walssd ui z br wnl ili wa - chronicling...

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I I L w GETS IIEAR REPORTS c X fS > ftSS QEXSKAL SECRKTART A1TD 372- V l t 4 EXECUTIVE BOARD UI aol Mft t i JUUhmVi rirnM Oat ttat t Or r aa t XAMt Oily OOOOO HMb raTli Brd r Had If BoycetltAboat Wa Warl- MiKHKxVoLiB Oct 7Tho cffoot of M- Xowderly I addres yesterday ha been geno- itil f A l y good Ills expressions with regard to hi- plleced connection with socialism and anarch- Jroro very well received and have won corn g mont In lita favor Tho talk 1 general amon the delegates that a fight over the new const iutlon is likely to come up and that the con i titutlon will be bitterly opposed by the ant A lending Eastern Knight expresses t I Ion that the dissatisfaction over this matter i I vary mitcli stronger than the admlnlstratioi q fi men hovoAny Idea of Tho antls would havo to poll n twothirds vote to win The prin- olt t point of opposition among tho antts1 Booms to bo tbatthoydonotllko the Idea of thi r1 general officers holding office for a two yean L term They also mako the claim that at leosi U 4 I two of the present aner omcrrtar I Lltcbman and ff incompetent The administration delegates asked In regard tho matter stato emphatic- ally I that these charges of Incompetency an entirely without foundation In fact They say two hotter men for the positions named tat not be found in tho organization Itii evident that tho two faction in the Convex f tlon tear each other Long secret oaucusef 1r1 ore hold nlgbtly by each of them Y Ucmoral decretory Lltchman presented h L report today The following Is a synopsis It The nuaabrommbrIrpOrtedInrOodtndth ai tbe Iut Miilon of IhelnoaIAmbl wa IIJ24 11 ami 1 the number 7 Tl mail thS epparentinemberihlpo th ordir ii reported the tremendous growth In the early pert of tl 1t7 be reinimlxred 1ropl came Into the P irutir by hundred thouiand to that a inipenslon ol k Initiation for forty davsirai ordered After ihU tony 1 dr hat expired the itemln commented and thi i4 ro ut wax to lirlux to rol orimnliatlon a nail of mate- rial trenftb this proved iiMlf t beawnkuew rather than a fur the >lx months relowlol the leulon of tho Gen- t erl Auembly at paper of tb country liar bel tilled continually with axaulta upon the order J ant the neutral oRon and Teryibtnir poiitbli- ha 1 < ben done to sod deuror tbo order a xet in oumboof- mu ti o plofUthlo vovu ltoaUhoot 4Ciouu Add to ll 11U x who are In tho earn relation to tbe orer U07A3 re 4b fortod M In arrtan In the report and we would Karalh merabertblp ot th e order 6sa JO July 1 1K8- 7ThU ff would Indoaln apparent decrial o boOIIO CUmmb for the Dual ksr4 July 1 bow be with balances on w hand ar 1of t3731lrr l The Ut neral Afiembly at Htchmond after adopting a certain amendment to the eomutution rtftrred th ifl balance of the report or the Committee on Law together wlih inch other ebanze aa had been pmented to the f Jeueral Aeiembly to a peclal commute of revision I It wa ordered that thi committee In conjunction with the Ueneral Hxecutiv Board ihould prepare a rovielo- nt the constitution and lubmlt the attn to a vote ot th v local auemblle of the order Th remit of the detib- t I tratloni of this commute on Mtlilon waa labmltted to- lbs local auemblle aa provided under the vote under Ich I the commltte I waa appointed The awemblle 1 re requested to vote upon the constltntlon proper a r J nut proposition and upon the article relating to latlonal trail assemblies as the second proposition The returns tomlhe 10olImble showed that Aitea local proposition and embl I that J863 local assemblies voted yea on t JlIot proposition and 10 no j Tho General Secretory makes a number of 4 recommendations which may h summarized f as follows That the inbjtct of tabllshlng a cooperative saving L association be considered by the Commute the Slate of the Order dlr II ii deemed advisable the proper f authority he given Insecure an ant of Incorporation for the organization and management of mob an lustltn lion The primary object of this will be to establish 1 bom foth order In every town or city where i 1bo Nothing will five suehpermanence 1 on organization aa the ruuUment of tbl plan- Brancheaniayb established tn each SII and i pally lb power of lbe order can lad bear In itue various division of coiaeratlv consumption and saving y l duotoD llrbloD have entire control ot his dine rr Tore That State auemblle be made oomprln teadof permissive That the proper ii alder tbe demand for some sort of regalia for members ot lbs order1 and badge to be worn at tnnerala That ther be legislation which will make more stringent the prohibition of the Use of th name of the order or any 8 of Its symbol fa bualnei pup O 11 plth- teortiI General bo Justified In roIOArbot on every artlcl ti ptolnln a of It sym ¬ I i d without the sanction the General L IUTeBoa 1i This paragraph is worthy of note 11 A great deal of complaint ha been mad to the gen- eral ¬ IA once In relation to embezzlement of funds by loa it 1 officers who nbteontntly absconded and thus be notified of pending charges 1 recommend that frg a r ltd In the conitltnUon that a notice or trial p known addreu ijbi absconding omur l ha considered legal summons and that It tile at- conder W fall to appear at the time of IrL either In pel son or by counsel th trial may pree I his absence the same a though its wu I Mrs LenoraM Barry the General Invest ff l Bator of the Order made her annual embracing the results of her inquiries into tin 1 condltionot the working woman ot tho coun- J try bheeaysI- lavlnitua legal authority 1 have been unab to make d4 as tuorouah an Investigation In many 1 would 4 like and after the dlaenam of ltIztrAnnist200bOyfrom- ihestlk mill in Auburn In February lastforhavinrtaken- in through the mill 1 wu obll to Can front IloC through iiabllshment own J to our order lest tome of our members b vtctlnilMd- tonieQuenUv the facts stand In my report are not all from actual observation but from authority which I J eAT every reason to believe truthful and reliable Upon the strength of my observation and experience I 14 I would ask ot officers and members of this order that tnore coutderaUon be rtvin ana more thorough duc- tlonsl to measnr b adopted on behalf et the wurklni I t omen ofonr the majority ot whom are entlreli c ot th lad and industrial question wbcb ot such vital importance once more yea brotbersot lbs Knight of Labor touproo t system that Ii making ananol alone or go- ral but slave to sin and amr who by O divine parentage mlt a call sisters 1 i I rcommend tat It be mAde compulson 1 Upon or National Trade Assembly to have eduoator for the purpose of t f < teaching the true of the order who sbal bo required to pass an examination by Workman on their qualm l Goner e position and that attention tx 44 j turned to the forming of producUvoanddla tylbuttvo cooperative enterprIses particularly i m the nanufaotur1ng of men womens ant eblidren s garments as In this in- dustry 1 wages womon suffer the mOlt from poor Instances of the cruel treatment of working 1 f jrromon are cite At Paterson N J In the k linen thread workl Mr Barry pound that In one brebof1blfndustr women are com In water the 1 plod most of the time barefoot with u- epray t of water from a revolving cylinder flying constantly against the breast and the coldest I J I night in the winter as well as the warmest In- V ummerthoo poor creatures must go to their Borneo with water dripping from their under- clothing along their path because there could i ixtot bo space or a few moments allowed thorn tj herein she to ehanl their clothing As t Pitts- burgh ¬ > who an Ureoodbarpetomforoma j ar em- ploy d in the manufacturing of barbed wire under 1 cable cork works pickle factories bakeries f Koond otaU kind antI all lbs otbrbracbeof buslne- ut ff which women ar mpIOe visited a 5 < large establishment which Is to be SIted for- thmaauraclurlugofnalLsatwhlclwomea t mployo an t be 1t t The report of theGeneral Executive Board loll of tho Knights words of Labor f prefaced t the fol ¬ f this report w would gay that It has been BBA out aim t give to every case presented for our consid- ratlon J speedy and cartful attention as waa possible > Occasional delsyewr onnldablo owl to the nn- nerous 1W and Important ed o and which masT sarse required th prince cf a number i After giving a description of the building purchased last winter in Philadelphia for the use of the Board the committee takes up in regular order 1883 cases on which It baa I paused during the year Most of these ate In W ilgnlflosnt and tow have any public Interest p IleauestB appeals protests demands applica- tion ¬ If queries complaltslolow each other In bewildering the most im iT portantdooumentarelerjedtolsthe report of- f the Committee on Conspiracy appointed at the f Convention The committee has Ichmonl on the Baled blacklist which r Vr thl establishment beep sent to al the eanl mufaturnl 7 resulted in most of the men prolnnllte whose wer in the list from settIng ork l This case opinion of your commute funush- auuceUint opportunity to test certain phaMiof the- coueptnaeylawsofOhIaaswsUal tboMol l United Bute mUll black list u appar by peclal in- vestigation ¬ of Brother fcoyss aaihortud byte corn J mute names ot some men who were nol in tb applI company at the Urn the Irk ¬ i4 curred and had not Wn employed for weeks but wire In the employ et other partIes and II who have been discharged from work In eonMOueac cf tbe ald black list D Your committee are unanimously of th oplnl that a am Speedy xampl should be made In some many tlj ease of conspiracy that ar constantly arising as It I very evident that the laws are timidation of our brolhir r hrcIrs1 au exception and that the sooner risifullr toad lbs btttir it will b OD fb kulhts of Labor b0 fur society ginirally The history ot the Chicago stock yards strike and eighthour movement Is rehearsed and cutS Of tba trademark lawIs for clove man- ufactured ¬ by Knights Labor toy leather- workersproductandforuseonbarrcia Me- mber ¬ lt of the order are recommended to refuse to 1 crockery mode by Knowles Taylor ht Ka Liverpool Ohio on account of firehose opposition to the order Among 9i llrms whose goods orilmUar reasons not rucommended a I II Stetson hl Sherman k Co hats rhusdelphist KranclsCobbTco lime ltock laud Ni tn mehard fap r tompany Uarlluir Me i roller A Vaio atovea Tray N YI IV ciba 8 ie Uit ton Mllllt U Hplnner S Co4 shoe Norway isl Kast- MrouOiburg Olw Company last lrfndsbarg Pa Bound Krook Woolln Mula bound brook f J W Buckiiy A ecu chose roth JervlT Yl Tlagtrdoa A Xawman hlrta rhlladalphlai Houpe- rowvreadboits A- i la rtlluUlpbUiJiaanf Unit Goods Auselauea t T American Tack Company ra hay 1 a i Cerbin Company- locks I n Br Coca I kanIJThnta Sat Wan- isqs4fftJii = I Iurl T a < I i ui 1 o7TY Brooknild MUM Chraplon Hachtn CompanY blOW eli rupees inS binder Hprlngtlld Ohio sUndarfl Sewing Machln Company Cleveland Ohio A report from the CommltUe on State of the Order rehearses tho discussion with a similar committee from the trade union lost Decem- ber ¬ when an atteynotwas mode to settle prlov- nnoos between the unions and tile Kngbt ot sbor In closing the commlttoe sa1 Our opinion Is that the socalled reunc1 they do- exIst sic rather aceeptabl than pie sans In their helrergtnttatlon and are used by them tehlib purpose it and we bilv a lrIOor emanating from our order sent to ill trails and union explainIng our iqrtirwouMreiVltlhniuVh position on the question of trde- orlalllonold by the leaders of trade orgintatlouie- ompllfh destrttctlon of their outIng by absorption Inll blb of Labor of their mmbr and the SlIT on tnelr part to oppose any tendency In that direc- tion ¬ that the autonomy of their dlstlnetlv teals preserved Much rgument are but an mv Ignorance > ot those who advance them of the I I and workingS of our order which portnnlty to any trade to organize within thblnnand perform II I tunctlon a a trad organization when th conditions 1011 would JtU WAR AMONG XUH KNiaUTB- Ueary George Land Theory Firebrand la the VTIIkesbarre Auembly- WttjKESDAJuiE Oct 7An internal w ho broken out In the big Knights of Labor as- sembly ¬ of Wilkosbarro which threatens the disintegration of the assembly The assembly Is one of tho oldest and most powerful In the coal regions It was founded by Muter Work- man ¬ Powdorly himself and prospered under his car The trouble Is of recent origin At 1 state mooting of the society hold two weeks strike in tho Leblgh region was brought up It was voted to appoint commit- tees to solicit subscriptions and aid the strik- ing ¬ minor In the Lehlgh region This did not satisfy somo of tho members Charles Lavln a tailor of this city made a speech In which ho denounced the two old parties and said the time had come when labor should assert Itself Ho therefore moved that a call be Issued for a Labor Convention to be hold In this city Mr Hopkins foreman for Flick A Thomas the ex- tensive ¬ hardware merchants seconded the motion After a debute which lasted unti past midnight the motion was voted A few days afterward the w llkesbarre alk whose editor Is a Knight of Labor against Hopkins others for their Lavlnland attempt to drag of Labor organi- zation ¬ Into politics This attack only wlaened tho brooch Lavlns party got together and Issued a call for a Labor Convention to bo held in this city on Monday next A part of the call reads as follows The promises made by represintaUve rrlt old tin have not been fulfilled Every par for existence 1 becomlug more Intense and bUr outlook for th wealthproducer more periim crime and Insanity are Increasing much faster than the population and aU this la spite ot the fact that our divine Creator In Ills Inunlt goodness baa mad ample provision for the needs of all his children during their residence on earth and In spit ot the fact that the productiveness of labor ha Increased until In moo branches ot Industry one man ol I Is able with the machinery to produce In urn space of time as much as fifty men could produce a few years back tI e also believe that lbs only I remedy for existing con ditioni the only remedy that will produce a permanent- and far reaching effect u to place the whole of land not according to ill arearIp- romntbu Im according to Its value Just whet the effect would be wills the Coxes the Jermyn If their coal lands were aesetreilai their actual value and the taxes collected UlOfl the assessments without any rebates and this u essment was made upon their lauds whether It was In me or not Mo you believe they would leave their mines to stand Idle because the men wanted au advance of eIght per cent upon starvation wages or wished to be long to our order Then the working miners and labor en and all other classes of labor both skilled and unskilled could demand not eight per cent but all of the wealth that they produce by their hard labor and tn the sweat of their brow1 The distribution of the circular ha caused more or less excltemont not only Iltcal but labor Many it the a the Knights of Labor As ¬ broaklnllp differences which divide tho Knights was further augmented this evening by the publication in tho Leader of an article reflecting on John Hhaddrack a prominent labor leader The Leader accuses Shaddrack of being connecteitwith a scheme to send State Senator Williams bock to the Uenate Shad ¬ drack Is a Republican Ho says that Williams- has done more for the miner than a groat socalled labor Leader nlfo may If Hopkins had loss to say the firm he works for could sell more goods- In nn Interview with a conservative Knight of Labor tonight ho said Tho thirdrtto politicians who have crept into our order are tho cause of nil this trouble They neck to destroy and the probabilities are that they will be successful The Leaders course In fannlnl the flame Is condemned by the factions In the order are now bent on war and A Monday lively time f expected at tho Convention on CRACK eaooxmo 2 ura BIRDS Tae Ort Opea weepstnke mot yet Fie Isued Tbe Trophy Shoot TodarD- UNEUCN Oct 7 Pigeon shooters from al ovor the country came to this place today participate in or witness tho contests in the Middlesex Gun Clubs tournament The at- tendance was very large All the crook live bird shot were on hand and they banged away more than 1000 pigeons The event of the day was the great sweepstakes open to tho world at twentyfive single live birds En ¬ with a 300 guaranteed purse I closed with twentytwo entries The birds were strong Dyer and tho shoot ing excellent Owing to darkness the wits postponed in tho fourteenth round until tomorrow morning The following had mado clean scores Frank Klelntz of Philadelphia- T A Peacock of Wostfleld N Y JR Slice of Jacksonville IlL J Brewer of Fhlaelphla Joe Camp of Dear Swamp N J of Dos Molnos the champion of the United States Capt oopesot Bordentown N J a man of Newark alanDl the big event the unfinished event of Thursday evening was wound lip and the scheduled event No 18 also reeled off In both