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r* a i I n NVHBBB 1808. i Weakly ■■tahUahed 1850. j PITTSTON 188b. J TWO OEHT8 | Ten OHM Por Week ORANGE RIOTS. THE QU the qhio club - \ InM • llnUM* to tha D*no«ntl THE LINES DRAWN. THE CIVIL SERVICE AMENDING THE b the Dissolution of the Present Par- liament. State CommtHM. _C? CiKoiNKATi, June la—The Ohio chib has promulgated a manifesto to the Dtnumia of Hamilton copnt? and the state of Ohio at large- The paper was for warded by special messenger to Columbus, ia the form of an address to the Democratic ccnpmittee. which meats at Columbus to-day. The club first declares it to be the duty of ovary gVxJ citizen to take a deep interest and an active part tn the political affair* of the cdwntry. It quotas the fifth article of the olub's declaration of principles, jcien coning the corrupt use of money to secure riomtnatioa or rteotion, and maintaining the purity of the ballot. The club adtnMa tfcat there was gross corruption arid violations of the ballot in the October election); declares it a matter of history that the scratching of tickets and the forgery of aamee on the tally ■bests occurred in Democratic wards, and that up to this time Hiws has been no definite condemnation of these outrages by any organised body within the Democratic party, ami none by any"official class now holding . office in the city or County. ! It warns against surprise, and: denounces Democratic fraud, exempting members of the general assembly from a mistaken tense Of party fidelity. "The party throughout the state must be pqratd pf its worst elements, who have been dragging It down from its high functions to subserve private and corrupt ambitiona. We must put the Democratio house tn crda*eo that it shall be possible to give- a becoming welcome to the thousands of good Republicans who Shall, in a short time, find it Impossible. to share the narrow and partisan efclwsiveness itffch has already begun to undermine the strength vt their once powerful organisation. "Let the Democracy oft he state .take warning from the faults of their opponftits; let them also remember the misconduct which, in the past, lost to them the public confidence, and prepare to deserve and win control, to the end that good government may be established and maintained in the state at Ohio." K RULING OF THE CANA0IAN3 Amerloan AimUtln Sgfordag Daoldtd DWoipIlae. ObfLTTKBXJB, June 9.—The (pedal meattng of the American BmWI association, called to take action on the failure of the 8c. Lowts club to pay certain ten assessed against Capt Comisky byumpires, and aim to investigate the charge* agalMt Bathing and Latham for their conduct on ttoBtoSoMr* ground! on the 4th Inst, U in i i II Malms th*^tl^coilnedtop^m against Comisky, amounting to M00. A PMoluUon waa adopted direetinffc Present Wikoff to give Bushong and Iauaid ah op» portunlty to submit affidavits in their behalf, after whkty he will inflict sj|u$ nnnlshment as he may deem proper. SevAl important amendments were made playing rules. One confines, the captains, Mid coachers to a spape 18x35 feet no mu-t rf which «h*ll b. nifcrt, i|» S«srv i.".': oOstofr punishable by flat to address-the Rule M Was so anieftUd as to ""if- it punishable by.fertho oaptaiaor any ftew to question any decWoh of the umpire by ***'uCmptt* aD*j games soheduled for' Sunday shall be championship games Wild Orgies in the Streets of hotraon, June 9.—Scores of provtaets} Tory and Liberal election agents are In load on, oonsulting with the whips of their respective parties In regard to plans Tor the ooming parliamentary elections. Mr. Gladstone insists that every constituency. shall be provided with a home role candidate, and relies tfpaa the Radical .warkiu#men and the Radical clubs and societies to supply •salons volunteer* M workers during the campaign and at the polls. CAUSES A FLURRY IN THE HOUSE. COUNTJER ARRAIGNMENTS. CAUSES CONSTERNATION. Belfagt. Butterwnrth Kndurses New Tork'l "Oot' anor, and flays the President la Oom- Determined to Drive Amerloan Fishermen rrom Canadian Waters— A flMavlta llelng Prepared for the State Department—Mackerel Fishing Cut Off. MANY BIOTEBS SHOT DOWN. mltted 'to' CM) Service Keform—Mr. Kami all Speaks His Mind. Oloccbstfr, Mass., June lft—The dispatches from tho provinces bearing on the exclusion of American fishing vessels from waters within three miles of n lhD« drawn from headland to headland ci co_s'j*fnaticn hero. Fisbormon say Uiat this con - struct ion of the treaty wiH crot off oar mackerel fishery, and they threaten'to take the law into their own hands nnltns the government dousi eomethin g to help them. Bald a fisherman: "Where ia the American squadron, when. the whole British North American iqualron is in and about provincial waters. If the Americans are to he shut oat from headland to headland, In many case* It will out off the whole mackerel fishery." The P«1Im Uttqul to Control the laU jaflfl 7TV -V'fT". ) ' Washington, June la—The tiine of the house was spent on the civil service amendment to the legislttfttfMitalMMtfc tderCely tatiDeqception, the routine partisan rhetoric age now field by Jtsnvblioans, and called this administration th-D most non-partisan since the days of Washington. . Mr. ButterWdrth (O.) said the president had come info' pow»r undsr a protniie, zr"„*s stare; si-r&t. but the spfcit of civl) •arvi«'(aw. He read with expressions of oommendation the civil service message of the president, and de-1' dared that the majority In 'the house was undermining to overthrow the president and Induce him to break; the pledge he had given to the people. There might be a! difference of opinion as to the propriety at the law, but If so why did nOt the Democrats come forward in -a manly wv and. repeal, |t! They.dM not do so, but while talkhig with the Voice of Jacob they reached out with the hand et Hsau to seise the spoils (Laughter.) He thenquoted from tlte message of GkDv. Hill in favor of civil service refbrm. While he had criticised Governor Hill's methods, he' wanted to applaud him to this echo for the utterance there made. Hill wrote like a stalwart, like a man of experience, like a man who sought to secure honest government for his stata and the city of New York. Governor Hill might be the Democratic candidate for the presidency, but he supposed »t the Democratic party would not snpt him naif-his atterancas open civil service reform were expunged. : i Mr. Randall closed the debate with a ringing attack on the present law.;-Speaking of the arbitrary clause excluding citizens over 45 years of age from examination, ,bf *%i4» • i "It got in at the will of a tingle individual, and there waa not a mdn to-day who had the courage to utter a sentiment fn favor of that part of the regulations. The conclusion could be safely that the language was inserted in the rSgtOntions to exolude members of one political party from examination; not a man who had been removed from office in 1801 could make an application now, notwithstanding that he might have the capacity for being an efficient officer.. S.-ESSS £!ft£%*WRr members of Dj|ifc|fayt-Dfrom securing any position in the nlsMlflsd service. Should not that law he assstiilt Vow, hire, everywhere, with proprietary, he would directly and indirectly aglMts the repeal of such • I Drake* P?p«laee. The government will endeavor to dissolve parliament on June 24, or sooner if the necessary business now before the house can be disposed of, although it is not desired by the government to interfere with harvest work |by precipitating an oloction campaign during the - height of that industry.Houm Plllt|ed and Burned to the Orovai—Wlilikr Poured Into the Streata ilTom—i Take fart In the mmm «ss4 tfca Me. On. Clargrasaa Not Beaded. Bilfabt, June 10.