JAMES G BLAINE BIS DEATH AT WASHINGTON AND SKETCH OF HIS LIFE. Br glnnlngof Hi Political Career. Speak er, Senator, Secretary cf State, Tresi dentin Candidate and Bittcnnn. Hi Bereavements and Ill-Fntcd Hour in Washington The Blaine Household. Mr. Hlntne .lied at his home in Wah ington, P.C., Friday morning, at 11 o'clock. Tb end ramc peacefully. He was surrounded by lis family at the last moment. Death came painlessly and quietly. It approach waa made evident to t tie family Inlly two hours before ita occurrei.ee, ANr0. THAI.Nr yeoM 1 AIT FUOTCK.PAril, TAKKX IN '.2. Between 8 and 0 o'clock Friday morning the first dnncerotis symptoms were observed. Mrs. Trice, the trained nurse, had cone for her breakfast, leaving the patient temporar ily alone. Maine had passed a resiles night and had been pronounced "not well" by his physicians, but beyond a perceptible in crease of the languor which had marked his condition during the previous few day there was no very alarming change to be Doted. When the nurse returned from her breakfast, however, her experienced 'eye at fince saw that the end was drawing near. Both physicians were immediately tele fraphed for, and arrived in a few minutes. The powerful heart stimulant, nltro-glycer-Ine, which had several times before brought the patient back out of the valley of death, was powerless now. In the meantime all the family had been summoned Into the death chamber Mrs. Blaine, the devoted wife; Miss Haltie Blaine, his unmarried daughter; Vrs. Dam rrnh, his married daughter, James (J. I.laine, Jr., his only surviving son, and Miss Dodge (Hail Hamilton), his cousin. In silent, tearful sorrow they witnessed the closing scenes. The patient lay so quietly that even the doctors were hardly able to say when he died. No word of con iciousness. no look of recognition passed. At 10:45 he lay so still tbat the window hades were raised to give more light, to enable the physicians to determine if life till lingered. Fifteen minute Ur they proclaimed him dead. The news was instantly flashed a;l over the world. Young Mr. Blaine was in the act of writ, iug a note to President Harrison to inform bim of the event, when the President him self arrived, accompanied by his private tee retary and Secretary of Plate Foster. All the rest of the Cabinet quickly followed ami the excitement throughout the city became general as the news spread. Both houses of Congress adjourned and the former associ ates of the ex-Senator and ex-peaker of both political parties united in eloquent tributes to hia memory. The physicians have officially made pub ic the canse of death as Bright' disease, aggravated by tubercular disease of the lungs and followed by he art failure. HIS WONDERFUL MEMORY. Btorles Illustrating Mr.Blaine's Remark able Faculty for Remembering Names, Face and Events.After Many Yeara. Washinotiin, Jan. I!?. Senator Saw yer, of Wisconsin, tells the following a to Mr. Blaine'a wonderful memory for names and facea: "In 1874 Mr. Blaine made a speech In Wisconsin and was my guest. J gave a dinner In bla honor, to which I invited Mr. Myer, of Fond du Lac. In 181, more tnan 16 years afterwards, Mr. Myer came to Washington and I took him to call on Mr. Blaine. Before we got there we met Mr. Blaine and, when within bout 40 feet of him, he walked quickly forward and without any hesitation said; 'Mr. C. L. J. Mver, hew do you dbi' " A gentleman of the party with Senator Buwyer, said: "I was with Mr Tthiln l. uuMitr, u., auring a cumpaign Mr. maine naa lived there, and he g srreat reoention H rmn,i..i fr got a 1 the eld residents. Finally some one brought - wu wuum uiey aula ne would uot remember. Mr. Blaine replied: "Yes. I do. Give me a little time.'' Pretty soon be remarked to the man : 'I never aaw So but once,' and then be told is story: When a boy there was great excitement one day because a convict had escaped from the Columbus penitentiary end bad been tracked into thai neighbor food. Police arrested him and Mr. Blaine said he waa one of the crowd round. The man was taken to a black- Emith ahop and had fettera riveted on him y the blacksmith. 