Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, February 25, 1887, Page 1

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e MORNING, FEBRUARY 25, 1897. NUMBER 252 members do so and so bribery exists, [ and, who have mortages even won tieir lr to the people! Let there be one stak 1t originally. "There must be some reason for ¢ .\lr,ITu- ling—No, you are mistaken. You | chattels. In \'lmnm like the esunty I;-w- kl‘\lk,\lnlh ore “'-I‘wmiilr:\i.\n. Is th this A large number of them, b ravel faster than my language. resent we need two or thre erks to keep r. Smyth asked Mr. Caldwell: *‘Is the | o like hiwself, ‘terminate their officlal The Corporate Orowd Manacle a Majority of | “yir. Colty—All 1" desite 15 courteous lan- | track of the chattel mort<a For twelve | rate ‘which is fixed by his bill any higher | The House Refuses to Pass the Dependent | lives on the 4th of March, and a large num- | Over Ono Hundred Thousand Dollars Worth {slatare, guage here years, sinee the grasshopper year, we haye \ the rate now in operation, and if it is it B ot the Vo ber, unlike himself, wore now » the Legislatare Mr. Sterling—1 have made no personal in- | had seed time and harvest and our crops ¥y do you say Its establishment would Pension Bill Over the Veto. about the white house “en 1ing the prognant Of Property Destroyed, _— sinuations nzainst any senats ider- | have grown lusurianily, Wit is the cor aninjustieer” © A - hinges of the knee that thrift may follow o | ATION BLOCKED | standthe rules and have fon to | dition of the people? Are they getting bet- | Mr Caldwell—I don't know anythir fawn'ng.” (Lond cheers and_laughter on RAILROADREGUL transcend them or injur of | ter off ot arethey worse oft? There must be | aboutit. 1 do know that you don't know | NYMEROUS VOTES CHANGED. | v fifitican sidey 1 deny. the rent, e | SEVERAL PEOPLE BADLY HURT.| §0Y onombere But iy 18 8 subject } a legitimate cause o this. Tt Is largely traco- ¥ morg than I do, an n{m..{n know auy. — continued, of the gentleman from Ohio (War- ) 2 aly B am chiefly interested in t is of greater | able to the cost of transportation within o No man not a railroad man can tell Y < o o _ ner), and the gentlem from Viscons r > Beventeen Senators Vote Solldly FOr | jiierest to the people than any other. 1 | stata of Nebraska, Wo are tod about it. “" | The Result Greeted With Chicers From | RS o speak ;:fxlfwnn‘. \!hll\(‘m‘) ofthis | The Report That Ten Men Were Monopoly Measures—A Better yranta railway law passed that will do goed, | tarif in Nebraska, not in_ Tilinois or | MG Caldwell's” amendment. was lost~15 the Democratic Side and Groans country 1 tell vou that while these gentle (Buried in the Ruins Proves False | ' «Mange hut object to & measure that I believe to be | souti, except to draw comparisons, 0 48, e men did oecupy yrable places in the Grand 5 A g " s 8howing in the House--Mang dictated wholly by the corporations of this | *hia gentlemen toll 13 that we are The honse adjourned without final action and Hisses From the Army and were everywliere received, yot bl LS A ling Omaha's Charter. state. A S caution us to make no mistake, | on the section, Republicans, they are Ioaked inon to-day, when they' rise mont—State News. is amendiment was lost—10 to 12, s this caution come from? From ™ iu their places and denounce their okl com 4 Mr. Lininger, made another - the people or from the lobby? From th Mutiiating the.Charter. rades, as vagabonds and scamps and scam_ of Senate Proceedings. definitely postjione the whole 1 well fed aw O [rom the masees? They say: | LANCOLN, Feb. %4.—[Bpecial Telezram to lumanity, as Benedict Arnold was. (Re A Destructive Blas Livcory, Neb, Feb, 24,—[Speeial to the | wis lost=19 to 1 ‘Be careful or you will do something that | the Bee.]—The house judiciary committee WastiiNaToN, Feb, ¢ § newed clieers and lanse on the republican NenRASKA Crry, Neb, Feb, & Speeial N 1 " pm- Thie report of the committe of t \ o peol We a ve 0 ceting S IS ¥ Bee.]—The temperature of one or two mem: T 10 the people. @ | held a very briel meeting late last evening side.) There wa time when Benedict | g} 3 d oDhio report of the committe of ! 0 P B{ venrenniatives | iresertod. ¢ 2F i i RS edict | Tolozram to the Bk, |—=The most destructive bers of thed senate rose to a higher | fconmending the passage of the atives of the ‘whole | and carried out the progiamme dictated by | o0 bl oo e arnold rodo slong tho line and wien he , H0) b O ons as we s tl o scene to-day. Nearly every memb met with the acclaim of the brave soldiery [ fire that ever occurred in Nebraska City i pitchthis morning in debate than | The following s the voto: ¥ the cor ns as well as the we- | 4,0 1qilvoad attorneys and contractors lobby. 3 = . By llory ¢ chanie' and the farmer. But where is the | 1! : present ahen the blind chaplain was | everywhere, Yet there was another period | been raging here nearly all day to-day, and ever before, Mr. Colby bristled up at| Yeas - Honeste Brown, Burnha faruier to-day?. 18 e here to shoot. statisties | They cut the charter as It passed the | ¢y ®En 8 DIRG . COF ker's | 1 bis lite when he teld an interview with an | has destroyed the best business blocks in the Mr. Sterling’s general insinuation that some- 11, Colvy Conger, Holmes, Weartwel into the ears of repres ? Where are | senate all to pieces, The committee b i s bl A ha | American on English_soil, he notdaring to | o 0 o'clock ¢ morning i . i s ent, Lindsay, Linn, Majors, 'MeNamar | the corporations? They are here trying to | should Ave N Siie 2% desk and inyoked divine blessing upon the | tome on American soil, He asked what nis | O At in the norning the 1ire thing was wrong with the ralifoad erowd, | Noors Robbins, Schiinke, Shiervin, Suell; | dotrace trom whiat will be honest legislation, | o id, have ' met at N iberations, No sooner had his voice died | old comrades. those who had worn the uni- | VA8 discovered by some printers, who were and lie experienced aburning desire to knock | Vandomark—10, ; il Al e B LT LT Ll did not meat il 9:30and_ remained In $es- | o0y tian kit of members assembod in e continentals i the dark days of | £0ing home from their night's work, in the somebody down. What reason he had for | Nays—Calkins, Casper, Duras, Fuller, Hig- | of Nebraska? Do we not want tiiem to crow | $ion less than an hour. It was a star cham- | (o riong parts of the hatl and discussed the ution, thouzht of him, W hat would | front part of the store of Robert Hawke, the thinking that Mr. Sterling was attempting to | gins of Cass,” Higgins of Coltax, Lininger, | and prosper? We have a t censation of the house, the president's veto | dhey do with im if they should meet him? | largest mercantile establishment in the city. A0 | ; ] 3 common interest, | ber session, the object being to dodge the ad- u \ 4 single him out asn member who had been | ¢ We stand nere 1o ask justice for the