these contests the entries were largo and the shooting was firstclass Among the new faces presont yesterday were Prank Harrison of Newark LoanderB Campbell of Little Silver James Thompson and Ed Thompson of Yonk crBexMnyor lokaelerof Plalnlleld Oeorco- Gevtans F M Lawall of Easton tioorgo Penny of Jersey City and llobert Hag gerty of Newark Tbe folowll are the summaries of the two Event No la Ten 11 veblrdsttonrnimentrnles Straps both harrestSHOguarameed entrance ill open to alit- handicap rise closed wlb1 entries Appended 1s the summary of the iou t Hinlth 11 yanls 1 mice au yards IU Peacock 8 TarUe lu Cooper yanlsi- lu Thorns 30 yards J KI1utl ai yards 10 ItdJr 21 yards Miller ao Lever so yards 10 Bugler Ju yards 10 Dnddu yards 0 Graham 20 yards HI Class xo yards a Jones 30 yards 8 hIs ao yards Force 30 yards U lIcHurony 8- lirewer 2 yards DLBrootnou li yards 8LQullla80 yards Cant Ureeley 3 8 ISO yards 8 Uedlen 2U yards Telpel si OIoD DIckens 8 si Manlu uo yards 11 o Von Lngerke m aro Cannon 28 yards 7 Dr Smith so yards l Sheldon 80 yards 4 withdrew roe ties ot 10 and u birds first and second money wa divided 1 tie f 5 mluand nut Croeley 8 o it yelpsL Clayton lit Hidden 1 Creeliy third- nhoDeranttn tie ot 7 lat Von Lenrirke and Can ¬ Event No IS Seven live birds tournament rules five trap both barrstjClcO guaranted purse handi- cap rise open to all entrance closed with thirty sl entries Summary e the score t Dode 1 yards 7t- Moilurchy 31 yards 7t It O yards 7 Thorns ao yards 71 Mlllir I It yard 7 1 o rtmltn ai l yards T KlelnUSI yards npr yards 7 A- SmIth2lyards 7 Jon 29 Clark yards 7 Williams 28 yards 7 feacock 8yarda 7 ir yards 7 yards 71 TilpeL al 7 8 YeroJD 7 u Thompson 29 hidden 11 yards 1 Lvr so yards ii Class 29 yar l St Day 21t yards 8 fore M yards U llbMon yards 61 Ely 91 yards I Iro zu yards Ot Krner I sroll tmf11 yards Clay- ton ¬ 27 yards at Lengerke27 5 Dane 30 od 4 BiiintnslL 2 rd 41I Birds 28 yards 3 Ties ot B o and 4 were dlra4 Ties of 7 ml > and out hot off In a his BurtJ I8t Uraham IS Peacock IK and KIIDt IS TelpiL 17 Mdlurh771 B JllUir 13 a 1 C Smlh I Hmlth 10 Ospu Jonis 1 Clark 8 WIlliams Ytrrtngton 0 K Thompson St f JThemp son 2 BudS Uraham Peacock and KJitnti divided cut money only on acccount of darkness Tomorrow morning 0 A Budd the cham- pion ¬ pigeon shot of America and holder of the diamond badge will defend the trophy in a 100 bird match rules for 600 against M 0 Bmlth of Syracuse N X FATAL DISEASE I XE1T OltLXANS- OntbreaU ef Edesna la the Parish Prlsest- aud Other 1obllo Inatltntlon- NnwOnLEANS Oct 6 Judge Kaman of the Criminal Court called the attention of the Orond Jury today to tho outbreak of oedema In tho parish prison and other public Institu- tions ¬ and Instructed them to make an exam- ination ¬ and find the cause of this disease Edema ha prevailed In the parish prison for two years a number of prisoners having died ot it In tbe lit few weeks It hal also made Its appearance boys House IleCuKowhlr two of the Inmates died from House of the Good Bhephenl The disease had never been known hero before and presents many peculiarities which have puzzled the doctors The limbs swell up the patent grown pale feeble and woakmlnded of de- bility ¬ An examination made by the Board of Health last month attributed the disease to In siifllclent food Since then however It his been found to prevail among the jailers an as the prisoner It was then attributed to the damp condition of the prison which is a very old building Tho appearance In other institu- tions ¬ which are admirably managed has in ¬ creased the mystery and a thorough medical Investigation will now be made by the Grand- 3irytodlsooverthe nature and cause of this novel malady which 1 proving soJUtal those whom I attacks II n I i = CAMPING TILE NORTIIW1IU- DQ anVlSuBllBO Z Wnl 01 IlI mAla TThtre thu Br nnty but Hard to e ass Wiser Troa are Vnnsnall Vms An Indian CIr la Cutaway Coal Two weeks ago Judgo len AOndor sleeve wo 8000 miles i depth of an almost unexplored wilderness up part of Idaho near the Oaa dlan line and occasionally crnlnl the lie on the trail of 1 blacktailed dor I tl memory of many young mon such a Jouroy would hove boon an affstrof two or thret months yotwithinaweekfrom the time hi left that distant region he wo calmly sitting at his accustomed desk In raiL of the Gen- eral Sessions sending the usual procession of burglars pickpockets and cutthroats on frog throe to five years Journeys to Sing Sing Iii sat there yesterday loklnl bronzed and hearty from his dash wilderness ant after court adjourned ho talked about his trp Ho was one of Gen Rodney 0 Wards bll hunting party Gon Ward ear in the sum- mer conceived tho Idea of a out to soi- untromped region whore ra trout and ra door could bo had and building sporting reputation on the skill of guide and astrnl imagination would be out of the ques knew that Lieut Aberoomble of tht ton State Army bad surveyed the wilder nose above Fend dOrelllo Lake In northern Idaho and he corresponded with him and i- colvod so much onoouragomontlthat hodecld to go there and organized lila expedition The party consisted of Gon Word Judge Gilder sleeve Col William Hester Major Wakem- iHolberton Mr Murray Boocook Barn Lees ener of Germany Mr Chauncey Marshall I- Hongland Mr George Morstor Jir Euge- Underbill Lieut Aborcomble and Dr Merl am tho two lastnamed being of the They left tho Grand Central stntlon at 9if on tho morning of Thursday Aug 25 and on the following Tuesday were at Sand Point on Lake Pond tlOrollle tho ond of their railway journey and about V900 miles from Now York They travelled alt the way In tho special Wanderer living in it as In a hotel with their own cook and servants end In fact baring In It for two day arriving at dOrJo for It rained steadily and heavily not necessary to got wet Band Point is the very northernmost point of the northern Pa chic Hallway It is tho apex of a sharp angle tho road makes by running in a northwesterly direction for several hundred miles and then dropping away to the southwest Idaho Is shaped like a leg of mutton with tho shank jammed In between Montana and Washlngtc territories and spreading out towa the south unti It touches Oregon and Wyoming lend dOroille Is way up in th narrow shank and only about a hundn miles from the line of the British Possessions It Is on Lake Pond dOrellle From this point the hunters struck out for SnuuBka Lake which lies away off to the northwest In the heart of as wild a mountain- and lake and timber country as tho most am- bitious sportsman could desire The party wlmn It started from Sand Point consisted oi twentylive Tho chief guide was H T blie wood a white with Ho had had his first tAte of a life of Independence and adventure member of the old Nowiork Volunteer Fire Department IIo ran with the masheen her for many years and took part In tho big nnment in Twentythird street before the filth Avenuo Hotel was built and though he ran a mile and a quartor in seven minutes 41ld not win a prize Then he went West and ma vied a squuw but he kept informed on New York matters and knew all about Jake Sharp and the boodle Aldermen Besides Sherwood thor were six Indians together with Mar of the chief who was of tho ho wie boy who was known paY cblelsUtte were 28 horses and the road was by an old trai the Indians had used for fifty to tho hunting grounds abou year was titty Lake The distance to b travelle The first night out said Judge Gilder sleeve was not cheerful It came on to rRln again and it rained In torrents Wo had no teats but some of tho men had sleeping bags though I didnt These sleeping bags wer something now to mo They consist outer bag of waterproof canvas Within that- Is a sheepskin bag with the wool still on and within that is still another bag of brown mus- lin You got inside and buckle the mouth of ho bag up about your headand there you an But the trouble with these bags is that you lb tn them like an LgyptlaD mummy or like a papoose strapped to a board You cant turn- over and you cant draw your leg up Llenl- Lbercromnle who has had experience at roughing It had a ontrvac which was far superior to the ba was simply n piece of eight feet wide by ten foot lonl You laid the canvas on the round light thin hair mattress and Borne blankets on the canvas Then you retched t yourself on the canvas pulled the blankets about you and then fastened the side ends of the canvas together with buckles and traps provided for the purpose The canvas ten feet long you could crawl down into bolnJ t sleep enuJly and with the luxury of rain on the roof Intensified form In the morning you can roll up mattress and blankets In the canvas and throw In a lot of boots and shoes If you like and rl the whole thing UP Into a convenient Is by far thebes contrivance I have seen for outdoor life On the nrt day the party only made eight miles on second about thirty and on the third alter a journey of twelve miles they reached the camp Their first night In camp also somewhat exhilarating Joe Sutton WA of the Indians and the chief broke Into the storeroom and loaded up with whiskey until the chief had to be lugged off- In an Inanimate condition and Mr Sutton mused himself firing his Winchester rifle at the tourists as they sat about their evening nr Button was disarmed and the next day whiskey was nil thrown away and from that time on there was no trouble- As for the game up there said Judl Gil orsleeve thorn Is plenty of It to- ucged < n country to hunt in much enjoy lent I am glad I went but I dont thin 1- woud go thor again If you kill a big camp It is next to Imps sible to do anything with the oars country is so rough yOU cannot Then tbe timber growth Is so thick it is almost 1m osslblo to get through it and very difficult l to- get a shot at a deer even though there are plenty of thorn about you You hoar a thump minp among the trees and got n glimpse of a tawny form and the deer is off and out of sight Wo shot howovor twentythree block lulled doer two whltotalled deer and one irlbou or American reindeer Tho caribou weighed ovor 400 pounds and wo could do iittiu more than cut off tIm antlers to curry to imp There were plonty of grouse and ol three vareleRtbe ruflled tho blue and the caught two beavr and trapped several martin and we wolf and a wildcat- As for trout the lake was full of them We ihed altogether with a fly and caught all we wanted They are beautiful trout and ox qui holy marked The males have olive with lines of black dots and the sides ar car mine Tho females have Green with black dots and silver sides They are very shy- Dnd full of light when houd We caught In I during the two were up there abut 11 400 of these trout A peculiarity of the seemed to be that they were all large We caught no small ones Some of the speckled lake trout weighed nine pounds and were Jled Dolly Vardens After the first two or three days we had illghtful weather warm but not sultry days and cool nights There are sudden and e treme changes In the lemJraturohowever- On one day it drppd wlhln mom 78 degrees night lee and WIllie frost formed Our camp wan very oem forable Sherwood had built huts and store for UH in advance so when we got there erythlng was ready to go to housekeeping lbe Indians were goodnatured fellows Thoy belong to the Kalespell tribe and have never been at war with the whites These In iiaxc have always hunted on the south thorl of Lake KanuskL On the nopib hor Kotenai Indians hunt They all like whikY work Our chief was a good I iwolL He wore a cutaway coat and a breech Generally they wear a breech clout and clout blanket The men generally wear some thlnu but the women seldom if- hyor do They are not well formed and not a math for white men In strength I had one of working for me one day and hi pitched In with ardor for halt an hour and then threw the job saying It was too hot up During I the last year a number of miners an- dprsJector have come Into the countrt Min found and traes gold They nil have a little gold abut them iiat they havo picked up but wa- yollelnl i what the gold up there amounts to set machinery to get down to the bed rock which tborcannot reach now on ac count of the nndprospeo ore there now are rather a famished lot and- tho older heads do not take much the prospects I was much struck by the splendid timber whloh grows parloularvon the lower lands nagulfkent los but no soft Limber The trouble is that there Is no way of getting it to market That is the mblo with that whole countryIts inacoessl- Ity and its ruggedness There are deep seams and gulches between tho hills May of- tbe i hills or rather mountains are canod l Ilpagland took a good many photographs tad Major Holberton collected two dollars conth of dust as a souvenir of the trip is aid quartz about the lower end of Thor Kanuska and the miners have been biltnf Lke there and hay scared away a good game especially the con On lung that makes It so difficult about t vugb these toral j U the facility with whloli- i it i trees blow dw Th coil isYry UxJit aid Ii f 0 I J I Lw J 1 jf eandy with ntf t r the i root to cling to- nd when the furlou wldd which whistle over nI mountain at eertsbrtiniee of the year break down the tree right and left thevr000 to clear the trail ofa TMt dal ot tbl fallen timber before we could make ourworon horseback front Hand Point to heo horf sbaek about q mile tact of it much Is it 1 is Oth8rOU- Pd a oxjienco roughing- It to afford And can stand ote aft I have got broken In a well IOu tat it takes a a fortnight or three weeks to Iet Jan abut and then yoU are ready and havehad aching bones anti stiff Joints about all the time you have been in the woods A man to go to apes a country should make up his mind not to try to live Ia A camp but to rough It and sleep wherever he Is like a trap- per ¬ The game for a short time is hardly worth the candle One should go prepared to make a and then he wou d- ome lOnfhstft7t It health and strength would well repay 1G party left Sand hm the 37th of Sep- tember ¬ and reached the Grand cntr Dtpot on Sunday morning the 3d of OPM unaa mzrol OCur ad Zasad AddrM- K aa Imsaas etU U ri BUr FALL Emai Oot781r Thomas Honr Gratton Esmond and Arthur Irish members of Parliament had A onthn- tastia reception In this city today and were greeted tonight by an Immense audience at the Academy of Music They wro received on their arrival this morning by a committee of the local branch of the Irish National Lao and during the day were entertained ad tkn to view various points of interest in tbo Tonight a public meeting was held at tho Academy of Uuslo under the auspices of the local branch of the Irish National League Over 3000 persons wero pr lent Mayor Cum- mings presided and the platform- were a large umber of prominent citizens and John J MoDonoghue called tho clorlmen order and in a brief speech intro- duced ¬ Mayor Cummings Chairman of the evening The Mayor introduced as the first speaker Arthur OConnor MP who held the attention of tie audience for nearly an hour He said be colleague oamo Irishmen to speak to Irishmen on the sentiments which aat present moving the hearts of Ireland as It l- nevnr lS been stirred before The cause of ro- land he sold was never safer never brighter than at the present time Irland today stands tape toface witheJ I what to be a final Landlords 8ems the day has come when the land shan- boome nl the of those who occupy It pry to Introduce Ito the British Parliament a body of who truly represent tho Irish people That is our political By means of Itwo have the weapn lland within tho past advance more than Is advanced dur live the preceding fifty rear ben believe that by means of weapon we can tl achieve Ioto The Irish Parliamentary party did not intend to lay down their armA their constitutional weapons until obtained exclusive independence He spoke of the value of American assistance In the post and used a continuance of the same especially present time Thomas Henry Orattan Esmonde said that they came her from people at homo who must either conquer now or die In their attempt and he appealed te the enlightened public sen- timent ¬ of America John P Sutton of Lincoln Nob Secretary of brief the Irish Natona League of America made a ItesoIutlonR were then adopted denouncing coercion dyingassurance of continued sym- pathy ¬ for the Irish people In their struggle and prmlll support for the im- prisoned ¬ patot ATHLETES 2 A BANQUET T Haahattam dab Xatertstla U Xai- llsbsaea 4 Clarke auad Kay President George W Carrot the Manhat- tan ¬ Athletic Club made a speech in the plrlor of tho club lost night to nearly 200 of th mem- bers ¬ Every man was In a dress suit and a happy state of mid They ha just eaten their annual The had a its guests the Encl athletes C AW Clarke tho pedestrian Bay the champion pole vaulter I had also William Byrd Page who I only 5 feet ta and who can jump 6 8 lpcbes Among the there weroj1i1Judge Brady ol the oter promo Coutt W J Swap VlcoPre- sljandC dent eftflfl u 0 Hughes Us 6 < torrrftvM p4 Seeks who