ti: Tli JL DEATH 'MID FLAMES. Brave Milwaukee Firemen Plunged Into a Seething Furnace. Taey Fall with the Blazing Roof of tha lavldson Theater, and Nine of Them Are Tal'en Oat Dead A Thrilling Rescue. BBAYE ME.V PERISH. Milwaukee, April 1 1. Nine firemen met a horrible death in a fire which de stroyed the Davidson theater on Third street between 4 and 5 a. m. Monday. The biff 6tone building1, which con tained the finest playhouse in the city and the Davidson hotel, was burned to the gTound In tha midst of a blinding- storm of rain and sleet, and in the final crash of falling roof and walls several companies of the fire brigade were thrown from the top story into the pit of the flaming' fur nace. The disaster is one of the most frightful that has befallen the city iace the Newhall house burned down, when scores of lives were lost. The Davidson block was one of the most imposing- in Milwaukee and the pe cuniary loss of the fire is estimated at between 300.000 and $350,000. The following1 Is a list of the dead: Third Assistant Chief August Janssen, 266 SUthth street; Frank McOurk, lieutenant truck company Jfa s and acting captain No. 14. SOT Park street; Fred Kroesschmuer, plpemao ctoemical company Xa S; Capt. Archie Camp bell, r the Dretoat Foley, 71 Twenty-seventh street; Allle Rtea, company No. 3, killed by a falling ladder; James C Freeman, lieutenant company No. 4: Frank TClnne, chemical No. 4, found in balcony of theater; Thomas Morgan, iguie company No. 1; John Farreu, chemical Ka t Seven of the injured firemen were taken to the Emergency hospital and number of others were removed to their homes. Shortly after 5 o'clock, when the fire was seemingly under control, the theater roof, on which a score or more firemen stood as they fought the names, went down, and the brave men were carried with it to the floor of the auditorium below. Some were extricated from the furnace of flames, in which the whole interior was now enveloped, by their brave and more fortunate comrades, who risked their lives to drag out the prostrate forms of the dead and injured men. Six or eight men were soon brought out, and those who were able to seak said there were ten or more in the ruins, where living" death awaited them. For these poor fellows there was no chance. The burning roof had fallen on them, and they were roasted to death, if they had not been killed outright in that terrible pi tinge from the roof. The most thrilling" experience of all was that of John Crowley. ' For several hours he was pinned beneath the ruins, suffering bodily torture, but brave and self-possessed all the while. From 9:30 o'clock until 12:15 his com rades worked to liberate him. It was known that he had been buried, but the firemen thought he must be dead or un conscious until one of the men heard a faint sound Putting his ear down he listened and then shouted: "Who's down there?" "This is John Crowley," came the faint reply. "I'm alive, but for God's sake don't drown me. There are two men cesd beside me, and Tom Morgan of Ha. 1 is one of them." A cloud of hot smoke drove the men back, and, flames bursting forth, it was necessary to pour in more water. The faint cries of Crowley could be heard. "For God's sake kill me in some other way than by drowning. I can't stand all that water. I'm lying on my back." But the fire was soon put out and fifty men, a special detail ordered by Chief Foley, set to work to rescue the brave fellow. Crowley grew weaker and the men heard him say he could not last much longer. Then came a most dramatic incident. Wil liam Crowley, a brother, appeared with Father Haven, a Catholic priest. The father bent down and spoke to the imprisoned man. In re ply Crowley said that the water was nearly over his head and fast rising, and asked that the last sacrament of the church be given him, and there, amid the steaming ruins, the dense smoke and the charred timbers, the priest administered the last sacrament, and fifty men stood around with their helmets off, all brothers, all comrades. Catholic and non-Catholic. The work of rescue was pushed by detail of ten men working in five-minute shifts, and they fought the stub born timbers and beams like mad men. At 11:30 o'clock Crowley's head was free, and a shout went up that shook the tottering side walls. Shortly after his right leg was freed, but it looked as if nothing could save the other limb. Hut the firemen kept at work and in side of an hour the man was pulled out. He was perfectly limp and his face wore a distorted look, showing plainly the terrible agony he had gone through. As he was placed on the stretcher he opened his eyes and endeavored to smile to his companions, but the effort was too much and his head sank back. lie was conscious, but he was unable to utter a sound. lie was placed in the ambulance and taken directly to the Emergency hos pital. When Crowley was carried into the Emercency hospital his pulse had