookrell. Coke. Daniel. Faulkner. George. Gibson. Aldrich. Allison. Carey. Vnandler. Culletm. J)avi*. Itixon. J)<j]ph. Diimis. Frve. I Gallinaer. Hale. The pairs were a? follows: The first named would have voted for the bill, the others against it: Brice with \Y<>lcott; Butler with Cameron; Camden with Pettigrew; Gordon with Wil son; Pugh with Hoar; McPherson with Mor rill. Mr. Harris moved that a conference committee of "seven Senators on the disagreeing votes of the two houses be appointed, and. although Mr. Allison {protested against this action, maintainor that a? yet there was no disagree ment, the motion preva:led and the Vice President appointed the follow ing committee: Messrs. Voorhees,- Harris, Vest, Jones (Ark.),. Sherman, Allispn and Aldrich. j Sparks from the Wires. - HENRI ROCHEFOHT says Casirr ir- Perier's Presidency means civil war. ' MR. GLADSTONE will not again stand for election to the Houso of Commons. THE University of Michigan con ferred degrees on 68J at its commence ment." PRESIDENT CLEVELAND has signed the bill making Labor Pay a nation A1 holiday. WILLIAM DAVIS GALLAGHER, poet and journalist, died at Louisville, *vy., aged 8ti. MORMONS have secured land and money to establish a college at La- mo a i, Iowa. AT New York, Michael Gessner, a tailor, shot and killed Annie Sauter and himself. THE si le of the steamer Puritan, of the Fail Biver Line, was 1 ipped open in CHAPMAN GOHDON- ln the South as "the confederacy," died at i,he Morse telegraph have been sent by an FADL ht from S Iteelbla Aixaanla Wljkh tb« Mriua World Should Heed. Barely in a public address are thefr?. spoken such ' 'words of softer- nessiDd truth" as are contained in a paper read by Editor O. J. Sturgis, ot the Uniontown (JPenn.) Daily Ts'ews Standard, upon the occasion of a recent local gathering and from which copious extracts are given be? low. Mr. Stu:gis went to the heart of the sublect of the gelations exist ing between newspapers and the pub lic, taking an exalted and dignify ing view of the newspaper publish ing business--one that is full of food for thought, whether the reader have to do with the business office or "up stairs." He said in part: "It seems-ifo be a common impres sion that the newspaper is a sort of public institution, upon which every body has a'claim, some right to a say in its management, or to a kick if its policy does not suit him. For that reason, a newspaper is constant ly subjected to demands that are un reasonable and unjust. If a man goes into the mercantile business, you do not expect to .control his policy or shape his views simply be cause you buy his commoditiea You takejhis goods, he takes your money; that ends tbe transaction.. The newspaper also does a legitimate merchandizing business. It deals in news and advertising space. Those are its commodities. It pays for news what it costs to collect, print, and publish it, including the inter est on invested capital. It sells news for the price of the paper; and, considering the labor involved, the money expended and the capital in vested in its production, there is ^nothingso cheap as the American newspaper, nothing that gives so much for so little. Few people have any adequate idea of what it costs to run a newspaper in an ordinary coun try town. The failure to appreciate this, and to grasp the business rela tion which the editor's enterprise sustains to other enterprises, ex plains the large number of news paper failu es that are recorded and the vast amount of money annually sunk in the business. "What, then, Is tbe business status of the newspaper? It is a private enterprise. Its proprietor-- whether individual, firm, or com pany--publishes it for profit, to make a living out of it, just as an individ ual or a corporation goes into tbe manufacturing or banging business. The motive here is no lower, the calling no less honorable, than is his who enters any other vocation of a semi-public character. The same ob ligation of moral and business integ rity rests upon the press as upon other p;ofess!ons and businesses, and the fact that an occasional newspaper prostitutes its columns to unworthy ends no mo e condemns journalism as af profession or calling, than the legal or medical profession is made unwortihy of public confidence be cause of isolated cases of unprofes sional or dishonorable conduct by a member. A newspaper gets no special credit for maintaining a high moral tone, but it gets plenty of cen sure M anything creeps into its col umns to lower that tone. It is ex pected to be virtuous, as a matter of course. "It is the conception of the news paper as a legitimate private busi ness enterprise that has made great results possible. The editor gathers the news of the field, and sells it to his subscribers When the subscriber gets that, he has what he paid for, and there his claim stops. Tbe pa per is not obliged to print the com munication of Old Subscriber,' 'Con stant Reader,' 'Taxpayer,' or 'Pro Bono Publico,' nor even to give any reason for it. If the subscriber imagines be has special rights and therefore special grievances, he can stop his paper, and