SHREWD HEX IN BUSINESS Can reach the best class or investors thrown THE JIS. PATCH. The best man In taiuinnsBcan I also bo. through PATCH. i"; iXDRTY-FOTJJiTH YEAE. m mm Of Leeching the Blood of Pitts r burg's Prosperity to Aid Monopoly AROUSING GREAT SHIPPERS. Iron Manufacturers' Freight Pool Organizing to , Eesist It; INTERVIEWS THAT EOEO. B. F. Jones, J. H. Kicketson and Others Disclose and Favor as Mnch as Carnegie. PRODUCE AKD GRAIN MEN SPLIT. JIhe Great Drygoods Merchants Likewise Divided as to What Exists and tt hat Should be Done. 'AWFUL HANDICAP OX PITTSBURG COAL A movement is on foot among Pittsburg iron manufacturers to organize for relief from the freight discriminations against tbem. Dispatch reporters yesterday fonnd some mighty strong supporters of Andrew Carnegie in his war on the Pennsylvania Railroad. Hon. B. F. Jones shows up other unjust discriminations. He does not believe, however, that a State commission is the best remedy. Mr. John H. Bicketson pictures the great corporation's short sighted policy in a general way. Other man ulactnrers add much to charzes instituted by Mr. Carnegie. On the whole, the storm that has arisen at the end of the little Scotch iron master's pen seems to have spread rapidly- . The movement for a reduction of freight rates in Pittsburg is not going to be all talk this time. On reliable authority it was learned yesterday that steps are being taken for a formal organization of the heaviest shippers to resist the overcharges to this section of country. It had indeed already been in contemplation even before Mr. Car negie took up the subject, two firms partic ularly, one of the heaviest in Allegheny and another in Lawrenceville, being chief promoters. The data submitted by the Braddock iron master joined with that of other shippers showing a large special tax per ton over and above what their competi tors in Chicago and at other points were taxed for transportation quickened the step. Details and names, together with the pro gramme of action, are promised later on. What It Aggregates. At several of the mills this extra on freight rates amounts to as much as a large part of the cost of their fuel; and at ail of them it is more than is involved in the an nual dispute over wages between the manu facturers and the Amalgamated Associa tion. The general feeling expressed by manufacturers yesterday to Dispatch re porters, who called on many ot them, was that Mr. Carnegie had rendered timely -and substantial service in presenting the case, as no other person was as well qualified to do so, and they propose to take it up and co operate with him. Thus far there is a hesi tancy among shippers about using their names. They have not yet got quite out of the idea that the railroad could make it un pleasant hereafter lor those who complain now. Others, it is hinted, have different and special reasons. Still, there is more outspoken criticism than a few months ago would have been possible. Some of the manufacturers said yesterday that names were premature as yet; that when they band together formally they will not hesitate to state their objections to the present policy of railroad discrimination, and will formu late their demands in a fearless and unmis takable manner. Why the South Booms. Special attention has been directed in the last few days to the charges by Southern railroads to iron makers of Tennessee and Alabama. These are claimed to be scarcely one-third what similar service costs in Penn sylvania. "This," said a Pittsburg em ployer, "is without doubt one ot the reasons why the South is becoming prominent in the iron market Down there, if anything, special consideration is given heavy indus tries, while here the iron makers of Penn sylvania, and other industries connected are compelled literally to pay a special tax, in order that Chicago, New York and other favored points East and "West, can trans port goods below actual cost. I am so much pleased by Mr. Carnegie's vigorous presenta tion of the case that our firm offers to be one of a number to raise $5,000 for printing his speech and getting up mass meetings to get this matter rightly before the public Keitber Buncombe Nor Bitterness. Said a representative of another firm which handles thousands of tons of iron per month: "There is neither buncombe nor bitterness in this movement; only business, and for that reason it will be successful. It is all nonsense to pretend that Pittsburg can stand this discrimination. No city wants to stand anything of the kind. The argument made in letters to THE DISPATCH that the rail roads, like other branches of business, should take their profits from the natural growth of trade, and not by way of arbitrary special tax, is a good one. There are heavy real estate and mercantile interests in this town which require to be considered. It is de sired to have the volume of our manufact ures increased. And what argument could be more pertinent tnan the one cited by a prominent real estate broker of .Fourth avenue, on Friday, that a Chicago firm in tending to put $1,000,000 in a steel plant .Itere,hsi suspended itslunt for a site till reached THE DIS the future of high rates for Plttshurg is settled? , Striking night none. "Again, on Saturday an Allegheny mill shut down, involving the possible suspension of a Pittsburg roiling mill connected with it, assigning freight discrimination and high wages as the, cause. Every year we make a vigorous fight against the disparity of wages existing between the East and the West. How can we go to our men this year and make this familiar argument if we silently permit the railroads to go on charging us a greater difference per ton than the men ask for without any protest? "It is not alone Pittsburg that is inter ested now in getting this matter set right. Philadelphia has been suffering in trade by discriminations similar" to those com plained of here, New York and Baltimore reaping the benefit The Grangers are also in arms, as may be seen by Mr. "Wherry's interview, because they cannot get their cattle to Pennsylvania markets, except ing at a rate much higher than the "Western States pay. It will result inevitably in a commission or else equalization of rates long made by the railroad company. Competition also may result" IIow They Are Organizing, From a person prominently connected with "William Clark, Son & Co.'s Solar Iron "Works on Thirty-filth street, an au thentic account of the movements of Mr. Frank Clark in the freight discrimination war between the Pennsylvania Eailroad and Pittsburg iron manufacturers was last even ing obtained. From the first that gentle man, owing to the large shipments made by the firm over the railroad lines centering in this city,has taken a keen interest in the fight He is greatly opposed to Mr. Carnegie's methods of obtaining redress, however, thinking it was "foolish or unwise for him to rush into print with his fight, as It is generally known that Pittsburg is being discriminated against by the road, and be might write from now until doomsday and not obtain any satisfaction." The press, Mr. Clark thinks, is no battle ground on which to canyon a war against such a power as the Pennsylvania Bailrdad. The company will take no notice of the affair, and keep pn in their old course. Mr. Clark has other ideas for fighting the road. Ills Idea or righting It. He, among all the manufacturers, first proposed