ff ~ scenes enacted Demo Waldo Terms, 82.00 a Year, in Advance. | Bellefonte, Pa., Feb. 5, 1897. P. GRAY MEEK, . EDITOR. | | The Bill for an International Confer- | ence. The Republican caucus bill, which is in- tended to authorize President McKINLEY to call an international monetary confer- ence with the objeet of remonetizing silver, and to name the American commissioners, has passed the Senate by the extraordinary majority of 46 to 4, and there is no doubt that the House will follow the lead of the Senate in this matter by an equally large majority. This measure is intended to | bring the action of the Republican Con- | gress and administration into conformity with the plank in the party platform that assumed to favor international bimetallism. It is to be seen whether there will be any carnestness in this movement after the bill shall have been passed. During the campaign, when the minions of the money power were denouncing, with the most op- probrious terms, those who advocated the restoration of silver to its former monetary standing, the Republican leaders made the concession to bimetallism expressed by their international conference plank, with the evident object of effecting a campaign purpose. By that expedient they no doubt retained the votes of many who favored a double standard, and it is now necessary that they should make some show of re- deeming that pledge by such a measure as a bill directing President MCKINLEY to call an international conference. But there is scarcely a probability that the gold influence, which has complete con- trol of the Republican party, will allow this movement to materialize in any sub- stantial action for the remonetization of silver. The goldites, both of this country and Europe, are making too good a thing out of the contraction caused by the gold standard to allow the existing monetary status to be disturbed. They will ex- perience no great difficulty in defeating the object of a call for an international bimet- allic conference that does not appear to be any thing more than perfunctory in its intention. However, if there should be added to this bill that has heen passed by the Senate, a clause to the effect that if, upon the invi- tation of the American President, the na- tions of Europe shall fail to meet the repre- sentatives of this government in a confer- ence for the adoption of international bimetallism or upon a meeting shall réject that monetary policy it shall be the duty of Congress to act without foreign co- operation, and authorize the free coinage of silver and gold in the mints of the United States at the ratio that existed previous to the demonetization act of 1873, such a clause to the bill would look like earnest business in this matter, and would be a notification to European nations that the action of the United States for the re- _establishment of bimetallism will not be dependent upon their consent and co- operation. \ But such action by a Republican Con- gress and administration would concede that the Democrats were right in the posi- tion they took on the silver question in the recent campaign, and would be an ad- mission that the terms ‘‘anarchists’”” and *‘repudiators,’’ that were applied to them for maintaining that the United States could safely restore silver to its old status without the permission and aid of Europe, were used for the base purpose of deluding the gullible class of voters. But it is not to be expected that the Re- publicans will, make such a concession, however true it might be. Their situation will compel them to maintain their alliance with the monetary contractionists and manipulators of the gold market, thereby continuing the financial stringency and business depression until a storm of popular reprobation shall sweep them from power, four years hence, by a majority that will make the beginning of the next century memorable in the political history of the country. The State Capitol Burned. The burning of the state capitol build- ing, at Harrisburg, on Tuesday morning, was at once a misfortune and a blessing to this Commonwealth. A misfortune, be- cause there never was a time when the State could so ill afford the outlay the building of a new capitol will require. A blessing, in that it has made it absolutely necessary to have a new capitol building and in erecting it there is the assurance that it will be worthy the great State whose seat of government it is. The burned building had stood there since 1821 and while it was imposing in its antiquity it has long been recognized that a new one was needed. Millions of dol- lars had been thrown away on improving it, with the result that it remained an old, dilapidated looKing structure all the while. Aside from the fact that the State is really not financially in a position to start re- building on the scale that ought to be fol- lowed, without seriously burdening the tax | payers, not one of the group of government buildings, at Harrisburg, could have been destroyed with less loss and more satisfac- tion than the capitol. Had the executive departments been burned all of the archives and valuable papers of the ‘State might have been lost, never to be replaced. While there is much of sentiment attached to the old building, owing to the many historic within its walls during the past seventy years, every one will | Fire [Interrupts Solons.