i VOL, VI. SALISBURY. N. C. THURSDAY. JANUARY 19, 1893. NO. 15. f Ill CONGRESSIONAL HALLS. Mly Eontine of Eotl Houses oi ltis Filty-Seconi Cocsjess. . . t Measures Discussed and Bills Tassed By Our National Law-Makers. THE SENATE. The death of Senator Kenna, of West Virginia, immediately after the reading of Tuesday's journal, was announced to the senate Wednesday morning by Mr. Blackburn. Feeling remarks were made by him in praise of the dead senator and tbe usual resolutions were presented and adopted including invitation to the house of representatives, president and members of the cabinet and supreme court to attend the funeral ceremonies in the senate chamber at 1 o'clock Thurs day. A committee of seven senators Faulkner, Blackburn, Ransom, Daoie', Walthall, Manderson and Squires were appointed to take orders us to the funeral T and to accompany the remains to West Virginia, and-then as a further mark of TtXfLGt the senate adjourned. The't'.inernl services over the remains of the laU .Senator Kenna were held in the senate chamber Thursday afternoon. At the residence the late senator Mrs. Kenna took leave of the remains alone, her grief too deep to be shared by any one, ami the agony too great to be witnessed even by friends. A few minutes after 11 o'clock the body of tbe dead senator was carried into the senate wing of the capitol a.nd laid in state in the marble room under guard ' the capitol police. The remains were re moved to tbe senate chamber about one o'clock and the funeral services began. They were conducted with all the impres sivencss and solemnity of the service for the dend prescribed by the Catholic church, und were conducted by Bish op Keiine, assisted by almost twenty priests. In the senat?, Friday, the electoral certificates for the electors for president of the states of New York aud South Carolina whs presented and placed on file. Jlr. Sherman, from the committee on foreign relations, reported back the senate bill introduced by him December 20tb, to extend to the North Pacific ocean the provisions of the statutes for the protection of fur seals and other fur bearing animals, and after a brief expla nation the bill passed. Tbe certificate of the governor of Louisiana, of his ap pointment of Donelson Cofl.-ry to fill the vacancy in the senate caused by the death of Senator Gibson, was presented and placed on file. The McGarrahan bill was under consideration for half an hour, and after a speech against it by Mr. MiUs, it went over till Mondav. At 2 o'clock the anti option bill was taken up, the pend ing question being an amendment offered -fty Mr. White, of Lou isiana, to strike out the last proviso in 6cction 2. The proviso is that "such contract or agreement shall not be made, settled for by delivery or settlement of , dufference or by any other mode of per formance or settlement in or upon any board of trade," etc. This was rejected jeas, 15; nays, 42 So the proviso is re tained in the bill. Mr. Vilas moved to attend the second section by adding the words, "and does not in good faith in tend to purcl ase and deliver articles con tracted to be sold and delivered accord ing to the terms and requirements of tucli contracts." He said that the pur Toso of the amendment was to distinguish u legitimate transactions from gambling 'Operations. Debate on this amend mett occupied the remainder of the day's ses sion, and, without action upon it, went over. In lhe senate. Saturday, Mr. Coffery.ap pointed bv tbe irovernor of Louisiana to fill the Vacancy caused by the death1 of tne lau; senator Gibson, was introduced ly his coli.-ague, Jlr. White, and took the oath o office. Mr. Wolcott ottered a resolution it structing the committee on soreign reiilon3 to inquire what were the sums thtvave been expended in and about the commotion of the Nicaragua canal since the it account was rendered The resolution , a-tr over till Monday. The resolution iff ercd Friday by jlr. Morgan, instructing the com xnmee un vuiuiuumc to inquire ana re port the advantages, U anv tnat would nccruo to -production industries, etc., by ine .PUcarnKui euip Wos taken up, and Mr. Morg-m addnd tne 8enate upon it. At tbe concius.tJU 0f Ajr Mor gan 's speech: the anti-optic iu Cune up as a special oraer. dui nrngonism to it Mr. Wolcott moved to itoCced to the consideration of the first biu0a tne CHi endar. A vote showed no quon,. Mr. bhcrman asata unanimuu ccit,.cnt to have the vote on the anti-option vm t ik- ea Wednesday. At a:ou ocicOi ,he en ate went into executive s8ion and soon afterward adjourned till Xon day. "'"-V;- - tub nocsK. house, Wednesday, the bi kansas. and placed upo The report upon the measure has not yet been reported. The house adjourned out of respect to the late Senator Kenna. In the house Thursday morning a reso lution was adopted that at 12:45 o'clock the