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VOLIIM E XLYI-N UM HEIt 04. W H EE LING, W. VA., FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1897. fRICE TWO CENTS. unit) is safe FOR HANNA. ? th Although .Muruin in Legislature Is i*u t'ucomfortably Close. T! Dimvr u?if>DiTVWi;p |?? IJU1NI DALLUl mrtjunn i iiil. j8| ______________ W( The Close Counties were Deleware ca Noble and Wood. ** on lie nil: VOTE BEING CANVASSED. cw? br of Kuifiucirfl Plurality Kmw Exceed* 48,000. ca Kvery I'olnt t? Being Couteated In the lie Olllclul ( ouut-Chairman McCouvllle, lrJ W] uf (be Democratic Committee, Slakea lit- tj, illicrlaitiiate Charges of Praad?Senator til Volght, Out of the ludtp?ad?ai Jl*puJ>- wj liMus Elected In Ilaralltou Contj, c0 Nan He Will Vote for a lie publican for n b.?i.r. {J ?, g(> COLUMBUS, Ohio. Nov. < ?Many ke ca talk about a crisis 1 n Ohio. Some bo]|?-ve that a crisis Is impending. The to I bout "a combine In the legislature tn against Senator Hanna has subsided, PJ" pending the Interest In the official fMj counting of the vote in close counties, ve As the official canvass of the vote iu 111 t v eighty-eight counties proceeded to- ,,e ilay the Republican plurality on the State iickot Increased and on tho legls- w inHuft iinUnfa lr nnn<mre<l to be uettlnH I toward a very close shave. < White the .Republican plurality on cj( Mate ticket exceeds 28,000, the vote on pe the legislative ticket Is almost oa close t0 as i: could be. For this reason there Is p0 .-till unusual anxiety at the respective state headquarters of both parties. The Republican still claim that the ' t legislature stands seventy-five Repub- .. * llcans to -seventy Democrats on joint 1 , ballot for senator, and that their candidates for representative in threeofthe , close counties hflv?> been elected by the . following pluralities: p, Delaware county 29: Wood county 2S; Noble county S3; a total of 142 In the f pluralities of these three counties. A , change <<f seventy-two votes, properly distributed In these three counties , would therefore, 'have turned the result In the legislature by giving these three . representatives to the Democrats. Then thf legislature would have stood ?ev- , eaty-two Republican* and aeventythreo Democrats on Joint ballot for senator. , SMALLNEBB OP PLURALITIES. (It When It Is remembered that the to- be Ol Ohio last year was over one ,lr million and fs almost one million (hi* J1" year, it Is readily seen that seventy-one 1? such a ?m?i? -faat i+can- fU bt eiparly tfaferrntf if <lgur< nr hl| fCt<-tlons or language. And his is what 11 makes the Democratic stnt" committee" continue to claim the legislature and , the Republican state committee to be so closely on gflard In watching th? na I counting In the close counties The offl- te) I clal count of Delaware county is In. su ! but with protests and notices of con- th tests from the Democrats and the sam" nfl Is true of Noble county. The official count of Wood* county may not bf? nn completed till *<nturdn^. although they fjr expect to get through to-morrow. an In Wood county to-day the Demo- h prut* nrofost^d nunlnaf rounMnc thr? vote at a precinct whtre the place of voting was outside of the precinct, but within the ward. Had this precinct boon thrown out It would have elected the Democratic candidate for representative by a plurality of five Instead of the Republican candidate by twenty- m eight. The vote of the precinct tvns stJ counted and the Democratic protest HI- ' ed. Other technicalities are expected In the progress of the vote In that county Y< to-morrow. In Noble county there was th n lone contest over twenty-seven ()C scratched tickets that were Anally ,0; thrown out because they were pot pro- cjj lierly marked. This was a Republican ^ Ins?, livery point I* being contested In pr the official count of the close counties. hn CHAIRMAN NASH'S CLA.IM. bl Chairman Nash saya to-night that th the Republicans have a safe majority t0, of five on Joint ballot In the legislature. f0 He admits that the pluralities are th small In som? counties, but claims they R< are safe. He has no doubt of the result 1st In any of the counties which he claims Hr except possibly, Wood county, and In th the event of the loss of that represents- th tive, he says the legislature would still *oi stand seventy-four Republicans tosev- \ enty-?one Democrats and have a major- an ity ojf throe on Joint ballot Tor senator, co1 chairman Nasli said the returns from an the Thirteenth district showed that the Hti Republicans had a