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— e - —— - — — — — — " - — —— — i TWENTIETH YEAR. OMAHA, SATURDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 6, 1890. 4 NUMBAR 80, -, - O THE STATE FAIRAT LINCOLY, | =eess oo so meanrcmr. | RRGCEINRIDGE, 1§ NOT 1Y I, | e s s ta o | A PRTETION 10 0UST HISH, | geeet et e, 5 IABOLIGAL TRALY WRECKERS Dawes, Frye, Hale, Hawldy, Hiscock, Hoar | ; ni | 3 i, Kxpress Trate eifan, Plorce Pintt ,,,JL savver’ same terrfory n tho carring of o pelltiv 2 ) f Mpr, Vance moved to insert t 0 to the same ma ots, cannot ¢ ate the & " Exhibits are Not Yet in Shape, but The; {Comyright 15001y Jomes Gordon Bewnett) | Ty 8o Fy Tas Bemm Ouupylag fn the | “timber hown and sawed, Sauied and siiod, i lio righton the part of the carrier to take advan- = gy fuoceed in Ditching the Nontreal E: : ape, Y| Pams, Sept.s.—[New York Herald Cab! 0 Seat He Has Been Qooupying in the | o™ ccd boirds, plank, deals aud other | The Prosident of the Illinois Oentral Ob- {age of the consolidstion ¢f itkerens % 8o v e khing the U 4 Will be by Monday. —Special to Tue Bre]—Early yesterds House Declared Vacant, lumber of henlock whliéwood, syeanore noxious to Many Stockholders, privo the pubiio of the beefits of filt compe: presson tho Central, i morning Paris was startied with @ repor! white pine and basswood. " vo the pubilo of | Of fiir eumpe AL, that a frightful aceldent )I:J“l‘r::ml:“:‘w{x,u:r: Mr. Manderson moved to strike out of the dlnoiiatoation with & view Solts. Gwa. Iboe. 8 11 el B ol el o i amendment the words, ““hemlock, white. AT WIYD R vt o LA Mo T [T W N AN \KMEN \ ML FORMER DISPLAYS TO BE EXCELLED. | tho Northern mailway. Information was | HE MAKES A TALK IN HIS OWN BEHALF, | tmeniment the Wit bsn AN INTE RSTATE COMMISSION RULNG. | &io,sneiiae eutaiiaion o e fron 6|3 THROWN DOWN AN ENBANKMENT, 4 soon forthcoming that the English night fter considerable diseussion My, Mander- %o ,‘l" “""'," Vi Droltat e it mail from London to Paris had come to griet son's amendment 10 Mr. Vest's motion was for ane dlivision that gives proftable mark G W Every County in the State, Prompted | 1 1o numberof alled and injured was vart- | The Senate Disposes of Several Artl- | rejected, Messrs. Ingalls, Munderson, Pod- | mne New BIt1 of Lnding—All Roads | nna v for - aithee ditiion that are | The Fassengers Badly Shaken Up, bng by a Bpirit ot Fricndly Rivaley, | ously roported at from forty downto two or | Cles on the Free List of whe | doicand Plumbvetkarser - | 5 o bably Be Using ftIne | destructive to tho inierests of othes patrons [ Nono Seriously Enjurcd — kivo g L e { Y ¢ v ) > competitor: he samoe busin iy a o ” Will Try to Outdo its three. But little at was paid these Taviff Bill—Hides Are Jumber, sawed boards, planks and deals and a6 ofs Weok—Tatl Gos D e et ATeG Chib T4 STOG T DON e SRR Compoetitors. reports until it became ovic that s Btill Dutiablo. other limber of white pine. Rejected. s _ SB50106 MAb B0 ATELD 66, LI Who Wt sttusted fered for the Perpetrators, thing really had happened. As usual, the 2, miys 89—tho Nebrusial i Kaasas sona- sp aad News ik, Itis further held that o road ewnnot b= de » Bl o tors again voting with the democrats. GHTS O 5 Bi0s 2o BELHISTE ks and Nelll Bt B iBaiiy Helb | olasa: - the WSTn deiisdr: tna. s e Paragraph 211, in schodule D, reiating to e Lo Btk the | - Kmaews %0, et b Lkat ATghs AboRd ooty Neb, Sept. 5-—[Spactal Telo | placo at the second deiivery, and still | Wasmivaroy, Sept. fi—In the house todsy | sawed bourds, e, was taken p and tho | New Yoms, Sept. f—An eventng paper | MOUCE or thsaimo fn burrels, nor wr, N Y, Sept 5.~ L gt abon gram to Tue Bee.] he exhibi nothing came from London. This circum- | the Clayton-Breckinridge case was again | committee amendments agreed to. Also an Bl e Ao ub | 13 ¢ sdas part of tho car ok @ siccessful attempt ot train wrecking was made on the New Yorls Central, about four miles south of Greene state fair are not yet in shape, but they will | gance would 2 P2 by manday, and the exposition will then | practically commence. Abvoutone-halfof the | ¢ publishes the potition which it statesis now | they must be being diligently circulated among the stocl holders of the Illinois Centr railroad, urg not hava been uncommon in iter, but is very unusual this t sidere ded | amendment offered by M. Aldrich to place & . | the te RN THNIS 4N t Ho | duty of 25 per cont ad valorem on posts, rail- » road ties and tulu:rrngh poles of cedar. Mr, I | taken up and Mr. Breckinridge was ac of the | the floor to argue in hisown beh ar. Something ukin to a panic then oc- harged the chairman of th committee o g i The New Billof Lading. bush. Luckily 10 1oss of life or serious ine = S HAEs i1 AU e R i, bl | S ! o to apar A A committee ou | On motion of Mr. Plumb the duty on pine | ing them to rise in rebellion agalost the pres- [ 4 bkl *um“”'“m!\m mnhn..n\(.;l,.::n (/.thr‘ | curred in business circles. Tho wildest | elections (Rowell) with improg n judg- | clapboards was reduced from § 1o &1 per | ent mausgementof tho company at whose |, CEAG0 SL b ““;xvl I)\hhn;"nw Hinen ]| fon of the M 1 tra i one s endeavoring to outdo the other. | yumors were quickly afloat, ams were | ing cases. That gentlemar, iu discussing | 1,000, < * SRR B Ly » Tre Bee]—Suid Chairma anchard of the hesecond section of the Montreal traln gricultural hall, which has been doubled in | gashed by the doze L L & head stands President Stuyvesant Fish of to I another election case, had referred to the | . Consideration of the free list was resumed. | o i i foasnily: o as district and | LBecommittee amendment, Jting mica on RNOAS IS SR VIGy UHIELCSLLY, s boect rof the roads | ing ofan engineand cght slecpers, in whichy Istrict Avo political | Mo e oearas Foloo twas then re- | assistelby B. IL Harrlman, also of New | oy have refused touse the mow bl of | there were sixtytwo men, women and child- tin thatdistrict five political | stored in paragraph 100 af the rate of 35 per | York. The petition states thut the company (et Sin 4 el TR ¢ ralibae oF s red. He called upon the | centad valorem. 