there Is no harm done. The conscientious newspaper endeavors to have its news correct and trustworthy, and to verify its information, in order not to mis lead or injure tbe innceut. Consid ering the difficulty, often, of finding reliable sources of information, and of sifting the false from the true, the wonder is, not that so. many errors cree^lfi, but that so many are kept out. In the large cities, this mutual re lation between the ptess and the public is better understood than in the country, and hence the relative growth of the city paper has far out stripped that of its rural contempor ary. The city paper does business on business principles, and is therefore able to be prosperous, t.nd to live in i.lS own home on a front street. When you enter its office, the ^ first thing visible is the business manager, with his clerks at tbe cash counted Tbe ed itor and his assistants are in a remote back room, or on the third floor. Tbe day of the b. slness manage - in the country newspaper office Is also coming, and when it does come, the local newspaper will occupy the place it long since earned--that of an inde pendent and profitable business en terprise. The countrv newspaper has been crippled because the editor was a good-natured, obliging individ ual, who allowed himself to be handicapped by yielding to the mis taken public notion that it was a I art of his business to boost along everybody's else business, free of charge. " "When that time comes, the man who wants a notice printed in the newspaper for his personal benefit, or to advance his private interest, will pay for it, just as he pays the merchant for his goods. "The subscriber, who pays for one copy of the paper regularly, will not expect a few extra copies free occa sionally, when something nice has been published abdut him, any more than he would expect his milkman, from whom he buys a quart of milk each morning, to send him a half- gallon of cream, free of charge, every time he entertains his friends at a select dinner. "The teachcr who conducts a pros perous normal school will not expect free printer's ink to work up his school, while he pockets the tuition straight. , "In short the reign of newspaper dead-head ism Will be over, because dead-headism will come to be es teemed as unprofessional and as un businesslike to all concerned, as it , has long been inprotitable to the ed- 8EVEN MAMMOTH STRUCTURES SWEPT AWAY. * Admlnlatratlon'a Golden Dome md f*m ona Fall In Ashea--Manufactures BnMiHug Baaed to the Ground--Large Portion ol tbe Exposition Grounds Devastated. A Sen of Flume. '"A'-'fww ago the Court of Honorof the fair "White City" stood in unrt^iff&d' splendor upon the shore of Lake Mich igan. and thousands reveled in its beauty. Tb.ur.day night it passed away in fiery splendor, and thousands mourned its fall. Blackened and twisted arches ot iron, with their gird ers sagging under the weight of torn sheets of roofing, rear their skeleton forms where tho buildings - Of the beautiful city once stood. Beneath them lie huge mot: nets of smol dering ruins frosted with a waste of snowy ashes. Tangles of wire the misshapen hulks of fallen statuary and long rows of blistered columns mark the outlines of avenues and drives. The parapats, the bridges, and the wide sweep of ttaircasing which flanked the buildings have been licked Aip by the fire to the water's edge. Every other atrack of the ele ments, fire, wind, cr water, was as nothing bstore this all-devouring "tor nado of flame which swspt from end, to end and laid low every important building left standing by the wrecker. The World's Fair buildings are in ruins. Beginning with the huge weather- beaten remains of the terminal station at the south of the grounds, the fire sped rapidly northward, and in the course of its progress completely de stroyed the following structures: Terminal Building. Administration Building : Mines and Mining." ' Electricity. Manufactures. Machinery. Agricu ture. Stock Pavilion. x Philadelphia Cafe. Cne man lost his life In the flames and another received burns from which he may die. Besides these a number of persons received minor injuries. Snve i by a Cltwiife of Wind.- Tho firemen made no attempt to save the buildings alter they were once ablaze, but devoted every effort to prevent the fire from spreading. The transportation and government build ings were saved only by tho most per sistent efforts of the* firemen. At one time it looked as if all the buildings at the north end of the errcunds would be swept away, but a change of the wind from the southwest to the northwest prevented the flames frcm advancing. , A dispatch from Chicago says that a few minutes after (» o'clock Park Po liceman John Reynolds saw two spirals of blue smoke curlincr lazily upward from a window in the southwestern corner of the Terminal Building. Hastening over to the spot he burst into the building through a broken door. A stilling gust of smoke rolled out. Penetrating t) the center of the building he taw a point of flame shoot upward from under a stair-case in tho corner. Fanned by tho bresze from the open doer the whole end