Newspaper Page Text
VOL. XXVIII—NO.
i;:i
COLCMBCS, GblOHOfA: 'iTKSim
Yesterday’? Proceedings of the House
. and the Senate.
i li »* soniito I’asKOSH Tin* IMIctHiry \miropi luUon
Hill—Mr. HI air's I’roposrl Prohibit hm Aiin>i»»l-
mout to the Constitntion—Editor (’uttiniYs Cum .
Hupont (iucvrj (%o1n Thrn*, Ktc.
Washington, July 2B.-Ho)inau, from
the conference committee on the legisla
tive, executive and judicial appropriation
bill, reported a disagreement. Holman
stated that the real point of difference was
the senate amendment providing for sena
tors’ clerks. The other points of differ
ence were more formal than real.
Oates moved that the house recede from
the senators’ clerks amendment.
The motion was losG-yeis 98, nays 121.
A further conference was ordered.
Henley, of California, from the commit
tee on public lands reported back the sen
ate bill forfeiting certain lands granted to
the Northern Pacific railroad company.
The committee recommends that' in lieu
of the senate bill there be substituted the
provisions of the house bill on the same
subject.
» Henley stated that the distinctive differ
ence between the two bills was that while
the senate bill forfeited the grant from ,, ,,
Wallula junction to Portland, the house ' ..'’J't™ 5 se nate are <717,546 for public
bill included also the forfeiture of the grant ' buildings, £518,750 for light houses, $106,662
from Bismarck to the Pacific ocean.
opened and the senate proceeded to the
consideration of private pen.’ n bills which
have been favorably rev- u. Fifty were
P issod, including one g umg a pension to
the widow ot lien. Durum Ward.
Or. motion of Vest the bib was passed
authorizing the construction of a hotel on
the goverment land at Portress Monroe.
. 1 here were but few more than a quorum
of senators present, and attention being
called to the tact, both sides to the contro
versy assented to a postponement of action
till to-morrow.
Calendar cases were then taken up
again, and a large number of nominations
were confirmed from which the injunction
of secrecy was not remov-m mi
important were those of J, ., v „,
lector of customs, and Israel Lawton, su
perintendent of the mint, both of San
Francisco.
A greater part of to-morrow may lie
passed in secret session, it having been de
cided not to take up the fortification ap
propriation bill till Wednesday.
A number of public buildings bills were
passed, among them one authorizing a
public building at Charlotte, N. C., to cost
$100 000.
Adjourned.
\m HIE ANARCHISTS.
Pinkerton’s Detectives Telling What They
Caught On To.
Hiiiiitiinnii Tt'slinu.ny l
hi it its \nothcr ><•«
Doubt \ hotit )) Jiv ihr
At Hi.- I.
rr Iteg.oi
Ch rcAGO. July 20. Tin
secrecy was not removed. The most! the anarchiststrial this weuk.it i-iixijt
. S. Hagar, col- will witness several new and startin'
The Sundry Civil lllll.
Washington, July 26.—As it passed the
senate Saturday night the sundry civil ap
propriation bill appropriates an aggregate
of $34,418,375. or an increase of $3,106,850
over tlie amount appropriated by the hill
as it came from the house. The items
„ __ _ jrtlandTthe house added by the senab
bill included also the for . ... , „. ,
The ; *°r coast survey and $1,765,902 on account
house bill forfeited 33,000,000 ’acres more ! of miscellaneous items.
than the senate bill. As an earnest, he I —
said, of the determination of the demo- 1 ' ■’rolillitHou Amriubiinit.
cratic party to fulfill the pledges made in its I Washington, July 26.—Senator Blair,
platform, there was now brought forward from the committee on education and la-
bill to forfeit the most ; b° r - tO;day submitted a favorable report
valuable of all the grants
which had ever been made in the history
of the government to any corporation.
The democratic party proposed to make
this bill a test of its fidelity to its pledges
Complaint had been made in the senate
that if this and other forfeiture bills were
passed, rank injustice might be worked ti
the railroad corporations, and this com
plaint had been made as though it were
from the majority of the committee on*th
joint resolution proposing that an amend
ment to the constitution in relation to alco
holic liquors and other poisonous bever
ages be submitted to the legislatures of the
states for ratification. The amendment
provides that from and after the year 1900
the manufacture, side and importation of
distilled alcoholic intoxicative liquors, ev
ent for medicinal, mechanical, chemical
possible for congress to work a divestituri ; and scientific purposes and forjuse in arts,
of any legal rights. j shall cease.
