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THE OMAHA DALy BEE EIGHTEENTH YEAR. OMAHA. TUESDAY, MORNING, FEBRUAR-Y 5, 18%0. again awaited the outcome. At last the im- | ing into the engine room. While in the ex- When the wind became so strong _yester Result of the Investigation by a Sen prisoned man was reached and J. Daniels | press office physicians were summoned and | day morning Mr. Whitlook says he went ate Committee. LIVES BLOTTED QUT, | stk atifor msimenta The “oecutors | ivio: Howas i noeeo puenes byt | st i wan ant wotes smcnem o | SENATOR ALLISON ANNOYED, |, ™F mixas swkonioy cases. | KROK(K HAS A LUCKY STAR. was drawn out with a broken leg and arm, | they did all they could for the suffering | down and inspected the building again, and WASHINGTON, Feb, 4.—The reportof the and taken to St. Joseph's hospital young man. His painful groans and screams | thought it perfectly safe. The accident was | Not True That He Once Accepted committes of the sonate on the Texas election From that time forward all hope | were heartrending. a peculiar and unprecedentad one, the two Bix Human Beings Find Budden | "L, Ao, MG, fomil, and Oh, my God, give me something to end | quick consccutive gusts of wind sweeping the Treasuryship. investigation made to-day, goos into the de- and Oruel Death. the search was for the dead. The first body | this torture—kill me, don't let me suffer this | through the broad space botween the two tails of the cases, cte. The first conclusion An Iowa Town Which Survives Prohibition, reached was that of Edward Olson, the pro. vay Were the starthng cries that ema- | wails with a force that might have pros b the committee reaches is that the averment prietor of a clothing store, who Was found | nated from the lips of the suffcrer, When | trated a much stronget stracture AN APPEAL TO THE PEOPLE [ ¢ ] UAWEHRSENGRIURERARY crushed to death, and then another body | he was put into an ambulance to_ be —_— the petitioners as to their situation ushed o death, and then another bo o nt_into ambulance to_ = their home Toxas, and tho occasion of CRUSHED UNDER FALLING BRICK | that for a time could not be recognized. The | be taken to St.Joseph hospital. At 7:30 Thys Banvh oPSLw, Mitchell, UL e DL el hoad was crushed betiveen two falling safes | o'clock he died and was couveyed to the | on4 of the simgular incidents of the casu. | Breckinridge Advised to Resign and L apd death must have been istantancous. morgue, 3, -, " . | Both bodies were removed to the morgue, This completed the list of the six dead men | 81ty was the death of Rudolph Mitchell, an Again Go Before His Constitu The Wind Too Strong for & Weak- | j,.;'thatof the strangor was identifiod a8 | at the morgue, and as thiey lay mangled and | agent for the Equitable Life Insurance so- ency -Progress of the Re- Flewellyon, where Dewees Bolton, who ¥ idolpl chell, he recen ap| Zu 800 de oy sented o 08t ¢ y ety Vhile ing e other people L 3 . ) . ened Wall ERAREE OF e e AIe ity A etanea ||oriceea in deathi tiaypressnted s miosvgHastly | eiety, - WHIS tRyINgto Iu¥HIre otheE. pepis's publican Tarift Bill. headed a raiding party that entered the poll ianagor of the ible Life a spectacle lives, his was ended. Little did he know his ingprecinet in disguise for the purpose of — company, of New York. He had peen ap All the afternoon_and the early part of | ;o "t iC il bl ol andangered while —_— ARKLYSIRE YT ALIGE Bo%, Wwal St wut lerlled parently talking business to Mr. Boyer at | night the strect in front of the undertakiug hasdhids hod bt o B s v %G e destroying the ballot ox, was SHob atld KIICG | sfopa ffortunate Than Its Nelghborss PERHAPS SOMEBODY BLUNDERED | (e time of the aceident, and while pointing | establishment and the alley in the rear, were | he was in Poter Boyer's office, evidently try WasmiNeroy BurrAu Tite Ovana Bre, } Che dend inatis body \vas 161t 61000 1NATONM | “seesieiii 1s & aprightiy 1118 ‘CIty ot WgH in substanco and offect sustained by the evi 1s Quict, and There Is Little dence. It reviowed the case of outrages at romise I tho ture. t ! 518 FounTEENTA STRRRT, 11 night, and toward morning Judge Robin out the behelits of life insurance, had met | thronged with a curious crowd who wanted | ing to induce him to take dut a policy. A oyl . R X B} % s, Drobably 200 e i his death, to geta elimpse of the dead. As 800on a8 The right side of Mr. Mitchell's face was Hankter \”“A lvn\nn;; tvl:‘..‘:‘\h,\ 4| U :.;:,‘ \-‘1|-[i\lx\]l\;“| an “‘1 s \‘[.“'1 |nr|u).H.\\\I\!Ia"{ '1‘4,;":\; |[n‘ry|‘4‘|\m.\‘x‘n‘ .‘| m‘;‘ : : M '» mlr|« (.lqu‘l‘ % et e I"ollowing him, the body of Samuel | the first body was taken to the morgue, | so crushed that it is supposed he was killed Senator Allison is somewhat annoyed B e Hab e ) A, Ad four voars ago. Merchants and sho| A Story of Frightful and DIStress: |y ;yparg “was found. Apparently this | Drexel & Mau| wore compollod to lock the | almost — instantly. Ho was a man of | publications in certain papors which ropre- g0 with him to’ the seene of, the murder, on | koepors claim that business is moro than ing Disastor. man had fbeen choked to " death. | doors in order to keep out the crowd. ‘The | most magnificent physique; tall, ro- | senthim as having been coquetting with ‘h"*mwl"l'l;l‘d“:'l:"m."'_h}‘y-:‘m:‘“\"j:l‘_“m:‘”(‘-"“,‘,:\‘l“ fairly good and is growing botter evory day, How it was o coutd not be explained, but the | inguest will be held this morningat 10 o'clock, | bust and handsome. "His height was | Gonoral Harrison, as having been ot and | Yor, and his observation of tho dead body | but the symptoms of activity are but milaly —_ swollen distizured features, gave every evi- | the jury having been empannelied last night. | six fectand three inches, and he “weighed | co8oEt oo Sapatil b e BAKIARY BHA th its disguise and murderous weapon cost | observable to n stranger within her gate dence of suffocation, whild the rest of the | The jury is composed of Nat Brown, James | upwards of 200 pounds. His age was about | ¢0ld at times, in regard to tho cabinet and | with its disguise and murderous weapon co kB L R AL R BT LR CAUGHT LIKE RATS IN A TRAP. | oy was unharimed Stephengon, John Baumer, Henry Gibson, | forty with having refused to accept the treasury | him his hife, When, afterwards, an attempt | Until within the past cight months no at- The last resovered was Peter Boyer, who orge Guy and A. R, Pentwick, Mr. Mitchell and his wite came to Omaha | portfolio because he could not secure cortain | Was 1o J::'fw\lf.l o I‘[‘“‘l‘“"‘l:'xl‘.