house attend as a body the funeral ceremonies to be conducted in the sen ate chamber over the remains of the late Senator John E. Kenna, of West Vir ginit. In the consideration morning hour lhe house resumed consideration of the bill to promote the efficiency of the malitia. No action was taken, and at 12:45 o'clock the house, in a body, preceded by the speaker and sergeant-at-arms, proceed ed to the senate chamber. Immediately on returning to its own chamber afbr at tending tbe funeral services, the house as a further maik of respect to the mem ory of the deceased, at 1 :50 o'clock ad journed. In the hour e, Friday, on motion of Mr. Culb-Tson, of Texas, Tuesday as sub stituted for Saturday for the considera tion of bills reported by the coitmittee on judiciary. Mr. Richardson, from tbe committee on printing, reported a concur rent resolution of the printing of 60,000 copies of the report of the agricultural depaitmtnt on the sheep industry and on diseases of cattle for distribution by the Tn tliA L nrhiian M vaa 1 DOISOUOUi UrU8. OI ,w rfP,1 from th committee on bankin na consumers are m i and currency by Mr. Cate, (dein.) of Ar- pWt of the rect.ti,rs n trtA n anrltr cu mat tuo uuiuu S'rators nn'J represents ives. lhe reso lution a agreed to, but it will he some weeks before copies of tbe work will be ready for distribution.- Saturday was assigned for tbe consideration of meas ures called up by tbe committee on Indi an affairs. Mr. Beltsboover moved that the bouse go into committee of the whole for the consideration oi tne private cal endar which was rgreed to. The first billon the calendar was one for the relief of Hiram Johnson and others, and the republicans resoited to their fili bustering tactics and left the house with out a quorum. After a couple of hours consumed in a vain attempt to secure a quorum to vote upon, the democrats be came irritated, and under the lead of Mr. Enloe, champion of the Johnson measure, attemped to force an adjournment. The t fleet of this would be to vacate the night sesnon lor the consideration of private pension bills. The republicans then came to the fore, and with the help of some democrats defeated the motion to adjourn yeas 74, nays 128. Tfce house then at 4:30 o'clock, took a recess until 8 o'clock, the evening session to be for the consideration of private pension bills. The meeting hour of the house Satur day was devoted to consideration of the bill to promote tbe ethciency of the mi litia. No action was taken, and the bill resumed its place upon the calendar. The floor w&s then eccorded to the com mittee on Indian affairs. The first bill celled up wa3 one appropriating $8,595, 000 to ratify and confirm an agreement with the Cherokee nation. The agree ment for which this appropriation is a consideration provides for the cession by the Cherokte Indians of Cherokee outh t, which contains about 8,000,000 acres. The bill was discussed by Messrs. Peel, Otis, populist of Kansas; Rock well, Dingley Helman, Bowers and Pickler and wa3 passed. and the house adjourn- ed till Monday. CAPITAL GOSSIP. The Norfolk and Western railroad bill was passed by the house, was sent over to the sennte Friday and wns, under the rules of the senate and without any spec ial motion, referred to the committee on the District of Columbia. . The reports received from the navy de partment from the government inspector at Carnegie steel works at Homestead, Pa., shows that the armor plate manufac tured there for the new , naval vessels is quite as good as any turned out by the establishment before the lockout of last summer. The plate has stood all the se vere tests prescribed and the men are working night and day to till the con tracts. Senator Kenna's death marks a singu lar fataliiy nmong members of the senate during the present congress. There have now been four deaths among them since the fifty-second congress wa9 called to gether a little more than a year ago. First there was Senator Plumb, who died in Washington December 20. '1891. Then Senator Barbour died in this city May 14th last. Senator Gibson died at Hot SpriDgs, Ark., December 15th last, and Senator Kenna, making an almost unpar alleled death record for one con gress. The Nicaragua Canal Question. Mr. Morgan introduced in the senate, Friday, the following resolution : "Re solved, That thee mmittee on commerce is instructed to inquire and report to the senate the advantages, if any, that will accrue to productions, industries, coast wise and foreign commerce, immigration and other interests of the "United States by means of additional facilities of trans portation and reduction of cost thereof that wou'd be afforded by building a ship canal to connect tbe waters of the Atlantic and Pacific oceans through Lake Nicaragua." ' A Pertinent Resolution. The house adopted Friday afternoon