brought the English onsTover fir E P Hoyt Dr ohj Bradley Parker VlesPresldent of the Cotton Exchange Wm L Flndloy exDistrict Attorney Brfgg of westchester county Iron ¬ son Howard E L Bosslter CoL W H Steven- son ¬ JWEdward President of tho Staten Island Athletic Club and A P Burbank These were some ot the athletes present I M Mitchell who can run hal a mile in 1 A F Copeland a hurdle E D Lanl a very fast walker and H M Bonks auortermlle champion runner of the United States and Canada Mr Carr waded through a glorious speech with difficulty because otthe jocular Interrup- tions ¬ and then Mr Clarke made a bpeocb He saId he liked this country and that when ho thought of tho kindness of the Manhattan Ath- letic ¬ Club he was too full for utterance This struck the noisy gentlemen as being very funny and thero were yells of Me tool I Mr Clarke said that when he raced In England hereafter he would represent the cherry cross of the Manhattan Club Mr Hay also made a speech He cut It short because he observed that a thoughtless waiter had fllled his glass and he was anxious to empty it Dr Hoyt and others made remarks The club will have Its gomes this afternoon AMUSEMENTS The OM Ixmdni Street Tilled by Bmmell- wltb New mtrtaiaeata One crowd alter another filled the Old London Street yesterday afternoon and oven tag The people come to see the things that the new manager Mr Bunnell had to show for the place was reopened a a museum None of the former bareness or emptiness re- mained ¬ All the available space was occupied- by exhibits The picture of London bridge at tho eastern ond bad become tho drop curtain of a stage upon which n variety entertainment- was repeated at Intervals Tho actors wore not as clover us Booth nor as handsome as Langtry but what they did seemed to pleano theiraudiences and applause was plenty Some of much greater merit had time prormer themselves on a separato platform They were seals and their tricks involved about as much Intelligence and docility as tralnod dogs or horses can be made- to exhibit They wore wonderfully bright faced and as playful In their glass animas tank when not employed In their feats out of water They should prove a strong and pleasant attraction Othorsights were the Pepper ghost myster adapted to a series of illustrations cited poem marionettes laughably worked by John Till and a number of historical curiosi- ties ¬ which accorded well with the duplicates- of ancient London houses A X w Pars at U Tkalla Te Thalia Theatre pruce another new last nht boln the fourth change of th week Th Buch holren or the Family a farce in four acts by Leon Troptow which details the woes of an ambitious woman whose sole purJlln life Is to rise In things social Her fuiltttes ore amusing and she sees the err of her ways and all hands unit In of becoming plain and everyday folksand enjoy- ing life as It comes August Walteras Iten tin Vuchhob soap merchant Adelo Fulma as the lively daughter Marts ranl Costa as the carpenter her husband Ma Lube nB BucMoj factotuin most ot the fun The Lln JIslter and Lub second act received encores eluh to satiety even a insatiable Hopper CuIrsac of Republic Lender ExSenator Plttt celled a conference at the Rtpafcllcui uaqual1 the Fifth Annulol1 yes- terday 10 Snlr DIssect oSnator ex Conmumu hamming Bird Ilurisish l zCaaruuna Kn pn Chairman of the KXMDUT Committee CoL fled tlraat candidate for Secretary of Stats and Other candidates were pnl Mr ls ran the other men ponie advice 1pr1 <m that thIs WM a harmony com U promised to be toad TbranUb iMtehu and toiuor tratuoatb IU- pnbllcai side c4 thlt campaln Senator Evicts ipul- it OUokrtof lUu tonljkt and be and Bcutor IllMock wIll slump ui Stt State PolltlM James H Arnott having declined the Demo eraSe nomlnaUon tot mlbe of the Assembly toe Broon county OL n Bc < n wu yesterday p01 10mlnal0 and class accepted II U opo4 that lb wi TbolubUca SolllTan county hn r nomlnat < the Assembly and nomtnattd tb oUowUf ooonty ticket Cooair judge Wm JU Thorn tool County cret James r C4lbratb Jrt County Treasurer Oldnnl Hcbtol ComalMloner- Boond 41lrol Volr ChpUn eas Zpubiira Ot Two Berata la Collector Mtgone yesterday appointed Dem eo 51 0 TUaaiO Dot and JOpl Slt a 1 = J a- t 9 I J j t j A NEWS FROM THE OLD WORE KULAT BABBA1T SULTAJf OV VOBOCI muD AND UU BOX ENTHRONED The tAt af Ms Rae to Hale Mereeea- Hebammed sa the 8515 LIsi Dueed- Lw th the 51a or tha I rBh 1 LNDN Oct 7Nowa was received her tho Sultan of Morocco who ha been critically 111 for some time 1 dead ll 10yearold son took the oath of office on fathers corpse and ho assumed the Govern mont Vizier Ho ha appointed h favorite um Ie England lots made a proposition to t hi powers that they send menofwar to Moroc to protect their respective subjects there A lars despatch says that the French iron- clad has already been ordered t pr ceed to Tangier Tho Parlsrmpi states that a complete m cordials exists between Franco and SPln sardine Morocco Morocco Two Italian war ships have been ordered t Extonslv preparation are being mado at Spanish port nearest Morocco 1 for encamping Spanish troops TAMOIKB Oct 7It Is reported that tho re- cent attempt to poison tho late Sultan was tho result of a harem intrigue Some time sg poison wa discovered In some mod prepared for the Sultan and since then ho had eater nothing unless tho servants partook of it frt Muley Hanson EmlralMumenln or Prin of True Bolievers ruloi Qf MaghrobelAkaa- the extreme west or 11Alaahrb tho west succeeded to tho the deatL of his father being the Drt to got that honor through being the son of father tho succes- sion having previously boen to the eldest rep resentatlve of tbe family not to tho eldest soo Ho is the fourteenth of the dynasty of AIdes and calls himself tho thirtyfifth lineal descendant of All uncle and soninlaw of the Prophet His family that of the Hhorifs- J of Hell or Tnfliet came into power In 1048 when Mule Uhorlt olFUell King of Tafllet set up a ruler ovor nil ho could get of tho ancloi t- emplrooxtendlngnorh to Xlmbnctoo which bad at his death to save a therl the family divided up his five sons Muler Hnnn came amonl throne in troublous times lila father Bld- lluleyMohmmodlnvlnl boon well whipped es by his pirate subjects and compelled to borrow money to pay tho damages of the flght Franco mean- while harassing him bCRUI of Inourlons made by his unruly borer glers and making e tours of e- planatlon Into his southeastern territories and finally the troublesome Berber them- selves upon him Tho tumlnA the son however hat not boon a quiet and comfortable one Trilling exceptions wore a few Incidental n- balllons among the woster tribes about the time he began to some trouble he had with the civilized world in 1880 qvor the Jewbaiting in vogue among his subjects at Fez and elswhor The Moor at Fez amid shouts was had killed a Hebrew seventy YCRr ot ageby lurll petro bum over his fire- Incidentally two French spectators had been wounded The American Consul Informed Muley Hassan that public sentiment not only- In Europe but In America would not coun- tenance Indulgence In such amusements b the Moorish populace and not only demands tho punishment of the guilty person but warned Muloy that It Is indispensably requi- site that the Israelites of Morocco shall be protected by the local authorities othorwls wi be long before they will all be pro toted by foreign notions An International at Madrid followed and nt the suggostlonof eleven plenipotentiaries Mule Hassan signed an agreement that all his sub- jects without regard to race should be on an equal tooting before his tribunals and tha- ulrages against those who woro not Moham medans should b suppressed sareblsta Large Talk at a SaifB DUtemei LONDON Oct 7A oomolned meeting of An- archists and Socialists was t have been held I CIv land laU LndoD this evenlnr t protest against the e Chicago AnarchUU When the Urn arrived for the opening the doors were found tejiars- been locked by the landlord the tenants or the hallthT- ommnnlitlker Arbeltblldnngsvereln having paid heir rent meeting wa adjourned to an adjacent I tall Ine a club of Communist Illlam Morrli the poet prelded In his pcb he said that the Chi care cases showed him how the thin veneer of cli- llzatlon over mere brutality was remov d and the ho man beast exposed One man named Seymour said that every Anarchist at the Chicago meeting ought to have thrown A bmbt the police and he hoped all would I do so If the were carried out if be were brought before Jndgi Gary be wailS consIder It b proudest duty to rid the of such a wol a rat t PrM for as Xar m tllltac the Waves BEBLXN Oct 7The Nautical Society of hamburg ha offered a pits ot noo mark for the beet nay on the subject calming lbs tea by the us of oil- An exhaustive deicrlptlcnof experiments of the effect of- oIl made up to the present time 1s required also a cciii rum of the arrangements used so far and especially complete dIrections for its use by large steamers and tailIng vessels as well as small vessels pilot tubing md lifesaving boat besides directions for th us- oil ol at sea and near the coast The essays are tn be written In English or German and sent before Nov I 11HM7 to the President the autlcal Society Director of the havlgatlon School spt V E ilatthlesen hamburg Competition Is not limited by nationality The Government Dodges DCBIJN Oct7The Inquest in the case of- the i victims at Mltchelstown was continued today Mr orphy counsel for the Crown declared that the wit iises for the Government who had leitlned In the cue had been Insulted by Mr Harrington and that that gsa etnan had not been reproved for hi conduct by the kroner He therefore declined to call any more wit acute The Coroner thou railed Caps Beagrave who look a leading part tn dispersing the crowd on the cars lion of the rioting and examined him as to his knowl- edge of the affair Constable Leabya evidence was taken at lbs hospital where he is now confined suffering from wounds re¬ ived In the tight lie testlijed that be was knocked Iowa and beaten four times before be reached the bar- racks and Identlfled one ot th Jurymen as one of those Who had obstructtd him Mr OBrien Case Adjonrued- Duntnt Oct 7The hearing In the case of- Wtr William OBrien who wa summoned for publishing iccounts of meeting of suppressed branches of the itlonal League In United Ireland ha been adjourned ndingadeclilonof the appeal to the Superior Court by tho Crown In the case snihui Lord Mayer Sullivan who was summoned for the sums offence Mr Ilc ly member of Parliament MrOBrien cow- let applauded the magIstrate ileclslon and ssld that Ills Court had shown Itself fair minded ta its disposition it th case tlr OBrien wa not present In the court Oeraaar Settle her Bill with Vrmnee PAnts Oct 7Count von Munstor the Oar nsa Ambssiador to day handed to M Flonrens Minis Sr ot Foreign Affairs 112500 the amount agreed upon 0 be paid by the German Government aa Indemnity to- he family of timekeeper Hrignon who was recently hot dead on the FrancoHerman frontier Connt von tnster stated that an Inquiry was proceeding tn nx the iponalbllily for Kaufmaun act in shooting Ilrignon Lord Mpenaer Bpeuka Out far Ireland LONDON Oct 7In a speech at Aberyswlth- Is evening Lord Spencer said he wa lallaAed that the eague had nothing to do with crime In Ireland Re erring to the trial of Lord Mayor Sullivan he sill tie- could not advocate a breach of the law but In the pres nt t state of affair be could not expect anytblngdlffer nt on the pact ot the Irish people tie was cotivinead acre strongly than ever that Ireland needed home rule Infanaer Calllnan Dunked Wask LONDON Oct Colllnon the Informer who 5 eitlfyiog for th Crown In the cast against his con iderates for the murder of Constable Whelehan con tuned his evidence at tnnll today He said be disliked eork It appears from his testimony that his only clock a trade was that lie murdered Tat Ilenbrld and had- Inc been welcomed everywhere Fort HaUtha Hangman Kept Bniy PonT SMITH Ark Oct 7Sllas Hampton and Btabora Oreen were hung today tn the United States Jail yard for murder Both men faced their tat with great coolness and died name Their necks were broken by tIm fall Both confessed the crimes and died penitent The crime for which Green was hung wa the murder of three deputy marshal all of whom he at tacked while asleep Hampton murdered an old white man named Lloyd on the night ot lIeu 8 IKKO and rave as his reason that there were too many white mn In th nation This Ii the ulnity fourth man hunt by the pces sat hangmen Henry Oeanro at Auburn Aununx Oct 7 Henry George spoke in the Academy of Music here tonight to a Urge audience The Itv F II Hlnman of the Calvary freibyterlan Church presided and Introduced Mr George On th platform were Mayor Austin Police Commissioner Laurie the Rev F V Drown and repreentatlriiot the United l labor party from the dllferent wards In the city Mr Ueorg ipok for about an hour and a half and at th close of tile remarks answered questions propound i to him by persons In the audlenc Tfc Uqoor Qaestlca la Atlaata- AnaNTa Oot 7In view of the approach ¬ lug vote on Prohibition In Atlanta the City Council asked the Legislature W Until the district la which liquor could be sold If lbs city should g wet and to- nx high llcenie This measure of restriction and high Ucens were advocated by the Prohibitionists and opposed by the Iroblbltlonlit The matter came up In the Legislature today and the City Council bill was defeated leaving the Issue now to be plain wet or dry Bavatrea orTyBBold Fever Ouaouixix Oct Typhoid fever has prevailed u an alarming extent at Ventral Bridie Seho Ian county tar several weeks The family of Land- lord Jacob C Lethj at that place bu been nearly ex be ales nil wife cud two oi have lust died and ° tuly smber t hIs taahtr itrylTlBft U ptZeesi7 i 0 F 0 I not rotujfTKKR At tuttttttatxAD Walssd with alatcs seal lbs Chases f- MB Women and Chlldrea- MAitDiiEintAD Oct 7 Much anxiety vriw felt here concerning tho Volunteer this morn- ing when it no known that she bad not ar- rived and had not been hoard from and this anxiety was not dispelled until at noon a de- spatch ¬ was received from Highland Light say ing that she passed thoro at 11JUM with the wind wontsouthwest at the rote of twelve miles an hour At 810 P M the Voluntoor wo sighted from Abbott Hall Observatory some fifteen miles distant In tow An soon as the nows that the Volunteer hud been seen was circulated men women antI children left factory and homo rushed for the headlands and anxiously waited for the white victor to round Iolnt Nonlt At 8 oclock she dropped anchor off the East- ern ¬ Yacht Clubs house Her anchor had not reached bottom before the cannon on Good ¬ wins Head and Mason Rocks belched forth solutes and on enthusiastic crowd cheered to the echo Scores of boats put out from shore and In a few minutes Copt Haff was receiving the hourly congratulations of tho people The crook sloop came un the harbor with eight sig- nals ¬ flying from her masthead signifying races won At 0 oclock Capt Hail and part of the crow loft for Itoston to attend the reception at Fanoull Hall tonight DYNIS KEAKNET COMING nonxs- Th > exKra f he Sand Lisle to aVnk- eeeht Acatnit George CmoAOO Oct 7 Dennis Kearney the agi ¬ tator arrived from tho Pacific coast this morn ¬ ing and loft for Now York In the afternoon to take part in the throecornered political strug- gle ¬ waging between the Democrats Ropub- icans and the followers of Henry George Mr Kearney on reaching Chicago made an im- mediate ¬ effort to seethe condemned Anarchists particularly Parsons The Pacific coast agita- tor ¬ was Quietly but firmly denied admission to the jail by the officers in charge Ho wont away lamenting and telling how four years ago ho had advised Parsons to leave bombs alone and take to ballots or he would surely got his neck In a halter But Parsons only laughed Kearney says that on reaching New York he will make a series of speeches taking the ground that the question of questions for tile worklngmen at this time IB not the faroff Issue of land taxation but shall the laboring people concentrate every effort upon passing a law through the very next session of Congress making tho exclusion ot Chinese from the country absolute Ho will urge that the hands of the Democrats be strengthened their rep- resentatives ¬ nt present being the tile strongest anttChlnoso advocates It will be an Immeas ¬ urably greater victory ho thinks for the work Ingmen now to help pass tile Mitchell Anti Chinese bill when Congress assembles than for a side Issue to weaken the Democracy and I In- directly ¬ strengthen their proChinese Kenub- llcan opponents After leaving Now York Kearney proposes to renew the antiChinese agitation in the principal cities ot Canada riltE Or A PAm OF TBOU8EKS Three Engines and a Track Summoned Headlong to Beaver Street Tho clanging of fire engine bolls and the rattling of engines and trucks resounded through the First ward just before the Ex- changes ¬ opened