Auditor Cornell Speaks in Language Most Plain to Mr , Armstrong , 41 OVERHEAD INSURANCE. ' Jt Will Not Uo Permitted to Do Written In Nehrnnka The President of the Uluhnttitn Company ItouuUly Jtoustcd Sty the Auditor of Nebraska. Auditor Cornell is after P. B. Arm strong , president of the Manhattan Fire Insurance company of New York city. In a letter , which is herewith xiven. he intimates that the company cf which Mr. Armstrong Is president may Just aa well retire from business 3n Nebraska as not and the sooner the lintter ns far as the auditor Is con- corned. The difficulty arose over Ihe writing of the "overhead" insurance on large properties by which the home ofilce of the company saved commissions to lo cal agents and also evaded paying a lax on the premiums to the state. Aud itor Cornell has for some time been in correspondence with several com panies in regard to the matter and they have almost to a one agreed to dispense writing insurance in that innnnrr. The auditor in writing to IVIr. Armstrong says that in securing a license for 1898 , his company agreed to suspend writing that kind of pol icies and from correspondence which Tie has had he rather thinks this was not done. While Nebraska has no res ident agency law , the auditor intimates that an agreement should be lived up to. He explains things in the follow ing manner : P. B. Armstrong , President Manhat tan Fire Insurance Co. . New York City Dear Sir : Citizens of this state have frequently called my attention to the practices of eastern insurance com panies doing business in Nebraska , in liaving insurance on property here , written through Chicago and New "York brokers and agents , entirely dis regarding their legally licensed agents In this state. Our statute provides that " 'insurance agents shall render the list of net premiums" for taxation ; it is therefore urged that when Nebraska agents do not receive the premiums , our assessors do not meet with the men who receive them , and these premiums for that reason generally escape taxa tion in this state. This caused me to send a circular letter to eastern com panies early this year , requesting that "before I re-licensed them for 1898 , they should auree to stoo this overhead Avriting , and have all the Nebraska in surance written by Nebraska agents , who could under the law. "be personal ly holden for taxes on the premiums. " -All but two companies agreed to stop 1he practice and many of the compan ies spoke of it as a bad practice , which they were very happy to see discon tinued. If Nebraska had a "resident agency law" there would have been no need of trying to effect this agreement "between the state and the companies. Mr. H. F. Neefue , secretary of your company , answered my letter tinder date of April 12. 1898 , as follows : "It is not our intention , now that we have a commissioned and duly authorized sicent in your state , to write business there , other than through such agent. " I regarded this as all in good faith on your part and accented it as a con tract between your company and the state. I then sent you vour license for 1898. On July 22,1S9S , I called attention to your violation of this agreement by Insuring property in this state through Itfew York agents. I asked if you would liave the kindness to cancel this in surance and have it re-written through your Nebraska agents , so this state could tax the premium. Your reply to me under date of August 9 , to say the least , is rude and in several respects \ It is false. You intimate that "compan ies pay into your treasury , taxes upon -all such premiums received for this overhead -insurance. " You had our law in hand when you wrote this and "knew its falsity quite well. Neither your company nor any eastern com pany you may mention , pays taxes on premiums into our state treasury. You convey the idea that you "sent the bulk of our insurance covering the Cudahy plant , to our Omaha agents to lie written , " and they refused to write it because you placed the rates too low to please them. The truth of the mat ter is that the New York brokers con trolling the line of insurance in ques tion , placed the insurance with your Tsew York office and your office then sent same to your Omaha agents to liave the policies written ; but they re fused to write the policies for the rea son that by doing so they would ma . .A terially help the New York brokers to continue to keep the enormout line of insurance carried by the Cudahv Packing company away from the Oma- "ha local agents , who are as justly en titled to the business , as the state is to the taxes on the premiums. Your remarks that I have joined an insurance trust to assist in oppressing \ the people of this state are very silly snd unworthy of the president of any great corporation. The people cf Ne braska do not need the assistance of outside corporations to keep their pres ent state officers from oppressing them. I stand enjoined by the federal courts now