—The riotous demonstrations of ths Orangpiben In this city were renewed last evening- The rioters began The queen telegraphed to Mr. Gladstone her' consent to the dissolution of parliament, after oonferring with Lord Hartington, whom she asked whether ha was willing to form a ministry. Lord Hartington advised dissolution, informing her majesty that ha himself would regard dissolution as desirable at this time should he form a government with the manifest determination of completing the devastation oT the houses of The police were promptly on hand and summoned the mob to disperse. No heed was paid to the summons, and the riot act was read, with as little effect as its reading had produced twenty-four hours before. The mob, during the reading of the act, continued their work of destruction, sending showers of stones through the windows and doors of homes occupied by Catholics, breaking furniture, raiding ale houses, etc., when suddenly the order was given to the police to fire. A volley was fired into the mob and three of the rioters fell dead, while a dozan others lay upon the ground bleeding from wounds, some of which will prove fatal. The mob returned the fire, and a brisk fusillade was kept qp (or twenty minutes. Soldiers are now parading the streets to assist the polioe in case of necessity. la an interview President Steele of the' American Fishery anion said: "There ajD- poars to be a better feeling in Washington. As fast as tha • skippers of A merican vessels who have been excluded from cqgimercial privileges and thoae who have been ordered out from the large bay t arrive their affldaviu will be t*kan before a notary public, and these statements forwarded to the authorities at Washington. Then they will will have something to Work upon that is substantial Newspaper reports are. not evidence." Earl Roeebery started for Balmoral by last night's mail train. It ia understood tha* his visit to her majesty htfi no reference to the political situation, but is simply made in the capacity of minister in attendance. OHIO NEW LIQUOR LAW. * Ita Constitutionality to be T«teclt* W have been outgeneraled. They exacted to fight the Dow law by {laying It continued In the court!; meantime no tax wou'd be paid. Br » briuiantplan the cCwe i« already before the supreme courts. It to learned that the jrtlice commissioners art at the teUom of MtaaAama Thajt wanted to know whether fflKJCS to work to hare tha matter officially and ACU.patoh received from Columbus g&fit the transcript of a suit brought in tide city to tost the validity of the Dow liquor taxJ%w was taken thsre to be brought directly before the supreme • court. The ntt to brought by Mm Mary F. wealthy holder of WalieaUts, and brings an SX1: aSMS £&&£". lien oa the premises occupied bytatoa. Her Told, (Halmlng Humt the law * imni—tltusslvi ast?$vC£MC£ olause of the ooastitutkn. .hhw? f « The Liberal clubs have split, like tha party. The Reform ami Devonshire club* support the dissidents, and the National and Liberal uphold Mr. Gladstone. President Steele forwarded the affidavits of the skipper of the Ady M. Jordan, who had a permit to trade, and Secretary Bayard has replied to it Just what the answer is is a secret, but as far as oan bs learned something will be done regarding the commercial fights of Americana "r , At the headquarter* of Hr. Schnadhorst, of the National-Liberal federation, that gantlemam boasted that not a single Liberal association had swerved from ltC allegiance to Mr. Gladstone. The mob drove a force of ISO policemen Into the barraoks, and than attacked the building*, firing revolvers and throwing ■ton** at the door* and window*. The police fired, and a later report say* they killed five person*. Several Protestant clergymen tried to dispone the mob, bnt their effort* were unavailing. One of the parson* killed wa* a wMpw with two ohOdren. Orangemen wrecked 100 hoosM i» city, two of whiC$i they boned. The rioters broke into several whisky (tore* and possessed themselves of the content*. Numbers of the men XeU Into the gutter* drunk and laid there. Other*, made desperate or maudlin by drink, prowled about the street* crying oat, "To with the pope!" ▲ metD of Orangemen made an attack ubd the tavern kept by a Catholic named Duffy. Tha police war* promptly on tha scene, and, after a stubborn ooeteet. during which they ussd their qarbhtes, drove tha mob a«ay in disorder. The ricMer* reasawnbled with increased strength and again attacked Duffy'*, tU* time overpowering the police and driving them from the place. In the first assault Chief of Folio* Carr was wounded. He wa* carried away, and Is In a critical condition.A deputation of the Irish Loyal and Patriotic union ha* started upon a stumping campaign in Scotland. THE BRITISH BETTER BEWARE. •ssth Carolina Democrats. Tank** FUhermen Getting Ready tC Comtmbus, Jtine ia—The state Demo•ratio executive committee held a secret seesion here. The meeting was called to organize the Democracy to thwart thC farmers .in their movement for a "new deal," which is tending to disrupt the party. Another object of the meeting wastode-. olare against the primary system, which it being adopted In the Thlni congrsss district against party rtoles. The recent fanners' convention held in this city has greatly alarmed Many Democrats in the state. The aQce-holders are uneasy on account of the demonstration made by the farmers against the present state administration, and they will oSe every effort to overoome Farmer Tillman in the approaching campaign. Mate convention has been called to meet in Columbia on Adg. 4. Gloucmtor, Mm*., June 10. —The Boston Globe correspondent *a tokl by a successful and reliable flaharman that tha fishermen are organising to take the law into their own hands, and defend their property and business by force of arms, tiniest the government speedily does something for their protection. %venty-flve sail are Reported to have banded together at Block Island the other day, and at Vineyard Haven over 100 sail have organised. They purpose if the government dfcllfas too long, to arm and drive off all , Canadian vessels coming to tbe United. States with fish, meeting- them on the higll seaa and destroying their fish. They have detectives in the proyinpes to notify them whan fish are to be shipped by rail, and means will be taken to stop their Importation. Many fishermen are Knight* Of Labor, and it is further reported that the Knifrhta will have a hand In the matter. Bald The Globe informant: "We will cany sixpounders, and some schooners can carry as high as an eighteen-pounder. Th -y will fish on the high seas, keeping three miles from shore, but they projftst toprotect their rights and will get mackerel. We can blow their cutters out of the water. Already the fishermen are said to have sent in their orders for guns and ammunition, f Blow Them From the Sea. Female Orange lodges are being formed in England In view of tha doming elections, and it is the intention of promoter* of the organization* that their member* shall1 lend their personal inflpenoe at the polls to a*oure vtttes fir the Tory candidates. The movement wa* * tar ted at a meeting which took place at the house of Maj. Saunderaon, Conservative member for Armagh, and the plans arranged at the meeting were Immediately carried Into effect. LONDON EXCITED. A Fenian Outbreak Bald to Be H^tcfc- It London, June 10.—The excesses of the Orangemen in Belfast and other place* in Ulster have unquestionably disgusted the average Briton, but the Unionist* maintain that the riotous demonstrations have done, no harm to their cause, bnt rather hava been productive of good, as they prove the utter madness of •objecting' Ulster to the rule of tha Nationalists. Precisely how they reconcile this line of masoning with the fact that the Orangemen in every case of vidlenoe thus far MBfrtad have been the aggressors, i* not quite clear. - I Extern! ve polios precautions have been taken at the east end, where disorders are feared, tha Irish of Rotherhlthe, Be rmond*ey and Wapping having becoihe greatly excited. A full supply of detectives has been stationed to protect railway statloas and river subways, and to watoh the tower luid other places, and all strangers are narrowly scrutinized. It is openly said that a Fenian outbreak orplot is hatching, as tha outcome of tha reeettt political events. PrrrSBTJRO, June 10.— A remarkable natural gas well baa been struolc at Cochran's Station, on the Wheeling branch of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. Gas was struck a day or two ago at a depth of 160 feet white passing through a vein of cannel coal It waa believed to be only a Tata of aurfaoe gas, and drilling waa discontinued to await developments. Contrary to expectations the flow gr»w stronger. Fiaoaa of ooat three and four inches In diameter are hurled out of the Ma with terrific force. Of all of the gas walls pat dowjr in this neighborhood this one Is without an equal. It I* s wildcat well, and is Jointly owned by the Phtfedelphia and iMnnhail companies. A WUdeat Oas Well. Knight* of Ubm Hut Go. '' Mr Mct'opae—Caftnot thepresldeut by a lation rests here; that this one man haslsg(s-luted and deprived congress of the power, which should be lodged here. I say, with deliberation, ths»I wantthe ohiaf executive to hear what I have to say on the It is not an assault oh the president; bat I ► ay here to-day that the representative* of deprived of the rights which they ought to have stood here and defended In behalf of the people who sent them here. (Applause.) Mr. Cleveland .is not responsible fdr these regulations. Nay, more, it has been but a brief time since Mr. Cleveland oould possibly have had any influence over the commissi on, and, like the gentleman from North Carolina, thoogh I have no warrant to say so, I hope a change will come over the spirit at hi* dream*, and that he wnrgive u» a Jnrt administration of ' the dvil servioe act Rbajmwo, Pa., June 10. —Nineteen, female employe* of T. H. Wilaon & Co.'* spectacle factory here, who are members of the Knights of Labor, have qgt* nrork oa account pf the porting of a notice that aU member* of any labor orgaaintiouinurt either quit the firm or the organisation. About 75 of the ISO rirU employed by the firm are tnemberi of tn* Knight*. ' Twentyana have promised to qUt the Knight*. The firm's action- has earned a flurry in labor olrclta. When the Orangeman returned to the fight tkqr ww aooompaniad by a large — - aumbtf who goaded or iIhibkI th* mil nD mfarmed a moat dangerou* element When the edqer. abandoned Duffy'*, the nob at once took complete mNMta oftjMitaTern.