yesterday and In a jiffy all the resources ot Engine Companies 410 and 31 and Hook and Ladder Company 15 poured in ¬ to Beaver street near Broad A pair of trou- sers ¬ very old black and oily was smoking faintly on the sidewalk In front of the office ot J A Hawksworth 85 Beaver street A group of men In Mr Hnwksworths door was looking at the Ore The firemen looked at It also and retired without throwing any water The trousers belonged to Charles Doll Ho sat inside the 011cc wsitingfor some one to bring him another pair Ho works in the stove store of JomoB Uupho A Co in Old slip and yesterday morning he was down in the basement of Mr Hawksworths offlco polishing up a stove It was a small and close place and a gas jot was burning Tho stove polish contained naphtha Suddenly titers wnj a puff the little flame lighted up and a big flame began to play on the polish not In his agitation Mr Doll turned the pot over and the fire began to spread and to catch on his clothing Ho bounded up stairs and up Beaver street throwlna off smoke like a steam engine Ho pulled the alarm in front of the Cotton Exchange and rushed back to the store in a state bordering on conflagration Meanwhile a pall of water had put out tile flames In the basement and when Mr Doll re- appeared ¬ he was relieved ot his trousers with ¬ out Injury llesIgnatla of Commloloner KeraaaA- LBaNT Oct 7The Hon John D Kern an Chairman of the Board of Railroad Commissioner of this State today filed his resIgnation of the offlco of Commissioner to take effect Nov 141887 The reason for Mr Kernan resignation is his desire to resnmo lbs practice ot the law which he will do in the city of New York In connection with his brother Nicholas of Utica and his father ex Senator Eeman Mr heroin hu been active In the work ot the Ks w York State Commis- sion emeclally In connection with the drafting of the amendments to the general railroad laws and tile legl- latlon for the regulation of railroads and for the protec- tion ¬ ot the travelling public and of railroad employees Ac that have been enacted during his term The ac- curate ¬ compilation of the railroad laws of the Stats contained In each annual report of the Hoard and pre- pared ¬ under his supervision Is highly spoken ot by law- yers Th weight given to his recommendation as to national railroad legislation by the tultm Senate Com- mittee led to the general belief that he would be ap¬ pointed an Inter state Commerce Cumniluloner last spring The contest for bis place on the New York State Commission promises to be exciting One of Baldwin Murderess Killed Los ANGELES Oct 7A letter has just been received by hen John Baldwin of this city from parties near Durango Mexico where his brother Leon Bald win wu mnrdered by Mexican bandits a few weeks ago concerning which outrage the Bttte Department bu in- structed the United States Consul at Onrango to make a full Investigation The letter gives nw fact concern- Ing the altair and states that the bandits alter robbing and tilting Haldwln went to Ventanea and robbed the store of an old man there also taking hip ton and hold tag him for ransom Villagers pursued the bandit soy prbed and killed LIce ot them Among those wa one ot- jhe murderers of Baldwin The letter further slates that the people were greatly rejoiced that some of the wont characters In the community were thus put to death George TV GermalDea Disappearance George W Oermaine a bookkeeper In the Bank of New York for sixteen yean loll the bank at < H oclock list Saturday afternoon since which time there hu been no tract of him It Is supposed that he hu gone off laboring under temporary aberration of the mind Tbe bank oOlrlal report that his accounts are perfectly straight The musing man Is a5 years old and A feet 7 Inches lilt Ils hu black hair and a dark moustache lie wore a brown striped suit A checked shirt and a brown overcoat when he went away lIe lives in Vluablng Retriever Duke Retrieved by Capt Smith Capt Smith of the Police boat Patrol saw a paragraph In Tug Sx that South Paw AL Heritage of Jersey City had lost his grist retrieving dog Duke he telegraphed air Heritage yesterday morning that Its had his dog CantmliR says he round Dnk swim mint in the EMI Illvtr off liovenmrs Island and Picked him up It Is thought that Duk wu stolen by river thieves and lumped off their craft and started on liii way none Pat Klllen Wants to Fight Cntouoo Oct 7The announcement that Sullivan wu soon to sail for Europe appeared her thi morning Parson Davies this afternoon made publIc a letter front Pat KlUen challenging Sullivan to box him ten rounds or more In Ulnneapoua Bt rant or 111- 1waukle within Ofleen days Fran Bench to liar WasnisoToy Oct 7The lion Andrew Wylle one of the indies of the Supreme Court of this District for twentyfour years and who was retired some months clue at his own requent wu today ad milted to vracUse In the court whets he lately presides Oar Hill at IImeE- LMrrtA Oct 7Goy lull spent the day on Keuka Lake and came down to this city this evening lie ws entertained at illnnir by Vlr ll B lisper at whoSe residence lie met a few friends Later in the venlagU lift for Albany 81AItKa 1UOX THE TZLEGflAPII Only four anadlsn cruisers will continue In the lab erlesttrotectlun servIce alter the lOll Inn tli rest be ¬ withdrawn from commission for th remainder ot- A tue season vein of rock salt forty feet thick ha been struck at the test weD in Ithaca at a depth of iiao reel The salt I Is clear ant pure 1 lie well I Is in be put down another thousand feet In search of oil or gas Th Captain of th Italian ship Libert which wa > Ued at Chatham N n forirouggllng brandy bu been sentenced by a local magistrate to pay a Due of w and to serve a term ot thirty days In prison Joseph Mills wno criminally assaulted a UtIle girl i the Concord N II cemetery where she had gone B place flowers on her mothers grave sentenced yes Urdy to twenty years In Stat prison Chrl llelmbach aced IB and August Pflffr aged aX were smothered yesterday at Veller ore mln In Keadlni ny the giving way of the embankment ot the din which they were during of mud The schooner Peregrine White of lloucest while cruising nit Cap Sable found a large grayish mass float lug on the water which proved to be ambergris TIle specimen wciabs 18n poonds and u worth l U canes pr Iiul in all John UKelm a wealthy farmer of Lobachsvllle Pa committed suIcide o Thursday ulrhl by shooting him elllntlie hea l IU was inOlcird at the last terra uf court on n Charge of defrauding a bank out of 7tu and It I is inppowd this trouble led him to take his Ufe The iaay Dipirtmint yesterday received a diipatch from Bear Admiral Chandler commanding the Aslatio squadron dated Magaukt Japan OclTln which be- uy be wU tend a able Unmdlatlr to Nonage Island of the Caroline group to lnvngt the nailve mu AedcMiaIuts and WESTERN UNIONS PRIZE XflV fl AND a rvnciiAKK IWIUUXD xo- AfOID INJUNCTIONS Tee Advise cf 0eme e f the Iengneiidl Use Abent Mr G nldAn Aeennt f What Weatera Vulva Get by the Deal The bargain between tho Western Union Telegraph Company anti the Baltimore slid Ohio Ilallroad was hurried up a little on Thurs- day ¬ beyond tho orislnal Intentions ot the ne- gotiator ¬ for a reason which appeared yester- day After the Executive Committee meeting of tho Western Union on Thursday nt which the contract for tho purchase was ratified porno of the longheaded people that Mr Joy Gould gathers about him suggested that the trade might aa well bo consummated at once to avoid possible interference by ohronlo litigants 89 tho obligation of the Western Union Corn ¬ pany to deliver to the syndicate for account of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company 20000 shore of Western Union stock wo drawn UP and delivered to Drexel Morgan A Co by Mr Gould himself who then received the entire capital stock of the Baltimore anti Ohio Telegraph Before nightfall It had been formally delivered to President Norvin Green and put In the treasury of the company thus putting tho purchase beyond the reach of aa Injunction All of these acts wore ratlflcil at a special mooting ot tint Western Union Kxeou Ire Commltteo yesterday I An experienced telegraph man not now con neared with any of tbo coeppanies explained yesterday what Western Union really gets The statistics of the Baltimore anti Ohio plant printed in Turn Bull yesterday show this In a general way but o description of the more Im- portnnt parts ot the system is essential to a complete understanding of the transaction In the first place It acquires as now business all the traffic along the lines of the Baltimore nnd Ohio Itiillrood and also along the West Shore road as far ns Albany The line from this city to Chicago by way of the West Shore and the Nickel Plate roads Is one of tha best In the country The Baltimore and Ohio paid 800000 for it and then rebuilt It with heavy poles upon which 30 wires wore placed at an expense of about 2000000 The competition on Southern business some thing that the Western union never had been troubled with before I is disposed of by the merger The loss to the Commercial Cable Company will also bo on Important factor since the Baltimore and Ohio gave traffic to that company and also distributed for It Ot course the officers of the Commercial Company do not take this view A sample of the man- agement ¬ of the Baltimore and Ohio and its unxlqty to get business away from the West orn Union is shown by the foot that in many cases even on Its 10 cent rates it allowed largo customers a rebate ot S3 per cent leav- ing ¬ 6j cents per out ot which 4tf cents had to be paid for delivery or collection As yet no formal notice of the change in ownership has been given to the employees of the Baltimore and Ohio The system I is turned over to the Western Union free of indebted- ness of any kind and the Baltimore and Ohio assumes alleged forfeitures like those which AIdermen of Philadelphia have threatened Mr Robert Garrett the President of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company ar- rived yesterday on the Ems lie put iat th- nearly Brevoort House and denied himself to all corners and especially to reporters A UARDVP ARTISTS LUCK He Finds the Slats In Chicago Who Task III Six Hundred Crown In Sweden An artist in this city ella on Interesting story Involving a wealthy Chicagoan a native ot Denmark but for a time before coming to this country a resident of Sweden Mr Leh ¬ man a Swedish artist now of Chicago when a young man about thirty years ago was ambi ¬ tious to learn the art of photography He went to Orobro in Sweden and there found a pho ¬ tographer named Harley Ho paid this man COO crowns to teach him tho art Soon after the payment of the money the photographer disappeared likewise the 600 crowns Lehman set to work diligently and became after awhile a tolerable artist He lived In Uormany and other European countries won- dered ¬ over to America and book again to Eu ¬ rope and about three years ago came back hero and settled In Chicago His bad luck still pursued him and he was in a condition fit for meditation as to whetnoi life was worth the living when he happened to see In the columns ot a Chicago paper the name of the man who had many years before confiscated his 600 crowns The name is not peculiar and Lehman hopes were not at all sanguine but ha went to so If it was the same man It was and he was living in a handsome residence wealthy and on the best of terms with the official custodians of the Cook county Treasury The 600 crowns were promptly handed over to the almost famishing artist though it U understood without interest The whilom Swedish photographer also engaged Lehman to do some painting for him remunerated him handsomely and introduced him to others who extended similar patronage BO that the artist became quite prosperous Obltnarr George James Webb a musician and corn poser died yesterday at his horn In Orange H J He was born In Wiltshire England June 24 lOc and was Intended for the Church hut b adopted mails as a pro- fession ¬ Ue came to the United Statu la 1830 settled In Boston and soon took a prominent plies 1 la musical circles lIe wu one of the founder of the Boston Acad- emy ¬ of Mule waa President of the llandeland Haydn Society and was one of the earliest conductors of srm phony and oratorio performances In that city lie was also one oflhefl adlmr teachers of pianoforte sad slag > ing In 1X11 he removed to New York and for years he wasth ormnlstot tbe BwedenborgUn ChurclC of which he wa a member lIe compiled a number of hymnals and wrote many popular bjrmns of which The Morning Light Is Breaking is perhaps the best known He also wrote many secular songs lie was a man ot mncbcuMration of the purest personal char acler KK01rat 4 for twenty years an editorial wrIter for the Journal of Qmmercf died yesterday typhoid pneumonia at tile horn In Lake View N J yoraerly- h wan a lawyer lie wa 07 years old Frederick H Abed one of lbs three brothers eonstt tntinr the arm of Abed Itrethern Iron manufacturer- satlsotiouthetceetwhlchdatepback to 1764 dl d yes- terday after a weeks illness his wa 40 year old and leaves a widow The funeral will be train the old Abes mansion now occupied by John IL Abe el Jrl 137 80 ond avenue- The Rev French 8 Evans died at his residence la Washington yesterday ared an years tie became a> active member of the Methodist Episcopal Church la early life and in 1320 received his appointment as mitt liter In Haltlmore lie rabsequently came to Wabln > lou Kor many years he ha been chaplain of the Asso- ciated ¬ Survivors of the War of 1813 tIe was Naval Officer at the port of Baltimore during President tin coins Administration Mr William I lleslv a butcher and market man ot itinj and one ot the Ol1st business men In thai city of apoplexy yesterday CoL Win J lloyd the wn known directory publisher died at Washlniton tall night Joseph Shlllington a wellknown bookseller of WasV- Initon died last nliibt lie was born In Irtlsndln Itll and came to America In ISu becomIng Washington correspondent of the Baltlmor Sun the following year lie made the sensation of the day by fist securIng aid publishing an account ot the kllUna of two Cabinet Ministers br the explosion ot a gun on board the rrtnee- ptn then lying in the Potomac After four years o- fnewpapr work he went Into the book badness and liii shop became a favorite resort for Webster Calhoua Clay and other oldtime itatiimen A Too AmbltUus Barilar Joseph Tallant of 133 East Twelfth street broke Into the house of Bella Broncella 144 East Fif- teenth street at SA M yesterday gaining aceis by a window 110 stole thirteen knives elttt forks iwl enoons and a napkin ring Bhortly afUrward he crspl through a coal hole and entered the house of Mar rrj Iwimtdy lw Kast Twelfth street II wa friptitenei away and left the sIlverware In the halt Polleemsit Colby nnt on the tnltr track and mt s P M yesterday had him locked up In tba station house There May He Fun at XaITtown James William Ilusteds Assembly Conven- tion ¬ 1s held at Tarry town today and there may be a pleasant Urn tartbt spectators Since Senator PlaIt Was 10 nnklu to the laid Eagle at the Repsbllr tn Stale committee meetIng the fibber of men who intt pluck hu feathers has Increased The Ktnte CoaTeD ion li held at the same time and between them the In habitants of Tarrytown should make up for any sllhH they way hare received from travelling circuses J011UHJH AUOUT- Mailon ZClJIY the Mall tlila afternoon at Sri by Cappa1 Set intblteglment Hand Jwlje Donohue baa granted an absolute divorce to Mitlllit OHrlen from ifdmund OUrien and to Fanny B- M veers from WillIam Myers While Barney Lynoh was walking through Coentlu alit a piece of wood fell from the track of She lvaid railroad and broke three ot bla rib lie tot a verdict In Judge liooktavira court yesterday against the rail- road company for 12110 Ctrl Werner save ball tn 3000 for rank P 51yas who was accused of swindlIng an Immigrant ffyaa Jumped hu ball sad the ball turned out to hi straw Werner was arreited In Philadelphia on Thursday and committed to the Tomb yesterday for perjury The Soard ° f School Trttsea of th Twelfth ward have elected Secretary John H halen to the Chairmanship made vacant br the reignatioo l of Andrew L UoiilarS from the hoard Antonio Kailne hag been made Seers tary Tb Iluard of Ilaucalia has not yet Cited the Ta cancy caused by Mr areilgnailon Coroner haunt began au inquest yrt rdy in lbs case SMry Kelly an epllintlo patient In the Kandill 5 buiiliaL who escaped tlirougli a bathroom win daw to Sept II and drnwd heraelf tine of She Juror wanted In know why abe was allowed to escape and SeaitendantJiPUI ° B the lolu11 in Order w ulPan4 William Brnns the art publisher a1335 Broadway aid henry rattberg the importer who ha an oOe tilt door preferced charges yesterday agabist olIocmeS f tormack and Hamilton et the Leonard trill station with whom they bad th extraordinary ezpplanc ea Uutsy Monday olwud narrated UutlMUi In K ima Ur 1trtl1j