and have been so enjoined for many months because I was con sidered too active in enforcing anti trust and anti-combine laws relating to insurance agents. You intimate that you will withdraw from the state if I insist that you live up to your agreement of April 12. The quicker all persons and corporations that do not reeard the sanctitv of a contract withdraw from the state , the "better for the people of Nebraska. It 5s plain you obtained your license for 1S9S under false pretenses. It cannot "be returned any too soon. Parties at South Omaha and New York can man age their own affairs , but they must also manage to pay the taxes due this state so long as I am insurance com missioner. To this d.te Nebraska has been an exceptionally fine field for eastern in surance companies. If the next legis lature enacts a strict "resident agency law" and imposes a severe tax upon it premiums , imprudent men , like the president of the Manhattan Fire Ia- surance company , can feel that they i are to blame for it all. The Spectator , the ablest insurance journal in the world , in its issue of August 18 , speaks as follows : "Our sympathy for Pres ident Armstrong Is very much weak ened by the unwarranted statcment3 in his letter to Auditor Cornell. Arm strong is by nature and education an iconoclast , moro successful in tearing down than in building up , still he might refrain from attempting to prej udice the business that he relies upon for a livelihood. " You believe "there are forty other companies doing overhead insurance in this state , and defrauding Nebraska of her Just revenue. If I can secure a list of such companies I will show yon that I treat all alike. If your atnte- ments are true in this regard , the ( iiiickcr Nebraska puts laws on her books to compel insurance companies to deal fairly , the better it will be for all concerned. When I wrote you July 29. I made a similar request of the Traders' Fire Insurance company of New York. Their answer is worthy of honorable men , quite different from yours. They agree the stale h.s rights which they will rcapect. Such a spirit of fairness ia apyrecfated. You have the bad srrace to give pri vate correspondence to the press and take special pains to send It to the western papers. I will save you the trouble this time by giving this letter out mvself. Very truly yours , JOHN F. CORNELL , Auditor of Public Accounts. Per SAMUEL LICHTY. Hartley In the I.nnndry. Ex-State Treasurer J. S. Bartley , says the Lincoln Journal , has been as signed to laundry work in the peniten tiary by Warden Leigh. " Bartley was suffering from a bad case of granulat ed eyelids when he entered the prison to serve a twenty years' term. He had been receiving treatment long before his trial , but after his sentence was af firmed by the supreme court his eyes became worse and it was reported that he would be unable to perform hard labor. The warden did not make the assignment until the prison physician examined Bartley and gave him a phy sical rating. Recently Bartley's eyes began to improve. The change was so marked that some ventured the opin ion that his eyes had not been given proper treatment while he was in the Douglas county jail. It is said this is the belief of the penitentiary physi cian. While some believe the storv and pretend to assign a motive , others are satisfied to give their opinion of doctors in general and assert that many of them would dislike to cure a patient too speedily when Le patient evinced a desire to pay coed round fees for treatment. Bartley's deportment is much the same as it was while he was in the Douglas Bounty jail. He continues to attend strictly to his own business. He has no cell mate , has received no vis itors and seldom communicates T/ith others. His work in the laundry is said to be satisfactory. He helps wash and iron. The washing is done by ma chinery and it is a part of his duty to place the garments in the machine and remove them at the proper time. The ironing is done after the old-fashioned manner , with bij , heavy flat irons. Some skill rnd muscle is reauired in the operation. Garments belonging to convicts and guards go through the laundry and Bartley handles his share of them , whether they be coarse striped goods or fine white shirts. He still wears glasses to protect his eyes , but his poor sijrbt does not appear to in terfere with his work. He has never made a complaint to the warden and be observes the rules of the peniten tiary strictly. Nebraska Medals for Fruit. Superintendent Youngers of the Ne braska fruit exhibit , says the Omaha Bee , is furnishing some conclusive evi dence that this is net the first exposi tion where the state has been in the lead in the way of showing : first-class fruit. The evidence is in the form of bronze and silver medals , all of which are in a case close to the fruit tables and under lock and key. The first medal Nebraska won on its fruit was at a horticultural exhibit in Baltimore in 