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J+P *r A m i HUKUt 1969. I Weekly BstsMlahcd ISfiO i ON, PA., TUESDAY. AUGUST 24. 188b. J two auras- I In Om» Pw Wwk AIN. to ra)iort to the strikers at headqnarten. A discussion as to whether they should aoMpt Mr. Thompson's -proposition m then todulged in. At 13:80 this morning the meeting ad journed, after deriding not to accept the compony's proposal. The Belt line employee held a secret session last night. The probability is, so an employe said, that the Belt line will be tied up. GOVERN' FI8HWG NOT GOOD. SCIENTIFIC LOBE. THE GOTHAM MUNICIPAL MUDDLE Daft. On Iff las OM Vat Sat Traps M A. Patent Wanted by an IMIm or. KRHAPS IT'S HUMOR. THE NEW YORK STREET CAR EM- Halifax, Aug. 34.—Three Hora Scotia vessels have arrived home from Labrador and 'report the oodfishing there a total failure. They secured only one-third of a cargo. This indicate* great distress in that region this JOME OF THE WORK DONE AT THE "*•*, Aok JM—» PLOYES TIE UP. GETTING MIXED. BUFFALO MEETING. irkwtottar reoeiTsiby tie in' l I'nasM frriu to Inform nrn Mllbla core for oflMal corruption, so mwh pored in a liquid form, bat aWuluglj no demand. I now propose it dry In- form at afflicted with that Cflp# ri&lady sating the vitals of oar belovwi country. In Dw Moines land steal 1,809,006 aentmtn, no compensate® whatever given, now triad to be compromised by a oookatrioaawato hUl incubated in star chamber gaOarfes cleared, doom closed and baptised in open senate Kebuary 11,1886. My medicine is free from mineral substance, ft is potent and pungaut, being first extracted by the mischievous potato I take equal parU of the hard ibell and of the red bog—same family in its embryo state. I forward it free ot all charge on application. Basis ting an Kfbrt to Increase TM*r Day's Week to #»«• Thirteen Honrs. Vet a Car Baa an Bi sMway lettottj. Boported Interview at Governor Hill With Soma of the Loaders la the City Factions In Which They Save Used Bis Papers Band by Geologists the Niagara Hirer Which Are Fan of Interact. President Thompson said: "If the men reject our terms we shall proceed to fill theii plea as. Wo will hAve no trouble in aAJ They should-3 hare consulted us hefoi* striking." Dispatches from Prince Edward Island say that cut of seventeen American cruisers, which put into Georgetown, only seven entered the custom house, and the harbor master collected only 15 from Mich vessel, where ha should have obtained $14. The cruiser Terror has arrived here. Capt Quighy said to a Boston Journal correspondent that of wlllnn. traps to nH* Ametican vessels, as ha had been charged with doing, he had prevented than from falling into traps. Had ha let them violate the law he might have iidad Justus of vsassls, but he warned them from wrong doing. In previous years between 500 and 600 American fishing vessels had frequented the coast from Halifax to Gape Sable, and had carried on a wholesale smuggling trade with New England. This trade Capt Quigley had suppressed almost entirely. Less than 850 American vessels have put into werternports. Of these he had boarded fifty. He had thoroughly protected the coast Hot a fish had been caught inside the limit by Americana. In previous years, between Sept 1 and Feb. the fresh haddock fishery near Bhslburne Harbor. Capt Quigley declared that this year he will not allow a Yankee to fish there. He denied having treated the schooners Rattler, Shiloh, Craig and others in an arbitrary manner, and said that the stories of Portland and Gloucester skippers must be taken with a grain at salt Buflblo nnd Chicago About on n Level. What Mode the Niagara. Wkat Bach We Has to lay. Name Too Freely. Kkw York, Aug. 91,—The Worid this morning prints the following: The politicaf gossips have had something to talk about for the past two days in discussing the details of the difference which they claim have arleen between Governor Hill and his friends in this city. K«w Yoke, Aug. 94.—Excepting the steel rails, all traces of the handiwork of Jake Sharp and the boodle sWsImm had gone from Broadway yesterday, tie 900 oars that usually bring in die company an avscage of $85 each D day had disappeared. The road was tied np, and 1,000 employes were either at heme or at their headquarters. The depot at Broadway and Fifty-first street waa closed up, and a dosen policemen walked up and down before it. Even the big clock Above the entrance waa tied up and kept Ms fingers pointed at VI all day. The 16,000 which is poured daily into the company's coffers went into other channels. The employes heard en Saturday that a new time table would be po*ted Sunday and go into ?ffeot yesterday. The former table provided that the men should make five trips a day to the Battery for $3.85 and six trips for rfcsilisi wages to Barclay street. The new table called for six Battery trips and seven Barclay street trips. IWrty-six care were to be taken off the Broadway road and five off the University place branch, which meant the discharge at forty-one drivers and aa many conductors. The employes met early Sunday morning and deoidednotto accept the new table. They the Sixth, Broadway, Eighth avenue and Beit Hoes, but that could not be done without the consent of the Empire Protective association.BtrrrxLO, Aug. 34.—The American Association for the Advancement of Science continued its section work. The Niagara river and gorge appears to be a favorite topic with the learned scientists, and two papers were read am that subject to-day. Much interest has manifested in the paper at Professor R. 8. Woodward, of Washington, on "The Rateof Reoemfcn of Niagara Falls." The professor laid the area of rock worn away at the Horseshoe falls between the years ISO- and 1875 18,500 square feet, and between 1848 and 1886 24,500 square feet. The maip length of the contour of the falls is 8,800 feet. The time required to recede one mile, if the rate is 24 feet per year, is 8,900 yearn. The average rate of recession along the whole contour from 1848 1875 was9.44 feat, aad from 1875 to 1886 2.88 feet It will be seen, the professor remarked, Mm these figures that at the present rate of recession it will require many thousands of years to depress the present face of the talk to any material die- THE TIRED BRIGADE Marched Forty Strong in Martial Style to Prison. Naw York, Aug. 31—As the park tramps dumber onthe soft side of the perk benches! a vision of blucoats appeared before them. They rubbed the sleep put of their optics and glanced around in blank amasement Police When the Squire-Flynn letter was made ' public the friandy of those gentlemen openly declared that It would fall flat with the governor, and that he would refuse to remove Mr. Squire while the criminal indictment wag pending against him. Governor Hill, they claimed, was friendly to Squire and would stand by him no matter what charges were brought against him, and all this, they did not hesitate to say, was the result of an the governor, Tammany Hall, Coin-" missioner Squire and the aqueduct' people, If the charges against Squire #ere too strong to be Ignored the governor, they averred, would still aid him at least to the extent of so managing the caae as to throw out of Mayor;. officers were as as the trees, but instead of waiting tb a respectful distance and inquiring whether the lords of creation wished a morning cocktail or a gin fin, the guardians of the law grabbed each tramp unceremoniously by the shoulder. The entire crowd, forty-four in number, were marched to the Tombs. In the afternoon they were arraigned and given sentences ranging froqi twenty days to six months. , THE BICYCM«r8 RUUES. Amatanrs shall MM Bm with the Aiw t*T»ftnilnB|1l Bono*, Aug. M.