18 practically on the vorge of ruin through | WiNE. The Canadian Pacific agreel un- | run, was deraild ad a number of cars mo the murdered men, Paragraph 625 of the free list, was, on ’\' i Y G ot 1t afal revionws | Gualiiedly to use it, whilo the G runk, | thrown down an cmbankuent and wrecked, that they wore Benjamin, | Motion of Mr. Carlisle, modified so'as (o road | the mismanagemet ofits offairs, Iire Wabash and Big Four ewh agroed to put but barringa shaking up of the pussengers ley and Clayton, awhile an at. | "0l mineral wators ot artificial.”” tho present financial condition of the com- |y effect if the others did. T think all roads | aud the bruisingot hulf adozenor s, nothing ntley and Clayton, while an at- | "My Quay moved to strike out of the free | pany and then s: Central traffic association today : “We capacity and otherwise improved, will be de- | yeter vemittan just had o harmonions meeti voted entirely to county exhibits with a few | cels of scrip fidividual displays, The Tancaster county | of value that go fair has been made a part of the exposition 11'-'\' 1one \"‘\,“\',‘.“'L’“f“l‘, o and its headquarters have been established | o Crod' ke and it was ascerin in a neat building adjoining ng fcultural hall. | though a us accident had r Custer county has g fine display and it nas | place, it had not resulted in a @c ave | out of New York duohere at 11:30, consist- , ‘many thousands of & to fill t! ar- | case from the Second Arkar °8 | had acclared t murders had oce gentleman to n edthat | Mr. Rowell s mith, s ’ i ill bo using it inside of & weele, The 1 more serious than the wiveking of the cars Uit P 5 e tempt bad been made to assassinate Wahl, list paragraph 065 sulphate of quinia and all | = "It is cles & * by ne * Vi ; : Sa0re of Tassengo shed . Paris safe paragraph 055 sul quinia and a it is clear that o crisis in theaffairs of this | v Stk Meaaay, oy | Tesulted. HDWhede of Bve undred exhibits, Inlading | SR O FRReCR e * Hone At Mr. Breckinridge denied the correctness of | alkaloids or salts of cincloua bark.” company 13 rupidly aporoaching and that if it | oy prccs i Buffalo next Manday, and el | ™Aunvestigation showed tho wreck was g Erains, fruits and © A0 | iy ree and one-ha late. Mails | the statement and called attention to the | The motion to strike quinine out of the LIV At RV loasns Will &ns L e 0 DB caused by a il fammed into the cottle alone seventy-five specimens of grasses from s s . i | free list was defeated—yeas, 15: nays, 33, | 1S not promptly met heavy losses will ensue. d General Agent Lee of the Canad A s80d It with timbe b s were delivered the afternoon. | fact that the gentleman himself concurred in | : yeas, ys, 38, | 8 | ; ek IR b T P R ST R s guards, welgod in with tinbers and securely that county. It appears that the mail trafn, & few miles | tho report. which sai v The following is the votein detail: Yeas— | With the facts beforeus we must insist that | Pacifie: “Acting under instru held by fishplates. A similar obstruction Nemaha county has 900 exhibits of | this aulo of Amiens, had struck a lougiron | LheFEPOrt Which said that there was sus- | Aldrich, Cameron, Chandier, Dawes, Ed- | tho presont mansgement is not o success and | Inv superior ofifcers, I mori 1 found on the southbound track a little 1y below where the other obstruction had beon placed on_the north track. his ccnfims Superintondent Bis- sell's opinion that the wrecking was the result of deliberate plans, laid by whormn he kiows not He said cder that had falien from | the up main line sing takion | picion only of these things being true. He | munds, Hawley, Hiscock, McMillan, a1t i ; « ] d The. " locomniva was abiteA thRb (8Y AA 700 |::liuml mur. | Platt, Quay, Stwyer, Stowarl Slchage, | ot e R e ey would be guided by the Watash in the mat i1s and huried. down thy | ders, His distinguished and lamented oppo. | Wilson of Iowa—15. ' Neys—Allen, Allison, | best intorests of tho stockholders, in our | ter, and did not consider it worth while to plays, while Richardson county 1as | cmbankment, foll 4. by the tendstoaud M::‘ o 'm..hvnl ;u; f““ll"" 4‘\|m‘ frln ate olx Lr‘ Barbour, Bale, Berty, Blidgett, Bitler, Car- opinion, requires that its president and vice | attend the mee \ ,\II understanding s Specimens of | wintor wheat | which | psconier coheh. _Fortuiately the rempinaer | e had been foully and infamously mur | \iste,'Cogkrell, Colqith - Cullom, Eustis, | president should bo practical milroad wen, | BOW tind hus been that e Wabish refuses o D i sisey-ve, pownds "tn o busnel, | b ho e thogh 1t Tofe (i track il ot | dered, bt 10 ono had produced any evidene Gibson, Gorman, | who have demonstrated theia ability to suc. | S€ the bill of lading until an amicabl " ¥ grains, fruits and vegetables. Stanton The | Blanchard today that the Cui and Perkins have also fine dis- [ ;2 XB RN varts, Faullmer, Fry : at it was anse the result e 0 i, Higgl g . tlement of the whole matter has been ) ; ; e o roll down the embankment—soa terrible dis- | that it was in any sense the result of public | Gray, Hale, Harris, Hearst. Higgins, Ingalls, | cegstully managea great raitvoad like ours. ged by the shippe ; i that inmediste oforts would be made todis- and oats which will weigh fortv-two pounds werted, Tho passengers, sud. | autipathy o had come froma collective or | Mitcliell, Morgun, Paddock, Plumb, Pagh, | Gt tr FOEEeR &L BT TR0 R | ranged by the shippors and railroads o con | verihe perpotrators of tho dastardly out- to the bushel. There are ove Jne hundred 1 from thelr slumbess and | organized effort. Thestateof Arkansas swer, Ransom, Sherman, Spooner, Teller, g : s L e e e | specimens of different kinds of timber grown into the d nd desolute stretch | qone ten times g 73 7 Aol || TINNE, VAo C N B RERSUGHTY WG e [ESVE NESIR GRnuItIR Sowll be secired sid | heo e B8 tofusilis Lo NEIUARE B0 S0RR0 t issaidthe evident intention In placing {n Richardson county. The sugar beet dis- y line, were nutur OHMEARLS | e Saai s [EVUR, ARIBOHOY L 8o S 38, that the men selected should bo known to | Guently the Canadian Pacific an_entvance to | &S ECE G ICHERE Sy CREEL, B PHECRS play from Grand Tsland promises to be one of i the byerturied and wrecked en. | a8 it had ever done before to detect and piun- | The committee amendment placing sponges | have the confidence of t v their tracks, the Wabash has 3 e patrons and cm- ployes of the road. We further urge that vot » 0 not above | only friendly but cordial relations between ansas, orany group of people | No. 13 on the free list also