^Itwu All the barrel* at liquor found In (took aad let (all until they broke and liberated their content*. All the furniture was carried out, plleg.Jn the oenter of the roadway youth* and gM* drank until they fell law in the gutter*, the girl* acting wltl greater fury during the earlier *tage* of thC *— A.i 4k. —— m. - —t— *»-- - * Diobt, N. a, Jane Ml—The gohoonar Terror hai concluded to play the detect! since bar officers Have board about the Yankee* hovering near, and put oat after seeing her. They have taken down their colors, disrobed their crew and togged them up in rock map!e suits, pretending theyaht south shore fishermen. An old fisherman remarked after seeing the disguised police craft: "Look thife, boy*, Yankee fishernien kiow tbo much to play for or be caugfat with that kind of bait." J Yankee* Knew TM tfuk. Painters Locked Out. To Unveil a Mosument. Chicago, June MX—The forty or more ■hope controlled by the Master Centers' association are etosed, and neafly 1.50b Journeymen painters are locknd ont, GMrlkes had been ordered in fire of the shoos, and as the painters In the reaaaining thirty-five shop* would contribute to ttw import of the strikers, the lookout was ordered, thus depriving the strikers of-*he sinews of wkr. H*w York, Jane la—The monument to the memory at Dr. Alonco Flack, late president of Clkveraek college and Hudson River Institute, at Claverack. N. Y, will bo , unveiled on Juno 17 at 10:30 a. m. A large number of the alumni of the oollege, from an part* of the country, hay* signified their intention to bo present Among those who are expected to deliver addresses are Hon. Warner Killer, Dr. J. P. Newman, Judge Landon, Judge Glider*leeve, A, B. Wat kins, Esq., and Wallace BruOs, Esq. The unveiling of the monument and the presentation address will bo by Henry R. Heath, Hm}., of Now Torlt. Rome, June 10.—There war* 30 new cum of oholer* and 10 deaths at V«ni»e on the 5th Inst; 5 new caae* and 2 death at Barl on that day; 21 new oaeea and IS death* at Venice on the 6th. There li no unutnal prevalence of dieeaee In- thl» city. The caaee at Florence do not aeem to be cholera, but tome elmllar a (fee Hon oaued by baa drinktag water. at Work. Drgie than tha man. Tha noise, the profanity, the disorder were terrible. Tha mob ended their work by firing the tavern iteelf, and It burned to the (round. Than tha (tronger men, who had become infuriated and not overpowered by their potationi, ran through the streets, yreoking and pillaging wherever they want, and increasing their following tha further they proceeded. Theer rioters after a while qpiUcnMted around tha police station and itonW the place until they Ware tired. J TB»y i then marohed down to, another tavern. Tha polioe hastened thither in advance and attempted to protect the proparty. but they were overpowered and driven away. Typographical Dolnii PiTTSBmio, June 10l—At the afternoon session of the Iternational Typographical convention a large number of memorials were presented, among others amendments to make the term of the Joint office of secretary and treasurer two /ears; providing for district conventions; to abolish the office of chief organizer, his duties to be performed by the president, with a stated salary attached; requiring the executive officers to give bonds in the sum of f10,000. Five hundred dollars was appropriated for Jacksonville, PI a., where the union Is meeting with opposition. The 'idditional appropriations were ordered iTopeka, Kas., $200; New Haven, Conn.. D300, ead-JS&n Antonio, Tex., $300. con nation Vhcn adjourned in order to allow thm committees an opportunity to make reports. To Kemaln at HUDvk- Washington, June 10.—Presidant Cleveland has as yet formed no.pbwtMMb-'ver for a summer vacation. He will remain in Washington attending closely* to official duties until after the adjournment of ogngreer. In closing, Mr. Randall said that ho would not for a moment go back to that condition of tilings whioh, at ovsry election, tnrned oat the adherents of one party indiscriminately and put In those of another. Bat he wanted to remind the house that the law to be permanent must be fair, must be Just, and that thoae who advocated this amendment were trying to strip tt of He injustice to one party, dominant in this ooontry today. (Applause.) The vote went over. Police for Belfast. Dublin, June 10.—A ditaohnmt D of pel oe, 150 strong, have left Dublin to re-enforce the Belfast police. The Unionists have selected Mr. Russali, a oofcspicuous Irish temperanoe orator, to oppose ,Mr. William O'Brien In the oonteet for the parliamentary seat for the southern di vision of Tyron* i ,, .... . A Kail road at AneUon, For Governor of Maine* Louisville, . June 10.—The Louisville, Evansville and St Louis railroad has (wen sold at New Albany, Ind., under decree -e£ foreclosure granted by Judge Oresham of the United States circuit court, to satisfy the mortgage held by the American Trust company, of Hew York. The road was purchased by Messrs. William T. Hart, Jonas T. French, J. M. Fetter, Sj. T. Burr and H. D Hyde, of Boston, who attended the sale in person, reprofentlng a committee of the Boston bondholders, for 1750,000. Lbwmton, Jane lft— In the Republican convention yesterday, J. H. Bodwoii was nominated for governor on the firrif ballot, receiving 863 out of a total of 1 ****CD Teething Babies are happy If their 'gums are bathed with Dr. Hand's Teething Lotion Summer—Mother be careiultf /.out, babies with diarrhoea] Or. Hand's Diarrhoea Mixtures curiae when everything else fatfa. Price 26 cto. I ui 1 §ltd 2 : OFFICIAL ENVELOPES. The mob, left in possession, treated the tavern as they hid treated Duffy's, turned on all the-tape, broke the fall barrels in the street, made a bonfire of the furniture, and finally set fire to the building. The police re'.urned, and this time got the better, for a time, of the mob, whose ranks were depleted by the scores who had fallen away in drunkenness, and extinguished the flames before they could gain control of the structure. But the officers were unable to drive the rioters from the locality, and they remained and did about as they pleased until A Cable News Agent Threatened. Bucharest, June 10,—M correspondent of the Cable News company of London, has been threatened by the government with expulsion for having divulged political secrets through the British and American press. / - n 7' The . Contract for Their Manufacture Awarded. Washington, June 10.—The postmaster general has awarded the contract for ■tamped and newspaper wrappers for four years, beginning October 1 next, to the Morgan Envelope company, of Springfield, Mass.,, and the'Plimpton Manufacturing company, of Hartford, Conn., these oompanles uniting In a bid, whioh was the lowest under the recent advertisement They' are the present Making a due allowanoe for the natural Increase in the lasses of envelopes and wrappers, the ex penttlture during the four year* of the contract term, it is estimated, will be about $3,250,000, as against (4,200,000 for like quantities at present contract prloes. The therefore, under the new contract wllrbe nearly $1,000,000. The public will receive the direct benefits of the reduction, as the envelopes are sold, as near as may be, at the cost of manufacture. Bt.'fcocifl, Jnn» Union, Franklin county, H. D.' Davit, master workman of the. local assembly, Knjgbts of L«bor, has bqen sentenced to two years in the penitentiary for railroad track on lUroh 24. L r-—7-ii)-iMjn t«j ffL • • master builders of this city, emoloying about 1,000 meU, have decided to notify their employees—oirpanteq* masons, bricklayers, etc.,—that after June 15 they .would be required to wqrk ten. hM-a and that if they refused men from otheF cities will be employed. The men who have been working eight hotm since May 1 say they wUl not return to tho old plan. X*' A Pall Full of Gold. brdtaiiic*. Be It ordered and enacted bv the Burgees and S «g *5? w«rt to the direction of the Burgees, and shall ha-« full tower and authority In carrying out his lnstromlons, or in the enforcement of ordinances, to make oectracts, ana hire all needful aid. sub - o%e 8J5?." "That a street committee of Woe etolD Ito elected by Bo i ough Council, who shall have charge of the opening trading and repairs otailstogsts and alleys and with full power and aothorjiyto act, and the Street Commissioner shall be subject to the direction and control of said street committee In the opening grading and repairs of streets and alley*, and shall do no work or Incur any indebtednees for openton grading or npnlm; on said streets and alleys without flrft having the consent of the Boreugh Council, except* antes of emergenqr, when the Street Commissioner shall make sucn needful repairs wj NDOrt- to the Borough Council." Joe. Lamoford, Burgess and ex-ottcio President of Town Council. Tsksisjsmtixr- Suspension Bridge, N. Y., June 10.