THE REPEAL BILL PASSED The Proceedings in Detall--Forty- three Votes Against Thirty-two Eleven Majority Recorded In Fa. | vor of Stopping any Further Pure | chase of Sliver by the Government, At SA J 26 p. m,, by a vote of forty-three to thirty-two, the United States Benate, aftor | one of the most remarkable and memorable parliamentary battles of a generation, passed the bill uneonditionally repealing the pur chase clause of the Sherman silver law, The | end was reached at the conclusion of a cone tinuous session of iourteen days, after sixty. y dave of debate, during which five volumes of the Congressi i Record bad been filled | with speeches, amounting in the aggregate | to about twenty million words, i I'he text of the bill as passed is as follows That so much of the act approved July 14, 1800, entitied “*An act directing the pur ehase of silver bullion and issue of Treasury notes thereon and for other purposes,” as directs toe Secratary of the Treasury to pur chase from time to time silver bullion to the agprogate amount of 4,500,000 ounces, or sx much thereof as may offered in each month at the market price thereof, not ex- ceeding £1 for 371 25-100 grains of pure ver, and to issue in payment for such pur- chases Treasury notes of the United States, be and the same Is hereby repealed, And it is hereby declared to be the policy of the United States to { On he stl« continue the use of both gold and silver as standard money, 10 coin both gold and silver into money of equal intrinsic and exchangeable value, such quality to be secured through interns greement or by such sal as will insure the 3 { in value of the « of the two met- nd the equal power of eyery dollar at ¢ n the markets and in the payment i and | solr uld be steadily uch a safe m as will maintain at al wywer of every dollar coined ho United States in the he payment of defts. owds in the wmmber when irpassed any lay at the C able cere halls surrounding the Senate r ied its dur. i 0X MY { when some 8 in progress, and strictly roun contest Senators and Te ne fighters Wash t Mr. Stewart | rom the : sfflcer, said 1 endment Harris and Ste : 7.15, vote wo nt and th wad t pote il * SngTOssn ird That was and then the nays on the and it was , thirtytw reading with was pe EEE passed = h, Brice, Caflery om. Daria, Dixon, Dols Gallinger, Gilson, Gorman, Gray, Hawley, Higgins, Hill, Hoar Hunton, Lindsay, Lodge, McMillan, McPher son. Manderson Mille, Mitchell (Wis, ), Mor rill, Murphy, Platt, Proctor, Quay. Bansom Sherman, Smith, Squire, Stockbridge, Turple, Vilas, Voorhees, Washburn and White (La) 43 Nays—Messrs, Allen, Bate, Berry, Diaak- durn, Buatier, Call, Cameron, Cockrel, Coke, Daniel, Dubols, George, Harris, Irby, Jones Ark Jones (Nev.), Kyle, Martin, Pasco Paffer. Perkina. Pettigraw, Power. Pugh, Roach, Shoup, SMtowart, Teller, Vance, Vest, Walthall and Wolcott thirty two. The following were the pairs . Meosarse, Mitchell (Ore and Allison Chandler and White (Cal), Colquitt and Wilson : Palmer and Hansbrough ; Gordoa and Morgan, The party divisions were as follows For Repeal--Republicans, 23; Democrats, 20 Against Repeal--Demoerats, 18 licaus, 10 © Populists, 3. There was no demonstration whatever dur ing the roll eall, and when Vice-President Stevenson announcad the resait of the vote the Senate adjourned and the Sesators hur ried home to dinner. In ten migates the gal lorie and the chamber wersampty, the lights worn extinguished, and the curtain down one of the greatest parliamentary strug gles in the history of the Sonat Repub rung Passed by the House and Signed. By a vote of 193 to ninety-four the House wf! Representatives passed the Silver Pur ahase Repeal bill ax it eame from the Benate, It was promptly signed by the President, and | thus became the law of the land, The silver controversy, iu its last stages, having been transferred to the House, thers was quite sn large attendance, both on the floor and in the galleries, at the noon hour of meeting, The question of repeal same squarely be fore