'You,' turning to the nan, 'and I walked home to Lancaster together after tbat.' " Three Men Killed in Collision. Two freight train collided on the Santa Fe road near Millsdale, nine mile south ef Joliet, ill., and Engineer A. II. Kaun and Richard Mitchell and Brakeman M. J. Ma honey were killed. The other trainmen scaped without injury. Bo b train were badly wreoked and the pecuniary lees will be heavy. Out of population of about 80.000,000 in Prussia, only about one-tenth of them possess, it 1 said, an income of 000 mark year, whlcfl I equal to about 1226. THE PRESIDENT DEEPLY MOVED He Orders an Adjournment of the Cabl net Meeting and Issues a Froclamatiot for Official Mourning. WAsni!oTc.K,.inn. m. The cabinet was In session when the news of Mr. Blaine's death wa announced to them. President Harrison was deeply moved and said he felt unable, nndcr the circumstances, to enter upon the consideration of any pnblic business with the members of the Cabinet, most of whom had been associ ated with Mr. Blntnr In the official family relations, and therefore the meet a 1 lne 1 an,n" was adjourned. The President later Issued the follow Ing proclamation: It Is my painful duty to announce to the People ot the United Plates th death ot James Gillespie Blaine, which occurred In this city to-day at II oYlm k For a tull feneration thin eminent citizen has occupied a conspicuous and Influential position In the Nation tils first puhllc eer vice was In the Legislature ot Ms state Afterward for 14 years he was s member ol the N.itlc ,al House ef Hrpicsentativt and was thru times chosen Speaker In 1M7D he was elected to the Senate Here signed his seat lu that hotly In 1KH1 to ac eept the position of Secretary of State In the Cabinet ot President Oarfleld After the tragic death ot his chief he resigned and, devoting himself to literary work gave to the public In his "Twcnly Years In Ton- fjress" a most valuable and enduring con rlbutlon to our polltlcnl literature In March. 1H80. he avaln twam Hnrr.i,t State and continued to exercise this office uuiu .rune, insv nop, diplomacy and literature, uls has added new lustre to American renins cltt7.cn- mil. As a suitable expression of the National appreciation of his great public services and ft the general sorrow caused by his death 1 direct tbat on the day of his funeral, nil the Sepsrtraents of the cxei utlve hianch ot the Government at -Washington he closed and that on all public, buildings throughout tfcs United States, the National hag, shall be dismayed at balfsutf, and that for a period of an days, the department of State be draped In meurnlng. The Mourning t nlversal. WisniNOTOR, Jan. ST. Tbe Leglsln ture of the various States that are at present in session all adjourned to-day pen learning of Mr. Blaine'a death. From all over the country come expres sions of sorrow. Telegrams of condo lence are reaching the Blaine family by the thousands. FKETl'H OF MR. BLAINE'S LIFE. Jnmes Gillespie Blaine was born on the Slst of January, 1830, at West Brownsville, Penn,. in a house built by his great-grandfather before the War of the Revolution, which still stands. The Gillespie and Blalnes were people of standing before the Revolu tion. Colonel Blaine, who was commissary general ot the Northern Department of Washington's army during the Revolution, was Jnmes O. Blaine's great-grandfather. Whn eleven years old, he went to live with uncle, Thomas Ewinz, in Ohio, where his mother's father, Meal Gillespie, an accom plished scholar, directed his studies. Later he attended Washington College, at Wash ington, I'enn., graduating at the age of sev enteen. After leaving college be tan rht school at Clue Lick Springs, Ky. It was as a profes sor in the military school there that he made the acquaintanca of the lady a school teacher from Maine who afterward bevime bis wife. Later be went to Philadelphia, where he taught school and studiellnw. hut after two years he abandoned law stud ies, went to Maine, and became proprietor ami editor of the Kennebec Journal. At the birth of the Republican Party he was a delegate to the Philadelphia Conven tion in ls.'itt, which nominated Fremont. After serving as Speuker of the M'tine leg islature, he was sent to