-A lengthy correspondence is published here tatmn Henry & Ducker, president of the American Cyclists' union, and Robert Todd, secretary of the Nation*! Cyclists' onion, of England, also between Mr. Todd and Abbot* Baseett, chairmap of the racing board of the League of American Wheelmen. In it Mr. Danker define* tin new racing nflseof the A. C. TT. to Mr. Todd, sad mat - Hf * 1 «t» Banoe be formed, Um A, C n. and H. C. U. to control racing, and that English amateurs ootning to America be allowed to m» with the A. C. tFs "pro-amateurs," otherwise known as makers' amateur*. Mr. Banett informs Mr. Todd the insists that amateurs who raoe with "pro-amateurs" cannot retain tbeir uMitorstaMi, and that English amateurs wk?ra«* with "proamatsors" will not be able to entea amateur •▼sate in this country. In his reply Mr. Todd oninrirtss with Mr. BmmM, ftnd declines to oanrider Mr. Ducker1! propositions, . j Sane of the prisoner* ware repulsive in appearance and a few looked as though they had seen better days. Richard Hart, 40 yean Old, was one of the crowd. It came out that hi waa formerly a salesman for A. Levy & Brothers, dealers In eiothinf, and had made aa high a* 98,000 a year. He had gone downward through drink. Some of theways in which tramps make • little money waa brought out by one of the officers. He explained that the gents of leisure from Battery park were in league with the runners. -Whin farmers go to Castle Garden to hire hands the runner presents a tramp to the man from the country and gets a dollar oommisslen. The tramp says he must go and get Us clothing and is then seen no more. Afterward the drummer divides up with his partner in trickery. tfie appointment Oraoe'i haodsbj and « A.' The subject selected by Prat. B W. Claypole, of Buchtel college, Akron, Ohio, wa "Buffalo and Chicago." After reviewing the relations of one city to the other, which the professor said was not accidental, but based on. geological causes and depended on the drainage of the lakes, be proceeded to show that by the merest accident Lakes Brie and Huron were prevented from emptying into the Mississippi, by way of the Chicago river and the valley of the Deeplaines river, instead of into Lake Ontario and the tit. Lawrence rivor. A large part of all the fresh water on th4 globe, the professor said, is banked up on a tableland 800 to 600 feet above the sea and the drainage of course flows over the dam at tlie lowest paint But by a remarkable coincidence there are two points in this case almost an the mm level, Black Rock and Chicago, and a dam twonty-flve feat high aoross the river at Black Book woalB be sufficient to throw the Water of the upper lakes into the Mississippi by the IBtncfc river. The St Lawrence would, in that event, be almost annihilated, and the dirty ditch at Chicago would carry the tribute «jt the great lsjrse into the father at water* Buffalo would then be at the hetfi'of navigation and Chicago the nataral outlet port, and co this ilihl* thread dMifce'rIlittil ii CTtha themayot for thirty . 1pMln|i:TAr Mfcsligatoon, during which time Squire would be removed •ad hie successor appointed by President Nooney, of the botrd of aldermen, who woutf be then acting mayor. shown up as jobbers and the friend* and confidante of jobber*, and that, becatn? of his association with them htaownaamo was being trailed In the mud. Some of the ■**»■ papers e vftwreot »o far as to accuse WBbM Mng a party to the various "deals" and at ising his high office in a very unworthy w«y LABOUCHERE TAUNTS THE WHIQ& He Says That Thay in Toi-Im la Pickets were posted around the depot at 8 a. m. yesterday, and when the early hands arrived they were informed that a tie up had been ordered. At 7 o'clock no one was at the depot but Superintendent Newell, a foreman, a itartar and a watchman. A clean sweep had been made; 1,100 men, including 800 nonunion men, had gone on strike. Tin tta up caused inconvenience to the WLOOO )■■!» who patronise the road. Ilia striken made no demand whatever. Tbey simply refused to work wider the new sail theilr pay and hours wfCA safcsfactory, and they wanted them to n»4 main Just as they were. President Henry Thompson had previously informed the men that he proposed to run the road regardlsas of onions, the employes said they proposed to make the company carry out an agreement to require just twelve hours' service. * London, Aug. 84.—Daring the debate in the house of common* last evening Mr. Labonebere add Lord Banrtolpb Churchill'* manifesto was an insult to the Radical party, and wjrind surprise that the Hartingtonlans tod never repudiated the language it applied to Mr. Gladstone. Ha taantod the Whigs with being disguised Tories and said that besidir the Whigs there was a Birmingham gang under the leadership at Mr. Chamberlain. The family of the latter, be said, had doubtless done efficient mnntriral nervine, and therefore Birmingham, oat of sheer gratitude, bad subordinated imperial interests to municipal gratitude. Cutting liberated Bat is Not Very Well Satislled With Simple Freedom, i DARING NAVIOATORS. El Paso, Tex., Aug. 94.—Cutting was taken before the oourts at Paso del Norte yesterday and the official record of the supreme court decidon, confirming lib sentence bat ordering his release, was read to him. The court baaee its decision solely upon the ground that Medina waives his right to • civil suit for damages. The count declares that this puts an and to the proceedings. When notified of his freedom Cutting said: St. John, N. B., Aug. 24.—Csj*- Atulerson and his rompantenj who started from the forMmsaSSt^f Of the latter thsywere much in asttt Ills MDB». b°»» jmtj at Le*th and ST5°T uarBon Kop( oil nis course, conixaons or reaeniii Tjn end ooodiltattiMi indui to fnrthw hh own poUtteal hilweata. The dropping of the mayor and oomptroUer from the aqueduct board and the appointment of three new coramteioiier*, who, with the aid of Mr. Squire, were able to control the board and who were believed to be friendly to O'Brien 4t Clark, the aqueduct contractors, were mmtioaed aa the self-evident reaulta of a "deal" in which, it was claimed, the governor himself was a party. He urged Irishmen to their effort* to legitimately obtain the rights of a nation struggling for freedom. Winter was coming and the mattery ware writing to enforce erietfops is Ireland. Irishmen, therefore, would not be blamewhWi if they refused to tamely submit to snoh treatmsnt, bat he wanked Inland that disorder* would only serve to provide the government with an excuse for refuting home rule and applying coercion. Under the old or "pleasant table, " as they oallsd it, they worked eleven and a half houn a day. The new table they olaim would compel them to work thirteen and a half hours! The | n ofowtni tfaso procudid to acre£ town heights was flftasb M mM that at Chicago, and then* are but two possible solutions why the drainage dM not occur at the "Am I am no longer detained aa a prisoner I accept my liberty, bat I deeire a cortrof the supreme court decree for future refer •nee." The oourt directed pared for the primer. an onlarto tha jailer to To a reporter ttrttfqr Mid: not undargtanH what all " my card in The El Pa* was solely arrested tuaf —* • . Ij il A. - All this, with the vain injudicious friends, resulted a * 'ZjjT utS, i it is claimed, in a sort of politl hS. matinee, in which the governor Herald, for which I Sfca &&&£& be enforced against *°°C measured terms the' — The old table provided for 198 cars, each of which made Ave trips a day, or WO tripe in all Forty-one can were taken off, but the remaining 102 can wwe required to make 9TO trip*. The change reduced the company's expense* $250 a day and would have left eighty-two men idle. . Superintendent Newell Mid it was all ntt»- asnee Cor the man to say that they wouW have to work two hours laager. He knew, said, that the dz trip* oould be made Within twelve hours easily, allowing one hour boastings of Squire's jw d*y» ago, cal woodshed played the »Jta lower barrier. Id the ice age the nortbeaatarn hundred feat, and roM again ai the Ice disappeared. The #owof the Niagara began batons tto ice disappeared, and nmftmn Mmti VICTIMIZING COLORED PEOPLE. and Chairman the small boy. public, -ead the riot ~ - Se forgotten - denounced in.un- —on warranted nee of his am ma the alleged friend of the poet commissioner, and the "backer" of John O'Brien and his projects. The men who were assuming to speak for him in theae matters were npudiated, and the governor openly declared, so It is said, that ha was heartily tired of Mr. Squire, and would make no effort to retain him in office in the face of the grave chargea brought Mwfi »- D The tknwd Method* of a Begin Lawyer Baltwoiuc, Aug. 34.