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I Lw

GETS IIEAR REPORTSc X

fS > ftSS QEXSKAL SECRKTART A1TD 372-

V lt 4 EXECUTIVE BOARD UI aolMft t iJUUhmVi rirnM Oat ttat t Or r aat XAMt Oily OOOOO HMb raTli Brdr Had If BoycetltAboat Wa Warl-

MiKHKxVoLiB Oct 7Tho cffoot of M-

XowderlyI

addres yesterday ha been geno-itil

fA l y good Ills expressions with regard to hi-

plleced connection with socialism and anarch-

Jroro very well received and have won corng mont In lita favor Tho talk 1 general amon

the delegates that a fight over the new constiutlon is likely to come up and that the con

i titutlon will be bitterly opposed by the antA lending Eastern Knight expressestIIon that the dissatisfaction over this matter iIvary mitcli stronger than the admlnlstratioi

qfi men hovoAny Idea of Tho antls would havoto poll n twothirds vote to win The prin-oltt point of opposition among tho antts1

Booms to bo tbatthoydonotllko the Idea of thir1 general officers holding office for a two yean

L term They also mako the claim that at leosiU

4 I two of the present aneromcrrtarI Lltcbman andff incompetent The administration delegatesasked In regard tho matter stato emphatic-allyI that these charges of Incompetency anentirely without foundation In fact They say

two hotter men for the positions namedtat not be found in tho organization Itiievident that tho two faction in the Convex

f tlon tear each other Long secret oaucusef1r1 ore hold nlgbtly by each of themY Ucmoral decretory Lltchman presented hL report today The following Is a synopsisIt The nuaabrommbrIrpOrtedInrOodtndth ai

tbe Iut Miilon of IhelnoaIAmbl wa IIJ2411 ami1 the number 7 Tlmail thS epparentinemberihlpo th ordir iireported the tremendous growth In the early

pert of tl1t7 be reinimlxred 1ropl came Into theP irutir by hundred thouiand to that a inipenslon olk Initiation for forty davsirai ordered After ihU tony

1 dr hat expired the itemln commented and thii4 ro ut wax to lirlux torolorimnliatlon a nail of mate-

rialtrenftb

this proved iiMlf t beawnkuew rather than a

fur the >lx months relowlol the leulon of tho Gen-

t erl Auembly at paper of tb countryliar bel tilled continually with axaulta upon the orderJ ant the neutral oRonand Teryibtnir poiitbli-ha1 < ben done to sod deuror tbo order

a xet in oumboof-muti o plofUthlo vovu ltoaUhoot4Ciouu Add to ll11U x who areIn tho earn relation to tbe orer U07A3 re

4b fortod M In arrtan In the report and we wouldKaralh merabertblp ot th e order 6sa JO July 1 1K8-7ThUff would Indoaln apparent decrial o boOIIOCUmmb for the Dual

ksr4 July 1 bow be with balances onw hand ar 1of t3731lrrl The Ut neral Afiembly at Htchmond after adopting

acertain amendment to the eomutution rtftrred th

ifl balance of the report or the Committee on Law togetherwlih inch other ebanze aa had been pmented to thef Jeueral Aeiembly to a peclal commute of revisionI

It wa ordered that thi committee In conjunction withthe Ueneral Hxecutiv Board ihould prepare a rovielo-nt the constitution and lubmlt the attn to a vote ot th

v local auemblle of the order Th remit of the detib-t I tratloni of this commute on Mtlilon waa labmltted to-

lbs local auemblle aa provided under the vote underIchI the commltteI waa appointed The awemblle1 re requested to vote upon the constltntlon proper a

r J nut proposition and upon the article relating tolatlonal trail assemblies as the second proposition

The returns tomlhe 10olImbleshowed that Aitealocal proposition andemblI that J863 local assemblies voted yea ont JlIotproposition and 10 noj Tho General Secretory makes a number of

4 recommendations which may hsummarizedf as follows

That the inbjtct of tabllshlng a cooperative savingL association be considered by the Commute the Slate

of the Order dlr II ii deemed advisable the properf authority he given Insecure an ant of Incorporation for

the organization and management of mob an lustltnlion The primary object of this will be to establish1 bom foth order In every town or city where

i 1bo Nothing will five suehpermanence1 on organization aa the ruuUment of tbl plan-

Brancheaniayb established tn each SII andi pally lb power of lbe order can ladbear In itue various division of coiaeratlvconsumption and savingy l duotoD llrbloD have entire control ot his dinerr Tore That State auemblle be made oomprlnteadof permissive That the properii alder tbe demand for some sort of regalia for members

ot lbs order1 and badge to be worn at tnnerala Thatther be legislation which will make more stringent theprohibition of the Use of th name of the order or any

8 of Its symbol fabualnei pup O11plth-

teortiIGeneral bo Justified In

roIOArboton every artlclti ptolnln a of It sym ¬

I i d without the sanction the GeneralL IUTeBoa1i This paragraph is worthy of note

11 A great deal of complaint ha been mad to the gen-eral

¬

IA once In relation to embezzlement of funds by loait 1 officers who nbteontntly absconded and thusbe notified of pending charges 1 recommend that frga r ltd In the conitltnUon that a notice or trial

p known addreu ijbi absconding omurl ha considered legal summons and that It tile at-

conderW fall to appear at the time of IrL either In pelson or by counsel th trial may preeI hisabsence the same athough its wuI Mrs LenoraM Barry the General Investff l Bator of the Order made her annualembracing the results of her inquiries into tin1 condltionot the working woman ot tho coun-

J try bheeaysI-lavlnitua legal authority 1 have been unab to make

d4 as tuorouah an Investigation In many 1 would4 like and after the dlaenam of ltIztrAnnist200bOyfrom-

ihestlk mill in Auburn In February lastforhavinrtaken-in through the mill 1 wu obll to Can front IloCthrough iiabllshment ownJ to our order lest tome of our members b vtctlnilMd-tonieQuenUv the facts stand In my report are not allfrom actual observation but from authority which IJ eAT every reason to believe truthful and reliable

Upon the strength of my observation and experienceI14 I would ask ot officers and members of this order that

tnore coutderaUon be rtvin ana more thorough duc-tlonslto measnr b adopted on behalf et the wurklniI

t omen ofonr the majority ot whom are entlrelic ot th lad and industrial question wbcbot such vital importance once more

yea brotbersot lbs Knight of Labor touproot system that Ii making ananol alone orgo-

ralbut slave to sin and amr who by

Odivine parentage mlt acall sisters1 i I rcommend tat It be mAde compulson

1 Upon or National TradeAssembly to have eduoatorfor the purpose oftf < teaching the true of the order who

sbal bo required to pass an examination byWorkman on their qualm

l Goner e position and that attention tx44 j turned to the forming of producUvoanddla

tylbuttvo cooperative enterprIses particularly

i m the nanufaotur1ng of men womensanteblidren s garments as In this in-

dustry1 wageswomon suffer the mOlt from poor

Instances of the cruel treatment of working1 f jrromon are cite At Paterson N J In the

k linen thread worklMrBarry pound that Inone brebof1blfndustr women are com

In water the1 plod most of the time barefoot with u-

eprayt of water from a revolving cylinder flyingconstantly against the breast and the coldest

IJ I night in the winter as well as the warmest In-

V ummerthoo poor creatures must go to theirBorneo with water dripping from their under-clothing along their path because there couldi ixtot bo space or a few moments allowed thorn

tj hereinshe

to ehanl their clothing AstPitts-burgh

¬

> who anUreoodbarpetomforomaj ar em-ploy d in the manufacturing of barbed wire under

1 cable cork works pickle factories bakeriesf Koond otaU kind antI all lbs otbrbracbeof buslne-

utff which women ar mpIOe visited a5 < large establishment which Is to be SIted for-

thmaauraclurlugofnalLsatwhlclwomeat mployoan t be

1t t The report of theGeneral Executive Board

lollof tho Knights

wordsof Labor fprefaced t the fol¬

f this report w would gay that It has beenBBA out aimtgive to every case presented for our consid-

ratlonJ speedy and cartful attention as waa possible> Occasional delsyewr onnldabloowl to the nn-nerous1W and Important ed o andwhich masT sarse required th prince cf a numberi After giving a description of the buildingpurchased last winter in Philadelphia for theuse of the Board the committee takes up inregular order 1883 cases on which It baaI paused during the year Most of these ate In

W ilgnlflosnt and tow have any public Interestp IleauestB appeals protests demands applica-

tion¬

If queries complaltslolow each other Inbewildering the most im

iT portantdooumentarelerjedtolsthe report of-

f the Committee on Conspiracy appointed at thef Convention The committee hasIchmonl on the Baled blacklist whichr

Vrthlestablishment

beep sent to althe eanlmufaturnl7 resulted in most of the menprolnnlltewhose wer in the list from

settIng orkl This case opinion of your commute funush-auuceUint opportunity to test certain phaMiof the-coueptnaeylawsofOhIaaswsUal tboMol l UnitedBute mUll black list u appar by peclal in-vestigation

¬

of Brother fcoyss aaihortud byte cornJ mute names ot some men who were nolin tb applI company at the Urn the Irk ¬

i4 curred and had not Wn employed forweeks but wire In the employ et other partIes andII who have been discharged from work In eonMOueaccf tbe ald black list

D Your committee are unanimously of th oplnl that aam Speedy xampl should be made In some manytlj ease of conspiracy that ar constantly arising as It Ivery evident that the laws are

timidation of our brolhir r hrcIrs1au exception and that the soonerrisifullr toad lbs btttir it will b ODfb kulhts of Labor b0fur society ginirally

The history ot the Chicago stock yards strikeand eighthour movement Is rehearsed andcutS Of tba trademark lawIs for clove man-ufactured

¬

by Knights Labor toy leather-workersproductandforuseonbarrcia Me-mber

¬

lt of the order are recommended to refuse to1 crockery mode by Knowles Taylor

ht Ka Liverpool Ohio on account offirehose opposition to the order Among9i llrms whose goods orilmUar reasons

not rucommended aIII Stetson hl Sherman kCo hats rhusdelphist KranclsCobbTco lime ltocklaud Ni tn mehard fap r tompany Uarlluir Me iroller A Vaio atovea Tray N YII V ciba 8 ie Uitton Mllllt U Hplnner S Co4 shoe Norway isl Kast-MrouOiburg Olw Company last lrfndsbarg PaBound Krook Woolln Mula bound brook f J

W Buckiiy A ecu chose roth JervlT YlTlagtrdoa A Xawman hlrta rhlladalphlai Houpe-rowvreadboits

A-

ii la rtlluUlpbUiJiaanf UnitGoods Auselauea t T American TackCompany rahay 1a i Cerbin Company-locksI n Br Coca I kanIJThnta Sat Wan-

isqs4fftJii

= I Iurl T a

<

I

iui1 o7TY

Brooknild MUM Chraplon Hachtn CompanY blOW

eli rupees inS binder Hprlngtlld Ohio sUndarflSewing Machln Company Cleveland Ohio

A report from the CommltUe on State of theOrder rehearses tho discussion with a similarcommittee from the trade union lost Decem-ber

¬

when an atteynotwas mode to settle prlov-nnoos between the unions and tile Kngbt ot

sbor In closing the commlttoe sa1Our opinion IIs that the socalled reunc1 they do-exIst sic rather aceeptabl than piesans In their helrergtnttatlon and are used by them

tehlib purpose it and we bilv a lrIOoremanating from our order sent to ill trails andunion explainIng our iqrtirwouMreiVltlhniuVh

position on the question of trde-orlalllonold by the leaders of trade orgintatlouie-

ompllfh

destrttctlon of their outIng by absorption Inllblb of Labor of their mmbr and theSlIT on tnelr part to oppose any tendency In that direc-tion

¬

that the autonomy of their dlstlnetlv tealspreserved Much rgument are but an mvIgnorance > ot those who advance them of the I I

and workingS of our order which portnnltyto any trade to organize within thblnnand performIIItunctlon a a trad organization when th conditions

1011 would JtUWAR AMONG XUH KNiaUTB-

Ueary George Land Theory Firebrandla the VTIIkesbarre Auembly-

WttjKESDAJuiE Oct 7An internal who broken out In the big Knights of Labor as-

sembly¬

of Wilkosbarro which threatens thedisintegration of the assembly The assemblyIs one of tho oldest and most powerful In thecoal regions It was founded by Muter Work-man

¬

Powdorly himself and prospered underhis car The trouble Is of recent origin At 1statemooting of the society hold two weeks

strike in tho Leblgh region wasbrought up It was voted to appoint commit-tees to solicit subscriptions and aid the strik-ing

¬

minorIn the Lehlgh region This did notsatisfy somo of tho members Charles Lavln atailor of this city made a speech In whichho denounced the two old parties and said thetime had come when labor should assert ItselfHo therefore moved that a call be Issued for aLabor Convention to be hold In this city MrHopkins foreman for Flick A Thomas the ex-

tensive¬

hardware merchants seconded themotion After a debute which lasted untipast midnight the motion was voted

A few days afterward the w llkesbarre alkwhose editor Is a Knight of Laboragainst Hopkins others for theirLavlnlandattempt to drag of Labor organi-zation

¬

Into politics This attack only wlaenedtho brooch Lavlns party got together andIssued a call for a Labor Convention to bo heldin this city on Monday next A part of the callreads as follows

The promises made by represintaUve rrlt oldtin have not been fulfilled Every parfor existence 1becomlug more Intense and bUroutlook for th wealthproducer moreperiim crime and Insanity are Increasing much fasterthan the population and aU this la spite ot the fact thatour divine Creator In Ills Inunlt goodness baa madample provision for the needs of all his children duringtheir residence on earth and In spit ot the fact thatthe productiveness of labor ha Increased until In moobranches ot Industry one manol

IIs able with themachinery to produce In urn space of time asmuch as fifty men could produce a few years back

tI e also believe that lbs onlyI remedy for existing conditioni the only remedy that will produce a permanent-and far reaching effect u to place the whole of

land not according to ill arearIp-romntbu

Imaccording to Its value Just

whet the effect would be wills the Coxesthe Jermyn If their coal lands were

aesetreilai their actual value and the taxes collectedUlOfl the assessments without any rebates and this uessment was made upon their lauds whether It was Inme or not Mo you believe they would leave their minesto stand Idle because the men wanted au advance ofeIght per cent upon starvation wages or wished to belong to our order Then the working miners and laboren and all other classes of labor both skilledand unskilled could demand not eight per cent butall of the wealth that they produce by their hardlabor and tn the sweat of their brow1

The distribution of the circular hacausedmore or less excltemontnot only Iltcalbut labor Manyit the a the Knights of Labor As ¬broaklnllp differences which divide thoKnights was further augmented this eveningby the publication in tho Leader of an articlereflecting on John Hhaddrack a prominentlabor leader The Leader accuses Shaddrackof being connecteitwith a scheme to send StateSenator Williams bock to the Uenate Shad ¬

drack Is a Republican Ho says that Williams-has done more for the miner than a groat

socalled labor Leader nlfomay If Hopkins had loss to say the firm heworks for could sell more goods-

In nn Interview with a conservative Knightof Labor tonight ho said Tho thirdrttopoliticians who have crept into our order aretho cause of nil this trouble They neck todestroy and the probabilities are that they willbe successful The Leaders course In fannlnlthe flame Is condemned by thefactions In the order are now bent on war andAMonday

lively time fexpected at tho Convention on

CRACK eaooxmo 2ura BIRDS

Tae Ort Opea weepstnke mot yet FieIsued Tbe Trophy Shoot TodarD-

UNEUCN Oct 7 Pigeon shooters from

alovor the country came to this place todayparticipate in or witness tho contests in the

Middlesex Gun Clubs tournament The at-

tendance was very large All the crook livebird shot were on hand and they bangedaway more than 1000 pigeons The eventof the day was the great sweepstakes open totho worldat twentyfive single live birds En ¬

with a 300 guaranteed purse Iclosed with twentytwo entriesThe birds were strong Dyer and tho shoot

ing excellent Owing to darkness thewits postponed in tho fourteenth round untiltomorrow morning The following had madoclean scores Frank Klelntz of Philadelphia-T A Peacock of Wostfleld N Y J R Slice ofJacksonville IlL J Brewer of FhlaelphlaJoe Camp of Dear Swamp N Jof Dos Molnos the champion of the UnitedStates Capt oopesot Bordentown N J a

man of NewarkalanDl the big event the unfinished event ofThursday evening was wound lip and thescheduled event No 18 also reeled off In boththese contests the entries were largo and theshooting was firstclass Among the new facespresont yesterday were Prank Harrison ofNewark LoanderB Campbell of Little SilverJames Thompson and Ed Thompson of YonkcrBexMnyor lokaelerof Plalnlleld Oeorco-Gevtans F M Lawall of Eastontioorgo Penny of Jersey City and llobert Haggerty of Newark