-. Several workmen, while engaged In tearing down an old barn here, found (700 In gold in a pall under the Boor. The latest date on arty of the coins is 1861. It Is supposed that the money belonged to an eocentrlo person, now dead, who was a member of a family who once occuptsd the premises on which the barn stood. The workmen divided the money among themselves. KILLED HIS FATHER-IN-LAW. A North Carolina Tragedy—A Case of Charlotte, N. C, June 10.—Yesterday afternoon, between 3 and 4 o'clock, the startling report of a pistol was heard near the public square. A few moments after it was discovered that H. C. Long had killed W. F. Cuthbertson, his father-in-law. The tragedy is the result of Cuthberteon's threat* against the life of Long. When Long married Miss Cathberteon her father was vary much enraged, and at the timeJfad to be put under bonds to keep the peaoe. Bunday last Una Cuthbertson went to see her daughter and grandchild. When she returned home her husband nearly killed her with a buggy whip, and would have killed her if she had not thrown the cartridges out doors before he ooold load his pistol. Afterward he sent word to Long that he Intended to kill him and his (Long's) wife. Long is now in jail, and will have a trial to-day. The popular verdict is in favor of Long, and it is considered a clear oaae of selfdefenss. , to. Self-Defense. m rniug. During the rowdyism of the night Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Parnell were both burned in effigy, and a dummy body labelled "Home Rule' was cremated. Boa TON, June 10.—The '105th annual meeting of the Massachusetts Medical society was held here yesterday. A paper entitled "An epidemic of malaria in Massachusetts in 1815" was read by Zabdiel B. Adams, M D., of Framinghara. An essay on the Massachusetts Doctors. AN ORANGE FLAG, Timely Arrival of Military Forces at The entire polio* Woe of Bart St Lapis has been dismlaaed, on account of alleged conspiracy with robber* to go through bunks and business houses. CONDENSED NEWS. J.urgan, Jails 10.—Thomas Gallagher, -who was shot and killed during the riot here, was a well-known local simpleton. He -waved an Orange sash in the face of a home „ rule /nob during an incessant fire between r .that mob and it* Orange enemiee. Driving the riot the situation at one time became so desperate that Mr. Mathers, a local Orange leader, declared that Tinlsst the % authorities did their duty, he and a thousand armed Orangemen vould take charge of the town. Mather waa 011 the point of carrylag out his threat when the military ap- Lutfan. A Beekless Fireman. '■Causation and treatment of lateral curvature" was read by Edward H. Bradford, M D., of Boston. Tioga, Pa., June lft—On Monday afternoon Section Foreman Daniel Ahearn, of the Tioga railroad, started on his band oar with a number of laborers to run to Millerton. An engine stood on the switch at Seeley's creek, and the fireman, John, O'Lsary, stood near it As the hand etuf approached on the C main track, O'Lsary thought be would play a Joke cm the men on on the hand car, and he threw a stick across the rails. The hand oar struck it and was thrown from the rails. Ahearn and Thomas Birmingham were thrown from the car, and ll passed oyer both of them. One wheel crushed Ahearn's head, and he received' other injuries which will prove fataL Birmingham was frightfully mingled, and died before a physician atv. rived. He we* 66 years old, and leaves a wife and six children. t hern has a wife and nine children. Deputy Sheriff Coakly, of Bt Louis, has received a letter offering him $10,000 to permit Maxwell to eaoapa. He Serves Without Pay. New York, June 10.—A Washington special says: Mr. Bndlcott, son of the secretary of war,, and who was recently graduated from Harvard Law school, has been appointed to a place In the department of justice. It is said that he serves without pay, his object being to increase his knowledge of law. : K- , ; Ski The Rev. William Hdosaaond, lately deposed from the pastorate of the Free Will Baptist church of Franklin, N. H., is under arrest for perjury. Sealed propoau fUKHMlM byeMher of the undersigned until June 1Mb, 18M, for the ereotton and oompMuii bulldsSup&HMraay and all Md» 1» herobj reeerred. _ - J ianit Biidkn, % Isaac JCT0Eitt. Joseph Rublne, an 8 year old lad. found a cartridge In the !t«Ht In Haw fork, and whlla playing wilh hi. And It exploded tearing Mt thrto finger* and injuring hi """ "*MWr '* *" i The Presldemt Hand gkaklng. Anumhpr of policemen were so badly injai*»tWiat they are in the hospital. Twenty «*»(•■D are pow under arrest . Two man named Hart and Mason were arrested for 4hs nu»r4er ot Thomas Gallagher. The coroner's jury found that Gallagher died from the effects of gunihot wounds, and centured the authorities for not havtttg suffleiant polio* to preserve order. AA tafarnal machine, consisting of a Jar Med with a black substance and some etookWoffc. was thrown against the door of • Protectant's house here. When the malihi was burled It had a lighted fase attached. and it exploded in the doorway. Wabhikotoh, June 10.—The president shook hands at his publio reception with or* 400 people. He appeared treeh, and wore his pleasanteet smile. Among the visitor was the St. Vincent de Paul convention now in session here. Ej -bonator Tom Grady, of New York, a member of the convention whom Mr. Cleveland, as governor, asked Mr. John Kelly not to allow to be returned to Albany, and whom, it will be remembered, opposed Mr. Cleveland , at ChlCmo and afterwards bolted Tammany and supported Blaine, was one of Km'visitors. Mr. Cleveland reoognised him, while Grady shook hi» hand aad withdrew as quickly as possible. Mr. Clevejand's eye followed him until be vanished from eight Th. Diamond Field. At New York—New York, 4; Chicago. At HUten bland— Metropolitan, 5; Broi lyn, 1. Jtfm. „ at Um ezpiou Charles Turner, agad IT, wa# While bathing «t JUhway, W. J at lost pokor» *V nSfW^ooaSSS - SWItfSWSeS' -*? drowned At Hartford. Merlden, 8; Hartford. & At Washington—Th» Nationals and Louis clubs played two innings, neither ■cored, whop.a heavy shower set in anC game was called twaaD wound*. , O.. ha* lions to PI teuton, May 2«th, 18M. ' * *D— PropowJi wM be ieo«lTDd br eMher of the forleue of refreshment stand on IaUnd on the rf-'w WfffftSL ■ •r Robot Wallao, Chief. D-***«-■ T ijmif tn i iii—' • \ «*"•D"■# '» uDbCui*i I,ou IS VILLI, Job* 1(X—rSince gambling bu been mad* a felony, faro, kano, ml, have boan abandon ad for pokar, Which baa bean adopted ae the gam* of (porting men i in thia vicinity. Room* are aet apart for it* devotee*, which are oarafully guarded, and ma&mW& hand*. The Law and Order olub ha* eaaaed the arreat of Ella* Oppenheimer, indictaagnt baring been iounrt agalnat Mb under the The First DtpM te r \Ttmu. N*w Yowc, Jan* flr»t til iU 131 y ear* of estate as*, Columbia lege bu granted a dsgm to a won namely, Mlas Winifred EdgertQ I, who i« i a graduate of Welleeley college. 8be celved the degree of doctor of philosophy, cuin laude. There were 130 young men 1* the graduating claw. rooklyn, (located •ucoeaaful Cumber—ju prla. _ l*rje Mr Robert Hart,' iMpMtM' firfl of Jhinm maritime customs, ha* written a letter, stating that there la no opening In Ohimm tor railroad*. and that none will be ball*for year* t eAon* : n -y , Arthur and Andrew Donnelly, leading OathoKc merchants, have been arrested on the charge of ftriag from their windows. A *»b wanted to lynch the prisoners. The .magistrate* ordered that all taverns be dtoaed at Op m.: shopkeepers also cloeed at SlHt hour. The mob which stoned the poUee was disponed at the point of the bayonet. The managon dt a number of teottV*es have called upon the prii*eDk««p order aa4 Oraegeanen. TV nips ere arriving. A Clever ■eeape. COLUMBUS, O., June la—Charles Lewis, u Ashtabula county aaaa sent to the penitentiary for eeven years on a charge of shooting to kill, has escaped by stealing and donning a suit of clothes belonging to one of the guards. In tfca ooat pocket was found a pass, aad the prisoner had no diffloultMa | indng oul His saooess era* due M the preeence of new guards. It ah way Printers IHIIm. V" 70 \ RiHWiY, N. J , Jaw ia-Th« fifty compositor*, ten tteraotypera and the prmunen at IfaMhMtC & I Company's book printing hous* her* bar* atmek for w**kljr tnsteadof l»Jriw*kly payaunt*. Th* dunand * C'fki nuad. .T.I3 'row KU-.il Samuel J. Tildsn took a cruise InbU (teMW yacht on tb) 9odaon rirer. hi. emptoyr, and 011*4 hhnsalf npwUb^. ■""•at 'nj ■■^■Lfc^qWT as JS;otioto nwjd Mif yWraS^P®8
Object Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Number 1202, June 10, 1886 |
Issue | 1202 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1886-06-10 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Number 1202, June 10, 1886 |
Issue | 1202 |
Subject | Pittston Gazette newspaper |
Description | The collection contains the archive of the Pittston Gazette, a northeastern Pennsylvania newspaper published from 1850 through 1965. This archive spans 1850-1907 and is significant to genealogists and historians focused on northeastern Pennsylvania. |
Publisher | Pittston Gazette |
Physical Description | microfilm |