Van Eaton, of Mississippi, supported the —
' Mississippi, suppo
senate bill. He could find nothing in th.
platform of any political party'which | W.vshin
could justify congress in violating an ex- I day King,
pressed or implied contract, as was done which wai
iTON. July 26.—in the house to
il Louisiana, offered a resolution
forced to tin committee on
in the house hill. He was. hot willing to I foreign affairs, requesting the president to
how so abjectly before the communistic I communicate to the house information
cry of ‘'damn the railroads” as to break ! concc.ining the alleged illegal detention ol'
contracts and to break the pledges of I A. K. Cutting, an American citizen, by the
parties in national conventions. It ivas Mexican authorities at Paso Del Norte, and
whether an additional force of United
States troops had been ordered to Fort
Bliss.
demagoguery in the lowest and meanest
sense.
Voorhees, of Washington territory,
favored the house bill declaring that tnere
were high reasons of public policy why I Tile I'niled States ami .Mexico,
the land grant of the Northern Pacific Washington, July 26.—It is stated at
company should be taken from its control ] the war department that no United States
as fares this could legally he done. He troops have been ordered to Fort Bliss in
pictured what he characterized as the- op- I anticipation of trouble at, El Paso, arising
pression of railroad companies as;: radioed from the reported refusal of the Mexican
m Washington territory, asserting that it authorities to release editor Cutting. It is
dictated laws relating to railroad taxation
and set at defiance every legislative action
of the people.
Oats, of Alabama, argued against the
equitable and legal power of congress to
pass the senate bill.
Payson, of Illinois, entered into an ex
haustive review of the case, but pending
the conclusion of hie remarks the house at
5 o’clock adjourned.
Semite.
Washington, July 26.
the judiciary committee
dated further that the concentration of
Mexican troops at that place does not in
itself signify n probable rupture of the
present peaceful relations with this coun
try, but is more likely a strategic military
movement against the revolutionary par
ties in Mexico.
llmrrf j Good I li.
Washington, July 26.—The president
to-day nominated Charles M. Thomas, of
„ I Kentucky, to (be associate justice of the
’• Georg , from | supreme court of Idaho, and Dupont
:i reporter back Guerre United States attorney for the
tke fioiue bill removing the political Gtsu- j southern district of Georgia,
bilitjes of 1 nomas R. \\ are, of Virginia. |,
A resolution offered by Coke, Saturday, ; ‘ '' “ ' *■
discharging the committee on finance from : V .asiiington. July 26.—Hie president
further consideration of the joint house has reiuried the oleomargme hill to the
resolution directing the payment of the j attorney-general ior an opinion as to its
surplus in the treasury on the public debt i constitutionality,
was taken up, hut on a statement by Sher- I ~ ]
man, that in ail human probability, the | Gmmit .turn',
joint resolution would lie reported to- Washington, July 28.—The conferbes
morrow for the action of thelsenate, the I on the river and harbor bill have failed to i parsons, sn
matter went over. reach an agreement and will so report to | strike, said
Ingalls offered a resolution, which was j the respective houses,
adopted, requesting the president to com-
.1: i..f. —, ....... ,l. n
ntimiat
tod,
di
velopments. After the vast quantity of
testimony similar to that already gi' on by
Detective Jannesen from other detectives
who have, for various purposes, been em
ployed to watch the movements of the
Chicago dynamitets for the past two years,
some of them in the pay of the Citizens’
Association and others In the service of the
Pinkerton agency at the instance of foreign
governments, a dozen witnesses «ill be
called to give the substance of incendiary
speeches made by Parsons, Spies and Fiei-
den at Haymnrket on the evening of May
4th, preceding the bomb massacre. The
prosecution expects to rest its case by next
Saturday, although it may take State
Attorney Grinnell a little longer time to
get in all the available evidence, much of
which has unexpectedly come to hand
since the trial commenced.
The story published in a New York
paper Saturday, regarding an alleged in
terview with Ignatz Swahatka in that city,
in which Swahatka is made to confess that
he threw the fatal Hnymarket bomb, finds
no credence among tne authoiities here.