the body when the Wil was presented which had been passed in the Senate, Mr. Wilson moved to cotour and called for the previous question, After some discussion the Speaker was procuading tn put the question when Mr. ryan moved to adjourn, Lost twenty-six to 180, Mr. Baodgrass moved that the Houses take a recess until 3p. om. Lost Awenty-one to 191, An effort was made to secur= the yeas and nays on ns motion by Mr. Bryan that when the House adjourn it be until Friday, hut only twenty-eight members rose-pot a sul fislent number. Another motion by Mr, Bryas to adiourn wae voted down-—twenty: three to 183. cuen it became avident that passage of the bill by the House was to bu accomplished only in the face of an evident determination to filibuster on the part of a small number of irreconcilables led by Mr, frvan, Theres was a weary round of motions to adjourn and to take n recess until nt length the Bpeaker took the reins in his hand, wad, headless of interruptions by Mr, Bryan and Mr. 8nodgrass, put the motion on the de. mand of the previous question and declared it carried. The question was then taken on concurring in the Senate, sabstiiute an iit was concurred in--yeas, 193; nays, four, I'he President signed the Repeal bill at ex. actly hall past 4 o'clock, one hour and thir ty-five minutes after its passage, It was taken to the White House by Representative Albert J. Paarson, of Ohio, Chairman of the House Committees on Enrolled Bills, who had made the trip from the Capitol on a cable ofr, Wien Jif, 1 OREBOER PEOsei sa Lia aa rolled copy of the bill te the President, ex- plaining what it was, Mr. Cleveland inane diately took up his pen and wrote these words in the lower left hand corner Approved November 1, 1893 Grover CLEVELAND Secretary Carlisle, who was present at the signing, exprossed himself as highly gratifiad at the passage of the Rapeal bill He in- structed Acting Superintendent Preston of the Mint Bureau to telegraph to all the Uni. rihier ted States mints not to make any fus pure I —— - GLEANINGS, Tre coke trade is improving. Exoraxnp bas 420 {dle clergymen, Tux bullion value of a silver dollar is now £0.59 Tuer are fifteen crematories inthe United States SALvanon is going to try borrow $10, 000,000 in Europe, Micmraax's Sati Holiday law optional for banks [umexse schools New York waters « Traverens in Italy are by the scar r of small ¢ distur he Go back and paid pocket, I —— PROMINENT PEOPLE. PDRUFPY olghty awe wut the Chisag » younger visitors ears Fair as weil Cuanvorre M. Josox, the English novelist is srventy years old, Out ol the profits she ha! derived irom thirty she Las given 10,000 to charitable sodeties her novels Tie Sultan of Turkey is a monomaniac on tha subjeet of « arringes. Ho has boon stead. ily engaged in making =» lection of such vehicles for the past twenty years and now has nearly 500 of all makes and kinds Privoess Mavp, 5! Wales, who i= like her father than any other of the Prince of Wales's ethildren, inheritathe paternal love of humor. She is an inveterate punster as well, and she and ber father make a merry pair when they are In joking mood. te I —— SHOT BY A CRANK. He Sought Revenge for Helng Re fused Work. yee mous forty-four-calibre Colt's revolver and carrying a small arsenal supply of loose eartridgos in his pocket, shot and probably | killed one man in the gloomy ground floor of | the unfinished Postal Telegraph Building, st Broadway and Murray strest, New York City, | Then he held at bay and maintained a des. | porate pistol battle with eight policomen, | who, groping about in the dark and among confused heaps of building material, were endeavoring to hunt him out and eapture him or shoot him dead in his tracks, The cranks name is Thomas Bradioy, and he Is something of a tramp or vagabond, The man whom he shot A Frank Lowis Matthies, a highly respected superittendent of bulldings construction. The crank shot | him because he refused to give him work, The affair occurred at about 5.30 p. m. when the throngs on Broadway