Date | 1886-06-10 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | EGZ_18860610_001.tif |
Language | English |
Rights | http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-US/1.0/ |
Contact | For information on source and images, contact the West Pittston Public Library, 200 Exeter Ave, West Pittston, PA 18643. Phone: (570) 654-9847. Email: wplibrary@luzernelibraries.org |
Contributing Institution | West Pittston Public Library |
Sponsorship | This Digital Object is provided in a collection that is included in POWER Library: Pennsylvania Photos and Documents, which is funded by the Office of Commonwealth Libraries of Pennsylvania/Pennsylvania Department of Education. |
Full Text | r* a i I n NVHBBB 1808. i Weakly ■■tahUahed 1850. j PITTSTON 188b. J TWO OEHT8 | Ten OHM Por Week ORANGE RIOTS. THE QU the qhio club - \ InM • llnUM* to tha D*no«ntl THE LINES DRAWN. THE CIVIL SERVICE AMENDING THE b the Dissolution of the Present Par- liament. State CommtHM. _C? CiKoiNKATi, June la—The Ohio chib has promulgated a manifesto to the Dtnumia of Hamilton copnt? and the state of Ohio at large- The paper was for warded by special messenger to Columbus, ia the form of an address to the Democratic ccnpmittee. which meats at Columbus to-day. The club first declares it to be the duty of ovary gVxJ citizen to take a deep interest and an active part tn the political affair* of the cdwntry. It quotas the fifth article of the olub's declaration of principles, jcien coning the corrupt use of money to secure riomtnatioa or rteotion, and maintaining the purity of the ballot. The club adtnMa tfcat there was gross corruption arid violations of the ballot in the October election); declares it a matter of history that the scratching of tickets and the forgery of aamee on the tally ■bests occurred in Democratic wards, and that up to this time Hiws has been no definite condemnation of these outrages by any organised body within the Democratic party, ami none by any"official class now holding . office in the city or County. ! It warns against surprise, and: denounces Democratic fraud, exempting members of the general assembly from a mistaken tense Of party fidelity. "The party throughout the state must be pqratd pf its worst elements, who have been dragging It down from its high functions to subserve private and corrupt ambitiona. We must put the Democratio house tn crda*eo that it shall be possible to give- a becoming welcome to the thousands of good Republicans who Shall, in a short time, find it Impossible. to share the narrow and partisan efclwsiveness itffch has already begun to undermine the strength vt their once powerful organisation. "Let the Democracy oft he state .take warning from the faults of their opponftits; let them also remember the misconduct which, in the past, lost to them the public confidence, and prepare to deserve and win control, to the end that good government may be established and maintained in the state at Ohio." K RULING OF THE CANA0IAN3 Amerloan AimUtln Sgfordag Daoldtd DWoipIlae. ObfLTTKBXJB, June 9.—The (pedal meattng of the American BmWI association, called to take action on the failure of the 8c. Lowts club to pay certain ten assessed against Capt Comisky byumpires, and aim to investigate the charge* agalMt Bathing and Latham for their conduct on ttoBtoSoMr* ground! on the 4th Inst, U in i i II Malms th*^tl^coilnedtop^m against Comisky, amounting to M00. A PMoluUon waa adopted direetinffc Present Wikoff to give Bushong and Iauaid ah op» portunlty to submit affidavits in their behalf, after whkty he will inflict sj|u$ nnnlshment as he may deem proper. SevAl important amendments were made playing rules. One confines, the captains, Mid coachers to a spape 18x35 feet no mu-t rf which «h*ll b. nifcrt, i|» S«srv i.".': oOstofr punishable by flat to address-the Rule M Was so anieftUd as to ""if- it punishable by.fertho oaptaiaor any ftew to question any decWoh of the umpire by ***'uCmptt* aD*j games soheduled for' Sunday shall be championship games Wild Orgies in the Streets of hotraon, June 9.—Scores of provtaets} Tory and Liberal election agents are In load on, oonsulting with the whips of their respective parties In regard to plans Tor the ooming parliamentary elections. Mr. Gladstone insists that every constituency. shall be provided with a home role candidate, and relies tfpaa the Radical .warkiu#men and the Radical clubs and societies to supply •salons volunteer* M workers during the campaign and at the polls. CAUSES A FLURRY IN THE HOUSE. COUNTJER ARRAIGNMENTS. CAUSES CONSTERNATION. Belfagt. Butterwnrth Kndurses New Tork'l "Oot' anor, and flays the President la Oom- Determined to Drive Amerloan Fishermen rrom Canadian Waters— A flMavlta llelng Prepared for the State Department—Mackerel Fishing Cut Off. MANY BIOTEBS SHOT DOWN. mltted 'to' CM) Service Keform—Mr. Kami all Speaks His Mind. Oloccbstfr, Mass., June lft—The dispatches from tho provinces bearing on the exclusion of American fishing vessels from waters within three miles of n lhD« drawn from headland to headland ci co_s'j*fnaticn hero. Fisbormon say Uiat this con - struct ion of the treaty wiH crot off oar mackerel fishery, and they threaten'to take the law into their own hands nnltns the government dousi eomethin g to help them. Bald a fisherman: "Where ia the American squadron, when. the whole British North American iqualron is in and about provincial waters. If the Americans are to he shut oat from headland to headland, In many case* It will out off the whole mackerel fishery." The P«1Im Uttqul to Control the laU jaflfl 7TV -V'fT". ) ' Washington, June la—The tiine of the house was spent on the civil service amendment to the legislttfttfMitalMMtfc tderCely tatiDeqception, the routine partisan rhetoric age now field by Jtsnvblioans, and called this administration th-D most non-partisan since the days of Washington. . Mr. ButterWdrth (O.) said the president had come info' pow»r undsr a protniie, zr"„*s stare; si-r&t. but the spfcit of civl) •arvi«'(aw. He read with expressions of oommendation the civil service message of the president, and de-1' dared that the majority In 'the house was undermining to overthrow the president and Induce him to break; the pledge he had given to the people. There might be a! difference of opinion as to the propriety at the law, but If so why did nOt the Democrats come forward in -a manly wv and. repeal, |t! They.dM not do so, but while talkhig with the Voice of Jacob they reached out with the hand et Hsau to seise the spoils (Laughter.) He thenquoted from tlte message of GkDv. Hill in favor of civil service refbrm. While he had criticised Governor Hill's methods, he' wanted to applaud him to this echo for the utterance there made. Hill wrote like a stalwart, like a man of experience, like a man who sought to secure honest government for his stata and the city of New York. Governor Hill might be the Democratic candidate for the presidency, but he supposed »t the Democratic party would not snpt him naif-his atterancas open civil service reform were expunged. : i Mr. Randall closed the debate with a ringing attack on the present law.;-Speaking of the arbitrary clause excluding citizens over 45 years of age from examination, ,bf *%i4» • i "It got in at the will of a tingle individual, and there waa not a mdn to-day who had the courage to utter a sentiment fn favor of that part of the regulations. The conclusion could be safely that the language was inserted in the rSgtOntions to exolude members of one political party from examination; not a man who had been removed from office in 1801 could make an application now, notwithstanding that he might have the capacity for being an efficient officer.. S.-ESSS £!ft£%*WRr members of Dj|ifc|fayt-Dfrom securing any position in the nlsMlflsd service. Should not that law he assstiilt Vow, hire, everywhere, with proprietary, he would directly and indirectly aglMts the repeal of such • I Drake* P?p«laee. The government will endeavor to dissolve parliament on June 24, or sooner if the necessary business now before the house can be disposed of, although it is not desired by the government to interfere with harvest work |by precipitating an oloction campaign during the - height of that industry.Houm Plllt|ed and Burned to the Orovai—Wlilikr Poured Into the Streata ilTom—i Take fart In the mmm «ss4 tfca Me. On. Clargrasaa Not Beaded. Bilfabt, June 10.