plurality of 432, so Oil that there Is no lone r any of the state I senators In doubt, and the senate will tin stand nln?toen Democrats to seventeen St Jtepubllcans. Al At JtopuMimn state headquarters, to Summit county Is not considered so p? doubtful as heretofore and Its two rep- du rese^tatlvf-K are bolnc, conceded to the ra Democrats. This would mnko the houso . , flfty^elght Republicans and fifty-one Deruocrats. Chulrnrnn MePonvllle does . not adroit that th<- K.puhllcans have ? carried the Thlrt. with district for th-dr ? cand)d;?t" for 'state senator and he Htlll 1 claims the rtprep, ntatlve* from Noble, Rl Deloware. IWood, Mtisklniriim and llf other COUntlts o.lftimeM bi' th" Republlrans. He hiw> , xpectw the official , 1 count to give the Democrat two of the twelve mend" ! < of th.. i,.|iii?tuto from , Cuyahoga oountf in all ir ountb s v" nnd In othw he th- it , ill bo con* V tents for th< Hf-ntn .In th# tvent of tha , crftiflcutoi of election b"|ng nlven to the Republican*. * ' M'CONVIM.l? CTttl'B irilAUD. mi Chairman McConvllle churn fraud lb the 4o?e counties ati I in mino Republican counties, lb- says txnrly nil ||J ft he clone counties I) 'IV r.r>r?< IP-pub- (jll Ilean heretofore and th fttpuldi .-inn vo -till Mjive the mnehlnery ln*h . . conn r<u ties lie says the return* hi.,. I,..,.,, ||,. It-i'l back and It Iftnk^ , u'i (itiu i* 'Ml counties have completed UHt ' inintlng thi While the dOUldftll countle ate ritIII u ,?] ii lie nays the result w.i known ,b };< finitely iti Cincinnati y< ilao morning and he cannot get doflntil nnults v<n (o>nl|tht from f *i? v?land, ] 1 Kper t i the Vote lo bS v." , ' . | (,M| ' ' ' or Ihfee nn ruber - ' 11, I, lure <]}ialrman McConvlll" will 'un.ilit v on duty until the olHrlnl < >unt ,,t II the rountles Is completed I'" ''O.VIIT MAY lin AI'I'KAI.KIi It, j ' rite to-night It became known (hut Mil the roiirts would be resorted to r.?i the ! t I'ui i'usq yf preventing Jipanla of < ic* tlon vfjtJtn Issuing rertlfltKM tu the fil/ publican candidates In certain coun'??. The raseH will be brought In the tver courif and thence to the supreme url as soon as possible. The ttepuban state committee also has lawyers eparlng of contest. The lie- 'j iblleans gut three representatives on e face of the returns from Delawsre, able and Wogd counties whose pluIIties aggregate 142, and a change of venty-two votes would have given the (J mot-rats a control of the legislature. ?e Republicans claim that the Deiii* rats also elected memtjera of the leg- a lature on close margins, that there *re ten counties in the state that gave IB than 100 plurality each for their ndldates for the legislature and that smocrats secured us many members l these small pluralities as the Kepubnus. Both sides are preparing for ntests, llrst in the courts and afterard In the legislature. As each anch of the legislature Is the tribunal last resort in Judging of the quallfltlons of its own members, the Hepubans have an advantage In their conol of the house over the Democrats, tio control the senate. There are irty-Blx senators wun only iwo or reo contests possible In that body. In the house there are 10'J members th a dozen or more seats that can be ntested, and the Republicans claim majority of seven in that body, so at more Democrats could be unseated the house than Republicans In the n&te. While both committees uro I eplng secret any arrangements for le- ij 1 proceedings, yet It is mated that the \ ;mocratic state committee will seek enjoin enough certificates of election >m the Republican representatives to event the Republicans from organlzff the house and appointing the comIttee that will consider contests. Delopments are expected to-morrow in o policies of both parties so far as apaling to the courts is concerned. SEN A1 Oil VOIGHT'B POBITON. Ill Votti for a JlrpiibJirnii for Senator, Hut Won't Kpectfr Who. CINCINNATI, Ohio, Nov. 4,-Senatorect Lewis Voight, one of the lndondent Republicans elected In Hamlln county, was asked how he stood on cl 'litlcal matters. Mr. Voight replied: dj "I am n Republican, a sound money tc an. and furthermore, I nm a support- ti of the present national admlnlstram." 'How will you vote on United States ,f nator?" P "I shall voto for a Republican," re- ai led he. 0| "Will vou vote for Hanna?" "That I will not sny. Nor will I nay 0< r whom I- shall vote." to "Will you attend the Republican cau- m s?" 'I will not." , u u i p Ill CilC viii HHiuirv 10 mc wiiuivD vi e Republican caucus for United th ates senator will you vote for him?" j,? "That I will not gay." pi "How do you stand on other political fC ltters?" 