Columbus enquirer-sun. (Columbus, Ga.) 1886-1893, June 06, 1886, Image 1

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£uwlrttt VOL. XXVIII—NO. COLL'MBl'S. OKOKMA: SIM)AY MnUNING. CENTS Ingalls said farther that he was glad t he I order had been revoked. Its issuance was an offense that if committed by the store- tary of the interior and sanctioned by the ( president would justify their Impeachment Yesterday's Proceedings of the House and removal from office. and the Senate. 1 , ?c ld th / ^toturyof th ? interior ! desired the adoption of the resolution of- * fered by the senator from Kansas, so that Inmll* and Cockrell Kxclisnijp Compliments in the the senate could be informed of the cause* senate—Neither Thinks the Other • l.mtlmmi that had led to the issue of the order. The —Secretary »anntnir l.earia Wnkhimrton-Tlie 1 precedents for the issue of the order would Mmunda Antl-Holyp.m, Bill. j ^VellerPorted positively that no prece- dent for the order could be found in the records of the department. He defended Lamar, however, and said he could easily understand how he came to sign the order of June 2. He said it was positively | impossible for the heads of departments to | I sioner’of patents as to matters affecting | patents, the commissioner of the land of fice as to land matters, etc. Mr. Teller had 1 Washington, June 5.—Crisp, of Geor gia. from the committee on commerce, re ported a bill authorizing the construction of a bridge across the Tennessee river at Chattanooga, Tenn. House calendar. Atkins, of Pennsylvania, from the com mittee on patents, reported a bill amend ing section 4.887 of the revised statutes. House calendar. The change proposed will give the inventor a patent for seven teen years if his application for potent is t filed in this country before a patent is ! no criticism for the secretary. He thought , granted him in a foreign country. The! that officer hud done well in so promptly ! present law provides that if the invention revoking the objectionable order. fi first patented in a foreign country, the Call, Walthall, Beck and George defend- 1 American patent, subsequently issued for ed the commissioner of the land office from | the same Invention, shall expire with the i Ingalls' further attacks. foreign patent. ! Ingalls’ resolution was then agreed to, j An informal conversational discussion j and Edmunds presented a petition from then arose as to the procedure of business j himself as a citizen of Vermont, praying to-day, Holman expressing a desire to call | congress to grant a pension of *10!) a month up the appropriation bills, but being wil- i to Mrs. Emily C. Stannard, widow of the j ling to test the sense of the house upon the 1 late Genera! George J. Stannard, of Ver- i question. _ ! liiont, lately deceased, who occupied a ' Throckmorton and Crisp advocated the j position among the doorkeeper's assistants I claims of the committee on Pacific rail- of the house of representatives. Outhecon- roads to the floor, and O’Neill, of Missouri, spicuous gallantry and strategy of that ontended that a day should be assigned to i officer at Gettysburg, Edmunds' said, di pended much the fortunes of the war at i that. time. Later in the war’one of his the consideration of bills relating to labor juestions. _ __ . __ __ ... .... Tilt bouse having refused—til to 99—to j arms had been torn -from his body by a : into a committee of the whole on the ] cannon shot. Edmunds said Stannard’s widow had been for years a helpless inva- id. He concluded by introducing a bill legislative appropriation bill, the contest for precedence narrowed down to the com mittee on Pacific railroads and the com mittee on labor, the former coming out victorious. Crisp thereupon called up the Pacific railroad extension bill, and by a vote of 123 toll the house determined to consider. It was agreed that the previous question should be considered as ordered at four o'clock unless the debate should exhaust itself at an earlier hour. The debate con sumed the entire session of the day. On motion of Holman an amendment was adopted increasing from forty to fifty p.-r cent the amount of the net earnings is j aired io be paid into the sinking fund in case of the- companies refusal to accept the provisions of t his act. Tne previous question wa‘ then ordered giving effect to his own petition. It was referred to the pension committee. The senate then considered private pen sion bills and passed about 220 such bills. Adjourned. Tin* KiIiuuihJk Mnrnuui Hill. Washington, June 5.