The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, September 22, 1893, Image 3

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    Modern Criminality.
tHK FORCE AND VIOLENCE OF OTHER
PAYS HAS CHANGED TO FRAUD AND
ASTUTENESS.
There are two forms of criminality,
the atavic and evolutional. Atavic
criminality is the return of certain in
dividuals, whose physiological and
etiological constitutions is morbid,
psy
tn such means of the struggle for cx
jstencc as civilization has suppressed,
nich as murder, robbery, etc Now
the natural forces which formerly im
pelled men to battle in this sanguin
ary manner have not entirely ceased
to act upon humanity i they still act,
and excite men to certain antagonisms,
which occupy the entire life of almost
til human kind, excepting only those
who, possessing a superior moral
sense, refuse to become entangled in
self-interested struggles, even if this
course of action costs them some
trouble. But the means of the strug
gle have changed through the influence
of civilization these were formerly
force and violence ; they are to day
fraud and astuteness.
No one can deny that an immense
number of thefts are committed every
day, of which the law takes no cogni
zance; that human cupidity finds
means of satisfying itself even if it
does not employ the sword and poison,
which sometimes makes one wonder,
with horror, if all human progress is
not menaced with failure. This is the
transformation of savage criminality
among civilized people. It is to day,
unfortunately, a normal condition of
existence that this battle of astuteness
has replaced the war of the muscles.
For, as long as the social conditions
last, no human power will be able to
prevent men from stealing from each
other, just as it is impossible to keep
men living in a stale of barbarous
anarchy from killing each other. From
this point of view all modern humanity
is imbued, to some extent, with evolu
tional criminality.
These, however, who really form
that criminality, which I call evolu
tional, are the men who, endowed
with a greater talent or favored by a
too prosperous fortune, push that bat
tle of intrigue and deceit to a mon
strous excess, which makes it too
great a danger to all modern society.
These, in reality, only employ to a
great extent the means of enriching
themselves that all the world uses on
a small scale ; but their action, on ac
count of the excessive development
which they give to the means of the
struggle for existence, should be con
sidered as abnormal and, therefore
punishable; while the same means,
applied on a small scale, are entirely
normal, and, although our moral sense
feels them unworthy, remain unpunish
ed ; for law would be powerless and
even unjust to injure them. Those
who make use of the means that so
ciety has given them, without annoy
ing the social life more than others,
are evidently only using their rights.
But, for the great evolutional crimin
als, it will not do to trust too much to
the effects of the punishment ; they
are the product of our customs and
will always be found so long as our
customs remain unchanged. Guill
aume Ferrero, in Revue des Revues.
Deafness Cannot be Cored
by local applications as they cannot
reach the diseased portion of the ear.
There is only one way to cure deaf
ness, and that is by constitutional
remedies. Deafness is caused by an
inflamed condition of the mucous
lining of the Eustachian Tube. When
this tube is inflamed you have a rum
bling sound or imperfect hearing, and
when it is entirely closed, Deafness is
the result, and unless the inflamma
tion can be taken out and this tube re
stored to its normal condition, hear
ing will be destroyed forever; nine
cases out of ten are caused by catarrh,
which is nothing but an inflamed con
dition of the mucous surfaces.
We will give One Hundred Dollars
for any case of Deafness (caused by
catarrh) that cannot be cured by Hall's
Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars
free.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, O.
"Sold by Druggists, 75 c. im.
Iron Bridge Completed.
The last span of the iron railroad
bridge between Packer's Island and
Northumberland was put in place on
Sunday. This completes the work for
this season, although there is a small
span to build on the Northumberland
side over the canal. The bridge cost
the company about $90,000 and was
not built by contract, but was erected
by the company itself. The iron work
cost $54,000, the stone work $17,000
and the cost of putting it together was
$15,000. while the cost of painting it
will be $3,000. There are six spans
and each span required seven thous
and bolts or forty-two thousand bolts
in all. A remarkable tact in its erec
tion was that every bolt fitted perfect
ly, not a ream having to be made for
any of them. Next year the bridge
from the island to the Sunbury side
will be built and then the double
track will be laid. Sunbury Daily.
