FHE OMAHA DAILY BEE. ESTABLISHED JUNE 19 , 1871. OMAHA , TUESDAY MOBNT2TG , FEBRUA11Y 8 , 181)8 ) TWELVE PAGES. SINGLE COPY liTVB CENTS , BRIGHT SKIES IN THE WEST The Familiar Ory of "tho Enemy's Country" No Longer Heard in the Land , BETTER FEELING IN THE MIDDLE WEST CoiiilllloiiN Itnnlxli Hit * 1' < > unit I'rolli of I'ollllcul Clninor IVIIIIIIIM CiinilltliiiiH n " r I > \unil > le. The second paper ot Franklin Matthews In Harper's Weekly , under the above cap tion. deals with the political battle cry , "The nnemy'rt Country , " Ita disappearance r.nd the causes thereof. It ahould be wel come news , writes Mr. Matthews , to those * Aho live In the eastern part of the United St.itos , and , .ndccd , to all the people , that "the rnrmy'R country , " famous In the cam paign of IS'Jfi , Is patnlng away , and Is prac tically n thing of the pru.'t In Kansas and the middle west ono rarely hears or sees the expression nowadayvS. An era of better fcclltig hau eel In. Tills change mij bo noticed not only In the nwespapera and In the convcrsatlcn of the plain people , but Is a''o observable In the words anJ acts of the state olllclils. It ks no jart of the purpose ot these ar ticles on Kansas and the middle rtcst to lev vt political titrlfc , nor , Indeed .oven 'o recall It except to Iiliistratp marked changes In public sentiment of lalng benefit to our cnmtnra eountrj One of these changes re lates to the spirit that la ) behind the ex pression "the cnenij H conntr ) . " It was Mr llrjan who gave the phrane promlnmce Ho used It In his pi cell while on bin vvaj east A- ) accept formally the nomlnitlon for the presidency. It lo altogether probable that ho ( .poke the words aa a mere peasantr ) , but co-nlng as thej d d after the Impas- n'onod ' speech that weii him the nomination , In whlcli he said , while referring to the east " \\o entreat no more , " the plir-ise wan caught up by both sides , and It became the 'to-ni ce-ter of sectional bltternckfl. Governor Le-edy whether he knows It o- not , fmnlshes probably the most conspicuous Instance of the change nf feeling. This Is tliov- 1. In bis official utterances. In hlb message to the legislature of Kansas on Januirv 12 W7 , Governor Liedy railed blt- torlj at the- east It was ono of the moM remarkable messages over sent to a Icglsla tun In thlH country In his Thinksglvln- pie ( Inmotlon of November 11 , ten months Inter , t'le bltteiness had ciascd entirely am the governor also rejolcul openly bucjuai the atta < ks on Knnsab had ceased. Trulv there was n change1 Two things cf un- VHiial In.portanco had occurred in those ten months One was the revival of prospurltj In Kansas because of nature's bountiful rrops an 1 the other was that In August nftiv the ciops had been Inrvested practl cally. Governor Lecdy came to Now York , for tbo nrst tlmo In his life , to sco what kind of a place It was. LHKDY'S WAR WHOOP Here Is what Governor Lecdy said In the Introductory part of his message on Januarv 12 , 1V17 : "While according to the press of the m lion's most populous metropolis , her chil dren linger In the streets nntiupht except In the lore of the pavement , unfed excepi nt the hand of charltj unhoused except litho the kcanels thej dispute with crciturcb scarcely leas m'f > "rible , the commonwealth of Kansas rejoicing In a public-school sjn tern which Is the most grateful heritage we receive fron our fathers and the bebt legac wo can leave to our children , nnds ample house room and school room for cverj Kansas child , an 1 for such straggling waifs ns come to us from where penury and pawl- mony stalk sldo b ) side Thcro are no tramps in Kansas except those birds of passage sago who nit by us , grim reminders ot tbo conditions In older communities. "With a cheerful audtclty that almost chal lenges admiration Grub Street scribblers on a venil press which panders to the most vicious lifitlnctsof benil-clviilred foreign ccloilps llko New York and Chicago with hcml-lurbarlc splendor at the apex and soml- Larbarlc eaualor at the base of thulr oo-lal life have offered their puny nnd presumptu ou criticism of those whose shoestrings thej are not worth ) to unloose The dopa of Uopt hue barked at the pramlds un- an-werpd for nfty centuilos Let Gruo Stieet rail en. When the iccused Doe stood bc-'o-o the Venetian Council ho said , "My dpfenif * la jour accusation. " Tlu-j well know tint Kansas was a pillar of cloud bv illy and a pillar of nro by night before an oppressed people in the nitlon'a darkeot hour We shall keep those nres alight In our camps , and that fiinokc ascend'ng from our hllltolM , till this l.s Indeed a government of the people , and for the people , and by the "Slip filliil you not In tbe enrly d ly , nnd Hie fulled you not In the late , Nor forgot you how t'le ' bilance was poised on our youngest Btate , And ho'v with the file of Kansas was linked the nation's fate " GMveinor Lccdj'n familiarity with things r3gitlan | wns u greit Miiprlso to hlb friends , but they noon lenicmCicred that his prlvitc MPCiitary wap formeily e-onsuil geneial at Cairo , an 1 that accounted for It Those pri vate secretaries are usually elenor fellows rnd If Governor Leedy did not write that part of the nuhfiiige relating < e > irgjpt him- Belf he allowed It to ronmln In the docu ment and became responsible for It whlcli Is the same thing Governor Leedy's de nunciation of the nvNtem that had brought burn fiUhtfnl Ignorance , hunger , eiualor and illthy nb'dlng ' pliiern to New York Cltv savorol 1 irguly of atsl IIIOIIH reading of what IB known as "vellow Journalism , " ( ho kind of Journalism that for tin * snko of thn ad- vi rtlfament gC'ts up 'b'read ' funds and the lIKn whenever theie Is nn e < ast sldo Btrlkp and the peopln of tlut district with mueh wnllliiK , havn to draw n few ilollnra out of the bink from their savings to support thein- olvp.s until vvoik Is resumed Still there can bo no doubt that the governor meant what he said , although pnmpoiih phraj.es nnd evaggerated language wnro used. A CHANGU OF TUNR To fchow thn cliango that came over Gov ernor Leedy let us lefer to his Tli. kf.glv- Ing iiroolamatlnn After spoaklng of the bountiful ban int nnd better price. ? , and after mentioning that the attacks on Knnu.ia had rea.sed , and calling attention to the fact tl1 .it "thi > lepiitntlon of Kan.sas Is again nx good as KB rlmractcr always ha * bopn " he makes this solo reference to the condition of the p or In his cities "In tlu > day of mil- rejoicing let o.ir peonle rot forget the poor nnd needy of the great cities' and of foreign countries " It may bo bald that It would not have been proper for Governor Leedy to say Fbarp things In a Thanksgiving proclama tion To that ono may reply that a gov ernor who could send Biich an unusual ine's- tago to the Irglslaturn would scarcely have restrained hlnibelf from making a si ) dig at least In his Thanksgiving proclamation when ho wni talking on the name topic , the jiooi of our groa-ti cities , Tim fact Is that Governor Leedy was , anil is a fair typo of hundreds of thousands of porbons In the middle west who have had vuoai ? and unfortunate notions about thn jipopln of the east. They have Imagined that them was no health ) mlddlo rlass , as it Is called.In the east ; that there were a largo number of very rich persons , and honks upon hordes of poor living In nith a.