The opinion ot those who have had
most to do with the investigation
of the case and With the direction of. the
efforts that have been put forth to find Un
real bomb thrower, or to ascertain who in
is, has settled down to one of two peri-mis,
viz.: The man shot and killed b> Officer
Madden or Rudolph Schimuble, the ma
chinist who lias made his escape. The cir
cumstances point most clearly to the lat
ter.
The.full force and meaning of the testi
mony of the Pinkerton men in the anarch
ists’ trial will hardly be understood urn 2
more of it is put in. There is more of it to ,
come. Detective Janssen is only one of!
five of Pinkerton’s oldest officers who were
put to work early last winter to find
out how much the anarchist crowd
actually meant by their speeches and
who In the prosecution of their work pen
etrated tlic anarchist dens, took part in
their moat secret conclaves, listened to
their instructions to their dupes and re
ported daily to VV A. Pinkerton, their
employer. Pinkerton has been employed
by a party of the largest property owners
in the city to make the investigation and
furnish the information obtained as he got
it. His men were not employed to
accuse or convict anybody. They
were invited to report tacts
simply as they found them, and their testi
mony is; therefore, not open to the objec
Y
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PRICE FIVE CENTS
i In
’a-.- . 'I'lic Feeling
awI Amcricans is s-i
lint, and as the ’IV
i! antipathy for th
m outbreak may i.
mt is
il nil. -
enlimc
utting, even among
It- Ol El Paso, and
language towards
-s not exhibit him
At the same time
FAlTS filll'-l FlliiF.il'i'\ SIIDKfN.
Marquis of Salisbury Kiss, i
Queen's Hands.
10
r week:
wit
,u.
of hail. It is asserted \
only a specimen cd'
lerieuus generally in
Mexico, and “that the previous indiffor- i
enee of our government to clear cases of |
injustice has begotten In the Mexican |
■ 1 rmtempt for the American Hag,
mind i
London, July 26. -The .Marquis of Salis
bury arrive i
from Osborn
i hi! queen's commands to form a govern
ment. Great crowds assembled at all th
hospital corps. At Oravelotte a fragment
of shell struck Herman, and when the sol
di -t .- came around after the battle to bury
the dead, lie was put Into n shal'ow nit
with twenty or thirty other bodies. Grief
at the news of ids death drove Anna out of
he? mind, and wandering on the battle
field she Hought the pit in which he had
been buried and dug out his body. Sol-
diers came upon her and forcibly carried
her off to the hospital, whence she was
sent hack to Germany, but they did not
bother to reinter the body she had resur
rected. That night it rained heavily
and Herman was revlvod by it
He was nursed buck to life, but.
lay at noon in London a portion of the skull pressing upon the,
where lie went to receive | brain made him insane. Anna recovered
her reason, and, thinking him dead, came
live with her father in America. Last
hief railway stations between Portsmouth fall a celebrated Gcrmnn doctor examined
and a reckless disregard of the rights of and London and tendered the new pro- Herman, and by trepanning restored him
American citizens in Mexico.” If such lie ” ’ ” ’ ' '*
the case, it is high time the Mexicans were
enlightened as t.o the rights of Americans, j station an enormous crowd had assembled
and the power and determination of their to welcome the marquis, and they cheered
government to protect them in the fiql en- I him loudly when he alighted from th
inter ovations. Me declined to address | to reason, lie' made inquiries about bis
the crowds anywhere. At the London betrothed, and, discovering her location in
Joymcnt of them.
FIGHTING FOR FOOD.
Till 1 1P--.pei'llte t'.
mlilimi of 11n
l.iilmiilur.
l-'IsluTim'ii uf
St. Johns, N. F., July 26.—Further par
ticulars of distress among the fishermen of
Labrador have been received. Seventy
Esquimaux who demanded food from a
store at Mugenford, which could not be
given them owing to the needs of the in
habitants and tlic small supply, made a
rush for I la- harbor si irehouse where flour
and fish were stored. The men ol the
small settlement gathered to defend their
only hope of existe.'iye and a desperate fight
ensued, in which four of the marauding
Esquimaux were nearly killed and two of
the store house defenders were seriously
injured. The Esquimaux, finding that
thev could not obtain the food by force, re
treated mid sent in several of their number
to ask l'oi a small quantity of food which
they said was absolutely necessary to the
continued existence of their wives and
children. Two hundred pounds of flour
r.d about fifty pounds of frozen cod were
given them.