of the structure was a mass of £ame in less than a moment. Reynolds ran'rap idly across to machinery hall and turned in an alarm. When he returned the lire was playing hide-and-eeek in the ornamental cornices. It had not yet felt its power. By some strange fatality the crew cf the World's Fair station was a mile away extinguishing a little blaze at the corner of 71st street and Stony island avenue. It was a full half hour after the fi'-st alarm sounded befor^ the first fteb!e stream broke into "spray at the caves of the tall building. ' It was too late. The fire had found its power. The walls of the terminal station which still re mained standing gaped wide cracks through which glowed the volcano of fire within. The flames lighted up whitely the faces of the thousands of spectators who came streaming- out of the park from every street. Some of them shouted "Fira," "Fire." at the top of their voices, but ttey could not be heard above the roar of the fiamoa. The dry building with its lath and staff roof and wooden girders burned like tinder. A billowy cloud of sraoke arote slowly until the upper end of the cloud resembled a huge ba'loon, the top of which was tirst crimsoned with the rays of the setting 6un. Suddenly the northern wall of the Building fell with a crash, and there was an illumina tion of firerworks greater th'an any that ever graced a Bummer evening during- the F'air. Nothing could stay the flames, and the • swept on until all the buildings in tnetr fiery path were in ruins. *" THE HIGHWAYS OF COMMERCE. MEASURES CONSIDERED AND ACTED UPON. A* th» Nkthn'a Capital--WlMt Is Done by the Senate and Htmse--Otd XtaA* ten DispoMd Of and New Onei Conalll erecL. The Senate and Hoose. . v ___* Tbe tariff bill is finally oat of mlttee, and ' was given to ihe Senate FVMhfy. But the Income tax is yet a hone of nontontlon. ' A vote on the tariff will fee needed soon. With the exception of short time the day in tbe House was conrp Burner! l>y a filibuster over the contested election caw of Watson aeainst Blnek of the Tenih Genr*!* dUirlct. Tb» filibuster was led by Representative Pence, who contested every inch of ground, even after tbe aid of tbe committee on ratar had been invoked. The tangle was final ly straightened oqt and the resolution qf the committee on elections declaring Mr. Black elected was agreed to. A few bills of minor interest were passed early in the day and some resolutions tn pay the sftlarie* 11 nd funeral expenses oif deceased employes of the House were agreed to. At 4;3) o'clock tho House took a recess until S p. in. The eveuinz session was devoted to private pension bills. Numerous aniendmeuis to 'the tariff schedules were agreed to in the Senate on Monday. Tho Senate also passed a bill authorizing tho construction of a bridge across tho Mississippi Itiver at Lexington. Mo.; also a House joint resolution calling upon the Secretary »f War for reports rj|» latlng to the improvement, of iho Minne sota River. The H >use held a brief seiu. sion. A resolution vas passed directing the Commissioner of Labor to investigate the question of the work an l waies of women and children Adjourned until Thursday. ' v The event of Interest In the Honi| Thursday was a cablegram of congratula tion from the Brazilian Chamber 6f Deputies to the House of Rapresentatlves on the one hundred and eighteenth ' anni versary of American independence and the reception of the tnriff bill. This latter event excited Democratic applause, and the bill was laid upou the Speaker's table. A joint resolution to authorize the Secretary of the Navy to continue the em ployment of mechanics and laborers in iiavy yards who have been discharged oja Account of the failure of Congress to pass • the necessary appropriation bills was Sassed after some tart remarks from fessrs.. Cannon and Reed. The bill to sub ject to State taxation national bank notes and United States Treasury notes con sumed the entire afternoon, and no coii- cluBfou had been reached when the House adjourned at 5:15 o'clock. , 4: The Senate held a short session Friday and adjourned at 1:35 p. tn. until Monday, without having transacted any business of importance. The bill for the State tax a- * tiou al greenbacks occupied the attention of the House all day, and it was passed by a large majority. 1 iie only point of interest In the clay's prdceedjftffs was Ibe, taking of the tariff bill ironi/the speaker's ! table and its reference t^_,^he Committee on Ways and Means, but this was unat tended by any excitement or remarks. Several unimportant bills were passed. The House took a recess until 8 o'clock, the evening sessiop being devnte^i^j^l-. vale pension bills v ... American Some Interentiuff Figures on Railway Systems. There are more miles of railway track in the United States than in all the other countries of the world com bined. These are the figures: United/ States, 172,000 miles; hurooe, Asia, Africa, South. Central and British America and Australia, 167,000 miles. The numlror of locomot'ves in use on American railways i« 85,000; passen ger cars, . *5,000; mail and baggage cars, 8.000: and