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UP .'V* • 1 *" ■ TSTOW, PA- WRB»tESDAY. JUNE rMN»*Y~KEJ*J|t| V OUTDOO»_3K)r — p jK Th» lr and Dttml* i V B W H LjM / •■■ - j?-"* 3Stoettitt£ 4 MUM HE K 1219 W »k y Established I860. PIT 30, 1886. I TWO OtNTS | Ten Cents Per %Hk POBITAB THE D0' ILY DISLIKES GOULD. TH* HARRISBURG CONVENTION THE ENGLISH ELECTIONS. Exprttilon of Opinion Brought Onl FROM THE CdMffHTTfcE ON y»ilc««o« __ BmIm *1 Bu(ball-B»ola( Brant*. v Stllibuj'finln the Truth of PamtU'i by tbt Associated Pr«M Controvtrcy. New York, June 30 -TM first rao® at Sbeapshsait was over three-quarters of a mile. Pon Iliac flrat, Little Hincb second, Bandola third. Time, 1:114X. Auertlom The Conqueror of the Genesta KkW York. June 80.—A correspondence has taken place batweeu David M. Stone, preaideut of the Now York Associated Press and T. V. Powderly, general master workman Knights of Labor, relative to an expression said to hav« emanated from Mr. Powderly respecting the dispatches from Cleveland during the recent convention of the order. He was reported to have said that the Associated Preen lost no opporfDinity to malign him, and that instructions had been sent out by the Associated Pre* at the instanc* of Jay Gonld to misrepreeent him. D Mr. powderly was informed that iay Gould a*d the Associated press represented opposing interests that are so strongly an tagonistic that they would not be likely to act in harmony on any subject, and certainly neither would do anything whatever at the dictation of the other. In speaking of Jay Gonld, Mr. Powderly says: Until the receipt of your letter I fully bethat Mr. Gould was a controlling spirit in that institution, and I am glad to learn from yon that suoh is not the case. 1 am ■pteeeed to And out that the New York Asso-i dated Press and Jay Gould represent opposing interests that are so strongly antagonistic they wo'rfd not be act in harmony on any subject TELEPHONE CHARGES. BEAVER NOMINATED UNANIMOUSLY, DAVIE8 BY A SMALL MAJORITY. London, June 30.—Lord Salisbury has w ritten a letter denying the assertion! of Mr. Parnell that the latter lias eaWfed on negotiations with the late Conservative , Again to the Front. Severe Criticism of the Attorney General and Solicitor General Good©—Tho Minority Report Indorsed by the Four Republican Member* of the Comttiltto®. The second race was a »weepetake, over ■even furlong" Refrain DM, Pontico seo ond, Kalnla third. Time, 138& GALA DA* AT MABBLEHEAD the IfHtawHUMd I.amerne Delegation Vote Divided tor Lieutenant Governor— A Tenaperaaee Amendment Beaolatlon to be Toted en. government respecting horn* rale for Ireland, and denouncing hi* statements a* baseless fabrications. Lord Salisbury, coo- The third race wae a selling sweepstakes, cf threnj carters of a mile. Eleotrlcity fint, Nat Goodwin second, A1 Reed third. Time, 1:18^. The fourth race was a special pur* of 98,000, one mile and a quarter. Troubadour first, Kim Woodford second. Time, 8:«% The fifth race was a consolation handicap sweepstakes, one mile and a quarter. Aretino first, Buffalo second, Heel and Toe thhtL Time, 1K»X. the sixth race was a selling sweepstakes, over one mile and a furlong. Herbert first, Una B. second, War Eagle third. Time, ''" Washington, June 30. —The minority, or Republican report of the rpiclal committee Which conduct®* the Pan Electric telephone investigation, prepared by Hon. Ambrose A. Raimey, of Boston, is completed and will be submitted to the house as soon as the Democratic members reach an agr ment upon their report. Mr. Ranney"s report is indorsed by the four R publican members of the committee, and Chairman Boole's report, whiob was intende 1 to represent the views of the majority, is indorsed by four Democratic members, Mr. Hall, of Missouri, the fifth Democratic 'member of the committee, having decided (0 submit his individual views independently if lis colleagues. £ The Ranney report reviews the testimony Of the principal witnesses examined before the' committee, and embodies some severe criticisms of the Methods pursued by the projectors of the Pan Electric enterprise, and of the testimony as well as the conduct of Attorney General Garland and Solicitor General Goode la connection with granting the go**n|f*nt suit against P» Bag pan;'. HeiWrlag to tin efforts oC the Pan E ectric people to bring about a government rait, the report says: "They determined to have the department of justice, at the head of which was one of their co-directors, the attorney general, bring a suit against the Bell company, but whiob would remain under their control." They did not want to have the Bell patent radated, but hoped they oould frighten the Bell oootpany into the belief that they could do fo, for then they could drive that company, perhaps, to pay them for peaces A suit, apparently backed by the power of the government, with one of their own directors at the head of the government whioh authorised it, under their control, so that they could push it, or let it languish and die If they pleased, might seem formidable.. They thought, moreover, that the mere institution of such a suit would deter the United States courts from granting any injunction in favor of the Bell patent. ! If the Conservative* oame Into power after the general elections they would give Ireland a statutory parliament; Hi is false that I showed any The Wkito Sloop Passing Her Com petiton Amid WIM Cheering1. Hamusborg, June, 30.—Tb« R^pibKoan State Convention was c*llwl iu order lDj -Wondnrlnl Worl f «he Puritan Before the Wind—I«ie» fork's Favorite Tstkt Chairman Cooper at 10:30 o'clock, a m. George T. Oliver, of Pittsburg was elected temporary chairman. Forty minutes were occupied in discussing the temperance resolution. The committee on resolutions and permanent organisation agreed to meet at 1*30 o'clock, p. m. The Convention then adjourned until squally fata tha* LmM C«W%*won urged upon the cabinet the granting df such a concession. The statement is abo false that the cabinet did got refuse to extend tha oonoession of home rule to Ireland until after the elections want against us. Lord Salisbury denies aba, with great indignation, the statement that sitter the result of the slaottoae-BiiMUtef known the cabinet altered its intentions. "The assertion contains not the smallest element of trnlk," he says, "bati*fcs »s pattest never n had tha slightest IjWtaatinn toward , the srtabHshment of a statutory parliament in Mil was passsd in Msrenoe to awish «r- , pressed at an interview on Aug. 1 is impossible of tenth, because the bill had already passed tha boose of lords, and the government was publicly pledged to Ite terms. The government feaelvad upon the land purchase scheme as aoon as it entered , offlce, a month before that data" '* w ■ Mr. Gladstone, In the ooarte 6f hi. speech ,. 1 reeterday at Liverpool, said: "It waa her* that I lint drew breath. I have draW& It now 76 yearn, The time 1s not distort wlMto ;«t I shall pay my debt to nature, and. these possibly are the last words I shall (peak in claimed: "If idle and shallow pfetMMiJl •enee, the ohild unborn shall rae the i miy- * l*3t&£i isrin.'yss'ys that Ireland Is England's Poland and to defSfcMSPaftiiW* -• Listen to prudeaoe, eouratfe aad kteu*. 1-t Ring oat the oM, ring in the newt , JUngoot j the notes of misery and discord, rhyf lf the bleeeed reign of peace.'' to W«!T IiT .dil*s W deteotivee, and that hs, hfa detectives snned with re vol vert accompanying him on all his jourtoys Ixtwteo his hoos» and the * leaning steward such a policy, and it la Outsailed—A Breeze that Nearly Cap- sized the Majrflowetr-Seenee and Inci- dents ia the Bay. Mauubud, Him.. Jane 8a—The great and much anticipated regatta of the Eastern Yacht club WM sailed yesterday, and victory mmmi more rested with the Puritan, the FriseUla being a close second and Hie Mayflow«r third- Tbe day was perfect Rot * i clou/ obscured t*r sky, and i jfO°d knot btoTtrom thl.fci Miy thousands of visitors war* here to witness the contest. The race was twioe around a fifteen mile triangle off Marble head rook, lira miles to a leg. At 12:07 o'clock the ■tart wm made The Priscilla crossing the line MU ISM, the Fortuna second. The Puritan, close behind, took the wrong course, was ssat back, and crossed tbe line again at 13:11X, followed by the Mayflower at 13:13. Bbortly past the line the Mayflower, almost oaresning, had to take in sail, as she was unable M Mid np utdor tbe tremendous canvas she was attempting to carry and for ssveral seconds many feared that she would oapsiaa At 13:16 o'clock the second-class boats arosssd the Una The Puritan lost one and a half and the Mayflower two minutes by not getting over tbe line within tbe time limit. The Prisoilla immediately forged ahead and lad the othor boats by half • mile, bat tbe wind soon began to fresher and the Varitan -and- Mayflower at coor gained on Saw York's favorite. The yachtt turned the tret stake boat as follows: Gib urn, 18:85*; Priscilla, For — - • " -V Purl' ' CmoAdo, June 8ft—The first race at Washington park was for all ages, one end one sixteenth miles; Jim Douglass woh, Jim Gray second. Exile third. Time, 147& Second rao»—For maiden 8-year olds, SH mile; Clones won, Warfellow second, Bd Oilman third. Time, 1:44. ' The third race su for the Lake Side stakes, for fillies, firs furlongs; Mary finished first, Oracle D. second, HalUe C third. Time, 1,M^. Fourth raoe~ Maidens allowed, mile heats; Bootblack won, Billy Gilmore seoond. Sovereign Pat third. Time, 1:48*, 1:43*, 1:44. Basing at Chleag*. 