Tbe folowll are the summaries of the two

Event No la Ten 11 veblrdsttonrnimentrnles Strapsboth harrestSHOguarameed entrance ill open to alit-handicap rise closed wlb1 entries Appended 1s thesummary of the iou t Hinlth 11 yanls 1 miceau yards IU Peacock 8TarUe lu Cooper yanlsi-lu Thorns 30 yards J KI1utl ai yards 10 ItdJr21 yards Miller ao Lever so yards 10Bugler Ju yards 10 Dnddu yards 0 Graham 20yards HI Class xo yards a Jones 30 yards 8 hIs aoyards Force 30 yards U lIcHurony 8-

lirewer 2yards DLBrootnou li yards 8LQullla80yards Cant Ureeley 3 8ISO yards 8 Uedlen 2U yards Telpel siOIoD DIckens 8 si Manlu uo yards 11 oVon Lngerke m aro Cannon 28 yards 7 DrSmith so yards l Sheldon 80 yards 4 withdrew

roe ties ot 10 and u birds first and second money wadivided 1 tie f 5 mluand nut Croeley 8 o

it yelpsL Clayton lit Hidden 1 Creeliy third-nhoDeranttn tie ot 7 latVon Lenrirke and Can ¬

Event No IS Seven live birds tournament rulesfive trap both barrstjClcO guaranted purse handi-cap rise open to all entrance closed with thirtysl entries Summaryethe score t Dode 1 yards 7t-Moilurchy 31 yards 7t It O yards 7Thorns ao yards 71 MlllirI It yard 7 1 o rtmltn ailyards T KlelnUSI yards npr yards 7 A-

SmIth2lyards 7 Jon 29 Clark yards7 Williams 28 yards 7 feacock 8yarda 7 iryards 7 yards 71 TilpeL al 78 YeroJD 7 u Thompson 29hidden 11 yards 1 Lvr so yards ii Class 29 yarlSt Day 21t yards 8 fore M yards U llbMonyards 61 Ely 91 yards I Iro zuyards Ot Krner I sroll tmf11 yards Clay-ton

¬

27 yards at Lengerke275 Dane 30 od4 BiiintnslL 2 rd41IBirds 28 yards 3

Ties ot B o and 4 were dlra4 Ties of 7 ml > and outhot off In a his BurtJ I8t Uraham IS

Peacock IK and KIIDt IS TelpiL 17 Mdlurh771B JllUir 13 a1 CSmlhI Hmlth 10 Ospu Jonis 1 Clark 8WIlliams Ytrrtngton 0 K Thompson Stf JThempson 2 BudS Uraham Peacock and KJitnti dividedcut money only on acccount of darkness

Tomorrow morning 0 A Budd the cham-pion

¬

pigeon shot of America and holder of thediamond badge will defend the trophy in a100 bird match rules for 600against M 0 Bmlth of Syracuse N X

FATAL DISEASE IXE1T OltLXANS-

OntbreaU ef Edesna la the Parish Prlsest-aud Other 1obllo Inatltntlon-

NnwOnLEANS Oct 6 Judge Kaman ofthe Criminal Court called the attention of theOrond Jury today to tho outbreak of oedemaIn tho parish prison and other public Institu-tions

¬

and Instructed them to make an exam-ination

¬

and find the cause of this diseaseEdema haprevailed In the parish prison fortwo years a number of prisoners having diedot it In tbe lit few weeks It halalso made Itsappearance boys House IleCuKowhlrtwo of the Inmates died fromHouse of the Good Bhephenl The disease hadnever been known hero before and presentsmany peculiarities which have puzzled thedoctors The limbs swell up the patent grownpale feeble and woakmlnded of de-bility

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An examination made by the Board ofHealth last month attributed the disease to Insiifllclent food Since then however It hisbeen found to prevail among the jailers anas the prisoner It was then attributed to thedamp condition of the prison which is a veryold building Tho appearance In other institu-tions

¬

which are admirably managed has in¬

creased the mystery and a thorough medicalInvestigation will now be made by the Grand-3irytodlsooverthe nature and cause of thisnovel malady which 1proving soJUtal thosewhom Iattacks

II n I i

=

CAMPING TILE NORTIIW1IU-

DQ anVlSuBllBOZ Wnl01 IlImAlaTThtre thuBrnnty but Hard to e

ass Wiser Troa are Vnnsnall VmsAn Indian CIr la Cutaway Coal

Two weeks ago Judgo lenAOndorsleeve wo 8000 miles i

depthof an almost unexplored wilderness uppart of Idaho near the Oaa

dlan line and occasionally crnlnl the lie onthe trail of 1 blacktailed dor Itlmemory of many young mon such a Jouroywould hove boon an affstrof two or thretmonths yotwithinaweekfrom the time hileft that distant region he wo calmly sittingat his accustomed desk In raiL of the Gen-

eral Sessions sending the usual procession ofburglars pickpockets and cutthroats on frogthroe to five years Journeys to Sing Sing Iiisat there yesterday loklnl bronzed andhearty from his dash wilderness antafter court adjourned ho talked about his trp

Ho was one of Gen Rodney 0 Wards bllhunting party GonWard ear in the sum-mer conceived tho Idea of a out to soi-

untromped region whore ratrout and radoor could bo had and buildingsporting reputation on the skill of guide and

astrnl imagination would be out of the quesknew that Lieut Aberoomble of thtton State Army bad surveyed the wilder

nose above Fend dOrelllo Lake In northernIdaho and he corresponded with him and i-

colvod so much onoouragomontlthat hodecldto go there and organized lila expedition Theparty consisted of Gon Word Judge Gildersleeve Col William Hester Major Wakem-iHolberton Mr Murray Boocook Barn Leesener of Germany Mr Chauncey Marshall I-

Hongland Mr George Morstor Jir Euge-Underbill Lieut Aborcomble and Dr Merlam tho two lastnamed being of the

They left tho Grand Central stntlon at 9ifon tho morning of Thursday Aug 25 and onthe following Tuesday were at Sand Point onLake Pond tlOrollle tho ond of their railwayjourney and about V900 miles from Now YorkThey travelled alt the way In tho specialWanderer living in it as In a hotel with theirown cook and servants end In fact baring InIt for two day arriving at dOrJofor It rained steadily and heavilynot necessary to got wet Band Point is thevery northernmost point of the northern Pachic Hallway It is tho apex of a sharp angletho road makes by running in a northwesterlydirection for several hundred miles and thendropping away to the southwest Idaho Isshaped like a leg of mutton with tho shankjammed In between Montana and Washlngtcterritories and spreading out towa thesouth unti It touches Oregonand Wyoming lend dOroille Is way up in thnarrow shank and only about a hundnmiles from the line of the British PossessionsIt Is on Lake Pond dOrellle

From this point the hunters struck out forSnuuBka Lake which lies away off to thenorthwest In the heart of as wild a mountain-and lake and timber country as tho most am-bitious sportsman could desire The partywlmn It started from Sand Point consisted oitwentylive Tho chief guide was H T bliewood a white with Ho had had his first tAteof a life of Independence and adventuremember of the old Nowiork Volunteer FireDepartment IIo ran with the masheen herfor many years and took part In tho bignnment in Twentythird street before thefilth Avenuo Hotel was built and though heran a mile and a quartor in seven minutes 41ldnot win a prize Then he went West and mavied a squuw but he kept informed on NewYork matters and knew all about Jake Sharpand the boodle Aldermen Besides Sherwoodthor were six Indians together with Marof the chief who was of thoho wie boy who was knownpaYcblelsUtte were 28 horses and the roadwas by an old trai the Indians had used forfifty to tho hunting grounds abouyearwas titty Lake The distance to btravelle

The first night out said Judge Gildersleeve was not cheerful It came on to rRlnagain and it rained In torrents Wo had noteats but some of tho men had sleeping bagsthough I didnt These sleeping bags wersomething now to mo They consistouter bag of waterproof canvas Within that-Is a sheepskin bag with the wool still on andwithin that is still another bag of brown mus-lin You got inside and buckle the mouth ofho bag up about your headand there you anBut the trouble with these bags is that you lbtn them like an LgyptlaD mummy or like apapoose strapped to a board You cant turn-over and you cant draw your leg up Llenl-Lbercromnle who has had experience at

roughing It had a ontrvacwhich was farsuperior to the ba was simplyn piece of eight feet wideby ten foot lonl You laid the canvas on theround light thin hair mattress andBorne blankets on the canvas Then youretchedt yourself on the canvas pulled theblankets about you and then fastened the sideends of the canvas together with buckles andtraps provided for the purpose The canvas

ten feet long you could crawl down intobolnJt sleep enuJly and with the luxury of rainon the roof Intensified form In themorning you can roll up mattress and blanketsIn the canvas and throw In a lot of boots andshoes If you like and rl the whole thing UPInto a convenient Is by far thebescontrivance I have seen for outdoor life

On the nrt day the party only made eightmiles on second about thirty and on thethird alter a journey of twelve miles theyreached the camp Their first night In camp

also somewhat exhilarating Joe SuttonWAof the Indians and the chiefbroke Into the storeroom and loaded up withwhiskey until the chief had to be lugged off-

In an Inanimate condition and Mr Suttonmused himself firing his Winchester rifle atthe tourists as they sat about their eveningnr Button was disarmed and the next day

whiskey was nil thrown away and fromthat time on there was no trouble-

As for the game up there said Judl Gilorsleeve thorn Is plenty of It to-

ucged<

n country to hunt in much enjoylent I am glad I went but I dont thin 11-

woud go thoragain If you kill a bigcamp It is next to Impssible to do anything with the oarscountry is so rough yOU cannot Then

tbe timber growth Is so thick it is almost 1mosslblo to get through it and very difficultl to-get a shot at a deer even though there areplenty of thorn about you You hoar a thump

minp among the trees and got n glimpse of atawny form and the deer is off and out ofsight Wo shot howovor twentythree blocklulled doer two whltotalled deer and oneirlbou or American reindeer Tho caribouweighed ovor 400 pounds and wo could doiittiu more than cut off tIm antlers to curry toimp There were plonty of grouse and olthree vareleRtbe ruflled tho blue and the

caught two beavr andtrapped several martin and we wolfand a wildcat-

As for trout the lake was full of them Weihed altogether with a fly and caught all wewanted They are beautiful trout and ox quiholy marked The males have olivewith lines of black dots and the sides ar carmine Tho females have Green withblack dots and silver sides They are very shy-Dnd full of light when houd We caught In

I during the two were up thereabut11 400 of these trout A peculiarity of the

seemed to be that they were all largeWe caught no small ones Some of the speckledlake trout weighed nine pounds and wereJled Dolly Vardens

After the first two or three days we hadillghtful weather warm but not sultry daysand cool nights There are sudden and etreme changes In the lemJraturohowever-On one day it drppd wlhlnmom 78 degrees night lee andWIllie frost formed Our camp wan very oemforable Sherwood had built huts and store

for UH in advance so when we got thereerythlng was ready to go to housekeepinglbe Indians were goodnatured fellows

Thoy belong to the Kalespell tribe and havenever been at war with the whites These Iniiaxc have always hunted on the south thorlof Lake KanuskL On the nopib horKotenai Indians hunt They all like whikYwork Our chief was a goodI iwolL He wore a cutaway coat and a breech

Generally they wear a breech clout andclout blanket The men generally wear somethlnu but the women seldom if-hyor do They are not well formed and not amath for white men In strength I had one of

working for me one day and hi pitchedIn with ardor for halt an hour and then threw

the job saying It was too hotupDuringI the last year a number of miners an-dprsJectorhave come Into the countrt Min

found and traes goldThey nil have a little gold abut themiiat they havo picked up but wa-

yollelnli what the gold up there amounts toset machinery to get down to the

bed rock which tborcannot reach now on account of the nndprospeoore there now are rather a famished lot and-

tho older heads do not take much theprospects

I was much struck by the splendid timberwhloh grows parloularvon the lower lands

nagulfkent losbut no softLimber The trouble is that thereIs no way of getting it to market That is themblo with that whole countryIts inacoessl-

Ity and its ruggedness There are deepseams and gulches between tho hills May of-

tbei hills or rather mountains arecanodl Ilpagland took agood many photographstad Major Holberton collected two dollarsconth of dust as a souvenir of the trip

is aid quartz about the lower end ofThorKanuska and the miners have beenbiltnfLke there and hay scared away a good

game especially the con Onlung that makes It so difficult about

tvugb these toraljU the facility with whloli-iit i trees blow dwTh coil isYry UxJit aid

Iif0 I J ILw J1 jf

eandy with ntf t r the i root to cling to-

nd when the furlou wldd which whistle overnI mountain at eertsbrtiniee of the yearbreak down the tree rightand left thevr000 to clear the trail ofaTMt dal ot tbl fallen timber before we couldmake ourworon horseback front Hand Pointto heo horf sbaek about qmile tact ofitmuch

Is it1 is Oth8rOU-Pdaoxjiencoroughing-

It

to afford

And can stand ote aft I have gotbroken In a wellIOu tat it takes a

a fortnight or three weeks to IetJan abutand then yoU are readyand havehad aching bones anti stiff Jointsabout all the time you have been in the woodsA man to go to apes a country should make uphis mind not to try to live Ia A camp but torough It and sleep wherever he Is like a trap-per

¬

The game for a short time is hardlyworth the candle One should go prepared tomake a and then he wou d-

ome lOnfhstft7tIt health and strengthwould well repay1Gparty left Sand hm the 37th of Sep-

tember¬

and reached the Grand cntrDtpoton Sunday morning the 3d of

OPM unaa mzrolOCur ad Zasad AddrM-

Kaa Imsaas

etU U riBUrFALL Emai Oot781r Thomas Honr

Gratton Esmond and ArthurIrish members of Parliament had Aonthn-tastia reception In this city today and were

greeted tonight by an Immense audience atthe Academy of Music They wro received ontheir arrival this morning by a committee ofthe local branch of the Irish National Laoand during the daywere entertained ad tknto view various points of interest in tbo

Tonight a public meeting was held at thoAcademy of Uuslo under the auspices of thelocal branch of the Irish National LeagueOver 3000 persons wero prlent Mayor Cum-

mings presided and the platform-were a large umber of prominent citizens and

John J MoDonoghue called thoclorlmen order and in a brief speech intro-duced

¬

Mayor Cummings Chairman of theevening

The Mayor introduced as the first speakerArthur OConnor M P who held the attentionof tie audience for nearly an hour He said be

colleague oamo Irishmen to speakto Irishmen on the sentiments which aatpresent moving the hearts of Ireland as It l-

nevnr lSbeen stirred before The cause of ro-

land he sold was never safer never brighterthan at the present time Irland todaystands tape toface witheJ Iwhat

to be a final Landlords8ems the day has come when the land shan-

boomenl the of those who occupy Itpry to Introduce Itothe British Parliament a body ofwho truly represent tho Irish people That isour political By means of Itwo have

theweapnlland within tho pastadvancemore than Is advanced durlive the preceding fifty rearben believe that

by means of weapon we cantlachieve Ioto The Irish Parliamentaryparty did not intend to lay down their armAtheir constitutional weapons untilobtained exclusive independence He spokeof the value of American assistance In thepost and used a continuance of the sameespecially present time

Thomas Henry Orattan Esmonde said thatthey came herfrom people at homo who musteither conquer now or die In their attemptand he appealed te the enlightened public sen-timent

¬

of AmericaJohn P Sutton of Lincoln Nob Secretary of

briefthe Irish NatonaLeague of America made a

ItesoIutlonR were then adopted denouncingcoercion dyingassurance of continued sym-pathy

¬

for the Irish people In theirstruggle and prmlll support for the im-prisoned

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patotATHLETES 2A BANQUET

T Haahattam dab Xatertstla U Xai-llsbsaea4 Clarke auad Kay

President George W Carrot the Manhat-tan

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Athletic Club made a speech in the plrlorof tho club lost night to nearly 200 of th mem-bers

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Every man was In a dress suit and ahappy state of mid They ha just eatentheir annual The had aitsguests the Enclathletes C A W Clarke thopedestrian Bay the championpole vaulter Ihad also William Byrd Pagewho I only 5 feet taand who can jump6 8 lpcbes Among thethere weroj1i1Judge Brady ol theoterpromo Coutt W J Swap VlcoPre-

sljandCdent eftflfl u 0 Hughes Us6 < torrrftvM p4 Seeks who brought theEnglish onsTover fir E P Hoyt DrohjBradley Parker VlesPresldent of theCotton Exchange Wm L Flndloy exDistrictAttorney Brfgg of westchester county Iron ¬

son Howard E L Bosslter CoL W H Steven-son

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JWEdward President of tho StatenIsland Athletic Club and A P Burbank

These were some ot the athletes present IM Mitchell who can run hala mile in 1

A F Copeland ahurdle E D Lanl avery fast walker and H M Bonksauortermlle champion runner of the UnitedStates and Canada