‘.‘x“‘ll‘-“"_'l“j"“"‘_";:‘ tempt was made to enforee the prohibitory was found crushed over in a sitting position A — from Minneapolis F\ ebruary 1, and took up [ pledges from tho president-clect and from | gy ,‘mhmé |;|.Ln...."'\..,‘\, ‘,m.} beon slain by the | 18W, but at that time, May 1, Mayor Irwin, Mistory of the Afternoon of Omab neat o his desk formerly stood, and The Injured Survivors. their residence at the Paxton hotel. Ko the |ty povernor of Towa, concerning the sucecas. unprovoked violence of colored men, Jones | who, by the way, 18 not a prohibitionisty dead. He with the others was removed to | Of the sixteon who were crushed and | firsttime did his wife entor the dining room MR i p ¢ senate. All such reports do him o Q4 hung upc i d an edict closing the saloons, and the + 2 of that hostelry without his company last | 80Tship in the senate. All such reports dohim | was arrested and hung upon 1o conecivable [ issued an edict closing the saloons, and they Dark Day-Scencs Alter the the morgue, and while s thizing friends ' v i ¥ mangled by yesterday afternoon's terrible | g Sy ihor. She presumed that business | 8reat injustice. ‘The persons to whom S ena | incentive but to make away with his testi- | havo remained closed over since, Notwithe & went to bear the sad news to the family night Crash — The Dead — settled down and tho workers coased their | catastrophe, ten people escaped death but | jetained him. She waited a long time for | tor Allison has given his confidence have ""‘\'L‘i”“m murder of Jonos and Felder by a | stonding this fact, a good deal of whisky Thoe Losses. .'fl‘ 1 So far 8 .|I< Alnv'r\\"n‘ ll |n\.: ‘("I;:‘j.: are |nn|'|:’urh>.-q jured. v :jlfl.nrl'x‘\' \l, but thinking that he \1'1.m|d ‘\'m been aware from the first that, he hasre- | o 8 0 0% O Tiiom at Brenham, the | beer and other intoxicating beverages are e OF MK MIlOHOLLY IEAVEA 1o 4 INEIGRI0L doHbE ,,.‘(“'_"‘ {‘“;f""".”‘_ll:;"”,“ “_""“t":;‘)"‘“. Pk jate sho went to hor meal with other 1adios | sisted the attempts to make him a cabinet | cominitice Suys that theso murders wero | consumed hero, and it is the easiost mattor TR LT T e GrE e oy ouher | Edward Olson’s clothing store at 1016 tonanco Lt secmed to. oxpross the query, | Minister, and that ho has boen sincere. T | each committed upon a motive and interest | i the world to got whatever you want in Death in Falling Walls, strangers in the building when it coliapsed, | nam, was dangerously hurt. She was amone | (yvve can he be?” am now at liberty to relate a little incident | Of policy, and the purpose that had counte- | y)igjing At tho hotels the porters act as AL ng o o first taken o lebris, Her sido : i s 4 ancod d o e raids on tho The building at the corner of Bleventh and | and thie search will be resumed at daylight | the frst taken oit, of the acbis, (HEv 8109 | Shoruly after Mrs. Mitghell had finished | that occurred about the ist of Decomber. In | paticed and “caused the waids on whe | ¢ LB Coone and on short notice, but at Farnam strects, formerly occupied by Max [ 1S WOrmng - _ ribs. She was removed to the residence of [ Subher und had gone tother apartmonts to | my nows.athoring 1 discovored an attompt | ycrifico of *these worthy und - blame- | good sUMf prices, furnish guests with what Mever, and partially destroyed by a fire a The Scene at Dusk. T e e A twir ! DFGiIr et i o ta | kol TR O CRELELUCHIOaS S bpatads T omT Havar Hampon (| ohoy doatra, - Slootisgatie s ) e¥teratve Y 7 re grucsome s e and Harney streets, where hor sister. Mrs. § yroalc tho sad news, Mrs. Lyman Richard- | Senator Allison i the opinion of the presi- | of their evidence, which would have demon- | jyjustry, but there are but few points in short time ago collapsed yesterday during ]'\ ]‘"'Yr ~""*”'L‘ il ) ‘]”'“ i "“l““)”f Weindem, secured medical aid for hor. Her | G0EF T SR AGWE Whoa thes entered | dont-eloct. A sort of conspiracy to | Strated that the death of Bolton had befalien town Whoro n strangot ot o soconimoduted e 1 ; o . .q | the disaster just before dusk can seavcely be | jnjuries, it is thought, will not result fatally, | $Ph drcompanied ¢ g A 3 5 el ¥ “ e m the act of a preconcerted attack upon a | 10 ML e el u the gale. The eastern wall fell and crushed | ;=2 Per A8 t8 1K Ca o e siAdL be. Mies fimma Oliver, a stenogrupner for | (he doclor statod that ho had soniething to | create a misunderstanding botween him and | bulir box to defent the republican ticket, | The town authorities are very strict and in two adjoining buildings which were oceu- | g colder; the iron cornices, partly loos. | Dunbar & Co., ¥ slightly injured about | T HAFE (O sthi cas wrong. ne | General Harrison, ~and . I told hm | The ovidence before the committee showed [ violators of the law are summarily ¢ = " y P : o ' © head and arms. She was taken to the | piltChell kew somcthing was wrong. The | 150041, He thanked me for the informa- | no attempts by the authoritios of the county | qoalt w b TRV 881y pied by I Olson, clothier; D. C. Dunbar, [ encd from thew fastenings, beat a discord- | the head and £ first thing was: \ a a Y the o @ county | dealt with. In 1857 thoveswere just 551 ar- il ) 9 o agent. The | aut requiem for the doad against the Hotel Bismond, where she rooms. | " ils my husband a1l or hurt?” tion and then said that if these people knew | OF state to bring to telal any of the actors i | yogig for intoxication, as the records in the blis| 1P, Royer, safe agent. The [ autrequiem for the dead azainst the walls 8 Ol o > o o : o 8OVO! boxo S1 o publisher, and ) 5 i | Charles Cisar, forcwan of the engravers S b Aty . ¥ ; : tho soveral raids on ballot” boxes in 1584 or . : papers and. debris of overy description were | deputtmont, . aad his bt 1og apd aom | She jumped to her feet and naturally | how carncst ho was in his desiro not to go | {15 city clerk's offico show. Since May last, swirled about, adding to the general confu- | bruised, but not badly. He was also con- | yranted toknow if he had met with any mis- | nto the cabinet, they would not ‘H‘(“"l‘]‘ hie committee says in_conclusion that this [ when the law was fivst enforced, the number sion of the scene: the half-wrecked walls | veyed to the Hotel Esmond. He and Miss Solmb) ootor, L Faplie i trovble to getup a row between General | case presents, not unfairly, the features that | of arrests for this offense was 206, and thoy EDWARD OLSON, 1016 Farnam street. | Tooned up against 1o dariened hotizon in | OLver were getting along nicely av o late | , Colmby, the daotor, replied that he had | 11, jgon and himself. *Vou may tell thew, | illustrate the pol tical disorders in portions of | ao decreasing with cuch succeeding month, RUDOLPH MITCHELL, Puxton hotel. : grunness; sinoke from adjacent | hourlast wight, 0 L baet. | Bow bad, askked dot to bo kept n agony, und | he said, “if you gota chance, that they are | OUT countrs where the population i digiued | 0 ominent busimess man told me this e (L0/klocc0 BLEch Tt D P H GOV aNa VR WOT KF O LD with_the greatest of diseretion® | unconsciously doing me a favor, for, although | giearders tend. 16 wearen and set back the | morniug that it made no dilference about tho SAMUBE FOMIBARD. 