-r- tr -i v'5 , TJTSPwr.w .. ' -' -. - - -, I j. J . .rr j, . " - ' -w-v, hwaa11 .. ?-.' t ' "Sf r , , , - ?9 v -) ry a- fflqz tena$tc r .rH ' JL l' V . t, n . i V r . . , L i " .i Jl W i. lffiAn Vlt" AIttflylM&.. - u .jj . v .wi.vmM!wimmMTMi!''rfs. a -3-07 4 aa aa ,evw .. ..xNYivur,a;'i"iiia,vj''.v -awaw m v rk, " r-ni rv -fiTTiTitg-'-i . . a j . i i ifiiiT 4 i u cm cjcnccr. 1 n- 1 1 1L h vk V S 5 VOLUME XXn-NO. 188. VOWDKIILY AND GOULD a A lit 0H JC HII A 111' CUUHKHVONIIItHOK HKTWKKN THKH. Tha Meueral Mauler Workman of III K11I1I1U nf l-almr lnllf. the Mairnate le Curry Ilia DlnVrenre Inte Court The Itrply lit 111. I'rnimeltlniia, On llie litli Inst, Mr. T. V. l'nwderly ml dressed n lotter te Mr. Jay Oeuld, In which heiald: "Thoevonlsortho jwit rorty-elghl hour uuiKt have demonstrated te you llie absolute neenssltv of bringing thin (orrllile struggle In llie AoiilhMest te a speedy tonnl tennl tonnl natien. Yen have the iwer, tlie authority niul the mean In bring the strlke te nn end. I Have ilnne everything In my power le end the iitrlltv. The geutlomen associated with me en tlie general oxecullvo Ixwrd et the Knight or Lalxir have doue the same, liv ery thing consistent with honor and manhood lm been tlone In Iho Interest of ixmce. Ve false iintlniiN of prlde or dignity ha'. . swayed us til our dealing llti i en or D.e Kontlenion aie'lntO(J with you." Mr. l'owilerly i;lw In Hill lil linprwsleiia tm te the oenforonco helil In New Yerk, ami theti Myx I I ilht net heir oltlier you or Mr. Hepklim sy that the irevnt troiilile out alen your mail wmilil net Imi arhUratrd with llie moil who wero net at work. It was my firm ImjIIeI when I left you that nl!it that you nuunt te have the ontlre allalr Niihmltteil te urhllratlen t the first poKtlhle moiueiiU That lioller Is Bliarml in by Mr. MoDnwell, who was prtMeiit ilurliiK the ontlre Intorvlew. Wlmn you neiit the tiilPKnim te Mr. Iloxle Jim aent ; iircnMeiil or the Mlweurl l'acllle rallreail itiiiipAiir Yeu Ment It as the rliler Benils his iiiossbbe te nn Inrarler olllrer, unit It mount us ninth t" n senslhle man as the most luinitUe onler ixiuhl pos pes Rlhlv uipan. Whun I, iw tlie rliler otllcer or the'KulKht- f l'ier. "U"'1 ineKO"cli as that, It Is iiiulnnilntMl te Ik) my wlsliw. anil thfwe wlHlimare respcs'teil ly the suliorillnate filllowrte wlionillieyaroHMiU It Is net his plsre te put a illtlnrtuit ronslrurtleii en lliniu ami iihelhuui his own liitnriimlatleii. Ills duty lstoelHy the spirit or the Instructions. Tlie niiiii in wwer neel net le an aiiUvrut In enlcr tu limn his wlslmsruspoetwl. "I would llke te mm It done" cenicw with as Kreut a fercn lituii the man In authority as " 1 luimt havoltdeno." That was the Idea that I on en on lertalnod when 1 lull your heuse that nli?hU I also explained te you at your houne that iiluht that the moil who had onterwl uim the strlke had net violated any law or the order In he doing; that whlle I theiiKhtlt would have beuu lietter ir they had laid their grlBViincus liorero the ROiieral exwutlVH iKiard Iwrore Mrlklng, yet Uiere wasnothliiKlueur laws te oemmaud thorn te ile no. lwhl that a district aseinl)ly or the Knights r l,alKr liofero the aauie roln reln roln tleu te Iho genei-Hl Hsaetuuly, fir which I was the ohlef oflleor, thai ene or the slates el the A iiivrlciiu I n!en hae te Iho general government el the U ill toil .States, and that while 1 could Interfeie, It was under the law which gome jutisdlclleii eer the ontlre order, anil net uniier any iwmuuini inn. Yeu ran fcettle this trlka Ita longer iioii iieii tlnuaiiLsi iimlH with you and with you alone, livery act of violence, overy drop or IiIeckI that may be uliud Irem this tlme rertli, must he laid at v our deer. The Knights or l.alier were net reunded le prniuote or Bhield wroug-delng, and today the order of the Knlgiila or l-nber sUiuls betweeu your preimrty and ruin. We are willing te al Belve the men along your railways from their alleglance te our er-tfr. We leave that te themselves. We will net allow any claims which the order may have en thorn te stand letvwfii them and their restoration te thelr former positions. The onler el the Knights of I.'vtsir asks or no man te remalu t member ir It Is net te his In terejit te de se. Yeu may deal wlthlhi'iiiaseltlHuiHltyeu will. We will Hiirretider our right tu claim these men as meuilierslf they wish, but we will net sur render our right te see this airalr thoroughly lnv estimated. Yeu have said that the order eftheKiilghtH or Ijitsir was conspiracy, u secret menace, etc I am willing, as the elder .wilier, in lnv overvthliiLr connwletl with our order lure le the world, If j-eu will, en the ether hand, lay open le the public the means and methods whereby mi have piled up the wealth which you control, and allow the tri bunal or public opinion te puss In Judgment en the two, and nay which Is the conspiracy De you accept tlie challenge 7 Yeu h.vve Instructed jour legal adviser le proceed against a very man connected with ilieKnlghtHOf I.aber for the damages huv talned since the Mrlke began. Twe weeks aye I said: "De net de this." Te-day 1 say begin at unce, lay claims for damages ill every court within whose Jurisdiction n Knight exists. I'roeeed atonce, and In overy state whero you can i ecover damages de se, it the law w III sustain you In it. Let the HiHjostyef the law be vindicate!; It Is just and right that It should be se. We are will lug te l.u-e you lielore the law. We w 111 light you w 1th no ether weapon. Ter overy viola tion or the law or Mate or nation we will enter suit against you, and In this crusade against v en, de net understand that we mean te porsecute. On the contrary, we wish te ee the law vindicated. If von have at all times ebeved tlie law In yourdeallnga, In the methods by which you have acquired your immeuwi lortune, then it Is time that the many ellenses with which you are charged should be refuted. Yeu have remained allent under many a damaging charge of In- iiit-lm tttn ntntti. lale. WO will no your avenger. .-..- . . il V'Oll llaVO I'eeil niuiiKVHi w i.i w . known te the world through the medium el the courts or Justice, And let me nay right lioie that no money will buy a verdlct at .the bauds et these courts. Thorearopenplowhn Bay that this strug gle Is the beginning or the war betvveen ipltal and labor. That slatdiueut Is false. Thiscertalnly means war, but It Is a war between leglllintte capilnJ, honest enter prise and honest labor en the ene hand and illegitimate wealth en the ether band. This is a war In which we court the fullest Investigation of our acts. De you dare te de the saine? This war means no further strike, no shedding or bleed ; It Is a war iu which overy business man, every commercial man, every preles, sienal man, every werklngman, will be Invited te enlist. It will net be a war upon the Innocent, and the battlelleld upon which It will le fought out will be belore the two reurts or law and that which make law, pub lic opinion. There will be no mobs In this supreme hour te sllence any mann opinion. Nocenvorls will be made by physical ferce. "That llag which lleaU