Strained Relations.
. A. Yon are related to her by mar
nage, are you not ?
B No ; I'm her brother by refusal.
Demoretfi Magazine.
The Great Union County Tair.
11ROOK PARK, LEWIRBURO, SEPTEMBER
sont, 7TH, a&m and 29111, 1893.
Grand parade of live stock and dis
play of agricultural products on track,
Wednesday and Thursday, Sept. 27th
and 28th at 10 o'clock A. M. Large
nnd grand displays by organizations.
Three good races each day Wed
nesday, Thursday and Friday, Sept.
27th, aSth and agth.
53,000 111 premiums for stock and
agricultural products.
$2,000 in purses for speed.
Grand attractions every day.
$6,000 in purses for speed at Lewis
burg, Milton and Bloomsburg. The
successive weeks, 25 milc3 apart.
Don't miss Lewisburg Fair.
Ayer's Sarsaparilla does what no
other blood medicine in existence can
do. It searches out all the impurities
in the system and expels them harm
lessly mrougn tne proper channels.
T1.:. ,'. -i c
linn 1a wuy nyci s oa.i"illu.l ma is go
pre eminently effective as a remedy
for rheumatism.
Tha Decline of the Grand Army."
The twenty-seventh National En
campment of the Grand Army of the
Republic has nowmssed into history.
The veterans have gone or are going
their ways homeward from Indiampo
lis, and can think over at leisure the
events of their meeting.
taken altogether, it was a great
gathering. More than 20,000 men,
it is said, marched in the parade, and
there were ten times that number of
admiring onlookers. The railroads
have remarkable figures of the passen
gers they carried to town. The affair
was perhaps helped by the opportunity
of combining the reunion with a trip
to the big Chicago show. It was held,
too, at the place of the very first
National Encampment, and there
were pathetic elements in the reminis
cences and in the contrast between
1866 and 1893. Ringing speeches
were made, and there was plenty of
enthusiasm among the hearers and no
abatement in the glow of comrade
ship.
But there was something more sug
gestive at the meeting than all this,
For the first time in the history of the
Grand Army its roll showed a clear
and indisputable falling off. The year
before, at the Washington encamp
ment, there had been an omen of what
has now come. The annual gain in
membership, once reckoned in tens of
thousands, had fallen to only 1,200
names. With a special anxiety and
interest, therefore, the statistics of the
present encampment were awaited.
When they came it was found that,
as had been feared, high water mark
had already been passed and the
ebb had set in. "After most earnest
efforts," said Commander-in-Chief
Weissert, in his annual address, "made
by beaadua.ters, to increase the mem
bership in good standing, a loss from
June, 1892, of over 2,000 must be re
ported. That this result had not oc
cured without a determined attempt
to avert it was shown by the fact be
tween June and December, 1892, the
membership had been increased, in
spite of all inroads ; but that gain and
more was lost early in the present
year. A pardonable effort to explain
the decline was made in the sugges
tion that it may have been due to "the
determination to weed out all mem
bers who are practically a dead weight
to the order, together with the pressure
in financial matters throughout the
country." But in another portion of
the address it is shown ; that the loss
by death alone for the year was more
than 7,000, which was the greatest
from that source ever known in the
history of the order.
The decline thus begun may be ex
pected to continue from year to year,
by slow gradations at first, and then
rapidly. Compared with the great
membership of 397,a3 in good stand
ing, and 443,554 in all, a decrease of
2,000 is small; but its significance
is in marking the turn of the tide.
The Grand Army need not fear any
loss of renown or of national gratitude
in its days of decline. Perhaps, as the
years go by, it may find itself less ca
joled or attacked, and becoming a
smaller and smaller factor in politics,
but its dwindling reunions will show
no falling off in the feeling of com
radeship, or of enthusiasm for it in the
hearts of the people JV. Y. Sun.