the idea of forming an association of iron manufacturers, to be known as the Iron Manufacturers' Freight Association, with the object in view ot obtaining the rights of the shipper by means of the Inter State Commerce law. He made the sug gestion to the firm of Painter & Sons, in the "West End. This firm immediately ap proved of the plans he suggested, and both the firms' members have been quietly cir culating among the iron manufacturers of the city, obtaining their views on the sub ject of forming such an organization. It was not a difficult task to point out the wrongs which the shipper is suffering by the unjust discrimination of the road, and the formation of the association progresses very smoothly. A meeting' Very Soon. To the best ot the belief of the informant no meetings have yet been held by this proposed association, but one is likely to be held in the very near future, when such officers as are necessary will be chosen, and steps taken to obtain the rights which belong to the Pittsburg manufacturer, and of which he is deprived because he enjoys the benefit of a location near the greatest Penn sylvania gas fields and the other natural advantages enjoyed by manufacturers of this city. That such an organization is proposed is undoubtedly correct, as it was forcibly but pleasantly stated that the informant knew as mnch aboat the firm's affairs as Mr. Clark himself. Mr. Edward Clark himself is now in New York, so a charming little tot at his home timidly informed a reporter last evening. MIGHTY SIGNIFICANT. Hon. B. F. Jones, of the Great American Iron Work, Shows Dp Discrimination Beyond What Mr. Carnegie Td!d of IIU Idea as to Bow tli'e Great EtII Sfaanld be Righted. Jones & Laughlins ship nearly as much freight from their American Iron "Works as Andrew Carnegie sends out from his various mills. And a conversation with the senior proprietor, Hon. B. F. Jones, developed the fact that he has for several years past giyen the subject of freight discrimination much thought, besido reading all Mr. Carnegie's let ters in THE Dispatch and the numerous re plies to them. When thereporter first approachedMr. Jones on the subject, yesterday afternoon, the gentle man was averse to being interviewed. But re alizing that it was a matter of duty and loyalty to the Interests of his own city, he said: , "Everybody knows tiiat Pittsburg is discrimi nated against and that the has always suffered from discrimination. It is a notorious fact. And it is equally well known that Pittsburg's freight traffic Is the largest In the United States. Hardly another city In the country produces the vast ton nage we do. Philadelphia or New York do not. For years the Pennyslvanla Railroad had an entire monopoly of our trade, and to-day has nearly a monopoly of our Eastern traffic Westward we have three outlets, but as a usual thinz they pool or combine In such a manner that our rates are made higher than from competing points. Very Flngrnnt Discriminations. "for instance, Pittsburgers in shipping East, say to Latrobe, have to pay more than Philadel phia shippers are charged to the same place, it Is the same with nearly all the towns near Pitts burg. Philadelphia freight reaches Johnstown at a much less rate than we can ship from Pittsburg to Johnstown. I regard that as a discrimination, for look how much nearer we are to Johnstown and Latrobe than Philadelphia. Mr. Carnegie's figures on the freight charges on iron ore from the lakes are absolutely correct. The railroad companies carry the ore from the lakes to Ohio blast fnrnaceB cheaper than they do to Pittsburg, yet by our natural position we are entitled to the smaller rate. It cannot be denied that we suffer from this. Again the Pennsylvania road and the lines it controls not only carry the ores cheaper to the rurnaces of the .Mahoning and bhenanco Valleys, but also transport their fin ished product Eastward to Philadelphia and New i ork considerably cheaper than they will ship freight from Pittsburg to Philadelphia, or at least Just as cheap. That gives furnaces far West of us unfair advantages. The South Favored, Too. "Railroads generally place Pittsburg at a dis advantage. As an illustration of this I may men tion that pig Iron from Tennessee and finished iron from Alabama are carried all the way from those States to the Western cities ror a less rate than Pittsburg iron is shipped to the same West ern cites. low, to return to the Pennsylvania Railroad. It transports iron ore from the lake ports of Erie and Buffalo to the Iron manufactur ers ofthe Lehigh Valley at a much less rate than the ore is brought from lake ports to Pitts burg. These Lehigh manufacturers are the com petitors of Pittsburg manufacturers. That Is the Elalnest kind of discrimination against this city's idustrles. Air. Jones paused, and the reporter improving the opportunltv for an Interruption, asked the handsome Iron master the some question that has been flung at Andrew Carnegie several times since he started this Important agitation, viz.: "How, then, do Pittsburg iron manufacturers manage to keep their mills running at apparent profit if this discrimination has been so serious for years pastf" - How Wo Stand It. There was no hesitation about Jlr. Jones1 reply: "We have succeeded, "he said, "in maintaining this great Industry In the face of such discrimina tions by the advantages we enjoy from our prox imity to the lnexhaustless coal beds; the natural gas reservoirs; by the city's accumulated capital; by our skilled labor, and by our trained manage ment I fancy that nowhere else in the country will you find such untiring devotion to the iron business by Us capitalists as here. It is an old, historic Industry here to the manor born. It you please. There Is both Incentive and pride in its maintenance. Vet lew Indeed are the men who have retired from thllvlron business with Immense fortunes stored away. If Mr. Car negie has earned the large sums accredited to him by the newspapers I venture that he put the larg est part of them back Into the. iron business. Just as cverv Iron manufacturer draws money out of the mills, he has to put It back, and that process goes on Indefinitely, it requires big sums to oper ate big plants." liut the railroads claim that they should have a share of the natural advantages Pfttsburg man ufacturers enjoy," suggested the writer. "es.lknow they do," responded Sir. Jones, 'But there Is nothing in the claim, because Chi cago, Philadelphia and other cities thus secure an advantage over us In actual rates on freight, nnd In the end both Pittsburg andthe railroad win lose by saeli anolicy. " State Legislation Impracticable. When the proper time to suggest a remedy for all these troubles had been reached, the reporter asked the ex-Chairman of the National Republi can Committee, If he believed Andrew CarneglCs recommendation of a State Commission was the best method. "No, Idonot believe legislation is the proper cure for these evils," answered Mr. Jones. "The surest remedy, and the only real one that I can see, is for tlie railroad companies themselves to 6ee what win be their advantage In the long run. When they come to recognize that they will nat urally care for the best trade. However, of course. If railroads share In the legislation, giving them advantages and privileges, it would be only Just to enact defensive laws on behalf of cltl rens." "How shall the