ever press or man sion at the bidding of a mob dUgraeea lieth nlKinr ami victim." and under such a Hag as U'at we will net wage the battle j but this battle of Iho jioeplo against monopoly may as well be fought out new as ten years from new, and what Held w) eminently proper In which te fight It out as bafore the ceurU I Let us knew whether laws were made te be ebeyed or net, and If they were net se trained then tlie people must make laws that will be obeyed. Ne man, whether he be rich or whether he be the lxxirest el the peer, shall In the future shirk tlie responsibility of his act and shield himself behlnd the courts. It was te se see that the laws were ebeyed that the order or .i. i-..I, .i,iM -f r.nimrwas reunded. and It the day has ceme te make the trial, se let It be, 1 de net write this letter te you elther In the spirit of anger or revonge. Ker yen P?"01'; ally I have no dislike I belleve that ir allowed te lollew your Impulses In this matter you would have had the strike ended ere this. Theso who advise you de net mingle with the people, and de net eare inr the luwnln. Yeu have lieen warued that your llle Is in clanger. Pay no attention te Mich talk; no man who has the luterest or jiU country at heart would barm a hair or 3 our head. Hut the sy stout which reaches out ou all sldeagatberlnje In the millions of dol lars of treasure and koeplug then) out of the legitimate channels or trade and commerce must die, and the men whose money is In. vested iu the enterprises which stock gam bling has throttled must make common causa with these who have been denied the rlaht te earn eneught te provide the merest lecesssarles or life ler home ami family. When I say te you that we will meet you In ..... .ia i fin net sneak rashly or 111- adviwxllv I have taken counsel Irem the best legal mluds of the Uniiea ? are prepared te face you before the ceurta and new await your action lu the matter. This Is no threat I play no game or bluir or chance. I sjxwk tot W0,0QO erganised men who are ready te pay nut the last farthing In order that Jlistlce may prevall. Yeu have It lu your power le mal.e frlends of theso men by acting the part of ihe man by taking this matter lu your own hands. Will you de me mid end thliNlrlke In the Interest or humanity and our common country 7 Ills your duty le bruah aslde every obstacle, assert your authority and lake this matter iu your own hands, soltle overy grievance, restore overy man te his place except llione who have lieeu ongaged In the destruction or nrejierty or who have broken the laws. Will you de this? Yeu can then make nileH and agree agree inenls with your moil which will rorevor procledo llie possibility or anether such n dlsastrouscenlllct as this one has proved ibieir te be. lajr fleuM's Antwer. Mr. (leulil'a reply Ih dated Wodnesday. Mr. 1'ewderly's lotter was handed le him by Mr. McDowell, of the general ozecntlve beard el the Knights or I jilsir, and he was given until four o'clock lu Iho afternoon te say whether he would end the strike. If he did net end 11, or ir Mr. McDowell had re ceived no repl v et that hour, he was te make Mr. I'owderly's letter public Mr. lleuld In Ids reply netes these racts, and says: Your letter le me embrace two subjecls ene relating le me personally, and the ethor te the relation or the Knights of Imliortea railroad company of which 1 am the presi dent, and In souie degroe the representative of Us public and prlvate duties. I shall refer te the llrst subject verybrleily. The circumstance alxive given, under which your letter was delivered, as well as Its tenor and spirit, place the purxise lu writing it beyond any lair doubt. It would scorn te lx) an official declaration that llie Knights el I.atxir had determined te purxue me per per senallv unless the Missouri Pacific company fcheuld yield te Its demand lu what you call tlie strlke ou that read. In answer te these xirsenal threatx, 1 beg te say that I nm yet a froe American rlllxen. I am past lortv-uhie year or age ; was Ixirn In Kexbury, Delaware county, In this state. 1 lgan life In a lowly way, and by Industry, teinjieraiiceaml attention te my own busi ness have been successml, ixirhaps beynnil the ineasure of my deserts. If, as you say, I am new te Ixi Uestroyed by the KulgliLs or Laber unless I will sink my manhood, he Ikj It. Fortunately I have retained my early habits or Industry. My friends, neighbors and business associates knew me neil, and lam (julle content te leave my persenal recerd iu their hand. If any of them have aught te complain of, I will be only tee glad te Hiibmitte any arbitration. If such lwrtlex, or any el them, wish te appoint the Knights fr Laber or you as their attorney, such appointment Is ipiile agreoa agreea agreoa bie te me, but until such an election Is made, It will naturally occur te you that any Interference en your part In my lxirxenal alt Airs Is, te aay the least, qulte gratuitous. Hlnce I was nineteen years of age I have been In the habit of employing In my various enterprises a large number et persons, prob ably at times as high as MUM), distributing often threo or four million dollars per month te dilforent pay-rolls. It would seomallttle strange that during all theso years tlie dim culty with llie Knights of I-alxir should be inv ilrsL Ativattemiittocennoctmo person- I- ally with the fste strike ou the Southwestern rums or any rospensiuiiiiy inoreior, is equally gratuluius, as you well knew. It Is true I am the presideut et the Missouri l'a l'a clleo; but when this strlKO occtined, 1 was far away en the ocean and beyond the reach of teleginms. 1 went away, relying ou your premise made te me last August thai tliore should Iki no strlke en that read, and that If any dllllcultles should arise, you would ceme fnmkly le me with thein. Air. Hepkins, the vice piesiueiu ei mis company, was prnM-n. and (Yignlumter this arrangement with you. Mr. Hould then Incleses copies of tele grams betw eon Mr. Hepkins and Mr. l'ow l'ew derly at the tlme of the breaking out of Iho strlke of tlie Missouri l'acllli) te show that the men ou his read struck lu order te help theso en thoTexas Pacific, a re.ul evor which he hed no control, llelhen contliiuen: The correspondence places the continu ance of this strlke en your shoulders. Yeu sat still and was silent ntler Mr. Hepkins' urgent apX'iil, and allowed the strike te go ou tallewed the company's property te Ixi forcibly sei70d, ami the citlrens of four states and ene territory le Ik) deprived or their rightrul railway facilities. Thus fnrced, the beard of directors, prier te my re turn, placed tlie matter iu Mr. Holle's hands bva formal resolution, unci that disiiositlen el It has never been changed. Yeu knew this w ell, liecuise you had a correspondence with htm ou this subject, llence it was that when Mr. Turner, cecretary of your order, wrote te moon the subject 1 fully advised him In my letter or March 17 that the matter had Ision placed by the beard lu the bauds nr.Mr. Iloxle, and that I must refer you te him as Its continuing representative. At the sauie tlme 1 reminded you that n stand ing advertisement