went over without | oficers and agents of the road and the fo valuable fr over the Hud sh the destruction of httrains which piss both wa river division at that ti \dded its final puffs and snorts to the | ish the guilty. But the men who charged | on the freol screams of st ucted us that there s nodanger of los. S terminal ight offered.” the interesting features of the f: An entire wing of the agricultural hall is to be devoted to this exhibit. ture and deco ent over until tomorrow. putting sugars 3 o artled wormen. a more lu; cither on the floor or in the pr that the | _Paragraph 1brious scene can | people of A and to accept all contract . of night. Tho vestibule cars which were i | B y beimagined. It was not loneg, how- | represeuting that state had ever | action. L people along its line: are neces- s Wabanhis B = ditched remain intact. They sustuned no tou'of this department 1s entirely of beets, | “before a special came down in ot haste | shown sympathy with this infam- | Paragriph 713, placing tin oro and tinon | sary to its financial suceess. Tho Wabash's Eastern ‘,"{"‘l Pole. | damage beyond b inlows and the The poultry house has been doubled in size and picked up the frightened | ous _ crin or that he (Breckin- | the free list was amended on motion of Mr. | We regret to say that theso relations cannot | ST Touts, Mo., Sept. 5.-[Sye ele atchingof puint. ntendent Bissell ‘x:;n(.:m y ol M i , who happily were not numerous, | ridge) had any knowledge * of it | Aldrich by adding the w “until January, | b established by the present management. | £ram to Tiue Bre]—J. F. How, vice pres | sid these cars wer the finest in the world vith all | inthe remotest degree uttered that which | 18! et of the | was cow were dispatehied to Par 1. “Following is the ofticial | } saster, which was embodic in o | knew to be false. [Democratic ap port made by the minister of the | Hethen turned his attention to Ju interior Between Aille, and La | Clure, stating that on the return of the Falai a large e 2, but not thereafte The great mass of the people, from whom the | dent of the Wabash, was seen today in r ch they Consideration of the free 1list having been | yoad must secure its business, now regard its | gaid to the noti o given by the Chicago & concluded, some of the preceding paragraphs | administration as alien. The result is, and : a5 MRt o were lost were taken up ag: odified. must continne to be, a condition of unfriend- g & oliiitio S abrogaiion ot s Bt By Mr. Aldrich gave notice of committee ty | tract existing between the two roads, | of 5000 fo nter which is filled with water for ducks, and around it will be a profusion of flowers. A fountain spouting a stream fifteen feet high has been placed in the mi ddle ef the pond. i point of strength and du and it is undoubtedly owing o this fact thitno lives rdly and mean and wh dent Webb has offered a reward the detection and convietion of liness bordering upon comme 1 host ] TR he night mail from Loyndon run nto | committee the republican _members endorsed | smendments, including imposing a duty after | and provoxing adverso legislation, both state | whereby the Wabish obtained its | the person or persous who placel the obe i Lincoln has carried out, her obligations in- | 4 pisco of iron work that had been dropped | McClure fora high judicial position in Ar- | January |, 1592 of 4 cents a pound on_black | and municipal.”” tern outlet from Chicazo, Mr. How s struction on thetrack, gurred by the relocation of the state falt b¥ | 1y’ goods train; the consequenco was that | kansas. oxide of tin and on bar, block and pig tin. | *The petition calls attention to the violation | that it was necessary toreney the Robert, A, Pitkerton visited the scene of » R85 48 nmber of Lot dings, among which | the enatn i and the mauil van | Mr. Lacey of Iowna, chairman of the sub- | Adjourned. of thelaw of the state of Illinois, which re- | forat the time it was made the Wabash was trophe today and has several of his R Ly B pamod LIS e e s | latt thio ra ent over the embuukment, | committee, said he ended Judge Me- e quires that o majority of thedirectors of a | in the hauds of a receiver, and since then the tedtives warking on the case, No A IR rt hall. Externally 1t | oo coon “five and six metres high. Fortu: | Clure in str bim one of J. V. FARWELL & €0, road incorporated by thestate of Illinois | Chi Tlo ght on any accou moving between has the appearance three-story | ueue there was only one passenger in the | the best and most competent men in Ar- shall be residents of that state. In con- | hended no di the e and Hudson. Superintendent Bissell building, and the is most g ¢ that went over the embankment. kan i l:cu&ing in its arrangements. It will o devoted . exclusively to art work of all kinds he old art hall has been rech tened mercantilegiall and is to be devoted to the display of Lincoln merchants, * Secreta Furnas this afternoon moved into his new quarters on the fair grounds. The building is a handsome structy and will hereafter be for the use of the sceretary and his assistants exclusively, Amphithe- aters have been erected for the fat stock ring and also for the accommodation of visitors to the blooded swine displuy. The exhibits of fine draft, horsos will'bo fine, and those of other stock will be equally good. An un ally good spoed programeiehas been pre, and with the large number of entries made some magnificent races are expected. A novel feature of this programme is a trained moose, which will trot with any horse with a record 0f 2:30 or upwards e e HARRISO) The President Unable to be Present at the Annual Reunfon. Ixpravarous, Ind, Sept. b, Telegram to Tur Be son's regiment, the Scventeenth Indiana volunteers, held its annual reunion ten miles south of this city yesterday. The following letter fromathe president was read : Care May Poit, August 2.