1 o'clock, p. m. Habbibbubo, 1:30 p, m.—General Beaver has jsnt arrived m the city. Gen. Osborne ssems to be gaining strength. Hia name will be pcossntsd to tha convention by Hon. L J). Shoemaker. The convention will TOH an Ike temperance resolution at 4 o'olock p. m. I can assure you that no matter what the paper* may gay at tima* in favor of Mr. Gould, no matter though he has wealth unlimited at hi* command, he is the meet universally despised creature on the American tide of the Atlantic t*D-day. I speak from a knowledge of the people, having mingled among them, and I can in the future read D the Associated Press dispatches with more pine mi re, knowing that Jay Ooold does not control the wir*D oyer which they are sent "I can assure you," concluded the master workman, "that it was with no intention to do the press, associated or otherwise, an in- Jury tfiat I made the statement to which you refer." In a subsequent interview between the two gentlemen everything was - satisfactorily explained. Haerisbdeo, S p. m.—Oonvetftioa was called to order at 2.-20 p. m. Lewis Wagner m elected permanent chairman and read« three minutes address. Col Hastings made the speech nominating Gen, Bearer for Governor, who waa nominated by a unanimoua vote. Fifth race—A steeplechase, shod. oourse; Wellington won, Baoephalua second, Worth third, thU, am*. In the fourth race the haree Forest broke a lag; throwing Withers under him. Kansas, ridden by Covington, ran into Forest and both hones and Jockeys were rolled up in a bun ok. Covington was not ssrlouslr injured, but Withers was carried to the club house in an unconscious state. He wai not fatally injured, however. Forest was shot and killed on the track. Hamkisbuio, 4 £ m,—Davies nominated on first ballot, receiving HI} votes. Of the Luzerne and I*okawanna delegates Norris Adams, Uiteheli, Gale, Beeee and Jones voted for Davks and the othen for Won tooth. MR8. CLEVELAND "AT HOME." The President's Wife Begins Ber Series la the Dlamoad Field. ■ of Afternoon Ksssptlens. ' j WaSHIKGTOw, June 80.—The president's wife, for her informal receptions, has chosen different day* from those formerly observed by his a liter, but the same hour, from 12 to 1. Iflss Cleveland waa' "at home" in the R«d parlor on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday noon; Mrs. Cleveland on Tuedays-and Thursdays, choosing tha hour when the president is aura to be occupied with his cabinet. Yesterday was the first of these receptions under favoring skies, and there was present a brave show of society people for tha closing weak of June. At Detroit—Detroit, 8; Washington, d. At Kansas City—Kansas City, t; New York, & THE LAKE SHORE STRIKE. At St. Louis—St Louis, 4; Boston, 1L trains Having and the Trouble Appaa* At St Louis—Browns, S; Metropolitans, 2. At Louisville—Louisville, 6; Brooklyn, 1L At Rocheeter—Rochester, 7; Oswego, 1. . At Hamilton—Hamilton. 4; Utlca, 11 CHIOAOO, June SO.—The trafflo on the Lake Shore end Michigan Southern railroad hat been resumed in earnest In and oat bound trains are moved as rapidly as the occasion demands, but all are under strong polioe protection. No violenoe or interfarsncs is attempted by the striken or their sympathisers. Here and there, at a distance of two or three blooks from the Kwt street and Forty-third street croesings, small groups of strikers and their friends gather and quietly discuss the outlook, bat tbey do not venture nearer. Every outbound train is escorted by Pinker ton men armed with Winchester rifles as far as the Indiana state, line. The switchman of. other roads have dflcided not to place an' embargo on Lake Shore freight out of sympathy with this strikers. The Wabash, the Chicugo and Baatern Illinois and the Grand Trunk handles Lake Shore freight as usual. President Newell expressed his satisfaction with the situation at far as it has progressed, but Mtys he would not consider the strike at an said until trains could be run without the protection of riflse and without the fear of malicious interference with property. •ntlv Hearing an Knd. tana, 18:37;" Mayflower, 12:4* . .-ltai. tt-.tOX. Th and th* Mayflowe: wahail away frogD the Puritan -Halt w»3 between the Brat and MOnnd mark boats, o betweea mtmi aad eight tnUej from thC (tart, the Oltana wu an eighth of a mill ahead ot thr ' which ltd the For Of Attorney General Garland'* action or Don-action In connection with bringing the government suit, the report Bays, that be knew the Bell patent had befcn repeatedly sustained, and so it concerned the honor of th« department that each a patent should not be attached* without serious inquiry, and the duty of the attorney general to see to it that it received inch inquiry, they say, waa Increased by the fact that he knew an application was going to tie made and that th» parties pressing action wanted it passed on without reference to the patent of.' flee, and that he had a great pasaonal interest that it should be so passed, and should Inset with no delay.. After criticising the attorney qsnaral for not speaking to Soliolter Gs.Ceral Goode about this matter, and instructing him that, as he himself was personally interested, it concerned the honor of the department to make sure that the fullest investigation preceded any action, the minority, commenting on the testimony of the solioltor general that Mr. Garland never spoke to him on the subject, say: "There are a number of facts and clrcumstanoes, however, which leave it beyond doubt that Mr. Goode's recollection is so seriously ht fault as to a large part of what took place that it cannot be safely relied upon in any portion. He became solicitor general id May by an appointment made by the president, but not yet confirmed by the senate. On June 25 he went to British Columbia on a mission foi* the department and appeared at his office again Aug. 30. Mr. Garland teatiftee that he was then expecting to go away for his vacation, which would ■occupy about six weeks, and he did go away on the 27th of August Mr. Good testifies that during the week that intervened, hi' hardly spoke to Mr. Garland, except for the ordinary interchange of courtesies, and did not talk with him about business whatever. Mr. Goode must be mistaken about It It Is not poaible that after be had been away from the department for two months, and when the attorney general waa about to be absent for six weeks, leaving him at the head of the department, the one should not have ankei and the other should not hay* given information or Instrnctlom concerning the pending business of the office and matters expeotod to ariaa It would not be tolerated that private oounsel coqld so nCg)ect the interests of an important private client, and it* pannot be believed that Mr. Goode could have done so respecting the interests of the United States; 'be must havo bad consultations and forgotten all about them." At Cincinnati—Cincinnati, 18; Baltimore, 1. At Pittsburg—Athletic, 9; Pittsburg, 7. At Chicago—Chicago, 3; Philadelphia, 4. otty. Mr. Thomw Sexton k«l commenced his oampalKn In Belfut, and it promim ta b* 1 ;r * SSSEStafa a;'3S^"' brakM heuU no g- but t Mrs. Cleveland looked mora - youthful than ever in a short drsss of white mull, with yoke and sleeves of Valenciennes laoe and ruffles of the same across the skirt front Her only ornament win a jeweled pansy at the throat and a bunch of pink and red roses carried in her hand. Many ladies Insisted that she looked lovelier than in h«c more elaborate toilets. Her voice has gdned a certain as if sM.feft herself no longer a stranger. YALE LAW SCHOOL EXEROISE8. rTlSCllML, tuna by about tha MM distance. The Mayflomr tH doing remarkable work, but waa (till • mOe to the bad. 8he had drawn to windward of the Puritan and waa leading hor by about twenty rOfla. Both the Puritan and Mayflower war* to windward of the leading boat*. The »i* leading yachta paawd tha aeeand mark boat In the following order: Oitana, 1:03:50; Priscllla, 1:04:60; Fbrtuaa, 1:06; Mohican, 1:08; Mayflower, 1:06:15; Pdrltan, 1:08:15. Cheers and iteam whlatlea greeted the yachta aa they passed the mark boat At 1:15 the jjeading. hoata oaroe about with star board •tacks, tfcey started away at a but pace on «hel*t]ac«f the first and the Pari taniaade splendid work. The Priacllla had sailed farther to windward than her competitor*, and whoa the tacked Dhe waa only a ahart distance ahead In thd running - Before a mile had been (ailed tha Puritan bad walked away frcot them all. The yachta were that ruling close hauled. The work «f the Puritan tree wonderful She bad reached tha Mayflower, got to weather of her, and then' began work on the PHMimir When the Teasels came along on the pott taok and for the atafce at tM'llartlng point, it was evident that there was to be a great race to the flnlah of the fifteen mi lea. The Prlvsllla was to the windward, but the Puritan waa flying at such a clip that before the PrlsciHa bad i t squared away airot her (peed the P«ritaa . had outsailed her to las ward and gone into the lead, amid cheers and shoute of Joy on all sides. The yachta rounded the horn j stake boat, with one-half the rac* oompleted .