—George Butledge *m arrested and token before United State* Commissioner Bond, charged by the special examiner of pensions with representing as a United States officer, with the view of victimizing government pensioners. He waa committed in default of (2,000 ball to await the action of the United States grand Jury. Special "Examiner Jacob*, of Washington, who made the arrest, stats* that It wm Batledge's plan to go among Ignorant colored people aoft And oat who had claims upOq tha government, and, presenting himself as a government official, he would indoo* them to give him a fee and place their case in hi* hand*. Sometimes, it is alleged, Rutledge would represent himself aa a member of a well-known law Arm, and be used card* of that flrm, i- to Oct Money. It is Mid that thi Uw d«nce of agitator* tad aaton in Mexico wi! Cutting. Hon to permit the of thechan- Iks Taehts Save it ttr, Naw Yoh*, Aug. —The second Jfc»- limlnary race set down for yesterday to decide what boat should sell for the America honrs in almost a calm sfk The |)lsp|Mn was in the lead whsu she brufc* bcr topmast, which prsnttnsHy left hsr ant of the race. to winawaru ana renini, iqsmki or vwentj net Had the elevation besn more rapid, or theesxoevation mora slow, the water might have been dammed back and have found its outlet at Chicago. Hie Other solution is that owing to the stow northward retreat of the glacier, the channel at Mackinaw was tee locked long -after that at Black Bock was open. The waters of Huron from the Michigan basin and unable to escape by the Chicago outlet they must have rimn until they found outlet over tie sQnrian escarpment at QueeMto#m, wstnrsnppasing It at its prsetnt level, whtehie tswsnty-flv* feat above the lml of Lake Brie. MO&H* cauaes, or whether both of them were ooncerned in the course of the Niagara, Ik is at present impossible to determine, bt»t in any Tj£SZ2X."%ZSrS, &|E and Chicago depend- Had the conditions favored the Cldoago imllil the Tflmgmr* would never have eatMsd and a broad would have carried the water* of the four lakes past Chicago along the valley of the Das Haines into the UMasofa and Mississippi Pwihty, the yrnle—pr conchsded, the difference to the world might have beta slight, hot Chicago would have had the peat Hver. ■ D A RAILROAD WAR "This change," be continued, "to absolutely Decenary for the company's financial stability. It could not survive under its present Iwary expense*. Again, our road has to have twice as Many hones as any other road. ' I did not expect tbe tie up, but we can get all the new mm we need. It will take a long time to fitt their place*, but we can do it We can do nothing until president Thompson oaene* from Philadelphia. On behalf of the striken Secretary Andrew The Old Brie Vp in Arms Near IfornelU- Hoknxllsvhxk, N. Y., Aug. 21—There to great excitement at this place, caused by the' Erie railroad tearing up the track- of • the new Horneltoville, Lackawanna and Rochester road after an injunction had been served agaiipt them. Sheriff Baldwin has been appealed to to protect the property against the Brie, who wish to fake the lame forcibly. Hie Erie company has a large body of men on the grounds ready to force their track farther, bat are restrained from so doing on account of the large'poase .that Deputy Sheriff Murray has on guard. Several of the Erie officials are here and have a speoial train to uonvey then and workmen to the scene of the dispute, while the Lackawanna officials are employing all the mta they can get to protect their interests. It i» feared that blood »ill be shed before the matter ends, as both side* .are determined to stand firm. The scene of contest to about two miles wast of this city, on the Babcpek farm. villa. The would-be moutbpleoee attempted to reason with th« governor, bat be would listen to no argument and curtly informed them that Mr. Squire moat go and that there must also be a change in aqueduct methods or trouble would follow. "A pretty men you have mads of it," be fa) reported as storing, "connecting my name with these things and presuming to speak for me without any authority whatever, and a nice muddle you've gotten me into." Jute how many or who was present at ths time is not known, but it was reported yesterday that that the governor had called upon John O'Brien to resign from his position as chairman of the Democratio state central committee and had also quarrelled with his friend Judge Muller. The latter was formerly the governor's law partner and was chairman of the Democratic executive committee in the last campaign. He is now a commissioner of the court of claims at Albany and has always been supposed to be on very confidential terms with the governor. It is known that he and Chairman O'Brien, and perhaps others, held a conference last Saturday lasting nearly aB day, and rumor has it that Maurice B. Flynn was also called in. What took piaoe is, of course, unknown except to tbeee directly conoemed, but the conference, it is understood, wv called for the purpoee of discussing the titration, in view of what those present were pleased to term the governor's change at front Whatever conclusion was reached was also kept a secret, but it is said that unless the trouble can be patohed up Chairuun O'Brien will adopt the governor's suggestion and hand in his resignation. at jl ' VUHMMI WwYOK, AHS.M. finni JMcropoinHi MM. ADOOK ILH/ IIBM and welcomed the delegates to Wm\Tflrt; H*rm*n Hi(«l, ot The Mflwaafcee Praia Fmw, pnaktat of the Natk)«|l &§aocdatton, r»«pcmded for tha Tiidtdr*. The boat- "lite men had reason to strike. They cannot make six trip* in leas than thirteen and a half hours. Tbe new table will keep thei* without dinner dor eight hours. The new table was tried by Mr, Newell for three days IWt winter, and b* acknowledged that it wouldn't work. The change will force each boatiM* to care tor eighteen horass instead of ■Its mi Broadway Is crowded all day with waged*, and the oars are often blocked freen tm to thirty minutes, so that the six trips ootid not be made in twelve hour*. "Iitnk** an hour and three-quarters to make around trip from the Battsry to Central Pkrk. tlMn you must add the time taken in changing hissss, an hour for dinner and an hour or so lot Minhadssi which would stretch out the day to thirteen and a half hours. If a man to Maokad for twenty minutes and he drives fMtteaaakeup for lost Mm* he to suspended Or a week. H the blockade but* very long la* to maahwlnd anyhow. Til* explanation wfflnaMielWened to" HD**H that sinoePreafctmt Thompson took office 900 men had bean discharged without good reasnr Experienced drivers were discharged because horses fell down or died during the heated term. A driver was discharged for asking why ha had been suspended. He said that every district assembly in New York but "48" would support the Bonn, a striker, refused to move on wlw« prdersd by Officer Thomas Power, and he wa* taken to court and find $5. James toxicated, was going to th* Broadway depot to rat a job. A crowd surrounded him and rolled Mm in the gutter, and one man Jumped on him. Charles Garry, a striker, was arrested on suspicion . James Mnrray told the officer that Garry was not gufiigr and he, too, was arrested. A brick was tossed at the officer while on the way to thD station house. j- Kxmwlnlnr Shins. I#* Washington, Aug. at—The sscretary at the navy has receiysdtrWm ths naval board of inspection at Now york detailed reports ot two vessels which Oan be uSed by the navy as additional cruisers, in case ot an emergency. The rfiniti are tils Nawport, ot Un Pacific Mail titeamihip liqe, and ttto Louisiana, of the Cromwell lina, They ware both built by John Roach tc Sons ilk 188ft In regard to the Louisiana, the board reports, that in strength of hull, general ionstrpctkln, engine power, speed and ability to carry a btttery of six inch guns, she is superior to many of the first-class foreign v«nls which are regarded as auxilary naval veanls. The report on the Newport is equally favorable. As yet only vessels arriving at and dtMrifcg from New York are examined and rrttirted upon with a view of using them for&e navy at some tine, but ths secretary intends to direct such examinations to 1* m*de at Ban Francisto and Boston, and psrhava ana or two qttoy important parte, NaWAMC, N. J., Aug. 23.— Fully 20,000 man and women are expected to turn .out in the grand labor parade in this city on Sept ] IS, for over 11,000 badges have already been 1 distributed and there are forty-eight labor , organizations yet "to hoar from. The Columbia association, which.!