Specimen Cases. '
S. C. Clifford, New Cassel Wis.,
was troubled with Neuralgia and
Rheumatism, his Stomach was dis
ordered, his Liver was affected to an
alarming degree, appetite fell away,
and he was terribly reduced in flesh
and strength. Three bottles of Elec
tric Bitters cured him.
Edward Shepherd, Harrisburg, 111.,
had a running sore on his leg of eight
years' standing. Used three bottles
of Electric Bitters and seven boxes of
Bucklen's Arnica Salve, and his leg is
sound and well. John Speaker, Ka
tawba, O., had five large Fever sores
on his leg, doctors said he was incura
ble. One bottle Electric Bitters and
one box Bucklen's Arnica Salve cured
him entiieiy. Sold by C. A. Kleim's
Drug Store.
1 . a Sqyt
If you can afford to bs annoyed by
sick headache and constipation, don't
use DeWitt's Little Early Risers for
these little pills' will cure them. W.
S. Rishton, Druggist. 10-14-17. j
Autumn Tashions for Ladies. I
The latest news from the fashionable '
centres indicate t iat jackets with full
skirts and vciy large sleeve will i.e.
extensively worn during the fall neavm, !
and also that, the princess gown irw
newest models of which are verv ele
gant will be very popular. As for
skirls, the double skirt will be one of
the features of the coming styles. For
either jackets or waists the pretty "go
dels" drapery and the picturesque
directoire revers will be universally
adopted. The McDowell Magazines,
which are the leading fashion publi
cations, both in Paris and this coun
try, contain many designs of all the
newest styles. Moreover thev eive
lessons.on practical dressmaking which
are of great assistance to professional,
as well as to amateur dressmakers.
And what is still more advantageous,
Messrs. A. McDowell & Co. repro
duce any of their illustrations (or in
deed, for that matter, any design clip
ped from any other fashion journal)
in the form of made up paper models
with flat patterns besides exactly rep
resenting every detail of 'the original.
This simplifies dressmaking in a re
markable degree, and is especially
valuable to those who wish to appear
welt dressed on the most economical
plan. "LaMode de Paris," "Paris
Album of Fashion," "The French
Dressmaker," and 'La Mode" are the
most popular of these magazines. The
former two cost only $3.50 each a
year, or 35 cents a copy. "The
French Dressmaker" is $3.00 per an
num, while "La Mode" costs only
$1.50 a year, or 15 cents a copy. If
you are unable to procure any of these
publications at your newsdealer, do
not accept any substitute, but apply
directly to Messrs. A. McDowell &
Co., 4 West 14th Street, New York.
After a sea diet, to prevent boils
and assist acc.imation, use Ayer s Sar
saparilla.
The Last Series of Cheap-Rate Excursions
to the Worlds Fair via the Pennsylvania
Railroad.
ADDITIONAL DATES FOR THE POPULAR
. EXPOSITION TRIPS.
As the period of the existence of
the World's Columbian Exposition
draws to a close the demand grows
stronger for the economical and satis
factory means of reaching Chicago
provided heretofore by the Pennsyl
vania Railroad Company. Recogniz
ing the urgency of this popular need,
that company has fixed a few addition
al dates on which excursions of the
same character as the previous ones
will be run. September 23d, 28th,
October 2d, nth, 17th, and 21st, are
the clays selected from New York,
Philadelphia, and points east of Pitts
burg and Erie and north of York.
The special trains will be composed
of the standard coaches for which the
Pennsylvania Railroad Company is
noted, and the arrival in Chicago at
an early hour the following afternoon
obviously gives ample opportunity for
the securing of accommodations at
that place.
The trains will leave New York
9.00 A. M., Jersey City 9.13, Newark
9.25, Elizabeth 9.32, New Brunswick
9.53, Trenton 10.23, Philadelphia it.