- nnd squalor ticre ; that there was no brotherly love or Christian feeling and that DIP lot of the mum-s In the ea t was | irai-tlcally o in of slavery to money barons T\IK : \ is no exaggeration , as I shall chow , nml It U Also ( run that the phr.nie "tho cnr-riv's country" was paiily rccpouolble fo , * It , IPiiRU8t list Governor Lccdv VUMII buck to the home of hi * childhood In Ohio , and t.bllo them It Is said , suggc-slrd to his wife that as they were so near New York It \ would bo a good Idea to run eiut and Icxik ttt the famous town ana lit sights I'orth- . \\ltb they ttnrtcd , I nm tola that it has not yet been made public that the governor came to the metropolis and that ho spent four days In town Incognito. Ono of his friends , to whom the governor spoke freely of his visit , told me that the nrst thing the governor did after ho crosied the Hudson river was to call a hackman , to whom he ( Mid : "Drive mo to Wall street " DRMIDINO TUB PLUTOCRATS. The governor went to Wall sti'cet , travel- Eialncd so he was. and his cab wont slowly from Trinity church to the East tlvcr , the governor peering eagerly from silo to side at people and at buildings. My Informant aj s that on his return homo fho governor slid that Wall street was nothing but a srt of "dinky little alley , anyway , " but that IIP was sure ho saw the nameii of Morgan and Holmont cii the signs , When the governor got down to the Kast river he saw the Brook lyn bridge and ordered hl driver to go up there. After looking at the bridge the gov ernor reached Droadway by devious paths through Cherry Hill. He spent four days looking about the town , having taken cnjo'lal rains that none of the reporters nhoiild nnd I'lm out by moans ot his signature , which he OUrposely trade blind , on the hotel register I was curious to learn what Governor Leedy saw In New York , and during an Inter view which ho gave tne , and most courteously placed all sorts of Information In 'Jta omcc a' my disposal , I asked him about his New York xtslt. Now Governor Leedy IIEB plenty of whit Is known In the west and olsewtie-o as "horso sense. " Ho paused a moment aftei I ci'ktJ my question , his ees twinkled and ha evidently fathdmed my purpose , which waa to place what ho might say of his expe-lenca In New York side by side with his extraor dinary mersag" to the legislature n the i a-no subject. The governor was noncommittal at nice and ho rcylled : "Oh , It was just such a place us I expected to see I was there so fbort a time that It wouldn't be right for mo to talk knowing' ) obotit it I had n good time " No more would the governor say , but 1 cnn tell him what he really paw He saw people on the streets looking ns well fed and as well clothed as In anv other place In the world He saw hundreds of th u- sands of prosperous persons of what Is called the middle cla&s He siw that N w York residents and New York buildings looked Just llko the people and builriliimi of any of our large cities Chicago St Louis , or even Kan-as City , the : ie irest largo town to Governor Leedj's home Ho did not ROO people In the streets irving - ing for bieail Ho saw no scmaloor fllth - New Yoik'H health board under Mavor Strong having storped all that Ho saw no golden chariots , rolling about with the fam ilies of millionaires In them He siw no tobbcr barons , or It he did , like the rest of us could not identify them No , Governor Lccdj went homo with a broader , kln-llt'r vlc-v , a feeling that he wab a proud clthrcn of a great country which even Inclmltc ! 'semi barbaric" New York within its borders ai'il down underneath the surface he wa5 pioblblv glad of It He had nothing to bu of "Grub btrcet writers on a venal press" when I saw him and I should bebiirprlsnd If ho ever referred to the matter again. OUTLAWING A V'ORD. Moio striking even than the governo-'s change of mental attitude Ib a movement that was staitcd about a year ago bv Bank Commissioner Hreldcntl-il of Kansas , the head and front for many venrs or the popti- llht tarty there , and until within a few months its state chairman Mr nrcldcnthal told me anil this Is probablv the Hrst hiif that has been made of It In prl'it that within a year he had written from fifty to ono hundred letters to men of Influi nee In the populist and 'democratic partlcveliters political managers , high ofllce holders in tact , every nun of great Influence In the flee silver movement asking them hence lorth not to use the word plutocrat In their wilting and their speaking Ho said that he pointed out to them that the word rcillv meant nothing , that It inflamed one set of men ngalnst another , and that the best wij to make political warfare was not by use of epithets. This Is what Mr Brcldentlu , said to me abojt if "Wo should not make war In politics on Individuals , but on the sjstem that has brought t.bout certain results Nothing can bp gained by calling a man or a 'ct of men plutocrats. It Is the system tint we- oppose Wo ought not to hate the banke r , the Indl- v ( dual. Wo do object to trusts and moncpo- lleu , the Individuals who ptofit b ) them arc nothing to us It Is wrong to attack bankets ns i class. You can't blame men fon.ak - Ing inoacy when they luvc legal oppo tunltj It Is the illegal opportunity , the morally wrong sstcm , that wo are after" . Mi Ilrcldenthal asked his corr'-bpondcnth to substitute the word cotporatlon for pluto- cmt hereafter. That , he said , would muko the war Impersonal , and would not aroiin- sectionalism. Ho received prompt lesponses to Ills letters , and , almost to a man , his correspondents agreed with him Ho read me some of tbo letters I am not at liberty to give the namett of the writers nor to tell the exact language that they tispd , but I can y that the spirit of denunciation of the east , the spit It that found common expression In the phrase "the enemy's country" was not to be found In them Practically all the wilters agreed not only to drop the word plutocrat but to UFO their Influence to have genera ! use of It abandoned DAWN OF IinrTKR PURLING I do not know how thlb may Impress ot'ieru , but It teems to me to be a matter of Mich great slgnincnnco as to mei t calling the . \idcst attention to It We of the east m y saj what we pleaseof popiills-i and trcii theories but Is It not a mattei for fdlcltatlon that a movement.tnwa-d a bet'ev unders.uid'ng ' nf each other ha. teen In ex- Istenei quietly for more than a year , th it It was started In HIP ve-y ct