* oomposed of 800 tailor j girls, will have a float for the Goddeas of Liberty, and thirty-eight pretty girl* representing the states. Thereto a prospect of the 3,000 employes in the Clark O. N. T. factories parading also, and the corset girls and hat trimmers say they will take part. Hep*y George, Jame* Redpath and otherswijlmaltespeeches. No girl under 15 years will be admitted to Caledonian pari without her parents. latokAlU Parade. Chicago, Aug. 81—Joseph Hillman, a Socialistic crank, made himself conspicuous last night by uttering an Inflammatory sidewalk harangue, in Which hs dsnenaoad the jury which convicted the Haymarket rioters. Be wu warned by officers to curb' his tongue, and he left the looallty. Subsequently he resmnsd his limsmttaiy rsnssrks and was arrested. D . j* -a,-. Tm K«oh Tongue. • " nia »iii»awMl WaaWiai «fCcr- The rush at J. E. Fleming's dng store atffl ftErrSstws »u lor u» Tbrat abnriM k MU !HCSHtt£2srCftm& and $1. Trial dsa nee. Qalffcst fffet^rbennee NOTICE. BiUiat, Aug. 81—At 9:80 o'clook last waning the police attempted to CMsparse a mob to the Shankhm road. The mob baoame'' infuriated and charged the polios, showering stones about them so thickly that they ran for their lives. The mob after rout- police the police barracks, George and Cnmnrings ran fc'foot race over a mils coarse at TUlis Bridge, Ladon, yseevent Cumnung* slipped and Qeorge won the mot, WEST PITT8T0N SOWMM Sixty ejected tenants of the estate ot Marquis Ely, at Wexford, Ireland, marched with a band of music to ths workhouse ratberthan sfesayfag"-—..-'•-.•'-•gg A M T Died On the Boston Boat. Kau. Riv*r, Mm;,, Aug 81—Hn. HnrWt Crofut, aged 84, of Newark, If. J., a passenger on the shnmer Bristol, en-route for Boston, died of heart disease in ber stateroom last night She had been fa poor health for some time and was on her way to the home of her father, Joseph Wilde, of Boston. Mr*. Crofut retired ip usual health and about 11 her husband, who occupied the uppo# berth, and »wh*wtteh# ingontocae stateroom door. gC$ up &t once aud went to ber assistance, bi»t she died ejmoet immediately. The quarrel la particularly unfortunate far Squire, whoee-case ooaam up before the governor to-day. ' summoned and are hurrying to the spot The police did not Ore upon the rioter*. The military arrived upon the w soon Offer the mob |iad wrecked the pqUtr barracks and scattered the crowd in a tow minutes. Mine rioters wan arrested, the town was quiet at midnight A ntgra named Thomas Sylvester was being led to a lamp poet at Buffalo with a halter strap around Ms neck whan he was rescued by the timely arrival oif * policeman. He bad chloroformed a white girl aged U, the A Ows* Book to Sen* War. W ahhinqton, Aiig. 3t — Commissioner Wright, of the labor bureau, expects to get his second annual fsport out by the time congress meets. Agents are hard at work in the Held collecting material. Two interesting ubjects will be treated of in the report One is ttie question of convict labor am} how it affects workingmwi. All available information OP this subject will be collacted and pot in this report, togethfer with the conclusion as to the part convict labor really play* in the labor problem. The other subject to be treated is strikes. A complete hlato«y,a»f strikes from 1880 up to July of this year vKll be given, including their causes, their purpose and their effect upon the labor of the country..- ■ daughter of a German farmer. Farmers near Oakland, His., captured a wild man In the woods. His hair a*d beard bung tohis waist, presenting a weird appear aaaai He proved to be an escaped lunatic. *anante HI* Many of the Eighth avenue men were grumMlac ypterday because their wages bad been reduced from t2 to 11-50 a day. They were talking about a tie up. A committee was sent to see President G. Hilton Scribner, of the Bait lines, with instructions to get a definite answer from hira before sundown. The committee My ha is forcing men to work MQpb boors a day, discharging others without came and reducing wages. They, too, talk of »tie up. The Bait line employes mat at 10 o'okx* last night, The committee reported that tbey obtained no satisfaction from the company and that there was bo prospect of having their grievances remedied. The feasibility of tying up the road this morning Was discussed. The men seemed to be ahnoat nnanfmons in favor erf a tie up. Janes P. Graham, Andrew D. Beet and Joseph Downing called upon President Henry Thompson, of the Broadway road, who had just come from Saratoga. The board said they cams to see what he intended to do. He said: ' • ■ * ' Dvmw*, Aaig- 8*.—A seriona row occurred to-day at Balbriggan, County Kilkenny, caused by the resistance of tenants and their friends to officer* of the law attempting to enforce evictions. Several haillffs were severely injured and a number of police badly hurt by stones. The mob made an attempt to wreck the police barracks, but were repulsed.A $orttm of the mansioq cf Judge Bice, at TJ-raaw. County Kartr. was Wrecked by an oxploaion of dynamite, and a similar outrage wta perpetrated in Qortttaul. County Kerry, where the hooae of a Protestant fanner was demolished. The Chicago police have found four man loaded bombs in an allay. Dr. HaadUy's Affliction. Naw Haven, Aug. iH.—Frederick H. Hoadley, of this «tty,hasbesn insane for some time, but oq Saturday night became violently So, and baa bean taken to Bloomingdale, N Y., inaaaa asylum. In 18H Or. Hoadley went octtmOrsely relief nypidM—, nortbecp latitude were too much for Us con Mtitution, and the hardships experienced rephysical and mental wmkness, culC2** in insanity. Bella Boyd, the Confederate spy, is accused at jumping hotel bills to Michigan a HoWngshsad, at Flint, Mich., aged 10, Med a halter rein arand «( body to bold a horse. The boras became fri*teoedapd ra» awar. killing the lad. A stock oompany la being organlaed at St. Louis to bay out the League baseball chib *nd Bwted Her Babe. Wert Tl Lbwibtoh, Ma., Aug. M.—Vary Fowler, an birth to a ohild on thsddawalk bars SaturfUy evening and borisd the baby to a garden nearby, where it Wsedisoovared Sunday morning. She was arrested for taftwtWta and oonfessedW maternity, but denied all knowledge of burying the babe. Sb« claims to have been insane at the time. Tha girl to critically ill. Haw Jersey's military esicampment has opened at Sea GUrt with VWD state troopa to 10 *"*' dDW & tsBssstisF^ssa' WMr HRHHI llWi |H WW W MW ,r*-*K5: DiuiCni i«iu ~ Or. UeMeaad Wot Qoilty, Sr. Josara, Ha, Aug. SH.—The trial of Dr. a A. Richmond for the killing of OoL James W. Strong, managing editor of The Herald of this city.wliiphM&eii in progress here for two weeks, has terminated, the jmy returning a verdict o« Jot guilty and finding defendant insane at the time of the killing and at the present time. The jury was out about forty minutes. The Bite BlitaM Ashore. A wild horse fi uas tha plains is being ■yy a modal for Roaa Botr- Mm & Oudhss ft Co.,pork aasktsa, of Bast Cataibi-idge, Mass.. have djtataurgwt between 1,00# a4M,ttD0 employee. , A fWlmi of wlillfidAphy IMi *t Milwaukee on the Concord plan, and la now In Hfrion Eighteen dead bodtos have b«an noqvared at Indianola, Tens, from the late tforta CWDd flood. —.n— ' tod tfca ■ * -'c ■ •—»+ Gaiv*»to», Aug. M.—Tha schoonsr BU+ Elliott, Boston, with a cargo of ice, want ashore at St. Louis pass, thirty milts wast of this city, Saturday morning. She has about of eight men were saved. She is owned to PbrtSiad, Me. She Is of 480 tons burden and to valued at $80,000. At Detroit—Detroit, Q; Chicago 4. At CincinnatiLouis gams postponed an aooouut of rain. "Thf men. #re working only nine hours a day instead +t eleven, at they should. We do not aft them to work over twelve hours, but ioMlkat they 4mA work twelve hours. We don't want to steal an hour tram them. We know the six trips can be made within twelve boars, I jwvpose that tbpmen try the MurtaUe. it iHyiH} n*k*v the six trips rithiu the twelve the At Brooklyn—Brooklyn, KD; HatrafDotitaa,S. At Baltimore—Athletic, 7; Baltimore, 8. WlWfWl.'W 3» AM* ■M ■«■» C* An MM WM.I, PobtulHD, Or#., Aug. St.—Gen. Logan 3W. Alger »nd party have left Athlaiid. Th. whole populktion tamed out to greet them, and there At Louisville Louisville 8; Allegheny, 8. 4t St Louie-St Louis, fl; Kansas GUjgr, 0. Froet-Bltteu Corn. Raw InwiaH, H. M-, Aug. Si.—Thara waa a severs frost to *a. low lands yesterday morning, tttata of the bom waa partly New Hav**, Aug. M.—Wton college opens Rev. Oaorge B. Stevens, D. D., of Watertewfjt, H. Y., will oocnpy ilia chair at social litefature, Vacated by Professor Dwlght to become president of Tale. Will Biter Tata's Faculty. gSfcfcTSjSfr, iwnrrti **.*W u a-HLiii J* JUL
Object Description
Title | Evening Gazette |
Masthead | Evening Gazette, Number 1263, August 24, 1886 |
Issue | 1263 |
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 | 1886-08-24 |
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 1263, August 24, 1886 |
Issue | 1263 |