FROM SAVANNAH.
It. I.ii-ie.- Wrlirht Xiuiilmiti'il liy the First Sen*.
Special to Enquirer-Sun.
Savannah, Ga., July 26.— 1 The senatorial
convention of the first district convened
to-day at Eden. M. O'Byrne, of Chatham,
was made permanent, chairman; and Jas.
Nciuiingev secretary. The two-thirds rule
was adopted. It. F. C. Smith, of Bryan
county, and H. Gregg Wright, of Effing
ham, were placed m nomination. Chat
ham offered no candidate. Wright was
nominated on the first ballot. He was no
tified of tlie nomination and accepted.
train.
HE KISSED HER HANDS.
The Marquis of Salisbury while at Os
borne kissed the hands of the queen and
was appointed her prime minister. He
has convened a meeting of the conserva
tive members of tlie house of commons at
the C'arleton club to-morrow. Lord Car
digan will probably he selected as secre
tary for the colonies in the new cabinet.
CHANGED for worse.
John Buskin's illness has changed for
worse.
M K HAKI, DAVITT COMING OVER.
Michael Davitt sails for New York
Thursday next.
KIKI.P GETS DAMAGES FROM HENNETT.
In the libci suit of Cyrus W. Field against
Jas. G. Bennett, tIn- Sheiiff's jury to-day
awarded the plaintiff $25,000 damages. Tin
defendant was condemned to pay all the
Brooklyn, wrote to her. and learned that
she was free and loved him still. A week
ago he reached America, and to-day’s
wedding ends the story for the present.
THIRD WEEK OF THE STRIKE.
Aaktmr the AVItliilrinrnl of Mr. ('okIii'n Resigna
tion.
Augusta Chronicle.
The third week of the Augusta factory-
strike has begun, and the situation is un-
There is not as much prospect
of a solution of the difficulty ns there was
changed.
a few weeks ago. The mill men issued
their reply nt that time and are deter
mined in their action. The organization
of the mill presidents makes them even
more formidable, ns the contest is no long
er a single-handed one. .
The operatives ’are strong in tneir deter
mination ami there are no perceptible
changes in their feeling about tlie strike.
They sav their cause is just, ami that they
♦ — , will'be satisfied with what is just—nothing
Frimrii. I less. Everything has been quiet, and or-
AN attack on the panama canai. levlv, and not a single arrestfor anycause
scheme. I lms been made in file vicinity of the Au-
Paris, Juiv 26?—A violent anonymous gusto factory since tlie strike commenced
attack has been made here on tlie Panama —not even a simple drunk.
:. ml enterprise. Tlie attack is made in » The Chronicle yesterday afternoon asked
pamphlet, stronglv written and eontainin:
seventy pages. The till" is, "Engineers
Letters on tlie Panama t anal.” The cover
lion which is usually urged with force
against detectives’, evidence that is pro
cured to convict.
A. C. Jonner, the detective whose dis
closures occasioned a sensation Saturday,
took the stand this morning and tlie ex
amination of the witness was resumed by
Foster, who asked concerning witness’
version of tlie conversation which took
place between Spies and an aged
”* A !*• “fZ, «S*.S" : B&ttRSSr’tSS. SitStin-mi lie
j bears the imprint of “Sarcophagus,’’ and
: tile work is dedicated tolhe“ Yicllmsoftbe
I Panama Craze.” The pamphlet describes
I till! mortality among the workmen cm-
i ployed in making the canal; describes in
! anecdotal form tlie state of things on the
j isthmus; tells of the heedless squandering
i of the French public money, and in con
clusion states that of tlie 21 sections of the
canal only live arc yet in anything like an
advanced state of construction.
Till' Velocity ot’ Unlit.