del of ronu- llun by a populist lender and already has ud good rceults ? Mr Hreldenthal Is tlm In timate fi lend and close politically ally of Mr Ilryan They are about the fimo age and liavo known pach ohei and worked together for nearly ten year . It U known however that Mr itreldenthal U not wedded to the " 1C tn 1" Idea , believing rathur In flat mcriey md tlut ho depr < cites the USD of such ploacs as "tho enemy's country. " In order tn loun prevalent Ideas In Kan- SKI Nc'brnska and other western states as to New York and Its people , I made It a ' "Int to ask merchants fanueiii editor ? , : ravclors , in those states what they thought Now York was IlkainJ Itniv they looued ipon Its people. Almost Invariably I found tint the campaign of 1S9Q had left so mo ciirloui notions among tin : imi&vs and almost as Inv.irHbly I found that whatever feeling of enmity h > d existed was gradually pass- UK a.way. Although the fee-ling la becoming ; li dllcr. nevert'iclcSs ' many queer Ideas as o tin iilace still prevail among the nuibscs [ naked Governor Lcody what ho thought was the general opinion among the masses of Kan&is of Now Yoik Hn said "Our people think It Is essentially H for eign city , that It Is filled with men lacking 'i ' patriotism ; that they are mercenary and .1 onsands of them , ns soon as tl.cy have nudn sulllcle'nt money , go back " to Ruropu to ' Ivt nn their fortunes H "is not the gon- cnil lellef tl'-t there Is a great mass cf > luln people In New York , a health ) mlJdlo ilass that we k'tnw Is most desirable in any common .vmlth. " VAGUE IDKAS. Heio Is what Mr. lircldcnthal cue of the popular Impretslon regarding New York : "People out here have a rather vague Idea about New York and Its people Many thl'ik theru Is a big moneyed machine out there a inichlne or a sjHtem that Ib not coulucivo o Ideas of liberty or ol freedom I do not thl-k , vou can ca ) truthful ! ) that our peo- ip | huto New York. Hither they feel j-orr ) 'or the miifees there " Hi-re la what < xie of the candlJatts on tl.o republican state ticket at the last election ( alJ ui the tubjitct ( I nm not at 1 berly to glvt ) hU > name ) "Out here we have the Idva that New York U not a truly American city.Ve do rot regard it a < representative of our rojn- trj We look at It au a p'ace whora meet eluich at tbelr bonda Snd i perfc end set up a cry ( hat they will lotp a do lar If we Hhotild assert the" 'M6nroe- doctrine or thrpaten to go to wnr to stop the terrible state of affairs In Cuba , Wo do not bc- llt-vo that the masses in New York love our country as wu do , or as wo think true American citizens should love the country. Still It Is true that there is to be seen on every hand a friendlier feeling toward the cast. " Another representative man stood by this speaker , and he became aroused. Ho broke In : "I'll tell you , " ho said , "whit people out hero think about New York- They think It Is a great big sponge a sponge that. In the greed for money absorbs all the life , man hood , and patriotism of Its citizens " Hero Is what ono ot the proprietors ot ono of the largest retail stores In Kansas said In answer to my question. | "I nnd that many pecplc In Kansas look j n > .n New York as the home and business I place of a rich set of Yankee-like men with I a great lot of Invention and peculiar ways ot gctttlng hold of oilier people's money. They lead exaggerated stories about the poor there and the starving and , being of a sympathetic wholesoulcd nature , believe these stories anJ think there arc hundreds djlng or starvation. while the Goulds and Vanderbilta and othcv millionaires by the score and hundred loll 1 about the streets In gorgeous turnouts , liv- Ishly displaying jewels as the poor static ! on I the streets with outstreU'.ied arms asking for bread Now It would seem btrange that such an absurd Idia should be prevalent H Is not I general among our educated people , but I i nnd that the Ideas I have Indlcitcd are mote 1 widespread than one would think. " Hero Is what one of the foremost candi dates for governor al the coming repub lican convention had to say on the matter - tor : . "It Is a mistake to say that our people ' hatu New York. Many of them have had n wrong Impression about the place and Us people- They have had an Idea that there nro a great many more millionaires than icnlly exist there , and they have thought that the rich people of the east were hard- I hearted They are bcjjKinlng to rcall/e however , that we are one people , that the people of Kansas woull probibly do as the people of Now Ycrk do If placed were changed , and that It wns a mistake to set oft ono part of this coantiy against nnothc In political hostility " SECTIONALISM VANISHING. So much for talks with representative men I talked with stoiekcepc s , railroad hand' ' farmern , everywhere 1 went , ! > nd while I an Inuml to say that such stiangcIdeis dl prevail as I have Ind catcd In many ct-es not once not oven when speaking with po lltlcal managers who naturally would hop * to thrive on stirring up discord dl 1 I hea a woid or enmity to.varJ the east as a dh tlnct part of our country There was mu , . . I said about corporations rtnd monopolies , there ( was a belief that patriotism v.as rainir negative quantity in the cast , tint tin ! niaSits wcie do.vi-troldcn , bit there was no bpccch or thought that found cxpicsjion In such a phrase as "the enemy's country , " cr Indicating feeling or opinioin about the cast Almost In every Instance In talking with the plain people I mut with th s statement " 1C thcio has been hatred toward the oar and that probably was overdcne ) ou vvll flnd v ry llttlo of It now. Wo recognize that New York is as cstentlal to us as we aio to New York. We all belong to one country. " And Indeed this should be so , naturally More farmers send their sons to college , i is r ertcd in Knnsab , ' 'rom the mldJle wes > than from nny other ngtlcultural part o nur cojntr ) Scores of them come east tc the largo universities , and hundreds am thousands go to their own state unUeisltic'S It one wants a college educUlon in the middle west , it costs very little. Tultioi Is free , and ore can live chuplv The re sult Is that higher education thrives am piCbpcrs there , and that a highly Intelligent people lives there The fact Is , Kansas people refer to them selves as "a peculiar people. " 'Ihey are in- tepscly high-spirited , and oven more In tensely patriotic- The John Drown spirit Is still In evidence In the state The people are roascd easily when their sympathies aic affected At such times they do not spare tbobo against whom they thunder. They still tell you about the famous "Battle o the Itlue , " and nil one has. to do Is to talk In earnest nbout liberty and the rights o' the people to secure their attention They hold not less than second place In the list o ; states In the milter of education of the people. In their anger