—The riotous demonstrations of ths Orangpiben In this city were renewed last evening- The rioters began The queen telegraphed to Mr. Gladstone her' consent to the dissolution of parliament, after oonferring with Lord Hartington, whom she asked whether ha was willing to form a ministry. Lord Hartington advised dissolution, informing her majesty that ha himself would regard dissolution as desirable at this time should he form a government with the manifest determination of completing the devastation oT the houses of The police were promptly on hand and summoned the mob to disperse. No heed was paid to the summons, and the riot act was read, with as little effect as its reading had produced twenty-four hours before. The mob, during the reading of the act, continued their work of destruction, sending showers of stones through the windows and doors of homes occupied by Catholics, breaking furniture, raiding ale houses, etc., when suddenly the order was given to the police to fire. A volley was fired into the mob and three of the rioters fell dead, while a dozan others lay upon the ground bleeding from wounds, some of which will prove fatal. The mob returned the fire, and a brisk fusillade was kept qp (or twenty minutes. Soldiers are now parading the streets to assist the polioe in case of necessity. la an interview President Steele of the' American Fishery anion said: "There ajD- poars to be a better feeling in Washington. As fast as tha • skippers of A merican vessels who have been excluded from cqgimercial privileges and thoae who have been ordered out from the large bay t arrive their affldaviu will be t*kan before a notary public, and these statements forwarded to the authorities at Washington. Then they will will have something to Work upon that is substantial Newspaper reports are. not evidence." Earl Roeebery started for Balmoral by last night's mail train. It ia understood tha* his visit to her majesty htfi no reference to the political situation, but is simply made in the capacity of minister in attendance. OHIO NEW LIQUOR LAW. * Ita Constitutionality to be T«teclt* W have been outgeneraled. They exacted to fight the Dow law by {laying It continued In the court!; meantime no tax wou'd be paid. Br » briuiantplan the cCwe i« already before the supreme courts. It to learned that the jrtlice commissioners art at the teUom of MtaaAama Thajt wanted to know whether fflKJCS to work to hare tha matter officially and ACU.patoh received from Columbus g&fit the transcript of a suit brought in tide city to tost the validity of the Dow liquor taxJ%w was taken thsre to be brought directly before the supreme • court. The ntt to brought by Mm Mary F. wealthy holder of WalieaUts, and brings an SX1: aSMS £&&£". lien oa the premises occupied bytatoa. Her Told, (Halmlng Humt the law * imni—tltusslvi ast?$vC£MC£ olause of the ooastitutkn. .hhw? f « The Liberal clubs have split, like tha party. The Reform ami Devonshire club* support the dissidents, and the National and Liberal uphold Mr. Gladstone. President Steele forwarded the affidavits of the skipper of the Ady M. Jordan, who had a permit to trade, and Secretary Bayard has replied to it Just what the answer is is a secret, but as far as oan bs learned something will be done regarding the commercial fights of Americana "r , At the headquarter* of Hr. Schnadhorst, of the National-Liberal federation, that gantlemam boasted that not a single Liberal association had swerved from ltC allegiance to Mr. Gladstone. The mob drove a force of ISO policemen Into the barraoks, and than attacked the building*, firing revolvers and throwing ■ton** at the door* and window*. The police fired, and a later report say* they killed five person*. Several Protestant clergymen tried to dispone the mob, bnt their effort* were unavailing. One of the parson* killed wa* a wMpw with two ohOdren. Orangemen wrecked 100 hoosM i» city, two of whiC$i they boned. The rioters broke into several whisky (tore* and possessed themselves of the content*. Numbers of the men XeU Into the gutter* drunk and laid there. Other*, made desperate or maudlin by drink, prowled about the street* crying oat, "To with the pope!" ▲ metD of Orangemen made an attack ubd the tavern kept by a Catholic named Duffy. Tha police war* promptly on tha scene, and, after a stubborn ooeteet. during which they ussd their qarbhtes, drove tha mob a«ay in disorder. The ricMer* reasawnbled with increased strength and again attacked Duffy'*, tU* time overpowering the police and driving them from the place. In the first assault Chief of Folio* Carr was wounded. He wa* carried away, and Is In a critical condition.A deputation of the Irish Loyal and Patriotic union ha* started upon a stumping campaign in Scotland. THE BRITISH BETTER BEWARE. •ssth Carolina Democrats. Tank** FUhermen Getting Ready tC Comtmbus, Jtine ia—The state Demo•ratio executive committee held a secret seesion here. The meeting was called to organize the Democracy to thwart thC farmers .in their movement for a "new deal," which is tending to disrupt the party. Another object of the meeting wastode-. olare against the primary system, which it being adopted In the Thlni congrsss district against party rtoles. The recent fanners' convention held in this city has greatly alarmed Many Democrats in the state. The aQce-holders are uneasy on account of the demonstration made by the farmers against the present state administration, and they will oSe every effort to overoome Farmer Tillman in the approaching campaign. Mate convention has been called to meet in Columbia on Adg. 4. Gloucmtor, Mm*., June 10. —The Boston Globe correspondent *a tokl by a successful and reliable flaharman that tha fishermen are organising to take the law into their own hands, and defend their property and business by force of arms, tiniest the government speedily does something for their protection. %venty-flve sail are Reported to have banded together at Block Island the other day, and at Vineyard Haven over 100 sail have organised. They purpose if the government dfcllfas too long, to arm and drive off all , Canadian vessels coming to tbe United. States with fish, meeting- them on the higll seaa and destroying their fish. They have detectives in the proyinpes to notify them whan fish are to be shipped by rail, and means will be taken to stop their Importation. Many fishermen are Knight* Of Labor, and it is further reported that the Knifrhta will have a hand In the matter. Bald The Globe informant: "We will cany sixpounders, and some schooners can carry as high as an eighteen-pounder. Th -y will fish on the high seas, keeping three miles from shore, but they projftst toprotect their rights and will get mackerel. We can blow their cutters out of the water. Already the fishermen are said to have sent in their orders for guns and ammunition, f Blow Them From the Sea. Female Orange lodges are being formed in England In view of tha doming elections, and it is the intention of promoter* of the organization* that their member* shall1 lend their personal inflpenoe at the polls to a*oure vtttes fir the Tory candidates. The movement wa* * tar ted at a meeting which took place at the house of Maj. Saunderaon, Conservative member for Armagh, and the plans arranged at the meeting were Immediately carried Into effect. LONDON EXCITED. A Fenian Outbreak Bald to Be H^tcfc- It London, June 10.—The excesses of the Orangemen in Belfast and other place* in Ulster have unquestionably disgusted the average Briton, but the Unionist* maintain that the riotous demonstrations have done, no harm to their cause, bnt rather hava been productive of good, as they prove the utter madness of •objecting' Ulster to the rule of tha Nationalists. Precisely how they reconcile this line of masoning with the fact that the Orangemen in every case of vidlenoe thus far MBfrtad have been the aggressors, i* not quite clear. - I Extern! ve polios precautions have been taken at the east end, where disorders are feared, tha Irish of Rotherhlthe, Be rmond*ey and Wapping having becoihe greatly excited. A full supply of detectives has been stationed to protect railway statloas and river subways, and to watoh the tower luid other places, and all strangers are narrowly scrutinized. It is openly said that a Fenian outbreak orplot is hatching, as tha outcome of tha reeettt political events. PrrrSBTJRO, June 10.— A remarkable natural gas well baa been struolc at Cochran's Station, on the Wheeling branch of the Baltimore and Ohio railroad. Gas was struck a day or two ago at a depth of 160 feet white passing through a vein of cannel coal It waa believed to be only a Tata of aurfaoe gas, and drilling waa discontinued to await developments. Contrary to expectations the flow gr»w stronger. Fiaoaa of ooat three and four inches In diameter are hurled out of the Ma with terrific force. Of all of the gas walls pat dowjr in this neighborhood this one Is without an equal. It I* s wildcat well, and is Jointly owned by the Phtfedelphia and iMnnhail companies. A WUdeat Oas Well. Knight* of Ubm Hut Go. '' Mr Mct'opae—Caftnot thepresldeut by a lation rests here; that this one man haslsg(s-luted and deprived congress of the power, which should be lodged here. I say, with deliberation, ths»I wantthe ohiaf executive to hear what I have to say on the It is not an assault oh the president; bat I ► ay here to-day that the representative* of deprived of the rights which they ought to have stood here and defended In behalf of the people who sent them here. (Applause.) Mr. Cleveland .is not responsible fdr these regulations. Nay, more, it has been but a brief time since Mr. Cleveland oould possibly have had any influence over the commissi on, and, like the gentleman from North Carolina, thoogh I have no warrant to say so, I hope a change will come over the spirit at hi* dream*, and that he wnrgive u» a Jnrt administration of ' the dvil servioe act Rbajmwo, Pa., June 10. —Nineteen, female employe* of T. H. Wilaon & Co.'