a resolution which reads: "Resolved, That the secretary of the interior be di rected to inform the house whether an executive order has been issued restoring tothc pti blic donatio any portion of the Navajo Indian reservation lying in the territory of Utah, and, if so, that he furnish lhe house with a copy of said order and report what action tas been taken regarding the same." The reso'ution refers to the reported find ing of rich placer gold mines n these lauds. These alleged discoveries have only been made public within a short period. It is Said that the discoveries were made known to Secret iry Elkins ahead of the public, and that he proceed ed, in company with others, to get in the ground floor by iociiting all the choice finds. Of course these mines could not be located or work d legally so long as they rtmained within the limits of an Indian reservation. After the Whiskey Trust. Representative Burr ws, of Michigan, has begun an active onslaught on the whiskey trust. On Friday he introduced ia the house a long preamble and resolu tion reciting the newspaper charge that the trust is makins spirits, I igh wines and alcohol for use as beverages by the use of adulterants; -that the trust is in conspiracy with the rectifiers to that end; that adulteration, is t fleeted by the use of which fact retailers gnorance; that the law is .thus vio States revenue is thus defrauded by the diminution of im Pnacce; that rectifiers are obliged to convlme only the j. roduct of tbe trust QlJdet heavy penalties; that such con tracts jo restraint of commerce be tween e stales, wherefore it is resolved thit a speCiai committee of five members of the house be appointed to fully inves tigate and report upon the subject, and especially nat persons are connected with th font. THE CENTRAL ATTACHED Dy Receivers Haidekoper and Fos'.ei for Honey Paid Oot. F. W.lluidtkoser and Reuben Foster, receivers of the Richmond & D-nviile, bars obtained from Judge O'Brien, ol thb supreme cw,aA attachment against the property of the Central Railroad and Banking Company, cf Qeorgi, in a uii to recover $1,213,404 for moneyp aid out na eipe-Tiea i0r the Use of the defend- '"V .ve1 "wroad Company, in aiscnarpng tne 5 cciued interest on de- oona. an in pay J"K " me dfrndant, be !r mber' April. 1. THROUGHOUT THE SOUTH Holes of .Her Progress aM Prosperity Briefly Epitomized . And Important Happenings from Day to Day Tersely Told. Dr. Samuel Logan, one of the oldest and most prominent physicians of the South, died very suddenly at New Or leansJTriday, of apoplexy. The nationally regretted death of Sen ator Kenna provokes a big fight for the senatorship in West Virginia. The state legislature met Wednesday. The jail at Eelma, Ala., was burned Tuesday. Loss, $20,000; insurance, $3, 500. Nine prisoners were iccarcerated at the time, but all were gotten out safely. A Knoxville, Tenn., special of Wed nesday says: The citizens of Coal Creek are about ready to get up in arms again. Their anger is caustd by the airival at tbe mines Tuesday of fifty more convicts. Fire broke out Wednesday night in M. F. Dunn & Bro.'s stationery and print ing establishment, New Orleans. The building was partially saved, while the stock was a total loss. Loss estimated at $35,000. A Raleigh dispatch says: The North Carolina legislature, Wednesday, unani mously eleeted James W. Wilson railroad commissioner for six year3 to succeed him self. He is now chairman of the com mission. Five storehouses were burned in the town of Blackville, S. C, Saturday, and but for the action of the South Carolina railway employes in running an engine close to the spot and throwing a stream on the buildings, others would also have been burned. A Nashville dispatch says: For the first time in fifteen years the Cumberland river froze thick Thursday night from the head of the river all the way to Nashville. The severest weather known for twenty years is reported from differ ent parts of the state. Wa'dleigh'8 old mill, at Atkins, Tenn burned Thursday night. It was used as a lodging house, joe English jumped from a second-story window and broke his neck. Tom Ashton was suffocated while trying to escape by the elevator. Twenty other lodgers barely escaped with their lives. On Friday, a syndicate of Knoxville, Tenn., men completed the purchase of 10,000 acres of coal land on New River, Virginia, for which they paid $120,000. The tract adjoins the land latfly bought by Drexel & Morgan, of New York, pre sumably for the Vanderbilts, for which $800,000 was paid. Colonel Grant, one of the pioneer resi dents of Atlanta, Qa., and one whose loyalty to her every public interest was one of the prime factors in the city's up building, died Wednesday. His magnif icent donation of land to the city for park purposes leaves an enduring monument to h s memory in the