Mr Carr waded through a glorious speechwith difficulty because otthe jocular Interrup-tions

¬

and then Mr Clarke made a bpeocb HesaId he liked this country and that when hothought of tho kindness of the Manhattan Ath-letic

¬Club he was too full for utterance This

struck the noisy gentlemen as being veryfunny and thero were yells of Me toolI MrClarke said that when he raced In Englandhereafter he would represent the cherry crossof the Manhattan Club

Mr Hay also made a speech He cut It shortbecause he observed that a thoughtless waiterhad fllled his glass and he was anxious toempty it Dr Hoyt and others made remarks

The club will have Its gomes this afternoon

AMUSEMENTS

The OM Ixmdni Street Tilled by Bmmell-wltb New mtrtaiaeata

One crowd alter another filled the OldLondon Street yesterday afternoon and oventag The people come to see the things thatthe new manager Mr Bunnell had to showfor the place was reopened aa museumNone of the former bareness or emptiness re-

mained¬

All the available space was occupied-by exhibits The picture of London bridge attho eastern ond bad become tho drop curtainof a stage upon which n variety entertainment-was repeated at Intervals Tho actors worenot as clover us Booth nor as handsome asLangtry but what they did seemed to pleanotheiraudiences and applause was plenty

Some of much greater merit hadtime prormer themselves on a separatoplatform They were seals and their tricksinvolved about as much Intelligence anddocility as tralnod dogs or horses can be made-to exhibit They wore wonderfully brightfaced and as playful In their glassanimastank when not employed In theirfeats out of water They should prove a strongand pleasant attraction

Othorsights were the Pepper ghost mysteradapted to a series of illustrationscited poem marionettes laughably worked byJohn Till and a number of historical curiosi-ties

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which accorded well with the duplicates-of ancient London houses

A X w Pars at UTkalla

TeThalia Theatre pruceanother newlast nht boln the fourth

change of th week Th Buchholren or the Family afarce in four acts by Leon Troptow whichdetails the woes of an ambitious womanwhose sole purJlln life Is to rise In thingssocial Her fuiltttesore amusing and she sees the err of herways and all hands unit In ofbecoming plain and everyday folksand enjoy-ing life as It comes August Walteras Itentin Vuchhob soap merchant Adelo Fulma asthe lively daughter Marts ranl Costa as thecarpenter her husband Ma Lube nBBucMoj factotuin most otthe fun The Lln JIslter andLub second act received encores eluhto satiety even ainsatiable Hopper

CuIrsac of Republic LenderExSenator Plttt celled a conference at the

Rtpafcllcui uaqual1 the Fifth Annulol1 yes-

terday 10 Snlr DIssect oSnator exConmumu hamming Bird Ilurisishl zCaaruunaKn pn Chairman of the KXMDUT Committee CoLfled tlraat candidate for Secretary of Stats and Othercandidates were pnl Mr lsran the other menponie advice 1pr1 <m that thIs WM aharmony com U promised to be toadTbranUb iMtehu and toiuor tratuoatb IU-

pnbllcai side c4 thlt campaln Senator Evicts ipul-it OUokrtof lUu tonljkt and be and Bcutor IllMockwIll slump ui Stt

State PolltlMJames H Arnott having declined the Demo

eraSe nomlnaUon tot mlbe of the Assembly toeBroon county OL n Bc <n wu yesterday p0110mlnal0 and

classaccepted II U opo4 that lbwiTbolubUca SolllTan county hn r nomlnat <the Assembly and nomtnattd tb

oUowUf ooonty ticket Cooair judge Wm JU Thorntool County cret James r C4lbratb Jrt CountyTreasurer Oldnnl Hcbtol ComalMloner-Boond 41lrol Volr ChpUneas Zpubiira OtTwo Berata laCollector Mtgone yesterday appointed Demeo510TUaaiO Dot and JOplSlta 1 = J a-t 9I

Jj t j A

NEWS FROM THE OLD WOREKULAT BABBA1T SULTAJf OV VOBOCI

muD AND UU BOX ENTHRONED

The tAt af Ms Rae to Hale Mereeea-

Hebammed

sathe 8515 LIsi Dueed-Lw

th the 51aor tha I rBh 1

LNDN Oct 7Nowa was received hertho Sultan of Morocco who habeen critically 111 for some time 1 dead ll10yearold son took the oath of office on

fathers corpse and ho assumed the Governmont

VizierHo ha appointed hfavorite um Ie

England lots made a proposition to thipowers that they send menofwar to Morocto protect their respective subjects there

A lars despatch says that the French iron-clad has already been ordered tprceed to Tangier

Tho Parlsrmpi states that a complete mcordials exists between Franco and SPlnsardine Morocco

MoroccoTwo Italian war ships have been ordered tExtonslv preparation are being mado at

Spanish port nearest Morocco 1forencamping Spanish troops

TAMOIKB Oct 7It Is reported that tho re-cent attempt to poison tho late Sultan was thoresult of a harem intrigue Some time sgpoison wa discovered In some mod preparedfor the Sultan and since then ho had eaternothing unless tho servants partook of it frt

Muley Hanson EmlralMumenln or Prinof True Bolievers ruloi Qf MaghrobelAkaa-

the extreme west or 11Alaahrb tho westsucceeded to tho the deatLof his father being the Drt to got that honorthrough being the son of father tho succes-sion having previously boen to the eldest representatlve of tbe family not to tho eldest sooHo is the fourteenth of the dynasty ofAIdes and calls himself tho thirtyfifth linealdescendant of All uncle and soninlaw of theProphet His family that of the Hhorifs-J

ofHell or Tnfliet came into power In 1048 when

Mule Uhorlt olFUell King of Tafllet set uparuler ovor nil ho could get of tho ancloi t-

emplrooxtendlngnorh to Xlmbnctoo whichbad at his death to

save a therl the family divided uphis five sons Muler Hnnn came amonlthrone in troublous times lila father Bld-

lluleyMohmmodlnvlnl boon well whippedes by his pirate

subjects and compelled to borrow money topay tho damages of the flght Franco mean-while harassing him bCRUI of Inourlonsmade by his unruly borerglers and making e tours of e-

planatlon Into his southeastern territoriesand finally the troublesome Berber them-selves upon himTho tumlnA the son however hatnot boon a quiet and comfortable oneTrilling exceptions wore a few Incidental n-

balllons among the woster tribes about thetime he began to some trouble hehad with the civilized world in 1880 qvor theJewbaiting in vogue among his subjects atFez and elswhor The Moorat Fez amidshouts was had killed aHebrew seventy YCRrot ageby lurllpetrobum over his fire-Incidentally two French spectators had beenwounded The American Consul InformedMuley Hassan that public sentiment not only-In Europe but In America would not coun-tenance Indulgence In such amusements bthe Moorish populace and not only demandstho punishment of the guilty person butwarned Muloy that It Is indispensably requi-site that the Israelites of Morocco shall beprotected by the local authorities othorwls

wi be long before they will all be pro

toted by foreign notions An Internationalat Madrid followed and nt the

suggostlonof eleven plenipotentiaries MuleHassan signed an agreement that all his sub-jects without regard to race should be on anequal tooting before his tribunals and tha-ulrages against those who woro not Moham

medans should bsuppressed

sareblsta Large Talk at a SaifB DUtemeiLONDON Oct 7A oomolned meeting of An-

archists and Socialists was thave been held ICIvland laULndoD this evenlnr t protest against thee Chicago AnarchUU When the Urn

arrived for the opening the doors were found tejiars-been locked by the landlord the tenants or the hallthT-ommnnlitlker Arbeltblldnngsvereln having paid

heir rent meeting wa adjourned to an adjacentItall Ine a club of Communist Illlam Morrli

the poet prelded In his pcb he said that the Chicare cases showed him how the thin veneer of cli-llzatlon over mere brutality was remov d and the ho

man beast exposedOne man named Seymour said that every Anarchist at

the Chicago meeting ought to have thrown A bmbtthe police and he hoped all wouldI do so If thewere carried out if be were brought before JndgiGary be wailS consIder It bproudest duty to rid the

of such awol a rattPrM for as Xar m tllltac the Waves

BEBLXN Oct 7The Nautical Society ofhamburg ha offered a pits ot noo mark for the beetnay on the subject calming lbs tea by the us of oil-

An exhaustive deicrlptlcnof experiments of the effect of-

oIl made up to the present time 1s required also a cciiirum of the arrangements used so far and especiallycomplete dIrections for its use by large steamers andtailIng vessels as well as small vessels pilot tubingmd lifesaving boat besides directions for th us-

oilol

at sea and near the coastThe essays are tn be written In English or German

and sent before Nov I11HM7 to the President theautlcal Society Director of the havlgatlon School

spt V E ilatthlesen hamburg Competition Is notlimited by nationality

The Government DodgesDCBIJN Oct7The Inquest in the case of-

thei victims at Mltchelstown was continued today Mrorphy counsel for the Crown declared that the witiises for the Government who had leitlned In the cuehad been Insulted by Mr Harrington and that that gsa

etnan had not been reproved for hi conduct by thekroner He therefore declined to call any more wit

acute The Coroner thou railed Caps Beagrave wholook a leading part tn dispersing the crowd on the carslion of the rioting and examined him as to his knowl-edge of the affair

Constable Leabya evidence was taken at lbs hospitalwhere he is now confined suffering from wounds re¬

ived In the tight lie testlijed that be was knockedIowa and beaten four times before be reached the bar-racks and Identlfled one ot th Jurymen as one of thoseWho had obstructtd him

Mr OBrien Case Adjonrued-Duntnt Oct 7The hearing In the case of-

Wtr William OBrien who wa summoned for publishingiccounts of meeting of suppressed branches of theitlonal League In United Ireland ha been adjourned

ndingadeclilonof the appeal to the Superior Courtby tho Crown In the case snihui Lord Mayer Sullivanwho was summoned for the sums offence

Mr Ilc ly member of Parliament MrOBrien cow-let applauded the magIstrate ileclslon and ssld thatIlls Court had shown Itself fair minded ta its dispositionit th case tlr OBrien wa not present In the court

Oeraaar Settle her Bill with VrmneePAnts Oct 7Count von Munstor the Oar

nsa Ambssiador to day handed to M Flonrens MinisSr ot Foreign Affairs 112500 the amount agreed upon

0 be paid by the German Government aa Indemnity to-

he family of timekeeper Hrignon who was recentlyhot dead on the FrancoHerman frontier Connt vontnster stated that an Inquiry was proceeding tn nx theiponalbllily for Kaufmaun act in shooting Ilrignon

Lord Mpenaer Bpeuka Out far IrelandLONDON Oct 7In a speech at Aberyswlth-Is evening Lord Spencer said he wa lallaAed that theeague had nothing to do with crime In Ireland Reerring to the trial of Lord Mayor Sullivan he sill tie-

could not advocate a breach of the law but In the presntt state of affair be could not expect anytblngdlffernt on the pact ot the Irish people tie was cotivineadacre strongly than ever that Ireland needed home rule

Infanaer Calllnan Dunked WaskLONDON Oct Colllnon the Informer who

5 eitlfyiog for th Crown In the cast against his coniderates for the murder of Constable Whelehan contuned his evidence at tnnll today He said be dislikedeork It appears from his testimony that his only clocka trade was that lie murdered Tat Ilenbrld and had-Inc been welcomed everywhere

Fort HaUtha Hangman Kept BniyPonT SMITH Ark Oct 7Sllas Hampton

and Btabora Oreen were hung today tn the UnitedStates Jail yard for murder Both men faced their tatwith great coolness and died name Their necks werebroken by tIm fall Both confessed the crimes and diedpenitent The crime for which Green was hung wa themurder of three deputy marshal all of whom he attacked while asleep Hampton murdered an old whiteman named Lloyd on the night ot lIeu 8 IKKO and raveas his reason that there were too many white mn In thnation This Ii the ulnity fourth man hunt by the pcessat hangmen

Henry Oeanro at AuburnAununx Oct 7 Henry George spoke in the

Academy of Music here tonight to a Urge audienceThe Itv F II Hlnman of the Calvary freibyterlanChurch presided and Introduced Mr George On thplatform were Mayor Austin Police CommissionerLaurie the Rev F V Drown and repreentatlriiot theUnited llabor party from the dllferent wards In the cityMr Ueorg ipok for about an hour and a half and atth close of tile remarks answered questions propoundi to him by persons In the audlenc

Tfc Uqoor Qaestlca la Atlaata-AnaNTa Oot 7In view of the approach ¬

lug vote on Prohibition In Atlanta the City Councilasked the Legislature W Until the district la whichliquor could be sold If lbs city should g wet and to-

nx high llcenie This measure of restriction and highUcens were advocated by the Prohibitionists andopposed by the Iroblbltlonlit The matter came up Inthe Legislature today and the City Council bill wasdefeated leaving the Issue now to be plain wetor dry

Bavatrea orTyBBold FeverOuaouixix Oct Typhoid fever has

prevailed u an alarming extent at Ventral Bridie SehoIan county tar several weeks The family of Land-

lord Jacob C Lethj at that place bu been nearly exbe ales nil wife cud two oi have lust died and° tuly smber t hIs taahtr itrylTlBft U

ptZeesi7 i

0

F 0

I

not rotujfTKKR At tuttttttatxAD

Walssd with alatcs seal lbs Chases f-

MB Women and Chlldrea-

MAitDiiEintAD Oct 7 Much anxiety vriw

felt here concerning tho Volunteer this morn-ing when it no known that she bad not ar-

rived and had not been hoard from and thisanxiety was not dispelled until at noon a de-

spatch¬

was received from Highland Light saying that she passed thoro at 11JUM with thewind wontsouthwest at the rote of twelvemiles an hour At 810 P M the Voluntoorwo sighted from Abbott Hall Observatorysome fifteen miles distant In tow An soon asthe nows that the Volunteer hud been seenwas circulated men women antI children leftfactory and homo rushed for the headlandsand anxiously waited for the white victor toround Iolnt Nonlt

At 8 oclock she dropped anchor off the East-ern

¬

Yacht Clubs house Her anchor had notreached bottom before the cannon on Good ¬

wins Head and Mason Rocks belched forthsolutes and on enthusiastic crowd cheered tothe echo Scores of boats put out from shoreand In a few minutes Copt Haff was receivingthe hourly congratulations of tho people Thecrook sloop came un the harbor with eight sig-

nals¬

flying from her masthead signifying raceswon At 0 oclock Capt Hail and part of thecrow loft for Itoston to attend the reception atFanoull Hall tonight

DYNIS KEAKNET COMING nonxs-

Th > exKra f he Sand Lisle to aVnk-eeeht Acatnit George

CmoAOO Oct 7 Dennis Kearney the agi¬

tator arrived from tho Pacific coast this morn ¬

ing and loft for Now York In the afternoon totake part in the throecornered political strug-gle

¬

waging between the Democrats Ropub-icans and the followers of Henry George MrKearney on reaching Chicago made an im-

mediate¬

effort to seethe condemned Anarchistsparticularly Parsons The Pacific coast agita-tor

¬

was Quietly but firmly denied admission tothe jail by the officers in charge Ho wontaway lamenting and telling how four yearsago ho had advised Parsons to leave bombsalone and take to ballots or he would surelygot his neck In a halter But Parsons onlylaughed Kearney says that on reaching NewYork he will make a series of speeches takingthe ground that the question of questions fortile worklngmen at this time IB not the faroffIssue of land taxation but shall the laboringpeople concentrate every effort upon passing alaw through the very next session of Congressmaking tho exclusion ot Chinese from thecountry absolute Ho will urge that the handsof the Democrats be strengthened their rep-resentatives

¬

nt present being the tile strongestanttChlnoso advocates It will be an Immeas ¬

urably greater victory ho thinks for the workIngmen now to help pass tile Mitchell AntiChinese bill when Congress assembles than fora side Issue to weaken the Democracy and IIn-directly

¬

strengthen their proChinese Kenub-llcan opponents After leaving Now YorkKearney proposes to renew the antiChineseagitation in the principal cities ot Canada

riltE Or A PAm OF TBOU8EKS

Three Engines and a Track SummonedHeadlong to Beaver Street

Tho clanging of fire engine bolls and therattling of engines and trucks resoundedthrough the First ward just before the Ex-changes