—The houSe judi-; clary committee to day agreed upon a favor able report on the Edmunds anti-polygamy bill with an amendment repealing the j charter of the Mormon church and congre gation society and another striking out tin. clause ci eating a board of United Stales trustees tc. take charge of the Mormon church property. .grossing i the opp> of the m i fiiiibustci Xcini.il'i Mui.i.aiu heat AVaviitnoton. June 5. ig. Ms wife .ii. d du iglit 'in-.- of Interna. ite and Com .a- Miller MAXWELL F'OUNL GUILTY. i .oris Mn:t How Congressman Crisp Shows Up Hol man and Springer. lie Kxpuw* Tkelr Mrthnite of Mot I’m.*' as the Irieuite of tin* I'vijpli* THlIll* They A re Tr)'lu|r to llvcelve Then Am Kvettloif Kreue In ihe IIoiim*. Washington. June 5.—In the course of tiie debate in the house to-day iiiwm the Pacific sailroad extension bill Springer op posed the bill, declaring that the roads were in a prosperous condition and con tending that at the time the debt would mature under the existing law the roads would be running through a prosperous, thickly settled country and would be valuable properties. It was proposed now to investigate the man agement of the railroads, and he thought that that investigation should take place before congress passed a law whh It would put the question out of iis hands for 70 years. He favored postponing farther con sideration of the bill until the next session of congress, when the house might be in possession of information which would en able it to act intelligently. Holman, of Indiana, opposed the bill, and quoted from the report of the com missioner ol'railroads to the effect that, the net annual earnings of the Union Pacific railroad weiv **'.73.3,107, and of the <_\ ntral Pacific $7,820,371. Crisp proposed to assume full responsi bility for the part he had taken in tile mat ter, and the two gentlemen referring to Springer and Holman must assume the responsibility before the country for the gross misrepresentations they had made, either through ignorance or an attempt, to deceive the house. The gentleman from Indiana i Holmani, reading from the report of the secretary ot tin-interior, had made statements which were calculated, and which he submitted, were deliberately in tended to deceive the house. He Crisp had before him the identical documents used by the gentleman, and in a hook in connection with the identical statement from which ho read were clear and dis linct refutations of what lie had stated. Tiie gentleman had stated Unit the assets of the Union Pacific company •were ?250,000,0iXk when he knew that there was included in that unsuh- ■idiz.ed lines, lines or which the govern ment had no lien. 'The gentleman had stated that, the net earnings of the Union Pacific railroad were »S,738,i)*A when Hu- very same book showed that the ear:tings of the company .within the meaning of the Thmliiafl act, Mere hut -rl.ofiu.fzVi. Ho t-.a seated tills as a refutation of the state ment of the gentleman from indi-inn. Tiie figures AVer.- right, hut when they -.v>-fe i i.ted to tin- n a:- pic-, .i jy 11.• gentleman from Indianu ; a-.y .oi they dwavs spoke when so pn w, 1 ..), ial.-cly. When the genii -man garbled ’.- e figures they would he false. to make Kt-v. Thomas K. Hendridkeu, bishop of the diocese of Providence, lies dangerously ill at the Episcopal residence in this city. Bishop Hendriekon has for years been a great sufferer from asthma, and about ten days'ago he contracted a severe cold,which - has since developed into pneumonia. The complication arising from the two diseases has made his case very critical, and fears arc entertained that lie may not recover. Last night he did not sleep nt all and phy sicians were In constant attendance upon him. His symptoms assumed such serious j form that ii was deemed best to prepare him for death and the last sacraments of I the church were administered. To-day lie I was a little more comfortable and secured ! a few hours’ repose. THEY STRIKE AGAIN. Tin- Net AnrA t’lir Privets toul (on.hirtor* quit Work the Tlilr.fTime. New York. June 5.—At a meeting of the executive boat d of Empire Protective Asso ciation it was decided to order a tie up of all the surface railroads in this citv, Brook lyn and Jersey City. The order lias been issued, and all the lines except tlie Third avenue stopped running at tin early hour this morning. The l Idril Time. SShw You::. Juki ' F ir the third tii.it in the first hulf of tile year losii. ailttie sur- faet roads in the city have been tied up. This time the tie-up deludes not only tin- Brooklyn, hut all the Jersey City roads as well. It was remarked yesterday by one of the executive board of the Empire asso ciation Unit the proceedings of the l-oard had been made too public. He promised the reporters that hereafter they would not be able to publish to. action of the board, lie said the next district meeting would be held in some place where it would not