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aa Four hun- The World Hunt fora “ There’ as = i ( i stehnnt =} hat les coe Mekhi be? Place ye -nine Em- esi ‘or loom or lome”” Legit asked | 365,066 | Exchange in Al 651,139 there’s no Help in = existence. The World's “j= —===7' place to find Tuesday's (No Evening | Watch the House & Home | (Week-Day one World. Edition.) “ Wants." Columns. Average.) to The World. “Circulation Books Open to All.” | NIGH = ___ Wrote President Dole That ED | ' I ’ | ON ‘phe present. tumble of the tempera. [CG Rature in giving Gotham its weather. ture, Mr. Dunn declares, is due to a|twenty to twenty-four miles an hour ooo — —=—== ~ = soa THIS MORNIN big bank of compact atmosphere which | h wee WT EA all A i: ; is started up in the Northwest, and has [down toca slower rece during the: day ft" He and His Fellow-Pankers Try-|New Names Presented as Sub: D Sean shoctine Gt Ole CHUNK, towards |RSeaish TTI meena eth j ing to Bluff the Adwinistration, jeots of Indictment esi the southennt, an Kt moved cantward— |e hyaline as there mleBt ou ial ety aie t the yl NS ' ey ze ver fro re to shore is : © Cleveland Wants to Place the Loan| Work Praciically Done as Far a New Yorkers Had a Taste Above. “Oia. tatia, Were. oF tha ‘opinion 4548 jace the Loan that when this ice breaks It may caus: 7 ‘ ‘ tiver with 309 or 400 passengers on board b) ll Y Finally the Bergen went into an unused (Spectal to The Evening World.) It was learned this afternoon that the . ah any le regular time. after that 4: WASHINGTON, Feb. 6—The New| Oyer and Terminer Grand Jury has com- ‘he sat John McCullough, | of Legal Government. when a *ub-committee m1. WILLIS AGAIN NTEREERES. |i ity isha Besson cove |e Se Sen eat wl he SNOW STORM COMES NEXT. jo | land and Secretary Carlisle are keenly | tion) or the alleged misconduct in oft He Is Said To Have Protested To Dole Against the Trial of K news except as may be contained tn Tabove Te'clock....3 below | perature at § o'clock this morning wa On their side, the bankers make lugu-|/ rumors may be looked for from that above So'clock...2 below |G degrees below zero. This, by the way, threw Tammany. 1 ti ni t B (of t Martial brious faces about the condition of the} body for several days. bove MWo'cleck..Yabove is (he lowest record of temperature olutionists Dy Cour e money market and the condition of @ubave 12 Noon which Mr. Dunn can remember at any HONOLULU, Jan. 9., via San Fran-| who have recently engaged in rebellion eieco, Feb. 6.—Lilliuokalan! has attention to the fact that sterling ex- (Special to The Evening World.) * A “ Divorce the Elections Bureau and @icated in favor of the Republic. This|to restore me to the position) change advanced half a cent eo, RACE TRACK, NEW ORLEANS, Feb, Tuan: Sunwrtaree eee Hla y Ne RARE es ay aes bel 4 Linn tee bat ia by far te most important outcome of |of Queen, which I held prior to|but are met with the argument that they|6.—Kainy weather and a slushy track | oclock was tho mercury coaxed back to! Portland, Me., 10 below; Boston, 4 be: REGULAR BRIDGE WALKER Cee ee ee the!’ “ m ‘Uon, t was drawn up by A. 8./and without any claim that I shall be- : Femained to make the racing intereming. more, ‘ero. lifted from the docks to the boats until ‘exci aba cat lates a ditions. gee baal ho sere ot the | The betting was heavy. dectareg |, Forecaster Dunn says it will continuc| It was below the freezing point at| the ude turned, | ene i eas a argument on either side the President is The original th race was declare . telegram rom Vhitestone La Lilluckalant, Ex-Queen g Hawall. fem aridithe bankers are Weakening, | end another etal ataeven furlongs | (2 Mrow Wartoer:, NUL ‘Nol at @ Yerr)/all/peinte as fee south) a9 Georg morning reported that a Fall River boat (Special to The Evening World.) ‘They know that e' y dollar Tepres wi substituted. rapid rate. ; In the Central States, however, there|/ had been frozen in opposite that point. ALBANY, Feb. 6.