710 Plorco street. | thS Ao ot ropes. stretehed | Dem portraits ot one of the front windows | Kave her the tidings. Tho woman wwis ot | T don't want” anything to happen ' that will | yincera desive of tho couniry al {aro to ob- | presont fair condition of things, that the lnw THOMAS HUSTON, 2220 Chicago. across Farnam and Eleventh st ind the | when the wails caved . Both escaped with [ roctiedy B B0 GO0, WaR Sk i | fmpair the cordial relations that have always | literate alldistinctions. a8 botweon g0~ | had injured Keokuk meatenlably: One ro- WOUNDE 116} BotHeOn S FAF NI N EDOURIAE HBNvaR || BURKY B U FISAY Sadb LD | ODILS 18 | existed between General Harrison and myself, | graphicat or political divisions, and the solv- S ST oTkaah tha 1 L S C. H. Silver, a wood engraver whose home | Festing as casily as could be expected under | [ ghall be very grateful if providence | jng of all problems which affeet the welfare E. A, PuiLieo. ) the idle spoctators at a safe distance is i Sioux City. sustained o erushod shoul- | the circumstances at a late hour last night. or any other power will prevent him frow | of this people, portion of the corn market. this city formerly UL OKeON S I the evehuof e fulliotanrotho Y o F ORI O 8 e e N S ORI RROE Manager Hull, of the hotel, immediately | offering me a scat in the cabinet, It is e e derivea from the adjoining Ilinois countics, Miss Evva Oiver, Hotel Esmond. the walls. Of the buildings that had been | der und a broken fng ¥ 10 .. | telegraphed the management of the company | gomething that a man cannot decline very 3 AW, 1 4 THOMAS HOUSTON. St pIBaE b VIR PO Vor % GO RO HD IR Jon Jackson, & seventeeneyear-old bov, |t N VT s Corking. and | Somothing that a man cannot decline very RESULTED IN A DRAW. to tho littlo town of Hamilton, just across i bar and Edward Olson but little remained | and, Joranke Seaser escaped - with sHERE | glgo o his mother and brother, who five nt [ §r any ‘cirenmatances afiord to uecepty | The Fifteen-lRownd Fight Retween | the river, and another was that roal cstate i SR o e grumbled brick and splintored timbers. | ™ Charley Blake, who lives at Council Bluffs, D s UHEU RO SRRTOLSOT M e Sl ato Allison said o did ot at anytinio Lannon and Godfrey. ;A”"‘;j“ ns were kept down to ridiculously CHARLES BLAKE, throughout the afternoon, but the number of | Sustainea a badly bruised eye. J Tt is said that Mr. Mitchell has $160,000 in- | Fivp General Harrison roason t '~'.’|.“L-\.° that Bostoy, Mass., Ieb. 4.—[Spocial Telogram [ low fliures. x ; D s spectators was still sufliciontly largo to block W, W, Daniols, o driver for the safe com- | i L3 g lto had wocopted 4 placo in tho eabinets nor | 1 gy, g ] —Twenty-iive o forty dollars called on Adam Tagny, the most promi- FRANK TiAv i, the pavements on two sides of the rums. | Pany. was taken from the ruins in the re S R v ¢a8 offered to-night frecly for tickots to see | tent real estato agent in the city, and ha o % INGE vl q i Jolicamni il 3 SN of the building, with a broken shoulder B him repeatedly that he could not, and he | Was offered to-night freely fo Led a otitlook Co oL T BT He s Tyl {th anl Homey. e 1 o e Ull | futernal injurics. He. was unconscious and Other Tragodien. weut to Indianupolis at the request of | the fight between the heavy-weights, Joo | S3id the outlook with reference to proporty Tie B10FY BEDIsANter Ko back e orowds of sheciatoras | was removed to 213 Pierce street. At 7 | The dreadful catastrophe which is above | General Harrison, who asked him to delay | Lannon and George Godfroy, the | Was'auite noticcably better than it was @ Ruincd buildings, shattered homes, man- work of rescuing the wounded and ro. | 0'clock he had regained consciousness, and | recorded is the greatest, in loss of life, which | his final answer until they could talk over | o100 pugilists. The resalt was th vear ago. There is more inquiry for prop- gled bodies, and death in its most eruel form | Covering the bodics of the dead had ended | bis physician belicves that his injuries will | Omaha has ever known. It has, howover, L T i ill:"‘l:"‘l\{"‘]L;.ll'r";“}:l:::f‘ thio: (OFb! club, .whore ' the' iifificon :'rl,l and tho indications for gencral spring /oro left in the track of the windstorm that | {0F them and for tho many civilians that had 3 been almost paralleled by several which pre- [ pot GRS g BTG, M GRY, PRICUIMG | inds for & purse of €300 came off, was so | building are more encouraging than for swept over this city yesterday, and o half a [ the remains of Petor Boyer were unearthod The Buildings and Losses. rendered them such able assistance when STeey ceded it and all of which still Live in the | son to tuke a little more time for refloction, | crowded that to get to the ring the principals ars. There are no large deals in negotin. dozen graves will mark one of Omaha’s dark | from beneath the deb The Mdx Meyer building was constructed | memory of" citizens whose residence here | He did so, ‘but could not change his mind. were passed over the heads of the spectators, tion, but there is nothing fictitious about days. ‘[he place scemod pssess an awful fus- | in 1878, at a_cost of $5,000. 