10 "I nm for the brat Interests of Hamon county. For a. long time I have on Interested In opposing bosslsm f, id shall favor everything that Is clean rp id that will Rive us good government. Jv im n Republican. ^ "f will repeat that I shall vott far. ft-J-u .far UnHed Wm fltoator it will not go farther than tjjyfct until p e time comes to vote." el llnniia t'ongrnln Intnl. CLEVELAND, Nov. 4.?Senator Han. to-day received a large number of (v legrams congratulating him on the re- v< ,Jt3of the election In Ohio. Among "J* ose who sent the meHsagt>s were Gover- "I r JluFhnell, Senator Foraker, Posti?tnr General Gacy. Secretaries Long d Wilson Attorney General McKenna. w nators Fairbanks, Mason, Prltchard ?J (1 Elklns, Chauncey M. Depew, Joseph . Manley and scores of other men in ^ bile life. Ki newTork legislature g< fflr llrnultllcnii-Jmlur I'arlcrr'a Pin- | rnlllj1 for Cnnrl of A|i|i??U. m NEW" YORK, Nov. 4.?Returns on <i< embers of tho lower house of (he tl ?to legislature nre complete from nil it eight districts which arc In "Now rj >rk nnd Kings eountjcy*. These show pi e election of 79 Republicans, CI Dcm- II' rats nnd two Citizen*'Union, n mapity of si riven: Should tho remaining w -*Mt dlstrioti be :?n cafcrled by the J? mocratic nominees, which is not lJ[ obablo, tho Republicans would still tr ive a majority of eight In the ncem- rc y. Chairman Klllott F. Danforth, of ? Democratic state committee, said t,: day. * "We estimate that we have seventyur members. There Is nq doubt thai 0 Democrats. which with the Worth ^publicans nnd the Citizens' Uplonh will.organize the legislature. This j" is been a campaign against bossism roughout the state, awl I believe that ai o* fflcflort flght 'among Republicans Is c[ 1 to tin- dtatfe'" y Complete returns from the Nineteenth 1 id TWenty-flrst districts of New York untf, heretofore doubtful, elect Weill t0 id .Murray, .Democrats, The assembly inds: Republicans'70; Democrats 63; listens* Anion 2; Doubtful f<. jfl *omplet> retnrmi frorA all cotintl^ In 1,( r state except Cattaraugus, Greene, C( euben and Yates, show u plurality for. ^ ton R. Parker, Democratic candidate " r chief Justice of ihs ty>urt of ap- |* als of ft6,058, Tho final returns will re- D ce thljLplurallty. Judge Parker's i>lu- ?" lily ItMirflater New York Is 133,968. .... _ l? BECftEtAUY BLISS H pi It Wai l)l{l?lon In llir. It nit tin TlmJ "Won "n?rTlclot)'*i(?i( l'rnr, ' jj( WASHINGTON, N?\v, |-Secrctary nt Iss hns returned from New York. m warding the <\ectlons he made the llowlng statement to-day: "Uegard( the result In Ndjv fhrki ft I*4>lmply int might have beiji expected from dlilon vln thifraak* <>f the people who ui the Victory lait year; this Is all pro (w about It. 'When It became Impassible to malto n| Utilon of foree| oppsscd to Tnrnin.'inv, font was Inevftnoie.'""As tVrefponid- ' Ity, )?very man will have to decldu ui for himself, T! 'We hope that before another clee- tr in ttik' H place ufe jtvljU biTiflbla tojr#(7 gi pno dlY'dn!-forces logotlief. f found Hi lid n number of tnlft>\tyhh Intended to" fi1 to for den. Tracy who caet tholr vote lir p Mr. IxjW at the lasl moment, lie- mi vlmr that the only Van ! > <frfl*t tv s VKfWycM. This ftfellhg e^istid on u i' i?nrt of a iri n( many snrtjundpubt- II: ly lind' fPgmit tnflmffu* In reducing bi ri TnMy'rt v/dfj," v< IN . *< ! Vol* IJnM, J.,| MOZNBf*. towa, Nov. Th* iti liplel" dhoflrelil reiurns ?T 'tuosday'" i nr< For ^ t#noi'-~flhflW,'|11?pph [JJ im. ),'?/ '?: White, Dcmecml, 10.1,670; PUlhl, Middle ,4 ih..Jf.iail. I.IIOKlolA ni i" era I i: i, ri:ohlblll( nIM in no iMt i4o,ii?:i, Hitnw's plurality flo.iw pi law's total vole |m the Urgent over Hi i r.. it Itepubllcan candidate f<?r iii v jiuil. lu ltig M1,0<JU IiImIicc 4/ulik illO in rhf <f ih fmt ' ONE MORE COON, o Express the Satisfaction that Many Citizens Feel m THE DEFEAT OF GORMAN. Another Itc|>aljllcan Senator?The Ofllo1*1 Co?nt of (ha Ballots Lmtm no Farther Doabt that the flepablluaui will Con- | Irol Bath lirmncli?? of thai Litflilalnrc. Tin/ will have IT Majority ou Jolut Ballot?Bom* Men who arc Willing to Snocicil the Mary laud Uom?a Weak Democratic Wall* "I nm the Real Thing.*' BALTIMORE, Md., Nov. 4.