—My dear comrades—That I cennot attend the reunion of the survivors of the old regiment is a source of very great regret tome and T ven- ture to hope that the dear old friends whose nappier lot “it is to be present will also feel some little disappointment. I am debtor to them for the brave and patient service they gave to our country under my gommand d for a most loyal and affectionate comradeship since the fighting days were over. God bless them, every one. ‘Most sincerely yours, ca He was kille caped; the The driver and fireman es- rd received 4 compound {rac- ture of the and other nries,” The passengers escaped without injury and were conveyed back to Amicns and brought on o Paris by another route, reaching Purls at 0:30 with the mails. There was nointe ruption to London and Paris trafiic, except a delay of about a quarter of an hour, The following account by of the passeng differs very materially from the one given above: “A3 Iwas a passenger on the London- Paris exy , perhaps it may interest your readers to see an account of the disaster that occurred to our train near Amicns, the de- tails of which will doubtless appeat tomo row in all the French papers. The train left Charing Cross station punctually ats:15 p. m. We had o very smooth pussage across the chiannel and reached Calais on time. We left Calais at 1 p.m. for Paris. There were not very many passengers on the train, probably not over fifty altogether. I was asleep towards morning, when there was a sudden shock and 1 found myself sprawling on the floor of the coupe; then there was a frightful silence and I realized that a disaster had happened. We had been going at full speed and were fifteen kilometres on this side of Amicns. I jumped out of the train aud ran towards the ecagine. It seems that a hollow iron girder about twenty feet long aud a foot square—such _as ave used in the construction of bridges—had failen from a freight train and lay parallel with the metals and_midway between them and the express. The train came dashing along and butted against the fallen girder and drove it into the ground. The iron girder be- came a lever and tossed the engine on the metals and down the steep embankment. On topof the engine was piled tle tender and on topof the tender was the second-class passen- ger car, The baggage car had broken its coupl- ing and stood at right angles across the metals, blocking both line The rest of the train remajned slanted over the cmbunkment. The stoker was smashed toajelly. A number of persons were in- R Mr. Breckin proceeded to quote from astatement made by Mr burn, a re- , toshow the bad character of Me- He criticised n_severe language the action of the subcommittee, asserting that he had been denied witnesses after he had been promised they would be accorded him. No greater debauchery of a free ballot ever d than by that committee, fon: ‘“Cometo your con- take an appeal to the peo- in the distri:t I have He said in conels clusion and I wi ple, regardiess of the honor to represent on_the broad ground of common honesty, and in November they will reverse both your conclusion and the method of your conclusion, [Democratic ap- plause, Mr, Dalzell of Pennsylvania read in detail the testimony bearing on the theft of the ballot box at Plummerville and said its theft was absolutely nccessary to Breckinridge's return. Yet hestood here and asserted that it had been stolen by republicans—this re- publican ballot box. ~ The house stood dumb- founded in the face of this sublime embodi- ment of impudence. He commented uponthe backwarduess of the state of Arkansas in en- deavoring to hunt down the murderers.. From her desecrated soil the blood of John M. Clayton cried to heaven, not for vengeance, but” for justice, and the members of both sides were here s sacred ministers to exe- cute her just decrees. [Republican ap- plause.] The debate having closed, Mr. Crisp of Georgia moved to recommit the case with instructions to the committee on elections to report which of the gentlemen received a majority of the votes of the second district of Arkansas. Lost—yeas, S3; nays, 101. A vote was then taken on the minority resolution confining Breckinridge's right to the seat—yeas, 81; nays, 103, The resolution 'de was then agreed to— The house then took a reces session to be for the considera pension bills, the seat vacant ays, 62, the evening tion of private Rumors of Their Being Crippled Vig- orously Donied, Ciicaco, Sept, b.—[Special Telegram to Tue Bee,|—J, V. Farwell, jr., was emphatio in his denial of the story that the firm of J. V. Farwell & Co. is crippled, or likely to be, by the Potter-Lovell failure. Such rumors have been in circulation since the failure and although not generally thonght to be well founded, have been the cause of much specu- lation in the business world as to just how the firm in question stands, That it is at all crippled Mr. Farwell donies, “It is a baseless n’?m’ snid Mr. Farwell. “Wo are not injured in the least and all this talk is absolute nonsense. Nothing can hurt us. As to the stories regarding Congressman Taylor's embarrass- ment T can_say nothing as I know nothing whatever about Colonel T-.ylor's affairs. But as to the ramors_ regardiog our firm’s condi- ;mt";\cy should be branded as absolutely “As the failure was for but £2,000,000 whilo Farwell & Co, have a solid backing exclusive of their business profit, of §5,000,000, Mr. Farwell's statements seem to beamply sup- ported by figures. Congressman Taylor also figured largely in the rumors and is said to be impoverished by the failure, but as heis not in the city nothing definite can be learned. A New Party Born, 8r. Lovis, Mo., Sept. 5.—A mew political party was born after midnight last night. The national reform party—for such itis named—is the outcome of a convention as- sembled during the last thirty-six hours. The platform embraces about twenty-four planks. Anolition of national banks; prohibition; government control of railroads; uniform ge laws; against alien ownership of lands; tariff reform; regulation of corpora- tions: restriction of pauper immigration— these were among the sentiments voiced and clusion, the petition asks the co-ope all the stockholders to accomplish the changes, A contrast is made between the prosperous state of the company in 1833 and in 1885, after five years of the Fish-Harriman me 4 It is'shown (hat “with an increase inthedebt and st £4,005,000 there has been a de- et 1,501 in net earnings from opera- tionsbt the rond, when the results from 18s: are compared Wi thoseof the fiscal ending June %, 1800, the latter a 3 of hanv?' traffic, owing to the pro- lific vield of grain o 1888 an@ 1889, Dividénds have fallen from 5 per eent in 1883 10 6_per cent in 1859 and the warket value of holdings in the same period has fallen from 15 to 116.) The petition further states, “It is believed that since the reportof 1888 was published the debt of the company has been increased by seyeral millions of dollars, and that the debt and stock are approximately §38,000,000 in excess of 1833, and there arc strong rea- sons for believing that at this time the com- ny has afloating debt of front 1,000,000 to ,000,000. It must be apparent that after’ paying the anmal charges the margin from 6 per cent dividends i now very narrow and a further issue of $5,000,000 of stock was recently proposed by the bresent manage- ment, or any considerable increase in the debt and interest account wall force a reduc- tion of dividends and a serious decline in the market values of shares.” Neither Mr. Harrinan nor Mr. Fish were in the city toda, ents on the Fish Matter, Cuicaco, Sept. 5.