be found out by the reporters. At tlic last minting of the district assem bly it was decided w hen the new hoard j was appointed to give them two weeks to affect a peaceable settlement. Failing in that the last resource was a general tit- up. This has been indicated before. Members of the car associations have felt the weekly assessment burdensome, and now, exas perated by the delays and inaction of the previous executive hoards, they demanded a general tie-up as a remedy for .u; ending to the Third avenue st. ike, and refused to listen to c-onsirvutlte members of the board. With difficulty tin .immhers have been induced fi> post pone lie-I it-up until now. l-.o Mullfuri', I olio oi till prudent coun-t .,f tn ; board, si-'-erai days ago is.fused to att. ml any m.-ctmg of li.e ..oui-l a.n.1 Ims en at i htadqunrtci.s but very Utile of tie. time. [ Graiiael. the careful ■ ■1.i l iiu.iler woik- man, v. as foiled along with the cun--nt. j Tie - action taken by the b- end i- mid tn fi. iiu.-uimiHis and anrirv.td fiv tn--- me.-.. Introduced to a Drilling Machine and Taught to “Feed." The ItlNt-ksmlth Simp in the Ib'nitvutiiir) In Where Most h Mnppinr—Hc Will be u Giant PrLiiniT Iteeunse Ite Will ll»ve to lie fino.t The Suit Hit* I,list Ite *iiivur So tar its the Krkieheil le tun- eernetl. New York, June 5.—“There he is— that's him nt the drilling machine," and keen-eyed Keeper Coughlin pointed down tlu blacksmith simp attached to the peni tentiary on Blackwell’s Island. Sure enough there stood John Most, an archist, advocate of murder and arson, in structor in the art of criminally using poisons, “the most consummate scoundrel oftlie age,” at work fur the county of New York, in prison dress. Three fellow con victs Were In the group. Two held n wagon wheel that was being given a new tire, the third Most was “feeding the drill." and the fourth was drilling the necessary holes through the band of iron, that it might fie secured to the wooden "Lin yon know anything about this kind of work?" asked Keeper Coughlin of Most, when he entered the shop at seven o’clock yesterday morning. “Nothing,” meekly answered the once courageous shout it- of “To arms! To arms! Death to the police! Death to the capital ist!" “Then I’ll show you," and Keeper Coughlin instructed Most howto -‘feed the drill," aud warned him to be particular not to put such a pressure on it as to break it. Most listened and tried his hands—• those white hands unused to work since his residence in America. The first touch of the machine soiled them, but be perse vered with a calm exterior, though his brain may have been at blood beat with thoughts of vengeance. Again and again he tried, ills hands all the while becoming mori and more soiled, until at last Keeper Coughlin said, “I guess you'll get along, but be careftti, and left tin-anarchist with his fellow convict workmen. ninns or a feather. “He will be a good prisoner, i am sure,'’ rein;.iked Warden Pissbury, who, with in circulation and has been disposed of at the public resorts to curiosity hunters. At a restaurant near the treasury a man had a 1 cube about two inches Hqnare which he said he procured from a servant at the white house, and sold it to customers who vvere willing to pay a dollar for a teaspoon- j ful to take home to their sweethearts and J wives. The ladies of the cabinet and oth- I ers, who are supposed to have access to I the white house, hnvo been pestered In the most extraordinary manner oy people high in social circles and by strangers whom they never heard- of for relics and trophies of the wedding. Notes were sent to Miss j Cleveland by people who would not be ex pected to do such a thing, asking her to send a piece of cake by the bearer and "greatly oblige,” etc. Thu applications came from school girls and congressmen’s wives. iniissioin-rs Porter i blacksmith's 1 h ip have to b. a-kit d l’ii ad Ti]' durina tin visited ■ ii ft er- - a in', ii.-’i: ti ll that," quictlv suggested K til- -I rti.aUv ■"l 1 '1' .lined “The ifi uni through t in,;, lilies to ' I-'.! the fig!:. a Thus tiie first day of Mosl whs pas.-e.il in ris ' i. At half-past live <i'eln< k ln„t - . . n- bad not n-Tn taken from tin- am. '-i. i at vtiiin ho was v iking half a I! I i.,,|.I- ,1,,, 11k (hiv. Ton ■! <v , n- an It :< f riot i.ini *il<»1h1i.-<: t'n re w-: HE SANG IN THE CHOIR. A VTi-iiMli) Yiinmt l.inl) .tlurrliul to an Oj-Iii lilirvi-r. New York, June 5.