shape of the L. P. Grant park. The first train passed over the new steel bridge across the Tennessee river at Knoxville Wednesday. This is the com pleting gap in the new and comparatively short line between Atlanta and Louisville and Cincinnati by Way of the Marietta and North Georgia rad, the Knoxville, Cumberland Gap and Lou:sville road and the Louisville and Nashville. Treasurer Patrick Walsh, of the South ern Associated tress, lorwarded by ex press from Augusta, Ga., Wednesday night a magnificent sterling silver cup to Adolph S. Ochs, of The Chattanooga Time?, presented to.him by members of the Southern Associated Press in recog nition of his services in perfecting the organization of this association. The University of Virginia, at Char lottesville, has just received a donation of $60000 ftom Mrs. Lirden Kent, of Washington, D. C, for the establish ment of a new chair to be known as the Linden Kt nt memorial chair of English literature. The board of visitors ordered the establishment of the new chair and Appointed Prof. Charles W. Kent, of the University of Tennessee, to fill it. A Knoxville, Tenn., dispatch of Fri day says: W. A. Bly, late general pas senger agent of the Kn' xville, Cumber land Gap aud Louisville railroad, has been misd-ig several days. His where abouts are unknown, but supposed to be near New Orlen?. Officers of the road practically adnrt th it he is short in "his accounts. R ibert Vestal, his nngraph erand son of a p:ominint family, is also missing. A Nashville special says: Governor Buchanan signed the resolution Si turd ay authorizing a commit'ee to go to Win chester, Tenn., the home of Governor elect Turney, and administer the oath of office .there, ne said in his message which accompanied the resolution that he 'housht this was setting a bad prece dent, but he did not wmtto s'and in the way or delay the inauguration of the sjovernor the people had chosen. An appeal has been issued by the La dies' Memorial Association, and the con federnte camps of Richmond, V., in behaf of the monument to the private soldi-r and sailors. There will hortly be held in this city a memorial bazaar. In it there will be a table or tent for each state bearing its name, shield, colors and motto, and it is earnestly desired that each state shall assist its own table with contributions of all kinds. A special of Friday from Richmond, Va.f says: Msyor J. Taylor Elyson, president of the Jeff Davit Monument Association states that it is probable that that the remains of Mr. Davis will be re moved from New Orleans to Richmond for final interment in the early spring; that he has received a number of satis factory letters from tbe c Hectors of the monument fund and that when tbe weather opens permanently, anew impe tus will be given to the scheme. The bondholders1 committee of the Georgia Southern and Florida railway met at Baltimore, Wed n't day, to receive the report of W. P. Hardee, the account ant selected to examine into tbe financial condition of the company. The report shows that the earnings of the company have steadily increased, and that the railroad is the only one in Georgia whose earnings in 18C2 increased over those of 1891. The bondholders will insist that the road be sold under the foreclosure. The Southern Architects in session at Birmingham, Ala, Wednesday, unani mously elected L. F. Goodrich, of Au gusta, president; E. S. Lind, of Atlanta, vice president; Secretary Tinsley was re elected. The following board of direc tors was unanimously elected: D. B. Woodruff, Macon ; T. H. Morgan, . At lanta; C. C. Burke, Meapbis; Tom Wood, Sherman, Tex.; I. H. Maddox, Birmingham. Augusta, Ga., was unani mously selected as the place of meeting next year. A Raleigh, N. C, special says: The legislative committee on judiciary, on Friday decided to make a favorable re port on a bill intended to put a stop to lynching. It is important as the first ever introduced in tbe state, and is cer tainly etringent. It imposes a penalty of $500 and imprisonment on any person engaged in a lynching. It also holds the authorities of a county responsible if a lynching occurs. The governor will be allowed to send a judge and solictors di rectly to the place wher the lynching occurs and try any persons concerned in the affair who may be apprehended. TO 8E SOLD To fliA Fata rT tlia flanrtri SkAldfore' Home as Decided by the Trustees. The board of trustees cf the Georgia Soldiers' Home met in Atlanta Thursday to make final disposition of the -matter. There were present Col. W. L. Calhoun, Gen . C. A. Evans, Richard Hobbs. W. H. Ross, T. L. Massengale, W. D. Ellis, Dr. Amos Fox, Governor W. J. Northen, Col. T. L. Langston, Dr. R. D. Spald ing, Major A. M. Foute and Gen. Phillip Cook. Colonel Calhoun stated the ob ject of the meeting. Among other things he said : "I never