—|Special Telegram to Tur Ber)—A railway news burcau sa The New York telegram published this after- noon relative to the action of the Dutch se- curity holders of the Illinois Central in their plan to oust President Fish was a sensational piece of news to Chifago railroad men, but Comi jon of d be deprived of its i UY (UT DO The Pennsylvania Rail Gives Its Shopm Pirtsivra, Pa., Sept. 5 and boilermakers employ the Pensyivania railroad we ad Company | low the | will shut in the adopted | passenger traius, however, on the Hudson n per hour as before. | river division the boiler and machiue | them being a tittle late. shops had presénted @ petition fornine hours, | The gencral executive board of the Kuights forten hours, which had boeu re- | of Labor returned to New York on thenight re had been a sirike incontempla- | hoat tonight without stating whether or not ipped this in the of wwork und pay. | for the detection and convietion of the train "T'he men employed i tion, but tho cown) by cutting down To Sue Striking Laborers: Sept. b—[Spacial —_ Telogram to Twk Bez]—The H. C. Frick | Hugine cake company is preparing to bring an action | Vi for $100,000 damiges against the employes | trainon the Delaw.ar & Hudson raltroad,due of the Standard coke works, now ona strike | hereat . becauso of the refusal of the company to | A Howards, near Westpore, aarly this mor- ¥ oo |ing. Engineer Murray and Fivenen Stare W considen the action of | and Keafer were killed, s THE o summarily dismiss employed there. the men at the Standard works," Thomas Lynch, general maniger of Frick, today, »'a clear violation of the agree- | T'wo Conches and a Chair Car Ditched mxu}]e Fuln‘lmr_v‘ ti]lust, and wr‘s h:wu about made up our minds to see whether 4 ngger | mcremnyleg‘zl responsibility of laboror- | OGPEN, Utah, Sept. 5.—(Special Tele- ganization or the alleged representati the men for the violation of a contract,” s of |gram to Tu Combine Against Workmen. Prrrnont Do, et 5A mumber of the | chalr carof th Overland flyer went over on ; o Ra! the country have | theirsidesonabank about five feet hign. richest corporations in Ammg | OBl onepassmger, a ludy, was formed an alliance against strikes. the members are the Westinghouse system, Yale lock company, Colt arms company and | much. A broken mil or Wabash | has all hecan do toget the passencer traing ast the place where the derailmentoce letting atone tryiv to move freight tr Usually when cars aro ditched i wreck on aw week day they ave al I to vemain so until the follow- ing Sunday. The wiecking erows, however, -have commenced to clean up all trices of the wreck and it looks now us though their d, d in the shops of | work willnot be completed before tomorrow con- | afternoon, All the d frefight and it ckado . The trains arc being he looks as though another ards in this vi re running all right, some of they 1 decided to offer a reward of 81,000 wreckers, 8s Loy intimated. they would do this afterioon. v Firemen Kiled, C XS =Apasteuger - TRIALL, 05 o'clock, ran futoa freight train e T RIAND OERAILED. and One Passsnger Hurt. .]—There was aderailment on the Union Paciie, thirty miles cast of Ogden, this forenoon. Two coaches and @ erdy but not dangerously briised. The coiches were not broken upand the tr I was ot torn up g Y of i brake bar, Brxaasny Hamusox. | jured, and I believe several were killed and | Thehouse'at its evening session passed | agreed to, A mational executiye committee | W3S 1t iu thenaturo of asurprise. It has | four or five other big factories, and” presum- | it is not known which, caused the wreck. Mr. Harrison was re-clected president of | badly cut. The guard had his legs broken | thirty pension bills and at 10:%0 adjourned. | was appointed, consisting of W. W. Jones, | beenknown that for yews the Tlinois Cen- | ably the Pullman interests. Inthe compact - the R“fl;"‘“‘“l “*‘x‘*""“"" by “"h‘;“fl"imvus and ‘l‘lwl engineer o badly scalded. - A st Chicago; Mrs. T, E. Williams of the Women's | tral debt has been growing and its net earn- :‘;.';f,;-'fi-“:’;f‘ réki‘:fn':'.'hli?“fic.:fi:fi ieingiio LOST A PIINT OF MONEY, vote. Loviug greetings were set him. special train was at once sent out from Senate. Christion Temperance union; Mrs. 8. B. V. | ings decrensing, The hint that General Mo- | €I a ) 5 T th i e Amiens with doctors, stretchers and am- | WASHINGTON, Sept. 5,—The tariff bill was | Emery, Lausing, . Mich.; Edward Evans, | Nulta, ate reciiver of (he Wabash, is boing sisiis lio spainiat only ene/CthHoramatiieds | Elunger Mike Dy shbo L HIERT AN ARID LANDS, }»u'-;*]"flh tors. l’“*"*‘“k’;‘“l wace ""’“"c."fl\ taken up in the senate this morning, and the ?"&m“'"d“' N."Y.; Hiram Main, Marion, | considered by tluI: Holland s; kholders as a | fCHOESS LS ) RO AL IO the Wrong Horse, 3 by the Brussols express to Parls, where we | . jjerati Hio fnadi Tkt e e hand? successor to President Fish is sus. | St ¥ 3 New York, Sopt. 5—[Special Telogram Commissioner Groff Issues a Circular a9 .05 Wien'T lofb (o Tlace GF | considaralion of i {reB ek, wis procestied e ceptible of partinl confirmation here, | WAin idle until they see fit to re- aster they wore cloariug away the | With. Mr. Vance moved to strike out the ting men around last Releasing Them, debris o find the vietins. I am confident | proviso in the pi h Cit; ion. o o i Vabs tun to work, and no factry |to Tue Be 0 The Reciprocity Resolution. Just before he closed his Wabash R O S 3 graph relating to animals [ Toroxto, Ont., Sept. 5.