Congress and begau his National ciireer in IWiJ, with the out break of the war. During the Forty-first Forty-s eond and Frrtv-thir 1 Congresses be was eipeaker of the House. Mr, Blaine's administration of the Speak ership is commonlv regarded as one of the most brilliant and successful in tin annals ot the House. He had rare aptitude and equip ment for the duties of presiding officer, and his complete mastery of Parliamentary law, bis dexterity and physical endurance, his rapid nispstch of business, and his Arm an 1 impartial spirit were recognised on all sides. It was during his occupancy of the Speak er's chair in ISM tnat he took the floor an t succeeded in defeatiuj; the passage of tne original "Fores bill." The political revulsion of 1874 placed the fleinocrats in control of the House, and Mr. B.aine became the leader of the minority. The session preceding the Presidential con test of IS7ti wa a pdi-iol of stormy and Vt uement contention. Oil the 2 1 of May a resolution was adopted in the House to in vestigate an alleged purchase by the Union Pacific Railroad Company of certain bonds ot the Little Kockand Fort Hmith Kiilrond Company. It soon became evident tbat the investigation was aimed at Mr. Blaine. An extemie I t,uineH4 correspondence on bis part with Warren Fisner, ot Boston, run ning through years and relating to various Iranwiiour, had tnllen into the hands o. a clerk named Mulligan, an t it was allege I that t lit production ol this correspondence would confirm the imputation against Mr. Blaine. When Mulligan was summon! to MR. ULSINI'I B1RTRPLACB Washington Mr. Blaine possessed himself of the letter, together with memorandum tbat contained a full index and abstraot. On Many Mexican Miner Killed. Fire broke out in tbe Conception mine, at Atorci. State of Ban Lull Potoai, Mexico. Thirteen poraons bay already been recover- eo, inenrenui rages, ana at latest advice other workings had collasped and further subsidence waa momentarially expectrC. Th lose financially will reach l,000,u00. A 6-riAB-oi.D Arkansaa negro boy i e. citing people by reading correctly book In all language. He oan turn to any dealgnat- n.Te0' ,!Lil,bi1' at M reedily a ear practiced dlvin. nianevnuon to ttie public I passim through there roid rin interests, nta mirkeri nhint ht. i- . sited Yintri.,1 r. " ' . - . mi ...i . limine arm ami pleasantly h " ih.Pi,rJ .H.,,. .,""n... u:r. "' him about hi. coning holl his countrymen and the admiration of the i it" T ,l.en!'v1'', 'J'" """" wor d. In the varleil m,,.,,it. i i.-i., . I I he death of Mr. tlarfle hi el tn 5tTfl . NyM , the flth of June, ISTd, he rose to personal explanation, and after denying the power of the House to compel the prolurtion of his private papers, and his willingness to go to any extremity In defense of his rights, he declared that he propose J to reserve noth-"V- Holding up the letters he exclaitne.l. .. 'Tha"J; Gol. I ant not ashsmsd to show them. There is the very orlennl package. And with some sense of humiliations with a mortification I do not attempt to conceal, with a sense of outrage which I think any mnn in my position would feel, I invite the confidence of 40,fll)0,(l of mv countrymen while 1 read these letters from mv desk " i ne demonstration closed with dramatic scene. Josinh Caldwell, one of the origina tors of the Little Hock and Fort Smith Rail road, who had full knowledge of the whole transaction, was traveling In F.nrope and both side were seeking to rommunlc.tte with him. After finishing the reading of the letters Mr. Blaine turned to the Chair man of the Commltt-e and demanded to know whether he had received anv dispatch from Mr Caldwell. Receiving an evas.ve answer Mr. Blalnn assertsd, as within hia own knowledge, that the Chairman had re ceived such a dispatch "eompletoly and ab solutely exonerating mi from this charge and you have suppressed It" In 187.1 Mr. Blaine wss appoints I to the Senate to fill the vacancy causo l by the re. signatlon of Senator Morrill, and the next winter was elected bv the Legislature to the succeeding term. His career in the Senate was both brilliant and distinguis ic I, as it bad been In the House. He was