expected, gentlemen,", said he, "to be subjected to the humiliation of havinrr to appear before the board of trustees of the Georgia Confederate Sol d:er's Home and tell them that the home had again been repudiated by the legis lature of Georgia. I could not imagine such a thing as being possible. When the home was built the sentiment in favor of it seemed to be so general through out the state that it seemed" to us that it would be most readily and thankfully re ceived." "I do not wish to unkindly criticiee the action of the general assembly, but for myself I wish to say that the action of the legislature was very humiliating tome, and I think a disgrace to the state. The fact confronts us that tb"e' home has been refused and stands there tenantless; We have the property on our hands and the object of this meeting is to' de vise some plan for its final disposition. Under our charter we have no right to divert the home from the purposes for which it was erected without the sane tion oi a court or equity, or oi tne con tributors to the fund" TO BE SOLD. After an hour and a half discussion the following resolution was adopted: "ltesoivea, mat tne board, tnrougn a committee of five, obtain leave from the court to sell the soldiers' home' property and to use the proceeds for the benefit of ex confederate soldiers of the state of Georgia, in the discretion , of the board of trustees." Col. Calhoun named as the committee W. D. Ellis, chairman ; Gen. Evans, Gen. Cook, Col. Hobbs, Major Foute. Col. Calhoun, upon motion, was added to the committee, ine committee win rile a petition with tbe courts as far as possible and when they nave secured tne proper authority to do so, they will sell the Geor gia Soldiers' Home at public outcry. The committee will hold another meeting at an early day. Bid BOSTON BLAZE. k Number of Large Business Houses Destroyed with Heary Losses. Fire broke out Tuesday morning in the building 207 to 219 Federal street, Bos ton, occupied by Hecht Bros. & Co., Korsbland & Co., Wool and Patterson Bros., market men. After spreading to 221 Federal street, occupied by Chris Carvin & Co., liquor dealers, and burn ing around into bummer street, the fire was gotten under control. Amon? the firms burned out ar Pfister, Vogel & C"., bire wool houe; Genrge II. Goodhue & Co., wool; White Broa. fancy leathers; Benjimin F. Thompson & Co.. leather: Baxter Fruit Comi. any. basement of Hecht Bros. ; New Englaud market, on the street floor of Hecht Bros.; Frank Supee, wool; Charles Or- ven. hou- rs: Carro Hon cafe, ana Ale- w -l Garry Sc Murnhv. liquors. A tangle of trolh y wires in front of the Hecht building was an ehment of great danger to the firemen and impeded hem very much in their work, lhe to tal loss by the fire as estimate by tl.e firms interested is $1,655,000. Five fire men ere hurt, but nobody was killed or lataily injured. A VETERAN NEWSPAPER to Suspend After Sening Bonanza Millionaires for Twenty-Are Tears. A Sm Fra cisco special of Saturday says: one of the siffna that the bottom has really dropped out of the great Com- iurn. ioae is tne telegraphic rder from xj. yj. .aims, now in New York, to sus pena the publication of The Vi'giais vny lemtorui Entenrie. the oldest Vta newspaper in Nevada, which for twenty- uve years nas Deen controlled bv bonanzt millionaires and the bank of California. It was the organ of T . these B,eo - the naner pic. xor over ten years n; tas not paid expenses. The EnternHae i i a. i . - i uu me nonor oi serving as a kindergar- aen lor most or the nottd California writers. With the exception of Bret tiart all have served on this Nevada pa per. Hark Twain. Jmnnin lf;n. mnA Dan de Quille were reporters io the early uays, ana some oi i wain's best stories first saw the light in The Enterprise. : Blalae Resting Ejy. A Washington special says: Another almost miraculous and unexpected im provement in the condition of Mr. Blaise occurred early Tuesday morning. Dr. Johnson reports that Mr. Blaine rested fairly well and u in so immediate dan ger of derth. TELEGRAPHIC GLEANINGS. Tie Hews of tie fori! CculeM Mo Pilhy amfl Pointed Faraojaplis. Interesting and Instructive to All Classes of Readers. The St. Louis the oldest hostelry in Dulutb, Minn., was totally destroyed by fire Friday. The total loss is estimated a ? 100. 