al most ceased beating. Dr. Fox, assisted bj Miss Jackson, the matron of the hos pital, worked over him an hour before he returned to consciousness. His pulse jrradually quickened and at is o'clock was quite strong. Dr. Fox say Crow ley is suffering from the shock to hia nervous system, but with good care will recover. Wont Storm In Kitty Year. St. John, N. IJ., April 1 1. In over b.alf a century a storm to equal the one now prevailing, which began Sunday night, cannot be recalled. All traffic is suspended. All railroad communica tion is shut off, the public schools are closed and the streets are deserted. All vessels in the harbor and all the wharves have thus far ridden the gale in safety, and no disasters are reported. Death of a Railway President. Richmond, Ind., April 11. William Parry, president of the Cincinnati, Richmond & Fort Wayne railroa.d, died in tl.U fit- VJVf' A GREAT STRIKE. Fully 1,500 Mile of the Great Northern Hallway Tied I p. Helena, Mont., April 10. A general strike on the Great Northern railway extending from Larimore, N. D., to Spokane, Wash., on the main line, and from Havre to Butte, on the Montana Central, was inaugurated at noon Fri day. Nearly 1,500 miles of road are tied up. The strike embraces all classes of employes. Every conductor, engineer, fireman, brakeman, operator, clerk, shopman, section man, car re pairer and coal heaver between the points named quit work together and the switchmen with the exception of those employed in the Butte yard. St. Paul, Minn., April 10. All union men employed by the Great Northern Railway company from Devil's Lake, N. D., to the Washington state border were on Friday morning sent an order feigned by a committee of the American Railway union, directing them to stop work at to resume until wages paid prior has been restored. noon, and not the old rate of to August 1, 1S03, Dispatches indicate that the order has been obej'ed at some places. At Helena the strike was in augurated promptly at noon. The At lantic express was dela3-ed there. The mail car was detached froja the train and sent ahead, but the passenger cars were all left behind. A Great Falls (Mont.) dispatch says all employes of the Great Northern struck promptly at noon. The Sand Coulee coal train was stopped on the railroad bridge over the Missouri river. The west-bound passenger train there is stopped on the east side of the Missouri The men de clare that mail trains will be allowed to run, but they will not permit pas senger trains to run. They say they will not, however, permit any violence or destruction of property. When the president of the Devil's Lake union received the strike order from Hogan and Roy he conferred with the men and they refused to strike be cause the order was not signed bj President Debs. A message was sent him asking for instructions. The eastern divisions of the line are not yet imbroiled. The officers of the union in Si. Paul state that since last August, the wages had been reduced all the way from 6 per cent, to 33 per cent, and that the agreement with the engineers recently made would be held void by them as hav ing been made tinder a misunderstand ing. Uniontown, Pa., April 10. Since daj-light Friday rrorning the southern half of the coke region embracing the Leith, Oliphant, Browntield, Kyle, Wynn and Redstone plants of the H. C. Friek Coke compan-, the Martin and Fairchance plants of the Fairchance Furnace company and a number of small plants have been completely over run by a mob of strikers estimated at from 1,500 to 2,000 men. They have made the most successful raid in the history of the strike and as a result not a workman can be seen nor is there a wheel turning at any of the above works. They drove nearly 1,000 men from their places and made that many coke ovens idle. REVIEW OF TRADE. Many Obstacles Keportecl In the Way or Iiuiuea Improvement. New Yokk, April 1. R. G. Dun & Co.'s week.y review of trade saj-s: "Business improvement meets many ob stacles an J is scarcely as distinct as it has been iu recent week-. Strikes have checked the improvement in building and some other trades, and scarcity of coke has caused the closing of Borne iron works, while a strike of all bitumin ous coal miners is ordered and may prove serious. More favorable crop reports than were expected, which Justiry larger hope for next fall, have arrested the upward tendency In priced of products. The renewal of sold ex ports occasions much disquietude, but the gradual exhaustion of goods in the htiuJs of dealers makes the consumption of the people mure distlncly felt ana apparently larger, and this demand increases with the gain in the number of hands at work. "It cannot be said that the uncertainty as to the future has materially diminished, but there is evidently a growing Impression that there will be no important legislation on the currency or the tariff. This impres Blon, whether erroneous or not. influences