people of | v f the charter as 1t the senate, | o¢ yjo dependent soldiers' pension bill, | fe that was wounded at Satatoga ind buve Jt | 1he fire had already gained considerable % " Ibach, Wright—13 Nebraska who have been clamoring, vea, | The agreement entered in cen : the unduly tampered with has not at this writing | " kilis oft all railroad legislation this | these many years, They ask us If wa know | oc dsreement entered into between: the | ipyq jeagers of both sides established their the honors of war, and the rest of your | headway and was bursting from the building been made apparent. Ie has, however, on | ses<ion. i cnongh to ix a maxinum rate. We know | Omaha citizens committee and the Donglas | yoqyouarters in the rear of the hall and sent s they would hang on a gibbet.” [Ap- | when it was discovered. The printers, after one other occasion at least displayeda sensa | The spectal committe reported tavorably on | enough to Know that we have been and are | delegation was repndiated and everytuing | g S e o bring in | Paise on the republican side. | rushing through the cloud of smoke that tiveness on th nt, and deciared that he | the bouse bill to establish a soldiers’ home at | being robbed. I can see the corporation | pertaining to taxation of raitroads stricken | g gt ol SR 8 FECE Reed | ¢ Nn Matson of Indiana closea the debate. | filjed the building, suc ed in awakening was ncting as spokesman for every senator | Urand Island. An attempt was made to re- | fangs fastening _on our entire land. [ out. The two hundred dollar tax exemption | o, LI¢ fbsentees. Gig, burly om He believed it to be his duty as a legislator to | g 0 oid HEER SIS acting as sy i fer the report to the committee on wilitary | Their representatives g0 into the JietL sl looked over the republican side with marked | ask the hotse to pass this Dl over the presi. | the clerk ot the store, whe siept upstairs, aud whow motives had been ruthlessly impugned. | affairs, Bit It was not successtul, ATer the | eatens, inty the leslolative halls everywhere, | C1Ause was stricken out. - The clause author- | ogiia verte G HIN L it the | dent's veto, He would be glad if lie tould | enabled him to escape. They then turned Jis solicitude for the safekeeping of the | heated discussion on the subject, a fecess tll King to control the legislature, the juo | 12ing the city to' go ten miles | Coyifinihe was confident of presenting the | Support the president’s veto, but his con- | inan alarm which brought out the entire feelings and consciences of others has | 2 v'clock was take < diciary and the executive. 1say now is the | outside the limits to condemn Property | opiire republican vote in opposition to it. | jeghce and hisheart would not permit. -~ He | force of the fire department. Tiie fire at this placed him in the role of a hero. His call __ AFTE 0N, SESSION, time for us to fight these fanes off, - Why put | for purposes of waterworks, sewers and |y Ho S b TRARE . v had been asked whether the \vrrsnlvm had | time had gained such headway that there for specific charges in writing will doubtless Tho senate met at 2 o'clock, By consent, | it off two years: The people have rights the | Parks was entirely stricken out. The thirty | Morrison rearranged his glasses nervously | ever signed a petition asking that a pension [ (A8 F8C KERRC S I e Lt e AR L Iby introduced a bill drawn by Judee | corporations should respect. We respect | square mile limit Was reduced to twenty-five. | and Randall was busy with the peculiar | be granted to all soldiers of tue late war. He | WAs 1o chance of saving any of the stock, HISTcss tS aCioL J kb LAt providing that cities of the second | them vote them bonds. The general | The committee refused to meet again to- | stripe of democrats who follow him blindly | had in his hand a petition drawn up in 1854 | and the men set to work to save the buildin assertions are in line with those of Mr, Ster- | cls y pave their streets and vote bonds | government is liberal to them. Why, itisex- | nizht at the request of the Douglas delega- | ynder all circumstances. Chairman Matson | Which was too long to read now. It They made slow progress, however, and at 8 ling, for the same in the wanner of citie claimed, look at what the railfonds have done | tion, giving asa reason that they wanted to F * h numerously signed and, in substance, asked | g'elock the building fell ina mass of runs. When the motion to tecommitd the report | frst clasa for the people! Let us ask what have the | attend the Patti concert i Omalia. They [ 8nd his —invalid pension —committee | thata pension of at least SS°a month be | Tuimediately tpon the fall of Hawke's bunld: £ ihb hoial & 3 WIS Feeomsnasd Bills on second and third reading were | people done for the railways? ‘They have re- | preferred to kil the charter and leave it. | flitted here and there trying to gather in | granted to all honorably discharged soldiers. | jng jire broke out in the Masonic and Odd l'wll e special uv[lmlx;xlu:", w ubl{lul"l""[l; n':'l wl;\lwi'-‘n-d. % UL & RV v ceived more donations than are suflicient to | They cast aside the clains of Omaha, to | stray votes to sustain their report. Altogethier | It contained this endorsement: **I am surs b he passage of the house bill locating the Mr. Conger’s bill fixing a penalty for fraud- Fellows” hall, the three-story brick soldiers’ home at Grand Island, was being | ulently wearing G. A, R. badees was passed. | We do not desire to'be niggardly or unfair. | absolutely necessary, and endanger its build ll the railways in the state to-day. | Whose welfare the new = eharier” s | he erowded galleries looked down upon a | Hatthe subject of this petition Is warthy of | biock ~ that * has been - considered i i i Mr. Tzschuck’s bill providing identitica: | 1 ; N utely Decessary, and endancer US| remarkable scene, The president's friends | bf cobpetes and me foimt Justios Seryion | the = best in the ‘eity, The fire: discussed, quiten little feeling was exhibited, | . Mr i s bill providing identifica- | But what we want is just I'he farmers | passage by taking a pleasure trip. They were busily engaged in looking after the in- | d ong i AT L onld B¢ | men, nothing daunted, went to work Mr. Kent made the motion, and stated tnat | 9D Of school bonds wsspassed. : nd the people are not eranks, nor enthus- | Nay consider it Friday and report it back ¥ ced i king af L done to the parties in whose interests this | i ai effort 1o save this block, At $:30 o'clock in asking that the matter: be. reterred o | o Mr Snell'sbillto tax sleeping and dininz | fasts, nor wild. - They are inteiligent. There | Tuesday. It is likely o be Thursday of next | terests of the administration. Mr. Cle move Is made. Grover Cleveland.” As MF. | tho water gave ont in two. of the. elsterns. A8 GO T AL Of military affairs, he did | oS used and operated in this state was s ignorance in the state of Nebraska per [ Week béfore the bill teaches the senate again, | land nas not hesitated to say lately that he | Matson concluded nearly eyery republican | Joaving the iremen with but limited means to it because he thought that the proper com- R Jnan In any otlier siatgcxcept one, | nextto tlielastday of the session. was greatly interested in having his veto sus- | a8 on his tect, and as Mr. Matson finished fight Uhe flames. When this state of alaits 16 A Rayh s i ckley’s solution 01 ow what they want. For ten years - ained by congre: 18 SEViADR cading the endorsement aloud sts heeame known Mayor Larsh teleg: ';"1'\':(;'.7’(';1;:&: Nlmh(:::l \ll:ll:{\v\l.hr He' was in |i{ne ..,,},‘“,,\,,‘ .