or this company was at that monient inviting Its former empleyes te return te their accustomed lKwtn; and that regardless or thelr being or net belng mem ber or your erder mid regardless also of their Individual psrtlchutinu In the strike which your erder had recently In augurated. liver slnce then Mr. Hnxie has steed ready te receive any and all persons In the actual omplev et this company, as aeoni aeeni aeoni mlttee or otherwise, and confer utxin or arbllrate any matter of dlllorencos or com plaint either between the company and its late empleyes, and Ter that matter, hetvvtxm the company and anylxxly else. Ne such committee or individual empleye has, se far as known te me, ever made any such appli cation. In this connection it will be rouieiu reuieiu lxired that they lelt net because or any complaint whatever of this company's treat ment of thenisolves, but only because of this company's refusal te comply with their demand that this company refuse te de what the law require lu tlie way et lntor lnter lntor changent business with another coin pan j, with which ouieot your erder had a quar rel. In the meantime this company has et no ne cesslty geno en te extend exployinenltesuch of theso ixirsens wlie locently and without even alleged provocation lelt its sorvice as saw lit In return. Theso returning ompleyos have Ikeii very many, and lu this way Us rolls are already If nniquitoes inn as its Hiiepsauu equipiiieiii, crippled by acts or vlolenco atleudant upon recent action or your erder, can empley. Mr. Hoxle advises me that every such person applying te be received back has been em ployed, unless txilleved te have taken part lu recent acts or violence. This company still stand ready te make geed In Iho tullest souse Its agroeiuout as oxpreasly set rerth. Iu the face or all this, you netlly me tint unless by live o'clock 1 lHtrxennlly consent te Homethiug, precLsely what I de net see, then porseual cousequencos et a sort, vaguely ox ex ox jiressod but net bard te understand, will at the hand or your order be visited upon me. Let me again remind you thai it is an Amerlcan citizen whom you and your erder thus propeso todestroy. The contest Is net betweeu your erder and me, but betweeu your order and the laws of tlie land. Your erder has already dolled the laws In preventing by vielence tills company from operating Its read. Yeu held then that this company should net eperate its read under conditions prescribed by law, but only under conditions prescribed by you. Yeu new declare in effect that I held my individual preixjrty and rights net as ether men held theirs, but only at theimrll of your letting loeso irrevocably after . e clock your erder utxiu me. If this is true of this com pony and of me, It Is true of all ether moil and companies. Jf se, you and your secret erder are llie law and an American cUi.en is such only In name. Already, for wceks, your erder have, in your attack uHu this company, net hesita ted ted tsable It by vlolenco from reudeiing IU duty te the public and from giving work and paying wage te men at least three times your own uuinber, who, working as they were by your Bide, were at least ilosorv ilesorv iloserv lug el your sympathy. Having pushed this vielence iKjyend even the great forbearance of the public, and found in this direction cause te hesitate, you new turn ou me and propeso that the wrong you have hlthorte intllcted en the public shall new culmluate iu an attack upon an individual. In this as 1 iiave said, the real Issue is bo be tweeu you und the laws of the land. It may be before you are through thoke laws will efficiently advise you that even 1, as an indi vidual citizen, am net beyond their eare." ilack Heme. Frank Olbseii, advance agent, and Charles Letr, musician, of this city, who have been with UuU'ale Hill's "Prairie Waif combina tion all Beaten, have returned te Lancaster. The show closed in Denver, se that the Lan canter. wq baa a big Jump home. A CI.UK DISCOVERED re TIIH HTItANIIK MIIHKAHK THAT It HArri.iNti tiik imuTuiiB. The Ment Hetle". Curs Net Trnrealiln In Its l. Water nr Imperii!-! fUnltnlleii, lint le Arllflea nl IiumI That Wrrn Kslsn. Tim Kmlnfa I'rnlenBiMt Hrare. Thern have Ixxm several theories glven te account for the txvullar dlsoase that ha txjcu allotting certain resident of this city for the past row weeks. It has len charged te bad IixkI, bad air due te decaylng animal and vegetable) matter, liad water, biliousness In cident te spring, gastro-lntestlnal catarrh, etc, etc, no two ihxiers apparently tying te the satiin tluxiry. Whero physician se widely illller, it will net Ixi doemod pro pre sumptuous In n unu-proftssleual rexrter te try lu his humble way le solve the problem that has sol the physicians at loggerheads. It I undenlahly true, as the Intkm.i (ikni'KIi suited ou Tuesday, that lu aceitatu (piarter of the north western end or town tliore I much accumulation or garbage and filth, which ir net removed will breed disease. Hut this ixKMillar malady that Is Just new the town's talk appeared most soveroly lu regions rometo from that section, and among poeplo most cleanly In thelr habits and sur rnundlngK. Iu fact, n cleser investigation reveals that theso poeplo of the north western quarter, bellevpd te have been visited by the disease, lived In that portion onjeylng the host or sewerage. With thoe goneral premise te start with, It I possible te build up an ontlrely natural theory te explain Iho mystery. U will lx found from what fellows that Iho cases dis covered wero Isolated lu thelr neighborhood, uext-dixir neighbors enjoying ontlre Im munity from their III ellects. I'ltOIIINO Till! StTt'VTtON. In all there htve been twelve famtlies af af lllcted by thlsdisojse, or something similar tell, solar as the public knows. True thore have txxm rumor of many mero, due per per hapste lmtorrix;tillagnesos, or a confound ing of symptoms. Hut clese Investigation of them shewed that they could be easily ex plained onnnethor hypothesls. An Intim. i.lfillNCKlt ropertor, determined te get at the bottom facts of the situation, started en his rounds yosterday te personally visit the slck Iiomes te learn what he could of the ail ment nf the patients therein. The llrst place visited was the home et llmanuel Shay, Ne. lf.2 Mast Fulton street, In the northeast quarter et the town. Inquiry revealed that tlie family had enjoyed Its usual geed lieaftli up le Tuesday al supper, 'men two pounds el pudding wero used at the evening meal, et which tlie family or flve partook. All were sick the nextday towards neon, the chill, vomiting, etc, Ixilng present In ecfi case. The rather of the family was the only one who ate the pudding for break fast en Wodnesday and he was the worst aftected, belng still lu a very debilitated con dition. The family noticed nothing peculiar in the bvste or Hie pudding and could detect In It no disagreeable odor. The pirty from whom the pudding was purchased was floergo W. Klllian, who keeps a meat market ou Hast Walnut stroet near Khlpixm. Ile pleasantly greoted the ropertor and referring te his bills, said that he had taught en April n 10 