1t was sub dates not more than ten years back. General Harrison understands his reasons | qy o foative of the afMair was John L. Sulll. | the mavket, and what theie is is in g it 4 : h o 4thiof September, 1575, the G und appreciates them fully. RHos ks 8 R lCRTIy 1o “Roal & Furst makiug itself felt. about 11 o'clock in | citation for men, women and chilaren alike, | stantially built and was considered in those | Gt ol Ster whio thon vecnpied thar ADVISING BRECKINRIDGE TO RESIC van in the capacity of referee, Lannon,weigh | & sound and healthy condition. **Real estato andit was not until nearly midnicht that | qays ond of the most imposing and handsome | CrHE 1eGent ‘Paxton. house, was burned. | There is a very loud call upon Congress- | ing 155 pounds,or five heavier than Godfrey, following have been removed from the ruins: KILL sult, he said, was the transter of a large pro- valuations,” ne remarked, “in all the river the morning, the wind inercased until nearly | fha jast sieht seor hid 1eft the fatat o M L ¥ s i) 3 o'elock, when it attained o velocity of forty- | ts. deselation. Boticemen pitroiiod tho v | Dulllings m the city, The Meyer ostablish- | fu ‘il fra four frenion, Joln A, Leo, | man Drockinridge, of ‘Avkunsas, o resign | was supported by Ed MeAvery and | lownshave beon discouragingly low for yoars, olght miles an hour and in one wild gust | cinity throughout the niwht. ment remover froui these rooms 10 Moy Alonzo Randall, Lewis Wilson and William [ his seat in the next congress and ask for a | Syoye Taylor, while Jim Godtrey and Jim but Keokuk is in as flattering a condition in g : g 2 and on the 19th of January the building was | McNamara, were burned to death. A fifth, | new election, on account of Clayton’s assas. | o 1°0 B SRR this regard as any city of her size in th spent its force on the tottering walls of the ST greatly damagod by fire, " At this time Mr. | Honry Lockfeldt, was so injurcd that hé | sination, and many of his friends are advis. | Colville saw ta Godfrey. = L'rank Smith was K ) 1 Uilo ola Max Meyer building, at the corner of cwed at Midnight, Meyer valued the property at £50,000. afterivard died. A ing him 1o do 80, They insist that this is the | timekeeper, The usual luck attended God- | State. ‘Tlic store rooms are pretty generally Eleventh and Farnam strects. For a mo. At midmght, the ruin presented an appear- Where the Boyer safe store and Dunbar On the sixth of Novewber, 1884, four boys | only way m which he can possibly clear him- | frey’s fizhting in Boston. — All througn the | occupied and complaints of dull times are but, ment they sccmed to cower and tremble be. | anee even more ghastly. The shuttered wall, | publishing house stood, formerly existed the [ wale Piown to pieces by the explosion of a | elf from the suspicion of sharing in the re- | northern cities there exists astrong projudice | infrequently heard. Of course we are not fore it, and then as 1f to acknowledge its | the demolished structure beside it and the | 014 Red '“u-u-rl'T‘;mr"!"'l“'-l"f"h-l“}“'f e | powder wagazine ou the ‘river bank near | ults of the ussassination. It is possiblo that | agaiust him on gogount ;" LHELD 2o | growing as rapidly as we probably should, power crashed downwards upon the adjomn- | antiquated shauty which also fell beneath the | Holished some years azo aud repluced by Mr. | Gibson, — ‘Their rewalns — were . scat- | Mr. Breckinridge will concjude to do so. At | result was a draw, when Godfrey really | ool \g o gtondy merease that will tell {u B e et e wina! il Meyer with a two-story brick structur tered to the iwinds. No person ever | leasthe has promised to give the subject | had the best of it, althoug an accident did g bullding, whl " i ,L"“’"" "‘,“;‘ crushing mass of brick and mortar, with ‘'he Olson building was erccted carly in | g{e00 0 "0 M‘ T mflon‘,’m th careful reflection. aid him. The first four rounds were rough | the long run,” paused in 18 2 ith path, whirling the dust n | their tangled masses of beams, rods, rafters | tho year 1565. It was first occupied by P. J. | fscovere 2 . LA B RERGBLIOAN TARIFE BILL. and tumble, honors being cven up to the He does not think that prohibition has hurt s above the hirhost buildings and . | and pillars, were dimly outlined in thie fecble | McNamara as a saloon, and e continued P Tuly 15, 1895, & sandbauk in the south- | At the mseting of the house committeo on | seventh, whon Launon got first blood from | gne place, but has rather tended to nelpmats Fying the groans of those it had entombed to | Mgt of the moon. | he place was deserted. | there through the years of 166-7-8. 1t was | o0 pat of the city entombed four men, who | Way caus to-duy it wus aunounc his opponent’s mouth, Ho budly bat- f o0 yyy just how he failed to state. Tharo 18 2hthosslluhadiontoin belated pedestrians shunnod the side of | then bought out” by Burcney & Brown, | S P e os UL ne nan Mills that the analysis of the tered the left sido of Godfrey's the ears of those who were unable to aid : ; s Thoy POWN, | wore uot rescued before death had come to ysis of tho s o s ome manufacturing here, and treet on which they fronted and, in_the | wholesale liquor dealers. They finally va' [ #Yorr RO FRIEE O8N TRSCLIARE BOMS RO | 10 bstitute to the house tariff bill was-ex. | face. The — darkay, up 1o the | some manufacturing here, and withal the e Who were passing at the time stood | SU breeze from the west and nortn, hurried | eated the building and Vietor Ducros, or *Old | eirreief, hey werg terribly distorted both fon to-morrow, | ninth saved his right lind, using only the | town scems better off than the majority of 0208 Tor a momens. biintied. by the dust and | bY; custing, however, a hurried glante at the | Vie,” as he was universally known, rented 1t | (f B0 St Visage 4 Fah i, who' was left. Ia this round Launon aimed asavage | wowns so far visited. But as to the enforee- ble to realize what had happened. A few | Unhallowed pile in which so many human be- | and fitted up a restaurant, Under the DUcros | oy the injuries. be pushed forward w rapidity as | blow, which, missing its aim, badl, ment of the lay is s0, inasmuch as thero e W esonpes from the bricks | 1gS had found untimely sepuliure, it was famous as a resort for | "yt G55 G0y of Febraary, the great- | possivle. The committee is to gothrough | him.' Godfrey saw this, aud, bringing his | 1* a0,tnad O e B O O e e | “Phe wind whistled through the oponings ivers, “Old Vic" being considered the | o't 0000 0cved o which six lives wore | the eatire form of serious consideration of | Fight in play, had it' all lis own way | 4renoopen saloons. The drug stores, how- B e teo ot i1 | aud loosened sheets of the: shattered metal | best cook in tho city. After Ducros another IO L TR brIB e RaEAT rit e WEIC | e masure the same as if final action | Lannon was badly usod up. At the end of | ever. generally have permits, and