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 | 1886-08-24 |
Location Covered | United States; Pennsylvania; Luzerne County; Pittston |
Type | Text |
Original Format | newspaper |
Digital Format | image/tiff |
Identifier | EGZ_18860824_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 | J+P *r A m i HUKUt 1969. I Weekly BstsMlahcd ISfiO i ON, PA., TUESDAY. AUGUST 24. 188b. J two auras- I In Om» Pw Wwk AIN. to ra)iort to the strikers at headqnarten. A discussion as to whether they should aoMpt Mr. Thompson's -proposition m then todulged in. At 13:80 this morning the meeting ad journed, after deriding not to accept the compony's proposal. The Belt line employee held a secret session last night. The probability is, so an employe said, that the Belt line will be tied up. GOVERN' FI8HWG NOT GOOD. SCIENTIFIC LOBE. THE GOTHAM MUNICIPAL MUDDLE Daft. On Iff las OM Vat Sat Traps M A. Patent Wanted by an IMIm or. KRHAPS IT'S HUMOR. THE NEW YORK STREET CAR EM- Halifax, Aug. 34.—Three Hora Scotia vessels have arrived home from Labrador and 'report the oodfishing there a total failure. They secured only one-third of a cargo. This indicate* great distress in that region this JOME OF THE WORK DONE AT THE "*•*, Aok JM—» PLOYES TIE UP. GETTING MIXED. BUFFALO MEETING. irkwtottar reoeiTsiby tie in' l I'nasM frriu to Inform nrn Mllbla core for oflMal corruption, so mwh pored in a liquid form, bat aWuluglj no demand. I now propose it dry In- form at afflicted with that Cflp# ri&lady sating the vitals of oar belovwi country. In Dw Moines land steal 1,809,006 aentmtn, no compensate® whatever given, now triad to be compromised by a oookatrioaawato hUl incubated in star chamber gaOarfes cleared, doom closed and baptised in open senate Kebuary 11,1886. My medicine is free from mineral substance, ft is potent and pungaut, being first extracted by the mischievous potato I take equal parU of the hard ibell and of the red bog—same family in its embryo state. I forward it free ot all charge on application. Basis ting an Kfbrt to Increase TM*r Day's Week to #»«• Thirteen Honrs. Vet a Car Baa an Bi sMway lettottj. Boported Interview at Governor Hill With Soma of the Loaders la the City Factions In Which They Save Used Bis Papers Band by Geologists the Niagara Hirer Which Are Fan of Interact. President Thompson said: "If the men reject our terms we shall proceed to fill theii plea as. Wo will hAve no trouble in aAJ They should-3 hare consulted us hefoi* striking." Dispatches from Prince Edward Island say that cut of seventeen American cruisers, which put into Georgetown, only seven entered the custom house, and the harbor master collected only 15 from Mich vessel, where ha should have obtained $14. The cruiser Terror has arrived here. Capt Quighy said to a Boston Journal correspondent that of wlllnn. traps to nH* Ametican vessels, as ha had been charged with doing, he had prevented than from falling into traps. Had ha let them violate the law he might have iidad Justus of vsassls, but he warned them from wrong doing. In previous years between 500 and 600 American fishing vessels had frequented the coast from Halifax to Gape Sable, and had carried on a wholesale smuggling trade with New England. This trade Capt Quigley had suppressed almost entirely. Less than 850 American vessels have put into werternports. Of these he had boarded fifty. He had thoroughly protected the coast Hot a fish had been caught inside the limit by Americana. In previous years, between Sept 1 and Feb. the fresh haddock fishery near Bhslburne Harbor. Capt Quigley declared that this year he will not allow a Yankee to fish there. He denied having treated the schooners Rattler, Shiloh, Craig and others in an arbitrary manner, and said that the stories of Portland and Gloucester skippers must be taken with a grain at salt Buflblo nnd Chicago About on n Level. What Mode the Niagara. Wkat Bach We Has to lay. Name Too Freely. Kkw York, Aug. 91,—The Worid this morning prints the following: The politicaf gossips have had something to talk about for the past two days in discussing the details of the difference which they claim have arleen between Governor Hill and his friends in this city. K«w Yoke, Aug. 94.—Excepting the steel rails, all traces of the handiwork of Jake Sharp and the boodle sWsImm had gone from Broadway yesterday, tie 900 oars that usually bring in die company an avscage of $85 each D day had disappeared. The road was tied np, and 1,000 employes were either at heme or at their headquarters. The depot at Broadway and Fifty-first street waa closed up, and a dosen policemen walked up and down before it. Even the big clock Above the entrance waa tied up and kept Ms fingers pointed at VI all day. The 16,000 which is poured daily into the company's coffers went into other channels. The employes heard en Saturday that a new time table would be po*ted Sunday and go into ?ffeot yesterday. The former table provided that the men should make five trips a day to the Battery for $3.85 and six trips for rfcsilisi wages to Barclay street. The new table called for six Battery trips and seven Barclay street trips. IWrty-six care were to be taken off the Broadway road and five off the University place branch, which meant the discharge at forty-one drivers and aa many conductors. The employes met early Sunday morning and deoidednotto accept the new table. They the Sixth, Broadway, Eighth avenue and Beit Hoes, but that could not be done without the consent of the Empire Protective association.BtrrrxLO, Aug. 34.—The American Association for the Advancement of Science continued its section work. The Niagara river and gorge appears to be a favorite topic with the learned scientists, and two papers were read am that subject to-day. Much interest has manifested in the paper at Professor R. 8. Woodward, of Washington, on "The Rateof Reoemfcn of Niagara Falls." The professor laid the area of rock worn away at the Horseshoe falls between the years ISO- and 1875 18,500 square feet, and between 1848 and 1886 24,500 square feet. The maip length of the contour of the falls is 8,800 feet. The time required to recede one mile, if the rate is 24 feet per year, is 8,900 yearn. The average rate of recession along the whole contour from 1848 1875 was9.44 feat, aad from 1875 to 1886 2.88 feet It will be seen, the professor remarked, Mm these figures that at the present rate of recession it will require many thousands of years to depress the present face of the talk to any material die- THE TIRED BRIGADE Marched Forty Strong in Martial Style to Prison. Naw York, Aug. 31—As the park tramps dumber onthe soft side of the perk benches! a vision of blucoats appeared before them. They rubbed the sleep put of their optics and glanced around in blank amasement Police When the Squire-Flynn letter was made ' public the friandy of those gentlemen openly declared that It would fall flat with the governor, and that he would refuse to remove Mr. Squire while the criminal indictment wag pending against him. Governor Hill, they claimed, was friendly to Squire and would stand by him no matter what charges were brought against him, and all this, they did not hesitate to say, was the result of an the governor, Tammany Hall, Coin-" missioner Squire and the aqueduct' people, If the charges against Squire #ere too strong to be Ignored the governor, they averred, would still aid him at least to the extent of so managing the caae as to throw out of Mayor;. officers were as as the trees, but instead of waiting tb a respectful distance and inquiring whether the lords of creation wished a morning cocktail or a gin fin, the guardians of the law grabbed each tramp unceremoniously by the shoulder. The entire crowd, forty-four in number, were marched to the Tombs. In the afternoon they were arraigned and given sentences ranging froqi twenty days to six months. , THE BICYCM«r8 RUUES. Amatanrs shall MM Bm with the Aiw t*T»ftnilnB|1l Bono*, Aug. M.