30, Frazer 12.09 P. M., Dowing
town 12.32, Parksburz 12.41, Coates
ville t.02, Lancaster 1.25, Conewago
1.57, Harrisbure 3.00 P. M., Lewis-
town Junction 4.30, Tyrone 6.00, Al
toona 7.00, and Pittsburg 10.40 P. M.
The excursion rate, good only on the
special train and valid for return with
in ten days, is $20 from New York,
$18.25 from Philadelphia, and pro
portionately low from other stations.
Return portions of tickets are good
for ten days.
These trains will be run on fast
schedule, and will be provided with
all modern conveniences with the ex
ception of Pullman cars.
: 1 Many expressions of complete satis
faction have been made by people
who have availed themselves of this
excellent opportunity of visiting the
greatest and grandest exhibition the
world has ever seen.
Summer Weakness
And that tired feeling, loss of appetite
and nervous prostration are driven
away by Hood's Sarsaparilla, like mist
before the morning sun. To realize
the benefit of this great medidne,
give it a trial and you will join the
army of enthusiastic admirers of Hood's
Sarsaparilla.
Sure, efficient, easy Hood's Pills.
They should be in every traveller's
grip and every family medicine chest.
25c. box.
How They Learn.
Little Dot I don't see how cows
can eat grass.
Little Dick I s'pose when they it
young the mother cow keeps sayin' to
their childrens : . "If you don't eat
grass, you sha'n't have any pie."
Good ATeioa.
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures
piles.
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures
burns.
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cures
sores.
DeWitt's Witch Hazel Salve cure
ulcers. W. S. Rishton, Druggist, iy
S20, $15
and
lor
8
New York clothing maker was hard up for cash.
Wc bought all his Men's Suits (made to sell
for $20, $15 and $12) at a price that enables U3
to offer them at $8.50 per Suit.
in
We are selling Boys $5.00 Knee Pant
Suit for $2.50. Hundreds to pick from. This
was another clean-out
BROWNING, KING & CO.
910-912 Chestnut Street
WARREN A. REED. Opposite Post Office, Philadelphia
Girls and Spending-Money.
The girl who is earning her money
by working says with a sigh, when she
buys a hat that is too extravagant or
a box of sweets that she doesn't need,
"Well, I worked hard enough for this
money, I may spend it as I please,"
writes Ruth Ashmore in a pleasant
article on "Girl3 and the Use of
Money" in the September Ladies'
Home Journal. That sounds reas
onable, but she ought to want to
spend it in the right way. She ought
to think of the days when possibly
sickness will come then coes she
want to feel sure that she hasn't a dol
lar in the world and that she is being
taken care of by people on whom she
has no claim ? Or there will come a
day when everybody else is going for
an outing ; will she have to decline be
cause she hasn't saved any money ? I
know she has earned it ; I know the
fine hat, or the fine gown may be very
tempting but the mere fact that she
has given her strength and her ner
vous force to get this money, should
make her cautious in taking care of it.
"Shall I be mean ?" asks a sensitive
girl. No, my dear, but I tell you it
is just as well to remember the old
proverb about being just, before you
are generous. There is no generosity
in contributing to a floral piece for
some dead comrade and owing a bill
to your washerwoman ; there is no
generosity in treating all the girls you
know to ice cream and having to
catch cold because you haven't a
inicx nannei petticoat on, tne reason
being that you have no money to buv
one. The girl who is talked of as
generous with money, is. I am sorry
to say, too often very foolish with it.
She is ready, when she has it, to lend
it to whoever asks her, to give to what
ever is going on. and when it is gone
she either sutlers from its loss in mor
tification and tears, or else she be
comes a borrower. The wise girl is
the one who tempers generosity with
sense.
I have been a sufferer from catarrh
for years. Having tried a number of
remedies advertised as "sure cures"
without obtaining any relief, I had
resolved never to take any other pat
ent medicines, when a friend advised
me to try Ely's Cream Balm. I did
so with ereat reluctance, but can now
testify that after using it for six weeks
I believe myself cured. It is a most
agreeable remedy an invaluable Balm.