—The Senate awaited sented in the price between a S14 per | C.F, Sanders, of New York, cut loose| This cheering news, however, 1s ac-|has been @ rise of from 4 to 90 degrees, | All of the Sound steamers were jate, | | \I-BANY. Feb. 6. "The Senate aualeed cent, and a 3 cent. basis will be|# good thing in the first race, which he! companied by the announcement that) due to the storm that is following the v a Sheathed Tee. Sanne hk ed Seas 2 Uhe seventeenth day of January, ab- | against the Republic, and in an attempt 1893, MORGAN BACK HOME, at 3 Per Cent. Representatives of Worelgn Fin: clers After a Higher Rate. York bankers August Belmont, J. Pier- Pont Morgan, Robert Bacon and James Speyer have started for home. The re- sult of their trip is said to have been satisfactory, Mr. J. Plerpont Morgan sald to-day: “I am satisfled no announcement of a bond issue will be made until after the vote in the House on the Springer bill alive to the situation.” The great National game of bluff Is being played between them and the President. They are trying to se- cure the bonds on a 31-4 per cent. banis. He hrs told them blwntly that they ought to take the issue on a 3 per cent. basis and be glad to get it on such favorable terms. the Treasury. The President responds by saying that if the bonds could be written rt % per cent. they would be readily taken at par, The bankers this morning are calling are {1 peaition to change the rates them- elves without regard to the natural con- clear profit, and that betw {ym total of some $4,000,000, ‘They know also that if they can ne- cure the bonds at 3 per cent., they will be able to place them at 2.8 per cent., or even better, and they fear that they the two may let a good opportunity slip by HiRsE RACE: of the alarm clock in his bedroom, he . ix furlongs. 5 walung too long. ‘There is ground for} felling: etx furta said when he finally arrived. As intimated in these despatches, the | Ransom, 108, (J Hill) Benator Lexow's Special Committee, Fresiaent he #08 Feason how for be- | Wea*inunt. ind which ts juggling with the three y, ‘NEW YORK, WEDNES OTHER CITY THIEVES, Police Are Concerned. There Will Bea Big Batch Wheo the ‘'y Reports. pleted its investigation of the Poli Department, and has ordered all the in- dictments against porice vMclais that can be found, The Grand Jury was ready this morn- ing to hand in the indictments, and Justice Ingraham was in his court ready to receive them and to sign bench ware rants for the arrest of the officials, the of of public officlals not connected with the Police Department. The information furnished by this sub- committee was of such a character that the Grand Jury felt compelled to con: tinue its investigations. It probably will be a week before they will have completed them It is the policy of the Grand Jury not to hand in any indictments until ail have been found, and consequently no C. F. SANDERS'S GOOD THING. Ransom, Backed to a Short Price, Wine at New ¢ tenner. kept many from the grounds to-day and withdrawals were numerous, but enough won with his gelding, Ransom, to a short price. Ransom fairly’ revelled in the slush, and made @ show of his field. Another Eastern colt, Van Brunt, jist, towt the place in the last jump to of Genuine Arctic Weather, Many Small Fires Caused by Efforts to Keep the Water Runaing. Scenes and Incidents on River and| Lard of the Sharpest Day of the Season. RECORD OF TEMPERATURE. ‘This is the coldest day in fifteen yea: in New York City. At 7 o'clock this zero, It went up two degrees in the/ next hour. the cold wave Is tollowed oy a storm, Aire 2 i Ong Jan, 10, 1875, 6 degrees below, and D BI, 1880, 6 degrees below. EVERYNODY MURRIED THROVGH THE STRERT. The crest of this wave ts now over the lake regions, with the centre about White River, Canada, where the tem- of the Weather Bureau stations. At Alpena, Micl., tt was 22 degrees below at 8 o'clock; 20 degrees below at Moutreal, and up at Albany, New York's statesmen who were around early in low; Philadelphia, 2 below, and Baltl- cold wave. This storm should reach New now developing in the Northwest. It York, according to Mr. Dunn's calcula- | Circulation Books Open to All,” | DAY, FEBRUARY 6, 189, aa THREE BELOW SCENE IN THE BAY OPPOSITE QUARANTINE AT 8 O'CLOCK THIS MORNING. IC NBII ot ROE EPO Sa A NL RN AR Padiatr st a8 likely to » shifted to New York ax anything else that is gone on the part serious trouble In the bay. Ferry-Hoats Delayed. The