were largest, and during the fosiiinde of more than tw mty shots that were fired crowds of ple gathered both on the lirondway and Fb stroot sides of the bullding, almost entirely stopping teafle for savers! minutes. The wourihe-asaassin was finally captared, a ——————— ——"— A NINR-TEAR-OLD boy in West Vieginia is Sorte hing Ay Ruth Cleveland on the v maeif, a Domocrat, pointed to succesd his father, & Republican, as postmaster, ninety. | | Steamship Company, and running | | Inter nows reduced the estimates of | boat, in which | July | The total admissions on employes of all kinds, exhibitors, concession. | aires, ole, has been 5 O68 SIX, STEANER BURKE AT 1 | THE CITY OF ALEXANDRIA LOST NEAR HAVANA. | The Ship Was on Her Way From Mat. wnzas to Havana There was an Explosion, and Four Hundred Barrels of Rum Fed the Flames Many Lives Reported Lost, of Alexandria, be. snd Cuba Mail bet ween The steamship Clty longing to the New York Matanzas and Havana, Cuba, and New York, has been burned off Colimar. It was ronartad | at first that sixty persons were drowned, but the lows of He The sanded by Captain Hoffman, A cablegram from Havana, says: A small were second ofMoeer and rar rom the steamship Clty ol Alexandrian, entered the and reported the loss of the hey say that an explosion occurred during the after fn board the rtly after was bural: of the exp! steamer was comm the ’ eloven othe ns harbor here steamer, 1 noon oO vessel ar ward she wion is flames hats } RECN Mm having been was great AN EXPLOSION, With KILLED BY A Feed WiN Ferrible foller Blows Up tesulta, the Ir and ollapse gy atward the th i the fond { caved In, followed by {de walls A large » atid wont sailing across with great i 534 East Fourteenth wall at the sscand ef fronts and windows of Peter's grocery and Ruhbl's saloon, on the ground floor The bodies of many horses wore taken out and eight Injured ones were shot, Fifteen ix all were killed, setion of t holler rose in the air the » rest It struck nt of the tensment stroct, crushing in the tha ree the Ir rv and smashing EE ——— WORLD'S FAIR ATTENDANCE. Total Pald Admissions 21,458,010 The t Fair from the opening to the closing days, Nambered Total Receipts, | inclusive, was 21 458 910, divided as follows A bomieidal erank, armed with an enor. | May.... a hhans Jane. ..... 1,060,087 August feptember « 4,638,902 October . . VO B.790.102 seen, Including the The closing day's adenissions reached a total of 242,575, of which 208.178 were pald, The gate re ecoipts will approximate $10,500 000, and the concession receipts 4.000.000, The Fair has recsived abont $2,500,000 from souvenir coins and premiums, and receipts from vations sources, Added to the $10,000,000 capital sock, make the total receipts approximately $25,400,000, The buildings, grounds, ad ministration, and everything olse under the direct jurisdiction of the exhibition oslo cost about $85.000,000, The grounds will continue open as long as the managers deem best, but the dismantling will begin st oboe - — - n PINAL ire of 1h shi sant aeirom (is 0 nan shortly be made, cans! will be about 300 feet wid abou 150 millon in longth, 1 and " tance from { bered that | the dal paid attendance at the World's | | (ow the press i= a mystery 2.675,11x | «+ 3,760,248 | B.515,.408 | LATER NEWS, Ax attempt was made to hold up the north. | bound Louisville express, near Coal Creek, Teun, One of the killed and another captured, wo \debarabhbers Tux second trial of ex-Deteetive Daniel Coughlin for alleged complicity in the mur. der of Dr, Cronin was begun in Chleago, Tur annual report of Third Assistant Post. | master-Genoeral Crealgo shows that the revenues of the department from all sources | during the last fiscal was 875,800,038 and the jenves un deflelency for the year ithe yeur expenditures #81.074,104 of 86,177,171, I'ne President has signe Chinese | amending the Geary law YICE-VBESIDENT BTEVENSON jell mn diately after the adjournment of the! for his home In Bloomington, 1il,, where will remain until Congress