railroad companies be brought to see what Is their advantage in the long runt' "That Is where the difficulty lies. Railroad officials are the officials of to-day. Their whole object is the present They are ambitious to make a strong showing weekly, monthly and yearly. They do not look far enough ahead In the inture. Consequently thev do not appear to fore see whero the great commerce or the years to come will originate. Two Good Illustrations. "Pittsburg was once a famous oJJ refining stronghold. Hut the short-sighted policy of freight discrimination crushed that Industry al most completely in this city. Now, what is the result? At this lapse of time it Is confessed by everybody that Pittsburg is the natural center of the great petroleum trade, and yet how little oil freights gc-out from here. Had the Industry been fostered in its fancy by the railroads the pipe line probably would not have grown to such a stu pendous svstem. and the railroads would now hare remunerative shipments from Pittsburg. "Another illustration: Some year; ago Pitts burg Iron manufacturers produced a great many nails every year. Now this cltv's output of nails is trilling, by? Little Wheeling started to make nails with practically no natural advantages in her favor and with some disadvantages. The railroads came to her aid, and gave her cheaper freight rates to Cincinnati, St Louis and other Western cities than they gave us, and that fact together with her very small galnof distance by river routes, gradually took away Pittsburg's nail trade." FALLACY OFTHE POLICY. John H. RIekctson, a Master on the Subject, Shows Jnst Where the P. K. It- Is Short . Sighted In Over-Eenclilngnnd Grasp lug Impartiality nnd Fairness the Only Course Wbleb Will Win in the Long Kan. Mr. John It. Kicketson. of the firm of A. Garrison & Co., stove manufacturers, who has always been connected with the Chamber of Commerce, and who has been prominently identified with many publio questions taken in hand by- that body, was questioned by The Dispatch reporter yester day on his knowledge of freight discrimination. In the conversation tbat followed he said: "The Pennsylvania Railroad is a great cor poration. It has accommodated Pittsburg peo ple in some ways during past years; but as a general thins, it has stood in an unfriendly at titude to our city. At the same time the marked friendship of the railroad company for Philadelphia has been apparent" to every Pitts burger. This has been a short-sighted policy. Pittsburg should have been shown every railroad advantage that was accorded Philadelphia. "Railroad companies ought to treat every ft-elght shipper exactly alike. They should do Just as the Government docs when we buy from it postage stamps. Everybody is charged 2 cents apiece for the stamps, or so much for stamped en velopes, no matter howjnany the purchaser buys, and no matter who he Is, or whero he does busi ness. That should be the policy on railroads; of course, however, maintaining proper regard for terminal charges and making shipments subject to tne rules of lonsT jnd shrt hanlslaKl'''dOTrnif in the Inter-State commerce law. The Baals He Pats It On. "Having secured a charter from the State, a railroad company Is presupposed to be a common carrier in the fullest sense of the word. There fore, it is not Just for it to charge a higher rate per single car of freight than for 1,000 cars. The Pennsylvania Railroad Is a creature of the Legis lature, and having been granted privileges, also bad Imposed upon It certain duties. "He all admit that It is the finest line of rail road In existence. We are proud or It I have been all over Europe and across our own conti nent, and in my ludgment It Is the model iron highway ofthe whole world Foreigners confess this fart Yet we wiU all cry out against the short-sighted policy that manes It oppressive on Plttsbnrr freight shippers. When railroads are confronted with the charge of discriminations be tween freight shippers or between cities, they say they must do as business men do reach out for the biggest business, the best shippers, by means ofconcesslons. I deny this emphatically. "The boast has been made in railroad circles that the Pennsvlvanla Railroad Company made Pittsburg. That Is not true. The city existed, with all Its magnificent future before It before there was such a corporation as the Pennsvlvanla Railroad. Nature created our great city. To day the Pennsylvania Railroad Is doing Its best to tnrottle Pittsburg by winding Its anaconda folds all around our hills and valleys. All your readers are familiar with the struggles the Junction Rail road has had in trying to secure a footing along the Allegheny river bant, and It is known how the Allegheny Valley RaUroad, under the control of the Pennsylvania Railroad, threw out Its switches at every point . To Balk the New Road. Why? Because it is a connecting link between the 1!. Jt O. K. K., the city's only other outlet to the East and the P. & W. It R., an Independent outlet to the West. Even now Influential men of this State cannot get out of the committee at the Legislature a bill to make railroad property liable to condemnation as well as private property. As an Illustration of the liberal policy of railroads, or Just the opposite of tbat of the P. R. K., take that pnrsucd by the Pittsburg and Lake Erie Com pany on the bouthslde. The Pennsylvania Railroad Company wanted to get a track up along the Monongahela south bank for a share of the heavy tonnage over here. W e manufacturers were anxious to have It and thus was originated the Whitehall Railroad. The Pittsburg and Lake Erie Company owned rights of way all along the river bank. Now, had the Pittsburg and Lake Erie pursued the same course as the Pennsvlvanla Company's Allegheny Valley Railroad in throwing out switches, the Whitehall tracks would never have been laid, and we would not now have the fine facilities we enjoy. "Iknowofajpartyof citizens who went to the high officials of the Pennsylvania Railroad, with a view to seeing if something could not be ar ranged whereby the railroad tracks might be taken up from Liberty street and that magnifi cent thoroughfare given entirely to the city. The reply the citizens got was: 'It Is the policy of the Pennsylvania Railroad to never lift a rail when once laid.' Nowthat's notthesort orpolicyto show a freight-producing city like Pittsburg. A liberal course on the part of the railroad, ex tended to freight rates, wonld, beyond doubt, bring more liberal patronage." Other Great Iron Masters. Messrs. W. J. Moorhead and C. R. Dallas, of Moorhead McClane-Wc are really very busy and have no time to talk. We are small shippers compared to many others, and do not care to en ter into the discussion. There should be many here, however, who ought to have something to say about Carnegle'seharges. . A. M. 13 jers I don't know anything about it. 