cillo.l from the Sennte to enter President (larft ild's t'nbinetas Secretary of State. It was while pot leaning matting lay that ratal bullet. Mr. Blaine's retirement fro n the Cabinet, in Decambsr, j-i. rrom innt nate until lie entered Mr, Harrison's Cabinet as Secretary of 8tut, be was in private life excopt 'during his campaign for the Presidency in 1HS4. During his retirement Mr. Blaine wrote his "Twenty Years in Congress," a work of great historical value. It was in accordance with hia original sungestion and due to his earnest efforts that provision was made in the McKlnley bill for the reciprocity trea ties which formed such prominent features of National policy. The Hamoan diltlrul- ties, the complications arising out of the lynching of Italians at New Orleans.and the killing of American seamen at Valparaiso were nlso disposed of while Mr. Blaine was at the head of the State Department. The events preceding and atton ling the recent Minneapolis Convention are too recent nl most to need recounting. Mr. Blaine was induced to permit his name to be used as a cindidnte, nnd reuu'nj 1 his placs in the Cabinet. Whether in publio position cr in private life, he alwars remained central figure in National alTiirs. BLAISE'S LIKK 1ST WASHI.XGTOt. For nearly thirty yosrs Mr. Blaine has been a resident of Washington. While he never gave up his home an I borne life in Maine, where he had a town residence in Augusta and s summer residence at Bar mm MRS. 1AMK 05. T.M!fg. Harbor, yet be alsr had a home In Washing ton. It wa only a few years after roiur there as a Member of Cinurress that he bought the residenc?, 8!1 Fifteenth street-, where he lived so many years. This was alout the year ISfW. when he was electeJ Hnaaker of the House for the first time. The house hebou'ht was one of row which had Just bwn unlit and was re garded at that time as on ot the chief architectural features ot the city. He made bis home at ail Fifteenth street for over ten years and then having built the fine residence fronting on Dupont Circle, he told the old houe and took nossssiion of the new one. The death of Garfield an I Mr. Blaine's retirement from public life caused a change in his plans and be leas ?d his Dupont Circle house to Mr. L-lter. He was absent from ths city tor several years, al though hespsnta portion of one or two winters there aud occupied the house on La fayette tquire adjoiuiug General Beate's residence, which isowuelby the daughter of ths lata Representative Hcott,of Pennsyl vania, Mrs. Scott Townsend. About the beginning ot his administration he purchased bis late nome, whici is on ta opposite side ot Lsfayette tquare, and is BEAR WARl.tUTJW, MX. known as the Seward House. Tne old plaoe had been unoccupied for some years and was In a dilapidated condition It was The wealthleat cluss in the United Btate is considered to be vastly richer than the wealthiest class In lireat Britain. The aver age annual income of the ricbe-t 100 Eng- listi men is about auu.uuu, nut the average annual income of the richeit 100 American cannot be lew than 200,000- Trlpists.-Qrover, Fraooes and Ruth. Martha Janvier, wife of a well-to-do farm r living near Athol, Md., gave birth tQ triplet boy and two girl. Th happy father, In the eostacy of bis Joy and patriot- ta.bM.u..dtU.mOroy.r, Fncet u.d ,. WW considers! notoriously unlucky, two tragedies having occurred within Its portals Durinr Buchanan's administration It was occupied as a clubhouse. One day Philip Barton Key, the vcrnai and handsnms Dis trict Attorney of the District of Columbia, bad just left the clubhouse when ho waa shot down by Congressman Sickles, of New York. Mr. Key waa carried back to the clubhouse. An Intrigue which Key had been carrying on with Sickles' wife was the cause of the encounter. fjaaSpHvW'il ifiippw! 