peuuds or pudding, f pounds the day bofero and 10 pounds en the 10th of tlie month, a well as ethor consign ments slnce. He purchased from Henry Deorr, of Water street, who has the reputation of being ene or the cleanest and best butchers or the city. Mr. Klllian said that pudding would net keep long lu this kind or weather, and usually what was kept from Saturday till Monday was net fit te eat lu the let Irem which Hhay purchased, he had noticed netli. Ing wrong, else he would net have sold It, a he Is always particularly careful le sorve his customers only the bust of meat. He said that It w.is pessible that the pudding purchased en theOlh was bad; he I mil net eateu of It lilmselt. (1. fl. Wenger, who works In the stere, .ild he had taken home ou Monday some of ttie pudding txiught ou Saturday, had eaten of It himself alone, and felt no 111 effects. Ile recalled that last fall his family were taken sick iu the Siime manner as the Shay family, except that the vomit was net black. He did net knew whether It was due tu bad meat or net Tin: wATiui stiikiit tasks. The home et Jehn Keelor, Ne. :ti North Water street, was next vnlted. Thore it was found that throe-roiirths of a pound el pudding had been purchased for supper en Friday the iUh instant Tlie following oven even lug the w hele family el four wero sick w ith violent svuioteins et the kind described. Mrs. Keelor said the pudding was soft and mushy, and Mr. Koelor remarked Its dark color when he was alxmt te eat It, declaring he believed it was bad. It was purchased Irem Henry Deorr. The family use hy drant water oxcept when the latter Is cloudy when recourse is had te a well. Mrs. Win. A. Warfel, who llves next deer, related her experience as follews: She had Ixiught llve cents worth or pudding from Deorr en Tuesday morning. Of this lier father, Jeremiah Henry, ami herself par tixik. She felt bully en Tuesday afternoon and Wodnesday, but ou Wodnesday oven even Ing she and her father ale rather heartily of beef purchased rrem Sehaefer, the Millers vllle butcher. She recalled that the pudding was qulte soft, hut she detected no bad laxfe. Herseir and father were taken sick Wodnesday night The family use hydrant and well water. Ml. Warlel Ixilloved the neefnr the pudding c.iused trouble, and her physician agreed w nn nor. At 1'eter Hulx)r's,No.l".lier the saine street, the atlllctieu was troced te a ham Ixiught ou market, the nauie or tlie seller unknown ; which ham was Isiiled and all who partook or it w oie made sick. Ne peculiar taste or smell was recognizable. at einr.it I't.Afi:. Tlie Kedi family, en North Arch alley above Chestnut, trace their woes te two pounds et dried pears Ixiught at Saniuel Clarke's en Tuesday, the Oth Instant. Tliesa were eaten ou Wednesday at dinner. That night wltliin aixirlrsl efiiue hour and a hair seven or the family of eight were violently At Mrs. Henry Yeung' Ne. Ill North Charlette street, mother and daughter wero stricken almost simultaneously. Here the feed soems net te have been chargeable, for the two ix-cu pants of the heuse adhered te their usual diet On the day of the Incursion of the disease, a breaktast et egirs, tea, bread, etc, had lxm eaton, and at 10 o'clock the svinnteins inaullested themselves. The day bofero shad had been used at dinner, and tlie supper was the same as the breakfast of the dav following. The uiollier and daughter, wlie are the sole occupants of the house, and who only moved there en April 1, think tlie bad condition lu which the cellar and yard were leH by the previous occupants may have had something te de with the trouble. SOMi: l'UCUI.IAll CASK- At Thema H. Cochran's, Ne. 310 North Lime street, boiue pudding from Deorr's was puichased en Tuesday morning, April 0. The ramilyate llrst of it en Tuesday evening. The following day all who hail eaten were sick. Mr. Cochran did net eat any pudding until Thursday ovenlng, aud was qultesick that night slid all of Friday. When he found that hi family wero gettlng sick, he called in hi mother-in-law, Mih. Jehn 11. l'earsel, te assist In thelr cure, Mrs. l'earsel and her husband at a supper had seme of the pudding served te thein. Mrs. l'earsel ate or It and was sick. Mr. l'earsel did net touch It and was oxempU At Frederick lloefel's. Ne. 13.1 Hast Wal nut stroet, whero pudding was procured from the same place, of the family el olevon six ate aud all w em sick. The flve who did net eat sutlered net at all. The pudding wa Ixiught en Wodnesday, April 7, and wa used for breakfast en Thursday, It was only eaten at one meai. At I'hlllp Kote's, Ne. 422 Middle streel, pudding from the same seurce hud the same eirects, sickening these who ate and exempt ing these who did net At Leenard Stepl's, corner of Heaver and Andrew streets, meat seems te have had no part In the outbreak. At Altheuse'H, near by, the cases tle net seem In their symptoms te be properly in cluded In tlie category under consideration. A VISIT TO DO EH It's, At Deorr's butcher shop, Ne, 114 North LANCASTER, PA., THURSDAY, APBLL 15, 1880. Water street, Henry Deorr, Jr., was leund who cheerfully gave enswer te all the ro re ro iiertor's question. Ile said he hail heard much talk of the puddings belng bad, hut he leek no stock In thein. He had tnade the pudding himself and thinks he would have ixwn able te dlscover If the meat was In any way tainted. He said the meat was very carelully Inspected, and he could notseehow anything wrong could get Inte the pudding, unless perhsps the portion of the lungs nr llver contained In the meat which could be bad and defy dotectlon. He had eaton the puddings hlniselfand se had the family and hands. Ills father hail complained of feel ing badly after eatlngthe pudding, but did net asoribe It le them. Ill sister had symp toms llke theso described a belonging in I the eculiar dlsoase. Ne ethers wero af- iocieu. The let nl puddings concerning which com plaint has been made were manufactured en April S, and at least IfiO pounds were sold In the city. Tliore wero 11M pounds delivered te the Mlllersvilly Nermal school from which no 111 effects have been rcxued. Mr. Deorr said that If the sickness wa due te the pud dings, It ought te lx mere wldely dlflused. f pudding were geed, they could be kept In n refrigerator for a week without danger. He kept for Inspection ene pound of the let manufactured April & which he was ready te submit te medical examination. A glance about Mr. Deorr's cleanly estab lishment, and a knowiedge of the integrity of his character convlnceil the reporter that If there was anything wrong with the let of pudding mede April f, It was sucli an acci dent as tlie most careful or men could net prevent hash that vvi:iik roNFeuNnnn. In tlii con noe t Ien It may Ise stated that no new case liaM.lieen reported for several days, and net ene of theso he far reixjrted were fatal. It is safe te say that In a week the ollects or the scare will have entlrely passed away. Tlie cases or Mr. Kllzabetli Waltz, who died at Ne. 3; North Charlette street, en March 0, and Mrs. Mary A. Hantch,whe died a square further north ou the same stroet en March 