1871. This was on a gen eral exhibit. The next was in Boston in 1873 , and was siven on account of the largest variety -of pears being shown by any one state. At that time Nebraska had fortythreevarieties on exhibition. The first prize was award ed in 187G , at the Centennial , when the slate was given p medal for the best collection of grapes. Prior to thi * tim < > the state hr.d won medals at Boston and Philadelphia , where it had shown its fruits. Hot and Dry. The weather of the past week , saya the last Nebraska crop bulletin , has been much like that of the week which preceded it and the results have been much the same. In the northern coun- Hes the week has been very favorable. Corn has matured rapidly and has not suffered from the hot. dry weather. The yield will be reduced so'mewhat in most other counties as a result of the heat and lack of moisture. Threshing from shock is about finished. The weather has been so favorable that very little or no grain has been dam aged in the shock. Fall plowing is well advanced , but the ground is now getting too dry and plowing has about stopped. A very little wheat and rye have been sown , but generally seeding will be delayed till after a rain. Killed at Manila. Osceola disoatch : There have been so many reports in relation to the death of William Lewis and people here were so anxious to know the . truth that a telegram was sent to the 1 war department to have the mystery cleared up , and yesterday Postmaster Campbell received a reply from Secre tary of War Meikeljohn saying that William P. Lewis was killed while in the trenches before Manilr. on the night of August 2 by the bursting of a shrapnell thrown by the Spaniards into the trenches. Dennis Grimes of Sauuders county , stopped to care for his horse , when the animal , presumably maddened by the flies , gave a vicious kick , the blow grazing the right sideof Mr. Grimes' s' head , severing one ear. The blow , had struck Grimes sauarely , would have caused instant death. Buffalo county is harvesting an un- e ; usually large crop. INDUSTRIAL CENSUS. CONDITIONS IN MARCH. IS95 , AND MARCH , 1393 , CON- THASTED. tizln * of 31.03 1'ur CentIn Number of Hand * Kmploycd , 44.O. > 1'er Cent. In W. ges Paid , and 11.5(1 Per Cent , hi Kate of Wages 1'or Cupltu. The statistics of industry and labor tabulated from the industrial census just completed by the American Pro tective Tariff League , and the accom panying comparisons and comments by Congressman Robert W. T&ylor of Ohio , which appear In the current is sue of the American Economist , will not fail to attract universal attention or to excite profound interest wher ever read and digested. The process of reading and digestion is greatly fa cilitated by the clear and luminous manner in which Mr. Taylor has pre sented his facts and conclusions. The report should be read entire , and doubtless will be by many millions of people , as it will be at once issued by the Tariff League in Defender docu ment form , bearing the serial number C6 , and made available for wide dis tribution in connection with the cam paign of 1S98. No industrial census of equal accu racy and scope has ever been obtained outside of governmental operations. Returns are received from 2.229 indus trial establishments in forty-seven states and territories , embracing al most every known line of industrial activity. Two years ago the League's census contained the figures of but little more than half the number of establishments which have reportad this year. In 189G the comparison em bodied the conditions prevailing in that year under the Wilson law , and those prevailing In 1S92 under the McKinley - Kinley law. The showing then was one of tremendous shrinkage and de pression. In the 1,388 establishments reporting there was a monthly loss in. wages of ยง 1,601,204 , or at the rate of In Colorado sixty concerns employed in 1895 4,758 hands , and in 1898 6,632 hands ; wages paid. 5200,478 and ? 31S > 154 , respectively. In Connecticut seventy-eight con cerns reported 13,839 and 15,576 as the number of hands employed in the two periods and $503,956 and $605,368 as the wages prJ'.d. South Carolina gave reports from fif teen concerns , which in 1895 employed 3.718 hand ? , and in 1898 employed 3- 892 , and the wages paid increased from ? 62,804 in ] S95 to $174,610 three years later a gain of more than 100 per cent , in hands employed , of more than 250 per cent. In total amount of wagoa paid , and of nearly 20 per cent , ia average rate of wages. From the State of Washington the exhibit is equally remarkable. This state sent 168 reports , showing . the employment in 1895 of 3,946 hands and 7,590 in 1898 , while the wages paid in creased from $188,889 In 1895 to $430.