about misrepresenta tion in the east and under 'he scourge o ] hard times , some o' them si Id harnh thlniv about the east , but that bitterness Is sub si ling The horn of plenty has rolled out Its Joy and peace over the btate Kansas and New York are In the sime country again , where they alwavs have been , and where they always will be. Why should not the efforts of men like Utcldpntbal , asklru ; the people on ono bile to refrain from using sjch a word as pluto crat , bo met by T similar reiucst by some man of commanding influence on the other siJe , asking that the people of the cut no longci refer to the people of Kansis as clanks' * If such effor's were met in the proper spirit , henceforth we fihoull hesx- very little of "tho enemy's country " KTVMIU > < m , s'ioitn > . CiiiiipMiiyimply Rellliiii , In Old l.l < | iil- ilntlimr TIT 11II i-Hi ex NRW YORK , Kcb 7 Standard oil sold rn the curb today at $42. > on the strength of a story that It was proposed to exchange present ceitincntcs for shares'n ' a new com pany on the basis or four to one. S C F. Dodd general solicitor for the Stiiulani Oil company contrallctcd the truth of to report. A statement Is authorized that liqui dating trustees arc simply going ahead and getting In prcsc.it liquidation certificates and other tiust stock pud Is'ii.ng therefore a rcitiilcato assigning le al title to a propoi tlonalp share in the cmponte i.toik of the Individual companies. U Is said furtler th t there nre still outstanding $37500,000 of liquidat ing ecitinentes and over $20,000,000 of the old trust certlUctes Until the above urnmuits are traiiRfened Into the new cui- tlfle.itcs nothing will be doiuIn icgarl to exchanging the coipotato ftoil.s for any now secuiltles ciiimv * , rou vmu.i'u sriito nillforilln VlllllouilllilJuilK < -il Mt-ii- ( ullj Irrc-kiiniiNlMi * . SAN KRANCIKCO , Teb 7. Adolph Sutro ox-mayor of San Francisco and builder of the famous Sutro tunnel , lies been adjudged mentally Incompetent by Superior Jud e Helchor. Ills daughter. Dr. Cinma Sutro Merrlot. who his been In constant profcs elonal attenclatii-p on lier father for innnv months past , has been appointed Ktiardla.i of his person and estate' , her bonds bolng nuc-d at $100,000. Mr Sutro Is over SO yeam old and the lass ol menfil facult'ca Is at tributed to the weight of years , combined with the effects of two strokes of apoplexy which hp has suffered within the past few m on thn. The petition to have his daughter appointed his guardian was made by Colonel Llttlo , manager of the Sutro properties after the members of their family and attorney. , hud decided that eucli n tstcp was necessary Item-Kelt from nn lee l-'loe , CLnVIJLANO. O. , Pob 7.-I"ho workmen - men who hod started to walk across the Ice from the new water works crib , five mllex out In thp lukp were rescued lost evening by thp flreboat Cle-velnnder from nn Ice lloe after nn exciting experience The men had started to walk ashore anil when a mlle out discovered that fu-y wcro on n detached Ice lloe nnd rapidly moving awny. After prolonged crlea and waving of their coats they finally attracted the attention of n skater near the shore , who telephoned to thp llrPbout After a hard battle with thp Ice the Clevelander BUP- i ceded In crushing1 Its way through the heavy Ice and rescuing the men Ship VnnU Slnrt I'll. HAY CITY , Mich , , Feb. 7. The Wheeler & Co , ship yard , which had been uhut down for two weekB on account of a strike of riveters , resumed operatlona today , A few non-union rlveteru were put to work. The striking riveter * will stay out at least until after u meeting of the state court of me diation , which Is expected to take thu ques tion up hero tbhj COLTRIN GIVES TESTIMONY Not Satisfied with the Conditions Im posed , METHODS OF THE LIVESTOCK EXCHANGE Uuti-N I'IINNIMI fen "le Purpose nf I'riiliiir Out On mill Us Inn Cotn- v * ' f * * * Iiini ) tliut \ \ im JoilipeMlinr for H Mlllt-l * tlf tllC ItllxllK-KN. " V Lafayette Coltrln , prej-li ont and treasurer of the Omaha Live Stock Commission com- pany , resumed ha ! direct tostlmcay In the case nt the United Statuojagilnst the South Oniata Live Stock fxchangc yesterday , before John W. UatUn. cxamlner-ln-chan- cery. Ho was on the stand a greater part of the day. „ Wltmcs testincd that the Omaha Llvo Stock Commission company comprl'ed forty stockholders ; that It began basinet * * October 1 , ISflC , nt the Colon stock yards , nnd re tired August 28 , 1S97. The company had quit business In coneociuenco of the rule pa'Kcd by the exchange which provided that members of all commission concerns at the South Omaha market would bo required to become members of the exchange or bo mem bers of uoino other similar orgintoatlon which vas a member of the National Live stock exchange. This rule provided that In any cast1 at Icoct Ihe members of conce.iis doing busings at the South Omahi jards \\ruld ha\o to be memberm of the local ox- clnngcOnlj six. stockholders of the Omaht Llvo Stock Commission co.i.fany had been members of any exchange niil thcj were at tached to the South Omaha orinlzitlon Sir Coltrln Etnted thit while the Omaha Li\p Stock Commission company was In Inis ness Its profits had avcr.iged nbout P21 per cent pel > car on the money Invcbkl , vhlch proflts b < 1 been nppoitloncd among the KtiK > kh ildors. Witness had rcpeatedlv made efforts to compromise the company's differences with the exchange and get Into me nbersh p te ! co-poiatlon'a coantrj stock holders , but the exchange had rc'uscd to consider the overtures alleging that the company h > > 1 violated rules of the cx- c > ianso by dvldlng Its cr > mmissl-ns In the \\iy of pajlni ; dividends to stockholders , when fitness tcHtlfled , s n matter of fact the company hid never declare ] a dividend until after it had wound up its business , about September 1 , 1S17. WOULD SHUT OUT COLTRIN. At the time the exclunge ado < ted its now rule ? Mr Coltrln said , when the section re lating to all members or commission conoercu was under discussion at a meeting , Frederick smith , a rtoch-.iolder In the Omaiu Live Stock Commission company , had ofTeied an amend ment to the prcno'ed bectlon to roanlre enl ) five members of any compel y or coiyoration to become Identified v lti ! the exchange. D 3 ParkhWbt n eotnml 1- > ion man and a mem ber of tile exchange , had addressed the meet ing In Cf.posit ! n to the amendment and had raid that it VMS the object of the rcctlon to shut cut fro.n the business of Uio jards Mr Coltrln's company an I nil other su ' .i concerns tbit attenntcd to invade the commission busi ness at the market Mr Parkhurst hid said that Mich concerns should be driven from tl > e field , bccau.