-as follows: Puritan, "1:53:55; Prisoillr, 3:54:65; Mayflower, 1:57. The Puritai mew began to outrun all bands before th» wM and the balance of the race was a procession. The Puritan orosaed tha. finish line at 3:34.48, the Priscilla at 3:87.50 and the Mayflower at .3:38 Had the Piiritan and Mayflower bean prompter in gating under way tha Puritan Mould have beaten the *reat Mew Vol* sleep by over elgjit minutes, wMle.tha Mayflower wowld have'beaten her by a nttle over a minute and occupied the second place at the flnlah instead of the third. „ ..j „ J.i,,j _ Mr. Thaefcer Takes a Prise Her a Speech on "Boycotting." Nnw Hivm, June 80.—The anniversary sxersisM of the Yale law school occurred in the Center ohurch yesterday evening; President Porter offered prayer. The competitive speaking for the Townseiul prise then began. The competitors were' as follows: "Boyootting," Lucius Boltwood, B A, of New Haven; "American Independence as a cadae of the French Revolution," by Frank D Pavey, B A, of Washington Court House, O.; "Boyootting," Sherman Day Thaoher, R A, of New Haven, Conn. When the above named speakers had coreluded President Porter introduoed Hon. Wayne MacVeagh, L.L.D., of'Philadelphia, who delivered the anniversary oration, taking for his theme, "Law and Democracy.""God Saw Intend," whan MM'fcHi* «n.ii or forty of MNkoahK to tb»:loekn|k v the TTllllllll —dill" I Til II I 111 day by laboriously raailng hb 4W* 1ft a Ml small room to aa aadtenoe of thirty-nin» ptrtoni, chiefly oomposed of students uC boys. •/' - fi e Mr. ParBoll's speeofasa ,in the south 01 England have io ranch damaged the prospects of the opposition that telegraphs lli — been sent to the Unionist committees in Lp%-,. don imploring the presence or eminent Unionist orators to (rnvMS ttevholfcftle defection whioh is imminent. Lord Hart- . teuton has agreed to speak at ftylhoafh he- ' fort the polling begins on Friday, and tUft.ild oomsuittee is searching /orpttwr speaker*. Lady Randolph Ctare&fll is ouaof the hardest election workers in London. Be- St. Loom, Jane 30.—J. H. Dixon, the English merchant for whom C. A. Preller was traveling at the time of (he murder at the Southern hotel haa Arrived in the city. Be came for Freller'i effect# and to eecure official paper a which the victim had in hla poesesslon. He will take back with him the oourt record of the caae properly certified and will collect $5,- 000 Insurance on Preller'a life for the benefit of the Preller family. Thi Harder of Preller. Milt Tf# A BIG STRIKE THREATENED. The committee on sward. President Cyrne K Northrop, of Minneapolis, Minn., Hon. Oliver Wendell Holme*, Jr., at Boeton, and Gen Br*jton Ivea, of New York, than announced that they had decided to award tw prise to Sherman Car Thacher, of New Haven. A benediction by President Porter cloeed the exercise*. The Dean awl faculty of the law school received the graduate* and their friend• at the law department Fifteen Hundred Philadelphia Iron- workers Co Ge On Strike. Philadelphia, JuneSOl —The fifteen hundred employes of the five large rolling mill* of this city, operated by James Roland St Got, Gaulbert, McFadden & Caskey, Hughes tc Patterson, Marx hall Broa ft Co., and Stevens, Robbins & Co., will go oat on strike this evening and the mills will suspend for an indefinite period. The trouble, which has been impending for the part six months, grow* out of the refusal ot the manufacturers to gr ant the demand of their employee for a change bUhe existing schedule of wage*. The sliding soala, which haabeen in force during the past year, expires to-day, and the employes object to the adoption of any new scale by which their wagsa will be rednoed. Repeated conference had taJhd to being a satisfactory settlement of the difference, and in aoeordanoe with a no. tice served on the manufaotnrers thirty day) ago, the employee will stop work. The em ployes belong to the Amalgamated Steel ani Iron Workers association and notice ha. bean forwarded to Prsaident Wiehe of th intended aotlcn of the men in this city Murdering and Kobbtiuf Hie Father. Pl/THCTOTH, N. C., June 30l —Jamea N. Baaemore, who livee near Windsor, Bertie county, and hia aon quarreled. The »on fired both barrel* of a shotgun loaded with buckshok into hia father1* body* He than broke open a safe, took therefrom $800 and fledv* The sheriff and • large pet** are scouring the country in search of him. The father is yet alive but will die. I b* THEIR ESTIMATE OF EACH OTHCft. Mr. Gladstone on Mr. ul Mr. Beeeher on Mr. Gladstone^ «{. Fight With Horse Thieves. CaLVKBton. Tex,,. June SO.—A Mews special from Uvalde »|»ys: Deputy Sheriffs T. P. Baylor and (f R. Nimmo had a desperate fight with Mexican horse thieve* at Clin* Station, seme twenty miles west of Uvalde. Oaa Mexican was Mlted and Another wounded. Tha officers clothing was riddled with bullets, but they escaped uninjured. « London, Jane 30.—In an Interview with a reporter for The Poet, Iter. Henry Ward Beeober expressed himself u delighted with the powerful speed) delivered by Mr. Gladstone at Liverpool. Referring to hfa exchange of compliments with Mr. Gladstone after the «peach, Mr. Beeober said ha told Mr. Gladstone that hyrw too much overcome fay the power and. eloquence of the premier to lie able to exprsas his appreciation of hi* address in word*. The speech, he saU, had gives him a greater insight into the affairs of Ireland than be had ever had before. To thfc Mr. Gladstooe remarked that hie considered Mr. Bseoher'e worts tide* assisting her husband in Padding ton,** make* frequent excursion* to other districts to organise and enocraragetlM W(Men of At continue hopeful of obtaining a small majority in Ota testing elections. At the National majority for the government is ertijawled at twenty. The Unionists are oMftSrtof a **?*£*t?sszxeiDJSZ iluba is two to one against Gladstone, Kate Townsend's Will. N*w Orijejlns, June 90.—In the famous Kate Townsend will case Judge Houston rendered" a decision deoreelng the will of Kate Townsend in favor of Tro|«rlUe Svkes null anil void, and giving judgment in favor of the state of Louisiana, decreeing the state to be the heir-at-law of the dead woman and entitled to the ownership add possession of all the property left by her. ■ forty to A»»lherH;A-—qh— Wmr „-j "tlvP Wabhutotok, Jane ift—BepMMntatlta dc?°f vtadtT" Pe,, sod Iblinatod Mr. Bowden for iWlwrf. On «M e3fto# A. •hoe »re «tae initUI* "G. (J." Md on the nnt *30 r "F. F. C." In the oenterU the ward To Gontwt uiitn Saata. * highly JL.~- pvwido, June 80.