'You are not interested, then?" "Oh, yes I am. If I only had the knowledge Andrew Carnegie claims to have, I would be very ni.inolre the Pennsvlvanla a good damnlnr." anil we are the ones to object." "Plainly, what do you think of Mr. Carnegie's cli& rircs? ' "1 have no doubt Carnegie knew what he was talking about He generally does. But. for my seir, I have no personal knowledge of these dis criminations, and would prefer not to commit my self." ' Henry Brown, of Brown &. Co., Duquesne and Tenth--rhc charges of-Mr. Carnegie are grave enough, and pointed enough. What is there more for ns to say? Walt until they are answered; then come tons. Wbat Thev Are Not. "Are Mr. Carnegie's charges true?" Tney are certainly not nntrue. Mr. Carnegie generally says wbat be thinks, and thinks what be says."" "What do you know, personally of these dis criminations against Pittsburg?" "Well, I will tell you: It is an old story, and we have become so used to this discrimination we have almost forgotten It. Discrimination by the Pennsylvania Railroad is one of the evils of being in business in Pittsburg. It Is of such longstand ing it seems a part of the being in the business here, and we have learned to tolerate or recognize it as such-an undoubted evil." "What instance can you give of discrimination under your own personal observation?" "NowyouaretbOBpceiflc The discussion, as I understand it. is entirely one-sided. The Penn sylvania .Railroad Is silent, and those who know are well aware why Its officers aresUent As ilr. .Continued on Sixth JPttge. . PITTSBURG, TUESDAY, APRIL 9, 1889. BLAINE AND BAYARD. Patent Evidence That the Gentlemen Are on Excellent Terms. EACH TREATS THE OTHER "WELL. Mr. Blaine's Old Secretary to Get 0ns of the Softest of Snap. NOBLE BACKS UP C0RP0EAL TANNEB, He Says Ex-Confederates Must March Oat for Oil Union Soldiers, Thomas Sherman, Mr, Blaine's old Sec retary, is to be Consul at Liyerpool, one of the best paying places in the gift of the Secretary of State. A number of Mr. Blaine's friends fared-well at Mr. Bayard's hands, and the favor is -to be returned. Secretary Noble says ex-Confederates in his department must go to make room for old Union soldiers. rSFECIAI, TELEQKAM TO TUX DISPATCH.! "Washington, April 8. It is under stood to be quite settled that Thomas Sher man, who used to be Mr. Blaine's private Secretary, is tp be Consul at Liverpool, a place that is no such Golconda as some late reports have represented, but the salary and fees amount to about $12,000 a year, so that it is well worth having, and except the Consulates Genera in London and Paris, is the best thing in the consular service. It was a rather generous thing in Mr. Bayard to retain in his department a gentleman so intimately associated with Mr. Blaine a; Mr. Sherman is. Ific late administration was rather tender toward the present Secre tary of State. Mr. Blaine's brother was re tained in the Agricultural Department daring most ofthe last four years, and Mr. Blaine's son-in-law, Colonel Coppinger, was assigned to the very comfortable berth of General Superintendent of the Recruiting Service, with headquarters in New York. In return, Secretary Blaine has appointed Mr. Bayard's friend .Bates to be one of the Samoan Commissioners, and it is under stood that Mr. Bayard's personal friend, Third Assistant Secretary Moore, is to be retained in the State Department Judge Holman has been calling on the Secretary of State. He had a pleasant time, and findsihttt the distinguished head of the State Department improves with age. He says of Mr. Blaine; "He was always cour teous and had an excellent manner of meet ing and mingling with men, but withal there was constantly apparent tbat self assertion, that aggressive will power. Now the will power is just as strong, but it does not obtrude itself in his manner. He is schooled to a calm repose of manner which is both attractive and impressive, and shows that he has gained a still more per fect knowledge of men. He is bound to re main the powerful personality of his party. His health and intellect appear vigorous." NO DEMOCRAT TO ESCAPE. Congressman Atkinson Is Determined to Secure Some Speedy Removals. rSriCIAI, TELEOHAM TO THE DISPATCH.: "Washington, April 8. Dr. Louis E. Atkinson, of Miffiintown, Juniata county, is one of the Pennsylvania Congressmen who is here to stay with the President until he makes & clean sweep of his district, whicbr,&j,j comprises prouauiy ua largo au area as uuy district of the State, as it includes Frank lin, Fulton, Huntingdon Juniata, Perry and Snyder counties. "Within his district are many important Presidental offices, and he desires that Mr. Harrison shall develop policy in the treatment of this great Eigh teenth district of Pennsylvania. Dr. Atkinson claims that in the Postoffice Departmenfand in Isolated cases of Presi dental offices, the administration has set the pace by summary removals, and he does not see why this policy shouldn't be carried out to the fullest extent He is here to insist that it shall be in his district. He does not intend, if he can help it, that any man guilty of being a Democrat shall escape. LEFT TO JUDGE LYNCH. No Provision Made for Punishing Felonies In No Man's Land. ISrECIAI. TILEOBAM TO TITK DISPATCH.! ' "Washington April 8. The provision in the last Indian appropriation bill creat ing a United States Court in Indian Terri tory extended its jurisdiction over No Man's Land as well as over Oklahoma, but limited it to misdemeanors. Jurisdiction in case of felonies was conferred upon the United States Court at "Wichita, but the court in Wichita has no jurisdiction over No Man's Land, so that in tbat very peculiar section of the United States, which has hitherto had no government at all, except such as the free and easy residents provided themselves with, there is judicial machinery for the punish ment of minor ofienses, but there is no tri bunal for the trial of felonies. It is presumed, however, that the people ho live in No Man's Land wonld resent any attempt to punish murder, and their re sources are quite adequate already for the prompt disposal of men who steal horses and cattle. EX-CONFEDEBATES MUST MAECH. Secretary Noble In Thorough Accord With Corporal Tanner's Policy. "Washington, April 8. Secretary Noble, in conversation with a reporter to day, said that Corporal Tanner, the new Commissioner of Pensions, was not a bit more radical in his politics than he was. The Secretary said he was in thorough ac cord with the Commissioner in the removal of incompetent or inefficient Democrats and the selection in their places of Bepublicans. "Tanner," said he, "believes in turning out ex-Confederates whenever more compe tent Union soldiers can be employed, and so doL" The Secretary said that 150 special exam iners in the Pension Office, all of whom were understood to be Democratic, would be dropped from the rolls at the end of the current fiscal year. NO HOLIDAY P0E HARBISON. The President Not Contemplating: Any Trip n Jnst at Present. ISPKCIAI.TKI.EOEAM TO TUB DISPXTCH.1 "Washington, April 8. Private Secre tary'Haliord stated this afternoon that the President had contemplated no excursion, and that while he would of course be likely to take a vacation, there was no foundation whatever for the story that he was planning for a trip down Chesapeake Bay or else where at present. A POINT BLANK DBNIAGT The Young- Boy Who Was Charged With Marder Pleads Bis Case. New York, April 8. On the trial to-day for murder William Krnlich, the 17-year-old lad who is charged with killing Drug Clerk "Weschrung by chopping his head to piece with a batched, the accused took the. stand and denied emphatically that he com mitted the crime. He related the story that he has already told the detectives of his movements on the morning of the marder. BOCHE'S AST HOPE. The Claim Set TJp"7hac the Lato Chicago Election Was Illegal Result of a Technical