-o thy were doing business 'n ' violation of the rues of thq exchange end that they wcro being uin by a lot-of farmers Lev I Cox , another member qf tne ex hange , nnd others who belonged to that ortwal.tk- llop , lid Indorsed what'Mr. Parkhurst old nn the subject. Witness testified that the first month the Omaha Live Stock Commis sion company did buplrew ? at the yards it mcde a geol showing and that all the time it was In bus'oess ' It was airong the conxrns it the h ad of the Met for the volume of bust ness they did On cross-examination , Attorney Swlt/ler nskcd Mr CoHrln it ho wished to go on recoil as raj Ing that the exchange pcssc 1 its alleged arbitrary membership rule for the inirpcsc of freeyiru out of business the Omaha Live Stock ronif' ' i-n company ' . ' do , " replied Mr. Coltrln. "In It not a fact that jou made over $5,000 Individually whllethe _ company was In existence' ' " ' "No , " icplled the wltndrs , "rs treasurer o > the cnnipanj I received fomething like $ * , - 700 from the business , 'but tint sum was all divide ! among the'sfo'-kholders or paid out In other ways for Him benefit of the coiporatlon. " "Was there nnj dU cns'on among the stockhcldcis of the company' " "Onlt ono man niropn the ( stockholders made anv trouble Tint was I ) Olnry a < - ltlo fikmnan v ho received a salary from the crncern and whose holdings In the or eanlzftlon were only four shares at stock There wcro 102 shaies of stock outstanding when the company quit business" "Did not Mnllorj Son & Zimmerman , the firm that ( succeeded to the company's busi ness , puj n bonus for tht business ? " "It did not : It bought HIP furniture of the company for $ 'ii ' ) less than was paid for It , and paid Into th treipuiy about $1 100 to offset money which the company had expended - ponded when It brgun buslncrs to SieltA Olnoy & Co for ttie firm's lUt of customers and ltd good will. " WOULD HCNEFIT PATRONS. At the aftoinoon s ° s Ion the witness nald that If the South Omaha exchange wan ajolhhert the cominhslco bik'ncz.3 at the jards could bo do-e for about one-rilf the expense and save pitiova of the market In tl'o total from JC10.000 to $300,000 a year Returning to the organization of the Omnha Live Stock Coinm'Hg'on company , witness said that whim the corporation WES llr.it forinnj there- were 102 shares of i toeU Issued to about fortj per/sens After the rule le- ( fiilring every member of a commission con cern to become a member of the oxohingu it n cost of $1.000 each was passed , ntock- hcldprs of the company who could not af ford to comply with this regulation disposed of their stock Witner-s bought up this stock pajlng M high as $100 < pcr share for It until when the company ccsised doing buslncs ] at the jards. witness had come Into postu.s.1 OT of foitj-two shares nnd the remainder of the- loldlnps wcro divided among about niiio otlicr str < ckholdcrs. Witness said that when the compan ) hcg.n husinoss. It occupied the old Bland of Spcltz Olney & Co. whoso jus ness It had practically. HUCcroJeil to and hat nhciit the only visible change In the inslniss of the old concern was In the emi i iloyment of olllco helri , etc The company | linpl ) had succeeded to a vvull-cstabllshcd commltulon buslnces at the yards. Allen Root , a former commission mer-1 chant < U the yards , \\a the next witness ea'led ' by the govornmpnt. Witness said hat In ISIll lo owned stcck In the Amerl- ' can Llvo Stock Cominlsslon companj , I vhlch was doing liiinlncHK at the yards then lo had also been stocli agent of the Nc- > raska State ulll'inre , an organization of 'armera , with a membership of about 27.000 Flcso farmers would ) up stock to him as agent at the jards. Ono of the rules of the alliance was that aftr ( * , ho had sold this block and paid the expanses of such sales ) , liu moit > saved on rpmmlsslons and all ollior profits were to bo pro-rated into a rebate to shippers. Wit"188 bad by this iie-aus bavcd the shippers from 50 to CO per cent of the established ommlsHlons at the narkets. Ono of the members of the Ameri can company , who was also a member of he exchange , It d befcn George nrown and t 1'ad been witness' custom to handle the alllanco's stock through tbls concern le- cause of this , the exchange brought charges against Drown to th& effect that bo was lolatlng a rule of the organization In that 10 was dividing commissions > : ml paying real - > al ( One morning wltqcss had received a argo consignment of stock from members of the alliance and ponfjlgtifd It to the American company fqr sale. Drown at- empted ( o dispose of the stock , but could lot and witness was compelled to hold It n the market for two days In the mean- Imo the American compiny secured a tem porary Injunction against the exchange re training It from Interfering with the sale of the stock and only In tbU way bail vvH- ncss been able to sell off the consignment. Ever after that time , bow ever , the Ameri can compan ) had been BO hampered by the exchange tbjt It was finally compelled to quit business , ROOT COUI.D NOT 9HLL STOCK. Witness had himself tried to sell stock belonging to the alliance as agent of that otganlzatton , but lie could do nothing hlm- eelf , Seeing that the exchange was bent on freezing out the agency as well as the Amcrlo n company , witness afterward ar ranged w Ith n commission firm to handle shipments from alliance members and paj to them through witness ns their agent 10 per cent commission for the privilege of handling the stock. In this way witness had succeeded for the time In getting stock of the alllanco Into the market according to the c-lglnsl plans and rebating to ship pers the sivod commissions. finally , after the alliance arrangement was knocked out by the exchange and the American company had been compelled to quit business , witness bad attempted to run a commission business at the jards under the firm name of Allen Root & Co. , one of the partnera bolng George Urovvn. Hut It was not long cro the exchange had forced this concern out of the field by causing re ports to bo spread concerning Urown's meth ods of doing 1/uslncss and his standing among bujers at the jards , which were Intended - , tended to prejudice shippers against the I firm. | On cross-exnmlnatlon witness slid that If the exchange were abolished the commission i buslriCFo at the yards could be done for ! from GO to 70 per cent less than It Is being done at present. "Unless jou nro a member of the ex change. " said the wltncbR , " > ou cannot do n commiss'on ' business at the Union Stock jards I have tried the experiment and have failed. Others have met with n sim ilar fate " Hero the government rratcd Its cise and Attornej Mahonoj , for the defendants , nn- nouncc-I that when the testimony had been extended nnd counsel had read It over the- defense would announcu when It would be rendj to present Its evidence Unl'cd States District Attorney Sawjer. rcplvlng to this served notice to opposing counsel that Just so soon as the testimony of the govern in cut's witnesses was extended tl'e prosecution would carry the case to the federal court , regardless of whether the de fense hnd presented evidence , and ask for a temporary rcctrntnlng order against the ex change piohlbltlng It fiom Interfering with tljo commission business at the South Omaha stock irarkct. ir run DIII.IM Ii-lsli-Vtm-rl.