tne action of many. On the whole, though progress is still obstructed by uncertain ties, it has not been arrested. The most cheering sign Is the decrease in importance cf commercial failures, for though one mortgage loan concern has failed with liabilities of 5,Soo ouO, the liabilities in all commercial failures for the tirst week of April were only S'i.l'JO.S of which iJO,5J7 were of manufacturing and 1. or trading concerns. The failures this week have teea ilt u the United States, against lfc7 last year, and 3 in Canada, against last week." THIRTEEN ARE LOST. Ulut-oKe Company Kuiployes liellrved to II Cremated. liUfFAi.o, X. Y., April 16. There is little doubt left that thirteen, and per haps more, of the employes of the American Glucose company, whose works were burned Thursday night, were cremated in the fire. All day long women were coming to the oiliee of the company reporting men a missing. At 10 o'clock Fridaj night there were thirteen men who had not been home since 5 o'clock Thursday nijrht All these men were laborers and worked on the upper floor of the main building. It was in this building that the fire started, and this building was consumed first. The street in front of the morgue is crowded with crying women who fear their hus bands and sons perished in the fire. The tire was so intensely hot and the ruin of the main building is so com plete that it will be twenty-four and perhaps forty-eight hours before the work of searching the ruins can begin, tietn 87,000 Damages from a Hank. Sioux Citv, la., April 1C In the dis trict court Henry Hefner, a live stock commission merchant, got judgment against the National bank of Sioux City for 17,000 damages for malicious prosecution. Officers of the bank caused Hefner's arrebt because of some trouble over an $500 draft. The criminal charge was dismissed without prosecu tion. iov. Altfreld In Danger. Si'ringfiklu, TIL, April 16. Gov. Altgel's physician, who is with him at Uiloxi, .Iiss., admits that his ptUent : shows s;,-r.t.n:s of locomotor ataxia. 0 DAVID DUDLEY FIELD. The Famous Jurist Expires Some what Unexpectedly. He Succumb to n Attack of Pneumonia After a llrlef Illness A Sketch of Ilia Career and Service In the Cause of Law Beform, A JURIST GONE. New York, April 10. David Dudley Field, the distinguished jurist, died Fri day at his home, 2 Grammercy place, of pneumonia. Mr. Field arrived from Italy only last Wednesday on the Columbia. He had gone abroad to take Christmas dinner with his only child lady Musgrave, and to attend the twenty first birthday celebration of her eldest son, Dudley Field Musgrave. His daughter is the widow of Sir An thony Musgrave, who was governor of Queensland, Australia, when he died. She is living In East Grinstead in Sus sex, about 20 miles from London. He then traveled about on the continent and took the steamer from Genoa for home. He had been at his home at 2 Gram mercy place since his return, and was thought to be in good health for a man of his age 8'J years. He was taken with pneumonia Wednesday night He DAVID DUDLEY FIELD. had expected to spend his summer among the Berkshire hills, where he was born. He was engaged in writing his autobiography. Only last Wednesday he remarked: "My one great ambition is to have my codes adopted all over the world. They are written and published. It is only a question of time when they will be ac cepted." Mr. Field's estate is valued at be tween SoOO.OOO and tl.000,000. The property is unimcuinbered. Mr. Henry M. Field, his brother, said that the bulk of his estate will be hel 1 in trust for the grandchildren until they be come of age. When the news of Mr. Field's death became known Mayor Gilroy ordered the flags on the city hall displayed at half mast, and the flag over the Law-j-er's club in the Equitable building was also lowered. Judge Prior, sitting in part I of the court of common pleas. Judge Hookstaver, holding a special term of the court of common pleas, and Judge Giererich in part 3 of the court of common pleas, adjourned court when they heard of Mr. Field's death. Mr. Field was born at Haddam, Conn., and was educated at Williams college. He studied law, was admitted to practice when -3 years old and began bis legal career in this city. He was chlelly known as a public man for his labors in the cause of law reform. Having been appointed in 1&47 by the legislature of his state a commissioner on practice and pleadlug, he took an active part in the prep aration of a new code of procedure He was intrusted by the state In 1657. as president of a commission, with the tabk of preparing a political code, a penal code, and a civic code, containing the entire body of the law. Mr. Xoyes undertook the penal code and Mr. Field the analysis of the political and civil After many drafts and eight successive reports had been made the ninth and final report was submitted to the legislature in February. Mr. Field