* spectacle factory here, who are members of the Knights of Labor, have qgt* nrork oa account pf the porting of a notice that aU member* of any labor orgaaintiouinurt either quit the firm or the organisation. About 75 of the ISO rirU employed by the firm are tnemberi of tn* Knight*. ' Twentyana have promised to qUt the Knight*. The firm's action- has earned a flurry in labor olrclta. When the Orangeman returned to the fight tkqr ww aooompaniad by a large — - aumbtf who goaded or iIhibkI th* mil nD mfarmed a moat dangerou* element When the edqer. abandoned Duffy'*, the nob at once took complete mNMta oftjMitaTern.^Itwu All the barrel* at liquor found In (took aad let (all until they broke and liberated their content*. All the furniture was carried out, plleg.Jn the oenter of the roadway youth* and gM* drank until they fell law in the gutter*, the girl* acting wltl greater fury during the earlier *tage* of thC *— A.i 4k. —— m. - —t— *»-- - * Diobt, N. a, Jane Ml—The gohoonar Terror hai concluded to play the detect! since bar officers Have board about the Yankee* hovering near, and put oat after seeing her. They have taken down their colors, disrobed their crew and togged them up in rock map!e suits, pretending theyaht south shore fishermen. An old fisherman remarked after seeing the disguised police craft: "Look thife, boy*, Yankee fishernien kiow tbo much to play for or be caugfat with that kind of bait." J Yankee* Knew TM tfuk. Painters Locked Out. To Unveil a Mosument. Chicago, June MX—The forty or more ■hope controlled by the Master Centers' association are etosed, and neafly 1.50b Journeymen painters are locknd ont, GMrlkes had been ordered in fire of the shoos, and as the painters In the reaaaining thirty-five shop* would contribute to ttw import of the strikers, the lookout was ordered, thus depriving the strikers of-*he sinews of wkr. H*w York, Jane la—The monument to the memory at Dr. Alonco Flack, late president of Clkveraek college and Hudson River Institute, at Claverack. N. Y, will bo , unveiled on Juno 17 at 10:30 a. m. A large number of the alumni of the oollege, from an part* of the country, hay* signified their intention to bo present Among those who are expected to deliver addresses are Hon. Warner Killer, Dr. J. P. Newman, Judge Landon, Judge Glider*leeve, A, B. Wat kins, Esq., and Wallace BruOs, Esq. The unveiling of the monument and the presentation address will bo by Henry R. Heath, Hm}., of Now Torlt. Rome, June 10.—There war* 30 new cum of oholer* and 10 deaths at V«ni»e on the 5th Inst; 5 new caae* and 2 death at Barl on that day; 21 new oaeea and IS death* at Venice on the 6th. There li no unutnal prevalence of dieeaee In- thl» city. The caaee at Florence do not aeem to be cholera, but tome elmllar a (fee Hon oaued by baa drinktag water. at Work. Drgie than tha man. Tha noise, the profanity, the disorder were terrible. Tha mob ended their work by firing the tavern iteelf, and It burned to the (round. Than tha (tronger men, who had become infuriated and not overpowered by their potationi, ran through the streets, yreoking and pillaging wherever they want, and increasing their following tha further they proceeded. Theer rioters after a while qpiUcnMted around tha police station and itonW the place until they Ware tired. J TB»y i then marohed down to, another tavern. Tha polioe hastened thither in advance and attempted to protect the proparty. but they were overpowered and driven away. Typographical Dolnii PiTTSBmio, June 10l—At the afternoon session of the Iternational Typographical convention a large number of memorials were presented, among others amendments to make the term of the Joint office of secretary and treasurer two /ears; providing for district conventions; to abolish the office of chief organizer, his duties to be performed by the president, with a stated salary attached; requiring the executive officers to give bonds in the sum of f10,000. Five hundred dollars was appropriated for Jacksonville, PI a., where the union Is meeting with opposition. The 'idditional appropriations were ordered iTopeka, Kas., $200; New Haven, Conn.. D300, ead-JS&n Antonio, Tex., $300. con nation Vhcn adjourned in order to allow thm committees an opportunity to make reports. To Kemaln at HUDvk- Washington, June 10.—Presidant Cleveland has as yet formed no.pbwtMMb-'ver for a summer vacation. He will remain in Washington attending closely* to official duties until after the adjournment of ogngreer. In closing, Mr. Randall said that ho would not for a moment go back to that condition of tilings whioh, at ovsry election, tnrned oat the adherents of one party indiscriminately and put In those of another. Bat he wanted to remind the house that the law to be permanent must be fair, must be Just, and that thoae who advocated this amendment were trying to strip tt of He injustice to one party, dominant in this ooontry today. (Applause.) The vote went over. Police for Belfast. Dublin, June 10.—A ditaohnmt D of pel oe, 150 strong, have left Dublin to re-enforce the Belfast police. The Unionists have selected Mr. Russali, a oofcspicuous Irish temperanoe orator, to oppose ,Mr. William O'Brien In the oonteet for the parliamentary seat for the southern di vision of Tyron* i ,, .... . A Kail road at AneUon, For Governor of Maine* Louisville, . June 10.—The Louisville, Evansville and St Louis railroad has (wen sold at New Albany, Ind., under decree -e£ foreclosure granted by Judge Oresham of the United States circuit court, to satisfy the mortgage held by the American Trust company, of Hew York. The road was purchased by Messrs. William T. Hart, Jonas T. French, J. M. Fetter, Sj. T. Burr and H. D Hyde, of Boston, who attended the sale in person, reprofentlng a committee of the Boston bondholders, for 1750,000. Lbwmton, Jane lft— In the Republican convention yesterday, J. H. Bodwoii was nominated for governor on the firrif ballot, receiving 863 out of a total of 1 ****CD Teething Babies are happy If their 'gums are bathed with Dr. Hand's Teething Lotion Summer—Mother be careiultf /.out, babies with diarrhoea] Or. Hand's Diarrhoea Mixtures curiae when everything else fatfa. Price 26 cto. I ui 1 §ltd 2 : OFFICIAL ENVELOPES. The mob, left in possession, treated the tavern as they hid treated Duffy's, turned on all the-tape, broke the fall barrels in the street, made a bonfire of the furniture, and finally set fire to the building. The police re'.urned, and this time got the better, for a time, of the mob, whose ranks were depleted by the scores who had fallen away in drunkenness, and extinguished the flames before they could gain control of the structure. But the officers were unable to drive the rioters from the locality, and they remained and did about as they pleased until A Cable News Agent Threatened. Bucharest, June 10,—M correspondent of the Cable News company of London, has been threatened by the government with expulsion for having divulged political secrets through the British and American press. / - n 7' The . Contract for Their Manufacture Awarded. Washington, June 10.—The postmaster general has awarded the contract for ■tamped and newspaper wrappers for four years, beginning October 1 next, to the Morgan Envelope company, of Springfield, Mass.,, and the'Plimpton Manufacturing company, of Hartford, Conn., these oompanles uniting In a bid, whioh was the lowest under the recent advertisement They' are the present Making a due allowanoe for the natural Increase in the lasses of envelopes and wrappers, the ex penttlture during the four year* of the contract term, it is estimated, will be about $3,250,000, as against (4,200,000 for like quantities at present contract prloes. The therefore, under the new contract wllrbe nearly $1,000,000. The public will receive the direct benefits of the reduction, as the envelopes are sold, as near as may be, at the cost of manufacture. Bt.'fcocifl, Jnn» Union, Franklin county, H. D.' Davit, master workman of the. local assembly, Knjgbts of L«bor, has bqen sentenced to two years in the penitentiary for railroad track on lUroh 24. L r-—7-ii)-iMjn t«j ffL • • master builders of this city, emoloying about 1,000 meU, have decided to notify their employees—oirpanteq* masons, bricklayers, etc.,—that after June 15 they .would be required to wqrk ten. hM-a and that if they refused men from otheF cities will be employed. The men who have been working eight hotm since May 1 say they wUl not return to tho old plan. X*' A Pall Full of Gold. brdtaiiic*. Be It ordered and enacted bv the Burgees and S «g *5? w«rt to the direction of the Burgees, and shall ha-« full tower and authority In carrying out his lnstromlons, or in the enforcement of ordinances, to make oectracts, ana hire all needful aid. sub - o%e 8J5?." "That a street committee of Woe etolD Ito elected by Bo i ough Council, who shall have charge of the opening trading and repairs otailstogsts and alleys and with full power and aothorjiyto act, and the Street Commissioner shall be subject to the direction and control of said street committee In the opening grading and repairs of streets and alley*, and shall do no work or Incur any indebtednees for openton grading or npnlm; on said streets and alleys without flrft having the consent of the Boreugh Council, except* antes of emergenqr, when the Street Commissioner shall make sucn needful repairs wj NDOrt- to the Borough Council." Joe. Lamoford, Burgess and ex-ottcio President of Town Council. Tsksisjsmtixr- Suspension Bridge, N. Y., June 10.