Joseph Stewart, 624 Grand Avenue
Brooklyn.
Spared Every Annoyance. ,
"Why do you cross the street every
time you see me comincr ?" asked a
gentleman of another. "Are you try
ing to avoid the payment of that debt?
"Not a bit of it," was the reply.
It's merely to save you the annoyance
of asking me for the money every
time you 6ee me. I know it must be
distasteful, and I want to show you
every consideration." JV". ' Y. Her
ald.
Your Painter
has often wasted time and material la
trying to obtain a shade of color, and
as even resorted to the use of ready
mixed paints, the Ingredients of which
ha knew nothing; about, because of
the difficulty in making a shade of
color with white lead. This waste
can be avoided by the use of National
Lead Company's
Pure White Lead
Tinting Colors
These tints are a combination of per
fectly pure colors, put up in small can,
and prepared so that one pound will
tint 35 pounds of Strictly Pure White
Lead to the shade shown on the can.
By this means you will have the best
paint in the world, because made of
the best materials
Strictly Pure
White Lead
and pure colors. Insist on having 4
brand of white lead that is standard,
manufactured by the " Old Dutch "
process, and known to be strictly
pure the
John X. Lewis & Bros.
This brand of Strictly Pur White Lead
end National Lead Cos Pur White Lead
Tinting Colore are for eal by the moat re
liable dealers in paints everywhere.
ir you ar going to paint, it will
to send to us
you
tion that may eave you many dollar it wiU
lor a book
tr eav vou 1
book containing Iniorma-
only cost you a postal card.
JOHN T. LEWIS & BROS. CO., 4
. Philadelphia.
Sr2 Suits
50
Fine PHOTO
GRAPHS and
CRAYONS at
McKillip Bros.,
Bloomsburg.
The best are
the cheapest.
ratckeater'e EeatUb IHimI UrneS.
UriiEfflft for mifhuttft KnaiUh Via
mtmd Brand In tied uf Void mtn;t
arc, uifi rviuiii. la die, ui
im, rsUtjd with bio ribbon. Talcs
to ttarapfli tot Mrtlnlut, iMtinonltU to4
Hllar fnr I.MllM."Mi4ir. h -..
UvHM and imitation. Al Lrus1sn. ar awnd !.
7- T CBIraertvrf'aeBUeal VeHMr"
a-Ji- iw.
PILES
AX AStSTS " give Instant
renei arm is an iniumme
Care for files. 1'rtrcSl. Ily
Druggistaorinnil. Samples
free. Aikln-M-'AS A k KSIH.'
Oox Mid, Now York City.
GOT A GBIP
on Mother Earth an1 won't let sro
till It'a itnrrniir 1 .
Wll IVBUH5 VUll A f lit
Erath's Patent
Hitching Post.
Tbe anchor on the bottom resists
all attempts at loosening by ani
mals or front, Though these posts
win ouuiist several of tbecld kind,
they cost leas. Built, of wrought
auu uiaiiUKUie iron uy
O. W, ERATH 03 8. Main.
niiHvtgiiriv, rm
LY CataprH
UiUSAM eALM
Cleans the
Natal Passages,
Allays Pain and
Inflammation,
Heals the Sores.
Restores the
Sense of Taste
and smell.
TBI THE CUBE
A particle In applied Into each nostril and Is
ajrroeable. 1'rloe 50 cents at rrujKtln: by mall
ri-.'iHLera, ou ots. imu i units, ra warren
mmm w . . OOPTRIOMT,
'or tnfmattea andfraa Hurt book writ to
MUNN k CO, M Bboadwat, Maw You
dM barM for Monrlna patanU tn Anir
Oldwt
Tou. '
uonrini natanta In AauriM.