-niiM Mi-el mill \inxilnl "In-11- . Sunday afternoon ( hero was acry en- tluslnstlo meeting of the various comnii'- tecs having il.arg of the entertainment and rc-fiJtlsn to bo tendered the Irish pa triot , John Dalley , on March 17. It was the ilr-st mooting of all committees since the afialr w > stalled some two weckh ago The committees are all v.orklng lnr.1 to s'.iovv Mr. their- Dalley theirai > pictlallon of o man who can give the best nart of his life in "tittering for the Irish cause Atlorncj General Smj th will preside o- the occasl n , and the feception committee will Inc'tidoBome of the bent as well .is most PiitluiS'istic Iilsh-\iuerlcan citizens o On-ilu. The committees on which will fall the work of preparing the coining entertain ment arc as follows : Arrangements T. L McDonnell , chair iLau , Jonn Rush , John Powers , M. Hogan and J 1" Lallj. Program Ed Walsh , chairman- J fiar- rott Andrew Murrby , John Rush and J. F. Lally Kironce loin Po-vcii ? , clnlrman ; HdivarU Kcllj , WIKlam JIaher , Colonel Codj R O'Kneffo ot Oirahi and Join FIjrn , Andrew Gallagher ard Dr McC.an of South Omnha Hall R. 0 Keeffe. chairman ; M Hogan T L McDtcinclI. M Dnnleavcy and J p Hirnaher. Prrqs T J. I-'itzmorrls , chairman ; Frank Gallagher , J. B. Rjan , John Qulrn ant' James Tracy. Next Sunday afternoon nt .1 o'clock ail committees will meet in Kllw * lull 132" Farnam street to which all the Irish and Irlsh-Amerlcfci people of Omahi are linltod , a-d morn cspeclallj the women vsho aie tak Ing so much Interest 'n the coming affali It is thelesiro of the commlttep on .uranRc mcnts thit all of . .Hiearous committee members be present at rext Sumlaj's meet ing r i M v C'oiilrnvt for ' niiplj IIIKT I'l-i-scrlpl IIIIIM In -I ) | > rm fil. On account cf the absence of Chalrni'n Klorstcad , Comml < sloncr Ob'rom presided at the regnar meeting of the Hoard of County Commissioners jestcrday afterroon. The Viocccdlngs wore entirely of a routine char acter. T-o leport of the flnrnce committee on the cnnual report of Judge P-axtcr agreed with the figures submitted by Judge Haxtcr The latter were acceptoJ and placed on file Sim ilar action was taken on the last semi annual sta'ement of Countj Treasurer Helmrod Tic contract tni bond of Otto Svlfert for furrlhfag prescriptions during 1S9S was ap proved. The bonds of John Lew s , George Strjker , IJell A Pierce and George U Sand ns deputy sheriff/i were-also approved A'communication from Jo'm J Willis pro tested aRdlri t tbe cuitom that has prevailed of allow ns officers of the banks Interfiled to be Miretles on bends given by county do- po.sltorl(3. Referred to finance commute- " with pov.cr to act A lot of additional applications for pea - tlons In connection with the countj exhibit at the expedition wcro paced on ( lie The rci- tuition of George W. Hawkins an reid ( supervisor for the north district of Wi'jt Or.iala precinct vvcs aeceplol and Christ Neveaa was appointed to till the va cancy A resolution b > IJarto Instructel the HU- porlnter Junt of the eourt hoi.uo to collect all kejs to county oUicen held by pei o-s otlie- than county olllciils , In order to cor rect a prevalent Impression tru various Ln- olllclal Individual had accrs : ? to thu olilces night or da ) Adopted. Tills wan duo to HID fact that certain persons when dlu- charged had failed to deliver tho'r ' kevs MN WVItl ) IlKUMinsH | \ , 'N III liiktnllVlir Ii-iirliiii | > iit'N i\iiiiiiiH : iii tin * nviioMiiinn Henry C. WarJ of the Sixteenth United St. tea Infantry , the officer who will ha\o charge of the War department ex hibit ut the exposition , arrived In the city jiHterday and Is Btoinlng at the Millard - lard hotel. The captain Avll ] make Omaha Itls hindquarters until the exposition Is over and will devote his time to making arrangu- mcr.ts for the Installation of the exhibit and conferring with the ex | > osltlan olllUalK regarding other matters In connection with the affair. To a Ueo representative Captain Ward stated tlat the exhibit to ho made by the War department at the TransmlfsieslppI Imposition would bo much larger and more extensive In every way than the exhibit made at Nashville "All of the material comprli'ng ' the exhibit &t Nashville , " nald he , "was returned to Washington after tbe exposition cloned and the material to bo exhibited at Omaha will bo now. It will comprise a lar v amount of material which will bo prepared especially for tbls exposl- t'on ' and will be one of the best exhibit. . ! over made by the department This mater al will not be seat hero until the building Is eomplcted end ready to reecho It " Captain Ward U accompanied by Jcucpti J Hlttlnger , quartermaster tergcant , who was on dutj with the captain at NashvU'o and former expositions. x n IlnuiUfii > Iiui. Bpeelul Olllccr lirovvn hud n conflict with n drunken man at Fifteenth nnd Karntim streets Sunday night xvliifh resulted In xuveral euta and brulsen about his dice. The man emerged from the nlli-y and sprang upon tbe olllrer without warning. Ho VVUM later found to In ; mentally unbalanced from the effect of alcohol , mii.i\v VOMITS ins tu'ii/r. Durn ( KIHIVh > lie I'il unoil III * Itrnttirr niiil STutor. SUISUN , Cal. . Feb. 7 Frank Dellew has repeated to the district attorney bU confes sion of the murder of bis brother und sister He 1ms msde only A few new statements Ho said that before bo left the ranch on the afternoon of the * Jay ne put the poison In the kettle , ho emptied the powder out of Its original package and folded U In a newspaper , throwing nvv , y the box In front of the rancb house Ho thinks he burned this paper We aho said ! "When 1 held Susie's hand , while she vvak dying.'I did not give her water or broth to drink or anj- thlng else All that I gave her was some Ice It Is not true that my brother Tom knew anj thing of the poisoning , cither before or after It h > ppcnd Ho Is cntlrel ) Inno cent. I am sorry for Tom and Arthur , but I do not see what they want to worry for. " Arthur Hellew crloJ bitterly when ho met bis brother In his cell , but the prisoner siemrd stolid. "Tell mo with jour own lips , Frank , " said Arthur , "that > ou have made this confes sion. I ran hardly bellnvo It " "That's what I did , " was the answer "It Is true. 1 killed Susie t'ml Louis , but I don't really know why I did It. " The murderer has expressed a desire to plead guilty , but rather hesitated about this after a visit from his attorney , Rccs Clark. The attorney askc-J permission of Sheriff Ross to bring n phjslclnn to the jail vv th him. and there Is little doubt that this re quest me'ans that Insanity has been chosen ns the line of defense that will be1 adopted The case- will