1 ; lis sflff w A m 3 mlwmm vn. nrAtNK'g BumnRsjcg Two years after this occurrence the hnm. which was for a time unoomnie I, was taken ny tne men necretary ot Ktt, William H. Seward, and he moved intu it with his fam ily. On the night ot April 14, lW., while Mr. Seward lay sick in bed in one of the upper rooms, a big, oak cotnplexionod, broad shouhterei mnn rang the door bell and told the servant who admitted bim that he bad a package of mediolne which the Sec retary's physician ha I ordered to h deliv ered to him personally. The srvaut re lused to allow him to go upstairs nnl tin Secretary's son, Frederick if. Seward, also opposed him; but the stranger, unking a feint of departure, suddenly sprang at. Frederick and felled him to the Moor with the butt of a revolver, almost on the same instant slashing the servant with a knife. He then darted forwarl aud reached the sick chamber where Secretary St ward was sitting up in bed. The knife gleamed again and Mr. HewarJ, weak and helpless, was stabbed in the face anil neck, but tht band ages that swathed his neck save I him from a mortal wound. As the murderous intruder retreated he was again intercepted, this time by Major Augustus H. Seward and an attendant, but ha shook them olf, and running down stairs, leaped on his horse and rode oft. He was c iptured a few riavs later, and being lully ideutitled as Iwis Payne, one of the men implicate I in President Lincoln's death, was tried, condemnel anil ex ecuted with his fellow-conspirators. Bo great was the alarm excited by the attempt on Mr. Seward's life that from 180? to lHiil) a soldier waa kept constantly on guird In front ot the old mansion. The Secretary re covered, but his only daughter, who bat witne'sed Payne's assault, was so territdy shaken by tbe affair that she dial not long afterward. Secretary of War Belknap was tbe next tenant ot toe house of misfortune, nn l for a time the sober old edifice became gay with the life of the Urant regime. Before a twelve month ita evil genius bad again asserted It self and Mrs. Belknap lay dead under its roof after a brief illness. Then, after the Melknane vacated, it again did duty, as in the earlier days, aa a boarding-house, but Washington ha I somehow got ths impres sion that the place was uuoanny and that Its tenants were dogged by an evil fate. For a time the Commissary Ueneral's staff held possession, then when they had moved to tbe War Department's new build ing it was again tenautlesi. It was about this time tbat Mr. Blaiue, shortly after bis , . --tflj.t. Blaine's avoxsta RKSinsxce. appointment a Secretary of State by Presi dent Harrison, astonished his friends by renting tne ui-o nenl House ror ten year at -UHK) a yoar. Hs decorated anc" reno vated it throughout, tearing down the walls ol the room in wb cu tbe atte npt ou Mr. Seward's lite took place, and by generous expenditure transformed tbe dingy old wide-roomed bouse into a magnificent mod ern residence. Yet ail the chaiuns failed to eradicate tbe characteristic attributed to the mansion by the superstitious Washington ianr. Becoming ita tenant, Mr, Blaine bus encountered the greatest reverses to iiis am bitions, and experience! tbe keenest sorrows of bis ill. It ', blmik's rnorEiuv. Although known as a tnan of compara tively large wealth, Mr. Blaine's life during bis term as Seui-etarf of Stat i was fur from bein; ostentatious. His home on Lafayette square was well suited tor entertainment, nut, owing to the fact that what is called the "adminis tration circle" has been almost constantly in mourning during tbe past fcur years, it bis been used but little for that purpose, Mr. Blaine's fortune had its origin in tracts of land in Western Pennsylvania, w.iich were left by nis father, Epbraim L. Blaine who had bimialt In inherited them from the elder James Uillesnie Blaine. The mint valuable of these properties was a tract of coal land near tbe Monongahela River. Mr. Blaine made most of his money out of thess lands and out of investments in West Virginia. Mr. Blaius's last visit to tbe Capitol on a public oocasion was when he attended, with other members of tbe Cabinet, the Congres sional funeral of Samuel J. Kan lull. Mr. Blaine bail always a great respect and admir ation for Mr. Randall, who had led the minor ity in the House when Mr. Blaiue was tb Speaker. His last appearanos before a com mittee was wueu he protested to the Senate Finance Committee against the passage of the McKinley Tariff bill in the form in which it had come from the House and brought. Peculiar