everybody B rthat followed. e fire alrm sounded | cornice, nt intervals striking against the ty van the place under the name of the peas L was expected upon it in the | fifteen rounds the crowd wanted tho fight to | in Jowa knows what that means, O tite brisade tarned out but tho orowd | Walls on Farnam street, sounded a knell for ilver Moon.” ; i house. Mr. DMiills said this evening | continue, but Sullivan refused, and declared | ana that there are several rogular e ath T R A Fass staiioe i mpaaea | ieHovictins A. Olson first occupied the building ncidents, that he believed that the bill could be re. | it adraw, the purse of $300 being divided. | g0 0o tor dispensing that which both ehoe et aitorts until a eordon of Dotice farmed | . The ropes stretchied i front and at the | about three years and a half ago, continuing | About 4 o'clock a portion of the wall | oited’to tho house the frst of next month, | Godfrey’s fricnds were indignant. denois for ¢ suanaingithas svlohibothioHeges R HaAth e ana hela tham R back of the fated structures provented the | there till the present. He was partially | then standing fell outwards, but fortunately | Hia anaiysis from the. treasury departument —— and inolriates, thore fs no doubt, for large A haro was an absence of that hum which | Passage of the horse cuvs, and from the line, | burned out two years ago. Iler & Co. owned | without hurting anyone. is to be received some days eurlier than he RIVALS MR. HYDE. quantitics of Pcoria beer are shipped 18 86 atural 1o ail street gatuerings. nad | B ntervals, hung raddy symbols of aanger! | the building, witich was an almost worthless | " D. C. Dunbar, H. B. Lord, Joseph T, Dun- | expocted. When the tarie bill goes back to SRR e in and drank here, but at places not access- P o compared notes in- mlmest whispers s | 10 view of the damage that had been wrought, | story and a half structur : bar and Daniel Dunbar were not in the [ the house, a sharp dcbate is unticipated, | A Murderer Mutilates His Viettm dn | o) \0 0o one The decrease 1n drunk. HAURGEAL ously commoncod theie | ©f the wealth of “lifo which had been Meyer building was insured for | building at the time of the accident. Major MelKinley is at work upon the minority a Horrible Manner. 4 % % ) iEIspon cantlouslycommenced. shels e symbols swung lazily in the 00, all of "which has already been or |~ physicians from all parts of the city were | report on the measure, and he intends to re- | Trixipap, Colo., Feb. 4.—[Speciai Tele- | CIRess I8 not of sufticient magnitude to :,“’"mvmum";‘r l’;,'“ ,,_m‘l‘;‘ m‘“:,“;;h 3 ru'm“‘. breezes us if carcless about directing othier | will soon be paid, because of the fire which | promptly on hand, and rendered every pos- | cite some mteresting dnd unpleasant history Eramito itk Bik. ] At 5 a-clock this morn. | CAFFY With it the convietion of the truth of DUt “without avail, and the crowd agap | MOFtals away after so much misery had al- | destroyed theroof and interior on the night | Fille ssistance to the wounded, showing the offorts of ‘the democrutic | fue the body of Nestor Romer was found in | He truth of“the assertion that the law 1s ressed close upon the worker until “'"\‘a,\ljfj’\;'t' ;l;r;{r\:q‘:v;#’ I T (f),ll.‘lau‘l‘{uury 16. The insurance was placed as Express offices and drug stores in the | Party to break down the present anlaleyliaihe nj_“‘ of the Southern hotel | thoroughly enforced here. 1t is not, asany Bilo police anoe mora for ced them back and | o S840 (e only evidence. of 1ife about | Commorcial Union, London. . £1,000 | Vicinity of the accident wore thrown opon to [ Drotective tariff system and inaugurate fro0 | Jith the back of his head crushed, his foro. | raveling man who visits the city cn bear ran a rope down the center of tho street, be- | S¢It LI ROy e ; Gl . the sufferers, and every possible attention [ trade. He will pay cspecial attention to _the fhod) Toztimon v MiDhoy i pati T Tatimerey 1 yona which no one was allowed to go. :3; ;x‘:l“";“‘l““““‘:“ Vs HaLy ‘ll":)‘;cfic“:“‘::“"yu‘l’t‘fi Exi\{fll&n{'?lm\kf‘i:; . 5999 | paid them, refusal of the dn',mmt'll o abolish the inter- | head broken with a sharp instrument and T m.ifn:’ s ;m"; ::::a Siddenly thers wa Pmur from lemn duty was entrustes e] ch | Spri eld, Muss, sersene s r S i St nal taxes so as to reduce the revenues of the at cf 08t from| @an ear, I a e tasto, | Bidienly there was o muroyp the | over the dreary pla Imperial, London....... 7,500 A dog that had Dbeen buried in the ruins government forthe reason that the demo. 2:;,‘,{:{?,,“;;.‘;“, !f,‘,l,lsl\‘.r{,?\m“;,;' ,‘,',)‘h“:r ,_,hl,,::, is consumed under this regine, so compe- cratic party i8 from principle in favor of rais- | aud a violent disposition, wus arrested | tent anthoritics claim, than was before the ing revenues for the maintenance of the gov- | He had washed cavefully and changed his | law was enforced. reur end of the ruins, and coming from thut . ool . L car end of tho ruins, pmin thut £ Taticashlre/Munchoste, 000 | managed to wriggle out unaided, and covered parontly badly hurt and almost blinded. | From the scene of the appalling horror the | American, Boston......ll. 1+, 80001 Zoctionately o svoryigagiishin Teach, ernment by direct taxation and making trade | clothiag, but on his shocs were found blood 4 & Co.. 3 Slowly he tried to walk through the crowd | half dozen dead bodies were removed one ay | Lnderwriters, N. Y..... 2000 | When Mrs, Henzen was taken out of the | free, thus having nothing like custom duties. | and hate, Under his finger nails thore wis 17, Dougherty & Co., Jiquor dealers and B G A M 0 Peee LERLION : Sun Fire, London...... .. 