‘.“.q;.h.[..\-.,.., foror against | we have said in our stump speeches that we Good For Sixty Days. “I\“‘“' "(-‘ “‘"*';“‘ ":“I" ‘\*]Il‘”‘ll\l‘l“"L de- {‘!wm)m ~Same up trom thia republican sido o Lincoln for aid and ::.r’.ll\xmlxla‘r»pT\"“x'fhxlu:‘u' AVOIN At oA o | @ constitutional convention at the next gen- | would regulate railroad tariffs, They tell us LixcoLy, Neb. eb. 24, P ] Pl s e SUDEIREl ALY B0D) DL A/ g . Lincoln department had sent a torce of fire- ,";‘,{(,;,,*‘;f,‘fll‘,;".j,f",'(,,\..,l,{","gfi,;‘.,‘" S erabelectionwas passed. Uhat if this amendment becomes & part of the | geau o the. Brr —The following additional | Dearly exhausted legitimate means to bring | The auestion was then put; Will the house, | yien 1o the rescue, W hile the. firemen wete as a club to intimidate wembel I believe | wulos in Qu‘prox‘ne “'“tl:l‘fl( :‘[ll:j"n(_s‘“!:‘rf::!fi l‘x‘l‘lh it x‘:llll.l llill'lf:""!i']::"eIi“;."n rge and ((In‘lu_- counties have been recounted and gains | about the desired result. Upon being called [ GBAA FECPLEHERtton. BOss T bith the Prests | working on the third story ot the Masonic that this 18 part of the tacties of certain gen- | hotog | et the ratiroads SUIL Earther, 1t teaehes | found in each: Phetns 84, Colfax 43, Frank- | to order Mr. Bragg, of Wisconsin, moved that | Ginding, and it was decided in Yhe negative | bl e etz walls which hadbeen weakened tlemen who are interested in the defeat of | “Mr. Colby's bill to provide publication of | tiie peopre that they will say to them: “Keep | lin 179, Sar rlan 104, Thayer 35 | the senate amendments to the malitary aead- | —vens, 135: nays, 125, not the constitutional | {1 ten of the irewen to the roind i e Tt (e prpose F ittt [ names of soldiers and marines who served in | youc hands off of s Wesee that now they | Piereo 60 50, York 3. Disen 15, | €my appropsiation bill be concurred in. two-thivds in the neaative. wiss of Fuims and completely buried them, Jiembers and forcing them to take positions | V4L WATs was passed. 1 orelock | M8, seeking to make the interstute bill | Sunders 5. total 035 Thisgives Li#2 gain | The resolution was adopted contirming the fl“{'!:‘_\\‘::}"“_ln;\1\\“‘:}’-3""' m:""'f‘-!'?”(\}"i‘\;'x“! Several of the men were injured fatally and contrary to their convictions, 1 iope the | tonorron momime oo ned untit 10 ofcloc :""{;':';-m';: T e, where do theso | In seventeen counties ‘At orelbelc Uis | rizht of Steele in the Inafuna contested elee- | fofiowing Tramed members Al demoerats, | Al ofthem seriously. | The scene that, fol- otion will be voted down.” Oriow: i R iy Tkl T Sints, COMe | evening twentv-three counties resulted in a | tion case to a sea zed their vote e ineasuro’ Adams | lowed bezgars description, lundreds: the T T ea TIoTnriin atl thib btate: SR _NOTES. ! from? Do they not et theit life here? Are | total gain for the smendment of .45 votes, | D case fo seat. 2 - changed their votes on the measure: Adams | porrified spectators began tearing away the S R e baby i bifs say i e senate to-day, we then to say 1o these creations of ours. | or enbush to carry it The session 1s sood | MF: Blount calied up the report of the com- | of New Vork, Bacon, Hoyle, Buries, Cobd, | purming “ruins to, - rescno the - buried "the g pma y h ie BEE is in receipt of C. L. Hall's “Bio- | ‘We are powerless to control yous do with | for sixty days, ) P i mittee of the whole on the senate amend- | Curtin, Dawson, Dougherty, Eden, Ermen- it {;‘L"llxmhul:lell\,':};::::;"{(E:'le\{‘ih\,;'lll‘i\nlmn‘(u:‘x‘:‘u:: eraphical "‘""‘mll ..‘. the Twentieth li'iml‘\- us a8 you will” Let us raise our arms and BIXEIRYRS i f S0 ments to the postoflice appropriation bill. ““ll'v J I‘~|N"')rl."‘-$ ‘&ilb;jfl‘!\-]l'l-lll\._ Hateh, | tottered and threatened to fail Ll : Y Stee is a very o able pro- | strike tor ourselves. The eorpora s are e g The firs e amendments (rela- | Scott, Sey: s v, Sowden, Spr 3 e reseuing pa Zardbis 10 punish any meinber, He gave every sena- Tt TR e IRl Ol SLLIXR OOl rcly SETHeRo0t forsLima fure A DRAMATIO READING. B irciea || SiRiinecker Auton SO MIASONHE N Bl kMWard ]| o thie ressuing pRrlyt b yANRro USHLIE for credit for actin wpon firin convictions as | seriol i all respects, 1t contains informa | saying to imdividual membors on this flo S tiveto ofiice rent In Washington) and Huit- | Stahinecker, Stone, of Missouri, Viele carnest work all ot the ireuien wate rescuod, AR R on which can be secured ih no oter way o-day: “Be still lie down, or wewill makeit | e g the dlaing of letter boxes in public | of Indiana, and A, J. Warner of Ohio, | At noon it was thought that the tire had been Mr. Majors wanted the matter considered | TPty and s meeting with « larze sa hot for you.” Let us have the courage ot our | ivery ara places, buildings and railroad stations, was | _Upon the s he ~(u5\|vml, but it broke out at3 o'clovk aga n with reference to the best interests of the 0. Lewis, second assistant secre*ary of | convietions. The constitution of the state in Hamlet by Henry Irving. coneurred in. The fourth amendment (a [ was applause from the democratic side and | and the'entire bus ness portion of the town B e e S enate, is sick abed. itself gives the lezislature power to establish LCopuright 1557 by James Gordon Bennett.] JToposition abpropriating S0.00 to enable | hisses and - groans from the advocates o the | was throatened. The Lison fire ‘Gepuits '-}!u'.'.-'.’.'r'.';p.}-'.""flfu;?‘?:,'fu."“fii"('f:':iffi-r"n‘i‘u' ol Lixcotx, lm.. 5.’«,_ RIS Swectal m»; ture bas this power the people ousht to uale ‘"f*:}_m»(-“ [‘.\1“2?11\1:‘2 ?.:‘ I.xI:\h‘l{r;‘x:l and | Central and South America), a non-coneur- ot elna FAMB Lo Db eoIlS courately - estiated Hywke carried a >mmittee o i gram to the Ber.]—The cloven hoof showed | itau issue at has been the issue? Has | its diamonds, with ashions, and | renee was recommended. adjourned. of zoods valued at $75,000 and - msured ey 16 have tha | 1tself this morning agaln.; It was brought | 1Lnotapni ared inevery eampain? Yousay: | brains, Invaded this evening tho noisy pres- | A motion by Sir, Burrows that the house T at €30,000, His buiidiuz, valued at $5,000 8 biil considered by thie committee on military | out by the following resolution, whicli was | 1% IS Filway tion.’ Yet when tiie | ents of Temple Bar to' hear Ilenry Irving | concur in the senate amendment was lost. v Senate. | fully insured. “The tirst Tloor of the Mason e AL e | OMered by Mr. Eilis: B S e R FEODBCRIEHEIE LU T T Ui Rip o AR OGO G TS Sl [ W SR QL et VO D B LT D I 6 Mr. Casper said ho saw o reason why the | Resolved, That the judiciary committee of | with a green eve nnd say & maxinum theatre of the Birkbeck literary fnstitute in | "\ir“\fattson of Indiana called up the de- | Suiie & FEGIRIon Sechiin It 1o be the | JiCC M uveoed 150,000, on wiiich thare 15 the nncglnl committee and placed \‘:mxbn £ | the house be and is héreby instructed to re- | will build up Omaha and devastate Lincoln: | Chancery lane. The reading was given for | pendent pension bill, with the veto message | I : i s B S S out $65,000 insuranee. military committee, who Were o better able. | POrt back forthwith senate file 84 with recom- | that it will make Omaha and unmake the rest | the benelit ot the treasury of the institute, | Of the president thercon, [ amendment should be submitted to the people LATER PARTICULARS. Physteatiy, " nentay or e ne any | mendations, and that the chief clerk of the | of thestate, * ‘There is no_ground for this. | and hus thus presented it with $8,500, th | , 1t Was azreed that ebate should run until | for the election of senators dircetly from | The five causht from n stove in Hawke's e e 1Y | house serve'at once a copy of this resolution | What are weasking? We are taking the B, | T ! - 7Lt 4 o'clock, when tue previous question should | voters, and asked that it be laid over until to- | store. The report that several men were other way, to consider the matter. Diaichair f sald o 5 e M. schedul $d 1n the o 4 ors’ | Proceedsof the sale of seats, which were held | po {ered alid. q E i 5 Tiie" real reason Was that the | upon the chairman of said committee. & M. schiedule filed in the commissioners ERRTEH Hocs, ARG o hibiti e_considered as invalid. morrow, when he will make some remarks | buried in the ruins seems to be unfounded, gentleman from Jeffersoh. (Snel) had a | Mr. Slater offered an amendment that the | oflice. ~We do not desire to break the grada- | at hizh vrices. Although the prohibition | “Mr. Conger of lowa thought that the re- | THFOH though wany had miracalous, escapes. ‘The scheme for & normal sehool at Fairbury, and | resolution should not be concurred in. tion they have established, but we desire to | against theatres being open on Ash Wednes- | post of the committee on invalid pensious 3 duce it 20 “The ob b et 10 tl ident’s n he housa substitdfte for the Sshery re- | pro,aas subdued about b oidock awd-she 10 Wwas not yot ready for & trade. 1o con- | * 5r, Andres said that thero was no progress | [EAce It 20, per cent. e objection that | day has een epealed, Mr. Irving's theatro | Wis 3 completo answer to thepresident's hy home coupany and_LAncol id some firemen, while the remaining wall an! Morgan were appointed as senate conferees. || K L i e wa ) or o L con- A : L Bl L g B slice nerbolic eriticisms on the measure. He eoiny| tafiation bitl was disagreed to and a confer- | gnod woeks Amongie in Mm( i cluttz, NG LK, YA L8, SR | et made- vy thecommitee e sesion | el et ot 1 e Rl | s osed ozetir i Wedlumarkel and. | iewi ot thoacion o he Trsphbeti 10l el med NN Edmnds, Frve. ani | ing e el o fobby and drub me I am ready to dispense | Was rapidly approaching an end. The inter- | own table, own classitication. 1t is reduced | the St James. The programmes Satd it was | vetoing the pending imeasure, yet sizning Fr 3 o . WIth {16 sergeantatarms a fow momentsand | ests of the city of Omalia imperatively de- | Ubiformly and on their own basis. It was [ to be a readi It" was not one, noryet | the Mexican pension bill, saying he did i ) « X on that the eut con- ceitati really wi TS I Y ink patriotic people were res resolution declaring Senator Ingalls 3 i j accommodate him. manded «hat the bill should be acted upon ac | foUnd on an examination that the et con: | a recitation. It really wasa personation of | not think ™ patriotic people were ‘read Ira Golden, fireman, injured in the side. Mr. Concer disclaimed any intention of iplated by e first place woul e ) every chagaeler in “Hamlet.” mainly | 0 endorse sich action or commend their | chosen president pro tem of the senate was [ Mr. Bickford, serious internal injuries. Qelaying the DIl that normai-scliool trades | OCC and pasied. 94 have been an injustice to the shorter dis- [ (FEW | CAEECICr B TR BTN | chief ruler for No protest had come | Jaid over until to-morrow. William Lee was caught by failing icht be effected. The statement was not Mr. Randall said the committee on judiciary | tances. Therefore this amendment was udobds o E at against this bill exeept from the southern “Thie house bill to extend the laws of the | timoers, and when found was fastened down gl b were' considering the bill as fast as they | made. e reasonable maximum xate es- | long carcer he had beon catled upon, in fact, | states and from the money centers, Had it | Te Wose DI 10 Bt b s 98 T | so e could not ove. e was sawed out. Mr. Robbins objected to a reference of the | could and it was not fair to take it out of | tablished by the I ure would not neces- | to play every male part, notexeapting Polon- | come to this that Wail street and the solid St LCAnA R UNOTRY His lett side and Teg are badly bruised, while bill to the military committee and was sup- | their hands. be thie rat 5 jus in the tragedy, Inasmuch as New | South were so instrumental in electing the | tory south of the state of Kansas was passed | Lis hand was cut up. orted by a forcible objection from Mr. Mr. Smyth said that committee had met only | MF. Caldwell—Could the commission make | Y0 0coc oo cos o through the Herald, chief executive that they command himto | with amendinents. The total loss canuot fully estimated, Meikiejohn, one hour'sinee last Thursday. In that hour | it less? IR 1 il Y e i Gataatlen Lhd ~akecitionTot approve a weasure that inured to the benelit The house bill {vassed to effect a rear- | but will reach between 100,000 and $125,000, e Fatommlt was 1ost the committee by a tie vote had decided to | Mr. Harlan—Yes sir: If it couldn’t, 1 will | fully know his concey a cution of | of the men who liad fought against bis coun- | o8 oE B RER T8 GO0 & EOME | divided among the firms with insurance as “he "senate. thon 100k up fhe adop- | Not recommend the amendwent which Lad | DOt vote for or suoport’ the bill. By the pro- | Hamlet, T refer merely to other char- | try's flag and to withhoid Lis approval from Titant weneral's department of the army. | 10llows: “Bickiord & Co. had an insurance tion'~ of - the Teport of ‘the commit | been axreed upon by the citizens’ committee | ViSions of the very nest seetion afier the one | aciers, lrving s particular