—At the regular fortj at the N»tlonal league here MD. - Ie«ily, membar ' Of parliament, tar Iiooionderry, gratefully mlwiuia America had cfeiae the Urt WMMm 30,000 oontrlbutione to the NatlonalW aarllUMillUT oatapeicn fund. : He ako itgas - the brage ol the LoyalUt* that they MM 4D "long puree" for parliamentary election porpoeee. ' ' thought him as oapable • Jadge of the merits of u address or it* author a* any man he had ever met The'minority reach the conclusion that the solicitor general was lad to grant the application for a government suit without the usual reference or inquiry, without competent examination, with a speed unexampled in the history of the department and in violation of the established rules and practice of the office. "Ordinary oases," they aC|d. "such action would be held to be positive proof of fraud, at least proof of groes negUgenoe, which, iu a person in his position is equivalent to fraud." The Republican minority, following this severe criticism of the solicitor K-neral with su arraignment of Attorney G ueral Garland, equally levers. They say: 'The best that can be said of him is that he lent himself to this sohemo because he got stock for nothing. If he was not active in it himself, he suffered bis name and influence to be u*ed by others. He was thou only a senator of tha United States. He was next placed at tt)e head of the department of justice. Tbe man from whom he had received the *500,000 of itook wanted now to borrow tbe name of that department and get lb indorsement; then an ally asked for it; t hen the official representative of his company asked for It Some men would easily have found a oourse for themselves. Ha took one also; but his associate who knew him and who speculated oa his character were certain they would get what they wanted, and they did. Hie intelligence told him there were thing* he should not permit, and then his vacillating will let him argue that he might Stand aside and see his effloe do them for his benoflt He had not the strength to deny what his associates asked, nor to rat urn tha stock and erase to be an assoolate; he had not the boldness to do personally wuat they thought was a fair service tor the stock he kepi. But it was dona by his department as euoh a, thing never fas done before. Following are the tabulated results as made up by the judges: Distress In Lonlslaaa. ▲ New Planet Discovered. Baton Rouoc, La., June 30 —Governor McBnery has issued a proclamation reciting information received of great distress resulting from severe storms and inundations iu portions of tha parishss of Rapids, Grant and Catahoula. Ths crops have bsen totally destroyed, oattle and hogs drownel, and the soil iu many cases has been washed away to such an extent that It will be iiqpoosltfl* to raise crops of any kind this year. Tha governor, therefore, asks all charitably disposed persons In tbe state to ssnd contributions of provisions to these dlstreaied people. — — H —y — - "OHuok." which, in Qtrmin, maaqn «ooc look. Whan Hr. CUttfaml was nominated by tha presidency Mr. Sohnadt Mat a limitar horaaahoa to him, bat tha initial* "F. K a" were not-on itj 3F? f/ i . Actual Corrected Finish. Time. Time. ■.«.«. IL a m. a. 84 90 5 24 50 8 23 00 8 38 36 3 28 89 3 88 86 ........8 87 80 8 80 03 32887 yiR&T CLASH SCHOONERS. „8 48 80 8 3* 49 4 03 18 3 54 68 18 48 4 08 15 •BCOXP CLAM (LOOTS. .,1 06 40 8 51 40 .4 18 08 8 58 08 .4 20 84 4 05 24 .4 82 08 4 12 00 .(Did not finish.) Utica, June 8ft—Dr. G H. F. Peters, of the Litchfield observatory of Hamilton college, report® that a minor planet, which he believes to be unknown, was observed there at 1 o'clock yesterday morning In right ascension 17h. 28m. 50s, and south declination 28 deg., 0m HAM. Puritan ... ifefjlower Pristine,,. Chief jutlw Weite's HoTfWRk I-. Toledo, Jon* 8Cl-Cbtof Justice Wait.,, whoee tuna* home wm in Toledo, to spending* abort time here among hto old fri*u& and relative* He to in excellent health and Is dividing hto time between motiving oalis (ram friend* and writing opinions on decklions of the court referred to him. He will toavs for the VeUewstooe Perk shortly and proposes making a trip to Atoaka tbe latter llilM* Dol tars 1Mb. Fort una. Gttana.. Mohican. 8 85 ft 3 83 21 4 09 14 Mcskookb, L T., June 8ft—On the bails of the Cherokee oensusjusi oompleted It i* «&- Bated that each Cherokee by blood will receive $16 of tte $300,000 ' rived frm the tzzs&ts} its- Studying Hebrew is the Dog Pays. l)edouin..f 4, Sirauger Tbetl* ( lara Huron 7..... 3 j»l 40 3 64 87 4 01 83 4 13 00 Chicago, June 80. —The Chicago rammer school C4 Hebrew, under the direction at Professor William R Harper, began at Morgan park with seventy students. William Henry Green, IX V., of Princeton, is announced to deliver (our lectures during the sesslou. Attempted Murder and NUMe CONDENSED NEWS. Alice. Meia. Gevalea. 4 48 30 4 28 80 ..4 44 fiO 4 29 60 ...5 «) 20 4 43 2D TRIED CLAM BLOOM. 4 10 29 4 29 90 4 86 85 Pittsbobo, Jane 30. —Frederick Jutte, aged 25 years, son of Charles Jutte, a prominent steamboat owner, shot himsslf through the head, at his father's residence, at Luoas, Pa., near this city, last evening. He died Instantly. Previous to shooting himeelf be flred three shots at hit sister and two at hto stepmother. It is also reported that he shot hto little stepbrother through the shoulder. No osuse for the deed has beet) made public. " The fieoioara** hare nominated Thomas Cogswell for governor of New Hampshire. The president has signed the bill lagalthe bill granting the franking privilege to Mrs. Grant Henry Ward Beeoher has arrived in Loodoa and if the gUeet of the Rev. Dr. (Men , ■. , - . Clara.! Active III id la. 8bona. .4 8) 00 4 12 00 .4; 51 80 4 87 85 .5 15 83 4 55 85 4 12 00 4 87 85 4 48 00 To EduoftU Toonf Almakmni. Hrlln lfin Burn eft. Washington, June 30.— Senator Dolph submitted a proposad amendment to sundry civil appropriation bill to appropriate $50,- 000 for the education of children of school age, without reference to race, in the Territory of Alaska. Faumc**, Ky, June 8a—The torn brick building of the Champion roller mills owned by Messrs Applegate and Hamilton, we* dlsoOTseed k flames. The entire structure was rsduosd to a mats of ashes In one boor. The origin of the Are was probably la a lot a£Dtys»B, which heated and ignited. The loes is setimalad at $30,000; Insurance, mootnnHEStzn HBBBMMMMK A ter the race the Prise Ilia was towed to Boston. The eastern club banquetted its -guest* fa the club houCe at 1 pi m. Justifiable Homleida. 1 D'Knnwy1* MCr fUj, "Lout. Martyr" was a nroDounoed luociia it Chlcaa?o whtfa it racaivad tto flnt praaantattou In America. Ttonitm hai fcadad, at tha rate of fifty "»ntr * dollar, 981,000,000 of her »*,- Washington, June SO.—The coroner's jury returned a verdict of justifiable homicide iu the case Cn Samuel Gassenhelmer, a saloon proprietor, who, Monday night, shot and killed Frank A. Blackford. Gsssenhelmer was discharged. Blackfor.l and three dispute companion* entered Gaasenhe m •?» saloon for the purpose of a row* and floated a pistol. They chased Gas. senht imar about the room, and he finally shot Blackford three tiaaes, who died in twenty WIlMp iUstllteee ms—.ee. 80.—QuiU a full representation of big il|DMl)iDn are here wrestling with the question of pool or no pool, rather than what kind of pool ehall exist. The dissatisfied have so far refused to sign any agrsemenfc It is very likely the manufacture nuy hereafter be a free-for jaU gO"*8 die tillers aadlfc— are 4ran iaabU If all Soldiers Withdrawn Irsa Garfleld'e To provide Peer With Work. CuvatwMTCD, June 80k—Tba United Statea soldiers who have been pacing to and fro Ir front of G^rBald's tomb, in Lake View oemetery, ever since the body was placed in the Scofield vault, have been removed. Tsmb. Paris, June 80—The senate to-day adopted the bill authorising the olty of Paris to issue a loan of *50,000,000 to inaugurate and carry on public 'Till wn*r for. tbe purpose of tarnishing work to the unemployed, -striking out, bowerur, the clauae interpolated by the chamber of deputlee forbidding the use of yntsrlal obtained outside of Franos. 3SMia.fc -.-"*• dressed man, between 85 and £Q years of . Rx-Senator Stockton, of New Jersey ago, found floating in |he twim that he wants to be a candidate fa clothiu* indicate Um». tbo body la that of gTwo daogbtara ot WJUiw Milter, agad 18 Hampton, of Cl«D»laoJ, 0. It was 2nd 10, war* burned to' death at Shannon, I'HiLAMLmnx. Juo* aa-AMu iUv. Qgl of aattian an the Dm Moinaa rirar A Bnslnsss Failure In North Carolina. PtTinMCM, Va., June 80.—News ha* been received here of the failure of Pohs & Stock tor, of Winstoa, S. CI, merchants and proprietors of the Csintral hotel; liabilities, 160.000. - , . 8«oret«ry Manning* V HwHk. Washihotow, Jam 8ft lhD- niog'n private secretary received the following dispatch)- « - D Comoobd, N. H , June 80.—The Second district Democratic congressional convent on nominated John H George, of Concord, for congressman. A Congressional Nomination. As to the press lb* minority »sy that The New York Time* is the only journal that has received pay for articles published relating to the telephone controversy, but this was for the Insertion of • four column industrial article, and the pries charged —$1,200—was at regular advertising rates. The evideno* they say shows that the Ball company resolved at the outset of the controversy pot tp go - into newspaper dtsD fculan, and hasfrdharad to ttut jajicy. Hot SrMaog. V*. June 9ft—Contradict Herald's story about my health I am much better *ha« whan I left WfttWngtoa Diinu Maotibo. Killed bj the Express. /uiR, June 30.—The WgpM Suffrage party's state committee have ant to Governor Httl a letter thahkteg U* for which pwmtejrtkin ai Thauktng the SovUMD, Madisonviu.e, O, June 110. — James Baker, a carpenter, aged 55, was struck by the wast bound C. W. and B expresa and instantly killed.