-A lengthy correspondence is published here tatmn Henry & Ducker, president of the American Cyclists' union, and Robert Todd, secretary of the Nation*! Cyclists' onion, of England, also between Mr. Todd and Abbot* Baseett, chairmap of the racing board of the League of American Wheelmen. In it Mr. Danker define* tin new racing nflseof the A. C. TT. to Mr. Todd, sad mat - Hf * 1 «t» Banoe be formed, Um A, C n. and H. C. U. to control racing, and that English amateurs ootning to America be allowed to m» with the A. C. tFs "pro-amateurs," otherwise known as makers' amateur*. Mr. Banett informs Mr. Todd the insists that amateurs who raoe with "pro-amateurs" cannot retain tbeir uMitorstaMi, and that English amateurs wk?ra«* with "proamatsors" will not be able to entea amateur •▼sate in this country. In his reply Mr. Todd oninrirtss with Mr. BmmM, ftnd declines to oanrider Mr. Ducker1! propositions, . j Sane of the prisoner* ware repulsive in appearance and a few looked as though they had seen better days. Richard Hart, 40 yean Old, was one of the crowd. It came out that hi waa formerly a salesman for A. Levy & Brothers, dealers In eiothinf, and had made aa high a* 98,000 a year. He had gone downward through drink. Some of theways in which tramps make • little money waa brought out by one of the officers. He explained that the gents of leisure from Battery park were in league with the runners. -Whin farmers go to Castle Garden to hire hands the runner presents a tramp to the man from the country and gets a dollar oommisslen. The tramp says he must go and get Us clothing and is then seen no more. Afterward the drummer divides up with his partner in trickery. tfie appointment Oraoe'i haodsbj and « A.' The subject selected by Prat. B W. Claypole, of Buchtel college, Akron, Ohio, wa "Buffalo and Chicago." After reviewing the relations of one city to the other, which the professor said was not accidental, but based on. geological causes and depended on the drainage of the lakes, be proceeded to show that by the merest accident Lakes Brie and Huron were prevented from emptying into the Mississippi, by way of the Chicago river and the valley of the Deeplaines river, instead of into Lake Ontario and the tit. Lawrence rivor. A large part of all the fresh water on th4 globe, the professor said, is banked up on a tableland 800 to 600 feet above the sea and the drainage of course flows over the dam at tlie lowest paint But by a remarkable coincidence there are two points in this case almost an the mm level, Black Rock and Chicago, and a dam twonty-flve feat high aoross the river at Black Book woalB be sufficient to throw the Water of the upper lakes into the Mississippi by the IBtncfc river. The St Lawrence would, in that event, be almost annihilated, and the dirty ditch at Chicago would carry the tribute «jt the great lsjrse into the father at water* Buffalo would then be at the hetfi'of navigation and Chicago the nataral outlet port, and co this ilihl* thread dMifce'rIlittil ii CTtha themayot for thirty . 1pMln|i:TAr Mfcsligatoon, during which time Squire would be removed •ad hie successor appointed by President Nooney, of the botrd of aldermen, who woutf be then acting mayor. shown up as jobbers and the friend* and confidante of jobber*, and that, becatn? of his association with them htaownaamo was being trailed In the mud. Some of the ■**»■ papers e vftwreot »o far as to accuse WBbM Mng a party to the various "deals" and at ising his high office in a very unworthy w«y LABOUCHERE TAUNTS THE WHIQ& He Says That Thay in Toi-Im la Pickets were posted around the depot at 8 a. m. yesterday, and when the early hands arrived they were informed that a tie up had been ordered. At 7 o'clock no one was at the depot but Superintendent Newell, a foreman, a itartar and a watchman. A clean sweep had been made; 1,100 men, including 800 nonunion men, had gone on strike. Tin tta up caused inconvenience to the WLOOO )■■!» who patronise the road. Ilia striken made no demand whatever. Tbey simply refused to work wider the new sail theilr pay and hours wfCA safcsfactory, and they wanted them to n»4 main Just as they were. President Henry Thompson had previously informed the men that he proposed to run the road regardlsas of onions, the employes said they proposed to make the company carry out an agreement to require just twelve hours' service. * London, Aug. 84.—Daring the debate in the house of common* last evening Mr. Labonebere add Lord Banrtolpb Churchill'* manifesto was an insult to the Radical party, and wjrind surprise that the Hartingtonlans tod never repudiated the language it applied to Mr. Gladstone. Ha taantod the Whigs with being disguised Tories and said that besidir the Whigs there was a Birmingham gang under the leadership at Mr. Chamberlain. The family of the latter, be said, had doubtless done efficient mnntriral nervine, and therefore Birmingham, oat of sheer gratitude, bad subordinated imperial interests to municipal gratitude. Cutting liberated Bat is Not Very Well Satislled With Simple Freedom, i DARING NAVIOATORS. El Paso, Tex., Aug. 94.—Cutting was taken before the oourts at Paso del Norte yesterday and the official record of the supreme court decidon, confirming lib sentence bat ordering his release, was read to him. The court baaee its decision solely upon the ground that Medina waives his right to • civil suit for damages. The count declares that this puts an and to the proceedings. When notified of his freedom Cutting said: St. John, N. B., Aug. 24.—Csj*- Atulerson and his rompantenj who started from the forMmsaSSt^f Of the latter thsywere much in asttt Ills MDB». b°»» jmtj at Le*th and ST5°T uarBon Kop( oil nis course, conixaons or reaeniii Tjn end ooodiltattiMi indui to fnrthw hh own poUtteal hilweata. The dropping of the mayor and oomptroUer from the aqueduct board and the appointment of three new coramteioiier*, who, with the aid of Mr. Squire, were able to control the board and who were believed to be friendly to O'Brien 4t Clark, the aqueduct contractors, were mmtioaed aa the self-evident reaulta of a "deal" in which, it was claimed, the governor himself was a party. He urged Irishmen to their effort* to legitimately obtain the rights of a nation struggling for freedom. Winter was coming and the mattery ware writing to enforce erietfops is Ireland. Irishmen, therefore, would not be blamewhWi if they refused to tamely submit to snoh treatmsnt, bat he wanked Inland that disorder* would only serve to provide the government with an excuse for refuting home rule and applying coercion. Under the old or "pleasant table, " as they oallsd it, they worked eleven and a half houn a day. The new table they olaim would compel them to work thirteen and a half hours! The | n ofowtni tfaso procudid to acre£ town heights was flftasb M mM that at Chicago, and then* are but two possible solutions why the drainage dM not occur at the "Am I am no longer detained aa a prisoner I accept my liberty, bat I deeire a cortrof the supreme court decree for future refer •nee." The oourt directed pared for the primer. an onlarto tha jailer to To a reporter ttrttfqr Mid: not undargtanH what all " my card in The El Pa* was solely arrested tuaf —* • . Ij il A. - All this, with the vain injudicious friends, resulted a * 'ZjjT utS, i it is claimed, in a sort of politl hS. matinee, in which the governor Herald, for which I Sfca &&&£& be enforced against *°°C measured terms the' — The old table provided for 198 cars, each of which made Ave trips a day, or WO tripe in all Forty-one can were taken off, but the remaining 102 can wwe required to make 9TO trip*. The change reduced the company's expense* $250 a day and would have left eighty-two men idle. . Superintendent Newell Mid it was all ntt»- asnee Cor the man to say that they wouW have to work two hours laager. He knew, said, that the dz trip* oould be made Within twelve hours easily, allowing one hour boastings of Squire's jw d*y» ago, cal woodshed played the »Jta lower barrier. Id the ice age the nortbeaatarn hundred feat, and roM again ai the Ice disappeared. The #owof the Niagara began batons tto ice disappeared, and nmftmn Mmti VICTIMIZING COLORED PEOPLE. and Chairman the small boy. public, -ead the riot ~ - Se forgotten - denounced in.un- —on warranted nee of his am ma the alleged friend of the poet commissioner, and the "backer" of John O'Brien and his projects. The men who were assuming to speak for him in theae matters were npudiated, and the governor openly declared, so It is said, that ha was heartily tired of Mr. Squire, and would make no effort to retain him in office in the face of the grave chargea brought Mwfi »- D The tknwd Method* of a Begin Lawyer Baltwoiuc, Aug. 34.