—The fashionable little summer resort of Oyster Buy, Long Island, is somewhat stirred up over the | marriage by the Rev. Folsom Baker of Miss Clam Mason, Uu daughter of well i known Brooklyn parents, to William Underhill, an oyster digger of that village. Mr. Mason, the head of the family, having died recently, tin family went to the ootin- i try much earlier than usual this year. The Mason mansion is a very beautiful one, and commands a tine view of the bay and Long Island Sound. I The bride is twenty-seven years of age, I stately and handsome. The groom is barely I twenty-one, but he is tall and muscular, possessing every type of a rough and ready countryman. At tunes he drives a public ' stage between Oyster bay and Locust val ley to connect with tiie Long Island railroad trains. Miss Mason often traveled with I him, but it was as a worshipper in the Episcopal church that the young lady be came well acquainted with him. There, on each succeeding Sunday, he sang in the i choir, and having a rich baritone voice, was much admired. Yesterday morning - Underhill obtained a day’s leave of ab sence , and met Miss Mason and drove with ! her to Cold Springs, five niilc-s distant. They then went to the rectory of St. John’s Episcopal church, where they were mar- ; ried. AA'hen the twain returned to Oyster Bay I t in crii!" dis|mtalii d n mile to her sister, 1 .Atisi Eililh Mason, requesting that she couu-uuiicale U.t-neus Vo their mother. Mi-s Edith bad < uly nail two lines when ■fin i.--,i in.!. Mrs. Mason, more eourtige- iai.. ".-.id tle- null- through and fainted. : Both l-'-iii- nit'ii . liov.iM-r, and began to ci,-mi.-u'i- notes on Miss Clara’s demeanor -.it - ill- . is. feu vvi i-ks. ill loo i jam Mrs but it is ■d pillin' occurred between 11 and In i- family that tin.- sim.it.ion i.hii Mil In in..! by. .all tic;, -it < 1'isp of 111 - stiike. that no pr i Ki !l>‘- FiuiithI. l a 'I. The funeral of John t- tiii"- morning from Ht. dnd. Tiit-re u t c no ser- pe. Io ink to hei ri ucmit M p; inr-ip'i y ti.-eii li of th cd - ■ til i III' in a Tiu-i i pec II. tli I IK legal auihoi i to mu! ■I I- a.It. tc- hours i had dee. i mined t a • iku if Walthall said tuat son: Ito-.ir b.".- thes.nat.- met mid tw • or efore the nff'ering Ir.g:', reK'lmi.:'. he Walthniii sttvand read tu - original draft of the order revoking it, aud h. ;rl a conversation with the secretary of the interior on the sui.-jtct. He ; Walthall, tc .i learned from the secretary that he h-td '•'try grave doubt as to the legality of the order, and had determined on the very day of its issue to revoke it whatever the prece dents might be. Walthall sent to < lit desk and had the clerk read a copy of the order of revocation. Ingalls was glad the first order bad been revoked, but regretted the statement of the grounds on which the revocation had been made. He .Ingalls: affirmed that no precedent in harmony with tiie order of June 2d would he found in the interior de partment. The revocation was right, hut the reasons given for the revocation were not right. The constitution of the United States, Ingalls continued, required the president of the United States to take care that the laws were faithfully executed. The president was responsible for the acta ot his executive officers. Ingalls did not assume that Presi- cteut Cleveland, on the 2d day of June, or at any day since, had been in a condition to approve or disapprove the acts of his subordinates, and while Ingalls exonerated the secretary of the interior from any ac tive intervention in this matter, the radical difficulty lay in the fact that the executive had placed vast national interests in the Lands of subordinate officers, who assumed riot to see that the laws were faithfully ex ecuted, but that valid and subsisting laws of the United States were suspended over <i vast area of public domain, and tiiat many thousands of citizens were denied taeir rights under the laws. The advent of the present commissioner of the general land office to his position had been sequai- ized by an immediate suspension of 12<i.OKI -: tries of public lands. The commissioner c-f the general land office assumed that every one of these claimants was en gaged in fraudulent attempts to rob and plunder the United States, lie suspended every one of those entries, directed that patents should not issue, and sent out a vast corps of inquisitors and -pies instruct ed to find evidence to support the suspi cions of the commissioner of the general after on; iii‘- lit. Burn It wh fur conviction and ten in j two for conviction was announced as tiie •.■;.i.i. Tin suo-eediug ballots up to the i time for adjournment were identical with i the latter with no prospects for a change, j “.'here aiv two knights of ia'nor on the jury, j and the fact that AlcDonald, of the prose- I cation, figured prominently in the wire : tapping scheme at the time of the South-I '.vest road strike influences many to think ' that those two knights were thereby prej- ud.ct-d, and will hold out against ten stub- | born men and thus give tiie prisoner a new triui. I St. Loetk. June 5.