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Show ' l V- w' OGDEN DAILY COMMERGIA DEADLY COAL DAMP with UuuJ ouiiiig front U I tbe story vt the appaiimg i 4r. Working ihu way ia. ihrr fvMad bud ma trt-- n alfc INGALLS REIGN OVER. thegaseay. Oiie itiifurtu&ale aaet tit dnklh wade oa L kaeea ia prayer, with handa eiakped asd r; putind. II fuuud in tkii pifciuua. The Alliance Men Dartre at His U3y IT wa a rirni-TK- Kl. . Political Fueeral. Men Meet While all tbi was oeeurrii g the peoOne ple of the regwa fe cvMiteatratiog at U- - scette of Ue tt tmw gnat dsii-t-f- . ktxt rril.r aad friend; U DEFEATED BY PFEFFEIi. ruebed to lUe the uouth of the j'iu riiriekmg and sobbing was ooe nver to be fur- and the Yt'a Ee-ia Wiroiiiiii - The them cam gotten. h'uli.iBg BOWELS. IX r and ucJc rtat-frooi 8cattLil lViidlork Stilt ou la liliucii Mount IVant asd Creeitkbjrh. aixl SitUutioii Elahrrf. after taeoi rather Laojluag, of Scott-dai- o who went aiooug the Uuiaaved m ilL rVnimlva- - worda of aynipalhy aa J txmdi!(, An Explosion iu ToPti. Kan, Jan. 27- .- W. A. PftaVr. baida urging ni.9 to greater work to edUorufthe Kajua Partner, baa rere-unia Coal Mine ami It and be aiive any bo miht cently received the full alliance rote for . Fearful 'Krsult-Jsenator in the bouxe. lYeffer waa nomi M sou At a:u xtnr xt Servicea by the pliyaieiana were little naled by the Alliance caucus on the needed, for every tuaa in !la headings ninet enth ballot lart bight The toto v ;j kilieii. The Wok f by the where the etplukiou the defeat f Iagalla. Nime were injured and liveti. The de d today imans F la nits After Sixty Bodies Had The biJiot for United States senator todies were brought up every few minhi-e- a ute i. Every cortitie was oovered and do resulted : Uerovrrrd Feare4 Ike one evenv entureJ to inuuire which body Houfw-- Pf offer. 9C; lngal2a,S; Blair 5. I Cremated. Oifcre Will ii waa, ror itit--y Knew mat every ooe u Henato-Iugalla 3a, Pfetfer f. that part of the mine at the time of the IfeQor waa bora in Cumberland e plosion waa dead. Pennsylvania, in K'iL and is of tf Wire au4 Untrlrradiug a aorolr county, Superintendent Keighly Dutch parentage. In ISjU he caught hearts With TMr IWd Lev4 diatreeaed, lie baa been ia two other the gold fever and went to California nun diaaatera, Dunbar and iounga-town- , where be remained two Hi(kteia thttma-W- r years. He made but thia waa far worse. II aaid: considerable money and returned to ef Homm. Xo man living knows the causa of and soon after removed to Pennsylvania the accident and it ne er will be Indiana and later to Mis ourL He known for a) Not ao many served during the wax in the Eighty-thir- d Prrraacau, Jan. 27. At midnight it is were killed bycertainty. the explosion, but the Illinois volunteers. At the close stated that on hundred and tea men dreaded after-damcame and the un of the war he settled at Clarksville, to succumbed were killed Thia fortunates ia it Tenn- - practicing law, and in 1870 be explosion. 8ixty bodiea have been taken out ao far. The shown by the fact that only those bodies moved to Kansas taking ap claims at immediate vicinity of the worat different times. He edited yarona pathe in mine ia again on fire and it ia feared that wreckage were mutilated. One foreman served aa delegate to the national all other bodiea will be cremated. connected with the mine said that the pers; convention iu 168U In that republican in it. The year he moved to ScoTTOAUi, Pa, Jan. 27. By an ex- aafety lampa were not need Topeka, assumed ediwa not auapectea. torial control of the Kansas Farmer and plosion of lire damp in the mammoth preeeuee of gaa A rOKHIULJC THEOKT. afterwards bought the paper. He has ahaft of the IL C. Fricke Coke company been engaged in the publication of that aaid he Lynch Superintendent tonight today, eighty sturdy minere were ever since. paper in it that the drawing possible thought ushered into eternity and a number se- riba The paper baa a wide circulation or pillars tame miner tapped toe gaa. Ail the lights were open aud the gas waa among the Kansas farmers and much inriously injured. fluence over them. He joined the Althmy. Thxploaion occurred thia