one for the benetit of those whose suferings | Jpy Aty FEACPS COPTAIRC % Votaoly 1o | Of §2000, divided between the Freeport and tea’ of the \whole, which was pending | and the Omaha legilative delezation. we are debating the commissioners are wiven | ;10 (GG e ghost, the K liad saved the nation and made it ereat. Zrant HEht of way throtsh the Indian tert | 78 Omalia company, of which R, A. White & last evening when adjournment was taken. | the —committee “had decided power to fix a reasonable rate at whatever it | 1} Seehes witers the khost the Mr. Sawyer had no apology to oifér for | £t rizht of way throush the Indiah "0 nre 15 stock was valued at R HL A arriad xing | out the 200 emption clause, may deem just. But it the establishment of 18, £r agers. to pass a bill which met with_ the ap- | 10rY to the Chicngo, Kunsas & Nebraska 116 willilosa: considerablo onkas the salary of each secretary of the railway | Was also deeided to cut ~out a maximu rate would render that the lowest | Osrie appeared, e was heard as faras | proval of over thiee-fourths of the peopleof [ Tofb Calendar, =~ o 0 water. e has opened a new stora T o mer oy, Mt THonnd | property. qualltication clause, = 1t ‘was possible rate. what, in God's name, would | was possible to do so, and when it is men- Countr: PRSI tion ot abridge by the Chieagoe S “Panr. | at the corner of Main and Fifth. Robert well this morning offered a resolution raising | dently ~ the 'intention of the ° judi- | be possible without a masimum raie? We | {;oned that he was in evening dress without [ Mr. Warner of Missouri said that the ques. | ARS8 S ORAEE T PaE CORSTERL TE DI | Hawke had av insirance ot _about” 337,000, it to 82,000, Little discussion followed, clary committee to thus go through the ¢l must rotect the commission. As soon as | (U S0 G ok Td played ~Hame | SO Presented was whethier the house would | MInheanolig, < Gmata Ty eonpany | Wk Diilon, ity had $5,000 with' the Alr, Sterling thought $1,500 sufficient. ter and amend it until it would he unaccepta- | the commission is appointed the railroads | J€TM (s A Bty stand by the brave men of 1561 and 1565, who A v London Globe-Commercial Union, £3,000% Mr. Casper saidif the average farmer in | ble to Omaha ple, with the lope that it | Will surround them with powerful infiuences | let” in the biz wig and biack dress of the | were dependent on their daily labor for'sup- | Pagsed, G0 0 B G tion of Philadelphia, $3,000, and Nebraska was compelled 10 work 500 days at | would fail to pass by reason of there being | Whieh Will be concentrated unon their heads. | period) he personated each characters with | port, or by the president, who refused to sign |, The senate bill to authorlze the copstruc- National, 100, 1lochstele a net prolit of less than one hundred dollars, | 1o one to say one word in Its favor. If the corporations can control le:islatures, | 1] abandon and exhibited a thorough play | the lu_H which would take old soldiers out of sippi river at Grand To T S e nts, had $3,000 each in the B O e e satars eworars: | “Mr. Russell repudiated the allegation that | session atter session, what can they not do aims bouses, The country should blush to | fpbr river at tirand Tower, 11, was t “Etna and Home, ind 56,000 in the former considering that the bill as ame thie committee intended to mutilate the char- [ With three or dive mel They employ the | . B e and grave di-ger, oven | S6¢ even one of its defenders an Inmate of a | fTom thecalendar Amendinonts wore; on the building, ' The Masons and OddFel- most stupendous joke yet perpetrated by the | ter, but he asserted that the committee, as far [ most brilliant men for the purpose of is- A o gre H county poor house. LR And e other seans 00 feot ands the bill | 1ows had some £,000 each on their buildings sonnte as he was eoncerned, intended to ive ihe bill | £uiding and misleading the commissioners | to the swinging of the spade and shovel, | A(r o"llara of North Carolina favored tho | At the other spans 500 fect andy the Cixing i ahanterlindian | neiranCADE Mr. Heartwell’s amendment prevailed. the consideration it merited. ‘The Omaha | by subtle arzuments, and defeating the will | seemed regarded by all as a delightful exhibi- | bill and eriticised the ruling of the pension | Pagsed. | A e TSRS T A T tdiely encampment, $100, aud - othier e e eyl ving | delegation came here and wanted to ram the | of the peopie. "€ thi force of argument will | gio 0 R ot 05 I8 oftiee denying aid to colored women who had | e senate then proceeded to consideration | 70, 1 GELY TGS aunous 5 a raduated table of distance charge bill - down the throats of the members | control the commissioners ouceit will ever | |08 O VRIS RIE SCIER O LN | lost their sons in the war, The colored men | of the senate bill to extitpate eontagions | ©8U TG i firemen camie near being e W ata ST H oy of the house. They wanted to apply the [ atterwards control them. queen and Ophella were spatinels glven and | did not go into the war, as the president in- | lenro-pneumonin, foot and mouth dijeases | v iuied” while tizhting the fire in the M omtion ME Ster A b o 2 law v8S triia e ha Mr. Tingle—1f you believe that, why have | no attempt was made to_imitate the voice of | dicated, for dollars and cents. When the | and rinderpest among eattle and to facilitate | /5 HIE Kkl adoption Mr, Sterling said: *"This amend- | gag law, Itwas true thatthe committee had v 3 } ; L I J 3 ¢ building, The buildings burned a Thent SCols o ha & rate on the prinsipal com- | held but one meeting sinee st Thursday,but | 8 commission? - Why not attach your amend- | o woman, In the closing scene with | Fiftv-fourth and_Fitty-pith Massachusetts | the exportation of eattle avd products of liye sked will all be replaced by larger and modities of this state, cereals, lumber, coal | that was due to the fact that it was hpos- [ ment to the law and let the commission go Ophelia he several times seemed to | Fegiments, composed exclusively of colored | 8 \‘x * Edmund: o noti f end- | Petter ones in the sprin e bt AV 1o 0 et et v et m | sible" 80 get the committee together, ho | . Mr. Harlan—1 believe there are some good | PRI (0 SEHEEE IS JEEREC, D | on, went out, and the paymaster offered to | Mr Edmunds gave notice of an amen: 1ng D mOd tise 180t ALl we en ettt | Work which was done at the meeting of the | things abouta commission. Merchants and | recall — the it pay tem less than other reciments because [ ment which ho would offeras a substitute Two Men Instantly Killed, o e b e CLted | i ittee st niEht was Worth sommetning. | farmers will place complaints before u com- | Terrs's voice. ‘The evening's undertaking | they were black, they spurned the money | for the pill. 1t proposed the approprition | . Fwe Jjen Instantly KALESk With that feature incorporated in it 1 should | Another meeting only was necessary and in | mission from which complaint will emanate | yroved very arduous, and occupied three | andsaid: *No: wearein the cause of lib- | 0f SL0GO.MOL0 be expended under the dire NT, Neb., . 