000. with an insurance of halt that amount. The trial of Hugh Derapsey, district master workman of the Knights of Labor; J. M. Davidson and Robert Beatty, charged with poisoning non-union work men in the Homestead steel mill during last August, began at Pittsburg, Penn sylvania, Thursday, in a crowded court room. Two firemen were caught under falling wans at a final! fire in Kensington, a suburb cf Chicago, Saturday morning. une named Stephen Morgan was instantly Kiued and James Cunningham iatniiy in jured. At another fire one,of tbe men fell through an elev&tor thaft and was Killed. A St. Paul, Minn., special savs: The temperature Saturday ranged all the way irom twelve degrees below zero to twen- iy-eignc Deiow. All anncesoia pomis rave had the coldest day of the winter. It was thiity degrees below zero at 'Elk river Saturday morning, and at several northern Minnesota points forty Deiow was registered. A special of Thursday, from Fort Smith, Aik., says: The table hns been computed of reports ot cotton at various neighboring points for the past two years. lhey show that the total receipts for leys at eleven points in Arkansas and Indian Territory were 51,617 bales. For the previous year at the same points the re ceipts were 122,201. A special of Wednesday to the New York World from Uvalde. Ttx.. enys Catarino Garza, tbe revolutionary agita tor, after eluding the Uuited States and Mexican autboricies in search of him for months, has returned to the Rio Grande frontier and is in person organizing band- that have of late been springing up among the cSrral. Over a quarter of . a million dollars worth of property was destroyed by fire in seventy minutes at Chicago Wednes day morning. The fire was ia the five storv stone front bnildirur-at-Tfiii to 781 riaistead street, occupied as a dry goods store. The establishment contained 800 employes and was one of the largest dry goods stores on the west side. Wednesday morning fire broke out in the block occupied O. M. Sheldon's drug store and Thomas Dealy's meat market, at Chateaugav, Franklin county, N. Y., and almost the entire business portion of the town on North Main street. comprising fifteen business houses, was destroyed. The loss will be $150,000. The thermometer was 26 below zero at the time. Cushing academy, at Ashburnham. Mass., a noted educational institution and preparatory school, was burned Thursday morning, and the loss on the building is fl60,0u0; insurance $ 90, 000. The institution has a fund of f 100,000 and a new building will be at once erect ed. Two hundred and twenyt-five stu dents escaped without injury. The fire originated in the chemicals in the labor atory. A Washington special' says: Indica tions Thursday evening were that Mr. Blaine a condition has taken another un favorable turn. At 6:25 o'clock mes sengers were hastily dispatched for both Drs. Johnson and Hyatt, Mr. Blaine's at tending physicians. Young James G. Blaine was also quickly summoned. Dr. Johnron remained- twenty minutes but Dr. Hyatt did not leave the house at all. lhe physicians are as usual non-com mittal. In the Wyoming state penitentiary at Laramie, WednesdMy night, six desperate characters were beinc brought to their cell rooms, when one of thtm attacked Warden Briggs, who was standing at tht doorway. The rest of tbe convicts joined in the assault and badly beat tbe wnrden. Two iail cuards heard tbe row ad came to the warden's relief with Winchesters. They "opened fire on the convicts, mortallv wounding one and shooting another. The four remain mg convicts returned to thtir cells sub dued. While Sheriff Lre was conveying four handcuffed prisoners across the river st Cummins, Ark., Thursday, Ed Taylor, one oi the prisoners, caused the boat to capsize while in the middle of the stream. Taylor and his partner, Walker Wooden, were drowned. The sheriff and the re- luaiumg prisoners naa a narrow escape ii . . irom a waiery crave, lavlor had sworn that he would never be taken to the workhouse alive, and in carrying out his "w threat caured the death of himself and Wooden. The city natural gas trust of 'PindJav, u., nas s nut on tbe supply! of gas to all the glas factories . r i a M . t.. tones id town, me auinotuies gave no tice that the companies could have thirty j r -V. i. :t J uajs m wuicu iu cuauge 10 on or json e other kind of fuel, and all except (hree ot the eighteen compinies paia no atten tion to it. They claim that they were induced to come to Findlay by offers of free natural gas for fuel.' and thai the I city cannot lawfully take tbe gas awsy I 'rorn mem. -a. mjc uniuwc u nuu wui probably result, A Trenton, N. J., special says: Chan cellor McQi'l filed his opinion Wednes day on the app'ication for a receiver for the Central Railroad Company of New Jersey, deciding every point in favor of the state and ordering the sppointment of a receiver, w bo is, however, not to be named until tbe master reports wbetbsr there has been any change in tbe status of the case iccc it was argued. Thu provision is made because the counsel for the Central have asked pennbsion to show tht the company have cut loose from the Reading coal combine. A Topeka, Ksn f special says: The supreme court decided Friday afternoon that it had no jurisdiction in the man damus proceedings instituted by the re publicans to compel the secretary of state to hand the