meets again Tax nomination of James BE, Hoosevelt a Secretary of Embassy at London was « firmed in executive sess A pisraTon Africe, says ths captured by the Chartered Con ee — . TO RESUME COINAGE. Orders Sent to the Mints by Secre tary Carlisle. nn taken regard Important action has be by the 'reasury Department in to silver, ’ Orders wor anit 14 United y the superintendents of Mints Slates aw Orieans 10 resume the 00 mizing 1 I'he expo standard sliver 4 which will rage is » i + " | Blates I reasurs sond to the credit THANKSGIVING. President Cleveland’s Proclamation Appointing the Day. asued his oroclar rose the ha knowisdy T hisrolor HIGHEST IN THE WORLD. New Sige tion on an Extinct Volcano in Peru. Harvard's Meteorological 1 Harvard Uni Lt EN is! established al sintion at { El Miste Cordilleras 8 T00 few French As ano will here and the stat) bulit a short , * tha t hiv adleomy nite fist a Shae ryets, by storm or night This gives Harvard thetw rologioal stations, the other having heon os tablished part way ip Mi: Chachani two years ago sf an altitude of 16.650 feet, by Professor Bailey and W, I, Pickering, = — SAD FATE OF Body Found In Pressed Cotton Bale. highest meteo. A CHILD. Its the Centre ft JR Ada, made for Several days ago the little obiid Harkey Ark him wit wh rates a cotton gin sonrch Mr he had last seen ginhouse noad at the child's body was found in a bale that had bean prosssd a How child Tell Int disapproarsad an hout Was a Harkey remem. playing about th Work was and ' visi mien the sla days belore the EE — TROOPS DROWNED, Admiral Mello's Republica Rams the | Transport Rio de Janeiro. The armed steamer Urano, while leaving Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, was hit by a shell and | badly damaged, Sho has arrived at Destorro and reports that forty of Ler crew were "To Rep . ublica rammed the transport Rio de Jansiro, which was conveying 1100 troops to Sautos, and 300 of the troo were drowned, Admiral Mello confirms the truth of this report, Tue senior surviving ofesr of the Con. fedarncy In James Longstreet, for whom a Now York firm is publishing a book, Peau. regard was the last of the generals Long. street heading the list of Lieutenant Gener als, He fs a old man now, gray and deaf, He lives quietly and simply ot his home in Gainesville, Wiataoxs sold at New Dedford, Mass, the other day at #2 per pound, the lowest price lor some years, The price was #8 a {eaten of the winter in Wis | total | whieh bil | . the central the little fellow | ripping opening OFFICIAL CROP REPORT. A Monthly Bulletin Issued Weather Bureau. by the The Weather Bureau, which suspended ity weekly crop bulletins with the ingathering of the harvest, has issued, through Ating Chief Dunwoody, a monthly crop feport as follows The month was warmer than usual in cen tral and eastern Texas, and from the upper Hilsniastp pl snd lower Missouri valleys east. ward to the New Faogland and Middle Atlan tie consts, Over the Atlantic coast Btates southward of New Jersey about the normal temperature prevailed, except in portions of Maryland and over the interior of Virginia, where it was slightly cooler than usual, It was also cooler than usual in the lower Ohio Valley, Gull mates, the upper Missour! Valley, and all the Pacific const State The rainfall during October was largely deficient in the upper Mississippi and lower Missouri valleys and in the Gulf States, ex cept along the Gulf const, where there was » marked execs, There was also a decided deficiency in Western New York, Southern New England, and at a few stations on the Immediate const from North Carolina north. ward. Upon the whole the uth has favorable for such farm work ass done at this season Winter wheat is up, and is reports Ing well in the States 10 the east of wianip] i, and, while the erop is It ondition in Kansas and Miss prove beneficial in thos In Texas the general abnen very favorable for was nearing tions as early Pp ms generally ing will be this year eaiier however, the Aton secured before pr bly not before D beety is usually Matos pletoiy I'he frosts during enused » Texas but the rep %i . i ight, Misslasing BAY A ¥ye wl His vital operation that he Wyse aiLon A ranry of reais gud mine £400 to 8500 they expoct t f{ THE MARKETS. Late Wholesale Prices of Country Produce Quoted In New York. @ 8675 Fowis State, Western, ¥ pring chickens of fTREY Ducks ¥ pair ’ “ine Western, ¥ pair .e Goose, Western, P pale. cove 1 Pigeons, ¥ pair. “ven DRESSED POULTRY PFREAN Tarkeys, 9H Chickens, Phila, ¥ Western. PI Fowla St, and West Ducks Fair to tency, Eastern, ¥ Ib Spring. L.L.