—George Butledge *m arrested and token before United State* Commissioner Bond, charged by the special examiner of pensions with representing as a United States officer, with the view of victimizing government pensioners. He waa committed in default of (2,000 ball to await the action of the United States grand Jury. Special "Examiner Jacob*, of Washington, who made the arrest, stats* that It wm Batledge's plan to go among Ignorant colored people aoft And oat who had claims upOq tha government, and, presenting himself as a government official, he would indoo* them to give him a fee and place their case in hi* hand*. Sometimes, it is alleged, Rutledge would represent himself aa a member of a well-known law Arm, and be used card* of that flrm, i- to Oct Money. It is Mid that thi Uw d«nce of agitator* tad aaton in Mexico wi! Cutting. Hon to permit the of thechan- Iks Taehts Save it ttr, Naw Yoh*, Aug. —The second Jfc»- limlnary race set down for yesterday to decide what boat should sell for the America honrs in almost a calm sfk The |)lsp|Mn was in the lead whsu she brufc* bcr topmast, which prsnttnsHy left hsr ant of the race. to winawaru ana renini, iqsmki or vwentj net Had the elevation besn more rapid, or theesxoevation mora slow, the water might have been dammed back and have found its outlet at Chicago. Hie Other solution is that owing to the stow northward retreat of the glacier, the channel at Mackinaw was tee locked long -after that at Black Bock was open. The waters of Huron from the Michigan basin and unable to escape by the Chicago outlet they must have rimn until they found outlet over tie sQnrian escarpment at QueeMto#m, wstnrsnppasing It at its prsetnt level, whtehie tswsnty-flv* feat above the lml of Lake Brie. MO&H* cauaes, or whether both of them were ooncerned in the course of the Niagara, Ik is at present impossible to determine, bt»t in any Tj£SZ2X."%ZSrS, &|E and Chicago depend- Had the conditions favored the Cldoago imllil the Tflmgmr* would never have eatMsd and a broad would have carried the water* of the four lakes past Chicago along the valley of the Das Haines into the UMasofa and Mississippi Pwihty, the yrnle—pr conchsded, the difference to the world might have beta slight, hot Chicago would have had the peat Hver. ■ D A RAILROAD WAR "This change," be continued, "to absolutely Decenary for the company's financial stability. It could not survive under its present Iwary expense*. Again, our road has to have twice as Many hones as any other road. ' I did not expect tbe tie up, but we can get all the new mm we need. It will take a long time to fitt their place*, but we can do it We can do nothing until president Thompson oaene* from Philadelphia. On behalf of the striken Secretary Andrew The Old Brie Vp in Arms Near IfornelU- Hoknxllsvhxk, N. Y., Aug. 21—There to great excitement at this place, caused by the' Erie railroad tearing up the track- of • the new Horneltoville, Lackawanna and Rochester road after an injunction had been served agaiipt them. Sheriff Baldwin has been appealed to to protect the property against the Brie, who wish to fake the lame forcibly. Hie Erie company has a large body of men on the grounds ready to force their track farther, bat are restrained from so doing on account of the large'poase .that Deputy Sheriff Murray has on guard. Several of the Erie officials are here and have a speoial train to uonvey then and workmen to the scene of the dispute, while the Lackawanna officials are employing all the mta they can get to protect their interests. It i» feared that blood »ill be shed before the matter ends, as both side* .are determined to stand firm. The scene of contest to about two miles wast of this city, on the Babcpek farm. villa. The would-be moutbpleoee attempted to reason with th« governor, bat be would listen to no argument and curtly informed them that Mr. Squire moat go and that there must also be a change in aqueduct methods or trouble would follow. "A pretty men you have mads of it," be fa) reported as storing, "connecting my name with these things and presuming to speak for me without any authority whatever, and a nice muddle you've gotten me into." Jute how many or who was present at ths time is not known, but it was reported yesterday that that the governor had called upon John O'Brien to resign from his position as chairman of the Democratio state central committee and had also quarrelled with his friend Judge Muller. The latter was formerly the governor's law partner and was chairman of the Democratic executive committee in the last campaign. He is now a commissioner of the court of claims at Albany and has always been supposed to be on very confidential terms with the governor. It is known that he and Chairman O'Brien, and perhaps others, held a conference last Saturday lasting nearly aB day, and rumor has it that Maurice B. Flynn was also called in. What took piaoe is, of course, unknown except to tbeee directly conoemed, but the conference, it is understood, wv called for the purpoee of discussing the titration, in view of what those present were pleased to term the governor's change at front Whatever conclusion was reached was also kept a secret, but it is said that unless the trouble can be patohed up Chairuun O'Brien will adopt the governor's suggestion and hand in his resignation. at jl ' VUHMMI WwYOK, AHS.M. finni JMcropoinHi MM. ADOOK ILH/ IIBM and welcomed the delegates to Wm\Tflrt; H*rm*n Hi(«l, ot The Mflwaafcee Praia Fmw, pnaktat of the Natk)«|l &§aocdatton, r»«pcmded for tha Tiidtdr*. The boat- "lite men had reason to strike. They cannot make six trip* in leas than thirteen and a half hours. Tbe new table will keep thei* without dinner dor eight hours. The new table was tried by Mr, Newell for three days IWt winter, and b* acknowledged that it wouldn't work. The change will force each boatiM* to care tor eighteen horass instead of ■Its mi Broadway Is crowded all day with waged*, and the oars are often blocked freen tm to thirty minutes, so that the six trips ootid not be made in twelve hour*. "Iitnk** an hour and three-quarters to make around trip from the Battsry to Central Pkrk. tlMn you must add the time taken in changing hissss, an hour for dinner and an hour or so lot Minhadssi which would stretch out the day to thirteen and a half hours. If a man to Maokad for twenty minutes and he drives fMtteaaakeup for lost Mm* he to suspended Or a week. H the blockade but* very long la* to maahwlnd anyhow. Til* explanation wfflnaMielWened to" HD**H that sinoePreafctmt Thompson took office 900 men had bean discharged without good reasnr Experienced drivers were discharged because horses fell down or died during the heated term. A driver was discharged for asking why ha had been suspended. He said that every district assembly in New York but "48" would support the Bonn, a striker, refused to move on wlw« prdersd by Officer Thomas Power, and he wa* taken to court and find $5. James toxicated, was going to th* Broadway depot to rat a job. A crowd surrounded him and rolled Mm in the gutter, and one man Jumped on him. Charles Garry, a striker, was arrested on suspicion . James Mnrray told the officer that Garry was not gufiigr and he, too, was arrested. A brick was tossed at the officer while on the way to thD station house. j- Kxmwlnlnr Shins. I#* Washington, Aug. at—The sscretary at the navy has receiysdtrWm ths naval board of inspection at Now york detailed reports ot two vessels which Oan be uSed by the navy as additional cruisers, in case ot an emergency. The rfiniti are tils Nawport, ot Un Pacific Mail titeamihip liqe, and ttto Louisiana, of the Cromwell lina, They ware both built by John Roach tc Sons ilk 188ft In regard to the Louisiana, the board reports, that in strength of hull, general ionstrpctkln, engine power, speed and ability to carry a btttery of six inch guns, she is superior to many of the first-class foreign v«nls which are regarded as auxilary naval veanls. The report on the Newport is equally favorable. As yet only vessels arriving at and dtMrifcg from New York are examined and rrttirted upon with a view of using them for&e navy at some tine, but ths secretary intends to direct such examinations to 1* m*de at Ban Francisto and Boston, and psrhava ana or two qttoy important parte, NaWAMC, N. J., Aug. 23.— Fully 20,000 man and women are expected to turn .out in the grand labor parade in this city on Sept ] IS, for over 11,000 badges have already been 1 distributed and there are forty-eight labor , organizations yet "to hoar from. The Columbia association, which.!