freight and coal cars, 1,20!), 003. The railways of the United States carry in a year (03,00;),00 ) passengers, and transport 8(0,0JO,00j tons of freight. The disparity between the two branches of transportation is much greater than it is in Europe, for the foreign railways carry twice as many passengers as do the railways of the United States, whereas the earn ings from freight or "goods" trains, as they are called abroad, just about bal ance. In this country the earnings from freight business are about three times greater than from passenger l)usin6ss« The railways of the United States earn from all sources of revenue about *1.100,000,000 in a year. About, .two- thirds of this is disbursed in expenses, and the balance, $35 ),0D0,0,)0. repre sents the net profit. Two-thirds of this, however, go s to pay interest on bonds of guaranteed stock, leaving about $100,000,000, or one-twelfth of the whole amount earned, fo - the pay ment of dividends and for neces&ary improvements. Telegraphic Clicks. A HOT-AIR tornado was exparienced at Cjhlllicothe, Mo. ARKANSAS Democrats declared'for free silver at a ratio of 16 to 1. . r AN investigation was ordered o£ tho action of the Michigan jury in Attor ney General Ellis' case. ASSETS of the Chamberlain Inv ment Company, face value $2,500, sold at Denver for $10,100. ILLINOIS has <>,400,030 acres in an increase of 3 per cent., a^ | dition u exceptionally good. Sympathy. " *- None of in a.e sufficiently sympa thetic in our innermost natures. We exhaust our stock upon visible suffer ing, and have little left for deeper and sadder evils. We need to realize tnat where we cannot sympathii e our r ght to criticise is questionable. No one is more to be pitied than the wrong-doer, and no one mere truly needs the hand of sympathy extended to him. If we cannot do this, if we»cannot feel with in ourselves that even we might have done as badly, or even worse, under like circumstances, we are in no posir tion to do him good. How oftea do we hear, when another errs, "There is no excuse for him. He knew perfectly well what should have been done, but ha failed to do it," showing that there is still held the ex pectation that performance will follow Knowledge, even though it has thou- ^ sands of times been proved a fallacy. We must deal with people as they are, not as we would like to find them. There are a few who do their duty at once upon perceiving it. no matter how disagreeable it may be, but most 0f u 1 temporize if possible, or perhaps absolutely shirk many a thing which we know should be done at once. Therefore, though our line of faith* ' lessness to duty may not be his, let us keep a warm spot in our sympathies for the wrong-doer Some day we may need his forbeaiance it some other di rection. , A Wonderful Bridge of Agate'. "During a trip through Arizona a short time ago," remarked a traveler recently, "1 came across a most remark able natural bridge spanning a chasm about' fifty feet wide. The bridge is formed by an immense tree ot agati/ed wood. The tree had fallen many years before and become imbedded in the silt of some great inland sea or wat3r overflow. The silt became in time sandstone and the wood gradually pass ed through the various stages ot min- » era ization until it is now agate. Fully fifty feet of the tree rest on one side of the ravine and can be traced, but how far the other end is buried in the sandstone cannot be ascertained with out blasting away the reek. The trunk varies in size from three to four feet in diameter. Whe:e the bark has been torn away all the characteiistic colors of agate are plainly seen, and under a njict oscope the brilliancy of the color ings is clearly brought out in all it» beauty." -- . He Was Equal to the Occasion. "Thomas, you have disobeyed old grandmother." ; » "No, I didn t, ma." " Yes, you did. Have yow hot been £ in swimming?" •, "Yes, ma." ."Didn't I hear her go in swimming?" "Oh, she didn't tell us that: she only . come cut and said: 'Boys, I wouldn t go in swimming,' and I shouldn't think she wculd, an old rheumatic woman like her: but she didn't say anything about our goin' in swimmin'." .. This «»it Thwfc * ENGLISH education dates from A!*;; fred the Great, "who ordered that Ihe son of every freeman who could afford- it should be taught reading and writ ing. AT the age of 81, ex-United States- Senator W. E. Willey continues aa active career as Clerk of the County Court of Monongalia County, West Virginia. TitR Merchants' National Bank, of Middletown, Ohio, a depository of the? great tobacco section of the Miami Valley, has for one of its tellers Misa IjOuis-a Smith. CAPT. LKVI T. SCHOFIELD. the build er who designed for Cleveland, Ohio* the soldiers and sailors" monument, has received a letter from Gov. McKinley asking him to make room for a statue . of KutherforJ B. Hayes on the monu ment. At pi esent the statues include- Grant, Sherman, Sheridan, Stanton, Garfield, and t 'hase. THE millets constitute a more im- aa either rice more exten- ,bout eighty- grain area forty-one per rty-nine per ices, in all portant crop or wheat, an per te mbay in the in the mm.