The Cleveland experiments of Professor
Michelson indicated tlie velocity of light
to be 299,953 kilometers per second. ’! he
Washington experiments of Ptofessor New
comb, using only results supposed to be
Wright is a farmer of Effingham county, nearly free from constant errors, gave 299,
and brother the late Gen. A. R. Wright. 860 Ikllometers per second, a difference of
He is conservative and a man of ability ' " . . -
ON CHANGE.
t.iitii’
as it
Wall
hut seven kilometers, or about four and
j three-quarter miles. These experiments
j are held by scientists all o’, < r the world to
| lie of far superior precision lo any others
’ vet executed. No other experiments gave
, such satisfactory results us those siinulta-
I neously carried on by Professor Newcomb
,P Washington and Professor Michelson at
. the Case school in Cc velnnd. Professor
Newcomb’s finally concluded result is that
light travels in vacua at the rate of 290.860
ouple of prominent operatives if they
did not think Hie present misunderstand
ing could tie arbitrated.
" Yes,” said one of them ; “ nil we want
is what !h fair. The operatives will dcz
whatever they are ordered by tlie Knights,,
and I believe our leaders will arbitrate, or
do anything that is just Id botli sides.
HE U F, F C'( 1MM ITTF.ES.
“Relief committees have been establish
ed, and we will see that no one will suffer,
never mind how long the strike lasts.
They are actively at work now making
ample provisions for tlie needy, and our
idle companions will not want.”
MR. ( (IKIN' RKOl'KSTKD NOT TO RESIGN.
A petetion signed by five hundred of the
operatives was sent during the week to
tlie directors of the Augusta factory stat
ing that they had learned with regret that
Mr. Francis G. Cogin, the superintendent,
was about to resign, and petitioned the
board of directors to request Mr. Cogin to
vi ithdraw his resignation.
His lung and faithful service to tne facto
ry and his uni’ ersal kindness to tlie opera
tives have endeared him to them.
'tin- li'imlnli Tlqi a Him Vi' Gver the Finer.
New York, Juiv 24.—John Hartman, a
Hollander and n shinu'iuker, of Paterson,
N. was too inquisitive about lus pastor,
and he now regrets it, The conduct of
Itev. Johannes Van Den Broek, who pre*
lilies over the church that Hartman went
reports,
not know Mr. Gage. Witness said that
danng^th^thjgoverniuent'couurtje^i’ver: j **•».? -ctlv.ty - early trading and .slight
thrown bv force only, and on another oe-
showing an advance ranging from | to t,
the latter Reading. Tlie market showed
.Saratoga. July 23.—First rne
Proiiu.su won, llordelaiso 2d,
lines were established, except on North- I ”T’., G”
n Pacific, hut before noon dullness reign- j l,< ” 1 ’
ixsion Fielden told witness the force ivas j c '*i u 1 aeine. ljul lie.loie iiono ou ness reign-
to be used May 1, this year. On August lil e . d ‘'J nd prices rallied, ! dull and fault
Parsons, speaking of the street ear inen’s I , ‘.
iking
that il Inspector Bonfield wa
I'asscl lii llir
Washington, July 28. The senate to
day passed the house hill directing the
commissioner of labor to make an invest!-
municate Information concerning tlie al
ieged detention of A. K. Cutting, an
American citizen, by tlie Mexican authori
ties at Paso Del Norte ; also, whether any
additional United States troops have been j gation as to convict labor,
recently ordered to Fort Bliss. | .
The senate then, at 11:45, proceeded to
the consideration of tlie deficiency appro-
priotion hill.
Tiie first clause that attracted attention
ivas one on page 29 in relation to the in
crease of the water supply in Washington.
As passed by the house the Dill appropri
ates $180,000 to complete tlie reservoir and
M9o,000 to complete the tunnel, the
'Mali,
continued until the last hour,
I shot u social revolution would he inatig-'| " dl J; n , a decided U P," ,Vu-IF
! u ,. a t e( j ” took place. 1 lie market finally closed
William A. Pinkerton, chief of th,
lii iiulitii-an Senator.' in ( aiii'ua.
Washington, July 26.—At six o'clock
the republican senators assembled in
caucus m the judiciary committee room.
The committee appointed at the caucus at
Senator Sherman’s house to outline a sub
stitute for Morrison’s surplus resolution,
made its report, recommending that the
minimum reserve lie fixed ut $1 U),fX)0,009
tional detective agency, testified that In
had employed detectives to ferret out the
secret doings of the anarchists, but this
was ordered stricken out, and Pinkerton
left the stand.