-An ofl\al count of the ballots cast on Tues- I W last, made in most of the counties ' day,leaves no further room for doubt lat the Republicans Jiave control of Dth branches of the legislature, nnd iat a Republican will succeed Arthur . Gorman In (ho United States eente. Five members of the assembly and le senator were taken from the Dem:ratlc list of probabilities'and added i that of the Republicans. Three of the embers and the senator are from Tnl)t county and one member each from run;I' in'ur[;v a auu v,ui iuii. * tuo jsiwwo 10 Republicans 49 members in the >uae and the Democrats 42. It also Ives the Republicans 18 senators to 8 ir the Democrats, and a majority on int ballot of 17. The result In Talbot county arose oiti the fact that eighteen votes In ilgliam precinct had been counted vice for the Democratic ticket. This ?'UfT oorr?ctef* rn : the "Republican I'HWfc) .a?>j?r,Wrmfitr frOrrt ic* nmet?<n In rlnce George's a nlmliar correction eoted Underwood, (Republican), by iur votes. While in Carroll <ho relunt shoived that Stnnsbury, (Repub??n), defeated Crouse, (Democrat), by renty-three votes. The doubtful )tes in Montgomery nnd Washington untle? also went to the Republicans v small majorities. The Democratic state headquarters ere closed to-dajr nnd all the members ' the state committee have gone to lelr respective homes. Before leaving, jwQver. Chairman Murray Vandlver lve out the following statement: "As far as the Joint convention of the ineral anscmWy Ik concerned, the lAtter Is not Entirely settled nnd will 3t be until the official returns arc nde up. In regard to the house of legates, I nm ."till of the opinion thnt jo Democrat* will have a majority In rrU body and will organize It, The ectlon In several of the countlcs Is ho ose that It Is Impossible to tell at resent which side has won and T breve a recount .will be demanded In ontgomory county by the Democrat*!, ho claim that they have elected at ast one, and possible two members of le house; while the Republicans claim iat they have electod all three. A reiunt inny also be demanded In Talbot nd in Carroll counties to determine le result with certainty. At any rate e have not given up our expectation ' controllln? the house whether we ive a majority on Joint ballot or not. "The Democratic candidates who have ?en defeated In the close countlcs we been In many Instances noted as itl?Oorman men. while In the same nintles tho Gormnn men have been ected. In one or two Instanees.whlch could speelfy thexe men Wl v CUt mply because they were not believed be Clorman men. This shows that ic antl-Oorman outcry did not hurt 10 Democrats liuthe conation, for there i'" senator 1ms alw.yp hod his strongrtd. Todn. JarKO oxtept I am more nvlneed than ever by the r"sult' <>f lis election that tlic nntl-Gortnan 3enmcnt Is . ulmbst .eytlfelV confined to ic city of^Jqjlt^nore and that the emocrats o t the* coll nuts aro meas ably free from It. In my opinion.even it should turn out that the senator defeated, he Is. stronger to-day in le country districts of the state than 1 oyer was." , ^t)b>nK those mbrt prominently mqninefl ni the probable Accessor to Henor Gorman are Alexander Hhniv, Wrer Congressman John. V. L. Flndlsy, 011master General GnVy \nnd ConrcHsman Hldney R. Mudd. HBPtJBUOANH' OAIN 1 rer Ihe 1NUO Vflln In Katun* l?? llir lie( Mil Cnnittr fviriMOui*. KANBA8 CITY, Nov. 1 Two-third* Vtho HH? Km is a# <caimttes so far rejftlr.g iiljow ttyv Hjpubljcnns to h^vo noted ? majority of tiie founty oflkers. lie Itppubllcnnn also elected sevun din* let Judges and the fuslonlsts nix, a llu 4n?Jw?,,*iy' UloJllSlMilsls. While ie returns sho? fiVnln In olllce for the H'.ohftfliWvfr U'^irlsE fact that Ihey ive lost voles in almost every county id ihui tlio Itepubllcans gained fullv | I - niy per cent. In the vote compared 1th liiMl year.. The funionlMln admit le 1!i ptibth'Nfe'f jliave gained In Vole, It declare Itnviis caused by tuanysll r Ib'pUblloaimA'otliir for ItcpubllQsn tndldates on ptysotial preference bowse of tho obietieo of llio silver Issue lis yeat TnpiOKA. Ka"? Nov. I. lClection ins hfivi' bi'i'ii,ii'i yiv(id*ul ll' piibllcnii adnuXrtors firni nixiy-lhn Knusas ill ft ties Mil of jo/? aud f]v>/ii sixty-eight iinib ?pri IMpiHlsttiiiri'*1'H Whll" boib M'portM autr e on largo Heibllcan Wins over the vatn of mini, ey are CQflfllrtliju In eotnpailMon Willi ?? vote ..r 1S?fi, Mtid this imi 't be deli i lnud.bx t lio.?iflb'in L Rfttltrt tlic tlorihiif of fitag** ihbrd Is no dispute. The Populist managers V late this afternoon conceded that the re- I suit of the Judicial elections \va? a dis? * tlnct victory for the Republicans. { PENNSYLVANIA'S VOTE ' g Ortr 400,000 l.?M TUiii la 1606-0f!lcl?l Flanrci on tiUU Ticket. PHILADELPHIA, Pa., Nov. 4.