election retmrns over to George L. Douglass, republican speaker. Tbe bond of State Treasurer-elect Biddle has net yet been made complete, and no attempt has been made to have it ap proved before the populist executive council. The republican treasurer is still in full possession and has been compelled to reopen his accounts, which he had closed to turn over to his successor. The muddle that the legislature Has bren placed in has frightened those who had already signed Riddle's bond, and they are withdrawing their names. THE ELECTORAL VOTE. The Way It Will be Announced to the House and Senate. Here is how the vote will stand when footed up by the tellers and announced by Vice President Morton to the joint session of the house and senate: C STATES. Cuj Alabama. ... Arkansas . . California. Colorado. . . Connecticut Delaware .. 11 8 8 6 3 4 13 24 Florida .... Georgia .... Idaho Iilinoia .... Indiana Iowa 15 13 Kansas , iventnekr , 10 13 Louisiana 8i Maine , Maryland , M'iRsachusetta. . . Michigan ...... 15 Minnesota Misai-sippi Missouri Montana. Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire. New Jersey IP New York... North Carolina.. North Dakota . . . 11 3 'Ohio J 2 Oregon Pennsylvania. . . . uhode Inland . . . South Carolina. . Sonth Dakota . . . 4 Tennessee ....... V2 Teiaa . Vermont Virginia JO 12 Washington..... West Virginia... 6 Wisconsin....... 12 Wyoming ....... Total .. 280 144 20 ine vote oi tne states raaiKea with a are divided. In Michigan tbe electors rtrt , 1 m V a re chosen by congressional districts, and tbe division cf the whele electoral vote of 14 bit ween Cleveland and Harrison was expected: but in Uamorm and Ohio, where the state plan of choosincr (lectors ODtams, me aivision oi tne vote a 1 a a " m . was a surprise, and was caused by igno ranee oi the ballot law on tbe part of the voters. SENATOR KENNA PASSES AWAY. He Represented West Virginia in the United States Senate. Senator John E. Kenna, of West Vir ginia, died in Washington uuy at three o'clock Wednesdny morning of heart disease, from which he had been for some vears an acute sufferer, so much so that for long intervals he bad Ixien compelled to abandon bis duties as senator and to forego all mental exertion. Two summers az". with a view of di verting his mind from his physical ail ments. he established an smtteur boat builder's shop and busied himself in the mechanical operation of constructing a boat. He partially recovered and re sumed his seat in the senate and made one memorable speeen, wmcn was re a a a markable, both lor its length and its viiror. but soon suffered a relapse, from which he never rallied. SKETCn OF JOHN KEKXA'b LIFE. John E. Kenna, of Charleston, Ivana- wah county. WVt Virginia, was ix.rn at Valcoulon, Virginia (now West Virginia), April 10, 1843. lie lived and worked ou a farm. lie entered the Confederate army as a private soldier, aud w wun ded in that service in 1864, and was sur rendered in Shreveport. Louisiana, in 1865. He afterward attended St. Vincent's college. Wheehnff. and studied law with Miller and Quarner, at Charleston. He was admitted to tbe bar June 20, 1870. and has continued to practice law from that time; he wts elected prosecut ing aitorney for Kat awah county on tbe democratic ticket in 1872, and setved until January 1, 1877; in 1875 he was elected by tbe bar in tbe representative counties under statutory provisions to hold the circuit courts of Lincoln and Wayne. He was elected to the forty-fifth, frty- sixth and forty-eventh congress s, and has been elected to the forty-eiath o-n-eres. when he was elected to the United States senate as a democrat, to succeed Henry O. Davis, democrat, and took his seat December 3. 1833. and was re elected. His term of service would have expired March 8, 1893. GAS MAINS BURST Aad Cause Great Soffertas; and tress In an Ohio Town. Dls- A special of Thursday from St. Mary's. Ohio, say With the thermometer bug ging ine zero mars: ana tne natural gas pressure down to nothing, there came ibe startling report that the main, which leids into the field, bad burst from the intense cold Thursday afternoon and shut off tbe supply altogether, thus leavine the inhabitants of the city at the mercy of this frigid weather. The suffering a caused oy tnis unexpected emergency is indescribable, ss there is neither wood nor coal ia sufficient quantities to be had m ue ciiy. Specie ITovemenL lux ports ox specvi from the port of New York for tbe wk 4iB liun,n OtL.' toiu idu i,vti,vuj in Sliver. OI th gold enlj two million .Uppe4.So,d., America. Impor s of specie during th. VEVri .Ml.,??1.W4fof which s . . v. 114.300 was old and $I,7.H surer. CRISIS. IN; MICE, m mni 'ffiiislrf Eess Owins .to Dillerences In - tbe CaM t Intense Excitement la "Wv A new Cabinet to be fonne4. . A special cable dispatch, Tues day, from