Decision of tliellll- nols Supremo Court. Chicago, April 8. The politicians of the ity were astonished this after noon by the announcement that it had beei discovered that the recent election in this city was illegal, and that it was in the power of any citizen to overthrow it This state of affairs grows out of a decision of the Supreme Court to the effect that the town of Brighton Park and other portions of the township of Cicero had been, by a vote of the people on November 17, 1887, legally annexed to the townships of South and West Chicago, Previous to the annexation the townships of South and West Chicago were entirely included within the limits ol the city of Chicago. The general law of the States provides that wherever all of a township lies within the limits of a city the electionshaIl be held on the first Tuesday after the "first Monday in April, and that wherever the township is not all included within the city limits the election shall be held on the third Tues day in April. Therefore, the election, in stead of being held on the first Tuesday in April, as it was, should have been held on the third Tuesday. Moreover, the law re quires that 20 days' notice of an election shall be given, and, as the time is too short between this date nnd the third Tuesday in April for legal notice, it seems questiona ble whether the mistake can be rectified by a new election on that date. "Wide fields oi speculation are open as to tlss possibility of revising the verdict of the people in the recent political "landslide" when the Bepublicans were defeated by the Democrats by decisive majorities. It is claimed that if the present Republican ad ministration is willing to invoke the law it can hold over and prevent the newly-elected Democrats from taking their seats, tt is said that Mayor Roche has consulted the corporation counsel in regard to the matters, but it cannot be learned that any decision as to what action shall be taken has been reached. Late this evening a resident- of the an nexed territory applied to Judge Jamieson for an injunction restraining the Election Commissioners from counting or declaring the votes cast. The application was armed with a recommendation from a master in chancery that the injunction be issued. Judge Jamieson set the matter for hearing to-morrow. LOST HIS BRIDE OP A JVEEK. An Italian Bridegroom Can't Imagine Where His Bird lias Flown. rSPECIAl. TELIOBAM TO THI DISPATCH.l Boston, April 8. An Italian bride of a week has disappeared, and the Italian quarter of the city is up in arms. Jose phns Luca is the grief-stricken bridegroom, but his sorrow is not of snch depth that he forgets that he had two rivals for the woman's hand. Now that his bride has been spirited away, he recalls dire threats made by Felix Matazo and Antonio Bomano that they would either kill him or steal his bride if he dared marry her. Luca did not mind what they said and married the woman In spite ot their threats, but he took care to put Mrs. Luca under lock and key for a whole week so that they could not get at her. At the end of that time he thought all was safe and let her out. She at once disappeared. Possibly she was tired of the "bird-in-a-cage" style of life, and so went away of her own accord, but her husband immediately made up his mind that she had been stolen and perhaps murdered by Matazo and Romano. He had them arrested upon sus- ciou. this mornintr. Thev stoutly dis claim any knowledge of the whereabouts of Mrs. Xiuca, and say tbat they have not seen her since the night she was married. ANXIOUS TO PAI THE DUTY. Depew, Twombley and theVanderbllts Don't Want Any Smuggled Goods. ' tSPICIAL TELEORAltTO THIDISPATCH.1 New York, April 8. The Hon. Chaun cey Mitchell Depew and others called on Collector Magone to-day to see about set tling with the Government for the duties which Allard & Sons are charged with col lecting from theVanderbilts on goods smug gled by the firm. There does not appear to be any way by which the representatives of the Treasury Department can collect the duties from the Allards. They are in Eu-' rope. Boulez is not the responsible repre sentative ofthe concern in New York." The Collector must therefore look to patrons of the firm to reimburse the Government, and a long and tedious investigation of the in voices and books of the firm is necessary, Mr. Depew and the representatives of Mr. Twombley and others known to have goods imported by the firm signified their readiness to comply with all the demands of the Treasury Department. A cable dis patch from Mrs. AY. K. Vanderbilt said the same. CAUGHT IN THE YERY ACT. A Postoffice Clerk Nabbed as He Was Ab-' straetlng 870 From a lienor. "Washington, April 8. Postoffice In spectors Smit, Pulcifer and Troy to-day ar rested .Harry D. Darby a registry clerk in the postoffice in this city, for rifling valua ble registered letters. When arrested Darby had $70 in his hand, which he had (just taken from va letter. The letter was mailed at Harper's Ferry,v W. Va., con tained $246, and was addressed to the United States Treasury. After removing $70 Darby was about to reseal it. He is an old employe, having entered the office as a carrier in 1880. Darby was taken before United States Commissioner Samuel O. Mllb and held in the sum of $2,000 to await examination to morrow. "When arrested he ,had 562 on his person, which, it is thought, was taken from other registered letters. YIRGINIA SWEPT" BY STORM. A Gale Does Great Damngo In Portions of ' the State. Fort Monroe, April 8. The worst storm ever remembered here set in Saturday, last ing 48 hours. Telegraph wires went down, no boats ventured out ancktthe tide was a foot higher than ever recorded, doing great damage to houses on the beach and road way. A number of families abandoned their homes and sought safety in the fort. There was no damage to shipping in the harbor. The Constellation bad her top masts housed, both anchors down and rode out the gale safely. Reports from Norfolk and other points indicate that the storm was general in this section and did considerable damage. A number of places are cut off from all tele graphic communication. ADRIFT IN A GALE. Six Men Aboard a Bark That Was Without Sails or Ballast. x "Wilmington-, N. O., April 8. The steam tug Alexander Jones, which left here Saturday last with the dismantled German bark Albatross in tow for Norfolk, returned this morning. The Captain reports that at 9 A. M. the 7th inst, when 30 miles north east of Frying Pan Lightship, the hawser parted and the bark went adritt in the calo. There are six men on the bark, which is wunoui Doats, sans or. Dauast, ana ic is feared, they have" perished, WELCOMED BY WITS. Spalding and His Lot of Traveled Baseball Flayers Banqueted. A FEAST AHD A FLOOD OF FUN. Mark Twain Makes One of His Character istically Humorous Speeches. MR. DEPEW ADDS SOME" EEMAEKS. The former Talks of the Many Beauties ot the Sandwich Ishadv A remarkable banquet was held In New York City last night. It was given by base ball men at Delmonico's to Mr. A. G. Spalding and his aggregation of baseball players who have just completed a tour of the world. A number of bright speeches were made, the wittiest being those of Mark Twain and Chauncey Depew. rsraCTAL TZLEOnAU TO TUB DI8PATCH.1 New York, April 8. Of the innumera ble feasts that have been eaten at Delmoni co's great banquet hall the one consumed there to-night