Grinnell read the following notice in ti e
Alarm of October 17,1886:
“Armed section of American group
meets every Monday night at No. 51 West
Lake street ”
j firm at about the best figures ol the day
, The net result of the day’s operations is an
advance of small fractions for most of tlie
[ active list. Bales 152,000 shares.
A TERRIBLE FIGHT.
j Four II,mi,Ire,I Itallinm amt IliuiqarlaiiH Him
Tovi‘1 lu-r.
Second race, three quarters of a mile,
Bessie Jane won. Theodasius 2d, Procras
tination 3d; time 1:18.
Third race, one and three-quarter miles,
; Oudurer won, Monogram 2d, Oretino 3d;
, time 2:06.
I Fourth race, three-quarters of a mile,
Mona won, Jennie 2d, Frankie B 3d; time
| 1:14.
| Fifth race, one and one-eighth miles,
i Frank Ward won, Sovereign Pat 2d, George
| I 3d; time 1:69.
The sir
ha
W. P. Freeman, a newspaper reporter, i Shenandoah, Pa., July 2h. A ser
Id that at the meetinir on theilake front l '°'. broke out between two gang*
Fill.
| Boston, July 26.—The steamer Gate
, City, w hich was ashore at NhiihIioii, reaeh-
! ed here at 6 a. mi. to-da.v in tow oft wo
tugs and anchored at South Boston, wher
| hat. coat and shoes off. He looked as
tonished when he saw me, and I suppose 1
; looked astonished, too. ' I asked him
whether that woman was a relative of ids
and he said ‘Yes.’ I said it was ail rj/ht
l then and went out. Going up l lie streeS «*■
j met tiie woman coming back with a pitcher
! of beer. I asked her whether the itev. Mc .
Vun Den Broek was any kin to her and
i she said ‘No.’ That, with what I had
seen, was enough for me. 1 went
, home. Last night about 10 o’clock I was
ill my store when the dominie came
in wit h a man 1 do not know. The domi
nie sat down on a chair and asked me what
1 thought of him. i did not want any
trouble, and I said I thought ho was a good
man and wouldn’t do anything wrong. He
got as mad as tin devil right away. I
guts' lie saw i did m mean what I said,
and lie tried hard to get me to say some
thing else, tint 1 stuck to it that lie was
r ’ ■ i l 1 s i J il . IJJillllllUHl I vOGi i V *V ^ t l 7
amounts to be expended under the super- ; and ,, le max j mum a t $130,000,1X10. A pro
vision of the army engineers The com-j viso wns added authorizing tlie president
mittee amendment provides that t b ( -' I t 0 suspend the operation of the resolution
money shall be expended under the super-| jn em J ncles A qU0 rum of the caucus
vision of a board composed of one-hal. , did not wnnt t0 [ lear the lull report, and
civilians and half army engineers, and the j wheu Senator Allison had finished reading
scope of the board is extended to, embrace aud explaining it, it was decided to ad-
the entire system of water supply tor the ; ourn without action, leaving the result to
district. The committee amendment was , | he t ] Dance committee at its meeting to-
adopted. . , . , , , morrow morning.
The reading of the bill was interrupted , _ m , m
to permit Dawes to report from the com- : pn<iT flFFICF EMPLOYES
mittee on appropriations the fortification | THIEVISH POST Or
bill. He gave notice that lie would call it [
up as soon as the deficiency hill was ! n nw H l .| l uiilicmis Wtw Slumlil H
passed. » 1
The house bill to increase the naval es
tablishment was laid before the senate
and referred to the committee on naval af
fairs. ,
The reading of the deficiency hill was
resumed. An item was inserted to pay
Edwin B. Smith $2000 for legal services
out l
Odin
Worked (In
• Hifii Tat
( liinitfo I
Chicago July 26.—Col. W. H. Bolton,
chief of the division for handling-second-
class mail matter at the Chicago post office,
was arrested shortly after noon to-day,
embezzlement of public
returns. Tlie
have traced
in her, 1884, : fiow the rank
intimated that the 1 jn)atc J L ’“ J —
To arms!” In his speech Fielden dis- , , ,, „ --. „ ,,
cussed legislation, and said it was useless f. he tvootls and
to attempt any thing by legislation. Force ! !"*“• Several of thelfungar anb arebiidly
was the only resource^ left. IVitnesssaw | injured, and three of the number are ic-
Pnrsons, Spies and Fielden on tlie wagon, ! l’erted dying.
and he also thought he saw Schawl). When “ 1 '
the police come up he heard the police TWO NOTABLE DEATHS.
give the command to the crowd to dis-
perse, which was followed by the exp lo- . .. . v .. v .,
Sion and firing. Witness crouched behind ’ A ,,tr 1 N "” '" rk
the wagon until the firing ceased. Ilciiiorrat l«m.tnny Suilclciil).