—Valuable Records The Capitol of Pennsyl- vania in Ashes. THE HISTORIC oLD BUILDING DE- STROYED AT LAST. Lost. Great Scramble of Legislators to Save Personal Be- longings and Some Heroic Work by Employes to Rescue Public Property.—Loss Will Reach Over a Million Dollars.—Arrangements Have Been Made for the Legislature to Convene in the Court Rooms Not Decidud.—Whether to Repair or Rebuild. HARRISBURG, Feb. 2.—The famous old state capitol building, the corner-stone of which was laid in 1819 hy Governor Find- lay, is a mass of ruins. A fire that spread with as much rapidity as the fire was unex- pected has left standing gaunt, thick walls and the skeleton of the splendidly con- structed dome, while the interior is a mass of falling ceilings, walls and furniture. Racalling the history of Pennsylvania, and the stirring and momentous scenes that have occurred in the venerable building during the last 78 years, the ruins loom up through the rain and sleet of to-night, in- vested with an interest full of pathos and regret. Not only did citizens of Harris- burg, but old time legislators and officials, who are here now, gazed upon the funeral pyre of the ancient edifice with saddened faces and serious eyes. All the talk on the ‘‘hill’”’ this morning was about the resolution creating the com- mittee to make an investigation of the state treasury, and the senate had used up near- ly all the morning hours with routine busi- ness and a talk over the need, from a Re- publican point of view, of the passage of apportionment bills. Everybody was wait- ing for the treasury resolution that was to come from the house, and finally there was much wonderment why it did not appear. Emissaries and correspondents hurried to the house. to discover the cause of the de- lay. It was discovered then that the reso- lution had not yet gone out of the transerib- ing clerk’s room ; and when it was known, at 12:30, by the senate, President pro tem MecCarrell, who was in the chair, declared a recess until 1 o’clock. DISCOVERY OF THE FIRE. Scarcely had the senate adjourned for the recess when quiet talk got around that there was a fire somewhere in the building above the senate postoffice, in the rear of the senate and on the second floor. Sena- tor Stineman, of Cambria county, had been smelling the odor of smoke, Clerk of the Senate Smiley detected the odor also, and finally parties outside saw smoke issuing from beneath the caves of the capitol build- ing on the senate side. Word was com- municated to the senators, and Senator Saylor, of Montgomery county, with a couple of officials, hurried upstairs over the senate chamber to see what was wrong. At that moment smoke was seen pouring from the floor of the superbly furnished apartments of the lieutenant-governor. The fire had evidently started beneath the floor of these rooms, and the ceiling, directly over the senate postofiice and bar- ber shop. No one knows yet what caused the fire, but it is very reasonably supposed that dry material between—the ceiling and floor was ignited by either broken or other- wise defective electric light wire. A line of hose, stationed handy, was immediately unrolled, after the discovery of the flames, and water was played upon the fire at the one small spot where it was seen. But this proved ineffective. Evidently the flames had been creeping along unseen for two hours or more, and before the serious extent of the trouble could be realized the senate chamber was becoming clouded with smoke. N FIRE GAINED GOOD HEADWAY. This evidence of the fire at once created the impression that it was serious, and en- ergetic means were at once adopted. A general city fire alarm was at once called, and the engines promptly responded. But before they could arrive the flames had eat- en their way through the floor and ceiling and had got through the roof of the senate side of the building. Ten minutes later the roof over Lieutenant Governor Lyon’s rooms and the offices of the educational de- partment began to sink down. There was no longer any doubt of a serious fire. The senate chamber was thick with smoke. he cut 2 piece out of the floor and saw be- neath : m@3thing mass of flames spreading in every d rection ; and the draft made by his oj (oii 1g soon swept the fire into the 'iente amb-governor’s room, and in a few minut(s i, was all aflame. FIREMEN WERE TOO LATE. The firemen, when it was too late to do to the open air. A number of narrow escapes were made. One old man was thrown against the wall. Rep- resentative Bliss of Delaware, was barely able to escape a rush of falling timber. The telegraph operator in his lit- tle coop made a forced egress through the | window into the open air. worked gallantly to get out the papers and save them, and was almost suffocated by the smoke. In running away from flames he turned into a hallway and fell over a desk, hurting himself badly. Twelve o'clock was the last hour tolled by the faithful old clock that did service so many years. Clerks Rex and Fetterholf made AR THE CAPITOL AS II' APPEARED TUESDAY. effective work, soon had streams of water pouring upon the flames, and a few min- utes later the water was dropping through the senate ceiling. For some time no one seemed to realize that the flames could not be confined to the upper part of the build- ing, but even when this belief was being indulged in a bright flame leaped out from behind the president's chair. Tongues of fire leaped around the great chandeliers, and