morning an unexpeoted movement one year ago, and in Lp to one o clock aixty bodies were re liance shortly after 0 o'clock and it ia supposed covered. waa the result of the ignition of a miner's Every live minutai a corpse ia the spring of laat year began a bitter oil lamp. The after damp whien Drougnt to the euriace una paaeri and determined warfare against Ingalls' p the explosion au (located uirougn lue line oi waivners wnnoui was a stauch Up to 1 year ago Pfeffer republican. Dearly every workman. The few men comment suve tho expression "anotber He outlined bis policy as senator toone." who It is impossible to obtain a list of the day. Ho aaid he favored absolute and BEAUZr.D THE AtTflX RITIATIOX dead aa net even the bosses know just unlimited coinage ct ailver and conserFell to the ground, thoreby" preventing who went down in the morning . vative expansion of the currency Blong s the gaa from striking them. The other lines. Ho was in favor, he said, of not killed are in auch a critical con- -' to home industry, but THE SILVEE INVESTIGATION. firotection best dition that their deaths are protection did not always lily expacted. Protection by Up to thia writing fifty Several Persons Examined but no Iu- - result from high tariffs. bodies have beetl recovered, all without tariff as a general principle, he aaid. was tormation Elirited. v a sign of life. The tire which broke out wrong. High tariff should be called in ; arter ice expkSion was ton extuvi Wamuixutox, Jan. 27. In the silver to aid only individual struggling indusan average David B. Littler was tries. He now favored i1 , out in oneration. The -- a has about .11ipooli of 20 per cent Ho was dnty A reirardinff the i i been driven from the pit and thf oppouod to the Fore bill f of rescuing tbe entombed niii purchase and Jr. lie did not t v ' .been oommenced. . The New vs nor dates, but The mammoih .plant was that the too 27 next Jan. When the one of the largest plan Va8hiotoj, wfuena, tore the bill passed. congress meets the seat of Hon. John oke region. but it ia hard of lobin not s engaged united works near the situated James Ingalls will be occupied by Al explosion recently destroyed the en-- ! hying or influencing members of con -- fred Pfeffer, of the Farmers' Alliance, in behalf of legislation. gress tire shaft. lhe affair Edward Curtis of San Francisco, a who in joint session of the Kansas legisHAS CAST A GliOOM Louis silver commit- lature will be formally declared elected member of the Over the entire ooks region, tnd tonight tee, denied the St statement of Correspon- United States senator. The predictions hundreds of miners are flocking to the dent Bogart that witness mentioned of the knowing ones that the Allianoe cene of the disaster, offering assistance, Flowers name ia connection with the would be unable to agree upon a candiThe appaling loss of life at the Dunbar silver purchases. Curtis having said date and that the failure to airree would disaster is more than overshadowed by something about hearing that a party of disrupt the organization went wide of the destruction of life in the mammoth New Yorkers interested in silver had tne mark, 'lhe caucus was harmon ous calamity. The newa spread throughout been in the Shoreham hotel, he was last night and to each ballot the name the entire coke region with great rapid- aaked to give the name of his inform- receiving the lowest vote was dropped ity and everybody ia awe stricken. Oof-tin-s ant. He waa unable to remember but from the list until the choice was made. have already been ordered for eighty thought that Gov. West and A. J.Rumors of defection in the vote in the house today likewise Droved unfounded. persona from Mt. Pleasant undertakers. Warner were in the wmn at the time. No one escaped from the mine in conCorrespondent Donnell, of the New The proceedings of both houses were of dition to tell the story of the awful dis- York Times, said R. J. Wynne of the an orderly character. In the house aster. ' Commercial Gazette waa the person fifty-thre- e petitions from tho G. A. R. LKFT OX THE WORLD'S CHARITY. from whom he received the information veterans throughout the state for the It is