On cross examination witness said lie did
:ir the remark attributed to Fielden,
is little iu the appearance of the steamer | friend lie had brought tried to take him
to indicate the serious nature of her inju- offme. I field out my left arm to ward
riea. off the blows which I was afraid the
m — ~ dominie would give me. and he took the
Xlnullnz ,,f tlic llluc unit the Kru). j ann j n j,j a teetli and bit it severely. I got
Richmond, Va., July 26.—The George loose, and he followed me into the store,
C. Strong Post G. A. K., of Brooklyn, ar- and threw me over my work bench. Then
rived here to-day on the steamship Old Do- he picked me up and threw me to the other
minion, of the Old Dominion line, from i side of the room. I tell you he is apow-
not
“we are peaceable.”
Joses breiilint., city tenement house in
spector, wus (ailed and testified that lie
was present when Spies told the reporter
the police could lie (Ici-
New York, • Jfiy 26.—Gen. James H.
Van Allen, . naged millionaire of Newport,
was lost overboard from the Cunard steam
ship Umbria, just before duyligl
morning of Thursday last, under circum
stances tiiat leave it a matter of conjecture
w the ranks c the police could lie dec- "
‘KrtTSiS total 'shortage M"f^m‘So,o56 toflOO.- i ArbUerttng ' office^tSm afternoon ! ThoinpsVul'.Teader of the New
L were P addeLF^8 -im John T. Stewart, weigher was „f May 3d aud saw Spies prepare the ‘ Re- ! Y^k_^u 1 ^ i! (le |= cy «nd ex^:on,™is-
ment'to'importers of dues | also arrested Bolton was i venge” eire
. ,-tao $626,674 on a ”'=?'' I ™rv likmv to betbUowedby
fni lr r C :“i C S, n T.^Y’± l ; year e ' 1 SSlcMheyclalm implicates a number of
»S])ies prepare
3ulnr.
This witness trembled violently during i
his examination. He lias been a recog- '
nized socialist and did not wish apparent*
ly to be a witness in the case.
sioner of public works, was found dead in
liis bed tnis morning, having died from
apoplexy during the night. He was very
fleshy.
in 5„ ,n ?^ inserted, to pay ! fellow offieiais, and even private
Prolndili* Suiriilo.
Norfolk, Va., July 26.—Dei
trusjj.
Maximos, a prominent young Greek cot-
j ton buyer, hired a row boat Saturday af-
avowed purpose of going
morning the boat wits
his coat, vest, hat and
mild nowhere be found
New York. They were met down the
river by a delegation from the Phil Kear
ney Post G. A. It., It. E. Dee Camp of Con
federate Veterans and escorted to the city
e cumin, , W^icre several hours were spent in
daylight on the ' ™itn:g places of interest,
• 7 the confederate soldiers home
this afternoon the visitors, escorted by
union and confederate veterans and two
companies of the first regiment of the* Vir
ginia Volunteers, proceeded to the cunitol
grounds, where tney were reviewed by
Gov. Fit/. Hugh Lee, who welcomed the
visitors in hearty and eloquent terms.
They were entertained this evening by the
military of the city and to-morrow
most of them v. iil go to Petersburg to visit
the battle grounds about that city.
erful man. He just threw me all around
the store, and I was pretty well used up.
Having satisfied himself he left, and I went
to a doctor, who dressed my arm.”
The police were looking for the Rev. Mr.
including Van Den Broek yesterday. It was said
Late that he had left Paterson. The woman
I could not be found in her apartments
which were locked, and the other tenants
| said that she had been packing up to go
away. None of them knew her name on
anything about her, except that she was
| supposed to be a widow and that the cler
gyman came to see her nearly ever day.
A Hun• Fossil.
j Alex Chopps, of this city, has in his pos
session a very rare fossil. Not long ago,
] while on a professional trip to Ohio, he
visited the state stone quarry, near the city
of Columbus, in hopes of gathering a few
specimens of carniferous limestone fossils.
He reached the quarry just as the men had
succeeded in blasting up a large section of
bor.
The bill
senate, and
one iu reference to the
works, were concurred
ment was changed in a
lars not affecting its main features, aim ”‘‘™ business'until his appointment to
then the amendment wns agreed to and gaged in busmiss^ Balto ^ held in
‘^The’senate then went into secret session, $10,060 and Stuart in $.5000 hail this after-
ter ordering a recess from 6 to s. i
"Si r =d^it except !
— | K&f ;
in a few slight parties- ! ^^F'came back 'to Chicago and em I Paso, Texas
its main features, and lit then tame a-K a „ IJO h ltmen t to ! Medina unde
after ordering a in— . .
minutes later the officers of the senate
were sent to the corridors, the committee
rooms and the telegraph and < newspoiHii
offices of the second
pants of which
At 6 o'clock
o’clock, the proceedings
tinned in secret session.
The senate reconvened
at 8 o’clock. At S:J5 the doors ncii -e-
A far I tor Klil'ol.
Rich
A Fatal Knilriiii'l .tciidoii:.
Fort Wayne, Iud., July 26.—The west I
hound limited express over the Pittsburg, '
Fort Wayne and Chicago road, due at Val
paraiso, Indiana, at 8 a. m., ran into an
spondent for some weeks ; open switch and crashed into some freight j tlic lower strata. To *his infTnite delight,
l he wns an-! Dcremptorv demand of our government and friends believe that lie committed sui- cars on a side track. Mart Burk, oge of i he found the above-mentioned fossil.
n 5 Totted States For his immediate release. It appears that eide. I the oldest engineers on the road, was in- ' Thinking that it might be a new species
bought a i Cutting was the editor of a paper called , -TT' „ , ! Jtantly lulled. '1 lie fireman jumped from [ belonging to the family of Cephalopoda s.
He left Mis- I El Centinela, at El Passo del Norte, just Origin nf .hi'I lug Hat. the engine and escaped with slight injury, he wrapped it up carefully andt
)ss the Rio Grande, in Mexico, from El Boston Bulletin. No passengers AVere injured. brought it home. Two weeks ago he
A Mcxicun-8paniard named 1 Jt is a curious fact unknown to the vast • 1 ■’ sent it to the Hugh Miller society of
ndertook to start a rival newspa- majority of th" people that the first silk | Ki iiiiiiu- Itimiuni'-. ! New York to be examined by the eminent
per, whereupon Cutting, both in his paper hat was made uoout fifty years ago; that, | New York, July 24.—Mayor Whitney, 1 geologists of that body, and Mr. Chopps
and in a card in the El Paso Herald, ot El like so many other articles which are com-J at his office in Brooklyn, married to-day
Paso, Texas, denounces Medina us a j mon and of every day use, it was of Chinese ' Herman Krause and Anna Esehenbach.
“fraud” and’ “beat” and offered to give . origin. The story runs that e French sea
captain on the coast of China, desiring to
have his shabby beaver hat replaced by a
new one, took it ashore, and as they had
not the material they made him a silk one
instead. This, it appears, happened in
him
MOND, Va., July 26.—Charles C. j waslthereupon arrested
‘American satisfaction." Cutting
prison without
1882, and he carried rlie hat to Paris the
same year. Here it was immediately
copied, and in a few years became a reg
ular style.
Prussian war medals decorated the^room’f
breast., and something unusual about their
demeanor led to questioning, which devel-
1 oped a rent untie story. Herman and
Anna lived at Friederichsau, on the Rhine,
and h( was eighteen years old when the*
Fr inco-Prussian war broke out. He
marched off to fight for the Vater-
land, and his sweetheart rode after him
in one of the wagons in the Red Cinss
ry of that society, wherein he states that
at their last meeting they made a close ex-
-mjna'ion of his fossil, and had arrived at
the conclusion that it was nothing short of
a genuine Bologna sausage in a fossilized
state, and, whereas it was found in the
lower strata of the carniferous limestone of
Ohio, it went to prove that the Dutch in
habited America nearly a million yea rs.
Guilder and biixen! Vat next?