—The jury in tiie Max- | well murder ca.-:e have returned a verdict of murder in the first degree. A SUMMER TOUR. i part t!i:i! tin- I’ri- n! unit lii- 111 iilu W ill Visit itaiiipsliirii. PlymOETH, June o.—The rumors that President and Mrs Cleveland would visit | New Hampshire during the summer have been confirmed by investigations by the Herald correspondent. The president will spend a portion of bis August vocation in i tne White mountains, making-a tour of tiie principal resorts. No public notice- ban been given of t.he intoiided visit be cause of an injunction placed by the pres- f ident upon the !:otcl keepers who are to i r ntortam him. Mr. Clevtlund lias sent a letter to Bethlehem, expressing his intention of visiting there. lie w ii, conic 1 to New Hampshire from the Adirondacks by special train to Bethlehelm, where he ; will oe met by the state officials and tie es corted to Fatiyan's Crawford House, the V/hite Mountain Notch, the Summit and mountains and then go over the Boston j aud Lowell road, stopping at Plymouth, iau-otiia, Coueord and Manchester, to Massachusetts, where he will visit some of r ite seaside resorts. 'flu 1 ChtruTO Aiinri-ht*t. Chicago, June C.—The Cook county j grand jury reported this evening to Judge 1 Rogers. The report says the number of dangerous anarchists has been greatly 1 overestimated, in reality there urc less ! than 100 dangerous chat-actors with miar- ' land office. That policy had been pursued cbistic tendencies. Tiie remainder arc up to this time-. So great had been the made up of men who implicitly follow the hardships and injustice and oppression of j guide of the leaders. The report says the the commissioner’s course that the sec re- i police are in possession of facts which can tary of the interior had been called upon not fail to bring these leaders to the pun- to revoke th- prior orders of the com- j Isltment thej" so justly deserve. The jury missioner. Ir.galls was proceeding to read ] decides'that the bomb throwing was the a letter .-iddressed by the commissioner of j consequence of a premeditated conspiracy toe general land office to the secretary of and the detection of the leaders will be left the interior, dated May 6th, 18S6, when ! in the hands of the police. Mr. Cockrell isked wtiat document In- ! — — » galls was going to read front. Ingalls re peated the date of the letter, and the state ment that it was from the commissioner. Cockrell inquirtd whether the senator was going to read from an official docu ment of the house or the senate. Yale Students IlefirliUHiidfil. New Haven, Conn., Jurie5.-The facul ty of Yale were very indignant to-day over the uncalled for celebration last night be cause of the victory of the Yale nine over ing, which were kept up until the small hours. The faculty to-night issued orders that there must lie no more such jubila tion, and if the students were disobedient the faculty would prohibit ball games in the future. The boys feel rattier sorry over the prohibition. authenticity or susmeted that he TrigalLs would agree with thi text of the letter, he | Cockrell! could seni to the document room and get tho r-port. Ingalls then stated the number of tie document. Cockrell—“Why coud not the senator i answer a polite questiot at once?" Ingalls—“The senator from Missouri is - incapable of asking a pdire question of anybody; that is the reasin." Cockrell—“And tiie senator from Kan- | to.- is incapable of answerite a gentleman." “ I shall never have ar. opportunity of t answering a gentleman whenever the son- llt , r from Missouri interregae- ::,e." ffie chair urged, tne Sci.iu.r- to keep Edmunds, -sotto voce — • 1 l.u is un; ar- Ingails. also sotto v — '• -. !: i- Scnt l’|i Pur t'ivi- Years,• Washington, June 5.— John Hetzclatt, president, and Charles E. Prentiss, late cu-sliier of the German American National bank, convicted of making false entries on tiie books of the banks, were to-day sen tenced to five years in the Albany peni tentiary. The' execution of the sentenci was d, ’erred until after the close of the n. xt aencra'. t- re !' l.vc district supr : t .' will not submit (villi impunity. [Applause.] He must stand by his: figures, and I am :n :n- ii'isi r.'spcmsible for it. W’hv did the g.’ii- ticnian make that statement in rc- .i'uid to tiie net earnings im'rai ’t wore to mislead the house. The gem • - man stated that the net earnings or the Cent' al i’nciflc were $7,820,871. it is marked so in be booV ) 1 ut when it comes to the net earnings witmn tiie meaning iif Uie Thurman act they are tint »-i,212,()tiO. From seven to one. from two to eight, and that is the distinguished gentleman who is