estimated that there are sixty mentioned iu yesterday's examination. reelection of Ingalls went over under the rule. When the result of the ballot was wives and. families left wholly de- - Wynne aaid he got it from Gen. Boy chief correspondent of the Com- announced the alliance men went wild on the charity .of the world for pendent 1 sustenance by thia disaster. In fact mercial Gazette. Aa Boy n ton could not and cheered for several minutes, Senator Ingalls, in an interview, thia the committee they are almost penniless, aa the plant be found this afternoon, " .. afternoon said be had no plans for the has not been running full for some time, adjourned. future except that ho knows he will reand work has been exceedingly scarce. 'WAR IN THE SPUING. main in Kansas. Everything possible will be done to tmpply the widowed mothers and children with the necessaries of life. The Not Over 100 of the Indians Have Vilas Has a Majority. Fricke company will act liberally in thia Been Disarmed. reMadisok, Wia, Jan. direction, and Master Workman Peter Kansas City, Jan.'27.--Jame- 8 A. Fin-la- y ceived a majority over Spooner today Wise has sent an appeal for aid to the of this city, Indian trader at the Pine when both houses of the legislature miners and cokers of the region. HTORT OF THE DISASTER. Ridge agency, returned home this morn- voted for United States senator. William F. Vilas is a gifted orator, not Thia evening the partial story of the ing for a brief visit Finlay reports that ' disaster waa obtained. An unexpected when he left the agency Saturday every quite 51 years old, a Yankee by birth but flow of gas waa struck, and the miners thing was peaceful and ouiet, and that a resident of Wisconsin since 1852 He working in tta headings connected with General Miles said he did not expect any served in tho army in a subaltern cakilled. further trouble, but that the general pacity. As a lawyer be ranks high. Unflats Nos.a 2, 3, and 4, were all n m 1a naa1 ueen in opinion of the officers was that the In- der President Cleveland he was first nia auty, tne nre doss, aaexamined and on the elevation the working dians would go on the warpath again iu postmaster-genera- l the mine, and of them had of Justice Lamar to the supreme bench nlacea. . His mangled body lies at the the spring, aa not over 100 ' ho succeeded the latter as secretary of morgue. The only evidence that he at- been disarmed. tho interior. tended to his duties is the regular cerWhat Indians Eat. tificates on inspection received from him Moody out of it. this morning, which guaranteed the Washington', Jan. 27. The eouitnis-sioner- s mines safe. The miners knew these ceron Indian affairs made a report Pierre, S. D., Jan. 27. Two ballots tificates had been tilled out. and went to for in to peuator were taken without result relation the manner of purchasing never return ed. Supenn- work. : . i iThey u 1 1.. tt Indian beet hoof on for tho the 1U- service; WIIU UJ1UO bUO wub Moody has released the republitoday. lenueuk lYeiulu, spector in the Dunbar district when also a detailed statement of the efforts can caucus but will not withdraw fro m made from time to time to do away with the race. His vote fell today on tha last taut horror occurred, was at the mine the practice of contracting for large de ballot to 3D, against 72 yesterday. All WHEX THE EXPLOSION TOOK PIACK. liveries in the fall. All euch efforts sorts of speculation is being indulged in. He immediately called( for volunteers, failed owing to the insufficient appropri-tions- . deand, gathering a few about him, In 1834 there was paid for 050,000 Thirty-seve- n Iiullots Taken. scended the shaft. Before doing so he of beef for the Pico Ilidge notified General Superintendent Dinch, founds delivered in the fall 8226,000; if 8krikpfii:m, 111., Jan. 27. After the and that gentleman orderod all the the lowest but ror tho monthly de- thirty-seventh ballot for United States mine superintendents in the region to livery had been accepted the cost senator was taken without result, the theaoene. would have boen 810(5,000. The beef session adjourned until noon toWhen the volunteers entered tho for Pine KidgQ this year cost 8100,6C0 joint morrow. mine the eight was impossible to picture for fall delivery.