ferry-boat Neth boken ling, was he! forencon by a big Jersey Central in the tee, rlands, of the Ho- up in her slip this ar-tloa: of the New Rallroad getting stuck It also blocked the Bergen, of the same line, which was out In the which laid up in New Was frozen faat this required several hours to night, It At one of the Hoboken ailpa the tce got packed in #0 solidly that the boats could not tun In closely, and women had to be ery vessel in the river this morn- ing from tugboat to ocean steamr, was DR, PARKHURST He Addresses the Committee at Albany on the Lerow Police Bills, “DOWN WITH PARTISANSHIP,” That Was the Battle Ory of Nov, 6, He Sad, That Over- WOULD FIX RESPONSIBILITY. Duty.” for half an hour this afternoon, and as the Senate doesn’t usually wait for any one the Doctor should have felt compll- mented, as he doubtless did. The doctor wes late, It wae the fault bond act. If Mr. Reed's Exc procaine bills that Boss Platt wants p \ed, and bond, proposition passes the House | Non iicXalry. b (heeriol bt 4 ‘ waited until he came. ew fairly with Mr. | Quckeye, ioe (Sumer): ti Cleveland, but the President is patriotic | black’ satin. 108 CPhordi 74 The Senate was crowded with Senators: and doesn't care, + In the Senate the situation in as fol- lows. The Financial Committee covered ite actions vesterday with some mys: | tery, but @ member of the Committee y by 4 | order tao come over to the Senate and Informe “The Evening World’ corre: | Longa head before Can Brunt. Tine |hear the Doctor; half a hundred New ion which was | er vho p Voted down was the Sherman’ bond | 1-20 3-4. ee Yorkers who came up to give tone to roposition. Hi said further that in hix| R the event, and a good many ladies, judgment anya iar proposition would pall hoe ‘olds; three beh whose presence compelled the Commit- But ‘here isthe line of poltes which | Becky Sharn, 107 ct 1 teemen to throw away thelr cigars, it is intimated wil be brought forward. | Romance, WT (A; Cle Oe Senators smoke during committee The pop-xun bills ‘are ali on the caien- Cae Be ior teith) n meetings in Albany. The assemblage dar. notice one can be ta Gua K (Mayberesy Looe Be even & x Re BFS up ‘ant « bond amendment’ offered in| Kravis. iio iketainey 2 abel Wel 4 Was notable one 1h exert WA7eaaaam open Senate. If the Reed substitute passes the House that can be offered verbatim. Then the question would re- solve itself directly on the: m y I Gerry, Cornelius Van Cott, G. W. W. securing a vote. e matter Of) mance cloned. In the race up the stretch |amaker, Sam 0, Bendorfer, Lawyer J. ‘The President_saw the Sherman Re- ron by wal lenethe,. 1 [ravers Jerome, Treadwell Clevs peal bill and the Tariff bill pulled through | aud won cleverly by two length ) Travers Ji e jeveland, after a fashion, Hence he {s inclined to the belief that a bond proposition may: yet be enacted, If so, he would be sure weil known in New York City, of a 3 per cent. bond, and he Is uaing seven and a half furl Parkhurst reached the Capitol at this argument to bring the bankers into Teale ons clock and his arrival was signallized ne. . i Perhaps the strongest argu by the President for a 3 per cent. basis in his conference with the bankers were that the Funded Loan of 1891, over 000,000, extended at only 2 per’ cent... quoted at 9%, and that the holders of the current 4s, now quoted at 111, would fi rotest with Treason against any loan eing placed at so low a figure as to affect the market value of holdings, amounting to over —_.-- GOLD RATES GO DOWN. May Indicate that the Bond Innue Has Been Arranged. ‘The posted rates of sterling exchange were reduced to-day to 4.87 1-2 and 4.89. This in a reduction of 1-2. It goes to cor- roborate the belief that the bond issue has been arranged finally at Washington. Ransom and John Cycha ran flanked for a quarter, when Ransom drew away and opened up daylight, followed by Van Brunt. Ransom was never headed, win Rags and Becky Sharp got the best of the start, the former leading to the wh harp and Re mance beat Rags the same distance Time—0.40 1-4 THIRD RACE, the place, It Beotty (Puryear) Sinith) ihuret Flower, eft at port Bay Flower was left at the post White made a runaway race of it, le all the Way