was probably the most re markable in .many respects. It was in honor of Mr. A. G. Spalding, of New York and Chicago, the man who engineered and carried out to a rousing success tbe tour of Chicago and All-American baseball teams around the world. Twenty years ago, and even later, profes sional baseball players had not been ele vated to the fanlights of fame. If one of them had appeared jn a dress suit he would have lost his job. He could not have borne up under the unmerciful guying that his comrades would have heaped upon him. Delmonico's was but a name to him. To-night's banquet to Mr. Spald ing and his two nines was the materializa tion of the rip-roaring enthusiasm with which every loyal son ot the country re gards the great American'game. The affair was like the game. The affair was like the game itself. It was a rush and a go from start to finish, A CYCLONE OF ENTHUSIASM. Delmonico's walls and chandeliers have echoed and re-echoed, to great blizzards of cheers, but on this occasion the enthusiasm was cyclonic. The decorations and menu and souvenirs were typical of the game and this memorable celebration. On the walls were big photos of the two teams at Borne, in Egypt and other distant lands. The menu card- was in good, old, plain Anglo Saxon. It had the pet dishes of all the countries visited by Mr. Spalding and his men, and the cream Iwas in baseball shanc, with tiny wooden bats for favors. The souvenir, an illus trated book ofthe trip, had red, white and blue ribbons for hinges. The band up in the balcony played American tunes every time, and the players and 300 guests warbled and trilled the melodies in chorus. Along toward speech-making time Mrs. Spalding tbe mother, and Mrs. Spaldin? the wife, of the man who was honored, and Mrs. Helen Dauvray Ward appeared in the balcony beside the band, and looked down on the scene. The speeches were made by Chairman Mills, Daniel Dougherty, Mayor Chapin, of Brooklyn, Mayor Cleveland, ot Jersey , City; A. G. Spalding, John Montgomery Ward and A. C. Anson, who told of- their all-around-th'e-world tour; L. S. Lynch, Erastus Wi man, Mark Twain and Hon. Chauncey M. Depew. Mark Twain's speech, which was loudly applauded and punctuated with laughter, was as follows: 1 mark twain in his element. Though not a native, as intimated by the Chairman, I have visited, a great many years ago, tbe Sandwich Islands that peaceful land, that beautiful land, that far-off homo of pro found repose and soft indolence and dreamy solitude, where life is one long, slnmberless Sabbatn, the climate one long, delicions sum mer day, and the good that die experience no change, for they but fall asleep in one heaven and wake up in another. And these bovs have played baseball there! Baseball, which is the very symbol of the outward and visi ble expression of the drive and push and rnsh and struggle of the faging, tearfng, boom ing nineteenth century! One cannot realize it The place and tbe fact are so incongruous; it's likd interrupting a funeral with a circus, why, there is no legitimate point of contact, no possible kinship between baseball and the Sandwich Islands; baseball is all fact tbe Islands all sentiment In baseball you've got to do everything just right or yon don't cet there; in tbe islands you've got to do everything Just wrong or you can't stay there. You do it wrong to get it right for if yon do it right you get it wrong: there is not any way to get it right but to do it wrong, and the wronger you do ittne Tighter it is. The natives illustrate this every day. They never mount a horse from the larboard side; they always mount him from the starboard: on the other band, tbey never milk a cow on tbe star board side, they always milk her on the larboard; it's why youseeso many short people there they have got their heads Kicked off. When tbey meet on the road tbey don't turn tothericht, they turn out to the left And so. from always doing everythine wrong end first tbatway.it makes them left-handed left-handed and crosseyed: they are all so. When a child is born tbe motber goes right along wlttuher or dinary work, without losing half a day It's the fatner that knocks off and goes to bed till he gets over the circumstance. And those natives don't trace descent through the male line, but throueh the female. They say they always know who a child's motber was. aV odd but good ststem. Well, that odd system Is well enough there because there a woman often has as many as six or seven husbands, all at the same time, and all properly married to her. Yet there is no fussing, no trouble. When a child is born the husbands all meet together in convention, in a perfectly orderly wav, and elect the father. And the wholo thing Is perfectly fair. Of course you can't keep politics out you couldn't do that in anv country: and so if three of the husbands are Republican and four are Democrats It don't make any differ ence how strong a Republican aspect the baby has got tbat election is going Democratic every time, and in the matter of that election those poor pe jple stand at the proud altitude ofthe very highest Christian civilization, for they know as well as we tbat all women are ignorant; and so they don't allow that mother to vote. The native language is soft and liquid and flexible, and in everyway efficient and satis factorytill yon get mad: then there yon are; there is not anything in it to swear witb. Oood judges say it is the best Sunday language there is: but then, all the othecsix days in tbe week, it inst hansrs idle on your hands: it isn't anv good for business, and vou can't work a tele phone with it Many a time the attention of tne missionaries uas oeen caiiea 10 wis uciect, and they are always promising tbey are ?oing to fix it: but no, they Co ooling, along and nothing is done.' Speaking of education, everybody there is edu cated, from tbahighesto the lowest; in fact. His the only country in tbe world where edu cation is actually universal. And yet every now and then you run across instances of ignorance that are simply revolting, simply de grading to the human race. Think of it there tbe ten takes tbe ace. But let us not dwell on such things.they make a person ashamed. Well, the missionaries are always going to fix tliat.bnt the? put ft off, and put it off, and put it off. and so tbat nation is going to keep on going down, and down, and djwn. till some day you will see a pair of jacks beat a stralcht flush. Well, it is refreshment to the jaded, water to tbe thirsty, to look upon men Abo have so lately breathed the soft airs of these isles of the blest, and had before their eyes the Inextin guishable vision of their beauty. THE LAND ALWAYS WITH HOI. No alien land in all tbe world has any deep, strong charm for me but tbat one; no other land could, so longingly and so beseechingly haunt me, sleeping and waking; through balf a lifetime as that one has done. Other things leave me, but It abides; other things change, WF WESi hut it remains the same. For me Its balmy airs are always blowine, its summer seas flash ing In the sun, the pulsing of its surf peat is in my ear; I can see its gar landed crags Us leaping cascades. Its plumy palms drowsing by the shore, its remote summits floating like islands above the cloud rack; I can feel the spirit or its wood land solitnde: f can bear the splash of its brooksjin my nostrils still Uvea the breath of flowers tbat perished 