24—(Sp : Uislike £0 see this senato accept that railrond | all prodabilicy the bill would be reported on | 1D the name of the people of the state. when | hours, But Irving's power never weakened, | erts and if you cannot pay us what vou pay | tion of the president th hthe commis: | gram to the B —At half past 5 o'clock Slop without injecting into it some clements | Saturday morning. Wiy should the bili be | they would not institute action on their own | 1o wecor ™ When called out at tie end for the | Other soldiers we will fight for our flag and :,"'.’“.rv‘f'. ?L!'}(ilgl_lllr«' 1o {\yl'!lh-: II:”I‘”"“".I ‘r§ this afternoon a sad aceident oceurred at the of merit, and for the reason that the best in- | taken from the committee? account. ~The gentleman from Lancaster G0 00 S i 1o be country without compensation,” = (Ap- | the several states in preventlng the shrend of | ponl edge of the city, by which a farmer terests of the stato demand that whatever | Mr. Agee followed Mr. Russell in o like | had much to say about cheap secretaries, [ | sixth successive time, he seemed to be thor- | plaser) D ara™ Tha DI o hovniad o | named Jobn Unkel and fanother man, name measures we pass on this subject shall con- | strain. e averred that no one wanted to be | Would like to hiave the gentleman stand up | oughly exhausted. A veteran critic, as the | = Mir. ‘Bayne of Pennsylvania favored the | Pirg in two yeais. I'he bill was amended so | named 1 Ipabier inan: Tain features that will relicve thie people from | unfair to Omaha. All that was desired was | eside flon. O, 2. Mason and ‘a sketch be | qudience dispersed, said: */Ihis is the first | passage of the bill over tne veto. ‘The bill, he 8 ‘eomn)issioners spnolnted by the | unknown, were instantly kilied by an ineom the oppressions which they are now laboring | that the committee should give the bili care- | taken. If there was anythiug good about the | gecasion in the history of the drama, unless | Sa3id. was being opposed by the most hypo- | bresident (without the necessity of confirimna- | jng passenger tram on the Fremont, Elkhorn under, T hope this amendment will carry, 1t | ful and thoughttul consideration. Jaw we have tried to repeal we' would have | pertut B RO O S Yon | enitical methods that had ever been employed | Hop by the senate), - ; & Missourl Valley railway. They were has been said, and 1 am disposed 1o beileve [ Mr. Smyth, responding to Mr. Agee, sald: | some results through Judge Mason. The | ToUAY EEROIES [ormes Sariles 66 T8s O | o defeut or promote legislation. - i he vatlons smendments 10 s biLEINDE | driving home from the city with a team and e * o ikt bl I » first place, the gentiel o1 commission of 1llinois have power to make | Like It,” are to be counted, a ch every Mr. Bragg of Wisconsin_ said that the time 18 pregide D! DA 8 4 - i Mo a e that there Is souio truth in the assertion, Hat | Ll e eatetts that e wants the chastor | & Drima facio rate and they have cut the cor- | character of o play has been presented with | had sirrived when the pension question should | ity which hiad bean pravosed to be kiven to | were run iato while crossing the track, ll= influence, politically, that candidates must | bill passed ina form which would be accept- | Porations down 15 to -0 per cent, The eorpor- | sucly excellence by one person.” receive wore than casual consideration. It [ the commissioner of agriculture, were agreed | ing the team and men, The train stopped swear allegiance to 'them before they can | able to the people of Omaha, If an amend. | ations uave submitted. '1ilinois is referied to was time for members ot the house to getout | 10gc, o e n | and pieked up the bodiesof the men, bringing Recure . homination, o say nothing of an | ment which the gentleman fad offered last | @5 & model, W are not asking the railionds |y pacinie waliroad Investigation, | [0l the roseate bubble in which they lived | , Without further action the senate ad- | 4041 to the passenger depot, wher they lny eloetion to this body, and they come hore, not | evening had been adopied it would haye tied | to come down to the Lllinois rate: but we ar 5 * [ in Washington. prepared tor them by claim | Journed. —_— awaiting the coroner's injuest, Unkel isa man representing the people, but representing the | Omaha hand and foot, reducing our rate from 10 to 20 per cent. Why | New Youk, Feb. 24,—|Speeial Telegram to | azents,’ and look after the interests’ of the = Ee— Aling Juest, A Erven-heatied corporations - which secured | - Mr. ltussell-*Didu't T voto against it2” are we asking this? Because we ean get 1e- | tno By, (—The World's Washington special | real soldier and business interests of the BRUTAL PRIZE FIGHT. fftpfour years ol Hving on Benslis omber 0! g e OW/ oa facts and et the house draw its own co o are comn i 0 S0Ie Paqifaive 3 8 of soldler, 5 5 i a o e s or s eitars ot any paont %2 | Slons, Wedo Dot want 0 choke the charter i, Lwould ather we ad the actual 1, voted agalnst taking the 1 '“;"'-q'-i"”"'"l(]nw advocated th S bill many of thew, siviply be- | Bloody Rounds. A e Tion, but 11 it *houid be demonstrated that | dowp the throat ‘of the house, as has beer, | & M. rate of to-day than to leave it loose as it | vestigation measure up, said: e matter | cause the wen could voté whom thiey expeéctes NEW Yong, Feb, 24,—[Special Te i, Isabout thirty-ive years old, a s [ every feature that may be suzgested to a law | charged. We want the bill brought before | has been. Then there is sometning to Icok | will surely come up to-motrow or Friday.and | to buy by this bill. s to the Bre.)—A desperate skin glove fight :::xf:ifv"th..i,:L o Anme ouigUInILy, '\1""'423! ating these is voted down, | tho liouse and want it disseeted, amended it | 10 W G must Ve d maxiuin fai Mpie | then 1 shall vote for the investigation. There [ | Mv. Hendersan of fowa-zFor ane. 1 bri- | 10 a inish took place last night ina down- | pinecy on the train. fle ran into o farmer Iul‘::::\:.ln‘:lll\\\l'“l.lx\lv‘;' 1‘.{;::.‘&.“;:“][:':‘:l‘ml:.:x‘:»";‘: fenth the -'.‘y'.lyl.a”"‘.:rmliua Whole stater ‘b | far shalt thou go and Do farther’ | are at leasta dozen republican senators who | F e and in the i Jerios.) L town resort between George Klein and | on ltlw crossiug near the saie pmeullwn D pD Ce: 388 OO b Jays ona-tenth the taxes. She has asked no | 'he maximum rate in every instance makes | feel as I do about it, that we have no right to Mr. Bragg—I say that is the sub-stratum | “Jack’ O'Brien, both of Brooklyn, Kiein s [ weeks ago, killing the team, the farmer havs ‘Illl‘ ||l:lllsl““ui‘lr I‘l’l‘ml liliub--r:,;):-'mnr:.:“ ) (ll\)‘nr.-\l;lu‘mx|llxlt~llmu~l:. Nn\\"lln’l‘?