-the lowest bid for which met them. The bank cars, mules, monthly delivery had lxen accepted it To I'cpeal the Bennett Law. and, more terrible than all, the men would havo been $19!l,203 or nearly a Maoihok, Wis., Jan. 27. The demowere piled in a compact mass against hundred per cent more. Iu several cases crats of the lower h .uw this morning the rib?, or walls of coal, and not a the difference while considerable was living thing was in the wreckage. It deemed excessive aad monthly deliveries pBS3od. under suspension of tho rules, was almost an solid as the coal itself, ao were accepted. . In all coses whore beef the bill to repeal the B,:inoU compulterrific was the force of the explosion. was purchased tor Northern tribo8Lii't? sory education law. This obstruction was. removed with kited, tho cattle must have boen at least Actions of Congress Approved. dillluulty and they entered tho twelve months in succession prior to 1. of south line of north' 1800, the Lincoln, Xeb.. Jan. .27. Resolutions CHAMUKR OF HORUORH. July Kansas. Tho statement that were adopted iu both branches or the The first object they discovered after cattle are delivered is untrie. legislature this morning approving tho leaving the main entry was a cum boot. action of the U. S. Ronnie .iu refusing to was the man. a Farther leg it on, In (t The Strike 01'. consider tho Foreo bill. a human found no but wbnre head, they -- Milwnukeo ami St. 27. Cm ; Jan. was the it. a;o, in Fight trnnk thai had borne IlepeaitSftliirLaw. But few n"nU3 after walking a dis- Pa;il station agents strike ia ended. The Milwaukee, Jan. 27. Tho Demodetance, surrounded by dangers uneetu, strikers' executive committee y cratic majority in tbo houao, under sus- thev found the trunk. The ragged neck clared it off. in -n Hundred Sadden Death vk-liin-a uafvM-funat- el EARTH'S. rt! e i.i. M4 -- lri p Mh d fire-dam- per-son- m - '"dt1 en' uwk - i - n, ' . 1 peosioa t the rvkia, passed a bill recvbuol law. the chief pealing tbe ett issue mi is caiopa'o. and r- jertn! the KepuUicaa cubrtitute, mhk-retained a cUnae requiring intftrucUun ta Ui uiika onguage. h Thry Won't Play. iNDJAiurou, Jin. 27. The senate, this vffcicg after a long debaU. adopted tha house resolution cot to make approprutktcs fur the WWlJ's Fair if the electtos bill becomes a law. The adverw report of the commit tee on the bill requiring the American flag be noatod over acUxH housus waa concurred in. AnolLer Stpublk-a- Pliant, 8. a Jan. Seat stolen. The hou finally by a vote of 3 to 54 declared Blake, independent entitled to the seat bow occupied by Fowler, republican. THE IX, WAGES OF 27. PEKFIDV. occ-urre- il -- U OGDEN. UTAH. WEDNESDAY MORNING, JANUARY 2b. 1891. U VOLUME IV. NUMBER 100. 1 7 unac-climnte- d to-da- A Swindling Scheme Exposed by a , Rejected sweetheart. Chicaoo, Jan. 27. C Perry Byaai, widely known in Grand Army circles as the "youngest eoluier of the rebellion and Henry Hart formerly a bosrd of trade man, an under arrest, charged with a real estate swindle. It is asserted that they paid a am all sum on a Urge tract of land south of this city and ad- vertised lots for sale in exchange for grocery store, saloons, etc As soon aa the deed of tba property was made over to them they would mortgage it aad let the business rua itself. Needless to aay the deeda they gave for the real estate were valueless. It is assarted thev have netted k),C3J from their many victims. The exposure came about through a widow named Graves, who followed Byam from Si Paul a few months ago under Dromise of marriairA. When ah learned he already had a wife and children she exposed his scheme to the BIOT IN PARIS THEATER. A of RevolutiouIoH Compel the Withdrawal or Sardon'i Play. Paris, Jan. 27. After the second ner- - A Mob formanoe of Sardou'a Thermidor lost night, there was a riot in the streets near the theater caused by the disorderly conduct of the extreme wirtisana of tho revolution who were ejected from . a1 me ilmea ilot. rait niaaed the audience iney on it it ii me ineaier. and snouted: Down with Knrdim. Inner livit tha