Coasting Aocideot At Boston, Mass., Wlllium Teuney, a boy of 11 year, ran again st a horse while coast ing. Th animal fell on the lad and crush ed him todeath. The body was horribly mangled. There i a wonderful grapevine at Galllao, town In Southern France. Al though the plant i only ten year, from tht cutting It baa yielded a many s 1,287 bunches of fine fruit In a slnls year. The man who hits Christ ha ever thing God'i law requires of bim. forward his policy of reciprocity with ths other republics of this continent. Mr. Blaine's last visit to the Whit House was when he attended the funeral services ol Mrs, Harrison. tin. nr.stsjK'g Roi-sxrtot.n. Of Mr. Blaine's six children, three-two sons and a daughter were suddenly stricken down by death aftfr reaching maturity. His eldest son, Walker, a yo-inz man of fine parts, who ha I glvnn evidence is WAaiiisinT.it, n. t of rare abilities nnl wis nnptra.-itlr destine! to a brilliant future, died twoyeirs ngo, Knimons, bis s.-cml son, a bright business man, in manner au 1 oharaeler closely resembling his 'ulnar, als die I su I deuly in the heyday o." youth an I prosperity. A third and crushing bereavement, was the death of th eldest daughter, Alice, who wis lunrnel to Lieutenant Colonel John J. Copplnner. It followed closely on the death of her brother, Walker Blaine, whose funeral sue was at tending when seir.il br ths fatil ill nss. Of the three surviving children, the son, James (i., llviile nil unfortunate marriage, the results of whioh em bittered the Uttsr y.sars of his father's life. Due of tin daughters. Miss Margaret, is married to M-. Walter Damroscli, the fa mous New York mus.cal director, and tbe other. Miss Harriet, is un nnrriel. Mrs. mm 'fi.., Bt.ISIR COTTAGE" AT BAIt RARRnR. Blaine Is still an active and brilliant Ittdy. She has baen a devoted wife to the great statesman, who ii she married forty one years ago when both were school teachers in a country district with but little to indicate the prominent place they were destine I to fill lu the bijhest circles of tue Nation. ITEMS OF INTEREST. Piui.AnKLPHlA'8 City Hall has cost about f20,000,tKW. I Russia has a treatury deficit of nearly 14, CO 1,0(10. A British Feleratiou of farina-' clubs Is to be forineJ. The emigrants who left German ports for the United Statei in 1B.IJ numbered Iflb.MO. A MoRMOif colony Is settling In Mexico by Instalments. About three tbousin I are to emigrate to Chlbuabua soon. There is Horse Accident Prevention As. ociation in London, tbe object of waicb is to keep slippery streets grareie l or eauded. Nxvf OHLEiifa lemon Importars assert that the fu nes ot sulphur usud in fumigat ing ships ill quarantine there destroy the fruit. Alt" Indianapolis fireman lost bis mind and killed himself through remorse over a man's dea.li who "subbed'1 fur him at a fire tw years ago. Denmark exported considerably more than IUJ,U.iO,0ih) pounds of butter last year. Tbe trade has more ibau doubled iu the put five years. Illuminated walking sticks ore among the latest applicttions o. electricity. A small incandescent lamp is onoalo I in the head of a cane and iau bj ignited by spring. Tiikre are now Vi.ODO ofTl-ors In the French infantry. The military schools graduate about, six hundred and fifty Pin cers annually an I about the same number are lost by death, disnussiou or retirement. The Grand Duke of Baden has presented the order of "Z u-hrmgen" to Dr. W. J. Hoffman, of the Smithsonian Institution, Washington, in recognition ot his distin guished contributions to ethnological science. Some one has computa I that the college endowment of Massachusetts foot up to tlC.O.VJ.WX). The buildings and grounds are worth .",IMJ,000, while tbe scientific appos ratus ot all the higher institutions is worts 1,(JJ0,00C TgM more buffaloes consigned to Austin Corbin's game preserve, on Croydon Moun tain, have arrived at their destination. 