Object Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Number 1219, June 30, 1886 |
Issue | 1219 |
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 | 1886-06-30 |
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 1219, June 30, 1886 |
Issue | 1219 |
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 | 1886-06-30 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | EGZ_18860630_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 | UP .'V* • 1 *" ■ TSTOW, PA- WRB»tESDAY. JUNE rMN»*Y~KEJ*J|t| V OUTDOO»_3K)r — p jK Th» lr and Dttml* i V B W H LjM / •■■ - j?-"* 3Stoettitt£ 4 MUM HE K 1219 W »k y Established I860. PIT 30, 1886. I TWO OtNTS | Ten Cents Per %Hk POBITAB THE D0' ILY DISLIKES GOULD. TH* HARRISBURG CONVENTION THE ENGLISH ELECTIONS. Exprttilon of Opinion Brought Onl FROM THE CdMffHTTfcE ON y»ilc««o« __ BmIm *1 Bu(ball-B»ola( Brant*. v Stllibuj'finln the Truth of PamtU'i by tbt Associated Pr«M Controvtrcy. New York, June 30 -TM first rao® at Sbeapshsait was over three-quarters of a mile. Pon Iliac flrat, Little Hincb second, Bandola third. Time, 1:114X. Auertlom The Conqueror of the Genesta KkW York. June 80.—A correspondence has taken place batweeu David M. Stone, preaideut of the Now York Associated Press and T. V. Powderly, general master workman Knights of Labor, relative to an expression said to hav« emanated from Mr. Powderly respecting the dispatches from Cleveland during the recent convention of the order. He was reported to have said that the Associated Preen lost no opporfDinity to malign him, and that instructions had been sent out by the Associated Pre* at the instanc* of Jay Gonld to misrepreeent him. D Mr. powderly was informed that iay Gould a*d the Associated press represented opposing interests that are so strongly an tagonistic that they would not be likely to act in harmony on any subject, and certainly neither would do anything whatever at the dictation of the other. In speaking of Jay Gonld, Mr. Powderly says: Until the receipt of your letter I fully bethat Mr. Gould was a controlling spirit in that institution, and I am glad to learn from yon that suoh is not the case. 1 am ■pteeeed to And out that the New York Asso-i dated Press and Jay Gould represent opposing interests that are so strongly antagonistic they wo'rfd not be act in harmony on any subject TELEPHONE CHARGES. BEAVER NOMINATED UNANIMOUSLY, DAVIE8 BY A SMALL MAJORITY. London, June 30.—Lord Salisbury has w ritten a letter denying the assertion! of Mr. Parnell that the latter lias eaWfed on negotiations with the late Conservative , Again to the Front. Severe Criticism of the Attorney General and Solicitor General Good©—Tho Minority Report Indorsed by the Four Republican Member* of the Comttiltto®. The second race was a »weepetake, over ■even furlong" Refrain DM, Pontico seo ond, Kalnla third. Time, 138& GALA DA* AT MABBLEHEAD the IfHtawHUMd I.amerne Delegation Vote Divided tor Lieutenant Governor— A Tenaperaaee Amendment Beaolatlon to be Toted en. government respecting horn* rale for Ireland, and denouncing hi* statements a* baseless fabrications. Lord Salisbury, coo- The third race wae a selling sweepstakes, cf threnj carters of a mile. Eleotrlcity fint, Nat Goodwin second, A1 Reed third. Time, 1:18^. The fourth race was a special pur* of 98,000, one mile and a quarter. Troubadour first, Kim Woodford second. Time, 8:«% The fifth race was a consolation handicap sweepstakes, one mile and a quarter. Aretino first, Buffalo second, Heel and Toe thhtL Time, 1K»X. the sixth race was a selling sweepstakes, over one mile and a furlong. Herbert first, Una B. second, War Eagle third. Time, ''" Washington, June 30. —The minority, or Republican report of the rpiclal committee Which conduct®* the Pan Electric telephone investigation, prepared by Hon. Ambrose A. Raimey, of Boston, is completed and will be submitted to the house as soon as the Democratic members reach an agr ment upon their report. Mr. Ranney"s report is indorsed by the four R publican members of the committee, and Chairman Boole's report, whiob was intende 1 to represent the views of the majority, is indorsed by four Democratic members, Mr. Hall, of Missouri, the fifth Democratic 'member of the committee, having decided (0 submit his individual views independently if lis colleagues. £ The Ranney report reviews the testimony Of the principal witnesses examined before the' committee, and embodies some severe criticisms of the Methods pursued by the projectors of the Pan Electric enterprise, and of the testimony as well as the conduct of Attorney General Garland and Solicitor General Goode la connection with granting the go**n|f*nt suit against P» Bag pan;'. HeiWrlag to tin efforts oC the Pan E ectric people to bring about a government rait, the report says: "They determined to have the department of justice, at the head of which was one of their co-directors, the attorney general, bring a suit against the Bell company, but whiob would remain under their control." They did not want to have the Bell patent radated, but hoped they oould frighten the Bell oootpany into the belief that they could do fo, for then they could drive that company, perhaps, to pay them for peaces A suit, apparently backed by the power of the government, with one of their own directors at the head of the government whioh authorised it, under their control, so that they could push it, or let it languish and die If they pleased, might seem formidable.. They thought, moreover, that the mere institution of such a suit would deter the United States courts from granting any injunction in favor of the Bell patent. ! If the Conservative* oame Into power after the general elections they would give Ireland a statutory parliament; Hi is false that I showed any The Wkito Sloop Passing Her Com petiton Amid WIM Cheering1. Hamusborg, June, 30.—Tb« R^pibKoan State Convention was c*llwl iu order lDj -Wondnrlnl Worl f «he Puritan Before the Wind—I«ie» fork's Favorite Tstkt Chairman Cooper at 10:30 o'clock, a m. George T. Oliver, of Pittsburg was elected temporary chairman. Forty minutes were occupied in discussing the temperance resolution. The committee on resolutions and permanent organisation agreed to meet at 1*30 o'clock, p. m. The Convention then adjourned until squally fata tha* LmM C«W%*won urged upon the cabinet the granting df such a concession. The statement is abo false that the cabinet did got refuse to extend tha oonoession of home rule to Ireland until after the elections want against us. Lord Salisbury denies aba, with great indignation, the statement that sitter the result of the slaottoae-BiiMUtef known the cabinet altered its intentions. "The assertion contains not the smallest element of trnlk," he says, "bati*fcs »s pattest never n had tha slightest IjWtaatinn toward , the srtabHshment of a statutory parliament in Mil was passsd in Msrenoe to awish «r- , pressed at an interview on Aug. 1 is impossible of tenth, because the bill had already passed tha boose of lords, and the government was publicly pledged to Ite terms. The government feaelvad upon the land purchase scheme as aoon as it entered , offlce, a month before that data" '* w ■ Mr. Gladstone, In the ooarte 6f hi. speech ,. 1 reeterday at Liverpool, said: "It waa her* that I lint drew breath. I have draW& It now 76 yearn, The time 1s not distort wlMto ;«t I shall pay my debt to nature, and. these possibly are the last words I shall (peak in claimed: "If idle and shallow pfetMMiJl •enee, the ohild unborn shall rae the i miy- * l*3t&£i isrin.'yss'ys that Ireland Is England's Poland and to defSfcMSPaftiiW* -• Listen to prudeaoe, eouratfe aad kteu*. 1-t Ring oat the oM, ring in the newt , JUngoot j the notes of misery and discord, rhyf lf the bleeeed reign of peace.'' to W«!T IiT .dil*s W deteotivee, and that hs, hfa detectives snned with re vol vert accompanying him on all his jourtoys Ixtwteo his hoos» and the * leaning steward such a policy, and it la Outsailed—A Breeze that Nearly Cap- sized the Majrflowetr-Seenee and Inci- dents ia the Bay. Mauubud, Him.. Jane 8a—The great and much anticipated regatta of the Eastern Yacht club WM sailed yesterday, and victory mmmi more rested with the Puritan, the FriseUla being a close second and Hie Mayflow«r third- Tbe day was perfect Rot * i clou/ obscured t*r sky, and i jfO°d knot btoTtrom thl.fci Miy thousands of visitors war* here to witness the contest. The race was twioe around a fifteen mile triangle off Marble head rook, lira miles to a leg. At 12:07 o'clock the ■tart wm made The Priscilla crossing the line MU ISM, the Fortuna second. The Puritan, close behind, took the wrong course, was ssat back, and crossed tbe line again at 13:11X, followed by the Mayflower at 13:13. Bbortly past the line the Mayflower, almost oaresning, had to take in sail, as she was unable M Mid np utdor tbe tremendous canvas she was attempting to carry and for ssveral seconds many feared that she would oapsiaa At 13:16 o'clock the second-class boats arosssd the Una The Puritan lost one and a half and the Mayflower two minutes by not getting over tbe line within tbe time limit. The Prisoilla immediately forged ahead and lad the othor boats by half • mile, bat tbe wind soon began to fresher and the Varitan -and- Mayflower at coor gained on Saw York's favorite. The yachtt turned the tret stake boat as follows: Gib urn, 18:85*; Priscilla, For — - • " -V Purl' ' CmoAdo, June 8ft—The first race at Washington park was for all ages, one end one sixteenth miles; Jim Douglass woh, Jim Gray second. Exile third. Time, 147& Second rao»—For maiden 8-year olds, SH mile; Clones won, Warfellow second, Bd Oilman third. Time, 1:44. ' The third race su for the Lake Side stakes, for fillies, firs furlongs; Mary finished first, Oracle D. second, HalUe C third. Time, 1,M^. Fourth raoe~ Maidens allowed, mile heats; Bootblack won, Billy Gilmore seoond. Sovereign Pat third. Time, 1:48*, 1:43*, 1:44. Basing at Chleag*. 