4,000 | ruins four atout men carried her into Chris | Fa "will. in_ tho courso of his report, prove | Lisaiir, Under his fingor nails there wis | 1, 5o in Hamilton, just across the river, h > was stre atime to Drexel & Maul's morgue. The | ipraders Gl | | e R R will, 0 \ ood and the iusides of his pockets were ) 3 along the botton as driven to his home, 3 b iite 2 L A LCRED oiaicile LiEps - L L, beyond the shadow of a shade of doubt that | bloody. He had the murdered man’s keys, | is one of the most flourishing estublishments first conveyed to that' piace was | British American Assu ¢ an easy chair and made as comfortable as | if“the democrati ety had 3 o Lot i sl ¥ Agun o work went o, and before the f (86 GELAEE 0 BEL BSOS possivlo. “Tho poor womun was so- dazod | L the democratio parly ‘hud . elear | whioh worc stained with blood. A moré | the whole surrounding country, They fur- s oY QU N onnall Mertin . fdman: | foti]| Mol o oin Bs s S8 G that she could think of nothing but her pet | fhiit"vvo "could have free trade in Tact with | £ ord blooded affulr was neverkiown | pish — Dubuque —with the most of e i il L 4 ‘Che injury to the building by the toppling | birds and expressed geeat anxicty that some | foroien countries, while there would be a | & oodad her ligmd supplies, and assert tl their from his sufferings, and the crowd ' listened | the cogine room of Dunbir & Co.’s enzra ey toithol n ( d xpressed gleat M g in awe to the moans of Thomas Huston, us | ing department. Following him the crushed | of the wall yesterday amounted to about | one should go and ascertain for hor whether | high tuxation on the people through the in- ‘The Dressed Beef Combine. business from this point alone 18 more o 000, or not they had been killed. Mrs, Henzen i ] he was borneon a hastily-constructed litter | remains of Edward Olson, the clothier who 4 i g otel v ol 3 i 4 s | ternal chaonels. Contributions to Major 88 Crry, Fe ocinl Telegrr than doubic what it used 1o be. Since Ma; 0 the Wolls-Fargo Express offic did business at 1018 Parnam_ stroet;nd who | . The building adjoining was complotely | had two cluldren living with her, but they | MoKinloy's repurt will be made by some'of | KANSAS Ciry, Feb. 4.—[Special Telegram | PHEt POUNIC ORS00 10 B - =inen AEAY or Clod's. saite pive e somathing, d0c. | Daamied it Mos. i atretywnd who | destroyed, or rather will require tobe rebuilt, | fortunately were away at school. the other republican members of the com. | 1 Tne Bee.]—The Kansus scnate committee, | 1ast they have enjoyed increased business tor, or I'll o mad, Tl go mad,” ho mur- | kis store, weve tiken tothe morgue, He | MEWVIng & loss of §10,000, upou which there | For a long time the crowd could not ascor- | mittee, and 1t 18 expoeted to be one of the | mvestigating tho alleged dressed beef com. | from thew Keokuk patrons. Loy & Co. is mured, as ho lay crushed almost out of | recently rosided at 213 South Twenty-ninth | 'S Insurance. | L0 e 0 L ] tai whetlir Peter Boyer was buried be- | strougest presentations against the auti- | bine, resumed its session at the stock yards [ another firm right in Keoluk—a branch shape.’ BBut it was beyond the power of the | street. * He cawe hiere. 1n 1872 from Swoden, | ) QHow's stock was valued at 8,000, and on | neath the ruins or not.” No one, however, | protective taviff principals of the democratic | i morning. A number of Kansus shippers | house of a Peoria, IiL, brewery, and thoy bysician to aid him, and he was removed to | For ten years he was a clovk for clothier | Hi% 1t 1 pog o] there was annsurance | had seen him, and us he failed to put in an | party ever presented. It will bring about a | were given a ance to air their | receive three carloads of beer every weok, Bt Jaoph's hospita, whero ho diod - about 9 | named Goldsmith, who did business nesr the | © Dunbar's. stock was valued at $10,000, und | Shhearance his friends fluully gave up hove. | debate which will bo intercsting’ and ex- | griovances, which wereto the offect that ‘a | and of course this 18 all used in the city o o'clock. His injuries werc internal, and as | same sito, After'this he wont into business Dunbars stock was valued at $10,000, and | Two men wero sent to his resideace, in view | tremely important, even though there is to | fombme alone could be responsible for the | oo it was insured for half that amount, of the possibility that he might have gone | be no action taken upon the bill. low prices of cattle, In tho afternoon Keokul, besides much more shipped in to he was badly scalded as well, his sufferings | with Sum Bergstrom. Luter he entered his ] e ing afes, wi must have been frightful. prosent bus Bovers stock, consisting of safos, was but | home and they would find him thcre, On THE NATTRALIZATION BILL. Armour and Swift addressed the committee, | Idividual partics. Onco more the wagon rolled up, and once | 'The next unfortunate found in the debris [ [EhUY insured und beyoud disficuration was | inguiring of Mrs, Boyer, who answored their | 1Tho sub-commitiee of the judiciary com- | and attribited the low prices to overpro. | Albert L. Connable, a well known nusiness more a victim was led out. This time it was | was Rudolph Mitehell, agent of the As Uhoss placos’ and stooks were msured | Sl whero her husband was, she replied | mittee of house, huving in charge the” natur- | duction, In rofutation of the assortioh that | man and large property owner, tolt mo that Charles H. Silver, who had his shoalder | Iquitablo Lifo Assurance society, which | A8 Hees BUoes SRQ SOCKS Wore s | #He is at the store.” She had not heard of | alization bill, huve roconsidered it and will | 4 combine existed Armour stated that thero | he bovel kit ok against fire and not against such u disaster, | the catastrophe and they came away without report it to tue full commitiee to-morrow. £ NG & x ] ¢ | he bought property—store rooms—on the - | was already too much competition be- | v Y A principal thoroughfare of the city nine years crushed and his fitjer broken, He expressed | docs business ia tho Unitod States National | 23 ] L4 behi & desire to reach his home in Sioux City, and | bank building. tolonn cemiploio apRiabunb aRl R Rl informing or It will exclude volygamists and criminals | ween Chicago, St Louis and —Kanss aftor bis injuries were dressed he wais seut | Samucl Lombard, a bookkeeper for Peter [ M4 Mever 101000 | | George C. Searle and_Charles Blake, resi- | from citizenship, and also those wio cannot | (ty, and that buyers for the Chicugo | 450, and aftor all the improvements e hay thither. Rumors that a man was slowly | Boyor, was the fourth taken to the morgue. | P 7 Dt $ d dents of Council Bluffs, were considerably | speak Euglish and read. The bil not | youge were frequently the sharp competitors | put on the same he couldn’t dispose of it to- roasting to death beneath an overturned | He has a wife, and was married ut a ¢ 20Y0! injured, the latter seriously so. Mr. Scarle | say what language the applicant for | of the buyers for the Kunsas City branch of | day for us much as he puid for Ha boiler then began to circulated among the | ago. He resided at 710 Plorco street, with g ! suys that in_falliug the sieam pipes above | citizenship must be able