'I bis increases tue herd to thirty-tnree, making it, with one exception, the lurgest private herd in the United St itas. William Black, the novelist, doss bis literary work in a room at the top of his bouse, above the noise of tbe street, and away from all unneoassary interruptions. nr. niacas room, apart trom a row of book shelves aud a desk, is almost bare of com forts. Richmond, Va is to have an art museum. The munillcent gift is from the Valentine fainily.ot wbo.n'El. V Valentine, the sculptor, is one, and is valued at about $U'.(HX). It constats ot the Valentine mansion, ft library, collection of pictures. curios, manuscripts, tapestries, statuary ana nrcnatoioeicai specimens. The American tlet There. Tbe city of London covers 087 an n are mils nf land, and vet. thorA are American tourists who can see It ' nil In wn Hen- n r. S Vov- r. 1MA I to take the evening mall train for Paris. m not good subjects: First boy (In rt gallery) All these historical pictures Is about foreign countries. Why don't the artists paint pictures of American history? (second boy I guess It's 'cause Americans always kep' thur clothes on. Good Newt. sJT EULOGIES IN CONORE8S. fitting Words Spoken in the Senate and Bouse, After Which Both Bodies Ad journ for tbe Day. Wasbiwotob, Jan. 7. The Kenate met this morning In tbe gloom which the In telligence of Mr. Blaine' death naturally tast over the Capitol. Mr. Dale, of Maine, one of deceased' closest friends, formally announced the death. He said: A very great man has passed from this jartb. .tames O. Blaine Is dead. His areer tas i so remarkable and his services so creat hat In all the histories which mas lie writ ten of his time be will stand as the central Bgnre not only as to his own country, but on politic and subjects that affected other treat nations. He belonged not to any onn Mate, but to all the country: the Pennsyl vania, which save him nlrthplace and nur tured him, and Maine, where he made hbs tome, and where he became her first rltlr.cn. and Which tilled his lap with all the I '" winrn sne couin nestow, mourn him . tin more to day than do the dwellers by the , shores of the great gulf and In the caiifns of the lar Slerrn. He was for years a (llslln . gulshed member of the House of Repre- seniaiives ami for sit years presided aa lie Xpcaker. He was twice Secretary of State, DDd was until ol lali r moml,., nl ..- ......! ! ent administration. 1 do not think there la on Mrnator here who will not deem It Bt llns. In view of these farts and ot the tact Ilia! he died where his last peaceful look Irom his chamber window might embi ace this Capitol, where bis voire had been so tpa tmrs heard, that we make a prece dent at this time, and that, although Mr. Hlalne was at the time ot tils death a pri vate rltlren, this body take Immediate ad journment. Mr. Cockrell, Democrat, of Missouri, moved an adjournment and it was uiiaiil Bioiisly carried. In the House, after the rhnplain bad) referred feelingly In his prarer to the death of Mr. Blaine, Mr. Milllkcn, of Maine, made the formal announcement. Mr. Hulmun, Democrat, of Indiana, said: The deaths which have been announced so recently ot Illustrious citizens may well brine to our minds the prophetic words of the Hebrew King, "How are the mighty fallen'" The drain of James O. Hlalne will proloundly Impress the sensibilities of the country. A great man Is dead. He laid the foundation of his tame In this city. Hero were his great and early triumphs. How oflcn have we heard lu tht ball the tone of his ringing eloquence. Great In statesmanship, knounnotonly in our country, but to the statesmen of the civilised world And not only ereat in statesmanship, not only one of the Illustrious characters which have Illustrated the value o, free Institutions, list beyond that he was great In the held of literature. As the historian of the grandest epoch In Hie history of the world, he did ills work well. His history, covering a period of years, will eo down to posterity as one of the brightest Illustrations of the period In hlch he lived, and of the grandest event ot which he was a part. It would ai-em. Mr. Speaker, to be emi nently proper and flttlnr that with the an nouncement of his death here In this, the theater ol his first achievements, this house, put of respect to his memory, should ad journ. I therefore move tbat tkc House do now adjourn." The motion waa agreed to and th Bouse adjourned. THE CAUSE OF DEATH. 