posing in this house as a friend of the peo ple, when lie is seeking by a statement of | that sort to km-p the house from endeavor ing to collect a Just debt due the govern ment. He and the gentleman from Illinois (Springer must not with my consent pose here as friends oftlie treasury when by re sorting to such means as that they arc try ing to prevent the government from col lecting what is justly due the government. Thi“ gentleman cannot blind the eyes of business to present the facts by detailing tae history of the reads in the past, heard the gentleman from Indiana a few moments ago say in response to a question of mine that in his opinion the attorneys of the railroads were always urgent. If the gentleman from Indiana means to insin uate in the remotest degree that I am in any way connected with the railroad com- | puny as attorney or agent, or tiiat i have ever accepted favors from the railroad company directly or indirectly, then, Mr. .-ffK-cicer, 1 throw the charge in his teeth as false,” Holman arose, and with some show of looting, replied to what lie termed the dis courteous language which had boon used, lie hud said nothing to incite the ire of tiie gentleman. He had been reading a statement which was apparently absolutely correct. Let a public document speak the truth and let the gentlemen who had applauded the attack of the gentleman from Georgia see whether it was an honor able thing for them to do. He then pro ceeded to read from the document a com parative state ineut of the net earnings of the Union and Central Pacific railroad company to show that they amounted to the sum previousiy stated by him. If tiie gentl“m.m could jioint to an error in tlic statement made by R public officer, let i fni do it and let him not go into a passion over u controversy in which a gt nth.: eu. ought to seek to know what the lmil. ,a.-, lie liurl said not a word which justified sueh a display of passion. The truth v..tillable, lie spoke from the Record, if tin: gentleman did not. Crisp said tt.v truth was valuable—too valuable to be lost sight of when the house was called upon to pass upon an important measure like this. Tiie gentleman hud said thal he quoted from the Uncord, and that he ,Crisp did not. He denied it. Th,'gentleman did quote it part of the Record, but it was a part tiiat mislead. He ■ Crisp hud quoted the summing up of the transactions of the railroads. Tiie gentle man had taken an intermediary point. Holman—“I will publish the whole ta ble, and the country will see who is right.” Crisp—“I s.sk nothing better than to Re peal to the country on a question of this sort. In a business body as tills ought to be I seek to be actuated by principle. The day has long passed when gentlemen can pose as the friends of the people when they are standing between the people and the collection of a just debt.” The house then granted leave to Holman and Crisp to print in the record the tables alluded to, and as Mr. Holman took his seat he expressed the hope that there would be no garbling of tiie records. “The gentleman cannot make that insinuation," burst out Mr. Crisp, angrily, but in-re- i.VLll ti: i Jj.irt, JeoLsi neni'iv f '"■? i fitiiug of i-ir Art'’" aritr" strained hiinstif. lie resum tne house, which hud I,ecu in a great confusion dining this'-pisode. it dimcult for Hit: speaker to bo h turned to its state of comparative i eat.a vtati nmtn ■. All the order l" lie up .-.us net s. r.t to their road until after 3 o'clock ti.;'" morning. h,v 4:30 a. m. it was known uniwuiiliy tltrougiiout tiie city. The police depart ment w;ei posted on tile fact:, eat i\. and i:> fill. m. every depot was guarded t.y del;.iis of police. Drivers and oilier employes worked through the nigh’, us usual, itnlil tiie time foi the first day cats to run in the morning. at the (erand street depot of the Dry Dock lines, the scene of thi tierce riot, and con fusion in March lies'., the night cars finish ed their trips at 3:30 n. rn. Half an hour earlier the day cars were to begin their trips. The lntm did not appear for work and the assistant suiieiintendent went down and was told oftlie oreder to tie up. He merely asked if there wiu- any griev ance of tiie men and was told there was iione; that they were ordered to stop work by the board. He then notified the super intendent. Stable men were left to care for the horses. At tin Fourth uvenui depotsin,oar ques tions were asked by the superintendent and similar replies given. The superin tendent said to a reporter that he did not understand why lii.s road should tie up or how it could affect the Third avenue com pany. At the depot of tiie Broadway and Seventh avenue company the superintend ent sain that lost night the cars came in at .3 o’clock in the morning, and that no cars arc usually run till 1:50 a. m. No explana tions were given, and the horses were unfed. At the office of the Eighth avenue* line the superintendent said the flint day oar snotild have started at fi a. rn., but it did not start owing to the tie up. Tiie superintendent of tiie fit!: avenue line said none of his men had any grievances and he hoped the striki would be settled soo'i. The horses were fed in these stables. The police received information of the tie up hulf an hour after the order was issued. Bujierintonifi'nt Maurry hurried to tho is dice headquarters and within an hour tne reserve o* ti.e entire force, lino, were com'"'i'' ncd at the stations along tiie l.ue of the : ,t inqiortant roads and whence they could most c*.- ;. oe dispatched to threatened quarters in the event of trouble. One hun dred and fifty men vvere stationed at police headquarters ail the summer, and the sick men pn - ot were stopped and ordered off, and two patrol wagons were brought to tin- headquarters. It was stated at noon today , but sixty extra cars Were being run by the Third avenue railroad company. The Blocker street and 23d street cross town line are running twenty- eight ears on their roads. The Central cross town line announced their intention ot starting some cars ovc their road this afternoon. Everything was reported omit at noon by the police. The Brooklyn fines are in the same predicament as the New York lines, hut there is no interruption of travel in Jersey City or Hoboken, the cars running there as usual. Tiie KiO'"' ut .Itriimi' I’urk. Jerome Park, N. Y., June 5.—First race, handicap sweepstakes, mile and one- sixteenth, won by Royal Arch, Goano 2d, Duke of Westmoreland 3d; time 1:62?. Second race, for two-year-olds, live fur longs, Treinont won, Austrians 2d, Cre- flan.me 3d: tune l:u2L Third race, for three-year-olds, mile and a half, Inspector B. won, The Hard TI, Linden 3d; time 2: It. Fourth race, handicap sweepstakes, ::ii!> and three—ixteenths, Spriiigfii id won, Te- cuniseh id, Stone Buck 3d. ’Lime, 2:05. . Illlii'U oticy in r.rder to pay the v.-'kiG ;|ir,ii John Most. At.i.'i" of 11 Tiie Ar Ojevl tin tine uu'Clmg:.' Hire,, loavrcl. •aid Most i ..ilil vv eii aff’oi out of lii" own pocket, plenty of money or*, of his newspaper and various bonks. One collection resulted in -.Ti, another in $15. BRl’TfS TS ASr.EI-T'. Notwiiiistanding Editor Most's engage ment on Blackwell's island, tiie Erie tie it appeared yesterday morning ar usual. “Citizens’’ Sebmelen and rich, ut/e, \vitli the experience whicli they gained during ■Afost's 1/ondon iniprisoninent, are quite prepared to run the organ of oisorder “all summer." But it was like “Hamlet,” with that in teresting though dyspeptic gentleman left out of the drama. The suit had lost its savor, ami the agile agitator hue certainly not bequeathed the full wealth of his icon oclastic vocabulary to Ids trusted lieuten ants. Tho write- of the “leader" in desirous of knowing whether or no Brutus ib sleeping in America. After marshaling facts and fiction for and against, the conclusion is reached that Brutus is. sound asleep in fact, snoring. Th. article concludes with a prayer for the speedy advent of sortie Caesar or other who would cause the dor mant Brutus U. s.iiiko off las dull sloth. Captain MeCuliug coine-s in for an ex coriation. He is denounced as one who Would rule “orientally" in the* Occident.; as worthy to have stood in inediaival times on « scaffold in the attire of a imngs- nuiu, and, riuallv, as a “mise.rabto cre.a- tiire.” Colonel f'ellovvs is not .slighted. He Ls likened unto the truculent 1'essen- dort. and denounc 'd as an cut .ny of his country and an upholder of slavery. .So miserable grows tiie writer while viewing the situation and shadows forecast by- coining events tiiat tiie only sop of co m fort he can give his readers is the assur ance of the worthy Bamberger to bis fel lows:—“Well, after a!., we are but dogs.” AFTER THE WEDDING. Fifth r: longs, P Engetieh allow won, •ii Un I! II, i dri l. ■ I vine. Culiini'l l.uiiiniil iiil.1*. h Ui-si x,tri|i|Jnir 1 hr ti llile K..ili'cf Its t'liirill Ilc-'iriiU a-. Washington, June 5.