to read. Declara- | fho firm, The commitieo returned to-nigit o eSSt Lot crowd and the excitement became intense, | the family of his employer, his head somewhat protected him from the | tions of intention for citizenship are done | 15 Topeka, where they will continue their . | *50red me that there had been a notavle but when it was known that every effort was There were all kinds of rumors afloat Y AR AR R ¢ 5 crashing wall, and %, this he probably owes | away with, but to enable alicns to acquire investigations among the cattle Erowers, depréciation in real estate in Keokuk within Dalue mada’ for his rolaase. siloace aeain | abont Batas Bovor. an agent {oF aalos wlo Phis sum is considered of but little im- | piglife. He wont home late in theafternoon | lands under the homestead law and iu the B the lust four years, Tolghod, and th reanls was watohed. broath | Aid business b 1018 Farnum. At firet Ik e B e s ot nle overshudowing | pruised badly but thuniful for his escapo | territorics the bill provides that they may AnIITaxichit s 2 ktla o ot e S lessly. 1or moment the rescuers paused | reported thak ho was no in tho wreck; that SYALY QHISHIMNIER O0VI0 CRlBmILY, :rum dmw hM&‘ Blako was taken to nis | file avetition in somo court, renouneing their | ¢\veys Ciry, Kb, 4,—[Special Telegram TWENTY-FOUR DIROWNED, in thieir work, and then as they resumed four | he was out of the city on business. Others = YT home on Nortl ventoenth strect, Council | allegiance to other countries and setting A3 ALY, =i RiOgFY ye el of them made their way to the front, carry- | said that he had been caueht but escaped un- Thought It Safe. Bluffs, where medical attendance was had. | forth their intention to acquive citizenship, | to Tne By |—Jeff Stovens, tried, con- 4 i il ing the remains of what had once been a | injured, but still he coutd not be found. The Section 25 of ordinance 1.733 pro- | He was found to be badly bruised about the | Such petitions are not to be filed by persons | victed and sentenced to death for the mur- wo Vessels Collide and Buth go to man, ‘Phe elenched hands, the st teoth, the | rescuiug party unveiled his whereabouts | yaec® 7 0 GEEEE o the | head and upper part af the body and if his | who have been five years in the country, as | dor of Thomas Kelly in July, 187, was the Bottom. swollen lips, the half-closed eyes, covored | when his body” was found in the debris hor- .. life is saved it will be little less than mirac- | they can be admitted to civizenship. A" pro- | Jluced upon his new trial in the orpmingl | LONDOS, Feb. 4.—Tho staamor Nereid col- with a il of mortar dust, showed the g ribly mangled. It was about half past5 | Obinion of the superintendent of | yjous, vision is made for Indians to acquire eitizen- | I e e ¢ | lided with 'the British suip Killochan f in which he had died, While nis shrunken [ o'clock when hie was found. On nccount of | buildivgs any wall or other part of a burned | * A gtranger in the city named Kruse had just | Ship. court to-day, and with the consont of | lided with the British ship Killoohun from and sbrivelied limbs, that could be scen | the difforent stories concoruing him his | building is dangerous the superintendent | turned the corner of Tenth ana Farnam | This evening's Star has this: “Overtures | the prosecutiug attorney pleaded guilty to | Lyttleton off Dungencss last night and both roasted to @ crisp through the rents | friends would mot believe that he | ghallenotify the owner or his agent in writ- | streets as the walls began o totter. Toa | have been made, unoficially, to A. U. | manslaughor in tho fourih degree, He was | vesscls went 1o the bottom in & vory short in the burnt overalls, told the | had been killed until they were con- | oolie i oy i con qan ror consists | €rowd that gathered about him in the Vienna | Wyman, formerly United States vreasurer, | sentenced to two years in the panitentiar time. Twenty-four porsons were drowned, cause. Gently the body was laid on the | vinced of the fact by guzing upon i SIOCLYIDE . 8 cife, he said that the walls tottered buta | to know'if he would como back to thatpo' [ Half an bour later in the sume court James |y i e captain of the Killocham, ground, and some of the fanter-hearted n | his remains. His features wore recognizable | OF wherein such building is unsafe or defec- second, and then fell with a_terrible crash, | 8ition. e 1s now president of the United | Morrissey pleaded puilty to a burglary comn ue members of the crews were rescued, tho croted gazad once and loft, while the po- | in deth, biit bis fuce and boly prosented u | tive. | Tho ruin was hid from view by tho clouds of | Ltates Nutional bank, of Omaha, and it is | mitted in browking open u stroot stands and | 006 o wtcrwaids dlod, The woather licemen on duty hid the corpse with a cover- | most distressing spectac (‘.. @ was the Mr. Adolph Meyer, who has been acting | dust that arose, and it was many minutes understood that he llnnuyxY to give up that AN 6 pie. e g hrec bal Waus clear al the time of the collision, let taken !mm‘\r;c ruins. 1{“:. |lmv1. wagon | worst lm]mg\ml utu.Lx \V'hn were m"rushmlltvo as agent for Max Meyer in the absence of | before it had sufeieutly.cleared away so that | Position to get 1. ol ‘:{-l place. 2 itentiary. ik e, Sl to the city morgue ull that was mortal of | Mitchell when the crash came. His back | Was met by a reporter last evening and [ atitacted his attention’ were. the men wi | propriation bill 80 as to give the privato sc Loxboy, Feb. 4.—-Tho Spauish mait | ©O0AlmALA Neb., Feb. 4.—iSpocial Tele. Mike Murtin, the fireman of 1, C. Dunbar | and neck wero both broken and his faco | asked us to whether the above requirements | wero struggling to gek out of the second | Fotary to tho president o salary of 85,000 in- | o o NPCR L8 G T PRERSE TR | gram to Tuk Bei.] -The discovery of a fire & Co., who died at his post. fearfully cut. He leaves a wife and four | of the ordinance had been complied with. | story of the Boyer buwd.hg He said that it | stead of §3,200 a year. s kg L 4 at 3 o'clock this morning in the Commercial ot from o yuiny of her homo Mrs. | childven, Wit rovido at 7lo Pierea stvect, 1o | Mr. Meyer saya ¢ at neither e nor bis | might bave becn imugination, but it secmail Pouuy 8, Hearn, | Of titaran ouo of the Bl itoiics. Mor | hotel, u large framo building south of the Blizabeth Hepgen was gently lifted and car- | commenced business in the spring of 1881, | brother had received any notice from the | to him s though the inin rti pL. h ngers are supposed to have be LAy 5 o . ried to the patrol wagon, ‘where she fell | succeeding Brisco & Co. in the safe business. | superintendent of buildings, and supposing | the wrecked wall eackad b and ra fou ns of ey drowned. ¥ ruilrond track, led to the disclosure of fainting on the seat. Her haiv scemed grey | He was born in Denmark Februury §, 15 the structure was perfectly safe, they lm:{ seconds after the erash. The dust that The Visinl» Supply, A Signi -4 AT a desy e attempt to burn that in its couting of dust, aud the rents in her | thus making bim forty-seven years of age. | decided to bulld —anoiher story on | arose from the ruins mounted fully two | CHICAGO, Feb, 4.