rewrote the civil code eighteen times. All these law reforms occupied most of his time for eighteen years. Other states followed the example of New York. These codes have been adopteu by near ly all the states and, in substance, by England and her colonies. An international code was next drawn up. Working with the Law society In Kcgland, be drafted a code which was after ward published. Mr. Field made his first public speech In 1M2 at Tammany halL Two years later he began to rally the anti-slavery remnant of his party to oppose the annexation of Texas None was more active on the side of free Join during the Missouri compromise and the Kansas-Nebraska difficulty. He at tended many conventions and always spoke against that portion of his party which upheld tho slave trade. Mr. Field was a dele gate to the peace convention during the last months of the Buchanan administration. To his Influence and that of Horace Greely, at the Chicago convention la 16). the nomination of Lincoln waa largely ascribed. After the war he objected to military rule in the south and argued many celebrated cases against the constitutionality of military commissions. - In 1873 he attended a meeting at Brussels, which resulted in the formation of an associa tion of economists, legislators and law yers from all parts of the world for the reform and codification of the laws of nations. The object being to substi tute arbitration for war In the settlement of disputes. Of this association he was chosen president. In the latter part of 1K73 Mr. Field made a tour around the world, being received everywhere with the highest honors permis sible to a civilian. In 187t5 he voted for Mr. Hayes, but being convinced that Mr. Tilden was duly chosen by the people be acted as counsel on the democrat ic side before the electoral commission. That same year Mr. Field was sent to congress. Aft er that he cave little time to public affairs. Mr. Field was a member of one of the most noted families of this country. Justice Field of the United States supreme court and Cyrus Field, father of tho ocean cable, were his brothers. She Want a Pension. London. April 10. The Chronicle says that ex-Queen Liliuokalani has become convinced of the hopelessness of her case and is said to be willing to advocate the annexation of the Lla waiian islands to the United States with a view of obtaining the pension which President Harrison advised. A petition to that effect is being prepared for submission to I'resident Cleveland. Cannot Afford to He Senator. Washington, April 10. Senator Dix on, of Rhode Island, has returned to Washington after a short absence. Many of his colleagues express regret that he has determined not to be a candidate for reelection. SenatorDixon says that he intends to resume hisprac tie of law, which has been interrupted during his career in the senate, which, he says, he could not afford to extend for another six years. Maachnsetts .Ilea May Mill Treat. Boston, April 10. The house hits de feated the bill prohibiting treating in places where ."jquor is sold. LOCKOUT IN CHICAGO. Jt Fails to Throw a Many Out of Work aa Was Anticipated. Chicago, April 14. The big lockout ordered by the Central Building league for yesterday was inaugurated. It was said that from 75,000 to 100.000 mem bers of the building trades would be thrown out of employment. The reports at . the headquarters of the unions failed to show even 1,000 men out of work in consequence of the orders of the employers. The men placed the figures at about 700.. On the other hand, the bosses claim that something like 10,000 men were locked out There is vague talk of a pavement to bring about arbitration, Tut no names are given. Columbus, O., April 14. President John C MeHride, of the United Mine Workers of America, was interviewed on the question of what assurance the executive board had that the order to strike April 21 would be obeyed by the men. He answWed in substance that the matter had been carefully can vassed by the districts, previous to the present meeting of the national body, and that there was no reason to doubt but what every member of the miners union would be bound by the edict of the convention. He said that beyond the membership of the union thousands of miners in Maryland, Michigan and other states where there was no state organization the men would strike from sympathy, and the executive board already had assurance to that effect. At Thursday's session of the United Mine Workers' convention the scale committee recommended that when the strike should be inaugurated the pur pose should be to restore the old scale in existence at the beginning of the present year; that is to sat', Ohio miners will demand 70 cents a ton. Indiana 0 cents, Illinois miners cents and Pennsylva Pittsburgh district, 79 50 to CO nia miners. cents. The scale in all the other states is based on the prices of these states and is governed by competitive