be brought before the grand jury o.i Tue-wlaj Under Sheriff Robinson xva Watchman Wells thought Tr.ink Hel lew tried to commit suicide last night by putting u handkerchief down his throat \\V1N bavg he thinks the attempt was made , but Ilcllewlisorouslj denied It. n vs > rnno'.s I'Hivvrn VV. K. II MoKc li UIIONOM lo I'llMlNll Some uf TlM'lli. NKW YORK , Keb 7 Ihcie Is nt least ie man In Gicater Now York today who holds the hipplni'Sfl , honor and fortune of a greu manj iieciile In the hollow ot bis hand. Tills man is W i : 1) Stokes Mr. Stokes caire Into possession of all lh < > private tapers of William M Tweed several joiri ago H has made a thorough otuilj of them with the Idea of writing a book on the subject Ac cording to his story , moreMian $11000001 was paid bj fie "Doss" for bribes and buj Ing up Individuals that othe' ocopleto this i'ay know nothing about The evidences of thcb" pajmrnts are btlll In existence , with the endorsement of the forties directly eon corned The surrender of Tweed by the Sfinlsh goveminent alter hH escape from l.udlow street Jail Is described by the ciauerp in ro session of Mi Stukcs ns imlltlcal vv < 1 to secure the e le"tlon of n republican prosl lent Mr Stokes * ajs > also tint there is T real confession of Tweed In existence , whloi Is likely to be publib'ird and which Is bound to cirato the liveliest kind of a stir He sa\i Tweed's diary Ib the most Interesting of a ! ' the prners H contains references to evei mio that called on htm and his business showing that noatlj cverj ono could be trc-ilcd with on n casli bas'8. The pipsr. wcro dellveird to Air Stokes by n mau vvhoir 1 o had befiluidnd NO iMtocunss Tim vim CoKon VII1I > > < rl1.f siru-ls In 1111 tlic I'lMii'lli AVroK. NCW nnnroilll , Mnes. , Tab. 7. Tlio be ginning of the fourth week pf the cotton inl'l operatives' strike showed nothing but tbo same apparent , determination on both sides to stick to their irRpscllvo position" until the other jlclds Secretary Cunnano of the Joint strike committee bns Issued n btntement sajlng that the total amount of moncj received up to Saturday , Februniy 5 was ? 1 343. "In looking over the amounts received ijs Secretary Cunnano , "there Is evc > ry In dication that Now Cngland Is beginning to wako up. The peopleof Lowell , Lawrence and Iloston , in particular , give encouraging IlIDDCFORD , Me. , Fob 7 The arbitral lo committee of the Hoard of Trade lies as yet undo no progress ) In the proposed effo-ta to remedy the htrlko situation here A commu- nlcat'on has been sent by the committee U the Dressers' union. whHi Inaugurated tin strike , oxprc'-cliiK the willingness of the committee mittoo to tiv to open negotiations between thn mill management and the ope-atlves , K the strikers u > desire No ans.vcr to the communication lias vet been -ecclved The corporations remain closed. I'VTIIOM'/IS VMljItlOVX IM US'l'lf\ i \Viiiiiiin nf Tlllo Seenron u DuKolii 1)1 nice. MINNKAPOLIS. Fcb 7. A report to the Journal from Fargo N. D. says- Satur day night State'n Attorney Preil Morrllla se cured a divorce for a dlstl.nguls'icd . Ppin'sh womrn Crucltj woo the ground upon which the decree was secured and there was no tight rrado on the suit bj ner hiibband The p'alntlff w.a Counters Marie do li Ooneeplo i de la Cantcra y Clark do Gobel y Fenian ce7 ! The dcfcndcm was Juan C Gobel j Perncnde ? Thej were married at Madild In Varcb. 1SD2 The woman belongs to one- of the oldest and wealthiest families In Spiln and owns laigo estate * In both Cuba aid Spain , Minister Woodford of the United States resides In one of her houses at Mad rlil and the woman Is second In rank inJ wraith rnly to the family of the premier She came- hero eovcra ! monlits ago , accom panied by a maid and spninis to have a mor tal frar of pnb'lcltj. She ban scarcelj left tier hotel since coming hero except to go to her attornoj'is ofllccAftei her separation from her lnsband two jeara ago the Bpent some time In Florida I'usrvi. IMI : > M > I ns TV POLITICS. Xo Cc'iKTiil Iluli * HH n ( iiijilo for Tliclr Irllon , CHICAGO , IVb 7 Postmatter Gordon to day iccelvcd a letter from First Assistant Postmaster General Heath In regard to what aaiou employes cf the postal survlco would bo allow oj to tuko on political The ccniiiuinkatlon statej that the depart ment had no special rule In such matters and that they prcforrc-d not to make nny Mr Hcuth said , however , that there would bo no objection to the cinplnycb asserting their political rights , but that there might bo cbjeetloir to the maniifr In vvlilr-h lhis < lights were attert&d Ho stated that It was the object of the department to do evc-rj thing possible for tbo gcod of the- depart in eat nnd that nothing would bo dune to binder the carrying out of that object Sometime ago John L Manning , president of thu Union Veteran club , addressed it com munication to Postmaster Gordon asking what liberties the cmplojen would bo allovvol In political uffuln/ The postinawton referred the matter to tbo department nt Washing ton. V iii'liiir Mm 8T LOUIS , Feb 7-Tlie property of the Anchor line , which recently failed , wns put on Halo at Cairo , III. , today by tbo United Slates marwhnl. The Mcnuicr jji | ] c\lv \ w it sold to Captain Sims of St. Louis for J''ilV ) The upprnlK'daluo of the vcs'c'l 'Mm lll- Wfl Ocorge H. IJdulll of Nc-w Yoik , t1 < ' f'nrc-vv of HiuiiiKlli- , III. , < < aptaln T II HlniH of Bt. Loiiln und Captnln H it Jiiadlcii of Cairo uoro the only bidders. It IK Ken t-rally understood tint Captain films pur- rbased the bout In the Intcrect of the Tennessee Rlve-r Packet company. Ht-iirliiMT Sinlili-iil > KiulN , IIOSTON. MIIHS , Fcb. 7.- The unexpected withdrawal uf the petition of Henij M \Vliltrie'y , president of tbo MaHH ichuKetif Pipe Line OIIB company rijlng foi the npproval of the IHHUO of $ lW ) , iO of Ktorx IMH hrouglii to an abrupt < owea hearing liefortt tbo lloird of On * find Irtrlc LUht CoininlHtloncTH. The action of tin- pipe lln company an far an tlio procicdlnuK today ore concunc'd , appeared Iti lie on account of the question of the legality of the at provul of tbo LominlajloiKra aliould It bv I BlV n. ' EXETER IS BADLY SCORCHED Nebraska Town Suffers from nn Ettily Morning Firo. FOURTEEN BUSINESS HDUSES CONSUMED All lint TIIII Iliillillniti mi OK * AVv * | Side f tin * TIIuu DrNtrii } t-il _ liiiH > < \ < > r > IU-n > ) , fiXBTEK , Nob. , Feb. 7.