—The visible supply for oo A RRMRGADE ALUAN, buiiding, together with the two busie Wh told how closcly she hud been pinioned | He camo to this couutey in 1564, and [ tho building. The experts ° em- | hundred fect b i the air in one clood. the Woek ending February 2, as compiled vy | BEWLAN, Feb. 4.—The North German | ;oo™ “yiooks cnst of it. A large o y el y the fulling acbris. The fireman worked | settled in - Omala iu 167, and’ was | ployed by the Insurance companies pro- |\ 5 the secretary of the Chicago board of trade, | G3%0!4@ to-aight makes ai allusion 1o Pendle- | Rola had beon bored ih the Weathor Lasbgs as they nover bud worked bofore, but uhelr | cogaged | i the ofico of - the | nounced the walls in good condition and only | o8 418k Hohugaps slending on the sor | $40 88TV ¥ "9 | ton beiug unwell, This is construed us t0 | onthe west side about @ foot from the efforts to lower the mountamn of timber and | Chicago & Northwestern railway. In 1872 | llowed one-third of the insurance. ‘ ¥ vots Wi 1 S ey # P ew Amer- | grou d shavings ated 0ul 0f broken brick that rose above, the victims had | ko took a position in the froight dopartment | Mr. George C. Whitlock, superintendent | the crash came. Ho did not see the wallsas | o Bushols. | indicato thut tuclappintmont of 8 sow Amer- | fround snd o b Lvon with eaabiel but little apparent effect. of the Union Pacific, where he remained | of buildings, that on 'the morning fol. | they fell, us Aijantion. was held olse- | Wheat., .. +1100 SA,ST0,000 SOl S 2 walls to the roof, but the smoke fortu- suggested that there were hundreds ready to | until he enguged in the present busine: lowing the fire be speat an hour and a half | Where, until he tled by the crushing | Corn. Y B LY 5 sucst i noise.’ He sayfhe S ] A Fatal SMITaln . nately arouscd 4 guest in an upper room asalst them in their work, and | Mr. Boyor was marricd to Miss Lida Mason | in the building exumining the ruins, and 3 SRRNAL aveloped i dust sud 5 Sooclal To who gave the alarm, and by tearing away in a second a hundred willing meu dived be- | May 20, 1578, He was a mewber of tho inde- | thought they were perfectly safe. He | ¢ould seo nothing for many minuteg, When 0 i . . Joareg, Fob, 4.—[Bysolai Tologram to § oot Etle ot 8 e O o el At neath the rope that kept them buck, or | pendent Order of Odd Fellows lodge and en- | thought the south wall was the weakest, but | the dust cleared gwuy'he heard the cries of creee e Tag Ber) - P, Rohror, one of tho lead- | yut RASIERE 6 Wik SHngVished. About dropped from the vantage grounds on which | campment aud bad passed through the chairs | considered even that safe. Ihe east'wail | the wounded and saw: the people trying to ing live stock dealers and commission menin | as the wind was very high some would they stood und rushiod o the ‘resciio. b | of boti, was sixteen inchos thick aud the brick build- | €8cape from the lug occupied by Hoyer Look Upon It as a Protest, this elcy, dicd to-night. Ho took a dose of | undoubtedly have cromated had it gained shaking walls ahove had no torrors for | Tommy Houston, a young man of perhaps | ing to the east acted as o buttress. He says | & Co- 1 Beruiy, Feb. 4.—In commenting on the | aconite through mistake, for whisky, and | any heudway beiore boing discoyered, Am them, and in the face of a death like thoso | twenty-two years of age, who boarded ut | that Mr. Robert Livesey's opinion wasthe | J. H. Richard was if the second story of a | o ovion of the United States senate in voting | lived bt an hour 8 b attempt was also made to burn the 131akes)! they were Lrying Lo save, they worked ke | 2220 Chicago'strect, was @ photographer in | same in regard to the safety of the building, | restaurant opposite the ruins when the walls v & ) frakiii A A0 Blde Y the men they were, Mauy of them wore | the engraving dopirtment of D. C. Dun: | Only on Sunday last Mr. J. F'. Coots had also | fell and saw them s they were going down, | & credit for a coaling station at Pago Pago, Datiaa o smm—— WRUAR Y IR Ble okl the appearance of those who are so often ar- | bar & Co.’s publishing bouse. He was | examined the walls and pronounced them | His description if Wa:disaster is tho same as | the Natlonal Zeung says: “America ob-| 8 FADS OO AR DR TR PR e T restod us suspicious characters, but there | among tho first thut were rescued from the | safe. A short time ago Mr. Whitlock heard | that given by of ‘Knowing that a sta- | tained the rignt to establish a coaling sta- ., i were 10 questions asked as thoy toiled with | ruios. Twmediately ho was couvoyed to the | that the Meyers contemplated addi tionary engine used by D. C. Dunbar his | tion from Malieoa, but she did not take ad- | issued for a meeting of the Cenwral Traft unkiy, Feb. 4.~A bill has been intro- 8 will. Huge sticks of timber, piles of | ofice of Wells-Fargo Express company where | auother story to the building rag first thought was of the dauger of fire, and | vantage of the privilege within the specified | sociation, in Chicago, next Thursday to con- | duced in the reichstag pro ding for a loan broken brick aud fragments of housebold | ke was laid out on @ stretcher, to await re- | ke wrote to their architects, men- | t0 prevent this if possible he rushed to the | time. The establishment of the station now | sider the' reportof the rcorganization ¢ of 60,000,000 marks for oxpenses on wecount furuiture were thrown fro:m the ruins until | moval 0 @& bospital, His swwach was | delssobn, Fisher & Towrie, notifying them | nearest firc box and turucd in an alarw. would xflmuur to be an Americun protest | witwe. of 146 army and Ruvy wud sLale railways. agaiost German anuexation,”