}ll;‘; .!..'J-i i ~ll:!"li~’«l‘l ton from ;mhmx nt vlalv 'u:u swullnulnlnu"\{wlnl‘nm of lnni» sensto ."lind“-n-lg;-ru upon wlmrln ,1}\ l!us):llniuun is based, 1f ||u~ul~i twenty-two years old, weighs 105 pounds,and | 108 & miraculous escape. > ear-marks 08 chly-embellished | before this body and requests that she be | 15 a marked reduetion of all classes of freight | any hones roposed es! on, wen whom they call paupers were to cal a0 ard glove s, O'Brie 3 : 3 the parmiaTks of tholo pishlysewheliiahed | bRiore Hie ROGY MNG. TRquoes LAl auODO | Dbitia from cariond lots, only reason that I voted against taking it up | Whon them individuaily for aid thoy would won sovera h B0 Klave contosis O “"; | Capital City Criminals Sentenced. see their persons on the floor of this sen- | way.” be question was upon the amendment of- | thus far is because 1 believed that it was out | say to them: **You good for nothing scoun- }‘“'“"}il 4 lllnul'n ~.‘|\ fl'.'[“f'“n ars ol ‘l» LincoLy, Neb., Feb, 24.—[Special Teles e from day G0 day. W see the efforts that AME. Catdwell aecused Mr. Smyth of incon- fered by Mr. Harlan. The following was the | of its order. drels.yau are a5 competent 10 work as we and hasa goud record. Tl ltst oo rounds | g’ o tlo Liki—In the United States these illustrious gentlemen are makigg to | slstency in askiug that the Omaha charter 5 & e splpieemen. are,” “(Laughter and applause on the repub- | were uneventful, In the third round Klein | 00, 8 afternc e parties ¢ of Corrupt anything® that 1s even lookifg to | bill should be immediately considered when | Yeas—Abrahamson, Aikin, Andres, Hal The Red Oak Wreck, fican side.)” Nr. Bragg declared that' the | led on O'Lirien’s face, cutting him badly, | COhrt thi> pttern “;“,‘.'l‘ ; "”‘i"“l:;“‘.':‘l*“.';f leg!slation, and it is & fact that ean- | the Lincoln charter bill hid been in Lis hands | cock, Bailey, Buird, Hallard, “Bentley, Bick, | Rep Oax, la, Feb. 24.—[Special Tele- | press of the country was opposed to the bill. | (3 ron " countered, but his blows had litle | iidemeanor and felony, iy ety mendment (Con- | as chairman of the comuittees on cities and | Cameron, “Cannon, Cole, Craiv,” Cran am to the Bek. |—Frank McKay, the man | Those gentlemen who sat aloft (pointing to 4 Klel HUNTRS A were arraigned before the judge, some receiys ger's) that I3 now before this senate for adop- | towns since last Thursday and not a meeting [ Dempster, Dickinson, - Diller, K gleston, | £ @ 5 8 BESRr S S0 SE T B | the press gallery) might some time or other | ¢ffect on Kicin, who ralned licavy DIows on | ¢ fines and others imprisonment. ‘The tion, is such a measure as has been suggested | of that committee had been held. Eisley, Ewing, Frantz, Fuchs, Fuller. Ga Jured 10 the rafiohd smasi-up turn this big “pension boom into & wuch | O'Brien’s face, drawing blood every time. | cases were all of minor importance and the, by the corporations of this state. They have | Mr. Smyth retorted that he wasawaiting the | ford,” Gawble, Gilwore, Harrison, Hayd place yesterday morniug, died about n larger boomerang -in some gentleman’s dis- | Rounds tour, five, six and seven were a repe- | sentences light. One man was sentenced in, dletated 1t: they have ordered it; they have | pleasure of Mr. Kaymond, who was the Lan- Jeary, ° Keiper, };r Marshl, 1o leaves » widow but no children, His | trict, (Avplause) = A tition of the third Kicin doing ail the lead- | fh ditrict court o oue year tu the penitepts, commande o upport it, aud it | caster county member of {he cities and towns | thiesg ondughy, Miller, Minnix, y was taken in charge by the Brother- | “\We have fared as wel our district as | ing. and rushing O'Brien all around the ring, | iary for grand larce s shoeh sy thouet there bhbaiag 1o belng | commitien: ~ ton, Nichol, Overton, Veters, Handall, ltus- | hood and will g0 east 10 his hope at Creston, | the gentleman has in his.: exciained Hens | (' irien was vors plicky, and. got Ih e I ubeyed, 1 should devlore the fact that mem- | Mr. Fuller said thatOmaha might eontain | sell, Satchel, Simms, Simanek, Slater,Siyth, | The other two injured are doing well and | derson of lowa, and this allusion to Brage's | erous €ood body blows on his adversary. In Big Betting on Yachts. bers of this body will so far forzet their obli- | one-tenth the population of Nebraska and pay | Sullivan, 'Thornton, Tingle, Tracey, Trues- | will probably both recover. The wreck isall | failure to secure a renomination was greeted | the eighth round Klein rushed his man, bit- | Npw Yomk, Feb, 24.—(Special Telegram Kations to their constituents: will so far for- | oneteuth the taxes, but it was evident the | dall, Turner, Tyson, Underhill’ Veach, | cleared up and trains are running through on | with loud and continued laughter on'the re- | ting Lim on every turn,and hurting O'Brien’s | | 200 g8 PO, =il 0T Ket their obligations which they took when | city contalned more than one-tenth the arro- | W etherald, W g, Wliismare, ‘l‘ll“\lvhnws. the main line. pupliogh elde. o o S aold frontispiece frightfully, “The latters face l:'\‘i;l‘ iy “'I'“"‘l:::,ir"':“ :(‘:_‘“‘:l";:‘ l“‘:‘f:: they occupied thelr seats on this floor under | gance. 1son, Wils ght, Youny, Harlan,--02, e | "M, Bragg, continuing—The great soldier, | was by this time ecovered with blood, both n the comingggreat oc o the solewn sanctity of an u-m.' u,r.;uu.e,'» K Mr. Andres ealled Mr. Fuller a parrot, say- he nays were 21 i The Dillon Jury Disagrees. Palmer of 1llinois, stood by the president; | eyes b’l.,,,g cut. his lips split and he could | between the sehooner yachts Coromet and shoald 8o far stultify their manhood as to re- | ing that he only chattered in imitation of the | Absentées—Agzee, Andrews, Barrett, Ellis, | Drnriy, Feb. 25,—On the resumption this | Governor Cox of Ohio stood by the presi- | yardly sec. The niuth round opened sav- | Dauntless, though us yet chiefly contined to fuse to vote their honest conyictions and re- | gentleman trom Lancaster (Caldwell) and | Heimrod, Horst Knox, McCann, MCGrew, | yorning of the trial of Dillon, O'Brien, Red- | dent: old Dan Sickles, of the- third army | agely, Klein leading and making a chopping A club man said last night that deem their obligations to the people and to | that all he knew about the Omaha charter he | Pemberton, Rief, Sehwab, Watson, Wolen~ [ [0 200 e fertieitoon toction with the | €orps, said that the veto was @ most glorious | block'of O'Brien, who was all but knoeked i RS the state by supporting a measure—-=" had obtained by listening to the latter. weber, . ALY SO the Judge continued his | deed: brave men of all parties siod by the | out. In the tenth round O'Brien gamely there was as much as §500,00 up on the race Mr. Colby—"1 rise to & point of order. | ~ Thepreviousquestion was called forand the | _ Mr. Harlan’s amendment was therefore | (Pah OF cafvmaiin,” (e RS CAEHINEE B8 | president., It was only the little miuds that | cauie up to the scratch unable to- see. *Klein | already, At the New York club liouse the 1 want the words fof the gentlewan from | amenduent by Mr. Slater was carried, 53 to | adopted, “The vote may be taken as a fair | FUtHEARIGEY. e SN, G0 T T 0 | went buzzing about like tusects that opposed | got him un to- the ropes and bammered bim | Dauntless s the favority. - Several bets of Fillmore taken 'down. - I want him | 3. The bill therefore still remains in the | index of the standing of the house on the | g enve HI', (averses Wed CERCY 0 GETent | Bi. unmereitully, O'Brien finally dropped his | two to one on the Dauntless have been made, 1o either make a specific charge or quit | clutehes of the judiciary committee, commission bill, e i heople o e A i iawaully, Lhe | Ar. Henderson of Iowa (contemptuously) | hands, The crowd here made ‘Siicla notse | Great fith aced on- Captain Samu s insinuations. * He has no right to say that | lhe shecial order was called for, and with | +he house then began consideration of the | SLie8ed, ey fiad ueted unlawfulv, A | Yo, stand by the president? and din that everything wasconfusion, The | the old skipper of the Dauntiess, but th any other geutleman Is bought or bribed. 1f | Mr. Peters in the chair discussion on Mr. | substitute offered last week by Mr. Caidwell, | 1utifed 1o consider their verdict after & | Mr. Bragg—No staff commissary ean ever | timekecper yelled tine, but could not be | friends of the Coronet remark that Captain, be” desires to make eharves here that | Harlan's amendment to section 10 of the | by which the railroads are obliged to keep | LGOI AR%nte Trom the court room they re | excite me. I am speaking for what 1 consia=r | heard. ~ Kléin Lawmered away at | Crosby is something of & skipper hiwself, has, & man has been bought or bribed, let him say | railroad bill was continued uatil noon, when | their actual rates posted in every depot, and | furied and Mod thev were unable to | the soldiers interest. ‘Ihe larest Grand | 'Brien, endeavoring to knock hun’out. | been aciossthe Atlantic in the Coronet an s0. lobject or else have his words taken | recess was taken. -~ | Which gives the commission power, upon i ey e ,"f""‘l““ o Army post in my state yesterday voted not to | (' Brien's second here claimed a foul and the | knows what she can do. Another noing down. 1 mean to say this, that if the gentle- THE ALL-IMPORTANT BILL. vestigation of complaint, to fix a reasonable | *5¥¢€ UPOD a verdiet, & ask members of congress 10 gO against the | roferee imine B A A A e | e TaavanIass of the (oo TS A wan says | have taken a bribe 1 simply want | In the afternoon alr. ilarian closed the de- | rate and makes that rate, prima tac e, the one L president, : | favor. The vas palpably unjust, as | nine feet longer than the Dauntless, and thi 10 have the privileze of knocking him~ down | bate on his amendment to the eleventh see- | which must be obser: by all railroads in A "'”", ch Affairs. M. Morrison of Illinois—~I voted for this | Kjein, 1. conld Wear the | 18 important in a race over the long swells of or calling hiw a liar here. 1do not propose | tion, establishing rates, of the railroad bill. | the state when like conditions exist. Mr. Panis, Feb. 24—The senate, by & vote of | pij], "I am satistied that it does not contain | timekeey e<cribable scene | the high seas, to stand it."” He sai This discussion was opened yes- | Caldwell made an exhgustive argument in | 210 10 i, has reinstated in the budzet the | what its friends claim for itaud that it is | followed, everybody e nd it looked as - —— Mr. Sterling—1 am_sorry that the gentle- | terday by the gentleman from Lanecaster and | favor of clothing the commission with uure- | credit for sub-prefeets, tue rejection of whichi | fajyly subject to the objections urged against | jf g riot would ensie ey e e S man feels sensative about iny remarks. he seemed to doubt whether we need regula- | stricted juaicial powers. He objected to the | by the chamber of deputies was the "‘fl'm‘ of | ji in the veto. Besides, the veto is 5o far | a1y withdrew. Kl vl showed a BERLIN, Feb, Shorlt 15 ascortalned thad Mr. Colby—1 am not sensitiveat all. There | tion of the railway tratie in Nebraska. He | horizoutal rule. of reduction. —He would | the overthrow of the DeFreycinct. ministrv. | above the high water mark of ordivary ex- | Sofatel and proved hineoit o waudertuly | o 1N, Feb, 2 are certain rights that wen are obliged to | says it mn)‘bu[mlblu there is some little | have a commission established with power | DThe Panama Canal company has bought [ ecutive independence and of manhood | sirong and scientitic fizhiter Prinee Alexander, the deposed king of Buls vield to. Let the gentlemar make his charge | complaint coming from some localities, but | to make the rate higher, lower, broader | thirty locomotives in Belgium. that I 1eel like sharing and taking my litile — garia, who was yesterday repoited to be d 0 detail. at the most Lie thought there was litile reason | 1n overy particular, Ia his mind there was — - hart of the responsibility. (A pulause on the The Gibbons-Stevons € Tug with gastric teser at 1us tather's house ir—The gentleman will make no | for complaint. Those of -us who come in | no justice in giving a commission the right Ingalls for President. emocratie side.) 7o g < Darwstadt, las smalipox refleetions upon any mei fi'fii of th ad.gun:: wnlla.n‘\bim the pmfhll‘een of ims state will :u &0 -hiwu but m: right to go up. Such a W AsHINGTON, Feb, 24.—The senate caucus ‘All. hl'r“.‘n‘(vl uullm‘mr u;n 1zht the |l ““ T T T v I - g ks Wi gen down by L or cent of the people are ‘erying, [ law would not stand. . — B atad B - dent would have alse 1o acred trus 0 the Ber. | i v ¢ 3 SR R e E Ld‘lrx;:rheliuummk;m take Y W g ;:‘““l olict? l] {(uu'x e Hyg 3 epiying. to Al Caldwell; M:. Harlan of the lq:uhuunlnmulmmdB-l’lflor}]m,nlls {f hie had not called attention to the ambigul- | Gibbous. against Mrs. Pareu Stey ”Bu)lllh Catipih : Mn’ml (lf..gk. (v;v.xlr. §—Becavse we differ 1 do’ not | talk for buncombe or to make a record. What | said: “For the purpase of taxinz the people | 10 bé president of the - senate. There were | iesof the bill and the misconstruction which | terday, gave the plainitf a verdie ranted first-cluss in every respect. C. L, sharge him ‘with bribery. l.gau say uilllhe in geh‘u( of uwd Ivméiucerls the ull}mnd:hnm worth $35.000 .to $ per {w‘fi“'“m V:l)tg‘n»l,dul nknl_qh luln.'lllb got. uxlfihlfie placed nv;m it. A 3 m.fim»fia She is dissatistied with the yerdict ,hnv&;a m \‘1\' Co., u\l\mfimule d retai M1, Sterling—1 stated that I very much de- | and those people on the farws aud iu the vil» | mile, ¥or the purpose of taxation they are | 15 Hoars, and Edmunds and Frye 1 each, r. Hepburn of fowa commented “u the | and will appeal. Jewelers, Masonic block, of features, atitudes, gestures and voice. specelies of the —_——

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