—[Speclal Telegram | yoceivership General McNulta, in an- | it employ any worker who may have left | night hada pi Wasnixarox, Sept. 5. —Land Commissioner | that this disaster would have been eutirely | imported spacially for breeding plarposes, the | to Ture Ber.)—The Globe, in an editorial on | swer to questions, told the writer that [ 1other factory on o strike, khulthuj,« anis- |to the doct that that wholesdo plinger, Groff today issucd to registers and receivers | avoided had the cngino been provided with a clsi 5 i g ) T htomdon making o business trip to Earope | Socinted factory to seck workers during the | ke Dyyer, had lost §0,000 in bets that he 3 b provision requiring animals to be pure | Senator Sherman's reciprocity resolution, | he intended making 2 e | T Raac nted Wwatki e 3 X of land offices a circular releasing from res- | proper heodlight, and above all with an ' B ; g ? | and bad no doubt of arranging for a better | SWike fromans oo 9 ado on August Belmionv's Racelind to bea wervation the lands of the arid region, It | American cowcatcher, which, reaching clear blooded, of recognized breed, with a record | says: “Some imagine that Sir John Mac- y fon in tho rallrond world than his ro. | institutions mnamed employ between fifty | ™ 19.0m AUMAL SAMONYE “‘L'd“ a1 ekt tion to th PRI At across the rails, would have prevented the | of pedigres, ete. The motion was defeated. | Donald will close with Mr, Sherman's offer | tejvership, General McNulta was positive | thousand and su}ylx,lmwtml workor and di- | L. Stuat's Tristan in tho ralle ani threo-sis- e o ortion 0f tho 8¢t aD-| girder from getting under theengine and | The consideration of the free list was re-| of reciprocity in coal and closer trade rela- | in his statoments aod from a close friend it Fectlysupport two hundved unl ffly thous: | tecath rice atShieepshiead Bay, which ended proved August 30, 1500, wh repeals so toff the track. Amongthe passen- | sumed. Mr. Quay moved to insert in the | tions in general if it should pass congress. | Was afterward leamed that Director Cooley, | S insdid ;‘, 108 h Sive 0F | in avictory for Tristan, When the betting much of the act of October 3, 188§, as with- | gers was an American doctor, but be dida't | g list wild animals inteaded for zoological | This may be doubted. Sir John would hardly | & dissatisied stockholder of _the Illinois of icsa poopte. - To In claimiod by Shose mane it ke Diyersnd e draws lauds in the arid region of the United | 8ppear to be very bus, collections or sclentific and educational pur- | care toalieuate the Manufacturers’ ussocli- '1'{“1‘ hmil\‘n‘xcdU!c";cl"-fl ~\=~ },\Ilm \uls\lluu\r} {t;r Ol B e R i e oy “.‘-'.'fu"fi‘,"\',“i\-‘x’lim,"'fifn onel “If‘hf*:fi::;:[lfé States from e ceupatio ‘ttleme: R ion, etorian guar ve 10 presidency of the road. General MeNulta SRt « 0083 heretofore located or selected shall remain g agreed to, Would be ‘one of those d-d short carves | consultation with Holland and London bar New York Central Striko Inquiry, | 9P0t0 fite, pVhen Duver and bis cmnis. scquestered and reserved from entry or | 9tdson of the Hyde Park Gas Com- | Onmotion of Mr. Manderson, “art educa- | which aiways produce confusion and at such | ers. On his return he told the writer that he Azine (N, Bogk I = Bifove i sistal|ficntes pod foiabelipikcineithy] '”*.bnulx(o settiement until otherwise provided by pany Withdraws His Petition. tional st composed of glass and metal | © time s this might fnvolve defeat. If, how- | had not been able to spend any_time sight- | | pSFs Do o, SR TEGIER 8 B | out of evary ten of the iundred odd, bode law, and the reservoir sites hereafter | Cupicico, Sc —[Special Telegram to | (an invention used in kindergartens), was in- | €Ver, be should resolve to appropriatethe | seeing and that he had been all the timo ‘ = o bl 8 ~erin i dotesiblic st i L ot located or scttled on public lands shall in like | Tue Bre. |- President Judson of the Hyde A : ] Tiberal party the iiberals would d6 theirut- | in _consultation with foreign moneyed men | discharged employe of the orls Cen- | further betting, md those that offcred any / : Be Judson of the Hyde | serted in the free list. y the ibarls ir s e raliroad;oftice of which he fr 8t ; ven om. | 0dds at all did 56 at the prohibitory figures of aoauner be reserved from date of location or 1 g most tohelp him fu forming the best possible | in regar to the railroad of which ho | tral milroad, testified that hehad been em Y R e I v ns Park gas company called on Mv. Hutchinson | My Plumb moved to strike hides, raw o 0 i} ad previous) :n, Hesaid bis mission A £ " | oneto six andoneto seven. Just how much clection. The circulars of August b, 1886 0 f h ! c , Taw or | arrangement for Canad pbad previous 3 s mission | yioved by the company eighteen vears. Su- | e to SiX tudoneto o A o o And Augist 9, 1590, are. rescinded, Tho en. | Of the city law department this morning and | uncured, off the free list, but after Some de- S had been succesatul, but that matters would | POYSRPY TN SPEN SHUEE SEUR, U | Dwyer hud on theracenonaat_ tho big sport- tri idated by this act will be neted upon | imparted the surprising information that he | bate the’ motion was defeated 3, nays They Want & Little Time. not materialize for perhaps a year. It was | POri as : o, | menscen last night could say. Muny of fn regular order und all patents issued on en- | desived to withdraw bis petition for a permiy | 29, All the afirmative votes were republica Bostox. Mass. Sept. b Special Telegram | 1ast October when this last conversation took | #ave no_reasous, telling him he kuew what n said that the redobtavle Mike had put trios made subsequent tothis act on entries | to lay gas pipes along certain streets in Hyde | (. D4Vis moved to insert binding twine in e g oo So\oBT™™ |'place. Moaniime General Mansger Jeffrey | for. He supposal it~ was because 1000, while & fow place his 80 validated west of the 100th meriatan will [ 0 2V K8 PR LoE ST o e e o, | the f : list, aud Mr, Vance moved to amend | % THE BeE] v this morn- | 5¢ the Illinois Central had rveceived such | he. was a Knight of Labo He ers s high as $10,00. tain @ clause reserving right-ofavays for | PAK for the purpose of connecting the In- | the amendwent by ndding cotion baggin ing received the following dispatch from Lee | treatment from