#0. Goose Eastern, 1 Squa’s-Dark ¥ doz Thite, ¥ doo TY YREAETARLES Potatoes Sate, # 180 hae Jersey, ¥ bbl " L. L, in bulk, ¥ bi Cabbage, LL. 9100... Onlons-—-St. & West, ¥ bbl Eastern, red, ¥ bhi Enstern, white, ¥ bbl 1. 1. & Jersey, yellow, ¥ bbl Bquash, marrow, ¥ bbl, Habbard, ¥ bbl, Carrots, ¥ bhi h es Turnips, Russia, ¥ bbl White, ¥ bhi . Ow! . L. LL. ¥ doz. bunches Canlifiowers, ¥ bbl. . Nwent tons, Bo, Jersey Virginia, P01... Parsnips ¥ bbl "1 2 ¥ 3999998994 93% vedee ree ~3%28R a Ba a - i aggsa RoaZggEERERIEREE GRAIN, ETO, Figurines Focal, oo Nprin ORR coco saunas What Ro 2 Rd, ss snes vor Barley Ungraded Western OorR=N0. 3...0000¢ « ciivm Onts-No, 2 White, . co.cc Mixed Womtorn ....oovevies Hay Good to Chole, vo... StrawLong Rye Hoods «Clover, @ 100 Timothy, # 100. ....... Tard Oty Steam. ....... LIVE ST00K, we gaEEI 8% 33833 wn - -y ETL - 0 SEE 2002.3. g3mEsR Sesesgs - tr wy Dooves Mileh heey, the. oom. to goad, 80 ¥ 100 he “aod © SETICE. 2 SEAREARA NS 8 Pim tw 6 FEARAR NR EET he LLL AE a SABBATH SCHOOL, INTERNATIONAL LESSON NOVEMBEK 12, Fom Lesson Text: “The Grace ality,” 2 Cor. vill., 1.12. Golden Text: 2 Cor. vill, 9 ~Commentary. of TAbere 1. “"Morsover, | (make known to you) of th bestowed on the Philllippl, Thessalonica Macedonia wore the gospel through xvil,, 1). Thess chur thelr faith and w Fhe iv., 16, 163 And Paul toy manifestation of the grace others might be quickens and Iabors of love and our Lord Jesus Christ dant labors he « t God (1 « rethiren, we do chur hes nnd the first in raw wr. Xv Wfier Me et hi : is oross and istran the His nis and Kk love of »d in th aear bapter IE, Ady Now, therefore, perform the doing of it, that as ther there which works was a readiness to will, so nay be a performance also out of that have When God works, Ha to wii and to &« When ws have the will and the wherewithal, there must surely be a performance ; otherwise the wiii is really not there, and what seems A willingness is merely a word of mouth without any heart to it Be yo doers of the word, and not hearers oaly deceiving your ownselves 12. “For if there be first a willing mind, is accepted according to that a man hath and not according to that he hath not.” There & no use wasting breath in telling what we would do if we eid, for God only asks » willing mind to do what we oun, If it shall be sald of us that we did what we could (Mark xiv., 8), we oan ask no highes cotnmendation. As to the willing mind and offering read Ex. XV. xxxv., 21, 22, 0 1Chron. xxix, 9. Thea re member that “God Is able to make all grace abound toward you, that ye always having all sufMclency in all things may abound to overy good work” (chapter Ix, 8). It snot A question of what we can or eannot do, but Aguestion of what God can do through us when we are willing to Jet Him, —~Lesson Helper, ve bot} Poor Reward For Generosity, President Caraot has been singularly (li. requitted for a generous action. It will be remembered that In 1888 & aan named Por. rin fired a revolver at the President, fore tunately oaly with bank certridge, as the Intter was leaving the Eiysee to proceed to Yersallios on the ocoasion of the centenary of the opening of the famous States General, Perrin was arrosiod, tried for his ofenss, and sentenced to four months’ imprisonment, As he was the Gather of « large family, M. Caruot *yok pity on him, snd immedintely on his release gave him an »
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