rAmiK. lie." Iu the streets a free furht followed oorween too extremists and the police, and it VM A limllltv fur th niwliani to rulirtC-- t A nambef of arrests were . v. made. More violent scenes were expected tonight, but the play waa withdrawn. The rising of tNi curtain waa the signal fot th violent' val crira.H.Vive thermidor," eta - Thei tumult increased in violence until younger Couelin stepped before the curtain and said he was compelled to announce that the performance wntlkl nroceed nn furl her &nr1 t.h ticket money would be returned. The audience departed greatly excited,, but no serious disorder ensued. It is rumored that McLaretc resigned -- theatre loses 633,033 francs in advance bookings in addition - to the cest of play. mounting the s Utah's Rates Still rending. Chicago, Jan. 27. A meeting of the passenger officials trans continental and lines was held today to consider the complain t of the Salt Lake City, of Utah, rates, aa compared with those to Montana and California. No action was taken pending the arrival of the Salt Lake committee tomorrow. A majority of the roads favor the equalizing of rates by advancing those to Montana instead of cutting them to Salt Lake, but it remains to be seen what trans-Muwou- will be done. The Bntehers Strike. Chicaoo, Jan. 27. More of the shop butchers at tbo stock yards are out to day. The strike w a peculiar one. Swift's men want seven cents apiece for anop Kiueu. Armour's men want day wagea instead of piece work. Merris' men are satisfied with seven cents but want more shop to kill. The packers say tnai aa soon as tne men can learn what they actually want the, matter will be settled. National Press Club. PrrrsnrHu, Jim. 27. The first international press club convention opened this morning. Sixty delegates were present from the principal cities of this country una uumuia. r osier uoaies or Aew 1 ork was elected president. After the an. pointment of a committee to prepare lori orgauizaiion, the convention plans i inijourneu. William Beulin, Jan.- - Celebrating. The three eldest 27.' children of Eaiperor William are suffering from severe colds, but physicians state there is no danger. Emperor William celebrated his thirty-secon- d birth day amid scones of great rejoicing. The city was gaily dworated. Tbe emperor rescntcd the castle guard with now colors, remarking that they were copied after those of Frederick the (treat, winch the "shameless enemy carried off to France.' A number of decorations were distributed. PRICE, FIVE CENTS. who oa the Mditary Aeadesy Ull la lb cuurae U gMrsi debi- e Rivera, of Arka&Mie referred b tbe ; oetit Iad:aa ar aa unprovoked aad Wounded Kam affa.. the must shameful murder is Thej Seem to I Hating Tliinjrs tie i.juiW our tiUlury. 11aer favumd a iavestiga-tio- a Their Own War. usto tbe rauase of the ear. Peel of Arka a aad Cutcheua ct drfeaded the army sad THE fiErOET OF A IIATTLE. ceorVsd a tburoub ureAigatwo. Atet eoote talk by hhiaoia aad Blaad. on t he 1 ofve bill, the eommittoe rua Insorrenu in Possesion on the Very aud the bouae adjourned. i of Valparaiso ForWahiuslon Nate. eigners 27. An improveAMUMrrox, J ment k tuAed ia Sena toe Hearst ' cooJI-tio- n an.1 be ia very comfortable. Loanox, Jan. 27. Dispatches from l Senator Chili via Bueooa Ayrea bri!ir further todey ietrudu d a oill to iacxjrporate the Pacific Cable particulars eoncerning the revoiu'iun in company, capiul .'. ,(U), to Ofie to ChilL The rebel Chilian war vewel at cable betaeen San Fraii Porto Coquimbo tired a number of ebots lanama, Samoa and Japan. ioo, A majority f the directors must 1 citizens into town, probably at the trooi de ol the United States, the secretary of the fending the coal depots. be to treasury authorized to pay to the Tbe troops from Valjiaraiao are oc company an annual subsidy of tjxiJXWa Laaerena in force. The insur- year for fifteen years. cupying Senator Stewart today received from gents have blockaded Tongoy bay, thirty Senator Stanford a tmeeage regarding miles from Coquimbo. ia bis Tongoy on the closure rule etc, connected bv railroad with Tamava sentstanding from New York yesteiday moraine; and Oral!, the latter towa being