20, soems net properly ascrlbable te the dlsease considered. The llrst had no vomiting, and the last seem te have been a woll-ilevelopod cose of typhoid fever. lleth were Indies of advanced age. One thing that struck the ropertor m the alsive investigation was the fact that no par ticular section had a monopoly or the cases, but that they wero widely scattored ; except lu Water street cases whero something eaten glve easy explanation of the Illness. The fact that hydrant water and well water were used Interchangeably make It Impossible te base any theery upon tlie water drunk. And whero nothing can be found in a wlde dis trict sufficiently oirenslve te cause dlsoase, the theory of Imperfect sanitation cannot be tee heavily leanod upon. In line, te sum up the results of the Inves tigation it would appear that the dlseases are sjxiradlc, due te Bixxial local causes, bad pudding In ene case, bad ham In anether, etc. In ether words there is no common seurce from which this mysterious dlsease is springing. It Is net epidemic, net conta gious, and there has been much exacueratleu of Its extentall around. If we had aboard of health tolnvestlgato It aud compare the cases ropertod, It Is Ixtlieved lliey would reach the same conclusion. Iu the mo.tntlme let us all keep ourselves and our premise a clean as possible, and rejolce In the fact that Lan caster la ene of the healthiest citles in tlie country. AHitKar or a tiiiki: Some Stelen flood Itcruvered In a llmne en l'luin Street. A week or two age a hat belonging te Mr. Storm and a sealskin cap belonging te anether boarder at the Keystone hetel were stolen Irem that place. A stranger who gives hi name a Jehn Ijeughlin wassuspocted, end laijt night vva arrested by Olllcers Walsh and l'yle, a he vva leaving the laundry oppeslto the Farm ers' Northern market Ou searching him there were found en hi person a small; velvet lined case containing two very line drlllSjSuch as are used by watchmakers, an old watch and chain, a smalt sum et money and a few ether articles, including a card en which was the name of Mrs. (lest, North lium street. Alter locking Lenghllu upthoolll uptheolll upthoelll cora visited the heuse of Mrs. (lest fotlior fetlior fotlier wiso known as Sue Kieller), and found thore the following stolen goods : An overcoat be bo be lenging te Hev. N. J. Mtlier and and um brella belonging te J. V. llelman, which had been stolen from the residouce or Mrs. J. W. llelman, Ne. .11!) Kai King stroet, en last Wednesday vvoek : two black shawls. ene or them tine, and the ether coarse, with a patch ou ene corner ; a lady's night dress, embroidered In front ; a gout's Kit In nccktie, a geed razor, a pair et gums, soveral lead pencils, aud a low ethor articies, which Lenghllu had left at Mrs. (last's. The overcoat and umbrella wero idontitied this morning a tlie articles stolen from Mrs. Helmau's. The ethor articles await Identifi cation at Alderman McConeuiy's otllce. Liughliu ha been locked up ter a hearing, the tlme for which has net yet been fixed. On Monday a party et circus men caine te this city te bill Forepaugh's show. They stepped at the City hotel, and among the number wa Leuis 11. Ceeko. Yesterday Mr. Ceeko telegraphed thejpronrietersof the hotel from Yerk that he had left a valuable night shirt In his room. Search vva made for the garment but It could net Ixi found. The elllcers heard et the larceny, and upon ex amining the goods found at Mrs. (lest's house, they found a shirt with ttie name of Mr. Ceeko upon the front It is Ixilloved that Lenghllu olther sneaked Inte Mr. Ceeko's room at the hotel or In seme ether way managed te get posessleu of the shirt. This aflernixiii the proprietors of the City hotel brought suit belore Alderman McCennmy against Lnughlln, charging him with larceny. Among the ether articles, which are known te have ceme from l.eughllii, are seme medical Instruments. Seme days age Dr. Liuoaweaver, et Columbia, had arti cles of that kind stolen from hisolllce, and as Leuchlluwa epcratim: In that town the goods found en him may have been taken there. A seal skin cap, which Lnughliu stele, was pawned by him in Columbia ler i cents. It Is said that he stele a great many ether articies In this city and ethor places. Lenghllu la a lollew perhaps "1 year of age. lie has beeu hanging around tills city ler seme mouths past, and has Ixien looked upon with suspicion by persons who took particular notice of him. Mm. S. SI. Clare'a rune nil., Mrs. Samuel M. Clare's funeral wa held ou Wednesday altorueon at two o'clock, at the Mlllorsville Methodist church, of which deceased had long been a momber. The obsequies wero largely altended and the services were conducted by the llev. Mr. Hliixles, of St. Paul's M. M. church, of Lan caster, assisted by the Kav. Mr. Stein, of .ion's Heformed church, of Mlllorsville. Do De Do ceasod was sixty-four years of age. and dled of pneumonia, alter an Illness of only flve da). She leaves a husband, two sons and ene daughter. Hertaluii Iteierteil. Yesterday altorueon llnima Heuder, a very pretty girl who Is but 15 years el age, wa before thojudge en the charge of being Incorrigible, The complainant was llmma's mother, who said slie count ue neiiuug with the latter who had lelt home, told false hoods, Kene In bad company, Ac Kmma denied the mother's statement and said that she left home bocause her mother marrled an Italian arter her father's death and bIie was badly treated. The court roservod thelr decision until te-morrow afternoon. Iteturnrd from lilt Wedding Tour, SIme'i 11. lllrsli, who Is a member of the well-known firm of lllrsli llrothers, and a seu et Herman Hlrsh, or SI North Lime street returned last evening from a wedding trip te Haltimnre, Washington and ethor citles. Mr. lllrsli was married last Thurs day te Miss Holelso, daughter of MyorUold MyerUold MyorUeld smith, of Oeldsmlth Hrethers, clothiers, Philadelphia. Mr. Hlrsh will gote house keeping at ence at Ne. 32 North Shlppen street, wiucu unusu no nas uiiisi up. I'.lerlrlc MgliU Net IluruliiB, All the electric lights were reported a net burning last night ler twenty-tlvn nitnutes. The caufie was that water could net lx pro pre cured.lt having been abut en by the iuperiu-tendeut SLXTY-ShVEN KILLED IS TIIK TKUHIIll.lt VV V 1,0.1 K MirKI'T tttNNKKUTA THAT The flrwit low nl I.lfe and Iletlrttrllennirrnp. ftrty-ralti or the Storm anil Its Dread ful Itaiantatlen The Hunt fur t!i Head and Injured In I'regreM. 