20 years ago. And these world wanderers who" sit before ns here have lately looked upon these things, and with eyes of flesh, not the unsatisfying vision of the spirit I envy tbem that. Yes, and I wonld envy them somewhat if the glories tbey have achieved in their illnsttioTis maren abnnt the I miehty circumference of the earth, if it were iair; due no, 11 was an earned run, ana wouia be out of place. I will ratherapplaud add my hall and welcome to the vast shout now going np frdm Maine to the Gulfr from Florida Keys to frozen Alaska, ont of the throats ot tbe otberCo.OOO.OOOof tbeircountrymen. They have carried tbe American name to the uttermost parts of the earth,-and covered it with glory every time. Tbat is a service to sentiment; but tbey did tbe general world a large practical service also, a service to the great science of geography. Ab, think of that! We don't talk enough about tbat don't give it its full value. Why, when these boys started out you couldn't see the equator at all; yon could walk right over it. and never know it was there. Tbat is the kind of equator it was. Such an equator as that is not any use to anybody; as forme, I would rather not have any equator at all than a dim thing like that that you can't see. But that is all fixed now; you can't rnn over it now, and not know it's there; and so I drink long life to tbe boys who plowed a new eqnator round the globe stealing bases on the fronts of thelr blouses. GEOEGE "WASHINGTON NOVTHEBE. Chauncey M. Depew was next introduced. The applause which greeted him was long ana loua. Among otner things ne saia: I have been preparing a speech for the cen- tennlal, but it fs insignificant in proportion to the one I shall deliver here to-night Tbis shall deliver here to-night, is an event which eclipses everything. George Washington was a, great and good man, but he never saw a baseball game. Madison wrote the constitution of the world, and Jefferson gave Democracy its birth, but there is no indication npon their tombstones that they were ever roused bv the enthusiasm of a home run. When I was in England last winter, Mr. Gladstone said to me: "What is the difference between the newspapers in America and those in this counlryf" "The newspapers in England." I replied; "devote ten columns to reporting Parliamentary proceed ings and half a column to a cricket match, while in America tbe newspapers give tbe Congres sional proceedings the balf column and the baseball game the ten columns." Athletic sports are tbe mainstay of civilization. From Charles Dickens to MaxO'Rell the American DeoDlo have been tbe butt of ridicule, but onr teams were sent abroad to show what Ameri cans really are, and that harmony of the mind and body is not neglected by tho American people. HE FOUGHT WITH QUAY. E. E. Martin, of Lancaster, a Candidate for Lieutenant Governor. FltOH X STAFF COEEZSrONDK-T.: Habbisbubg, April 8. A candidate for Lieutenant Governor has come prominently forward in the person of E. K. Martin, a Well-known Lancaster lawyer. He is an in tense Quayman, and figured in the recent fight. As a result all but one of the Lan caster delegation were for Quay. Otherwise he would ha-"-- had but two of the six votes. The story of his friendship for Quay is in teresting. Martin is a fighter in the political arena, and Quay had often felt his blows. When Quay was a candidate for State Treasurer be found one day that Magee was under mining him all over tbe State by means of his own candidate, James McUevitt, of Lancaster, a former Pittsburger. In Alle gheny the work was already done, and in Lancaster hardlv a shred of Quay's influ ence was left. Even, those on whom" Quay had for years showered favors, deserted him openly. It was then Qnay asked for a con ference with Martin, and Martin took off his coat for Quay. From that time the fur flew, and at last McDevitt led u broken minority from his own county-tothe State Convention at Harrisburg. and was easily turned down. Tt took one of the hardest fought battles that Lancaster ever witnessed, though, as Magee had everything thoroughly organized before Quay announced himself. That battle fought at McDevitt's doorway settled the State Treasurer's fight, which was the step ping stone of Quay to the unbroken line of success which he has since enjoyed. A PE1ZE FIGHT ENDS IN MUEDEE. Elsts Being Forsaken, tbe Mill nds la a General Blow with Other Weapons. PORTLAND, UKE.,1 April 8. A prize fight occurred yesterday at Seattle, between William Scott and Frank Britton, which ended in a row that will probably result fatally to one or more men. During the fourth round Britton claimed a loui. This the referee refused to allow, and ordered the fight to proceed. Britton refused to go on, and the referee gave the fight to Scott The crowd of Britton's friends sprang into the ring and Britton protested. Hot words followed; pistols were drawn, and a num ber of shots were fired. The row finally was quelled, when it was found that Tom and Charley Clancey, well-known saloon keepers, ana James McCann, Britton's sec ond, had been wounded, McCann danger ously. r The fight occurred in, the dining room of the race track hotel, and was witnessed by nearly 200 Seattle sports. The Clancey brothers each received a wound in the thigh and McCann was shot in the groin. The latter' wound is considered fatal. A number of persons have been arrested, in cluding Teddy Guthrie, the releree, and warrants are out for others. The officers areon a sharp lookout, and the purpose is to round up all the persons who partici pated in the melee. Thus far it is impossi ble to determine who actually fired the shots. There is great excitement in Seattle over the affair. MAEEIED BY MUTUAL CONSENT. A New York Judge Holds a Slngularlllar- rlago Contract Valid. ISP-ECUI. TEL-eOBAH TO TUB DISPATCn.l New Yobe, April 8. Eobcrt W. John son obtained yesterday a decree of absolute divorce from Ella C.Johnson. This case excited attention a year ago, when if was tried before a referee, the wife denying the legitimacy of her child in order that John son might not get possession of the little girl. The wife declared that they were never married. Mr. Johnson produced the following contract: We. Robert Wood Johnson and Ella Catting, recognize marriage as a crril contract and on tbis 9th day ofAugust, 1S80, enter into a solemn agreement to become man and wife so long as we live, or until this contract bo annulled by mutual consent Johnson is a drug merchant on Cedar street, and his wife came from Orange, N. J. Mr. Johnson went West on business, and upon his return found his wife living with a young lawyer named Melliss. Her refusal'to give him his child precipitated the suit. The courts held that there had been a marriage. ANOTHER EAILE0AD WEECK. The Rain to Blame for tho Death of Two Train Hands. West Point, Va., April 8. A fatal wreck occurred on the York river branch of the Richmond and Danville Railroad, about two miles above this place. The heavy rains of Saturday washed ont a culvert- and a part of tbe dam between the tank and the riverand an engine and seven freight cars plunged into the washout. Two men, a colored brakeman and the fireman, a young man named Dnrvin, were buried un der the cars ana killed. The body of the fireman has been gotten out, but tbe colored man has not yet been found. The engineer, named Lynch, was terribly scalded, bat managed to, crawl out 15Ck rt1itJflnf'1 A. STEW 8TOBT' TEJWjE written forTin Dispatch . , 'W-I&t & by BeT. Edward Everett. tfi Hale. Tbe opening chap ters appeared in last Sun day's issue. Begin at the I peginmng. THREE CENTS' krt GIE AT V0BE -i..J k I&?k !n7 The iie Mannfactnrer Hakes ftk' A fckand Scathing .