in tut deuived bv rrmnUl wir 1 - i. turn connected by rail with Coquimbo. says on general he favors the principles Torbarrall is also blockaded by rebel ouv aoeaoot rivor anytaina; """"" forces. Id ah - that woniui, uarau- Three thouaaod government troona meat to tbe electiona bill, providing it have been sent to reinforce the garrison waa only to apply to the electiona for at Tongoy. Later advice aay it ia re eomrreae. Without an.!, a waa battle ported that fought at with bia present riewa. he would be ' Tongoy. obliged to vote against the bilL Tne Kebsu bar occupied Limache miles from Alto, town only twenty-livKILLED OS THE SAIL. . Valparaiso. At Limache Alto the rebel forces took possession of tha national A Bad Wreck Dae to a Condnetor'a factories and expelled the director and Carelessness. adherents of President Balraacada from the town. The rebels have also occuTopeka. Jan, 27-.- In the wreck of a pied Quitlota in tbe province of Valpa- military train near Marysville laat nbrht. raiso, fifty miles from Santiago, and Omanoonagua, twenty miles from the Sergeant Schortbatot Light Battery 1 racmc. and Private Neil of trooo O. Seventh. The nronertv of foreiirn raaidnnta Sa cavalry, were killed. Captain Godfrey. suffering considerable from the rebellion ot troop D, and Sergeant Sharp, of troop in spite of tbe effort of renreent.tives "i of the foreign powors to protect the in other iiounijr iDjurea, ana snverai officers and priterests ot uio cittaens of tbe various vates were painfully hurt Lizzie Den- counu-iethey represent The action of Mv.,w utuwiUf iivu, unsxmnAau arm. the dipiomic representative hnve boen ao hrnknn anil lior ..vn.. vim, nuu a M.. ii discouraging to thnee oft'cmls that they named Kimball, Conductor Flynn and formally inrormen tne Chilian govern- uim ui uuie were augniiy mniren. i.u ment that they will embark on board of n. numuer oi cavalry nnrses were Killed. the vessels of the fleet ot the foreign The conductor on the military train. power if the conflict oootiuuea. Presi wuwhj cnreiewneea ia responsible tor the dent Hilmaesda in reply hati naked tbe wreck, has disappeared. miBiatera and to del THE CHILIAN REBELS. apprw-priaii- ua - ft iu eart-hio- Out-kirt- iJix-ooraye- Miu-hel- li, e - t,.l 1 1 cocsuih y takiug any notion for a tew days, aa ho hopea to be able to suppress t.Yi roiwlliou within that time. Chlrago Board. Cmc Aoo, Jan. 27. A good speculative trade existed in wheat, and the offering Senate. was heavy ot times. Tho opening was ' Washimoton, Jan. 27. The senate met W lower than yesterday's closing-- , at noon and the journal of Thursday, and the prioes dropped off X more.. rallied, but eased off covering tbe proceedings of Thursday, Later, the market and closed 1 lower' than yesterday. ' Friday, Saturday anl Monday was ap- - ReceipU 2L),(XX); ehiproenU 18lfit -., ,,v ... proved., bnsheJe, Euetis, rising to a personal explanation The Balls and Bears, , read from the Washington Post the fol sentence: New lowing York, Jan. 27. Stocks developed "Mr. Eustis was also brodght from bia a sudden strenth and activity that waa heme, although he did not arrive until entireld unlooked for. , The Gould after the vote had been taken." stocks, coalers, grangers and many ettec-iaitiHe said the statement waa wholly in which have kmn nonaninnm ln accurate, Hs had been in the chamber the weakness of the past two weeke an boor before the first vote was taken: were the prominent upward movement. waa present when the votwaa taken and The close was quiet but 'strong, tba cbd vote. He deemed it proper to make highest prices of the d v. St Puul and the explanation because of the import Union Paciflo advanced 1', Northerm ance or the voles yesterday. Pacifio Northwestern augar The credentials of Stanford and Irby, Governments ateadr. Petroleum. ' senators-elefrom California and South February, closed 75'. Carolina for the term beginning March An Exodns of Negroes. 