¬

opened yesterday and In a jiffy all theresources ot Engine Companies 410 and 31

and Hook and Ladder Company 15 poured in ¬

to Beaver street near Broad A pair of trou-sers

¬

very old black and oily was smokingfaintly on the sidewalk In front of the office otJ A Hawksworth 85 Beaver street A groupof men In Mr Hnwksworths door was lookingat the Ore The firemen looked at It also andretired without throwing any water

The trousers belonged to Charles Doll Ho satinside the 011cc wsitingfor some one to bringhim another pair Ho works in the stove storeof JomoB Uupho A Co in Old slip and yesterdaymorning he was down in the basement of MrHawksworths offlco polishing up a stove Itwas a small and close place and a gas jot wasburning Tho stove polish contained naphthaSuddenly titers wnj a puff the little flamelighted up and a big flame began to play onthe polish not In his agitation Mr Doll turnedthe pot over and the fire began to spread andto catch on his clothing Ho bounded up stairsand up Beaver street throwlna off smoke likea steam engine Ho pulled the alarm in frontof the Cotton Exchange and rushed back tothe store in a state bordering on conflagrationMeanwhile a pall of water had put out tileflames In the basement and when Mr Doll re-appeared

¬

he was relieved ot his trousers with ¬

out InjuryllesIgnatla of Commloloner KeraaaA-

LBaNT Oct 7The Hon John D Kern anChairman of the Board of Railroad Commissioner ofthis State today filed his resIgnation of the offlco ofCommissioner to take effect Nov 141887 The reasonfor Mr Kernan resignation is his desire to resnmo lbspractice ot the law which he will do in the city of NewYork In connection with his brother Nicholas of Uticaand his father ex Senator Eeman Mr heroin hubeen active In the work ot the Ks w York State Commis-sion emeclally In connection with the drafting of theamendments to the general railroad laws and tile legl-latlon for the regulation of railroads and for the protec-tion

¬ot the travelling public and of railroad employees

Ac that have been enacted during his term The ac-curate

¬

compilation of the railroad laws of the Statscontained In each annual report of the Hoard and pre-pared

¬

under his supervision Is highly spoken ot by law-yers Th weight given to his recommendation as tonational railroad legislation by the tultm Senate Com-mittee led to the general belief that he would be ap¬

pointed an Inter state Commerce Cumniluloner lastspring The contest for bis place on the New York StateCommission promises to be exciting

One of Baldwin Murderess KilledLos ANGELES Oct 7A letter has just been

received by hen John Baldwin of this city from partiesnear Durango Mexico where his brother Leon Baldwin wu mnrdered by Mexican bandits a few weeks agoconcerning which outrage the Bttte Department bu in-

structed the United States Consul at Onrango to makea full Investigation The letter gives nw fact concern-Ing the altair and states that the bandits alter robbingand tilting Haldwln went to Ventanea and robbed thestore of an old man there also taking hip ton and holdtag him for ransom Villagers pursued the bandit soyprbed and killed LIce ot them Among those wa one ot-jhe murderers of Baldwin The letter further slates thatthe people were greatly rejoiced that some of the wontcharacters In the community were thus put to death

George TV GermalDea DisappearanceGeorge W Oermaine a bookkeeper In the

Bank of New York for sixteen yean loll the bank at <Hoclock list Saturday afternoon since which time therehu been no tract of him It Is supposed that he hugone off laboring under temporary aberration of themind Tbe bank oOlrlal report that his accounts areperfectly straight The musing man Is a5 years oldand A feet 7 Inches lilt Ils hu black hair and a darkmoustache lie wore a brown striped suit A checkedshirt and a brown overcoat when he went away lIelives in Vluablng

Retriever Duke Retrieved by Capt SmithCapt Smith of the Police boat Patrol saw a

paragraph In Tug Sx that South Paw AL Heritageof Jersey City had lost his grist retrieving dog Dukehe telegraphed air Heritage yesterday morning thatIts had his dog CantmliR says he round Dnk swimmint in the EMI Illvtr off liovenmrs Island andPicked him up It Is thought that Duk wu stolen byriver thieves and lumped off their craft and started onliii way none

Pat Klllen Wants to FightCntouoo Oct 7The announcement that

Sullivan wu soon to sail for Europe appeared her thimorning Parson Davies this afternoon made publIca letter front Pat KlUen challenging Sullivan to box himten rounds or more In Ulnneapoua Bt rant or 111-1waukle within Ofleen days

Fran Bench to liarWasnisoToy Oct 7The lion Andrew

Wylle one of the indies of the Supreme Court of thisDistrict for twentyfour years and who was retiredsome months clue at his own requent wu today admilted to vracUse In the court whets he lately presides

Oar Hill at IImeE-LMrrtA Oct 7Goy lull spent the day on

Keuka Lake and came down to this city this eveninglie ws entertained at illnnir by Vlr ll B lisper atwhoSe residence lie met a few friends Later in thevenlagU lift for Albany

81AItKa 1UOX THE TZLEGflAPII

Only four anadlsn cruisers will continue In the laberlesttrotectlun servIce alter the lOll Inn tli rest be ¬

withdrawn from commission for th remainder ot-

Atue season

vein of rock salt forty feet thick ha been struck atthe test weD in Ithaca at a depth of iiao reel The saltIIs clear ant pure 1 lie well IIs in be put down anotherthousand feet In search of oil or gas

Th Captain of th Italian ship Libert which wa> Ued at Chatham N n forirouggllng brandy bu beensentenced by a local magistrate to pay a Due of w andto serve a term ot thirty days In prison

Joseph Mills wno criminally assaulted a UtIle girl ithe Concord N II cemetery where she had gone Bplace flowers on her mothers grave sentenced yesUrdy to twenty years In Stat prisonChrl llelmbach aced IB and August Pflffr agedaX were smothered yesterday at Veller ore mln In

Keadlni ny the giving way of the embankment ot thedin which they were during of mudThe schooner Peregrine White of lloucest while

cruising nit Cap Sable found a large grayish mass floatlug on the water which proved to be ambergris TIlespecimen wciabs 18n poonds and u worth l U canespr Iiul in all

John UKelm a wealthy farmer of Lobachsvllle Pacommitted suIcide o Thursday ulrhl by shooting himelllntlie heal IU was inOlcird at the last terra uf

court on n Charge of defrauding a bank out of 7tu andIt Iis inppowd this trouble led him to take his Ufe

The iaay Dipirtmint yesterday received a diipatchfrom Bear Admiral Chandler commanding the Aslatiosquadron dated Magaukt Japan OclTln which be-uy be wU tend a able Unmdlatlr to Nonage Islandof the Caroline group to lnvngt the nailve mu

AedcMiaIuts and

WESTERN UNIONS PRIZE

XflV fl AND a rvnciiAKK IWIUUXD xo-AfOID INJUNCTIONS

Tee Advise cf 0eme ef the IengneiidlUse Abent Mr G nldAn Aeennt fWhat Weatera Vulva Get by the Deal

The bargain between tho Western UnionTelegraph Company anti the Baltimore slidOhio Ilallroad was hurried up a little on Thurs-day

¬

beyond tho orislnal Intentions ot the ne-

gotiator¬

for a reason which appeared yester-day After the Executive Committee meetingof tho Western Union on Thursday nt whichthe contract for tho purchase was ratifiedporno of the longheaded people that Mr JoyGould gathers about him suggested that thetrade might aa well bo consummated at once toavoid possible interference by ohronlo litigants89 tho obligation of the Western Union Corn ¬

pany to deliver to the syndicate for account ofthe Baltimore and Ohio Railroad Company20000 shore of Western Union stock wodrawn UP and delivered to Drexel Morgan ACo by Mr Gould himself who then receivedthe entire capital stock of the Baltimore antiOhio Telegraph Before nightfall It had beenformally delivered to President Norvin Greenand put In the treasury of the company thusputting tho purchase beyond the reach of aaInjunction All of these acts wore ratlflcil at aspecial mooting ot tint Western Union KxeouIre Commltteo yesterday

I An experienced telegraph man not now conneared with any of tbo coeppanies explainedyesterday what Western Union really getsThe statistics of the Baltimore anti Ohio plantprinted in Turn Bull yesterday show this In ageneral way but o description of the more Im-

portnnt parts ot the system is essential to acomplete understanding of the transactionIn the first place It acquires as now businessall the traffic along the lines of the Baltimorennd Ohio Itiillrood and also along the WestShore road as far ns Albany The line fromthis city to Chicago by way of the West Shoreand the Nickel Plate roads Is one of thabest In the country The Baltimore and Ohiopaid 800000 for it and then rebuilt It withheavy poles upon which 30 wires wore placedat an expense of about 2000000

The competition on Southern business something that the Western union never had beentroubled with before Iis disposed of by themerger The loss to the Commercial CableCompany will also bo on Important factorsince the Baltimore and Ohio gave traffic tothat company and also distributed for It Otcourse the officers of the Commercial Companydo not take this view A sample of the man-agement

¬

of the Baltimore and Ohio and itsunxlqty to get business away from the Westorn Union is shown by the foot that in manycases even on Its 10 cent rates it allowedlargo customers a rebate ot S3 per cent leav-ing

¬

6j cents per out ot which 4tfcents had to be paid for delivery or collection

As yet no formal notice of the change inownership has been given to the employees ofthe Baltimore and Ohio The system Iis turnedover to the Western Union free of indebted-ness of any kind and the Baltimore and Ohioassumes alleged forfeitures like those whichAIdermen of Philadelphia have threatened

Mr Robert Garrett the President of theBaltimore and Ohio Railroad Company ar-rived yesterday on the Ems lie put iat th-

nearlyBrevoort House and denied himself toall corners and especially to reporters

A UARDVP ARTISTS LUCK

He Finds the Slats In Chicago Who TaskIII Six Hundred Crown In Sweden

An artist in this city ella on Interestingstory Involving a wealthy Chicagoan a nativeot Denmark but for a time before coming tothis country a resident of Sweden Mr Leh¬

man a Swedish artist now of Chicago when ayoung man about thirty years ago was ambi ¬

tious to learn the art of photography He wentto Orobro in Sweden and there found a pho ¬

tographer named Harley Ho paid this manCOO crowns to teach him tho art Soon afterthe payment of the money the photographerdisappeared likewise the 600 crowns

Lehman set to work diligently and becameafter awhile a tolerable artist He lived InUormany and other European countries won-dered

¬

over to America and book again to Eu ¬rope and about three years ago came backhero and settled In Chicago

His bad luck still pursued him and he wasin a condition fit for meditation as to whetnoilife was worth the living when he happenedto see In the columns ot a Chicago paper thename of the man who had many years beforeconfiscated his 600 crowns The name is notpeculiar and Lehman hopes were not atall sanguine but ha went to soIf it was the same man It was andhe was living in a handsome residencewealthy and on the best of terms with theofficial custodians of the Cook county TreasuryThe 600 crowns were promptly handed over tothe almost famishing artist though it Uunderstood without interest The whilomSwedish photographer also engaged Lehmanto do some painting for him remunerated himhandsomely and introduced him to others whoextended similar patronage BO that the artistbecame quite prosperous

ObltnarrGeorge James Webb a musician and corn

poser died yesterday at his horn In Orange H J Hewas born In Wiltshire England June 24 lOc and wasIntended for the Church hut b adopted mails as a pro-

fession¬

Ue came to the United Statu la 1830 settledIn Boston and soon took a prominent plies 1la musicalcircles lIe wu one of the founder of the Boston Acad-emy

¬

of Mule waa President of the llandeland HaydnSociety and was one of the earliest conductors of srmphony and oratorio performances In that city lie wasalso one oflhefl adlmr teachers of pianoforte sad slag>ing In 1X11 he removed to New York and foryears he wasth ormnlstot tbe BwedenborgUn ChurclCof which he wa a member lIe compiled a number ofhymnals and wrote many popular bjrmns of which

The Morning Light Is Breaking is perhaps the bestknown He also wrote many secular songs lie was aman ot mncbcuMration of the purest personal characler

KK01rat 4 for twenty years an editorial wrIterfor the Journal of Qmmercf died yesterday typhoidpneumonia at tile horn In Lake View N J yoraerly-h wan a lawyer lie wa 07 years old

Frederick H Abed one of lbs three brothers eonstttntinr the arm of Abed Itrethern Iron manufacturer-satlsotiouthetceetwhlchdatepback to 1764 dl d yes-terday after a weeks illness his wa 40 year old andleaves a widow The funeral will be train the old Abesmansion now occupied by John IL Abe el Jrl 137 80ond avenue-

The Rev French 8 Evans died at his residence laWashington yesterday ared an years tie became a>active member of the Methodist Episcopal Church laearly life and in 1320 received his appointment as mittliter In Haltlmore lie rabsequently came to Wabln >lou Kor many years he ha been chaplain of the Asso-ciated

¬

Survivors of the War of 1813 tIe was NavalOfficer at the port of Baltimore during President tincoins Administration

Mr William I lleslv a butcher and market man otitinj and one ot the Ol1st business men In thai

city of apoplexy yesterdayCoL Win J lloyd the wn known directory publisher

died at Washlniton tall nightJoseph Shlllington a wellknown bookseller of WasV-

Initon died last nliibt lie was born In Irtlsndln Itlland came to America In ISu becomIng Washingtoncorrespondent of the Baltlmor Sun the following yearlie made the sensation of the day by fist securIng aidpublishing an account ot the kllUna of two Cabinet

Ministers br the explosion ot a gun on board the rrtnee-ptn then lying in the Potomac After four years o-fnewpapr work he went Into the book badness andliii shop became a favorite resort for Webster CalhouaClay and other oldtime itatiimen

A Too AmbltUus BarilarJoseph Tallant of 133 East Twelfth street

broke Into the house of Bella Broncella 144 East Fif-

teenth street at S A M yesterday gaining aceis by awindow 110 stole thirteen knives elttt forks iwlenoons and a napkin ring Bhortly afUrward he crsplthrough a coal hole and entered the house of Mar rrjIwimtdy lw Kast Twelfth street II wa friptiteneiaway and left the sIlverware In the halt PolleemsitColby nnt on the tnltr track and mt s P M yesterdayhad him locked up In tba station house

There May He Fun at XaITtownJames William Ilusteds Assembly Conven-

tion¬

1s held at Tarry town today and there may be apleasant Urn tartbt spectators Since Senator PlaItWas 10 nnklu to the laid Eagle at the Repsbllr tn Stalecommittee meetIng the fibber of men who inttpluck hu feathers has Increased The Ktnte CoaTeDion li held at the same time and between them the Inhabitants of Tarrytown should make up for any sllhHthey way hare received from travelling circuses

J011UHJH AUOUT-

Mailon

ZClJIY

the Mall tlila afternoon at Sri by Cappa1Set intblteglment Hand

Jwlje Donohue baa granted an absolute divorce toMitlllit OHrlen from ifdmund OUrien and to Fanny B-

M veers from WillIam MyersWhile Barney Lynoh was walking through Coentlu

alit a piece of wood fell from the track of She lvaidrailroad and broke three ot bla rib lie tot a verdictIn Judge liooktavira court yesterday against the rail-road company for 12110

Ctrl Werner save ball tn 3000 for rank P 51yaswho was accused of swindlIng an Immigrant ffyaaJumped hu ball sad the ball turned out to hi strawWerner was arreited In Philadelphia on Thursday andcommitted to the Tomb yesterday for perjury

The Soard °f School Trttsea of th Twelfth ward haveelected Secretary John H halen to the Chairmanshipmade vacant br the reignatiool of Andrew L UoiilarSfrom the hoard Antonio Kailne hag been made Seerstary Tb Iluard of Ilaucalia has not yet Cited the Tacancy caused by Mr areilgnailon

Coroner haunt began au inquest yrt rdy in lbscase SMry Kelly an epllintlo patient In the Kandill 5

buiiliaL who escaped tlirougli a bathroom windaw to Sept II and drnwd heraelf tine of She Jurorwanted In know why abe was allowed to escape andSeaitendantJiPUI °B the lolu11 in Order w ulPan4

William Brnns the art publisher a1335 Broadway aidhenry rattberg the importer who ha an oOe tiltdoor preferced charges yesterday agabist olIocmeS

ftormack and Hamilton et the Leonard trill stationwith whom they bad th extraordinary ezpplanc ea

UutsyMonday

olwudnarrated

UutlMUiIn

K ima Ur 1trtl1j