- 258 in 1898. Equally interesting details pertain ing to all the states and territories and to all the industries represented are given in the tabulated statements em bodied in the census summary and recapitulation. The student of eco nomic and political questions cannot afford to skip any portion of this re markably interesting document. By every fair and open mind the summing up in the closing paragraph of the re port will be accepted aa cogent , fair and obviously truthful. Congressman Taylor says in conclusion : "The American Protective Tariff League presents these facts for the consideration of the American people. Their meaning is npparent , and their effect must be to stimulate the hope and strengthen tha convictions of ev ery believer in the principle of protec tion. " LARGER RECIPROCITY. Franco Anxious to JCxtond Her Trada with the United States. From a Paris cable of July 20 it appears that the business interests of SHOULD BE STOPPED AT ONCE. ( Uncle Sam "There they go , loaded down with American money , and not an American shipowner among them. This foolishness is going to be stopped. " ) $19,214,448 a year ; a Decrease of near ly 30 per cent. In tue employment of labor and a decrease of 26 } per cent , in wages paid. Now mark the contrast. In 1898 the 2,229 establishments reporting show a wonderful revival from the paralysis which fell upon them as the result cf hostile tariff legislation. These re ports give Information as to the num ber of hands employed and the gross sum of wages paid in March , 1393 , and in March. 1S9S , the object of the in quiry being to bring into juxtaposition the conditions prevailing at an ap proximately equal length of time after the enactment ot the tariff laws cf August 23 , 1891 , and July 24 , 1S97 ths Wilson and Dingley laws , respectively. It is found that In March , 1S95 , sev eral months after the Wilson law be came effective , the 2.229 establish ments reporting in response to the Tariff League's inquiries employed 204,580 hands , and paid these hands in wages $7,079.323. In March , 1S9S , after eight months of steady revival under the Dlngley law , these same 2.229 establishments employed 209,329 hands , and paid them in i wages $10.198.130. Gain for 1898. under the Dingley law , in hands employed , 31.C5 per cent. Gain for 1S9S. under the Dingley law , in wages paid , 44.05 per cent. Gain for 1898. under the Dingley law , in average of wages paid per capita , 11.56 per cent. Taking the month cf March as a fairly representative month In the matter of industrial activity. Congress man Taylor finds that at the same rate of gain throughout the year the 2,22 ! ) establishments reporting will employ 64,500 more men than were employed In : the which year embraced the re turns of 1895 , and will pay out wages exceeding by more than 537,000.000 the sum paid during the Wilson law pe riod named. The figures of the Tariff League's industrial census tally so closely Ja percentage with figures obtained by parties who investigated separate In dustries independently of the League as to Justify. Mr. Taylor's conclusion that vhe comparisons and percentages given above represent with exception ' , accuracy the Industrial conditions prevailing very generally throughout the United States. The reports , geographically consid ered , present seme Interesting facts. France are growing impatient at the delay in securing a comprehensive re ciprocal trade agreement with the United Stales. On Wednesday of last week a deputation consisting of prom inent members of the chamber of com merce called upon M. Maruejouls , min ister of commerce , and asked that the government secure a commercial en tente with the United States , accord ing to section 4 of the Diugley tariff act. M. Maruejouls promised to con I sider the matter. Section 4 embodies the general fea tures of the reciprocity clause of the Dingley law. Under its provisions the president of the United States with the a-Iv'ce and consent of the senate may enter into a commercial treaty with any foreign nation on the subject of r-oiprocal trade agreements , such agreements to cover a period of not more than five years. It aprears from this movement of the French chamber of commerce that broader scheme of reciprocity with the United States is desired than that re cently provided for In the agreement under section 3 of the Dingley law. This agreement was limited to a small number of articles. What the mer chants and manufacturers of France evidently want is a commercial treaty that shall cover a far wider range of the products of both countries. The big home market o the United States is a tempting field and foreign trad ers look upon it with unconcealed en vy. 3IuzzIed nml Mute. a A Hcnlthy Yearling. The Dingley tariff law was one year old Saturday last , at midnight , and it is the healthiest infant in the world today , despite the efforts of the con glomeration of the populist-democratic- free silver quack doctors to kill it. El Dorado ( Kan. ) Republican. Eighty-Three Volunteer Organiza tions Ordered Discharged , THIRTEEN REGIMENTS TO STAY They Will Probably Ho Retained In the Service Until Next Spring No Western Troops In the List