and mining conditions in each of the sev eral districts. The resolution also pro vided for the restoration of all the con ditions that existed between employer and employes at the beginning of tho present year. The report of the com mittee was received with cheers and unanimously adopted. John McBride introduced a resolution pledging the miners to obey the law during the forthcoming strike, to com mit no depredations, and if necessary to assist in protecting property. The resolution was received with cheers and adopted. SWEPT OUT TO SEA. Sailing Craft Driven from Shore by tha Atlantic dale. New Yokk, April 14. The storm which began to level things along the Atlantic coast Tuesday night is gradually losing its cyclonic nature, although the wind is still sweeping down the coast with considerable force. In this city and on the direct coast line the furj- of the storm was spent by dawn, but in the wake of the cyclone, which is slowly passing out to sea, the weather continues sufficiently rough to cause well-founded apprehension for any unfortunate vessels which may be in its track. It will be days before the full extent of the loss of life and prop erty can be determined. Perhaps the fate of some of the smaller craft, which were off the coast during the height of the gale, will never be known. Certain it is, from the meager number of arrivals at this port since the storm began, that a fleet of sailing craft has been driven out V sea or forced to fly before the tempest under bare poles and to be tossed about at tho mercy of the waves. All that is knotvn now is that two more vessels, in addi tion to the two which were wrecked Wednesday, have been reported cast up on the coast, and that more lives have probably been crushed out during the night Reports from places on the Long Island coast say that eight persons who were at sea in three j-achts are miss ing and are believed to be lost This increases the Dumber of victims from the storm to more than twenty-five. READY TO BE HANGED. tight Alabama Murderers Waiting for the Noohc. with Six More in Jull. Montgomery, Ala., April 14. The four negroes who murdered Mr. Grant a prominent citizen of this county, have been found guilty. Alex, Joe and Wilson Woodley are sen tenced to hang and Jack Gabriel to the penitentiary for life, Jim Calloway, another, was sentenced to be hanged several days ago. There are now eitfht condemned prisoners in the jail here to be hanged within three months. There are six other murderers to be tried and it is thought at least three of them will hang. ROBBED OF $2,500. A Cowboy Make a Raise in a Hanking House at Crawford, Neb. Chadron. Neb., April 14. At 3:40 Thursday afternoon, while Albert i'hipple, cashier of the Crawford Hank ing company of Crawford, Neb., was alone in the bank a stranger attired in cowboy garb entered, ' and shoving a six-shooter in Whipple's face demanded money. Whipple pave up all the cash on tho counter, amounting to about (2.500. The robber then compelled Whipple to enter the vault and then locked him in, where he was found twenty minutes laUr by the president Hold Kobbcry of a Hank. Pittsburgh, Pa., April 14. A tele phone message received at police head quarters states that during the tem porary absence at noon .of the clerk and cashier of the Wallace Exchange bank, at Heaver f alls, a thief who had gained an entrance to the cellar, cut a hole through the vault floor and robbed the vault of 8:1,500 in cash, mak ing good his escape. Farmers Alarmed by Drought. London. April 14. The five weeks drought in England, Germany. France, Austria and Poland is causing much un easiness to farmers in those countries. A BIG PLxVNT BUKXEJ) The American Glucose Works Buffalo Destroyed. in Tbe I-oss It Estimated at More Than 81,000,000 Several Men Are Iladly Injured, and It I Feared Soma Have Perished. IN ASHES. Buffalo, N. Y., April 14. The great plant of the American Glucose compa ny, which also has extensive works at Peoria, 111., and which is controlled by C J. Hamlin, the famous trottng horse man, and his sons, burned Thursday night The loss is considerably over tl, 000, 000; insurance, (585,000. The plant of this company was situ ated on the Hamburg canal, Scott, East and West Market and Perry etreets. There were four immense buildings of brick, ranging in height from eight to eleven stories. The fire started in the main building, which was used for making the glucose. The buildings burned were the power and feed house, the refinery and the store house. The Buffalo city fish market was also burned. The fire was discovered in the dynamo-room of the main building shortly after 7 o'clock, by the engineer. Ho gave the alarm and he and his fireman rushed out In ten minutes the whole eleven floors were on fire and flames were bursting through the windows and darting lrom the roof. There were perhaps 125 men at work Thursday night It will not be known until a census of