Vice President Harviman | had never been reprimanded, suspended or [ Mike Dwyer has bee particularly unfortus and canals coustructed by | diana gas flelds with Chicago. Mr. Judson | Mr. Vance's motion was defeated and Mr. | and Ferguson, Leavenworth, Kan.; “If | that he had indignantly resigned, the Chi- | accused of drunkenucss orincapacity. = T nate this yéar, both in the running’of horses authority of the United States. Par-| gave no ticular attention is called to that portion of the law which restriets aequirement of od to, Mr. Hoar moved to insert in parag: (allowing the free importation of books for cason for this action, after having created so much cominent and several small e ander the land luate, ssruirement of | sousations, but it is not likely that an effort | colleges, educational and religious socict agerogate. *You will require from all ap. | % £t the right to lay these pipes will be | ete.) thé words “‘or by any college, ncadem, icants to file or euter under any of the land | dropped. The idea seems to be put down the | school or seminury of I the Unil Jiwa of the United States an ataavit shows | extension of the Hyde park company's | States inits own behalf . behalf of any of ing that since August 30, 158, they had not v tie tha | its professors or teachers.” Agreed filed upon or entered under said laws a : . Pavagraph 515, putting fish on the fr quantity of land which would make, with the | ¢ UP I | rferred with and | yas laid aside without action, tracts applied for, more than 320acres; or, | S0 OB Wa tion with the mains from | My, Davis moved to insert binding twine in mony of otner discharged employe ative estim betting this has been arties ing our paper wi 3 vou | cago papers devoting columus of space to the X Dlcnt 10 Tono At b Ani o BAlF mmontndw | €vent an pruise of M. Jolfrey's abilities | the sunc guneril tenor, was taken. Of Wil have o diffieulty in paying every dojlur, | Mr. Joffrey was then stut’ to Paris to study | of the road testi We suggest thatall jarties piace their mat- | the exposition KR8 - Ohicaro world's e, 0N Ry e . > on’ > director nd he in turn, afte g t i 3 rotec Ve edi ze | time with Hollan and Loundon finan- Aring was he board wi id. issaid that he be 0,C00 to win in our power to'protect \evéry creditor, large | K20 MR 3 0 enon M. his | consider the testimony and make ce £12,000 wd lost the money aftera very close R — e done nothingto earn moue) ing his un- | rec us, but as it can do so throt finish. A Whole Family Poisoned divided attention to the world’s fair, He | the legislature nothing will be heard until per and in his botting, Consr his agr ate losse: 1to the discharge of men | this yearat $150,00. M ice of the cause assigned | Jost n playing suppose its,”’ such ag o bothering with commit- | Raceland. Dwyeralsolosta mint of money pipe, permit or no e he courts if int conne : b i : refused the director generalship_when it was | that body meets, ~ VermontE teturns, provided o party should claim by virtue of | the Indiana zas fields, while the lawyers are | the free list, and Mr. Vance moved to umend | _CINO¥am, 0., Sept. 5.—(Special Tele- | yy0q upon him unanimously, = Ho likewise, R T Winte RVER JUNCTIO! e s B on as to” sttt meoeeinaue of | anguing the right to' do so. Theclaim is | the amendment by wdding cotton bagging, . | gam to Tns Bre.)—W. J. Hart and his | as o the writer_and which was pub made that-the: unde th 0 i ¢ in the fr ofeated, Mr. Pad- | family, living at Westwood, 0., six in all, | lished atthe time, refused the ; 7 the ¥ of the Hyde park company orbids using being the only republican voting aye. vere wolsone g ing le zershipof the Lake Shoreroad, Likewise | car strike is s . The company eleared | 10014 for establishing the fa &% fla malns for "matural gas purpeece, that el | ek oeing tho only republican voting aye. || | were volsoned last aighity by eating lemon | agershipof th Lake Shororo wise | car strike fs still on. The company eleared | 1914 for Brigham and . 18 el y " or | he refused o a Word e B e M atiore. it goes futo an open combination 'With some | amendwent, Mr. Jones of Arkansas moved to Pudding 1nto wiich & patéat pudding powder | ;1 ;oo ’of ‘the The Wheeling Street Car Strike. Verified returns from all th nothing in the franchise | Mr. Vance ral man- | WieeLixG, W.Va, Sept. 6.—Tho street | seato show @ total vote of jtowns in the $ for Puge, Allen and August d ou will require an afidavit motion was d ept theofice of general | (ha ghstructions from the tracks this morn- | o rant locomotive works, | - 5. These returns mak plurality Onicaeo, Sept. 5.—The South Park icago company there is no danger of | add the words * for grain | had been placed. It was recommended by | \wyich will soon be removed to Chicago, His | U, but sympatuizers with the strikers fol- | 14104 and 1 12,888, T samo towns i e g ark com | charter belug forfeited. So whatever may | made of burlaps. The republi- | his sister, Mrs. Watts of Springfield, O., who | final choice of a position has b missioners today decided not to tender Wash- | be the a daily | lowed theworking gang and replaced the |y 1rss r0 ruil- | beams, rocks, ete, compiny wanted to | 1g(4s. high- | run cars with police protection, but several | douby | policemen said they would take theiruni- Dillinghiam 45,017, Shurtleff and all others 1A making Dillingham’s majority 27,662 and showing a falling off in tho republican majority al purnose of the natural gas pro- | cans who voled aye ington park as a site for the world's fair, as | Jectors there scems to be no way of stoppiug e Dy {hin Mxpasttio ectors. They | them uutil that purpose is openly avowed. requested by tho exposition directors. ‘They | it Hitk that burpose 18 apenly avoued. add that they have already made a tender of were Messrs. Allen, | was visiting at the house. All who ate the | matter of speculation among Chica Mitchell and Plumb, Neither Ingalls, Man- | pudding were attacl with m’nuxm of | road men, allof whom hold himin th derson nor Paddock voted. Mr. Davis’ amend- | arsenic poisoning, Underthe aid of a physi- | est possible estimation Toda; ment was then agreed to 0 ove io gy 'k iy 1 emphativally announced by | All the democrats except Blodgett voted ay oritic ’ cials are coufiden at Mr. Jeftrey | sucl )5€ tu company > > » republican d that park, making the