4, 1891, were presented and read and ... placed on tile. Those of Stanford were Ala 27.' A Jan. Birmixchak, big criticised by Hoar as unsatisfactory in form, the governor undertaking to exodus of negroes from thia state to "commission Stanford instead of simply Oklahoma bus set in. Fifty families of certifying to his election." negroes left hero yesterday for Kincr- rlishers and they Will be followed in a . rucjinr optimk. Harris suggested that there was abun- few days by 200 families. A negro by dant time before the expiration of tbe the name of Foster from Leavenworth. present term to have them put in prop r Kans., has been among them here for some time working up tha business. form. Among the petitions presented and lie represents to them that they can referred waa oe by Fry, in favor of secure rich farming lands in Oklahoma having opot&toeeuv received by the gov- for almost nothing and that if enough ernment aud treasury certificates issued ot them will go they can secure an absolute control of the government of ' them at $1 per bushel. Tho house uill to prevent counterfeit- that territory. The latter aoems to be the principal inducement A number of ing passed with amendment. , relation negroes who owned good farm a here have in resolution Dolph's to compel the attendance of ab- sold out everything and will join, in the exodus. sentees went over. . House bill for the payment of InThe First Stake Driven. dian depredat ion claims was considered until 2 o'clock when the apportionment Chicago, Jan. 27. The first stake was bill v us taken up, the question being on driven and the first epade full of earth Dawes mendment to give an additional member to each Arkansas, Minnesota, turned on the Lnke Front today in con- -, Missouri and New York. No action noct ion with tho World's fair. Preparawaa taken and the senate soon ad tions were begun for the erection of a journed. temporary building to be used by the chief of construction and his assistant,. Home. Some property owners opposite Luke approval Front park threaten injunction. Washington, Jan. of the journal occupied half an hour, DiRCitssinif the Division of Spoils. Springer of Illinois rising to a question Cnif AK Jan. 27. Six commissioner of nrivileire. offered a resolution reciting of in tho Western Traflia association re- conduct yesterday that the speaker's deciding the motion to be dilatory, was suincd their meeting today, devoting the unlawful entire session to a discussion of territory MoKinley of Ohio made a point of or ial divisions. It is no easy. task. A der that the resolution was not a privi block has been formidable exercised the stumbling having one, speaker leged the found in the objection of the Northhe right under the rules to decide ' motion to be dilatory. western road to having its L:ike Superior The speaker did not think tho action business subject to the provisions of tho ot the chair in deciding the motion to be agreement. , out of order on the .ground that it was of Confirmed. dilatory conld bo made n question privilege. If it could be. then tho purJan. 27. Con lir mat inns sr.sifixTON pose of tho rule of preventing dilatory Wm. F. Lnnt of Maine, member board motions was nugatory. Ho sustained the jxiint of order and general appraisers merchandise; Alo.v:io- Springer appealed and McKinley moved lcrC Biahop, of Ogden, probate judge to tuble the appeal: motio . agreed to, of Utah! W. F. Benjamin, postmaster vena 1.''8, navs 105. ; Koseb'.irg, Oregon. Tha speaker laid before the house a .Miles of Kiiilrnud. FiiVy-tiv- e message from the . - , ., efl 1, ct lj . - 27.--T- he -- The Strikers Violent. GrAwow. J;in. 27. A band or masked F'.rikers yesterday maltreated a n the lx::mo-fiv- e miuib'.-SroVAN?: F.VU.K. Jan. 27. -- The con-traPUBSIDEXT Vl.TOIN.TIlB KU.h i;f nie:i miles C' fiT tho buildins of !ifty-fisliru-- i of lhe l'edim'u.ii road at Anthorizing Okhdwraa City to Ktrrtl.aven and (ii.l muuh damage to bonds to railway companies. J ho.ia" on. tli Great Northern, bets' i v. Tho stri'icrs an Kdming n for r.iilw.iv hrid.ro over the pasw-nor'a iVi'ry on th- - Uv':;i:i aod Ko- H'ld oniaor-- ' witfhing tho trains rivor betwee.s t'xincil Bluff and Icr.ai fiii. hii I e m i hi l Duras & aad ara doirg all liiey c:m Jo it'inoy iy Omaha. . CiiRpmao i4 thj city. company. The lnuso went into eomniittco oi Uie Kcvi-rcl- . . ct wo.-khi- g i"J tire-li-.c- .Mix-Hou- ... ,' |