1 o'clock, p. m. Habbibbubo, 1:30 p, m.—General Beaver has jsnt arrived m the city. Gen. Osborne ssems to be gaining strength. Hia name will be pcossntsd to tha convention by Hon. L J). Shoemaker. The convention will TOH an Ike temperance resolution at 4 o'olock p. m. I can assure you that no matter what the paper* may gay at tima* in favor of Mr. Gould, no matter though he has wealth unlimited at hi* command, he is the meet universally despised creature on the American tide of the Atlantic t*D-day. I speak from a knowledge of the people, having mingled among them, and I can in the future read D the Associated Press dispatches with more pine mi re, knowing that Jay Ooold does not control the wir*D oyer which they are sent "I can assure you," concluded the master workman, "that it was with no intention to do the press, associated or otherwise, an in- Jury tfiat I made the statement to which you refer." In a subsequent interview between the two gentlemen everything was - satisfactorily explained. Haerisbdeo, S p. m.—Oonvetftioa was called to order at 2.-20 p. m. Lewis Wagner m elected permanent chairman and read« three minutes address. Col Hastings made the speech nominating Gen, Bearer for Governor, who waa nominated by a unanimoua vote. Fifth race—A steeplechase, shod. oourse; Wellington won, Baoephalua second, Worth third, thU, am*. In the fourth race the haree Forest broke a lag; throwing Withers under him. Kansas, ridden by Covington, ran into Forest and both hones and Jockeys were rolled up in a bun ok. Covington was not ssrlouslr injured, but Withers was carried to the club house in an unconscious state. He wai not fatally injured, however. Forest was shot and killed on the track. Hamkisbuio, 4 £ m,—Davies nominated on first ballot, receiving HI} votes. Of the Luzerne and I*okawanna delegates Norris Adams, Uiteheli, Gale, Beeee and Jones voted for Davks and the othen for Won tooth. MR8. CLEVELAND "AT HOME." The President's Wife Begins Ber Series la the Dlamoad Field. ■ of Afternoon Ksssptlens. ' j WaSHIKGTOw, June 80.—The president's wife, for her informal receptions, has chosen different day* from those formerly observed by his a liter, but the same hour, from 12 to 1. Iflss Cleveland waa' "at home" in the R«d parlor on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday noon; Mrs. Cleveland on Tuedays-and Thursdays, choosing tha hour when the president is aura to be occupied with his cabinet. Yesterday was the first of these receptions under favoring skies, and there was present a brave show of society people for tha closing weak of June. At Detroit—Detroit, 8; Washington, d. At Kansas City—Kansas City, t; New York, & THE LAKE SHORE STRIKE. At St. Louis—St Louis, 4; Boston, 1L trains Having and the Trouble Appaa* At St Louis—Browns, S; Metropolitans, 2. At Louisville—Louisville, 6; Brooklyn, 1L At Rocheeter—Rochester, 7; Oswego, 1. . At Hamilton—Hamilton. 4; Utlca, 11 CHIOAOO, June SO.—The trafflo on the Lake Shore end Michigan Southern railroad hat been resumed in earnest In and oat bound trains are moved as rapidly as the occasion demands, but all are under strong polioe protection. No violenoe or interfarsncs is attempted by the striken or their sympathisers. Here and there, at a distance of two or three blooks from the Kwt street and Forty-third street croesings, small groups of strikers and their friends gather and quietly discuss the outlook, bat tbey do not venture nearer. Every outbound train is escorted by Pinker ton men armed with Winchester rifles as far as the Indiana state, line. The switchman of. other roads have dflcided not to place an' embargo on Lake Shore freight out of sympathy with this strikers. The Wabash, the Chicugo and Baatern Illinois and the Grand Trunk handles Lake Shore freight as usual. President Newell expressed his satisfaction with the situation at far as it has progressed, but Mtys he would not consider the strike at an said until trains could be run without the protection of riflse and without the fear of malicious interference with property. •ntlv Hearing an Knd. tana, 18:37;" Mayflower, 12:4* . .-ltai. tt-.tOX. Th and th* Mayflowe: wahail away frogD the Puritan -Halt w»3 between the Brat and MOnnd mark boats, o betweea mtmi aad eight tnUej from thC (tart, the Oltana wu an eighth of a mill ahead ot thr ' which ltd the For Of Attorney General Garland'* action or Don-action In connection with bringing the government suit, the report Bays, that be knew the Bell patent had befcn repeatedly sustained, and so it concerned the honor of th« department that each a patent should not be attached* without serious inquiry, and the duty of the attorney general to see to it that it received inch inquiry, they say, waa Increased by the fact that he knew an application was going to tie made and that th» parties pressing action wanted it passed on without reference to the patent of.' flee, and that he had a great pasaonal interest that it should be so passed, and should Inset with no delay.. After criticising the attorney qsnaral for not speaking to Soliolter Gs.Ceral Goode about this matter, and instructing him that, as he himself was personally interested, it concerned the honor of the department to make sure that the fullest investigation preceded any action, the minority, commenting on the testimony of the solioltor general that Mr. Garland never spoke to him on the subject, say: "There are a number of facts and clrcumstanoes, however, which leave it beyond doubt that Mr. Goode's recollection is so seriously ht fault as to a large part of what took place that it cannot be safely relied upon in any portion. He became solicitor general id May by an appointment made by the president, but not yet confirmed by the senate. On June 25 he went to British Columbia on a mission foi* the department and appeared at his office again Aug. 30. Mr. Garland teatiftee that he was then expecting to go away for his vacation, which would ■occupy about six weeks, and he did go away on the 27th of August Mr. Good testifies that during the week that intervened, hi' hardly spoke to Mr. Garland, except for the ordinary interchange of courtesies, and did not talk with him about business whatever. Mr. Goode must be mistaken about It It Is not poaible that after be had been away from the department for two months, and when the attorney general waa about to be absent for six weeks, leaving him at the head of the department, the one should not have ankei and the other should not hay* given information or Instrnctlom concerning the pending business of the office and matters expeotod to ariaa It would not be tolerated that private oounsel coqld so nCg)ect the interests of an important private client, and it* pannot be believed that Mr. Goode could have done so respecting the interests of the United States; 'be must havo bad consultations and forgotten all about them." At Cincinnati—Cincinnati, 18; Baltimore, 1. At Pittsburg—Athletic, 9; Pittsburg, 7. At Chicago—Chicago, 3; Philadelphia, 4. otty. Mr. Thomw Sexton k«l commenced his oampalKn In Belfut, and it promim ta b* 1 ;r * SSSEStafa a;'3S^"' brakM heuU no g- but t Mrs. Cleveland looked mora - youthful than ever in a short drsss of white mull, with yoke and sleeves of Valenciennes laoe and ruffles of the same across the skirt front Her only ornament win a jeweled pansy at the throat and a bunch of pink and red roses carried in her hand. Many ladies Insisted that she looked lovelier than in h«c more elaborate toilets. Her voice has gdned a certain as if sM.feft herself no longer a stranger. YALE LAW SCHOOL EXEROISE8. rTlSCllML, tuna by about tha MM distance. The Mayflomr tH doing remarkable work, but waa (till • mOe to the bad. 8he had drawn to windward of the Puritan and waa leading hor by about twenty rOfla. Both the Puritan and Mayflower war* to windward of the leading boat*. The »i* leading yachta paawd tha aeeand mark boat In the following order: Oitana, 1:03:50; Priscllla, 1:04:60; Fbrtuaa, 1:06; Mohican, 1:08; Mayflower, 1:06:15; Pdrltan, 1:08:15. Cheers and iteam whlatlea greeted the yachta aa they passed the mark boat At 1:15 the jjeading. hoata oaroe about with star board •tacks, tfcey started away at a but pace on «hel*t]ac«f the first and the Pari taniaade splendid work. The Priacllla had sailed farther to windward than her competitor*, and whoa the tacked Dhe waa only a ahart distance ahead In thd running - Before a mile had been (ailed tha Puritan bad walked away frcot them all. The yachta were that ruling close hauled. The work «f the Puritan tree wonderful She bad reached tha Mayflower, got to weather of her, and then' began work on the PHMimir When the Teasels came along on the pott taok and for the atafce at tM'llartlng point, it was evident that there was to be a great race to the flnlah of the fifteen mi lea. The Prlvsllla was to the windward, but the Puritan waa flying at such a clip that before the PrlsciHa bad i t squared away airot her (peed the P«ritaa . had outsailed her to las ward and gone into the lead, amid cheers and shoute of Joy on all sides. The yachta rounded the horn j stake boat, with one-half the rac* oompleted .