total acreage so | LCPeny is bebiud this corporation, and that | licans: Allen, Allison, Cullom, Davis, In- The Weather Forecast, Muny think he will take the piace recently | onio (P B T ed biere the house will cousist, of 177 re- e dohad 170 horee A mile aid o nite 5 | it hus secured control of the vust natural gas | galls, McMahon, Manderson, Mitchell, | For Omaha and vicini ty—Fair: war vacated by the resignation of Vice President | CBi00go Carpenters! Strike ws, 59 democrats and wo farmors’ frontage on tho 1ake shire s tnciuded m the | A°-8 Of Indiuu Moody, Pierce, Plumb, Power, Sawyer, | potC Neoracka faire coolorr vasiibte | Harriman and that General MeNulta will bo | CitieaGo, Sept. 5.1t i3 estimated the @, With threo towns to be heard from. b § 9 - - Spoonier aud ' Washburn. The negatwve | FOF Nebraska—Fair; cooler: variable | gloeq president. Otbers think Mr. Jeffrey | about three bundred and fifty of the striking | One hundred and thirteen {owns in the Sec STATIONARY ENGINEERS, voles were given by Aldnch, Blodget, | Winds, ' | will be president. G | carpenters have refused to return to work up | oud congresional aistict give Grout 16059 L The Bennett Law and the Tarifr, ; Cameron, _Chan: Dayes, = Edmunds, o o ® ey warmer; southerly winds; | WThe resignation of President Stickney of | o the present time, and the strike is consid. | #nd Shurtlefl 7437 ; Grout's majority 8651, v i 5 Apa Next Meeting of the Association to Be | Evarts, Frye, Hawley, Higgins, Hoar, Platt, | cooler Sunda; ; the Chicago, St. Paul & Kansas City 000 and | woad vietusly at az; ond, D . Nin e pPOiLE TINEELY Sithe e Sopt. B.—[Special Teloy 4 | i i ot Bo PTakaie Taale: asiem e 3 3 | eredyirtually ot an end. The union is now [ aichdo, Sep. O [Special Telegram to Held 1in Omaha. Quay, Sherman, Stewart, Stockbridge and 3 ‘&“»N akota—IFair; cooler; variable | the clection to the presidency of General | jevoting its energies to gettingnon-union | Powers 11,608 and Mahoney 7,55, a majority f - TueBre|—The battle ground in the west- New Youx, Sept. 5.—The National Assoc Wolehtt. winds, Manager Egan was another important topic | pen into the fold with a view toa general | for Powers of 4051. Retiurns are wa i..fi 7 ern states this fall will be in Wiscousin, | . £ Statd b bt les sorlfiy o Mr. Paddock stated at a subsequent s g e ey s of conversation among railroad men today. | ipike next spring. from 37 towns to complete the congressiona swhere the Beanett law and the tarif? question | 2108 0f Statlonary Eng " of the proceedings thathe was unavoidab! g There is no thought of d ; g . h < ing toduy elected J. J. Illingsworth of Utica, | absent when the vote was taken on Mr. Ciuicaco, Sept. 5.~The American powder | tho stockholders, one of whom s T ot apncsentative MK | N. v, president. " The next wecting will be | Davis’ amendment, 1 he had been present | company was incorporated at Springfeld, | “We fare sincerely somy o lo inig a7 In Wisconsin ‘and will malko & held st Otuabaon the trst Tucsday 1n Sep- | ho would have Vaied for it a8 bo bad doo | 1L, yesterday. It iy leamed today that It is ut he s 8o much_other busin sp > A= —_— wote in both distric | ama Railroad Strike Ended. 3 - e 1 WasINGTON, Sept. 5.—The department of The Saw yer-Wallace Failure. T s : Loxnox, Sept. b.—[Spedial Cablegram to A By by e N erday. o Do trast which Is to buv una lrge num. | Bécould notin justice to himself retain the | state has a telegram from Cousul Adamson of |, LONION, Sopt. otaggal i eyt FOS 1 spuniicn in hale ol 1 Yoy dliowns ——— On motion of Mr. Carlisle the woris, *do- | {6 U0 it Sbiehls o Wiy up & lrge s | oice™ e wants to- give more attention to | Panuna saying thestrike of milroud latorers | Tt Bur. | ~Luden Suvyer who hul chirge kee and two in the Niath di:'v.ncu' Harrison Starts fur C.esson. BN e struck off the treelist (paragraph | gud'un them in opposition to the Dupont | Bis Chicago stockyards plan, now almost | is practically ended, of the business here of the firm o wyer, WasmiNaroy, Sept. 5, —Fresident, Mrs | ownk) | completed aud in partial running order. All 3 — — Wallacw & Co.’s of New York, wis inter- BEChansad Fatl el Anile Hord e o Heltard lott | - Mr. Plumb moved tostrike off the froe list | 41¢ Hazand concern G ofus have the most perfect confidence in Eight Miners Bu-iel Alive, viewed fn rogard ta the failure of that frm. [ Toutas, Bept. b Boaaltl CLbia L to | fhin oo fo Creeo: Toatimig proatdmnt | raph 370 hides, rave, uncured, whether A World's Fa both Mr. Stickney and Mr. Egan,' " Lsuresino, Mich., Sept, 5.—Eight miners | He sail: . 5.—[Spect o orn on, Pa. ) salted or pickled, cted—yeas, 193 — Tuae Ber.) —The British squadron departed | expects to remain at Cresson until October < Wasiuxaron, Sept ~ eas, 2 he first comp- Affirmative votes were given by me Interstate Commi jlom Raling. Itis true t this morning. As the fleet passed out of lhe t large losses have been suse 1, but his stay will be governed by the pro- | democrat (Pugh) and the follo | l were burled in the Lake Angeline minoby o | "“Iho failure sirprises mo as It doos others. o | B ing | troller of the treasury has remdered an | Wasmveroy, Sept. b.—The interstato com- | CA¥eIR o0 the sixth level this moming | gyiyedin both home and forcign business con= harbor the band on the flagship played the | ceedings of congress. He has accepted an in. | republicans: Allen, Allison, Cameron, Cul- | opinion that commissioners and alternate | perce commission today rendered the follow | VY effort is beug madeto rescue them, dycted through the London house, but it is Marseiliaise and the bands on the French | vitation 10 attend the reunion of the Army of | lon, Higgius, Ingalls, Mitckell, Moody, | commissioners of the word's falv Columbian b dhp o v The men aro alive and are communicated = not true that my private speculations caused men-of-war respouded with the British an- | the Cumberlaud #b Toledo, O., ou the i7th | Plumb, Quay, Stewart, Washburn, Wilson | exposition cannot serve both as such com. | 10E decision: {‘m..., y means of & pipe used to couvey com: the disaster” The fiilure has caused much Ahew insk, L of Iowa and Wolcott, The other dewocrats lmbsluncn and as oficers of the commission, The acquisition and consolidation by & rail | p alr for the power drilk excitement [n commercial cdrcles in Londoa