117 ptDt taken out by 1 brought before
imiMie dj uuues itb zraa oi enarga U IM
Mifsss emralatlosi of any setanttSe Papsr ra th
world. Bpleodldlr llhutraUd. Mo T Intelligent
soao should b vUhout It. Wklr. S3.00 a
11'
earf $1.60 elk tan the. Adenaa
45?-
dIiImhihu. 9 U rodv Xi if York
THOMAS GORREY
Plans and Estimates on all
kinds of buildings. Repairing
and carpenter work promptly
attended to.
klsr is Builder's Supplies.
Inside Hrrdwood finishes a
specialty.
Persons of limited means who
desire to build can pay pari and
secure balance by mortgage.
OUR WLII'S M BEVERAGE.
TUo most healthful and popular drluk of tho
I'iie proper drink for both table and tlrpNlde
now wlihln tun reach of all. Kvery thrliiy
liousowlfi' van provide for her home, grape, or.
anije, pear, cherry, apple, bunuiia and pim-appin
cHterh al the siuull expeuw of lift cm ct-nla per
gallon. Keep your hUxbHiidx nud suns ut. lioiu
by preparing for them those delightful and
Uiirmk'KH drinks: thereby saving the money
that mlRlit possibly nnd its way Into the wi
loous. Honly takes ten minutes to make any
one of these delightful drinks. Enclose 10 mnu
for one, or W eenis for seven of the "Krult Older
itMLo? co-
-lotf.
ft
it x
isr
mm
ft r x v u, i
HAY
l'u Jolsstlflo At1Cm
Mj T THADB MARKS),
The health authorities at Lisbon hare
raised the quarantine ngalnst Teasels ar
riving from the port of New York, which
had been established In consequence of re
I orta of tbe appearance of cholera in Jer
sey City.
THK IIRjiZIMAX HE VOLT. S
fragmentary of the Ilombardraent
at Kin.
Xf w York, Sept 15. A Buenoe Ayres
tek'Kiara gives fragmentary now of th
Brit.iHan revolt. l'rexMeut, Peixoto stilt
controls the telegraph lines.
The insurgent sqitiirlrou Is reported to
hare bombarded an arsenal town near Rio
Janeiro, but which one lls itnpoaslbla aa
yet to ascertuln. Tbe Insurgents captured
the government gunboat Alauoas, which
lay in the harbor, and surrendered with
out firing a shot. The forts at tho en
trance to the harbor fired on the Insurgent
fleet, but without effect. The Insurgents
directed their fire upon the arsenals and
forts. Tbo govern men t ironclad Banl!, ;
which started for 1'nrnuuy river to op-,
pose any revolt In the fleet at Matto Gros-1
o, has been ordered to return to the' de
fence of Hlo Janeiro. The officers of the
government gunboat Tlrudentes, which
has been in the liHrlior of Montevideo for
several days, expect to tie attacked shortly
by the Insurgent transport Itacca nnd they
have prepared their ship for action. Of
the 4D ollicera in the Uraiilian navy 2tt
have Joined the insurgents.
American interests in I'.rar.il are abno
lutelv unprotected, unless the preseuce of
tbe United States Minister at Rio can be
considered as a protection to them. It
will be frnro four dnys to a week before the
cruiser Charleston crni reach Wo from Mon
tevideo, for whili the distance Is only
1,0'M miles the vessel will lie obliged to
cohI before starting and coaling is Hume
thing not easily accomplished at the latter
port.
Yesterday the naey department was In
formed of tbe departure of the Detroit
from Hampton Roada for Brazil. The
journey to Rio will consume two weeks, so
that the vessel cannot ipiu the Charleston
until September 2H at the earliest.
Another dispatch stutes that the tele
graph odice at Rio has been abandoned on,
account of the bnmlmrdment. This mar
cause additional delay in the transmission
of official dispatches. Telegrama sent via
Lisbon have passed uninterrupted, but tho
Galveston and other lines have experienced
much trouble in getting telegraphic mat
ter through.
TRAIX nOBDERT A8 A TRADE.
A Texas liandlt Threatens to Implicate
Leading; Itaelnass Man.