Mostly Eastern and Southern ItcslmcntA for Garrison Duty. WASHINGTON , Sept. 5. A statement prepared at the War department shows that including1 to-day eighty-threo of the organizations in the volunteer army have received orders looking to their being1 mustered out of the service. This number includes fifty-three regi ments and a number of minor organi zations , such as batteries of artillery , independent companies of cavalry , etc. , and probably represents almost one-third of the approximated 220,000 men called for by the President in the two proclamations issued by him. The appended bulletin was issued by the War department to-day announc ing the additional regiments to be mustered out of the service. Adjutant General Corbin said that in all prob ability few if any other troops would be ordered relieved from duty at this time. The bulletin of the organiza tions to be mustered out follows : First United States volunteer cav alry , "Rough Riders. " at Galveston. Texas ; Ninth Massachusetts infantry ; Uatteries B , C and D , First Maine ar tillery ; Companies A , B , C and D , Second end Washington volunteer infantry ; District of Columbia infantry ; First battalion , Nevada infantry ; Third , Ninth and Fourteenth New York in fantry ; Second Xew Jersay infantry ; First Massachusetts heavy artillery. In connection with the orders mus tering out the above named regiments it is significant of the government's in tention to retain many of the volun teer troops in the servica that orders were issued transferring thirteen regi- ments from their state camps to the various camps of mobilization through out the country. It is understood that the orders were issued with a view to the retention in the service , perhaps , until next spring , of the organizations named in the orders. The regiments included in the orders are as follows : Third Georgia , from Griilin. Ga. , to Jacksonville ; Fifteenth Minnesota from St. Paul to Camp Mead ? , Middle- town , Pa. ; Fourth Xew Jersay from Seagirt , to Casip Moada ; Eighth in fantry ( regulars ) from Fort Thomas. Wash. , to Lexington ; Fifth Massachu setts from South Framington , to Camp Meade ; Thirty-fifth Michigan from Island Haven , to Camp Meade ; Third Mississippi from Jackson , Miss. , to Lexington ; Two Hundred and First Xew York from Hamstead , to Camp Meade ; Third Xorth Carolina from Fort Macon , to Knoxville , Fourth Kentucky from Lexington , to Knoxville ; Third Ala bama from Mobile , to Jacksonville ; Third regiment United States engineers - gineers from .Jefferson Barracks , to Lexington ; and First Territorial regiment - ment from Tucson , Ariz. , to Lexing ton. TO ABANDON CAMP WIKOFF. Keculnrg to Be Ordered to Garrisons The Twentieth to Fort T-eaveiiworth. XKW YORK , Sept. 5. A dispatch to the Xcw York Tribuaa from Washing ton says : Orders v.-ere prepared at the War department to-day for the practical abandonment of Camp Wikoff at Montauk Point. All the volunteer regiments now there will soon start for their homes and will receive fur- loughs as they are mustered out. while most of the regulars , us soon as they hava recuperated sufficiently , will re- suinc dut3' at the posts which they garrisoned before the war began. The orders for the regulars may be issued to-morrow. The Twentieth infantry will go to Fort Leavenworth , Kan. PANDO FLED WITH MILLIONS , A V , t Sum Taken by the General In Secret Departure From Haraua. XKW YOKK. Sept. 5. A dispatch to the Xcw York Herald from Havana says : Having successfully done every thing in his power to convey the im pression he was sailing for Spain by way of Xew York on the steamship Philadelphia , Thursday , General Pan- do , instead , secretly started for his Jiativa land aboxit ten hours later on the French steamer Xotre Dams du Salut , it is said , with S.,400,000. The secret was so efFectually kept that very few persons here have any knowl edge of it. and all the Havana news papers announce Pando's departure on the Philadelphia. The Only ' 'Official Cane" on Kccord. WASHINGTON , Sept. .V The alleged overcharging by stewards on board transports as stated at tbe quarter master general's office , is said to be one single instance where a steward charged a soldier twenty-five cents for sandwich. Xo other complaints of the kind have been made at the quar termaster's department u A Voting Girl in Trouble. ST. JOSBIMI , Mo. , Sept. 5. Ida Tot- man , a Cameron girl 1 ? years of age , was arraigned before Commissioner Pollock to-day , charged with opening and destroying mail not her own. at Mrs. Linda Totman. the girl's mother , entered a plea of guilty for her daugh ter , and the young defendant was bound over to the federal grand jury. Mrs. Mary Totman of Cameron , an aunt of the defendant , is the one whose letter was tampered with. A check for S50 was taken from the letter - . ter , the signature forged and money obtained and spent by the girl in be having a good time. 15aii for Si,000 was furnished. SPANISH ARMS CAPTURED , 25,130 Hlfloj nnd 3.BOO.OOO Surrendered nt Santiago. WASHINGTON' , Sept. ft. Colonel If. D. Uorup , tha chief ordnance officer of Santiago , has forwarded to thu war department a complete list of the ord nance captured from the Spaniards. The number of rifles and carbines cap tured far exceeds the expectations of the authorities in Washington. The list as received by General Flagler , chief of ordnance , ia as follows : Rifles : Spanish Mausers. . 