-Spcclnl ( Tele gram. ) A bad nro occurred hero early this morning. The west sldo of the business portion of town Is burned excepting Wallace & Co 's bank , a brick building , and Dli.iieon's restaurant , n. frame. Losses ns follows. C. 11 Wtill- brandt , frame building , $100 ; lleardslcy Stsler , stock mllllnerj- , total loss , J.OO , J. 0 Wilson , general merchandise , loss , build- IIIK. n.OOO , Block , $1.800. Insured , building , $500 , stock , $1 000 ; Mrs Carrie West , build ing , $ SOO , no Insurance ; J. C McLccse , auction stock , total , $400 ; J. P. Wilson , restaurant , stock and household goods , $ SOO , Insurance KM , O P. linker , dental outfit and building , total no Insurance , V if Elska , gcneipt merchandlbo and build ing , $11.000 , Insurance' $5 MH ) T H L Leo ft Son , lianlwnio and bulldlucr , $ L',200 , In- suruiCH $1,700 ; Mrs. Leiler , building , $300 , total loss , Insurance $300 , Miller Heller , riocerlcs $550 , Insurance' $100 , Kollv Hroa. , meat market , $ . ' 00 , Union Stock Yards National bank building total loss , $ , " 00 , W. II lajlor , general merchandise and bulld- Ini , , $10,000 , Insurance , building and stock , $ .1,000 ATLNTIC CITV SCOItCIIKI ) ATLANTIC CITV. N. J , Feb 7 A fire which originated in the AiMdeniy of Muslo this niornlni ; distroved n half block of Imlldlngh , entalllni ; a lo s of nbout $ R& oni ) before being got mider coiitiol The origin of tin tire Is a inji'terj Olllcer Reblnson dla- covcred smoke lusulni ; from under the > boa d walk In front of the Acadcmj of Music A gene-u.1 alarm WCH s < > nt In but before the engines arrived the Ac idem ) of Music was enveloped In flames 'Ihe flro spread to Lapro's confictloiu-rj store and there com- inunlcUcd to the reui of the Ilrvn Miwr hotel 'Hie IHincs quliklj spread to Ilaclmr'a fttrnlturo store Ruttcr's school of phieno- logy. M.ver's photograph illi-rv. the Gold Mlno Until lioiMiv ) . Smith's rolling choir establishment and a portion of the vltascope ixulors on the boird walk For a time it looked as t'lOUiOi the Hi-rkelev hotel , the largest hostelrj on Kentucky avcnno , would BUI el ) be dostroved Tie 1 car of the hotel adjoined thu burned build ings and the stiff westward wind fanned the Ik-imiH tow ml the big house Several lines ol hobo we're run o.it of the- hotel windows and the side of the building and surionnl- hiK propci tj wib the ouglilj di curbed Iho guests In the Ilcrkclej hotel hurrlcdlj picked their clothing and prepared foi a hastj e > xlt , but the wind shifted at this time and this ilono saved the hotel Tiie lloor of the bl-j beard walk for a dlb nnc-o of half u sqmre was bo badly damaged by the Ilamea that It will Imo to lin rebuilt Thc > heavlobt leoorn an < Academy ot Music , $30,000 ; Insurance Mimll , owned by Jobepli Frallngei , Lapte-H confectionery store , $5.000 ; Gold Mine Ivaths $4,000 , owned by P S. Mcrvlne ; Stewart McShea's house hold goods , $2,000 , Urjn .Mavvr hotel $10 , . 000 ; Hach.ir's fiirnlture > store , $1,000 Owing to the fict th-jt the property de- strojcd wns nil beach fionl buildings there 'a very little Insinance thn Iniiiranre rom- panlea icfining to take the risks except nt nigh rates The Academy of Music was ichtrojcd b ) llro In 1 ! > J3 ALI1ANY Ind , IV > 7 The nre which threatened laH might to destroy the busl- ess portion of Albany was subdued after ' .ours of hard fighting and the- llamcieon - Ini'd to David Spolrher's 1 lor-K The leas MIH Irss tl.in J25 000 , wol I'Mined LONDON. Feb 7. Dispitohcs Just rc- rnlved from Manila capital of the Philippine Ihlnnils aiinounco th it 200 bul'dings ' , someof them of Importance , 'avo ' been destrojed by IreDAYTON. DAYTON. O Fe-b 7 The works of the liradlpy Twine and Cnrlasc company were almost totnllv ilratroji-d bv ilro todaj with i loss of $75 OOOPPMSO unknown KANSAS CITY. Fob 7. A special to the Star from Hoiilson Ark . sajs The Hill Fontaine Cotton Co's largo brick block was entire ! ) drstrojcl bj nin tolny Total 'ess , $50000 , Insnraiifp imnll I'rlnclpil lo'-ero nip Ilairlson Piipnlj company. Hedges liros Rnckit Klnrc , Cltl7onb' bank. Fire undoubicdly Inccndlirj. ntmiKi-llNl Sniltli'H VV orlc. The evangellstlimeelliiFis at the First United Prrs ! < > terlnn chinch contlniio to i > row In Interest. Audlto-lnm und Sunday bdiool room ? wcro ( lacked Sunday night to hear Mr Smith's sermon on "Hepentanco and ConvpiHlon " Tonight the pvaimi-lmt will preach to men only , taking up three things which liavo troubled many "Tho Land of Nod , Where Cain Found His Wife , " "Tho Slaughter of the Cnn-anltlsli Nations , " mil "If Christ Was Horn of n Woni'in Whv Wa HP Not n Sinner" All men nnd bovs over II jears of ago mo InvltPd Tomorrow night Mr Smith will tell the Htory of his IKo nnd ccnvirMnn The-io will bo meetIngs - Ings each evening during thu week , cxcept- ng Saturday , at 8 o'clock Afteinnoii mee't- liips nt 3 o'clock Tnculaj mi Friday In clusive Piof A. Dolmoro Cheney will hln each ovenlng. lint i-riiiiii-nl In HIM C.iptnln JOIICH chief iiini | term iili r of the DcpirtmPiit of tne Plattp , has re > relvpil au thority fioin Wi hlnKtnn lo nlveillsii for hliln foi 110 p iik nnd ilillng mil' ) s to npbiii ) lliot-o vvhldi vveru rccintly HI-II ! from the di- pnrtmi-nt on tin1" n lit f exposition to Al isli i mid which annov on thdr way to the fromi north Tinmuli s wirp taken fr in I > "orIn KuHKc'llVasli.ildn anil ItiibliiHini and the ones to be purchased will dltitilbilted among these- thrift POH'H I'liiilit lnlrriiilN | n I'liiM-rnl , I.nXINGTON , Ky , 1M ) . 7Si vi ral thousand mgropH i-oncruKiitPil at the Audi- toiliun 'jdny , uhi'f the fiinpi il of the IH-- gro HaptlHt prpiulur Stanford J , Howard , v. aH to liein.ichil | The woolen nti ps to tinAiiilltoiluin , ndi n vvltb llircu H < oru vvomon , broke down Four wn-inin suffi-n d liroki n IPKH and many < itlui4 win- mon or 'CHS BOV < TP | > ' brulKi-d A runU PiiKiiul and tillfuller. . il was plP.irliril Mi a 111 Me chiirrh , During HIP pinlrthi HionUiy 1'iotinant I/jilscopal ehiirph eaiiKlit Hrp and half nn hour later thu Ontinnry Mi thoillHt chiirch wan on lire. Hotli flu B were ( julikly ex- tlnuiilHhcd. In l.i-iivi- I In * I'orl. HOl'STON. T x . Fell 7Tho iitc-ainHhlp nriiintlHler H.illid today from Hablnc Piss , the now harbor on the nuiithP.iBt eoiiHt , for Liverpool It if the Ilrnt Kuropi an HlPinn r to K.il1 from that port. Whiletbprp him burn twenty-four fpct of vnter on the bur for IAO yearn , nothing him hitherto IK on nhlp- tied cxtc-itt liimbir , if wh'f'i ' J7WWO worth VVIIH font out last > rir The Drunu iKlT c-iirrled out u gineial iarxo The onii cugo IF "Aortb more Hun , all of hint year'H lum ber HhliimentH , belnw v tliiiil at f ftUM Thei Hnildin Hall will liit-'ln loulliiB tomoirow nt Snlilne I'.IHH with 22 , < 0 lialeB of c-otton. for Liverpool. viliH-r * hlnrl it > < -vt VIn'iiienl. . MOItaANTOWN. W Vn , Fell 7 The movement umoiu. the coil mlneiH of Wcut Virginia to Hi-parnte themHolv from the I'nltid Mine Workirx' uhxoclnllon anil form in Indepcmlint oreinUni " U r < tdly KiilnliiK b'round Mure than 3 00 mlncrx and lehly operaloiH linvi joined the lndc [ > pnd- i in movtiiunt u | to ( Lite ami t.imu are lirtnhlng ever ) Irllunx to liiar up m the mlncrH and operatcrH v.ho are still In thei older orK'.inlz.itk'ii lo htivi them eomc In t < new The Kanavvhi and Nfw rlvt-r m it1 * iivn taken thn lead In the light the United MlnuVorheru. .