Paris, says;- Tbe Jfreecn ministry has resigned "Owir to the differences in the aoinei on the arrest of the ex-Minister of Public Works Baihut, and other matters. The gTeaCest excitement prtvaili snd people throng the streets Tho police are out in force dispersing the crodc. Prcm ident Car'not has charged Mr. Rlbot with the duty of reconstructing a ministry. It is openly charged that 'the President and M. Ribot are not in earnest ia rte Panama prosecutions and have no inten tion of brinciog the bribe-takers to trial and that the prosecution of DeLessepa, Fontaine, Cotton and E ffet will be noth ing more than a farce.. , AT THE CAEESET METIfQ. s At the cabinet council held in lhe Ely see, Tuesday, Premier Uiboi annoueo- ed to President Carnot that he ana nis collesgues recognized that it was nec essary to reform the cabinet, ine min isters thereupon collectively presented thcr resignations to President Carnot ana be charged M. Kibot s st itcd, witn re constructing the ministry.. ' THE JTKW CABINET." " The new cabinet-organized by Ribot is as follows: Ribot. premier and min ister of the interior; DeveUt. forcicn af fairs; Tirard, finance; Bourgeois, justice; General Loizillon, war; Burdeau, colon ies and marine; Dupuy, instruction; N'ger, agriculture; Siegfrited, commerce; Victte, works. The most notable aii- ference between this cabinet 'ana us pre decessor is shown by the absence of D Frc3 cintt and Loubet. CONDITION OF TRADE. The Business Ontlook as Reported by R. (j. Dun & Co. Dun & Co. 'a weekly review of trade pnvs: ine pause in business lnciuento ti e holidays seems to last longer thisyenr than usual, but the severe weather has given a powerful stimulus trade la avy boots and shoes and woolens, and preparations ior me. sp log business are going on actively wilh the utmost couft- lence. In spite of renoris that more gold will go abroad, and in spite of'unccrtain- ei regarding legislation on tbe mjiuy question, the business world seems lo aned to believe that there will be no I crious financial embarrasmenf, csrccially s the average oi commercial inueote'i- i ess is remarkably low und failures .. been comparatively unimportant. . 5 I ..v...-j,w-.; .J - though it is somewhat more deoresac J but in other important brancaes a dlslir improvement is noticed in pre para UcJL far thm anrlnor trade. , D . TBE COTTON MARKET. Speculation in cotton has been 1 dming, tbe price declining a quarte though receipts, tbis week sre 4 bales less and expotts 40,000 more a vear ago. .burger estimates or tne use now sent out. s - The treasury has been disbursing free ly since January 1st and very Urge re- turns of money from the interior have caused lower rates here, but ' foreign ex change advances and exports of gold are expected. Meicbandise imports con tinue fully up to last year's figures, while -exports from New York for two weeks have declined $5,900,000,- or over 80 per cent. It is evident that no larger ship ments of securities or withdrawal of foreign capital will be needed during" the coming months to cause some outgo . of gold. ; . " Business failures during tbe past week number for tbe United. State 280 and Canada twenty. THE POPULISTS RECOGNIZED In the Orgrantzatioa of the r Kaaxas House of Ilepresentatlres. A Topvk spccUl says: The crisis in tbe legislative confl ct tnat basbeeo wag ing betweei tho republicans and popu lists since tbe dsy the legisbiture assem bled has finally b-n reabed. Tbe pop-, ulifct house has been r jognizjd by both, th- govern r and the senate sod the pop ulist tite government i in a 'petition to turn the repub'icms ort. Tbe only way to pass theiTJis wttbout serious. trouble is tbe acceptance by o th s drs of totne c&tnpiomtte oicnsur and that now seesr . a the remoust p ssibili'y. A Theonly stp wanting Jitiagp i sttuatioa to a crjts a as lhe rerogo of the rxpulUt bouse by tb senate, t j ter in rxtenrted debate io the latter hi u til rrt w ttajk ffol rot - rtfSksvt!i An 7 rt-ndt d. . lhe fee in r? f tha hnti if j au rra'aBw m v j w 'iiibu n hi marks mde by both speakers wh( ril in nf thm am ate i innt Douylas, tbe republican. stid .tne pnncip;e oi se, . rn'-nt was on trial now is it go and it would tr umpns t did then. Duosmore Mid I ' a att ' . t a 1 uou baa Deen igm iv fv; recoenizei. end na&uower.i the swnrd, Could Uicsoltf h s bitterness attcnxrfe j uj iue leiuers oi earn S'd a compronue. Both hou to 4 o'clock Hon tsy alteTftV to give ample time for f ST negotfstiui.f. The croverrvi toe trnmiston of his nvt same purpose. fi A BRIDGE OP Formed at Xiarara rallsjV J Pedestrians WfgWv A dispatch of Thursday irom 0' I Oot.. wub r . imp!et. bri"l of to W'lK I inrr frn. . " . . ' ... ; hn.d , w lZlZ V' aaa so solid thu crossed it. Th:s is th flr.f tUii tutv rcrrrai BBWUUM MM-. dred tear, that t w , ton r r 7 frozen over. - , j c 1 T k IF. X