1C.C03 Argent . iC : Hcminston . 6.11S Curblncs : Mausers 813 Ardent . . . . . . 81 Remington 33 ; Revolvers 75 Ammunition for .small arms : Mauser rifle cartridges . 1,500.000 Argent rifle cartridges . 471,21 * ) Remington rills cartridges . 1.630,000 The worthless small-arm ammuni tion amounts to OTIS.OOO cartridges. Forty -four smooth-bore siege guns and five mortars wcro also captured , to gether with the following rifled guus : lironze , 30 ; cast-iron , 10 ; steel , 8. Projectiles captiired : Solid shot , spherical , 3,551 ; shell , spherical , 673 ; shell , cylindrical , 1,87'J ; cylindrical , 437. NAVY TO KEEP 20,009 MEN. No Great Fnllln ? Off From the Quota to Bo Allowed. WASHINGTON , Sept. 5. The enlisted force of the navy is to be maintained at its full strength and as fast as va cancies occur through discharges anil the expiration of enlistment periods they will be filled. The number of men enrolled in the navy during the war with Spain reached 24.000 , includ ing about 4,000 naval militia. The return North of the Santiago fleet , and that on patrol service , re sulted in the mustering out of over 400 regular seamen , whose terms had expired , and who had no desire for further active service. Many ships have on their list sailors who will also leave the government service in the next month for the same reason. To keep the strength approximately up to 20.000 enlistments have been di- rec'ted to begin again at recruiting stations , and so anxious are hundreds of well-equipped man to join the navy that no difficulty will be experienced in j soon having the quota filled. NO PARADE OF MILES1 ARMY , The Volunteers From Porto Klco to Ua Sent to lltoir Homos at Once. WASHINGTON , Sept. 5. General Miles and his army of between 4,000 and 5.009 volunteers , now on the way to this country from Porto Rico , will not parade in Xew York city or elsewhere as a body upon their arrival. The of ficial announcement ot this fact was made at the War department to-d.iy When the transports arrive in New York harbor they will be met by officers with orders for the troops to proceed j directly from their ships to the trains , to be sent immediately to their . state camps , preparatory to be ing mustered out of the servSet : . MAINE WRECK STILL THERE. Havana Authorities K-ttablUli a Pittrol About the Hulk In the Harbor. XKW YOKK , Sept. 5. A dispatch to the New Yorlt Herald from Havana saya : Within the last few days the authorities have reinstitnted the sys tem of patrol boats about the Maiuo wreck as maintained before the war , intending to show the commission their determination that American property shall be fully protected and , incidentally , that they do not regard the cause of the disaster as determined and intend to give no opportunity for the manufacture of evidence. For the Xovr Nuvnl Hospital. CHICAGO. Sept. . " . A dispatch to the Chicago Record from Washington says : The surgeon general of the navy has asked for proposals , to be opened Octo ber 12 , for the construction of a model naval hospital at Mara Island , Cal. , under a congressional appropriation of 8100,000. The plans are of the most modern type , conforming to the latest hospital practice at home and abroad , and provide for indefinite expanbiou. The 2 ocro Had Killed Four Women. DALLAS , Texas , Sept. . " > . From the confessions of "Dobie".Toe Malone , the negro hanged here yesterday , it is be lieved that , he participated in four or live murders. Two years ago he killed Mrs. Durham near Dallas , and he and another negro killed throe white wo men at Kagle Lako. near Houston , about three years ago. Governor IJlack Wants IIi < i Men Kolleved WASHINGTON , Sept. 5. Governor Ulack was an early caller at the \ \ ar department this morning. As a result of his personal inspection and obser vations , the governor recommended the mustering otJt of the Third. Ninth and Fourteenth regiments of Xew York volunteers in addition to those prev iously ordered out of the service. A Ktns34 Il- > tel Sinn Kills Illmsolf. OSAWATOMII : . Kan. . Sept. 5. C. A. Furr. proprietor of the Central hotel this place , shot himself last night. He recently canu here from Lane , Kan. , and had just , recovered from a severe sickness. Ills mind has been affected at times since coming here. HIU < iourl liay rrobnbly Glren Up. OMAHA , Sept. f > . Missouri day at the exposition will probably have to given up. The commissioners have been unable to secure the desired rates from raihvays.