us Winning inva gall five lengths from Footrunnér. Tr ser was six lengths before Taylor n. Time—1.44 1-! plat Hay- RTH RACE, Rotring Stralient, Place 1 & ‘ rere. weights and Jockays, Furious, 100. HAN) 08 (HL. Williams) 1% Robert Lat’ Panway,” 10) Furlong won. Robert Latta was second, who are and are not members of Mr, Lexow's Committee, Assemblymen, who got through a big day’s business In short of the people in the chamber were Boas Platt's) men, Lauterbach, Commodore , Louis Windmuller, Thaddeus Kenneson, ea other men who are and a ur, cle’ Dan" Bradley, of Brooklyn, ed his seat, ahd these mem: ¢ Committee appointed by tht |Cooper Union mass-meeting arra themselves about him: R. Fulton Cut- ting Chairman and delegate of City | Club; George 1. Rives, Good Goverhi- ment; Louls Windmuller, German-Amer- ican’ Reform Union: A, Johnston, Good Government Club; GC.” W. Jay Schieffelin, Chamber of Commerce; Hor- ace Deming, Civil-Service Reform Asso- elation; Dr. Theodore Dunham, Good Government Club, Senator Lexow’ was sitting in the | semicircle of space alloted to reporters when the Doctor came into the Senate Chamber. Now, in days gone by the Nyack states- man And the Doctor used to fall upon h other's necks when, they, were in same building, but to-day fifteen feet s near as the two gentlemen got ach other. th was toe a Late in the day the posted rates of sterling exchange were restored to $4.88 a $4.89 1-2, CRISP ON THE SITUATION. Said to Hay jd President That © Senator toyed with @ newspaper and did not look at the Doctor. and | the Doctor found something interesting in the carpet when he was not shaki hands with Senators and members who crowded about him, The Doctor looked wearied, and while _ Chairman Cutting was addressing Sena~ tor Lexow and his associates, he closed Is even, Beatie was third, Time. MADISON RESULTS. RACK TRACK, MADISO: ‘The races here to-day lows: Jeome entitled by reason of anything + | that I may now say or do to any other or different treatment or consideration |at the hands of the Government than 1 | otherwise could and might legally re- ———— promises cloudiness with snow ee row, accompanied by high north Feb. resuited as 6 fol- AL, PRESIDENT DOLE, OF HAT: ——_—_—__—_— = Hartwell at the request of the ex-Queen, It was presented on the 2th ult, to) Bresident Bole. j Phe document, according to the word- | Ing, was executed freely and voluntartiy. It was addressed to the President, and te say: nim to Throne. “after full and free cousuitation with | my persenal friends, and advisers, beth before and since my de- tention by military order in the Execu- tive building, and acting In conformity te thetr advice and also upon my ow: five volition and pur- evance of my unalterable belief ‘and “understanding of my duty to the people of Hawail and to thelr highest and best interest, also for the sake of those misguided Hawallans and others with my legal | in tha head | ceive, I now desire to express and make ‘inown, and jand make known do hereby to yourself and Government, lawful the only of and (Continued on Third Page.) BAYARD CUTTING SAY8 HE'LL WAIT. express as recognized | no: to | #1 the people of the Hawaiian Isiands, | | whether or not they citizens of the Republic or have been ad-| herents of the .ate monarchy, and also to all dipiomatic and other foreign repre- [sentatives in the Hawallan Islands, to ve yet become Springer BIN Ca: jal to Th WASHINGTON, is reported to have informed the Presi- Jent to-day that the Springer bill could be adopted in tts present form. issue is rapidiy narrowing to the Ree proposition or nothing. rolpeclsive action by “Congress will ollowed by decisive action in regard t \the bond call. . ue ‘reunury Statement To-Day. WASHING b. 6.—To-day's statement of the condition of the Treas ury shows Avatlable vening World.) ash balance, $1 01,808; gold re (Continued on Second Page.) THE REFORM MOVEMENT STARTS ON +L. RIVES FINDS IT COLD p. 6.