-as follows: Puritan, "1:53:55; Prisoillr, 3:54:65; Mayflower, 1:57. The Puritai mew began to outrun all bands before th» wM and the balance of the race was a procession. The Puritan orosaed tha. finish line at 3:34.48, the Priscilla at 3:87.50 and the Mayflower at .3:38 Had the Piiritan and Mayflower bean prompter in gating under way tha Puritan Mould have beaten the *reat Mew Vol* sleep by over elgjit minutes, wMle.tha Mayflower wowld have'beaten her by a nttle over a minute and occupied the second place at the flnlah instead of the third. „ ..j „ J.i,,j _ Mr. Thaefcer Takes a Prise Her a Speech on "Boycotting." Nnw Hivm, June 80.—The anniversary sxersisM of the Yale law school occurred in the Center ohurch yesterday evening; President Porter offered prayer. The competitive speaking for the Townseiul prise then began. The competitors were' as follows: "Boyootting," Lucius Boltwood, B A, of New Haven; "American Independence as a cadae of the French Revolution," by Frank D Pavey, B A, of Washington Court House, O.; "Boyootting," Sherman Day Thaoher, R A, of New Haven, Conn. When the above named speakers had coreluded President Porter introduoed Hon. Wayne MacVeagh, L.L.D., of'Philadelphia, who delivered the anniversary oration, taking for his theme, "Law and Democracy.""God Saw Intend," whan MM'fcHi* «n.ii or forty of MNkoahK to tb»:loekn|k v the TTllllllll —dill" I Til II I 111 day by laboriously raailng hb 4W* 1ft a Ml small room to aa aadtenoe of thirty-nin» ptrtoni, chiefly oomposed of students uC boys. •/' - fi e Mr. ParBoll's speeofasa ,in the south 01 England have io ranch damaged the prospects of the opposition that telegraphs lli — been sent to the Unionist committees in Lp%-,. don imploring the presence or eminent Unionist orators to (rnvMS ttevholfcftle defection whioh is imminent. Lord Hart- . teuton has agreed to speak at ftylhoafh he- ' fort the polling begins on Friday, and tUft.ild oomsuittee is searching /orpttwr speaker*. Lady Randolph Ctare&fll is ouaof the hardest election workers in London. Be- St. Loom, Jane 30.—J. H. Dixon, the English merchant for whom C. A. Preller was traveling at the time of (he murder at the Southern hotel haa Arrived in the city. Be came for Freller'i effect# and to eecure official paper a which the victim had in hla poesesslon. He will take back with him the oourt record of the caae properly certified and will collect $5,- 000 Insurance on Preller'a life for the benefit of the Preller family. Thi Harder of Preller. Milt Tf# A BIG STRIKE THREATENED. The committee on sward. President Cyrne K Northrop, of Minneapolis, Minn., Hon. Oliver Wendell Holme*, Jr., at Boeton, and Gen Br*jton Ivea, of New York, than announced that they had decided to award tw prise to Sherman Car Thacher, of New Haven. A benediction by President Porter cloeed the exercise*. The Dean awl faculty of the law school received the graduate* and their friend• at the law department Fifteen Hundred Philadelphia Iron- workers Co Ge On Strike. Philadelphia, JuneSOl —The fifteen hundred employes of the five large rolling mill* of this city, operated by James Roland St Got, Gaulbert, McFadden & Caskey, Hughes tc Patterson, Marx hall Broa ft Co., and Stevens, Robbins & Co., will go oat on strike this evening and the mills will suspend for an indefinite period. The trouble, which has been impending for the part six months, grow* out of the refusal ot the manufacturers to gr ant the demand of their employee for a change bUhe existing schedule of wage*. The sliding soala, which haabeen in force during the past year, expires to-day, and the employes object to the adoption of any new scale by which their wagsa will be rednoed. Repeated conference had taJhd to being a satisfactory settlement of the difference, and in aoeordanoe with a no. tice served on the manufaotnrers thirty day) ago, the employee will stop work. The em ployes belong to the Amalgamated Steel ani Iron Workers association and notice ha. bean forwarded to Prsaident Wiehe of th intended aotlcn of the men in this city Murdering and Kobbtiuf Hie Father. Pl/THCTOTH, N. C., June 30l —Jamea N. Baaemore, who livee near Windsor, Bertie county, and hia aon quarreled. The »on fired both barrel* of a shotgun loaded with buckshok into hia father1* body* He than broke open a safe, took therefrom $800 and fledv* The sheriff and • large pet** are scouring the country in search of him. The father is yet alive but will die. I b* THEIR ESTIMATE OF EACH OTHCft. Mr. Gladstone on Mr. ul Mr. Beeeher on Mr. Gladstone^ «{. Fight With Horse Thieves. CaLVKBton. Tex,,. June SO.—A Mews special from Uvalde »|»ys: Deputy Sheriffs T. P. Baylor and (f R. Nimmo had a desperate fight with Mexican horse thieve* at Clin* Station, seme twenty miles west of Uvalde. Oaa Mexican was Mlted and Another wounded. Tha officers clothing was riddled with bullets, but they escaped uninjured. « London, Jane 30.—In an Interview with a reporter for The Poet, Iter. Henry Ward Beeober expressed himself u delighted with the powerful speed) delivered by Mr. Gladstone at Liverpool. Referring to hfa exchange of compliments with Mr. Gladstone after the «peach, Mr. Beeober said ha told Mr. Gladstone that hyrw too much overcome fay the power and. eloquence of the premier to lie able to exprsas his appreciation of hi* address in word*. The speech, he saU, had gives him a greater insight into the affairs of Ireland than be had ever had before. To thfc Mr. Gladstooe remarked that hie considered Mr. Bseoher'e worts tide* assisting her husband in Padding ton,** make* frequent excursion* to other districts to organise and enocraragetlM W(Men of At continue hopeful of obtaining a small majority in Ota testing elections. At the National majority for the government is ertijawled at twenty. The Unionists are oMftSrtof a **?*£*t?sszxeiDJSZ iluba is two to one against Gladstone, Kate Townsend's Will. N*w Orijejlns, June 90.—In the famous Kate Townsend will case Judge Houston rendered" a decision deoreelng the will of Kate Townsend in favor of Tro|«rlUe Svkes null anil void, and giving judgment in favor of the state of Louisiana, decreeing the state to be the heir-at-law of the dead woman and entitled to the ownership add possession of all the property left by her. ■ forty to A»»lherH;A-—qh— Wmr „-j "tlvP Wabhutotok, Jane ift—BepMMntatlta dc?°f vtadtT" Pe,, sod Iblinatod Mr. Bowden for iWlwrf. On «M e3fto# A. •hoe »re «tae initUI* "G. (J." Md on the nnt *30 r "F. F. C." In the oenterU the ward To Gontwt uiitn Saata. * highly JL.~- pvwido, June 80.