- Colonel Dan Li- mont resemiiles a man with u load off his mind, lie does not longer consider him- seif responsible for the welfare of the pres ident of the United States, and will now give himself a rest. This was an off day with tiie colonel,and everybody agree* that he has earned a vacation, fie came dow n to liis office at tiie executive man sion rather late this morning, shook hands all round witti the boys, went into the pri vate’end of tiie house, said "Howdy do,” to Miss Cleveland and the rest of the rela tives, and looked for a moment at the men tearing up the arrangements and decora tions upon which he bestowed so much care. lie exchanged congratulations with the family over the handsome manner in w hich the event passed off, and was com plimented upon the graphic description Le furnished to tiie press. Before he left the president left orders that ail the cut flowers used to decorate the v.'hite house should be sent to the hos pitals of Washington te-day, and the gar deners were at work early’ this rooming taking them down and shipping them to tiie several benevolent i: -*notions, where tin: president’s kindness is fully appre ciate!. The president also gave orders tlint the presents to the bride should r.ot tie exhibited, and tiiat no information .■'bout them should in given to tiie press. Tin: number Is said to be v ery lurm . and tin re are some v ry hand rm. and mi pie piles, but verv ft vv tTiie packages i lie, I, opened, and will not tie until the re- II ; ! M: < . . '•:■,<! fro." I >■ er P rk ■rs on li was Inn a saw I lie silver i,."- a on : id*s. bcaring tlie ■J'.riiii Kelly, born April 211th, ii Nt. IsStj." Mane candles bend of the casket, i ;t".'l's wi-ti Judge Hilton, Jo!in T. Agiievv, Recorder Fire Commissioner Kelly and August Bel- it. Tiie. funeral services were held in '!:■ (lUiiedr.'ii o:i Fifth avenue, and con- i.uctc i by .'.rciibisliop Carrington. After 1 in- - rvli t - tiie body was borne to o Id St. | Patrick s cathedra., in Mott street, and laced in-t vault. One hundred members i of tin- Tammany society followed the re- i '11oi11-- in Hie procession, Tiie services j Were very impressive. i ^ .1 Hell Timer Tinged)'. i Denver, Cm,., June 5. —A sj>ecial from Aspen suvs: “I.nst evening a party of young I laities climbed to the top or the lire bell , inAvr. ixly .bet high, to obtain a good v iew of tiie city. Eppa Stewart stepped to the edge ot tiie tower and was leaning against a corner post, looking over tiie . ("unit: v. when the junilor, not knowing of tin: presence of the ludies. seized the bell I rope to call a meeting of the tiro company. The suditi n l iang of the great bell startled Miss .Stewart, and sin plunged from the fizzy height to the pumueiit. She was . arried into n neighiioririg house, when it was diM'OVered that botli legs were so bad ly crushed that the feet had liecn driven to within a few inches of the knees. The bol es of tier left arm were broken into ; splinters, and five ribs on the right side vvere broken and torn, loose from the spine. She was alive when picked up, but her 1 death is momentarily expected.” VVomlerfAil Km'hjw. Gai.veston, Texas, June 6. -The police ' last night rearrested Dick Lacouse at a [joint eight miles down the island. La- coti.se is a fugitive from Gloucester, Muss., where he Ls wanted for an attempt to kill Maud Kdson, his mistress. Ho was ar rested on this charge and was admitted to bail in the sum of fl lOO. As soon as he l gained his liberty he disappeared. His bondsmen traced him to this city a month ago. and he vva.-, arrested by W. J. Healy, a i'lnkerton detective. The detective and Lacouse started for New Y'ork on the steamship Han Marcos. When eleven nines oil Newport News, on the night of May 3. Lacouse suddenly disappeared | front the vessel. A most thorough search failed to find the fugitive, and it was con- 1 eluded that Iaicou.se had jumped over board in an attempt to escape, and, as tho night was dark and the sea rough, it was believed be was drowned. It now appears that Lucouse swam ashore and made his way back to Texas, where ho was followed bytbeEdson woman. Last night to the astonishment of the police, she appeared land swore out a warrant cnarging that Lacouse had again attempted to kill her. She divulged his hiding place, aud the im dice were thus enabled to capture him. Lacouse says it took him fivo hours to reach the land after he jumped from the | steamer. Tin- Doulile Scull ltnrc. Toronto, June 5.—The three-mile double soul! race here to-day was won by Hanlon aud Lee, who beat Hosmer aud SIcKay by ten lengths, in 16 minutes and 8 3-6seconds. The water was very rough, and Guudaur and Hamm did not start. [*■€, Conley and Plaisted were first, second and third respectively in the first heat for single scull-, one and one-half miles, finishing in 8 minutes and 56 seconds. Hosmer held second place up to the turning point, where lii- was upset by turning shuruly at the stake. In' the second beat the i fit iu the following order: if.in.o'i. tlosmer, Kitz, McKay, Stanton v: uii..u es and, forty-three seconds. Guv-Dor rvtvrr: d to tlic- row, as l.c could ,i t •'•-.]! for ti:.' final race which will not • .• ; , ■ ti': Mi'iidav afternoon. Those t.11;i •• •'. Lev. Ccnlev, Hanlon and