* oomposed of 800 tailor j girls, will have a float for the Goddeas of Liberty, and thirty-eight pretty girl* representing the states. Thereto a prospect of the 3,000 employes in the Clark O. N. T. factories parading also, and the corset girls and hat trimmers say they will take part. Hep*y George, Jame* Redpath and otherswijlmaltespeeches. No girl under 15 years will be admitted to Caledonian pari without her parents. latokAlU Parade. Chicago, Aug. 81—Joseph Hillman, a Socialistic crank, made himself conspicuous last night by uttering an Inflammatory sidewalk harangue, in Which hs dsnenaoad the jury which convicted the Haymarket rioters. Be wu warned by officers to curb' his tongue, and he left the looallty. Subsequently he resmnsd his limsmttaiy rsnssrks and was arrested. D . j* -a,-. Tm K«oh Tongue. • " nia »iii»awMl WaaWiai «fCcr- The rush at J. E. Fleming's dng store atffl ftErrSstws »u lor u» Tbrat abnriM k MU !HCSHtt£2srCftm& and $1. Trial dsa nee. Qalffcst fffet^rbennee NOTICE. BiUiat, Aug. 81—At 9:80 o'clook last waning the police attempted to CMsparse a mob to the Shankhm road. The mob baoame'' infuriated and charged the polios, showering stones about them so thickly that they ran for their lives. The mob after rout- police the police barracks, George and Cnmnrings ran fc'foot race over a mils coarse at TUlis Bridge, Ladon, yseevent Cumnung* slipped and Qeorge won the mot, WEST PITT8T0N SOWMM Sixty ejected tenants of the estate ot Marquis Ely, at Wexford, Ireland, marched with a band of music to ths workhouse ratberthan sfesayfag"-—..-'•-.•'-•gg A M T Died On the Boston Boat. Kau. Riv*r, Mm;,, Aug 81—Hn. HnrWt Crofut, aged 84, of Newark, If. J., a passenger on the shnmer Bristol, en-route for Boston, died of heart disease in ber stateroom last night She had been fa poor health for some time and was on her way to the home of her father, Joseph Wilde, of Boston. Mr*. Crofut retired ip usual health and about 11 her husband, who occupied the uppo# berth, and »wh*wtteh# ingontocae stateroom door. gC$ up &t once aud went to ber assistance, bi»t she died ejmoet immediately. The quarrel la particularly unfortunate far Squire, whoee-case ooaam up before the governor to-day. ' summoned and are hurrying to the spot The police did not Ore upon the rioter*. The military arrived upon the w soon Offer the mob |iad wrecked the pqUtr barracks and scattered the crowd in a tow minutes. Mine rioters wan arrested, the town was quiet at midnight A ntgra named Thomas Sylvester was being led to a lamp poet at Buffalo with a halter strap around Ms neck whan he was rescued by the timely arrival oif * policeman. He bad chloroformed a white girl aged U, the A Ows* Book to Sen* War. W ahhinqton, Aiig. 3t — Commissioner Wright, of the labor bureau, expects to get his second annual fsport out by the time congress meets. Agents are hard at work in the Held collecting material. Two interesting ubjects will be treated of in the report One is ttie question of convict labor am} how it affects workingmwi. All available information OP this subject will be collacted and pot in this report, togethfer with the conclusion as to the part convict labor really play* in the labor problem. The other subject to be treated is strikes. A complete hlato«y,a»f strikes from 1880 up to July of this year vKll be given, including their causes, their purpose and their effect upon the labor of the country..- ■ daughter of a German farmer. Farmers near Oakland, His., captured a wild man In the woods. His hair a*d beard bung tohis waist, presenting a weird appear aaaai He proved to be an escaped lunatic. *anante HI* Many of the Eighth avenue men were grumMlac ypterday because their wages bad been reduced from t2 to 11-50 a day. They were talking about a tie up. A committee was sent to see President G. Hilton Scribner, of the Bait lines, with instructions to get a definite answer from hira before sundown. The committee My ha is forcing men to work MQpb boors a day, discharging others without came and reducing wages. They, too, talk of »tie up. The Bait line employes mat at 10 o'okx* last night, The committee reported that tbey obtained no satisfaction from the company and that there was bo prospect of having their grievances remedied. The feasibility of tying up the road this morning Was discussed. The men seemed to be ahnoat nnanfmons in favor erf a tie up. Janes P. Graham, Andrew D. Beet and Joseph Downing called upon President Henry Thompson, of the Broadway road, who had just come from Saratoga. The board said they cams to see what he intended to do. He said: ' • ■ * ' Dvmw*, Aaig- 8*.—A seriona row occurred to-day at Balbriggan, County Kilkenny, caused by the resistance of tenants and their friends to officer* of the law attempting to enforce evictions. Several haillffs were severely injured and a number of police badly hurt by stones. The mob made an attempt to wreck the police barracks, but were repulsed.A $orttm of the mansioq cf Judge Bice, at TJ-raaw. County Kartr. was Wrecked by an oxploaion of dynamite, and a similar outrage wta perpetrated in Qortttaul. County Kerry, where the hooae of a Protestant fanner was demolished. The Chicago police have found four man loaded bombs in an allay. Dr. HaadUy's Affliction. Naw Haven, Aug. iH.—Frederick H. Hoadley, of this «tty,hasbesn insane for some time, but oq Saturday night became violently So, and baa bean taken to Bloomingdale, N Y., inaaaa asylum. In 18H Or. Hoadley went octtmOrsely relief nypidM—, nortbecp latitude were too much for Us con Mtitution, and the hardships experienced rephysical and mental wmkness, culC2** in insanity. Bella Boyd, the Confederate spy, is accused at jumping hotel bills to Michigan a HoWngshsad, at Flint, Mich., aged 10, Med a halter rein arand «( body to bold a horse. The boras became fri*teoedapd ra» awar. killing the lad. A stock oompany la being organlaed at St. Louis to bay out the League baseball chib *nd Bwted Her Babe. Wert Tl Lbwibtoh, Ma., Aug. M.—Vary Fowler, an birth to a ohild on thsddawalk bars SaturfUy evening and borisd the baby to a garden nearby, where it Wsedisoovared Sunday morning. She was arrested for taftwtWta and oonfessedW maternity, but denied all knowledge of burying the babe. Sb« claims to have been insane at the time. Tha girl to critically ill. Haw Jersey's military esicampment has opened at Sea GUrt with VWD state troopa to 10 *"*' dDW & tsBssstisF^ssa' WMr HRHHI llWi |H WW W MW ,r*-*K5: DiuiCni i«iu ~ Or. UeMeaad Wot Qoilty, Sr. Josara, Ha, Aug. SH.—The trial of Dr. a A. Richmond for the killing of OoL James W. Strong, managing editor of The Herald of this city.wliiphM&eii in progress here for two weeks, has terminated, the jmy returning a verdict o« Jot guilty and finding defendant insane at the time of the killing and at the present time. The jury was out about forty minutes. The Bite BlitaM Ashore. A wild horse fi uas tha plains is being ■yy a modal for Roaa Botr- Mm & Oudhss ft Co.,pork aasktsa, of Bast Cataibi-idge, Mass.. have djtataurgwt between 1,00# a4M,ttD0 employee. , A fWlmi of wlillfidAphy IMi *t Milwaukee on the Concord plan, and la now In Hfrion Eighteen dead bodtos have b«an noqvared at Indianola, Tens, from the late tforta CWDd flood. —.n— ' tod tfca ■ * -'c ■ •—»+ Gaiv*»to», Aug. M.—Tha schoonsr BU+ Elliott, Boston, with a cargo of ice, want ashore at St. Louis pass, thirty milts wast of this city, Saturday morning. She has about of eight men were saved. She is owned to PbrtSiad, Me. She Is of 480 tons burden and to valued at $80,000. At Detroit—Detroit, Q; Chicago 4. At CincinnatiLouis gams postponed an aooouut of rain. "Thf men. #re working only nine hours a day instead +t eleven, at they should. We do not aft them to work over twelve hours, but ioMlkat they 4mA work twelve hours. We don't want to steal an hour tram them. We know the six trips can be made within twelve boars, I jwvpose that tbpmen try the MurtaUe. it iHyiH} n*k*v the six trips rithiu the twelve the At Brooklyn—Brooklyn, KD; HatrafDotitaa,S. At Baltimore—Athletic, 7; Baltimore, 8. WlWfWl.'W 3» AM* ■M ■«■» C* An MM WM.I, PobtulHD, Or#., Aug. St.—Gen. Logan 3W. Alger »nd party have left Athlaiid. Th. whole populktion tamed out to greet them, and there At Louisville Louisville 8; Allegheny, 8. 4t St Louie-St Louis, fl; Kansas GUjgr, 0. Froet-Bltteu Corn. Raw InwiaH, H. M-, Aug. Si.—Thara waa a severs frost to *a. low lands yesterday morning, tttata of the bom waa partly New Hav**, Aug. M.—Wton college opens Rev. Oaorge B. Stevens, D. D., of Watertewfjt, H. Y., will oocnpy ilia chair at social litefature, Vacated by Professor Dwlght to become president of Tale. Will Biter Tata's Faculty. gSfcfcTSjSfr, iwnrrti **.*W u a-HLiii J* JUL |
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