—Speaker Crisp First Race—Four and a half furlongs —Won by Forget-Me-Not, 5 to 1 and 2 to 1; Lyons, 2 to 1 for a place, was sec- ond, and Baby B, third, Time—1.01 KID HOGAN'S SLAYER FREE. | ‘The Jury, After Three Charles Schaeffe The jury In the case of Char’ fer, charged with manslaughter first degree for killing Edw better “known as "I6td" March 4, 184, returned a verdict of not On at 4.15 o'clock Jat the corner o| avenue Ninth street. ‘The was out for over three hours. » Aca i} # Sehae the Mogan, Hogan, on First jury ITS WAY TO ALBANY THIS MORNING. WINDMULLER MEETS A FRIEND. winds and fog aleng the coast Sul further in the dista cold wave, now tn British but Mr, Dunn is not quite sure that this second wave will not be it reaches the Aulantic coast In the way of comparison, the Weather Bureau records show that not st . , 1889, When the thermometer reg degrees below zero, it be 6 cold as to-day. Weather Records Talk. To this Mr. tion, that since 1870, when ghe Weat Bureau records w 1, there hay heen only three than this. | These were pes below; ts enother | Columbia, | wrecked before | Dunn added the informa: | GV FY ey Dat (As she looked when she arr ing. He thinks from 15 to Don, tions, to-morrow m! the temperature should degrees warmer to-mo: term on the Way. ‘There will be quite a heavy snowfall, and possibly some danger to naviga tion from fogs along the coast and high winds, That the cold wave owing this ow aft Snow fe QCHIEFFELIN COMES IN FIRSR storm ts not out of nature's kindergar- ten, Is evident from the fact that at He. lena, Mon. the temperature has fallen 52 degrees in twenty-four hours, one of the greatest tumbles, which Mr. Dunn can remember. That wave will be rampant in the Southwest for a few days, and Is just | ei cot rete e STEAMER Jt ved in this port yesterday.) There was Coat was . and near the Nad been frozen ice. Staten rtistic turn of bip at anchor in art by nature, but Was not so much 1 through the dirty windows as if it had be > to stand outside the ts rhe rivers and bay were filled with floating tee, but as it has not been freeg- ing long enough to create thick and hard ice, there was little difficulty in naviga- thon. Uke a big ite Fearcely a spot on hot covered wit water Ine the into an ghost, of ice from the flats between Staten Island and Jersey, but the waves soon (Continued on Sixth Page.) } ‘The flood tide brought in huge cakes | | Mr: Cutting briefly stated the object lof the mass-meeting, the appointment ‘of the committee to come to Albany, and the object of Its mission, He said the mass-meeting was o1 of |the most representative gatherings of citizens ever held in New York. He eaid e meeting had been entirely free from idles and that the citizens who took art in it were compelled to disagree ith the Lexow Committee in regard to bills, because they believe it for the ntereste of the city, The Committee which he represented, | Mr. Cutting said, believed that the Citizens should be accorded the privilege of a hearing and a sufficient delay which to prepare measures to take the of those offered by the Lexow “ommittee, and which would remedy the evile now existing and which the Lexow bills were intended to remedy. jeorge L. Rives, representing Charles Stewart Sinith, who was kept away by iilness, was the first speaker. He said the citlzens who participated in the mass-meeting at Cooper Union differed with the Lexow Committee in re rd to details ‘in the reformation of the shocking conditions that the Lexow Committee had found existing in New. York. The details over which the citizens In the ma meeting now differed related te ithe ‘plans outlined by Benator Lexow for the reorganization of the Police De- partment. Mr. Rives read passages from the re- ort of the Lexow Committee. ‘The dif- erence, he said, Was not as to what was wanted, but how it was to be accom- plished. ‘The delegates representing the mass: meeting believed, in. brief, that the should be a single head to the Police Department; that the clvil-service tem should prevail in the appointment of policemen; the inauguration of @ tem having’ promotion upon seniority and merit; the reformation of the pen- sion system; that the accounts of the Department shall be audited as in other | departments; that a radical reorganisa~ \tWon of the Department be made by « commission to be agpointed for that purpose. Rives explained that the del tes represented believed the Miyor stewid he represented at the meee t this Commission, A’ committee >