Sah AitTonro, Tex., Sep. 18. Nathaniel
Myers, alias Charles Leakman, who is in
jail here charged with being implicated in
the Missouri Pacific train robbery- near
Lamar, Mo., which took place two year
ago, makes some startling disclosures as to
the guilt of Marion Hedgepath, who is i
jail at St Louis, charged with being the
leader of the Glendale train robbers, who
secured $40,000. Hedgepath claims to b
Meyers' double and says that the latter
was the leader of the Glendale robbers
and not he. Myers in reply to this says:
"I have shielded Hedgepath all along ir
the matter but I will now tell all I know.'
He got me into the trouble and Is now try
ing to put It all on me. I know tha
Hedgepath Is one of tbe Glendale train
robbers and I can produce four witnesses
that can prove that he is. When I am
called upou to tell what I know about tha
Glendale robbery my statement will impli
cate some of the most prominent business
men of Kansas City, Mo. It will bs an '
easy matter to prove that Hedgepath ts
guilty of the robbery. Mrs. Hedgepath
herself said that her husband was on of
the robbers and that $40,000 were secured
and that the money was divided in her
preeenae. ' Four of tbe men received an -equal
share of the money. They were
Hedgepath. Mrs. Hedgepath's brother, s
man named 8 lie, and Dink Wilson."
BOLD FRONT.
Tfc Amalgamate Aseoelatlra Kara) l
Madlry Their Uemaad. -
Prrrssvna, Sep. 18. The question of re-'
convening the conference committee of the"
Amalgamated Association of Iron and1
Steel workers, recently submitted to all of
the lodges in the country, has been rated
npon and the result of the ballot of , a
majority of workmen has been received at
Amalgamated Association headquarters tn
this city. The object sought in present! nor
ths question to the sub-lodges was to - ,
sure from them authority to modify the de- -mauds
made by the committee In their
recent conference with the manufacturers, 3
with a Tiew to smooth sway the raush I
plaoes on which they failed to agree,, , It
was noned ty tne acceptance of a 10 per
cent, reduction in tbs bar and guide mill
scales that the way would be opened for 1
the mills to bs placed in operation and the1
many thousand, idle workmen given em-i
ployment. The result of the ballot, how-'
ever, is against the reconvening of the
committee or the granting of any further
ouoeestons m the wage scale.
Anglican ArohMshops In Caaa4a. ,
Toronto, Ssp. 30. The House of Bish
ops of tha Synod of the Chnroh of Eng
land in Canada, sleeted Bishop Machray
f Ruperts Land Primate of . Canada and
Metropolitan of the Province of Ruperts
Land. It was decided that both he and
Bishep Lewis, the easteru Metropolitan,
should be created archbishops, in which
decision the lower house concurred. This
is the nrst Instance oi the creation of
Anglican Archbishops in Canada.
Uust Staud Trial at llama.
Nsw York, Sep. 20. Justice Cullen, in
the Supreme Court, Brooklyn, yesterday
decided that ex-Mayor Patrick J. Gleason
of Long Island City, should stand trial in
Queens county for auditing false bills and
conspiring to defraud tbe i:tty. Mr. - Glea
son was recently Indicted for selling to the
city a Are engine for $2,100 which he pur-
cnasea ror sou. tie asxeu lor a cnamie of
venue because of the prejudice against him
in long isinuQ iity.
A Wuiuau EUctnl.
Hartford, hep. .0. At a meeting of
tha board of education iu Welhemlleld
Miss Mary L. Waruer was elected actinr
school visitor for the coming year, her du
ties to begin at once. Her election is th.
first in the State under the now statute.
buffering Southerners.
Charleston, S. C, Sap. 19. The Rec
Cross Association has taken charge of
the relief of sufferers from the recent flood
and make an appeal tor further aid.
Oliver strike Off.
rYurtsBURO, Sep. 90. Tha strike at
Oliver's South Tenth street mill hsa Urn
declared off.