-Offlclal retumi have been received from [ nearly every county in the state. With complete figures from the counties which have not yet completed the ofll- ? clal count, the full vote of the state for state treasurer and auditor general is shown to be as follows: State treasurer?Beacom, (Rep.), 371,053; Brown, (Dem.), 244,569; Hwallow, (Pro.), 117,430; Thompson, (lad.), 15.204. Total vote, 748,206. Beacom's plurality over Brown, 125,484. Majority of other candidates over Beacom, 6,210. Auditor General?MeCauley, (Rep.), 407,301; Ritter. (Dem.), 268,706Lathrop, (Pro.), 57,615; total vote 733,658. McCauley'a plurality over Ritter, 138,- g 595. McCauley's majority over Ritter and Lathrop, 80,944. * The total vote Is about 20,000 less p than that for elate treasurer in 1895, i and nearly 4.r?0,000 less than was cast In the presidential election of last year. Beacom received 85,692 less votes than d wero given to Haywood for state treaa- c urer In 1895 and Brown's falls 37,912 be- E hind that cast for Meyers, the Demoemtio candidate In that year. J Swallow's voto is nearly 100,000 above n that given to Berry, tho 1895 Prohibi- n tioti candidate. The voto for Berry wus . 20,779. 4 McKlnley's plurality over Bryan last fl year was 301,175 In a total vote of 1,194,- o 355; his clear majority over all candt- ^ dates was 262,445. FOURTH VICTIM h V Of the Jackson Connty Blarderer-Tho Fiend Indicted Y?i(ird*r? >Vhlch Uu- tl doaliirilly I'reveitUd III* Lynching. 1 RIPLEY, "W. Va., Nov. 4.?John Mor- r' gan tho confessed murderer of the Green family, waa Indicted to-day by the grand Jury. His trial will begin to- tl morrow at 9 o'clock before Judge Bllz- j! zard. Nothing but this promptness .. could have prevented his being lynched. Miss Katie Green, the only one of the family not killed outright last Tuesday . night, died to-day, making a clean Jj sweep of the family of four in Tuesday ? night's tragedy. The people eeem con- " tent to Jet the law take Its course. Terrible Triple Tragedy g DALLAS, Toxas, Nov. 4.?-At 7 o'olock 1 to-nlght a terrible and bloody tragedy I occurred In a cottage at the cor- H ner of Germanta and Gaston ave- v nue, n,OHt umiu-f, wntrre mi v. rju mm Smith kept a. small boarding house. There boardod with her two men, James tl Boswell and James Barton. Bos well tl walked Into Mrs. Smith's room and s Bhot her in the throat. Th? man turn- cl ed on Barton, shooting him twice in w the body, then blew his own brains out, r falling dead. s In a statement the olght-year-old daughter of Mrs. Smith said: p "Uncle Jim Boswell cam- Into the I Jnom ar\d to rn M?mm? lev* r pim Barton more than sne does file,' d I He then shot mamma and also shot Mr. tl Barton and then ran into the yard and j-> shot himself." , 0 | There in no doubt that Mrs. Smith and Barton will die to-night. They were 0 went to the city hospital. The triple B, killing caused a great sensation la tho e, neighborhood. w Yellow Fever Mtantlon. ^ NEW ORLEANS, La., Nor. 4.?'The a yellow fever situation has not Improved ^ any since yesterday and the unfavor- el able turn of affairs following in tho wake of the cold wave and the light frost is very disappointing to Dr. 0111- ^ phant, president of the board of health. Ife reiterates, however, that the effects of thrf cold snap will becorrte npparent cl In a few dayp. The record Shows that n' the number of fatalities Is greater than X] that of yeaterdrty and there Is tio let- n up In the n^w enses. Deaths?John Vaughnn, Henry Nf?lts- n chclmer. Master Sealkl, Yrttida' Stein, 01 Lucy Honore, Valentine Zclgler, Raven Kennedy. ? MUJiU'i';, Jim., Nov. i.?wrvpn new - cases rind one death. Osslan Hlgglns, la ff to-day's fever record. c: MONTGOMKRY, Aln.. Nov. 4.-The r stato quarantine was rnlsed against all ^ points by Governor Johnston this mom- r< Ing and persons an well as freight enn n come and go to nnd from the state at A pleasure. Montgomery has rnlsed nil quarantlno, and with the exception of a few surrounding towns and the shot f11 gun quarantine In the county, all re- t( strlctlons are off. hi BIRMINGHAM, Ala . Nov. 4.-Tl|rm- c Ingham has hod several heavy frosts and M to-day tho msyor raised the quarantlno Si against .111 yellow fever Infected points, q The ratlroAdS have In consequence re- 1? mimed 'their regular schedules. ^ tt ff?rf?iqttflk? Nhack ftnt Wtiatt SKLJ LAKE, Utah, Nov. 4.-A speclnl to t(ia Trlbpno from Toeatpllo, Idaho, f, soynr A severe, shock of earthquake at o U:JtO n, m,, wan felt the entire distance p, from Sliver How .to. M.onida, Montann, y and at 7 o'clock f/ic second shook was, c' perceptible but not so severe. At Dl- \\ vldo, lied Rock, Minn. Monicty. window* ?p rattlpd, dishes foil to the floqr,, flower (POts., were thrown from thelf % stands, ? '] lamp chimneys and otln-r glassware suf-, ^ fenjd. destruction, clocks stopped nnd p buildings wort? ttindo to sway and crack. At Dillon especially was the first shock p Severe, The court housq walls were rracked nnd the plaster fell from UiecelllnK. _ DlMfil Ullril Workmen. NF/W .YOIIK, Nov. 4.?tho claak- r makers' union of this city has resumed hostilities agslnst the contractors In tho hope of abolishing the old syslein and f? M'cuflndr A better scale of wrigeti. Over ffl J i'OO member.i of the organisation are j, at present oil strike In seven shops tin tho o lJasL' ^ld(\, The rhltt makers, JI.OOO ,, tftrohg, an- salrHn bron the verge orn cotvfllcb tvlth the- ItnsRr*, 'Fhrlr alJegeif giievnpe^s are snuill wagss, long .hours - of toll nnd (Ija'dUllkc Sim to l>e enter-, falhed for msmbefs'of fobor tmjopa by; ,K lh?y MM! I"V 1 u t? A^l'ftlgttt. y ATRAHf^,!^. Y . Nov. 4.-Miss .Ap- i > (a ,V ?Huhll;?glot^ jDomocrnt, daughter <if tho JSpfPcopfll'tjlHhop of tVntr/il New ^ York, 'bss been'eb"KmI school eomrnlsnr for two ) in, Inidlna the ticket. Hhe Jh a lualby in several charitable eitteiprises fltnl Is a woman sufYr iglHt, Hhe Is thl* fit'st 'wontnti to hold eluctlve ofiler In'MyisoiOo*. m 'I'llr?^ snffiirulril llj*f>M. j'liANKFOItn. IV* . Nov 4?Pet or ol <'lw?tfi?r, Ii|s Infant daughter, 'Annif. lii anajTotin Hteima, Weh? asphyxiated iff p. co%l RDNUhlfi morula* at fh^wupr's lu homo on the ouisMirls of tiio town* w -AWYERS LOCUTION. icconJ Day's Session o( the State Bar Association. lAYTON'S JUDICIAL BILL Hvldlng Weil VlrRlula lalo two Fodaral DUlrloU UIichiimI at Ltugllii EudorMd bf (hi AmocIa t Ion?Commit le< Appointed to AdvoceU III* Mtaiarc Be' for# ConiriM? 'Quviramtut Ujr lnjuuc Horn" ft active* DUtlug ulibcd Consider* tloa?Election of Officer*?Next Mcillni aHliarlMUn URriug tin Seealou of th< Legislature. peclal Dispatch to the Intelligence. MORQANTOWN, W. Va., Nov. 4rntil almost midnight last night th? roposed bill of Congressman A. Q )oyton, dividing: West Virginia int< wo federal- Judicial districts, was dlsussed by the West Virginia nar Assolatlon. Mr. George C. Sturglss, Mr I. M. Ambler, Mr. C. Wood Dally, ant Ir W. N. Miller, spoke In favor of ? ^solution, recommending to Congresi :s passage, and Mr John Bassell anc Ir. Flournoy, of Charleston, spok? gainst the resolution. The advocate! f it showed by statistics that the dls< rlct of West Virginia has more busiess before it than have the districts 01 alf a dozen states combined, some o: rhlch have two districts. Mr. Flournoy and Mr. Bassell though fie bill as now drafted, would affori o relief, and when the resolutlor cached a vote voted against It. Ever) ther member of the association favorec le measure. Mr. Dayton, was present and state* hat he did not seek the endorsement o lie particular bill drawn by him, bui e merely wished an endorsement o' lie idea, and moved that a committer f seven be appointed by the presiden f the association to go before th< ouse judiciary committee and assls y suggestion Jn the passage of i leasure looking to a division. Accord igly the president d^lgnated Messrs lubbard, Ambler, Westenhaver, Btur Iss, Mason, Davis, and Reynolds 'her,e Is an enthusiastic sentiment foi he measure, and Mr. Dayton will presi ; vigorously at) soap us Congress con enes. The subject, "Government by Injunc on," was discussed at great length bj fie association, which pronounced it elf almost a unit In favor of the prln Iple, but deplored some of the abuses rhlch attached to the exercise of thli emedy during the late strike In this tate. The morning was taken up with rrr orts of committees and a visit to thi tnly/wltY,, w iVre tli^n aaoc iatjon wa. otrtlnj'iFr* cK*p?l hoWr Pr?SI ent Crogan mado an address, an( liero was a special musical programmi endered by the music department, ou f compliment to the attorneys, In the afternoon D. C. Westenhaver f Martlnsburg, read a paper on th? ubject of tnxatlon, which In the gen ral discussion which followed on It ias paid a high compliment by a mftner of the members. Bernard L. Butcher, of Fnlrmont.reai paper on the subJcct, "The Ren ;emody," which was followed by th< lection Of officers. Mr. D. C. "Westenhaver, of Martins org, was unanimously fchos??n pros! ent. and will bo the youngest man wh< ns been gfvrn thf? honor in the a."so latlon. Peveral of the membors In tholi nmlnatlng *n<?echos paid strong trlb ?.? f/% ?,iy nhiiitv nnd tisefulnesB In thi Bsoclatlort. James W. Ewlng, of Wheeling, waj i-elected secretary, and W. N. Miller f Parkersbnrg. treasurer. Henry M. Kussell, of "Wheeling, n. M mblor. - of Pjirlcersburg: fieorge K rlco, of Charleston; I'. J. Cronan, o,1 Mngwpod, and W. P. Wllley, of Mor dtitoivn, wore dieted members of th< reontJve committor. Nell J. Fortney, of Klngwood; Oorgr . Sturglss, of Morsrantown. and C rood Palley, of ttlklns, were elocted tf ?pre<?ent the association at tbn nexi nnunl meeting of the American I3ai ssoclntlon at San Francisco. The association nnd nn Immense nulence composed of the town people, Us. med to a splendid address before thf ssoclatlon to-nlirht, In commencemeni all, by Judge Seymour P. Thompson f St. Louis, editor of the Am^rlcar nw Review, on the subject. "Judicial jpremAcy." At Its conclusion, a bannet was given to the visitors by thr cal bar association where good thing? > eit and drink and witty toasts were iken In until the small hours. Mr. Ambler was toasrmastor. Thr eakers and their subjects were: "Thf Woolsack," Judge John II. Holt, ol rftfton; "The dates Ajar," Jud*f key Johnson; "The lawyer's Last Apeal," Hon. W. P. IJubbnrd; "The Wcs1 Irglnla Rar Association." Hon. Ocon?' . RlurgfHs: "The New Woman," <' food Pulley; "Our CJupst," Hon. Si P n'ompson. of St. Louis; "Conprnss and Ircult," Congressman A. CI. Dayton; Umbarrnsslni* Questions." J. W, Vnnavort; "Justice nf the Peace." 8. L Journoy. The next mretlnrr will 1?A hold a I hnrlosloti during tho session of the glslaturo. Hi ought I'nrte to Tim*. ntORLTN. Nov,'-!.?A dl'tpafch from onst.mtlnopl?to the Franfcfor/, Holtumi iy:? that the porte, under the thnal om the Rulgnrlan government that tin*u? the promised IVnrhtirtn tin* Rulgurin bishops In Macedonia should be rented before10 o'clock n. m. yesterday itb*arlA | declare Ind^jv-nde/)'- , nally acceded the demands nnti ninted the beraK Tr?f'mom* of 111* Wnlfti, COLPRTRINOH, N/Jfrt tfov. 4>-Ttierc llt^Je doubt that Fell* Ualta, of Mont al, whose bodfr was toinWl Ifl the Hud>n river, was .a-passenger on tyie New ork (Central train iv rocked'fit OnVHuons, elobet124. Iflrt watch wn i stopped at Til) o'clock, wlllch Is !>?< , Uirly the tlflU disaster occurred. The total number ' victims wandwi'nifMMie. , ?llaiourl 'A utt it Ni'iiri'iinl. LAM Alt, Mo. Nov. 4 -The lAislneni ut yfjtbr v|lla|tP/?^ liberal, fourteen illen west of here, was destroyed by re ibis nftemoonr entallliw ii loss of o.nov^TI* 10*cluing.' bank, thr IVttjfc , l.ll'iMu|, tieneru| si$vo, I'm i?hty's drui? HfhPe, the Ijlbcrsl Inde ndent, ^irldtlmtrt s 'ufocery, Corn<i*' Rrecejy nnd Vhvlion's notion storn ele the buildings t)i'?lro>oil# DISASTROUS WRECK flu (he Chtupcako & Ohio, SMr Char* lotlMVllU, Ylrgiu!*?I'omr KlU?I mmd Seventeen Injured. ' CHARLOTTESVILLE, V?., Nov. 4.The Chesapeake & Ohio vestibule express, known as the "F. F. V." from Cincinnati to Washington, was wrecked near Old Shndwell, live miles east of this place, at 1:25 this afternoon. Four persons were killed and seventeen injured. The dead: Henry Burnett, colored porter, Ket. wick, Va. An Italian woman named Merara, and Infant, believed to be from Ciacle natl. ( 1'hellx Mareno (died after removal to Charlottesville). The injured: Moses Goldblatt, Cincinnati, knee cap fractured. Conductor Schuster, legs injured. Engineer Duke, dangerously hurt MagKageman Peers, Qordonaviile.Va., > badly hurt from shoulders down; probably internally Injured. ' A. Merara, badly hurt. Mary Mareno, hurt about the head, but not seriously. Two small children of Mary Mareno, ono badly. J It Its reported that the body of another Italian child is under the wreck, * but this cannot be confirmed. i The cause of the accident has not I been definitely ciBcertalnod, but it is believed to have been due to spreadlrif J rails. The engine left the track on a * shfirp curve and was burled against a . rocky hill. All of the cars except the . dining car and the Richmond sleeper were derailed. Two cars plunged head r foremost down the steep embankment, f and one of them wont Into the river, which at this place skirts the tracks. t The day passenger conch and the expretf ?' ir were badly wrecked. As the ' locomotive plunged from the rails and 1 overturned Engineer Duke was hurled [ from the cnb and crushed under tho 1 engine, besides being terribly scalded by escaping steam. lie was rescued by * his fireman and the conductor. yThe r body of Henry Burnett, the colored 1 porter, was the last recovered. He was f terribly mangled, having been In tho 1 baggage car. A foot supposed to have 1 been his, was first recovered, nnd later - a portion of the head. The body was lit1 erally dismembered. Mareno had both " 1 legs cut oft and died at the hospital at Charlottesville. Among the uninjured, passengers on the train were Senator Piatt, of Con rectlcut, Commission of Pensions H. r Clay Evans, nnd Representative >Valler ? Evans, of ubulavllle. HIGH OLD TIME In the Lower Iloaac of the Austrian Itecliarath?Wow Talk A bo at the Bttr IMt? In the United Ulain CongreM. VJENNA, Nov. 4.?When the lower ,, house of the relchsrath reassembled today the acting president, Herr Abrahamovicz, declared the chair would not ? yield to Intimidation, and that he pro\. ;a.vi?Uu? . - the, sfandiny erven, thus protecting the 1 interests of the state and constitution. 3 This statement was the signal for upt roar and disorder upon the part of the Leftists. Amid Increasing confusion the Left* f?ts continued to oppose the decision of the bill for the prolonging for a year , the Austro-Hungarlan compromise, al though the house had adopted a resolution to debate It. Dr. Lueger, burgo1 master of Vienna, whom Herr Abrat hamovizc had invited to epeak, was ? unable to make himself heard. The Leftists actually entered the presidents tribune and refused to budge. Dr. Lue ger displayed a placard inscribed: "I - claim the right to speak." This was ) greeted by an Increased tumult Two Leftists arose and began to r speak simultaneously. Herr Abrahamovlcz rang the bell re! peatedly and cnllcd them to order; they refused to desist. The confusion had ' now become a bedlam and Herr Abrahnmnvics abruDtlv suspended the sit Una: by leaving the chair. When the Hitting was resumed the uproar was renewed. When Dr. Lueger f made a fresh attempt to speak, Herr Wolff, of tho Schoenerer group, began > reading aloud from a newspaper. The opposing parties fiercely abused each 4 other nnd Dr. Lueger denounced tho . Schnonerer group as a "pack of street > boys." The sitting was ngaln suspended and : yet again resumed, but It was Impoaslble for Dr. Lueger to get a hearing. At half p/ist ten this evening Leftists were shouting, bellowing nnd reading newspaper articles at the top of their i lungs. The uproar was Incessant. t At 11 o'clock many of tho members be. gan shouting together "close the sitting, i close th* sitting." This they kept up In I a kind of chorus, while Herr Wolff and others boat tlmo for them with the deBk > lids. After a while the noise subsided a ? little ho that Dr. Luogor ooutd be heard, arid lie went on condemning tho compromise with Hungary because, ns he aK . leged, "the Jew Magyars want to put . their hands Into the Csech as well as tiie German money bags." After several attempts to get tho sitting to adjourn, the uproar was resumed,) v t Herr Wolff bnngintr the lid of his desk > nnd several Csech deputies struggling to wrench It from htm. Tho most unparliamentary nnd abusive interruptions j were exchanged. Count Badenl, the premier, was present for part of the t1mo anil was sup-, posed to have a decree of adjournment Signed by the otmierer, In his pocket. According l/> n well Jfn/onned doputy, the . emperor said early In the morning: "I won't be dictated to by Schoenerer and Wolff." The deputy understood this to mean that Count Paflehl would not be allowwt ' to resign whatever turn events might ' take. VIENNA*, Nov* r>*~2 a? m.-AmM sn unseemly scuffle between Hqrr Wolft and a number of Csech deputies A vote hn* Just been taken nnd carried on a motion to cl<i?e the ilobato. Hut the house 1s Mill sitting wfth the prospect of another sll night, pension* Movrinrilf nf Nlrnmtlilpi, HHCMUWtAVlCN?K.-rfffr wiihnlm Dnr flrosslf, New York. > X AMI/KM?Whir,?. New York. NlflW YOIUC?Truve ' JihU Weimar, from Hremotv* Wrnllltl' Cnirrnil fnr Tn-ilnr. T-'oi* Wen Virginia inerpfulnr cloudlnsss in tlie plowing,) '"Owed by showers JrrU nft'imoon ana nlihi; .wifnitr; south M'l'ii' winds. ' i \?p western PmuisyJVahln, threatening,' with ptcbabl>' light).showers; cooler Ftm day tdglitj ^wutlyniy , winds, 1 i risk t?? Ijlan nti tnF mke* PrbUy. , I'or Otlln, tlireii'tonltig wootfjar, with showers; roinv |n western portlohl In* 1 erenslng sniithwesfifrly winds, booming wtKfilyj brisk to (il?b o?| Hir J*k?. l,?n i*| 'l>MH(ir?inrtt .The tnmptfiHuVa yesterday as bbsSnred by (' flehnepf, druggist, eeriier Fourteenth i^ml Markut slryots, was us fallow*! 7 ?. m 41 11 p. m.nMH!*"*.* M '? " ?'i 4s f ft. Ill W li" "? W lVcaihtr- Kalr,