—At the regular fortj at the N»tlonal league here MD. - Ie«ily, membar ' Of parliament, tar Iiooionderry, gratefully mlwiuia America had cfeiae the Urt WMMm 30,000 oontrlbutione to the NatlonalW aarllUMillUT oatapeicn fund. : He ako itgas - the brage ol the LoyalUt* that they MM 4D "long puree" for parliamentary election porpoeee. ' ' thought him as oapable • Jadge of the merits of u address or it* author a* any man he had ever met The'minority reach the conclusion that the solicitor general was lad to grant the application for a government suit without the usual reference or inquiry, without competent examination, with a speed unexampled in the history of the department and in violation of the established rules and practice of the office. "Ordinary oases," they aC|d. "such action would be held to be positive proof of fraud, at least proof of groes negUgenoe, which, iu a person in his position is equivalent to fraud." The Republican minority, following this severe criticism of the solicitor K-neral with su arraignment of Attorney G ueral Garland, equally levers. They say: 'The best that can be said of him is that he lent himself to this sohemo because he got stock for nothing. If he was not active in it himself, he suffered bis name and influence to be u*ed by others. He was thou only a senator of tha United States. He was next placed at tt)e head of the department of justice. Tbe man from whom he had received the *500,000 of itook wanted now to borrow tbe name of that department and get lb indorsement; then an ally asked for it; t hen the official representative of his company asked for It Some men would easily have found a oourse for themselves. Ha took one also; but his associate who knew him and who speculated oa his character were certain they would get what they wanted, and they did. Hie intelligence told him there were thing* he should not permit, and then his vacillating will let him argue that he might Stand aside and see his effloe do them for his benoflt He had not the strength to deny what his associates asked, nor to rat urn tha stock and erase to be an assoolate; he had not the boldness to do personally wuat they thought was a fair service tor the stock he kepi. But it was dona by his department as euoh a, thing never fas done before. Following are the tabulated results as made up by the judges: Distress In Lonlslaaa. ▲ New Planet Discovered. Baton Rouoc, La., June 30 —Governor McBnery has issued a proclamation reciting information received of great distress resulting from severe storms and inundations iu portions of tha parishss of Rapids, Grant and Catahoula. Ths crops have bsen totally destroyed, oattle and hogs drownel, and the soil iu many cases has been washed away to such an extent that It will be iiqpoosltfl* to raise crops of any kind this year. Tha governor, therefore, asks all charitably disposed persons In tbe state to ssnd contributions of provisions to these dlstreaied people. — — H —y — - "OHuok." which, in Qtrmin, maaqn «ooc look. Whan Hr. CUttfaml was nominated by tha presidency Mr. Sohnadt Mat a limitar horaaahoa to him, bat tha initial* "F. K a" were not-on itj 3F? f/ i . Actual Corrected Finish. Time. Time. ■.«.«. IL a m. a. 84 90 5 24 50 8 23 00 8 38 36 3 28 89 3 88 86 ........8 87 80 8 80 03 32887 yiR&T CLASH SCHOONERS. „8 48 80 8 3* 49 4 03 18 3 54 68 18 48 4 08 15 •BCOXP CLAM (LOOTS. .,1 06 40 8 51 40 .4 18 08 8 58 08 .4 20 84 4 05 24 .4 82 08 4 12 00 .(Did not finish.) Utica, June 8ft—Dr. G H. F. Peters, of the Litchfield observatory of Hamilton college, report® that a minor planet, which he believes to be unknown, was observed there at 1 o'clock yesterday morning In right ascension 17h. 28m. 50s, and south declination 28 deg., 0m HAM. Puritan ... ifefjlower Pristine,,. Chief jutlw Weite's HoTfWRk I-. Toledo, Jon* 8Cl-Cbtof Justice Wait.,, whoee tuna* home wm in Toledo, to spending* abort time here among hto old fri*u& and relative* He to in excellent health and Is dividing hto time between motiving oalis (ram friend* and writing opinions on decklions of the court referred to him. He will toavs for the VeUewstooe Perk shortly and proposes making a trip to Atoaka tbe latter llilM* Dol tars 1Mb. Fort una. Gttana.. Mohican. 8 85 ft 3 83 21 4 09 14 Mcskookb, L T., June 8ft—On the bails of the Cherokee oensusjusi oompleted It i* «&- Bated that each Cherokee by blood will receive $16 of tte $300,000 ' rived frm the tzzs&ts} its- Studying Hebrew is the Dog Pays. l)edouin..f 4, Sirauger Tbetl* ( lara Huron 7..... 3 j»l 40 3 64 87 4 01 83 4 13 00 Chicago, June 80. —The Chicago rammer school C4 Hebrew, under the direction at Professor William R Harper, began at Morgan park with seventy students. William Henry Green, IX V., of Princeton, is announced to deliver (our lectures during the sesslou. Attempted Murder and NUMe CONDENSED NEWS. Alice. Meia. Gevalea. 4 48 30 4 28 80 ..4 44 fiO 4 29 60 ...5 «) 20 4 43 2D TRIED CLAM BLOOM. 4 10 29 4 29 90 4 86 85 Pittsbobo, Jane 30. —Frederick Jutte, aged 25 years, son of Charles Jutte, a prominent steamboat owner, shot himsslf through the head, at his father's residence, at Luoas, Pa., near this city, last evening. He died Instantly. Previous to shooting himeelf be flred three shots at hit sister and two at hto stepmother. It is also reported that he shot hto little stepbrother through the shoulder. No osuse for the deed has beet) made public. " The fieoioara** hare nominated Thomas Cogswell for governor of New Hampshire. The president has signed the bill lagalthe bill granting the franking privilege to Mrs. Grant Henry Ward Beeoher has arrived in Loodoa and if the gUeet of the Rev. Dr. (Men , ■. , - . Clara.! Active III id la. 8bona. .4 8) 00 4 12 00 .4; 51 80 4 87 85 .5 15 83 4 55 85 4 12 00 4 87 85 4 48 00 To EduoftU Toonf Almakmni. Hrlln lfin Burn eft. Washington, June 30.— Senator Dolph submitted a proposad amendment to sundry civil appropriation bill to appropriate $50,- 000 for the education of children of school age, without reference to race, in the Territory of Alaska. Faumc**, Ky, June 8a—The torn brick building of the Champion roller mills owned by Messrs Applegate and Hamilton, we* dlsoOTseed k flames. The entire structure was rsduosd to a mats of ashes In one boor. The origin of the Are was probably la a lot a£Dtys»B, which heated and ignited. The loes is setimalad at $30,000; Insurance, mootnnHEStzn HBBBMMMMK A ter the race the Prise Ilia was towed to Boston. The eastern club banquetted its -guest* fa the club houCe at 1 pi m. Justifiable Homleida. 1 D'Knnwy1* MCr fUj, "Lout. Martyr" was a nroDounoed luociia it Chlcaa?o whtfa it racaivad tto flnt praaantattou In America. Ttonitm hai fcadad, at tha rate of fifty "»ntr * dollar, 981,000,000 of her »*,- Washington, June SO.—The coroner's jury returned a verdict of justifiable homicide iu the case Cn Samuel Gassenhelmer, a saloon proprietor, who, Monday night, shot and killed Frank A. Blackford. Gsssenhelmer was discharged. Blackfor.l and three dispute companion* entered Gaasenhe m •?» saloon for the purpose of a row* and floated a pistol. They chased Gas. senht imar about the room, and he finally shot Blackford three tiaaes, who died in twenty WIlMp iUstllteee ms—.ee. 80.—QuiU a full representation of big il|DMl)iDn are here wrestling with the question of pool or no pool, rather than what kind of pool ehall exist. The dissatisfied have so far refused to sign any agrsemenfc It is very likely the manufacture nuy hereafter be a free-for jaU gO"*8 die tillers aadlfc— are 4ran iaabU If all Soldiers Withdrawn Irsa Garfleld'e To provide Peer With Work. CuvatwMTCD, June 80k—Tba United Statea soldiers who have been pacing to and fro Ir front of G^rBald's tomb, in Lake View oemetery, ever since the body was placed in the Scofield vault, have been removed. Tsmb. Paris, June 80—The senate to-day adopted the bill authorising the olty of Paris to issue a loan of *50,000,000 to inaugurate and carry on public 'Till wn*r for. tbe purpose of tarnishing work to the unemployed, -striking out, bowerur, the clauae interpolated by the chamber of deputlee forbidding the use of yntsrlal obtained outside of Franos. 3SMia.fc -.-"*• dressed man, between 85 and £Q years of . Rx-Senator Stockton, of New Jersey ago, found floating in |he twim that he wants to be a candidate fa clothiu* indicate Um». tbo body la that of gTwo daogbtara ot WJUiw Milter, agad 18 Hampton, of Cl«D»laoJ, 0. It was 2nd 10, war* burned to' death at Shannon, I'HiLAMLmnx. Juo* aa-AMu iUv. Qgl of aattian an the Dm Moinaa rirar A Bnslnsss Failure In North Carolina. PtTinMCM, Va., June 80.—News ha* been received here of the failure of Pohs & Stock tor, of Winstoa, S. CI, merchants and proprietors of the Csintral hotel; liabilities, 160.000. - , . 8«oret«ry Manning* V HwHk. Washihotow, Jam 8ft lhD- niog'n private secretary received the following dispatch)- « - D Comoobd, N. H , June 80.—The Second district Democratic congressional convent on nominated John H George, of Concord, for congressman. A Congressional Nomination. As to the press lb* minority »sy that The New York Time* is the only journal that has received pay for articles published relating to the telephone controversy, but this was for the Insertion of • four column industrial article, and the pries charged —$1,200—was at regular advertising rates. The evideno* they say shows that the Ball company resolved at the outset of the controversy pot tp go - into newspaper dtsD fculan, and hasfrdharad to ttut jajicy. Hot SrMaog. V*. June 9ft—Contradict Herald's story about my health I am much better *ha« whan I left WfttWngtoa Diinu Maotibo. Killed bj the Express. /uiR, June 30.—The WgpM Suffrage party's state committee have ant to Governor Httl a letter thahkteg U* for which pwmtejrtkin ai Thauktng the SovUMD, Madisonviu.e, O, June 110. — James Baker, a carpenter, aged 55, was struck by the wast bound C. W. and B expresa and instantly killed. |
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