'ntersticlal Nephritis, a Form of Bright' Disease, Coupled With Lung and Heart Treuble. The Fatal Attack. WsSBiKOTo, Jan. S7. The physicians have officially made public the cause of death as Intersticial nephritis, a form of Bright' disease, aggravated by tuber rular disease of the lungs, and followed by heart failure. Dr. Johnston said that since the attack ot heart failure on Sunday, December IS last, there bad been no hope of Mr. Blaine's ultimate recovery, flisdeath waa but a question of how long his remarkable vitality would hold out. Following Is the ofllclul statement of the attending physiclaus, Drs. Johnston and Hyatt: "The beginning'of Mr. Blaine's Illness dates back some years. The earliest sign of Ill-health were associated with and no doubt due to a gouty tendency, which manifested itsell in subacute attacks of gout, disturbance of digestion and progressive innutrition and anoetnia. "Subsequent events prove tbat at tbl time changes were going on in the art eries of the body, which resulted later In symptoms of obliteration of vessels and In chronic disease of the kidneys. The attack of paralysis in 18H7 was connected with similar alterations In the blood ves sels of tbe brain. "During the summer of 1RK8 the evi dences of tailing health were more de cided, and in November, alter hi return to Washington, his symptoma suddenly assumed an aggravated form. From this time, although there were periods of ap parent improvement, he continued to grow worse from week to week. "The symptom were, nt first, more di rectly connected with the kidneys, and examinations of the urine showed that there was a progressive intersticlal change going on in tbe organ( and tbat be had a form of chronic Bright' disease. In December signs of lung complications appeared, which were no doubt connected with the general disease; but a tubercle bacilli were found in the sputa, It is probable that there was some tubercular infection) as well. Much of the distress which Mr. Blaine suffered waa associated with this disease of the lungs and his death was certainly hastened by it. "Toward the end of December, the heart began to show signs of unusual weakness from cardiac degeneration and dilatation, and on December 18 he had an alarming attacit of heart exhaus tion; from this he rallied, but others of the same nature recurred on several occasions. From tbe middle of January these attacks ceased und the action of the heart was more uniformly good. There was, however, a dully loss of flesh and strength. "For three day before Mr. Blaine' death there was no marked change in bis condition; each day he seemed somewhat more feeble than on the day before, and on the night before bis death he did not seem to lie in any imme diate dancer. Towards the morning of Januarv 27 his pulse waa observeil to be very feeble and his breathing more embarrassed. As a result of tbe tailing heart action oedema ot the lungs oc curred, and he died without much suffer Inp at 1 1 o'clock. "During the whole of Mr. Blaine'a Ill ness the digestion was well performed, and liquid food, chiefly milk, was taken In full quantities. His mind was generally clear, except wheu clouded by uroemia and disturbed brain circulation. Al though unable to express himself in words, be recognised all the member ol his family up to within a few moment ol his death." The statement of the physicians will not be supplemented by an autopsy, ths members ot the fa mil v being thoroughly satisfied as to the cause of death. U'hs body will not be embalmed for burial, tin family objecting lo any disturbance of it Fair Buildinga Damaged. Hundred ol feet of the annex roof of the Manufacturer' Building at the World IT1 .. : , . . . ruir, viucago, cavea in Huturday. The acci dent wa due lo tbe weight of snow and ice. The damage J up in tbe thousand. The udden thaw wa tbe cause. The otbar build ing at tbe Fair are being watched with anxiety. The Agricultural Building wa also damaged. Tux steam ferryboat Robert Garret!, which ply between Brooklyn and New York City, carries a many a 5,000 passen ger at a si I trip. It is said to be the largest steam passenger ferryboat In eai. nee, ' )