-. Several workmen, while engaged In tearing down an old barn here, found (700 In gold in a pall under the Boor. The latest date on arty of the coins is 1861. It Is supposed that the money belonged to an eocentrlo person, now dead, who was a member of a family who once occuptsd the premises on which the barn stood. The workmen divided the money among themselves. KILLED HIS FATHER-IN-LAW. A North Carolina Tragedy—A Case of Charlotte, N. C, June 10.—Yesterday afternoon, between 3 and 4 o'clock, the startling report of a pistol was heard near the public square. A few moments after it was discovered that H. C. Long had killed W. F. Cuthbertson, his father-in-law. The tragedy is the result of Cuthberteon's threat* against the life of Long. When Long married Miss Cathberteon her father was vary much enraged, and at the timeJfad to be put under bonds to keep the peaoe. Bunday last Una Cuthbertson went to see her daughter and grandchild. When she returned home her husband nearly killed her with a buggy whip, and would have killed her if she had not thrown the cartridges out doors before he ooold load his pistol. Afterward he sent word to Long that he Intended to kill him and his (Long's) wife. Long is now in jail, and will have a trial to-day. The popular verdict is in favor of Long, and it is considered a clear oaae of selfdefenss. , to. Self-Defense. m rniug. During the rowdyism of the night Mr. Gladstone and Mr. Parnell were both burned in effigy, and a dummy body labelled "Home Rule' was cremated. Boa TON, June 10.—The '105th annual meeting of the Massachusetts Medical society was held here yesterday. A paper entitled "An epidemic of malaria in Massachusetts in 1815" was read by Zabdiel B. Adams, M D., of Framinghara. An essay on the Massachusetts Doctors. AN ORANGE FLAG, Timely Arrival of Military Forces at The entire polio* Woe of Bart St Lapis has been dismlaaed, on account of alleged conspiracy with robber* to go through bunks and business houses. CONDENSED NEWS. J.urgan, Jails 10.—Thomas Gallagher, -who was shot and killed during the riot here, was a well-known local simpleton. He -waved an Orange sash in the face of a home „ rule /nob during an incessant fire between r .that mob and it* Orange enemiee. Driving the riot the situation at one time became so desperate that Mr. Mathers, a local Orange leader, declared that Tinlsst the % authorities did their duty, he and a thousand armed Orangemen vould take charge of the town. Mather waa 011 the point of carrylag out his threat when the military ap- Lutfan. A Beekless Fireman. '■Causation and treatment of lateral curvature" was read by Edward H. Bradford, M D., of Boston. Tioga, Pa., June lft—On Monday afternoon Section Foreman Daniel Ahearn, of the Tioga railroad, started on his band oar with a number of laborers to run to Millerton. An engine stood on the switch at Seeley's creek, and the fireman, John, O'Lsary, stood near it As the hand etuf approached on the C main track, O'Lsary thought be would play a Joke cm the men on on the hand car, and he threw a stick across the rails. The hand oar struck it and was thrown from the rails. Ahearn and Thomas Birmingham were thrown from the car, and ll passed oyer both of them. One wheel crushed Ahearn's head, and he received' other injuries which will prove fataL Birmingham was frightfully mingled, and died before a physician atv. rived. He we* 66 years old, and leaves a wife and six children. t hern has a wife and nine children. Deputy Sheriff Coakly, of Bt Louis, has received a letter offering him $10,000 to permit Maxwell to eaoapa. He Serves Without Pay. New York, June 10.—A Washington special says: Mr. Bndlcott, son of the secretary of war,, and who was recently graduated from Harvard Law school, has been appointed to a place In the department of justice. It is said that he serves without pay, his object being to increase his knowledge of law. : K- , ; Ski The Rev. William Hdosaaond, lately deposed from the pastorate of the Free Will Baptist church of Franklin, N. H., is under arrest for perjury. Sealed propoau fUKHMlM byeMher of the undersigned until June 1Mb, 18M, for the ereotton and oompMuii bulldsSup&HMraay and all Md» 1» herobj reeerred. _ - J ianit Biidkn, % Isaac JCT0Eitt. Joseph Rublne, an 8 year old lad. found a cartridge In the !t«Ht In Haw fork, and whlla playing wilh hi. And It exploded tearing Mt thrto finger* and injuring hi """ "*MWr '* *" i The Presldemt Hand gkaklng. Anumhpr of policemen were so badly injai*»tWiat they are in the hospital. Twenty «*»(•■D are pow under arrest . Two man named Hart and Mason were arrested for 4hs nu»r4er ot Thomas Gallagher. The coroner's jury found that Gallagher died from the effects of gunihot wounds, and centured the authorities for not havtttg suffleiant polio* to preserve order. AA tafarnal machine, consisting of a Jar Med with a black substance and some etookWoffc. was thrown against the door of • Protectant's house here. When the malihi was burled It had a lighted fase attached. and it exploded in the doorway. Wabhikotoh, June 10.—The president shook hands at his publio reception with or* 400 people. He appeared treeh, and wore his pleasanteet smile. Among the visitor was the St. Vincent de Paul convention now in session here. Ej -bonator Tom Grady, of New York, a member of the convention whom Mr. Cleveland, as governor, asked Mr. John Kelly not to allow to be returned to Albany, and whom, it will be remembered, opposed Mr. Cleveland , at ChlCmo and afterwards bolted Tammany and supported Blaine, was one of Km'visitors. Mr. Cleveland reoognised him, while Grady shook hi» hand aad withdrew as quickly as possible. Mr. Clevejand's eye followed him until be vanished from eight Th. Diamond Field. At New York—New York, 4; Chicago. At HUten bland— Metropolitan, 5; Broi lyn, 1. Jtfm. „ at Um ezpiou Charles Turner, agad IT, wa# While bathing «t JUhway, W. J at lost pokor» *V nSfW^ooaSSS - SWItfSWSeS' -*? drowned At Hartford. Merlden, 8; Hartford. & At Washington—Th» Nationals and Louis clubs played two innings, neither ■cored, whop.a heavy shower set in anC game was called twaaD wound*. , O.. ha* lions to PI teuton, May 2«th, 18M. ' * *D— PropowJi wM be ieo«lTDd br eMher of the forleue of refreshment stand on IaUnd on the rf-'w WfffftSL ■ •r Robot Wallao, Chief. D-***«-■ T ijmif tn i iii—' • \ «*"•D"■# '» uDbCui*i I,ou IS VILLI, Job* 1(X—rSince gambling bu been mad* a felony, faro, kano, ml, have boan abandon ad for pokar, Which baa bean adopted ae the gam* of (porting men i in thia vicinity. Room* are aet apart for it* devotee*, which are oarafully guarded, and ma&mW& hand*. The Law and Order olub ha* eaaaed the arreat of Ella* Oppenheimer, indictaagnt baring been iounrt agalnat Mb under the The First DtpM te r \Ttmu. N*w Yowc, Jan* flr»t til iU 131 y ear* of estate as*, Columbia lege bu granted a dsgm to a won namely, Mlas Winifred EdgertQ I, who i« i a graduate of Welleeley college. 8be celved the degree of doctor of philosophy, cuin laude. There were 130 young men 1* the graduating claw. rooklyn, (located •ucoeaaful Cumber—ju prla. _ l*rje Mr Robert Hart,' iMpMtM' firfl of Jhinm maritime customs, ha* written a letter, stating that there la no opening In Ohimm tor railroad*. and that none will be ball*for year* t eAon* : n -y , Arthur and Andrew Donnelly, leading OathoKc merchants, have been arrested on the charge of ftriag from their windows. A *»b wanted to lynch the prisoners. The .magistrate* ordered that all taverns be dtoaed at Op m.: shopkeepers also cloeed at SlHt hour. The mob which stoned the poUee was disponed at the point of the bayonet. The managon dt a number of teottV*es have called upon the prii*eDk««p order aa4 Oraegeanen. TV nips ere arriving. A Clever ■eeape. COLUMBUS, O., June la—Charles Lewis, u Ashtabula county aaaa sent to the penitentiary for eeven years on a charge of shooting to kill, has escaped by stealing and donning a suit of clothes belonging to one of the guards. In tfca ooat pocket was found a pass, aad the prisoner had no diffloultMa | indng oul His saooess era* due M the preeence of new guards. It ah way Printers IHIIm. V" 70 \ RiHWiY, N. J , Jaw ia-Th« fifty compositor*, ten tteraotypera and the prmunen at IfaMhMtC & I Company's book printing hous* her* bar* atmek for w**kljr tnsteadof l»Jriw*kly payaunt*. Th* dunand * C'fki nuad. .T.I3 'row KU-.il Samuel J. Tildsn took a cruise InbU (teMW yacht on tb) 9odaon rirer. hi. emptoyr, and 011*4 hhnsalf npwUb^. ■""•at 'nj ■■^■Lfc^qWT as JS;otioto nwjd Mif yWraS^P®8 |
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