8L Cloud and Hatik llaplds, Minn., wero swept by a terribly destructive eye I ene about GilO o'clock Wodnesday afternoon. The llrst knowledgonl thodisaslerwas the following telegram sent te Mayer Ames from fit. Cloud : Te Mayer Ami:, Minneapelis: A do de do Btructlve cyclene passed evor St. Cloud and Hank Kanlus thtsaltorneou. Tliore ha been terrible destruction here l'lease tend up all the assistance you can Immediately by apo ape dal train. Send physicians and surgeons. The following was received rrem Sauk Hajilils : Te Mayer Amks, Minneapolis : Can you send a special train w Ith physician te this city 7 A cyclene passed overthoclty this af af af torneon. A great many are tielieved te have been killed, but the number 1 net yet known. Immediately upon the receipt el these messages preparation wero made te respond te the call for hoi p. A train for St Cloud left at 0 o'clock. Keperts received at 10 p. in., glve the number killed In SL Cloud as fifteen and the Injured at about twenty-llve, and at Sauk llaplds about lllteen killed and twenty Injured. A torrllle thunder storm passed ever SL Paul and Minneapolis about 0 o'clock and n heavy hall storm follewod, but was of short duration. In tact, ene storm cloud alter anether has swept across tlie state evor slnce last evening and tlie rain -fall ha been heavy. Near Fergu Fall a house was struck by lightning aud Clement Crnganaud several inreu men weroBevoreiy injured. Tlie storm Is the worst known in the state since 1SS.T, when ltecbester and Klgin were devastated by a cyclone. A Chicago special from St Paul says the cyclene Ixjgan at St Cloud, In the basin or tlie Masonic cemetery, forming a whlrlw Ind about 1,000 feet in dlnmeter. it took almost overy tree In a clrcle from the ground or twlsted it oil' at tlietrunk. (Jreat stones were tern up and carried along with the wind, moving slowly in a northeasterly direction. It wrecked the Catholic chapel and soveral houses In its course across the prairie adjoin ing the town. It completely domellshod Jehn Schwartz's large brick heuse and scat tered firty or mero smaller frame house like feathers. In most cases nothing wa lelt te mark the site of the dwellings but the cellars. The prairies were strewn with timber, furniture and clothing. The freight depot of the Mani toba wa a total wreck. Numerous cars leaded with freight were blown hair a mile, and the rail were wrenched from the ties. It passed the limits or the town just west of Lieutenant Ooverner Oilman's residence, killing soveral horse, and crossing the Mis sissippi at the Sauk llaplds wagon bridge, which Is demolished. It hore widened te bee feet, and leveled Stanten's grist-mill. Frem there It swept through the centre of town, taking the best or the business portion, in cluding tl'O court house, hotel, public school and overy Important business building In town except Weed's store. Thovlllagels virtually wiped out, four-fifth, or the build lugs In It belng lovelcd. The fatalities In St Cloud, though great, are net equal lu uuinber te these in Sauk Rapids, in every heuse most all the Inmates were mero or less hurt The dead at St. Cloud, se far as knewu are a follew: Nick Juneman, Mrs. Weiaman and little girl, a 4-year-old son of It. O. Werskl, a 7-year-old et Frank Geltiskeflskl, Airs. Stein, a 4-year-old son of 1. Waldorf, and S. A. Yeuug, the latter a railroad man. Hi brother William had both leg smashed and they had te be amputated. An unknown railroad omplejo, J. ;V. Horseu, two young children et M. Cenoe aud a baby of Augnst Knell wero also killed. The dead at Sauk Rapids, se far a heard, are: J. Herg, merchant, and his two chil dren ; Jehn Kenan!, county auditor; (loergo Dudley, county treasurer; two children efC. O. Woed: lldgarlllll, president of the (terman-Amerlcan National bank. Abner Styr, a child of V. Carpenter, and Judge Heaupre, of the prebate court, wero all fatally Injured. FremSauk I'apid the storm went te Rice' station, lteuleu county, demolishing the vlllage and killing nr injuring nearly tlie entire population. The wires are all down, and no definlte Information Is obtainable from thore. It Itearhes Ienn and Dakota, Omaha, Nek, April Ik - A special le tlie ISee from Panama, Iowa, say a cyclone yes- terday afternoon at 4:30 o'clock struck the town or Coen Rapid and cempletely domel lshed most or the place One boy was ktlted and Humorous person were Injured. Twenty-five houses, two churches, ene school house and soveral business house wero destroyed. A freight train, except the locomotive, wa blown Irem the track and demolished, and tbe contents ruined. The cyclene swept evor Western Iowa, doing considerable damage. Ills suppesed that it started about three nitles east or Orls Orls weld, then passed north and slightly east, then going about nine mile northeast of Atlanta aud passed two and one-hall miles or Bray ten. The cyclene had thoappearanceol a funnel-shaped cloud. About four miles southeast of Atlantic, Henry Regers' heuse was blown away and his hired man was badly Injured. Jehn Kerk's big stable, 300 loot long, vva destroyed, tegether with his heuse. Iu Renten ten heuse were totally de stroyed and ene woman fatally injured. Near Hryten tlie dwellings or James noyueius and viiliaiu and Donald Hritner wero de streyed, nml also tlie Hrltner school heuse. The pupils escaped, howevor, by running with the ratnily into Rritner's cave or " cyclene cellar." Mrs. Nerthgraves, iu that vicinity, wa dangerously hurt. Much stock ha been killed. Reports from the cyclone are very meagre, se far, but it i believed great damage lias been done and many llve last. Jamhstevvn, D. T April 15 This place was visited yesterday aflorneon by a small cyclene, follewod by electrical showers. Sov Sev eal bulldlug and side-walks were tern te pieces, and Ciasal X Kalewatz's browery wa blown down. Kalewatz's heuse wa wrecked, but none of the occupants wa injured. At last accounts the storm wa proceeding In the direction ofMIUvllle. ihu:ni aiuxK vi&AaTiiuvs. Ten line Leis of Ufa and l'repertjr i'j the Itecent Wenleru C) clone. MiSNKAi'ei,iH, Minn., April 15. The latest reixirts from the path of the cyclone ludlcate that the destruction or lire and prep, erty has been even greater than at llrst re ported. The storm wa ene of the most terrific ever experienced. Frem the point of starting, about ene mlle (southwest or St. Cloud te a point seme distance beyond Sauk Rapids, a distance et evor flttoen miles, It destroyed everythlng It touched, tearing and rending the stoutest materials. Its path, se far a It ha been oxamlned, 1 from fiOO te 1,000 feet wlde. Frem the very build ing fence, tree and shrub has been swept away. In places the ground u tern up as if by an explosion, and In the yards or the Manitoba railroad at St Cloud, even the rails iue twisted from tlie ties, Tlie less ei llfe ha been very great A Hill number or the dead and wounded Is net yet known. The night wa ene ei iinieiu snuim-" mm sorrow In both the ruined towns. At St nimi.i ilm dead, a thelr bodies wero re covered, were taken te the englne heuse whlle the wounded wero eared for at St Hened let's hospital which wa near the track or the storm, but luekly escaped It At one ,i.. txi-nntv.three bodies, all mero or lex .miiiatcit and most of them nearly stripped el their clothing, wero stretched ou the engine heue fleer. They were covered with tarpaulin and blanket a they I wero brought In, and crowd of anxious and I sorrowing searchers wero moving alxmt among them all nightlong, loeklnganxlously for missing frlends. Although the storm ec curred shortly after 4 o'clock, the darkness that follewod wa se intonse that the search among the ruins for the wounded had te be prosecuted with lanterns, making the acone n welrd and ghostly ene. The aid telegraphed