before long they came down with a | not fall. | WAS A FINE SIGHT. Shortly after this explosion the flames were eating the ceiling of the hall of the house, and before long it too, was a mass ' of flames. With the fire making such head | way it required but a short time for the flames to envelop the building within and without, and the fire, as it leaped up to | and around the high dome, presented a | great spectacle. The dome, however did | It was built like the building in | ins. heroic efforts to save their records and were successful. The newspaper men, who had copies of all the bills introduced during this session, saved all of them, and this will be a great help when the legislature gets down to work. To-night nothing but the ruined walls remain standing, and what constituted the substantial and noted old capitol building is'now nothing but a mass of smoking ru- Nothing of value was left, and the crash, and very soon the entire senate|a most substantial manner, and its iron gaudy hall of the house of representatives, chamber was in flames. In the meantime! 334 brick work remain standing. The with its gorgeous decorations and allegorical senators and officials were endeavoring t0 flames burnt fiercely, and it was not until | frieze, had gone up in smoke. Thousands save personal effects, records and furniture. late in the afternoon were they subdued. President pro tem MecCarrell, Chief Clerk | The building was then in ruins. Smiley, Captain Delaney, superintendent | : THE CAPITOL IN of others turned in and worked valiantly ; but, aside from personal effects and a few chairs, only the records of the present ses- sion were saved. Representative Charles Voorhees, who had been resident clerk for many years, made heroic efforts to save valuable articles, and at various times, with president: Mec- Carrell, Clerk Smiley and some senators, labored like regular firemen at the hose. Mr. Voorhees tried to save the big and costly clocks in the senate chamber, but they were too heavy to be removed. SENATE WAS DOOMED. J With regret it was admitted that. the senate was doomed. Most of the articles in the senators’s desks and nearly all the furniture were destroyed ; but so eager were many of the men to stay the flames or save things that some of them were com- pelled to leap out of the windows. While the flames were devouring the senate side, the house, which had adjourned until the afternoon, was in commotion, but congrat- ulations were being heard on all sides that at least that part of the edifice would be saved. But even as these jubiliations a shower of sparks dropped into the ro- tunda, between the senate and house, of public buildings and grounds, and a host gyrance is about . $197,000. During the | The loss is about $500,000, and the in- 1 ii - Hr TT ml fey pt Sty! m= 1 | ITS FIRST YEAR. | last three years $395,000 has been spent on, | . the building. Many of the hooks, ete., cannot be replaced. Lieutenant-Governor Lyon’s private room, with his fine library, the department of public instruction with its collection of hooks, all the caucus and | committee rooms and the libraries attached thereto are in ruins and a total loss. Be- | sides these, all the ante-rooms, barber shops, cloak and toilet rooms, the magnifi- | $70,000 hall of the house of representatives | and senate chamber with all its offices and valuables were destroyed. The forestry | commission and several other apartments were burned. ORIGINALS OF BILLS CONSUMED. All the originals of the bills and peti- tions in the senate from 1800 down were consumed, but the records of both houses for the present session were saved. When the fire gained headway Captain Brown, of the department of internal affairs, pre- pared to move all the valuables out of the department of internal affairs. He has all the valuable surveys and records packed in boxes, and in 10 minutes’ time that de- partment could have been moved to a place of safety. The entire libraries of the senate and house were destroyed, entailing a loss of $25,000. The two French clocks Flames were coming through the elegantly painted ceiling around the chandeliers, and President pro tem McCarrell being upstairs looking after the flames, Senator Grady, of Philadelphia, mounted the rostrum, and, with senators and newspaper men crowded around with their hats on, entertained a | motion to adjourn till 11 o’clock to-morrow be glad that it is gone when a new one, that ought to be made a credit to Penn- | sylvania, has replaced it. and it was carried. When Senator Saylor had discovered the | and in a few minutes the flames were in the house gallery. It was at this moment that the most thrilling scenes occurred. gas or superheated air, being caused a terrific explosion. released, A false ceiling : ruined. Either escaping far up in the rotunda was blown out, and | a mighty roar of air and fallen timber fol- | lowed. How people escaped death was a miracle, and those in the vicinity rushed —— RUINS OF THE CAPITOL AFTER THE FIRE. in the senate worth $500 each, were also In the rooms of the lieutenant- governor, in addition to two valuable clocks, five portraits in oils of ex-lieuten- ant-governors were destroyed. These pict- ures were of Stone, Latta, Chauncy F. Black, Davies and Watres. Etchings of Judge Black, ex-United States Senator Wallace, Gen. Reynolds and Simon Cam- eron were also burned. . school of people visited the ruins during the after- noon. On the Third street side nothing but the white pillars remain, the entrance to the rotunda, and the top having been burned away. The walls may fall at any time. STILL BURNING TUESDAY NIGHT. There are three fire companies on the ground to-night, and the fire still burns in the cellar and part of the house. The departments in the burned building were the following : Senate and house committee rooms, senate librarian’s room, senate chief clerk’s room, smoking room, barber shop in senate, lieutenant-govern- ors’ room, room of president pro tem, department, house chief clerks’ room, speaker of house room, resident clerks’ room, two telegraph offices, room of the Harrisburg legislative correspondents | association, paster and folders’ departments, | cloak rooms in both branches, and the en- gine rooms. The contractor for the improvements in progress had an insurance of $70,000, his contract not being finished. The remarkable feature of the fire is that of hundreds of people who thronged the building during the fire, no one was ser- iously injured. A couple of firemen were hurt, and several citizens were bruised, but no other casualties occurred. Standing Since 1821. The burned capitol was built early in the century, but was, nevertheless. regarded as one of the handsomest specimens of Ionic architecture of the country. The build- ings was of red brick, with white trimmings. It was surrounded by a park of 10 acres, and stood on an eminence almost in the center of the city. The main structure was 2} stories high, surmounted by a large dome, from which a fine view of the surrounding country could be had. The capitol’s dimensions were : Length, 180 feet; width, 80 feet. The corner stone was laid on May 31, 1819, by Governor Findlay. The building was fin- ished in 1821, and was first occupied by the general assembly on the 3d of January, 1822. On each side was a wing, that on the north being occupied by the senate and the southern wing by the house. At each end of the building, separated from it by a narrow space, are located two buildings, containing the state treasury department and adjutant-general's office and other state offices. About 100 feet south is the modern granite building known as the ex- ecutive building, recently erected at a cost of near $1,000,000 for the accommodation of the governor, attorney-general and secreta- ry of state. This building also shelters the state li- brary, and a portion of it is used as a state museum. The library is one of the finest in the world, and until two years ago was quartered in the structure destroyed by fire to-day. It was the danger from fire that constantly menaced the libraray in the old building that induced the authori- ties to erect the fire proof structure in which it is now located. The Pennsylvania state government was organized in Philadelphia March 4, 1776, September 24 of the same year the execu- tive department was removed to Lancaster, though Philadelphia still retained its title as capitol of the state. April 3, 1779, by a vote of the legislature, the capital was re- moved to Lancaster, and it was continued there until 1812. For 117 years the capi- tal had been in Philadelphia. It was the ‘seat of state government during colonial days. In 1812, however, the capital was removed to Harrisburg by the unanimous consent of the legislature. Lancaster was found to be an inconvenient location, and from that period until the present time it has held its position as the legislative cen- ter of the staje. Fire Thought to Have Started Under the. Floor of the Lieut. Governor's Office The little furniture that is saved to the state is stored in a neighboring market, and is said to be only a portion of the com- paratively small quantity that had been handed through windows and doors of the burning building to the crowds, or had been otherwise ‘‘saved’” by any persons with sufficient daring to grope through smoke and risk falling plaster or embers. Chief Clerk Smiley, who stood to his an- kles in water, saved with some assistance all the valuables of the senate transcribing room and the senate records for 15 vears back. He and Chief Clerk Rex say that nearly all the bills introduced have been The greater part of the legislative supplies are gone. . Mr. Miller and others, who were early in the lieutenant-governor’s room, feel certain that the fire came from under that floor. The ofiicers generally say there was no rubbish in the loft, and nothing worth mentioning but the apparatus of the heat- ing and electric light companies, all the batteries and fans being there. All the rubbish, they say, was taken out of the loft two weeks ago. ILxcepting the law books referred to by Mr. Miller, no books were burned that cannot be duplicated in the executive building. Many legislators now condemn the long-continued policy of patching the capitol, which was done be- cause of jealous consideration for what was generally pronounced exteriorly the purest specimen of colonial architecture in the country. Senator Saylor and Representative Dliss were among those slightly hurt, and As- sistant Sergeant-at-Arms Rawlings, who stayed too long in the house trying to save things, had one of the narrowest of the many narrow escapes, nearly fainting from exertion in dodging falling objects, Speak- er Boyer, in his room at the farthest end of the capitol fron the start of the fire, was unsuspecting of much danger until he found it necessary to break the new rule of hav- ing no exit but the main entrance, and he hastily ordered open the end doors near the internal affairs building, so that all hands himself included, could the more readily escape. Afterward he and president pro tem McCarrell stood in the watching crowds, ankle deep in the slush, while em- bers perforated many a good umbreila. iss Ethel Webster, almost overcome by smoke, was rescued by firemen from the game commission room. Fireman Harry Schaeffer was badly hurt by falling plaster- ing. Two other firemen were slightly in- jured. : The Legislature Will Meet in Grace NM. E. Church. The New Place May be an Oddity to Members but it Will do Them Good. HARRISBURG, Feb. 3.—The Governor in an interview to-night said the quarters for the Senate and House would be ready in the Grace Methodist church, on West State street, by Monday evening. He added : “The Legislature has been in the habit of adjourning on Thursday evening during the first few weeks of the session. Every public building and hall in Harrisburg, I believe, has heen offered us. Harrisburg has responded promptly and generously. The Grace Methodist Episcopal church came to our relief to-day. By a unanimous vote of its board of directors it tendered te the State, for the use of the general assem- bly, their church on State street. I know of no other building in the city of Harris- burg so well adapted for the purpose as this structure. The committee of the Sen- ate and House were present when the gen- erous offer of the church officials was made and accepted. Contracts have now been made so that by next Monday afternoon the rooms for hoth branches of the general assembly and for their committees will be entirely ready. The contracts have been concluded this afternoon with the electrie- ians, steam heat company, the plumbers, carpenters, carpet layers and furnishers, and by next Mouday evening at 9 o’cleck the Legislature will find quarters as well fitted and prepared for them as is possible under the circumstances.’’ The Governor is not in sympathy with the proposition to adjourn to-morrow for two weeks and said there is no excuse for doing so. He said regarding the building of a new capitol that the matter is a grave one, which must receive the most careful deliberation. The Governor and Mrs. Hastings will not postpone their reception next week. ADDITIONAL LOCALS. -—— Prothonotary W. F. Smith has bees so badly crippled up with lumbago for the past few days that it has required two sticks, in addition to his legs, to move him about. a ——Guy, the five year old son of Edward McKinley, of Milesburg, was badly scald- ed, on Sunday morning. While warming himself at the kitchen stove a pot of boiling water toppled over onto him tte FOSTKR'S GENERAL FORECAST FOR FEBRUARY WEATHER.—My last bulletin gave forecasts of the storm wave to cross the continent from 25th to 29th and the next will reach the Pacific coast about the 30th, cross the west of Rockies country by close of 31st, great central valleys Feb. 1st to 3rd, eastern States the 4th. ‘Warm wave will cross the west of Rock- ies country about Jan. 25th, great central valleys Feb. 1st, eastern States 3rd. Cool wave will cross the west of Rockies coun- try about Feb. 2nd, great central valleys 4th, eastern States 5th. Ordinarily this disturbance would bring a severe cold wave, but a reversal will prob- ably occur at the last disturbance of Janu- ary, and the cold wave, in that event, will enter the upper Missouri valley not far from the 27th or an and move eastward across the continent in three or four days. This prospective reversal will cause the last days of January to be cold and stormy and the cool wave following that first dis- turbance in February will not bring very cold weather. The second disturbance of February will reach the Pacific coast about the 5th, cross the west of Rockies country by close of 6th, great central valleys 7th to 9th, eastern States 10th. Warm wave will cross the west of Rockies country about Feb. 5th, great central val-- leys 7th, eastern States 9th. Cool wave will cross the west of Rockies country about the 8th, great central valleys 10th, eastern States 12th. The regular weather changes would place this disturbance in the low temperature storm period, would cause severe storms. heavy snows and rains and result in the month averaging below the normal in tem- perature. But all this is expected to be reversed by the change that now appears to be during the last week in January. Be- cause of this reversal the coldest part of February is calculated to fall near the 1st, then a rising temperature to about Sth er 10th, then a feeble fall till near 16th or saved, and all their duplicates were carried | 18th, then a rise till about the last days of out safely hy the legislative correspondents. | the month, winding up with a severe cold Chairman Marshall, of the appropriations committee, saved all his bills and val- uables, having carried his desk ou. Many other committee chairmen maket similar wave not fi. from March 1st. February will probably be a warm | month, bad for those who desire good weather for gathering ice and favorable to | fire, at his first investigation with a hatchet ; pellmell into the hall of the house and in- | Major Seiders, of the senate postoffice, reports favorable to coming legislation. ' pneumonia, influenza, colds, ete.