-. ATTACK PEB5SILYABli?,i The Legislature is Told That the Matter- t Must he Eemedied. HE FULLY EXPECTS TO BE AREESTED For the Methods He Employs in FfeMiag the Baft. rood Company. Andrew Carnegie last evening addressed the members of the State Legislature and others at Harrisburg. He arraigned tho Pennsylvania Company, and told how ther South Penn was killed. He intimated that' he was prepared to take vigorous steps to prevent discrimination. EPEOJI A STAIT CORmflPOXDEST.I Harrisbueg, April 8. To cap" the cli max of Mr. Carnegie's speech to-night, Representative Wherry, of Cumberland, moved a special order for his anti-discrimination bill. It was agreed to by a vote of; 18 to 43. John Norris was present to see is, go through. When Mr. Carnegie was introducedby Governor Beaver to the audience in tha House of Representatives, he faced a nu merous gathering of members of both. Houses and distinguished and undistin guished residents of Harrisburg. His part ner, Mr. Phipps, was also an auditor, as were Manager Bent and Superintendent Felton, of thePennsylvaniaSteel Works, at Steelton; Colonel Jame3 Young, large stock holder in the concern, and Superintendent Boyd, of the Cumberland Valley Railroad. Mr. Carnegie's address in many particu lars was verbally identical with his letters published recently in The Dispatch. Ha compared the growth of Pennsylvania with that of sister States, and predicted that she would ere long advance to the front, ahead of New York, which depends chiefly for its prosperity on external commerce, while Pennsylvania's prosperity is dependent oa internal commerce, and the latter represent 95 per cent of the trade of the nation. PENNSYLVANIA PBE-EHINENT. As in his former speeches and letters, Mr. Carnecie dwelt upon Pennsylvania' industrial pre-eminence. He told the audi ence about the discrimination between. Pittsburg and Chicago in coke freights, be tween the Hocking Valley and Pittsburg on ore shipments irom lake ports, and about the discrimination against Pittsburg in the matter of rates to New York and Chicago, as compared with the through rates between these extreme points. In speaking of tho coke discrimination he waxed warm and said: The trains of coke pass through our own grounds for nearly bait a milerwithin 100 feet of our furnaces. We gave tnis right of way gratis. Is, it to be expected tbat if we have to close our works in consequence of railway dis criminations I have uitea that these men stand calmly by and see the Ohio and Chicago fur naces fed while theirs" arei idle. Legislators of Pennsylvania, the Arms I control have npon their pay rolls 17,000 men. On behalf of this great army of labor I, speak directly, but I also represent many thousands more in Pitts burg, I beseech yon., give ns, before yon ad jonrn, a law that will seenre to Pennsylvania the same rates for tbe same services tbat tbe railroads of Pennsylvania give to. our com -petitors in other States. We ask no more. Turning to Governor Beaver Mr. Car negie said: "I do not know butthatthe next time I see you I may be under arrest, but, . sir, I will trust to the clemencyand sense of justice of a Chief Magistrate who fought so gallantly for his country. I do not propose ' that any corporation that passes through our " grounds shall deprive our workmen of work." THE SOUTH TENN-. Mr. Carnegie told tbe story of the South Penn, He had promised half as much toward the South Penn as Vander bilt. -The latter gave $5,000,000, and Messrs. Jones, Chalfant and Watson and Mr. Car negie and his private partners furnished $2, 500,000. Mr. Vanderbilt, sick in mind and body in Europe, was coerced into selling" out to the Pennsylvania. Mr. Carnezie then told of his labors with the Vanderbilt boys, and how after he had obtained the necessary Pittsburg signatures to the reorganization agreement-the Penn sylvania again triumphed with the Vander bilts, and Mr. Carnegie advised his friends to accept the offer of the latter to buy their stock at 60 cents on the $1. Mr. Carnegie then said: Although the withdrawal of the Vanderbilts was a surprise. I had been f nlly advised of the Vm Ma-K" vanla Railroad Comnany were pressing them " fl again. Tbe truth is tbat the President and first Vice President of, the monopoly coerced the young Vanderbilts, and threatened destruc tion to their varied interests if tbey dared to interfere with the monopoly of transportation in Pennsylvania, which jhe Pennsylvania Rail road Company assumed as its right Thus this railroad monopoly has done indirectly wbat the courts prevented them from doing directly. . SOUBCE OF THE MONEY. They made a bargain, or came to an under standing, with the Vanderbilts. Tbe money paid to tbe South Pennsylvania people is not Vanderbilt's money: it was or is to be taken from the surplus of tbe Pennsylvania Railroad Company in some form or other, so that tbe Pennsylvania Railroad Company has nsed the millions extracted unjustly from the State ot Pennsylvania to prevent the southern counties from obtaining railroad facilities. It is our Pennsylvania money tbat prevents the devel opment of Pennsylvania. You will notice in tbe annnal report of the Pennsylvania Rail road Company that 1,020,000 is handed over to the Pennsylvania Company tbat Is. the com pany that operates the lines of tbe Pennsyl vania Railroad Company west of Pittsburg that is not charged to that company, but tbe Pennsylvania Railroad Company. Welt legis lators of Pennsylvania. I do not know that this is the first million of the money to be paid the Vanderbilts. but I do know that In some un derhand way the money or its equivalent will be paid. It if the Constitution of Pennsylvania tbat has been violated in spirit; the orders of your courts that tbe monopoly bas made a mockery. Perhaps yon may believe that an investigation committee is imperative. If you so decide, there will be no difficulty in getting at tbe truth if yon will allow me to conduct the cross- examination of President Roberts and Vice President Thompson and one or two others. Mr. Carnegie said many interesting things and was often applauded. He brought down the house when. SDeakinrofthe Sonth 'Pennsylvania matter, he remarked: "You , see, gentlemen, on this subject I do not have to refer to mv notes." He asked for the. - passage of a bill for the State similar to thet. inter-State commerce law, and predicted, iff nis laeas were carried ont, a inture lorvj ll..... ..I ..1. ... 1. 1 J. .1.1. . A U V...AV (,. A.cuuajrAvau. autu m uiq nuiiu ucta hh. ouiirsui., TAYLOE'S XITTLE SCHEME. A Governor'sGame Nicely Blocked by 1 Tennessee Legislature. Nashville, April 8. Governor Taylo tn 4n-M MnAAif niaiJi.ahia inniifnelinn ls- vetoeing a bill for the removal and rebuild-J ing or tne state .reniienuary .tie reserveaa his veto until both Houses were ready ,'tJ adionrn. when, for lack of a anorum. no ae- tinn vmM hp. talfpn nnon the veto hv ithrf Tft,ca " ! U.UU-.,.. , IV The indignant legislators thereunon.voted a recess to May instead of an adjournment,-'. ana declare tnat wnen tney reassemble ther - win pua uie uui uicf iiu yeio, f, r ... & 1 1 'J$. 'k ".