for In all direction began te arrive within four hour arter the storm had passed. The St. Paul fe Mlnnoa Mlnnea jx)ll sent '2,1 physician and surgeons by special train, which made the run of sixty sixty llve mile lu two hour. Although the night wa Inky black farmers canie In from the surrounding country, many of thein ac companied with their wives, and Joined in IhoBearch for the missing, or rendered such aid a they could glve te the mangled, but still living sullerers who wero brought te the hospital. This morning's light brought te the work ers of the night a fuller realization or the ter ror of the storm's dreadful work. The part or the town through which the storm had passed wa built largely of frame building, all of which have Ixjen thrown down nnd whirled together In the wildest confusion. The buildings wero net crusbed le fall In heaps upon their helpless occupants, but wero tern te pieces, and the fragmonts,somo fragments,somo fragmonts,semo tlnios whele reefs and even floors, wero sent crashing through neighboring structure, mingling them In ruins rrem under which dead and dying wero reloaded with dllllculty and semetime only after hours or labor with levors and axes. One woman, whose name 1 net yet learned, wlie wa found held under a wrecked reef, dled Just before she wa released ; afler threo hour hard work by a rescuing parly, a Mrs. Rhlnewald wa taken out nf a similar prison unhurt ; a man named Hall fled le his cellar with his family, and all escaped unhurt, though the build ing wa wrecked. Anethor man named l'arr wa found dead, his body hanging across n wire fence and almost stripped of clothing. At Sauk Rapids, about 14 tulles Irem St. Cloud, llie damage 1 even greater, and the less or life mero terrible, although it is dif ficult te get particulars. The storm struck the very centre el the town, demol ishing everythlng in its path. .Twonty-three persons are reported dead, and many belleve that mere than twlce that number have perished. Among the buildings destroyed I the Central hall, In which many are known te have been killed. Owing te the Intonse darkness and te the demands et sullerers, who could be mere readily readied, no ellert wa made te rescue the bedie from this building until thl morning. Net a slngle business heuse 1 left standing In the main part of the town. The court heuse i among the building dostreyod, and the I'nien school heuse and two of the principal churches are mined beyond their re pair. The Northern Pacific depot wa swept nway, net even n splinter or It remaining. Mit)-Seien Killed and Hundreds Injured. St. l'Ai'i, April 15. Revised estlmate or the killed and wounded by yesterday's cyclene are: At St Cloud, 13 killed, 40 In jured; at Sank Rapids, no killed, 100 hurt ; Rice's Station, 22 killed an unknown num ber Injured. Mrs. llartlett'a Trial. LoN'nex, April in. Tlie trial or Mrs. Ade laide Hartlett, for the murder by chloroform of her husband, lldwin Thema Hartlett, wa continued te-day at the Old ltalley bofero Judge Mill. Tbe principal witness wa Dr. Leach, u physician of l'imllce, who attended the deceased from the first te the latter part of last Docember, when the patient appeared te have ontlrely rocevored from his Illness. Dr. Leach testified that the deceased wa fairly well ou the day preceding hi death, that he could reach the chloroform where it wa placed en the lable near his bed without raising himself, that he had disclesed te the witness the peculiar relations existing bo be bo tween his wile and the Rev. Air. Dyson, and that the witness had at one lime Ixilloved lilm te be lnsane. lladteue Needed In Scetlai.il. Londen, April 15. Streng etlerts are Ixnng made by certain prominent Liberal te Induce Mr. Oladstone te make at least ene home rule speech lu Midlothian during the Easter holi days. Scotland i said te be the hetbed of n I.fheral rebellion against the premier which if uncontrolled will be fatal te hi Irish pro pre pro pes:ds. Till revolt Is net se formidable a it was represented te lx) a week or two age, but thore is undoubtedly a great deal ofsmoulder efsmoulder ofsmeulder ing opposition te the whole scheme of home rule, and this feeling Is most prevalent among the most intelligent men of the mlddle class, that is te say the men w he form the hack hack Ixme or the Llbenl party In Scotland. riintlne a' Nutclde. Ciiti'Aue, April 15. Henry Hutsen en gaged a room at the Hetel Royal, !!7 and Ufl Adams street, Tuesday evening, and retired. He did net appear yesterday, and when the deer of tils room was forced opeu last ovon evon oven lng he wa found dead in bed, with a builet hele Just abeve hi right ear. A revolver with two empty chambers lay en the bed. Thiae Ixittles of chloroform and a quantity of mcrphiue wero found lu the room. Sev eral lotters addressed te Leuis Hindi, rG9 Kills itroet, San Francisce, wero found en hi person. Killed ler Iuaultlug Weman. Cuoekp.tt, Texas, April 15. W. A. Swayroe, living with 11. J. Jerdan, seven nilles Irem Crockett, wa shot and killed Inte last ovenlng by A. RatUree, son-in-law of Mr. Jerdan. Swayree, it seems, bad Insulted Rattaroe's wile during the day. She Hed te her husband, who vva en his farm. He re- turned with her and called Svvayzoe te ac count, and In the rpiarrel which onsued, Sway zee wa shot through the heart. Public, sympathy 1 with Rattaroe. Ilerame Suddenly Insane. Jei.ikt, 111., April 15. Mrs. Sarah Quirk bocanie suddenly aud vloleutly insane Tues day night, and selzingadull bread axe which wa lying In the corner of the kitchen, Bhe struck her daughter a torrlble blew ever the head. A heavy coil of hair saved the girl's llfe. Wltli bleed streaming down her taco aud neck, Mis. Quirk rushed at her treinled mother, aud throwing en the fleer, held her until the poltce answered her own crle for assistance. Mrs. Quirk wa n raving nmtiale yesterday and will be sent le the asylum. Teenier Auiiuiet a Held Frent. Hest en, Mass., April 5. JohnTeomor has written the JleraUl saying : " I shall be ready te make a iace with Reach Iu July, and will row him in Octeber. I will leave for llngland in Soptembor. Anyone whewanU te luck Haitian le row me should put up money liofero they de auy talking. Hvery sportsman knows that Is the only way te is seo a genuine challenge. I will make a race with Hanlaii for the 15th of July, and 1 will pay no further attention te his talking unless he backs up what he says by a forfeit Theu he will hear from me." Knocked Oil- (lie Stage. ksti:i(, N. 11., April If I,alSlanche, the "Marine," sparred here last night with Matt Cunningham, of Lewell. Dad bleed I said te have existed between the nieu since their tight at Fall River, lu Augut, 1SS5. Karly lu the first round Cun ningham claimed that he was being slugged and resorted te clinching, once throwing the "Marine" heavily, but he get much the 1 worst of the buslness with the gloves. The I "Marine" finally knocked him off the atage, I and the police then Interfered. ' PKIOE TWO THE BELLEVILLE TMHHUP IBP. a 1'iwcr.AMATierr that mam JtMsr'JrtT" tnrt r THmMAttm. .