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li.i soil'll IN BRIEF
Tl,- -rf ot He? Progress Portrayed in
■ and Pointed Paragraphs
A N FT- EPITOME OF HAPFEN
REAL INTEREST FROM DAY
. lY '• ITH1N HER BORDERS.
it R rd, Va., grain elevator,
lOt I; • . line of tbe Chesapeake and
O- 1 in tbe northern portion of
tb ‘ : fire Monday night and
W with its contents. Loss
• fully insured.
. :.v.3 W. E. Turner, the
t», : _ . a k clerks who skipped
out t o the night of thous- Satur
day . w ith about eleven
a - ■ g :■ the Capital City
S . .. t. kite been captured.
• 1 annual session of the grand
car.' r C ' nfede ate Veterans was
bt :k> M . Miss., Tuesday, Gov
«rx - * S: jrand commander,
'1 s- ssippi _’rand camp was
i, and w hereafter be
k m t. - M:-sifs : ppi division of the
U- ? :-. i rate Veterans, of which
<3 - ..b B. Gordon is urand com
ct-r
N;a* Frankfort. Ky.. Monday morn
: 'itinders and Jim Fores were
k. mi explosion of powder from
ar=ena!. Others are reported
no names are given. The
7L-.U £ I were of a party appointed to
: the state arsenal and put it in
rJ They took all the ammunition
a: - :-s to a farm near Frankfort to do
tl-. •• .-.nd while engaged 1.200
p 7--* m i ded. pr wder caught from a spark
ATT CIO
_ rey.cmg . . at Bruns- „ ,
w - - . Monday -1' over uater the passage I urn in
• ' ....
. f-.r
- “P-’' water .he ueepest
-sr.s now afloat up to the
. i he city. who ar<
- -
der7-e>7 F.s-d in the bill are assured
::: . pass the senate. If so, before
I’ :.T! w;rk will be actually begun on
^ : it. snd in less than three months
B uusw; will have the deepest water
of any city n the coast.
A - :-n from Savannah, Ga., in
clu: : _ :h may r, health officer of the
civ 4»c members of the sanitary board
a: . :.- i «f aldermeD, visited New
Or.- . -■ >1 oday. for the purpose of in
epectmf the quarantine system of that
CliT. W the view of establishing a
ACi.,U stem at Savannah. The dele
git i i-ok in the quarantine sta'ion,
eiitit; ::below Nt-w Orleans with
the ::-.s:iect of the Louisiana board of
Lta'.th and thoroughly inspected the
w mere.
A • -- from Birmingham, Ala., state
tL»: :d- ampment of the Second reg
iurf a-.- . p M- nday with a sensation.
11'. M xtg mc-ry vliays.the famous prize
u:i.. mtany, had to be forced into
can and they have been disposed to
sulk. Mon lav morning their iusubordi
cs:. . ■•& :.ed the point of firing off
gUli : the presence of the colonel in
viol jb of orders and the colonel
pn rnptly had the whole company arres¬
ted. The v tlicers were stripped of their
sid« arms and the men of their guns and
all sen* iiome under guard of the Mont
I omrry True Blues, their famous rival
ome company.
A BIG HAUL.
Train Bobbers Secure Between Fift
and Seventy-fiveThousand Dollars.
The Missouri, Kansas and Texas pas¬
senger train No. 2, south bound, was
‘ eld up by a gang of masked robbers at
Adair, L T., late Thuisday night. The
robbers secured the contents of the safe
of the Pacific express and made good
their escape. It is believed the robbers
were the noted Dtlton gang. The
amount stolen is between fifty and sev
suty-flve thousand dollars.
The gang of robbers has been camped
in che territory for some time past be¬
tween Prior creek and the place where
tbe crime was committed. About 9
o’clock on tbe night of the robbe-ry they
made their way to Adair, bringing their
Winchesters to bear upon the station
agent. They proceeded to ransack the
Ration :h«y of all valuables. This accomplished, arrival
calmly sat down to await the due
A the north-bound passenger train
thereat 9:40 o’clock p. m. The entiie
contents of the safe was secured. In ibe
skirmish that took place between Captain
McKinney, chief of the railroad detective
force and tbe Indian guards while the ;
robbery was taking place, Mr. McKin
ney shoulder received d a of slight the guards wound received in tbe j
a one
a bullet in his log. Two stray bullets
entered a drug store up towu and ser
tousiy injured Drs. Youngblood an i W.
L. Goff, who wire sitting in the build
ing at tbe time. Dr. Goff has since died
from his wounds and Dr. Youngblood is I
in a serious condition. The exact value
of plunder obtained by tbe robbers can
not be learned, railroad i ffieials refusing
to state the amount taken.
The Stockholders Must Pay.
Receiver Beall, of the Maverick bank
at Boston, Mass., received papers frtoru
Monday, Acting Comptroller of Currency Nixon,
000 the ordering an assessment of $400,
on stockholders of the b mk.
The asse>sment is for the full limit al
lewed by law. The stt ckholders sre
giv;n which tiU Receiver August 12th to pay it. aft. i
Beall will enforce the
.assessment by wri’s of law
Th* steamers Alaska and Aurania ran A
across the Atlantic to New York, the
jr^* delayed by lan k brokeu lu f by machinery. twenty minutes though
«,
READY TO FIGHT.
The Situation in Idaho Is Alarming
And More Troops Ordered.
A dispatch from Portland, Ore., says:
The Union Pacific people have just re¬
ceived advices from Coeur d’Alene that a
Northern Pacific railroad bridge, together
with several hundred feet of track, was
blown up by the strikers west of Mullan
Wednesday morning. The company is
preparing to take all the non-union men
out of the mines to Tekoa. The union
men assert that the moment troops ap
pear on the scene they will blow up
Bunker Hill, Sullivan, Sierra Nevada and
aem mines. I he burning of the
bri ge near Mullan will hold
ee troops there unless they march
to Wallace or AVardner, which is almost
ten miles. It is now reported that the
union men have taken Yanelashutt, of
Per land; William Sweeney, and other
mine owners, and will hold them as
hostages until the trouble is settled. The
wires are in bad shape and it is almost
impossible to get any information from
Wallace. The wires have been cut.
MORE TROOPS ORDERED.
A Washington dispatch 1 savs : General
c Schofield, u * i a u having ■ received • , information - .
that the situation in the Coeur d’Alene
mining district of Idaho is more serious
than at first supposed, has ordered ten
more companies of infantry and one troop
of cavalry to the scene of trouble.
WILL FIGHT to the death.
Another ... dispatch r . , from - Boise -r, . City
Idaho says: Governor Willey has issued
a proclamation placing Shoshone county
under martial law. AAord has been re
ceived that three companies of federal
troops from Missoula have arrived at
Mullane. The other troops have not
been heard from. Adjutant General
Curtis, who is in command for the state,
who went to Coeur d’Alene in advance of
the out! ook has not beeil beard from,
and it is feared he has fallen into
tbe hands of the strikers. A dis
p R fc,h to the governor from Judge
HeyburD) at' Spokane, say3 the
union men drove 132 non-union miners
out Tuesday, firing on them and killing
two. Superintendent Dickinson, of the
Northern Pacific, telegraphs the governor
from Tacoma that tracks and bridges
have been destroyed in the vicinity of
Mullane and Wallace, and that the wires
have been cut. Another message to the
governor says that several non-uuion
men have been blown up, and that the
union . , the .
men propose to ugut troops to
the death.
THE SITUATION ALARMING.
The Idaho delegation in congress re
ceived a number of telegrams Wednes
d.y iu rtg-rd I lie trouble, in Cowr
d Atene mining region, borne ot them
were from W. B. Heyburn, solicitor for
one of the mining companies, now at Spo¬
kane, Wash., and contained the follow¬
ing information:
One hundred and thirty-two unarmed men
were taken to the Fourth-of-July canyon by the
strikt rs last night and robbed, and then fired
on. Can’t learn how many men were killed,
but know of two union men making preDara
tion- t i start 200 more out this evening. We are
as helpless as children. The miner.-.’ union at
Wallac has just made a demand on Delarhuutl
A Gross that they telegraph if to Washington tc
stop the tloop-, and they do not they will
blow up the Union and Gem mills at once. The
shua ion is ve y desperate. One hundred and
fifty of the non-union miners were being
marched out of toe country this a'teniocn, and
I expect they will night—that he treated like the ones and
maiehett out last is, robbed
shot down like dogs. Some of them who es¬
caped h - ve arrived here (Spokane), and giv<
horrible ace uuts of the affair.”
INVESTIGATING COMMITTEE
In the Homestead Affair Ready to
Report.
ATie special commit'ee of the house,
which has been investigating the iron
and steel workers’ strike at homestead,
returned to Washington Friday. Chair¬
man Oates, in speaking of the investiga¬
tion, said that the committee had not
found matters so bad there as they had
feared and expected. The differences
between the strikers and the Carnegie
people had not, however, been adjusted,
and so far as a settlement was concerned,
tbe two parties were about as far apart
now as at the beginning of the difficulty.
Mr. Oates is inclined to the opinion that
both parties to the difficulty are in fault. If
Frick had been more patient the and the had
taken pains to explain to men ex¬
act situation as to prices and profits, the
trouble might have been averted. So if
the Amalgated union had been less con¬
tentious and had shown a disposition to
do what was fair and just, the differences
might have been amicably settled to the
satisfaction of all concerned. Mr. Oates
did not see, however, how the govern
ment could take action in the matter. It
was not, in his opinion, within its juris¬
diction.
Against a Mercantile Agency.
Judge Shipman, of th. United States
circuit court at'New York hauded down
ftn opinion Saturday denying the motion
f or a new trial made by R G. Dun & Co.,
a f New York city, iu the case of a bank
of Birmingham, Ala., against the mer
cautile agency for Dun & Co. Tbe suit
was to recover losses sustained t>_ v
bank through a report received from t .£
agency as to the standing of W. A.K.tts.
of Oswego. The bank gave Kitts credit
on Dun’s report. The court holds tha
the agency is responsible for the result o:
the report of its auent.
The Cholera in Persia.
A cablegram of Tuesday from it. Pe
tersburg, Russia, states it is semi- ffi
ally reported that the plague has Or .< i
out in the province of Khorasan, P- - . .,
The Novcsti urges the necessity f r art
iaternational agreement t stamp at*:.:
disease and to save Europe from
tagion.
AT HOMESTEAD. 1
Quiet Reigns but tbe Locked-oat Men
are Dissatisfied,
AND MAY AGAIN CACSE TROUBLE WHEN I
THE TIME ARRIVES FOR THE
WORKS TO START UP.
A Pittsburo- dispatch says; Saturday
^ ba followin 0 notice was posted by the
L ' arne(T ie Steel company at Homestead
iu the vicinity of the works, and was
5en t a ll over the country:
\ 0X30E _individual application for received employ¬
^ at Homeated Steel vS’orks either will by be telegraph
bv the superintendent, 6 o’clock m. Thursday,
or in person, until p.
July 21, 1*92. It is our desire to retamin
'
^rd^if i^tor? an7 which who have did not been take
par; ^ tbe attempts
made to interfere with our rights employes to manage do
our business. Such of our old as
not applv by the time above named wilt be
considered as having no desire to re-enter our
f-mplovment and positions which they held will
be given to other men, and those first applying
which thev choiCtt are of suitab.e. . ibis notice ^ tS°will win be no
given to empioves of the works and
afternon-complianoe with this, the places will
be filled with non-union men
The Carnegie Steel company has adver
tised for bids for furnishing materials
and buildings for 100 houses for the use
of the men employed in the mi11 - The
location is inside ot the enclosure, and
£ prote ction will thus oe assured the men,
en in their houses .
Ui were put iQ the postoffice mills, Sat
urday J t0 e verv old employe of the
with about fo rtv exceptions, running as
f 0 °c jj 0WS S . '
arDt ie stefc i Company, Limited, Home
stead steel Works, July 15.‘— Hear Sir: Repairs
will be resumed on Monday morning, July 18th.
We invite you to return to your old position.
Work to J. comm^aUhe^ual W. Potter, General Superintendent. time
SUNDAY DISPATCHES.
A mass meeting was held at the rink
at Homestead Sunday morning at which
about 4C0 men were present who repre
sent the mechanical department and day
laborers. Several speeches were made as
to the poster put up by 1 rick inviting the
aid men back to work and after some
consideration the following resolution
was proposed and passed unanimously:
Whereas, We the employes of the mechanical
department and day laborers of the Carnegie
steel works in Homestead, in meeting assembled
o£Lt the following as our view's in regard to
the labor troubles existing at sympathy present: with
Resolved. That we are in the
Amalgamated Association and p.edge ourselves
to stand with them to the end.
Resolved, That we consider it an injustice ilmS to
S'
under a guard, as we believe, in this land
of the free, all men should be free,
This means that the repair work,
which was to have begun will not now
be undertaken by the old men who will
not go back to work, and that new men
will have to be brought in if the com¬
pany proposes to open the works on
Thursday next, as all the furnaces are
cold and much rebuilding will have to
be done.
NINE DEATHS REPORTED.
George W. Rutter, steel worker, woun¬
ded in the riot of July 6th, died at the
homeophatic hospital Sunday. He was
forty-six years old and leaves a family.
Edward Speer, a Piukerton man of Chi¬
cago, who was at West Pennsylvania hos
pital, died at midnight, This makes
eleven deaths resulting from the riot. i
AN APPEAL FOR AID.
On Saturday the Central Labor Union
received an appeal for financial aid from
the Homestead iron and steel workers.
It was referred to the affiliated unions for
immediate action. The Central Labor
Federation appointed a special committee
to collect funds in aid of the Homestead
iron workers.
WARRANTS FOR STRIKERS.
Monday afternoon informations were
made before Alderman McMasters, at
Pittsburg, for murder against Hugh
O’Donnell, John McLucky, Lyle Critcb
low, Anthony Flaherty, Samuel Berket,
James Flannagan and Hugh Ross.
These men were all leaders of the strike
at Homestead, and they are charged
with the murder of T. J. Conners and
Silas Wayne, two of tbe Pinkerton men
killed in the riots. Warrants were is¬
sued, and it is probable the men will be
arrested at once with the exception of
Hugh O’Donnell, who is out of the city.
PLENTY OF AMMUNITION.
Dispatches of Monday from Home¬
stead are to the effect that while the mil¬
itary are not expecting a riot they are
making serious preparations for trouble.
A large additional amount of amniuni- !
tion has been ordered from the Frank- j
ford arsenal. There are 2.500,000 rounds
of ball cartridges there ; n I at lea t 50,000
additional expected. According to the
mi.itia officers, between fifteen and twen
ty workmen were smuggled into the mi.l
during the night,
GOV. PATTISOX AT HOMESTEAD.
Governor PattBou and staff left Harri
s n. Monday morning for Homestead in a
private car. The governor wiii probably j
rrmiin in Homestead for a week. 1
YELLOW FEVER IN MEXICO |
Spreading Eapidly and Many Deaths
Occurring.
Dispatches of Tuesday from the City
of Mexico state that the yellow fever
•c .rge continues unabated at \ era
Cr.z and the rate of morality is alarm
:ngiy .arge. Hundreds of "?*!'^oVe people are
,»*T;og the city, miV
there ..ire been death
wtv ea»p* the quarantine regulations
,*■* “ t.u: : L m<*s and escaped to this city
*h- ii*fror The government has
published strict quarantine regulations,
Ifi -tedHPlh 0
1!
r
mQ&m if ■Hi
JWTvJ P#f; i
<$ ■Zr/wrw a j
-
Women of every rank go bareheaded
in Mexico.
Strictly fashionahle china must now
be all white.
There are three thousand female com- ]
positors in the United States. !
The world’s typewriter record is 182
words a minute, held by a lady.
Airs. Edison, wife of the electric light [
expert, prefers candles to any other
form of household illumination. California, j
Mrs. Tuana Neil, of gets
$ 10,000 a year in paid the insurance business, |
the largest salary to any woman. >
The Woman's Medical College o! Chi.
cage has heeome a department of the |
Northwestern University of Evanston,
Ill.
Miss Charlotte M. Yonge the author
has given $10,000 for building a mis- j
sionary college at Auckland, New Zea
land.
The Empress of Germany has mani.
fested a deep interest in the religious
and charitable institutious in and about
Berlin.
A young St. Louis girl is said to have
made a profit of $1300 last year in fur
nishing bread for the Woman’s Ex
change.
To make your bureau drawers sweetly
odorous, cover the bottom with layers
of China silk filled with sweet smelling
powder.
Shadow cretonnes, so called because
they do not show any decided pattern
until placed against the light,are summer
favorites.
A female preacher in Page County,
Virginia, Virginia, has has made made application application to to the the
County Court for permission to perform
the marriage ceremony.
Madras muslin in palm leaf and ara
besque scrolls are being used for draping
parlor, dining and bedroom of seaside
and suburban cottages.
In Rome, N. J., there is a colored
church under the ministration of a col- j
ored woman preacher of good education
and considerable power.
A movement is on foot in Chicago to
induce Mayor Washburn to appoint a
number of fashionable women to seats in
the Board of Education.
Most New York women won’t believe
it, but the women of Paris do not weai
what are known here a3 French-heel
boots when they are out walking.
t. Paul -i t-w Deschanel, -l i the ,, Frenchman ti i whe i
was over here recently studying the labor
question, pronounces the girls of San
Francisco the prettiest in the country.
The machine for making square-bot¬
tomed paper bags was invented by
Margaret L. Knight, who has since then
invented a machine for folding these
bags.
Queen Natalie, of Servia, has a finer
head of hair than any other feminine
royal personage in Europe. She gener¬
ally weaTS it hanging in two plaits down
her back.
Miss Marie Moran, of Newark, N. J.,
a girl of eighteen, recently offered her
services as nurse in a small-por hospital
when the courage of the regular nurses
failed them.
graduation class of twenty at the last
commencement of the Oberlin Tneologi
cal Semiuary.
It is estimated that over six thousand
women in the United States act as post
mistresses. The largest number for any
one State—463—are in. Pennsylvania and
460 in Virginia.
The Harvard ‘‘Annex” for the ac¬
commodation of women students now has
241 names on its books. Thirteen years
ago the number of students there was
only twenty-five.
James H. Fish, for many years official
stenographer of the New York Supreme
Court,says it is easier to nud a first-class
stenographic clerk among young women
than among young men.
Girls do not. grow so tall in Paris as in
London, nor have they such rosy cheeks,
but they are more pleasing to look upon.
They kuow how to dress so as not to ob¬
literate outiiues that are feminine and
charming.
The “Ella Reed” House, which is to
be opened sis a home for Boston street
waifs, is being built by Miss Cynthia
Bares, a business woman, in memorr of
a belovod u i ece . The Rev. PniUios
Brooks laid the corner-stone.
Felix, is making dresses in different
styles, but all teud toward the 1830
modes, and show even a landing in favor
of the Empire, but this is as yet unde¬
cided. What slaves we are to fashion;
every one is execrating the long dresses,
and yet every woman orders hers made
so.
Some unique features were introduced
^ bnd«ma>ds the maias and of four honor ushers, best man. one lady four
Pf« oi Queen \ eaus. aressea
m c.ass.c robes, with a jeweied crown on
her head. Her part was to bring the
miuistex from some hidden retreat.
AH Sorts.
•™s i, SLr
( ^ Jetr
vapor. P at0the «mos £
p
“ aklQ g -^^Tplologists fresh BP Com;
A valuable find acquisition* ifj rf km , *3 auaii,
to the fourth of t*,|
in Egypt. This is 3 Z eml
data of Egyptian ^ !/
remains !' W
In London there i 3
without legs a r j • pple
who i s Sai q ei %l
comrades in school in his ^;n UrDas3 ^
'^cuhr He is furthermore^ an °i bv'" swiml
of hls ? r ' dpidl v nitJ
amr *’ -
, t , t
weather made her pe't »JJ aWe lady in «i j!
ered by clothing it T -f n embr
fur-lined blanket . « : 4
its little legs and feet’ wi»h
stockings. ‘’ u 5a ° es as
A solid gold brick, ;
P^ds, and worth -$150 We Su , v \
^‘* ed j? 'fe 51 000 Q
g*,* ,™* F MM,, ‘*b5S
“
owner.
A Paris policeman bem DS -1
serr ^ '
twelve'yearshe^eJs day f he f “- h X® Te cents afy
. li( e h a a f :or ll -
day tbe '
as m ; n i mum
1 ’Prince Michael,” the W v ■
leader of the Detroit tb.Stat.Y5t fanatic*
jmtbee. se.t to fa 7’i
sold his hair and whiskers
museum man for -$750,
A company was organized at PW
Aria., what is recently claimed for will the be the construct^!
ervoir in the world. It largest n
will be s:x:«
0 f n ^ at C e ° r ntain 103 > 058 .WO,i
Caught at Last
^hG to Hostetter’s mnl^s^iSSrS Stomach Bltt-re. coupltlrf
^ic^a^dTo^u^^he^ltfv^Knll a feeble state. Nothing like the Bittel
^e^heumatism'and liver d irder id!,e J '1
know To piease'people little less than with whom you talk '
a they do.
For Impure or thin Blood, Weakness, Md
makingSd riA Neuralgia, 5 persons Indigestion, *tetfi-o-Sg^aS and bilioims
persons strong ; pleasant to take.
MThen marriage is anything else tkm
^ r-v u---h : - u - .
As Large
lal As a dollar were tl
M » scrofula sores on mytd J
'S little boy, sickening
disgusting. Tkey d
,/ especially severe on i|
legs, back of Ms earsaa
on ids bead. I gave Mi
& 1 »Ts wte*he ifcr-a?ariih. i
Joseph Ruby. o sores e-a
menced to heal up: th
scales healthy came off and all over bis body "ben new belt aa
flesh and skin formed,
taken 2 bottles of HOOD'S SARSAPJ ^ *
HOOD’S PILLS are a mild, geatle, pain
lt**a, safe and efficient cathartic.
Advice to Woffl
If you would protect yoursel Scanty,!
from Painful, Profuse,
Suppressed or Irregular .Meo*l
struation you must use j
BRADFlELD'Si \
- FEMALE
REGULATOR
Cartersttlle, April*, 1 J
tone treated without benejtP.P^.^
effect is truly wonderful. J
^valuable'mfonuaUoa REGULATOR on C0«
bradFIELD ga.
Atlanta, ^
JOB SALE BT all
AN ASTONISHING WOMEN*
TONIC FOR
McELREE»
WINE OF
u
V
Nerves, Re ieve u» Men
Suffering a- U- C-re 5
b-n SK YOUR DRUGGIST TTLE AS -- 1
svoo e sR ec ;.- T?” v
CH.VTAS’OOGt U E3 CO.. C-sTs-.'-^ . ,
m © § S S' 9 e @ s •
,
It is for the cure sick-headacbe, of co
• tion attendant's and piles, that vW *»«*? M
« • Tuffs Tin
have become so T«.«
gently, without ar 1 '^
j
T u/noi n'S FA!3 C-UID?
»a*ec:nerverjoos- vr / • ^ • ,
•
—