employes is taken to day whether one man or fifty were cremated. It is known that some of the men escaped by a fire-escape, and some of them on the lower stories jumped into the canal. A great many of the men at work on the upper floors were ignorant Poles and Germans. They may have been burned and they may not It is impos sible to tell now. Tbe chances are, however, that several men were burned to death. So far as known four workmen and three firemen are injured. These are: 3ohn Young, a workman, hurt about tha head and face; two Poles, cannot speak Eng lish, names unknown, both severely injured, one has both legs broken: John Stein, work man, severely burned: Chris Lang, fireman, leg broken by a fall: Louis H. Schrader, a tl re man, badly burned; Joseph Webber, a fireman, burned and injured. The fire was one of incredible swift ness. The building- was full of inflam mable materials, acids and the like used in the making of glucose and starch, and the fire spread from top to bottom in a few minutes. In fifteen minutes the entire main building was a mass of flames. In twenty minutes the walls began to fall, and they fell at frequent intervals until inside of forty five minutes there was but one corner standing. The main building was con nected with the power and feed house by an elevated bridge over Scott street The flames crept across this and ig nited the feed house. Meanwhile the city fish market just across the street caught fire. Five firemen were sent inside to fight the flames, and a number of streams were turned on the roof. The building was a lonr, low brick structure, and the firemen made a good fight to save it but a por tion of a blazing wall fell on it and started the roof to burning fiercely. The firemen inside did not know of this and no one told them. The conse quences were that in a few minutes tha roof fell in and buried the five firemen. Two of them escaped with no other in juries than a few bruises. The feed house was completely de stroyed, the walls all having fallen by 10 o'clock. The refinery and the store house went next and by 1 1 o'clock there was nothing left of the mammoth es tablishment but a few tottering wails. For a great many years the Ham lins held among' themselves the secrets of the processes and made millions. Then they were sued by a man named Williams, who claimed to have discov ered the prooess, and the secrets all came out. Since that time there have been many glucose works started. GOLD GOING ABROAD. Treasury Officials, However, Are Not Alarmed by tlie Shipments. Washington, April 14. The secre tary of the treasury has received notice tlitit about $-2,000,000 in gold coin would tje reqaired for export next Saturday, about half of which would be drawn from the treasury and an equal amount from the New York banks. It is the opinion of the treas ury officials that this shipment is the beginning of the usual spring exportation and that shipments are likely to continue for some time. This fact however, is not regarded as a cause for alarm. The net gold in the treasury at the close of business Thurs day was f 10.,903.5:J'J. Last year at this time the gold exportations were abnor mally heavy, reaching $19, H:9C4 dur ing April and f 10,914,317 in May. In June they had dropped to 2,711,220 and in July to $174,212. For a fiureau of Interstate Hanks. WTAsmxGTON, April 1. Representa tive Sherry (Conn.) has introduced in the house a bill to establish a bureau of interstate banks. The bill is a mod ification, in some important respects, of the national banking act and is de signed to meet the demand for local currency in the south and west by af fording a more profitable and accessi ble basis of circulation than Cnited States bonds. I.arce Carriage Factory Hurned. Cincinnati, April 14. The Sayres Scoville carriage factory on Colernin avenue burned Thursday night Only the walls are lef t standing. Stock, ma chinery and all the contents of the building are a total loss. The building was of brick, four stories high and 100 feet long. The fire originated in the paint shop from some cause unknown. J Loss, 50,000. Dean Hammond, of St. Louis, Dead. St. Louis, April 1. Dean W. O. Hammond of the St Lox'.is law school, one of the most noted of comtnon law exponents, is dead. THE CAUCUS ACTS. Ilonae Democrats Take Important Action on the Ounruiu Question. Washington, April 10. The strug gle over the adoption of the new rule to secure a voting quorum was resumed when the house met The republicans made a preliminary stand against the approval of the journal. As soon as it had been read Mr. Uoutelle jumped to his feet and objected, and when Mr. Dockery moved its approval, the republicans sat silent in their seats. Upon the announce ment of the vote, 10o 0, Mr. Uoutelle made the point of no quorum and the roll was called. The republicans refrained from voting, and the result 155 to 1, showed that the democrats were twenty-three short of a quorum. Mr. Dockery then moved a call of the house, instructing his side to vote down the motion, in the hope of C.e Teloping a democratic quorum. Hut again the democrats failed to get a quorum. The motion for a call was defeated, 140 14. The democrats were still twent3"-five short The prospect of a quorum was hope less, antl, as it had been decided to call a democratic caucus to consider the rules, Mr. Dockery moved an adjourn ment, and at 1 o'clock the house ad journed. Washington. April 16. After a heated session of two hours aud a half the democratic caucus Friday after noon decided by a vote of SO to 44 to instruct the committee on rules to re port a new rule to ascertain and record the presence of a quorum, whether vot ing or not Practically all the demo cratic members ol the house attended the caucus. Mr. Bland (Mo. ) presented a resolu tion directing the sergeant-at-arms to carry out the provision of section 40, chapter 2, of the revised statues by which deductions from the salaries of members should be made for every day's absence, except on account of sickness. This was in accordance th the action of the judiciary committee earlier in the day. It was unanimous ly adopted. Mr. Springer (I1L ) brought forward the rule which he introduced some time ago, framed on the lines of the old rule drawn some twelve years ago by J. Randolph Tucker, of Virjriuia, which provided that members who de clined to vote when their names were called should be brought to the bar of the house, and after being given an op portunit3' to vote upon the pending proposition, in case of reiu?al should be recorded as "present but not vot ing." Mr. Pendleton (W. Va.) offered a res olution directing the committee on rules to formulate and present a rule to ascertain and record the presence of a quorum, whether voting or not. Mr. Outhwaite (O. ) suggested a different method of accomplishing the same pur pose. Speaker Crisp took the floor and made a vigorous speech, pointing out the deplorable position in which the house found itself on account cf con tinued and persistent absenteeism. Quite a number of speeches were made in opposition to any and all rule.-; looking to the counting of members who refused to vote. Messrs. Kilgore (Tex.), ISryau (Neb.). MeMillin (Tenn.). Wheeler (Ala.) and Williams (111.) led the opposition. Mr. Cummings (N. Y. ) made a speech against the proposition to count a quorum, at the conclusion of which he sent up to the desk an amendment to the title of any new rule which should be reported for this purpose so as to make it read: A rule to nominate Thomas Rrackett Reed for president of the United States." Mr. DeArmond (Mo.) offered a reso lution expressing it us the sense of the caucus that the committee on rules should prepare a new rule for ascer taining the presence of a quorum and also some method for compelling the attendance of absent members. Mr. McCreary (Ivy. ) moved to refer all the resolutions to the committee on rules. The motion was lost o'J to 05. Mr. DeArmond's resolution was adopted by a two-thirds majority SO to 44. This completed the work of the caucus. TO THE Oi-D RATE. Judze DonUy Krstorpt Former Wages of I n Ion Pacific Men. Ojiaiia, Neb., April 10. Ju'.ljre Dun dv has ordered the wages of Union Pa cific employes restored to the old rate. This applies to all the employes of the Union Pacific whose salaries were cut last September. The order directs the receiver to restore the old wage schedule so far as it relates to the men represented by the petitioners and others similarly situated; and in cases where, the men receive less than $;; per month, the in creased pay shall commence on the first day of March last, and in all cases where the men receive SiiO per month or over the increased pa- shall com mence on the first of the present month. The opinion rendered in connection with the order is a very extensive one, covering the entire history of the wage troubles on the Union Pacific road and the hearing before Judge CaldwelL Judge Dundy declares that Judge Cald well, in his famous order, misstated facts, and did so maliciously. Sixteen Miner Killed. Uklgradb, April 16. An explosion caused by fire-damp occurred in a coal mine at Czuprija Thursday. It is known that sixteen were killed, and it is prob able that the removal of the debris piled up by the explosion will disclose the bodies of others. Killed K:cl OtUr. Dimming, N. M., April 10. Jack Red ding and David Harper, owners of the celebrated Don Cabazos mine in old Mexico, became involved in a quarrel here Thursday and shot and killed each other. These make five deaths of own ers of this property which seems to carry with it a strange fatality. Only one owner survives, ail five having met violent deaths. Kicked to Death by a Horse. Howard City, Mich., April 10. George Uelyer, aged 19 years, li'.-ing in Evergreen township, was kicked to death V a horse. 4 .v x - i 1 r .'t