- rA -V - ! w ," fi jV "V ' Cltltens Fnibldden le AamuMa eer el Twelve or Mera and Ordered le Clew Their Pteraa :;:t$ at Nine O'clock at WgM. vl-'i-VJ ,K ,-SrJ Mk - St. Leuis, Ma, April i.wrhe eftUra ties pet I leu or Itollevllle and Ui -" ment of the population are up and taxi against me meu wnicu created wa da ance thore Wodnesday night ThefcUewtag,! proclamation wa posted throucfeettt 'w ' place yesterday : " uitring ine excltement that exlMa Ih IMS & ciiy, i noreoy omer that poraena shall aet . i assombie te the number of 12 or mere la tmr'I i nublln nlttit In fiieniit. r fiAiiAwiiiA .v?V- 3 Saleen-keepers may open thelr aaloeaa,lml, shall use overy ondeavor te pi event draalrVSr. onness or disorderly conduct In or (ll4V thelr place of buslness and shall eletat P. m. until further notice I harebr oew-" ; maud and call npen overy constable, Jnetter- ; of the peace, alderman and policeman la tiM'' city of Hollevlllo, te assist In the full enforce-'i ment of this proclamation and tlie In. ' i-.-? (Slirned1 MtnirAi-r. Huts Mtrnli .' '' -1 Karly yesterday morning Cel. Andre, rsuhlnr nfthn Vlnt Vattntml lunlr. npMnlMil' TVMfln nf .11 nrnmlnAnt AlftvAna muahiMiiK.U an old inlllllflpninrmnv. ami HiAvwArAermeri $3- wlth Springfield rifles with orders te held '$' 'M court heuse bell. ; W ,, T.HBI AVIIIllni. lflnl.n.l rri.nl..,.. anlll'V'. .' .m.viuii fa ..iLtnini xwu0, m. m nniu-'y 4 van, josepu mix anu i.aurens inn were ar-'V. sv'i rested en conspiracy warrants. They wwrtf reieaseu upon giving lxnd or JeOO each. v gi i;; Ohl 1 still at large and supposed te be IrUf1 llie country. He Is the meulder, whosenelsy 4')J And tmlsturniis cnnilnct hmiin-lit nn velr sTfViS day's conflict lietweeu the deputies and thfiVif'1 crowd. "&' Tlie Ileelmilnir of a. rnr Mraerla. Mi St. Letus, Me., April 15. Mr. llayea waiff the only member of the executive beard tat? the city yesterday, Mr. Ilalley having left fer.X 3 Desote early iu the morning, accempaalea.v;, : uv Air. llrnwn. Tlinv wnnt In tulilraaa (r ' meeting there in the evenlng. During thellJ ft Aetlin r fADaea Yv.1 Wjb Aid bA L i.ce muiuiug J'lvmia, j.ulJ01B, JHWUOlfc Will HI S hone, the general executive beard of Illlaela,,:'?" arrived In the city. They declined te state i the exact object or their visit, but the general 'MS'; cnaracter of it was a conferenca. They were, aSiTa closeted wltli M:r. Hayes several hours, and &$ toek: the ovenlng train ler home. Sn'i i.ii. uujm reau iiiu uuuiu-i ewueny oer ,; rospeudenco late at night lie said : " I re- jH gar.1 it a the beginning of along, hardatrag lf- "Hew about Mr. (Jeuld's construction of l-ffi"4 the letter te mean that the erder wenld ?7 pursue him personally?" J Vt'' " It Is a mistake. There Is no Intention:' of that character. We have nothing agajaat 50 'J n.,,llil ou n t.,,1 Iv.lil.iel , wa nMuuuu lr J.' sk , , ,t,.. .. a. I .,.- . 1 " Kuep up inu uguv ii li uursis iue reau. ' vj A Striker Acealtted. !&''' ST. Lfftjis, Ma, April 15. J. J. McGarry.vR-, thojudgeadvocato of district assembly 1, jj ami ene or me most prominent llgurea ID ui local siriKe, was 10-uay acq.uiueu ei tne aav;,;v-.': eral charges preferred against him by 'the'-S'.'1 i-alttVAV pntunnnv In oinnAellnn ivIililliAnteill ter of persuading men te desert their engine "' .1...1 .... .i,. i"t r - Ulllill IIIU DII1IVU. ..jfV-. i-Kicueu up reuv, ,?. Nr.vv YeitK , April 15. The Third Aveeuej UurfiiMi vallvL-qv ari ova nmnfne. ma iflt1Al Km this morning, a truce having been patchedtip jyr.' shortly before the tlme appointed for the? strike. The details have net as yet beteifA,, lunriieii. uiii. lb i miu iuu, ..id uuiMwa, vu through certain overtures te the men, gOtp.v ihnm le nrrroe te a conference, at which their! vf grievances will be discussed. TheconfereaeSf takes place at 11 o'clock te-day, and nothing Jv definite will be known until after tne meet- CS Ing of the committees appointed by the cetnif 1.4 pany and empleye. ,' Te rlsy ler Hie KulibU. ip Fiur.Am.r.viiiA, April 15. Last night Mr. &S1 l'nwdnrlv received llie follewlne tuletrrmm .' ..v ? -,., Uiu.rala.if Tupttni- ?fll "Hrother Dunbar eilers ten porcent of the 2S-! "A Labering Man," ler the benefit et oerA& suilerlng brother In the Seuth western; ahall ,,,i, i accent, t k ks- i Mr. I'owderly replied: "Will aceeptjirMj Hrelber Dunbar's preposition. unu biieuiu;k be sent te you." IlUhonerablr DlKkarged. ii Rostev. April 15. The Itoaten light lefaav- trv veteran corps at a meeting last evealtag.1V dishonorably discharged Charles T. IiOrjBg&l or " Lieut " Lerlng a he calls himself enVti&'m slde of Hosten, ou account of a number at J a case of alleged crookedness, among laeea ,i belli ir that of obtaining U& Irem Cel. Tew? M Sleane, and f50er another monitor or theNrTA.vi -V..-I. At.1 n.nl ,., wnrl hlABfl ehsVlra. - VJ i lull, iiiu guaiu ll'u. , w. ...w ,..... , i , "l l'halla Sold for .10,000. f$W'i Racini:. Wis.. April 15.-J. I. Case mMAl bis celebrated sUllien Phallas chief teC.'C.;V Luyferd, el Minneapolis, yesterday for ?WVs 000. An Artre Weallliy Iliuband Uead. Riipkale, N. Y April 15, lien. WiirS W. Tracy, worth 500,000 and the husband eJVAil Agne i.tnei, iue actres., uieu hi - a. iu. rjsv ,la arrml J7 ..bt ,.J, Mbvu ... MauuliiE e usy. ,v,aj Washington, D. C, April 15.-10 A. K.-f?3j ll ,. ,.,...u.l a Kniiirnrtnhle and raalfiu'U': nlL'ht Secretary Manning Is reported teJb;: better tills morning than at any time alueea Ills niuiui.. ; 4. X1W1V liUlleilu, v. .Maiwu. jSi,; ... --at., . II.P int.. H.uatA, H VVASHINCITON, V. J.t April 1A lueiuwna. dent te-day sent te the Senate the nonalnaUettp'V of Chas. A. SpotVerd, of Maine, te be collector - .- -- .,.- .l!.,i-t. r.-llna Ufa &3.V5 ei cusuMin inr me uiaii.b u. .anMw, "s- tvis . . JW-' iriirium I'HIIHAMLITimM. iffitl ... ..... n 1 Anrll f.leVr'!,!. jt rfAnnuiiuuni fc.. v., .i'- --- .",? L- Uie MIUUIB AUOUUO aie wwmjmvj- rf j warmer weather, light local raw.. winds geuerally shining te aeutheaaterl l'OIl JKIIIAY-rwr emuvi, ,f VVJ Shti HIi aleney Was Melea. Jft, " Oeorge W. Leldy, a drummer, wlM rtjyr sents a Philadelphia beet and ahee Atm,mm te this city en Tuesday and ateppt atliM Orape hetel. In the evening be get entwHk "the Uiys," who take a great deal of pride la .iinu-inirstranceni around, eapeclally lfUMar bave mnney. When he started be had ova -i fi'4) ou his person and It la aald that ua mm j alKllltMi uunng me nignv iue ruuniaaai i.jj or tne money was stolen irem uimauu nvasw net as yet been able te ascertain who waa t t wlnner. Ttie matter has net been give? the police, but Mr. Leldy Is certain that Mil E aleser' '- '. Auil It Was Moeullaut. ,VV Flrteen ceuples met en Wedneaday Ing at the resldence or Mr. Jenn n. ai Ne. 217 Kast Walnut street, and, wea. there te Mrs. Oeu. Selvert'a, where Ing was spent lu musical WW nn.A.Inl..,nnl TIlM ItialTlMM lien of Messrs. FrallejvKjiJJi, .i. ....m, nl llr. all f Ml ' theMeasra. wnader aw m wa, mm. the evenlng. " "T' t, . .... at Waal PaMaV- Aecerdlflg ie yif-!. reiaU ve etendUg of the wea xmrn . i. i the reet aeatt itnaw iiiaclef77,BdW. W, KeOMkMr. 5rTy; weTiIMmW etaw.nrMlaeill i' - , 'vi ?." i'.V tv r;
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers