.flit Transient Advertisements, tWY- '- 7r 3te 'Wiri 3 : " -- - - 'Sr D 1 . ;C"Jr - -- TrjSratiSflrafeHraW S" - Jill ')pHs, Should bo banded in at the main advertising v1 T"t a 3 WWWfr ''Vm Br ''' For to-mo rtV-,ja up to 9 o'clock P. x. , Jj W- office of Tip: Dispatch, Fifth avenue, np to -? W t W a.. V J Forllstof bJe n the various die-, '. J I Wife - -- midnight. . 1 " 1 , . . trictssee "ilffiQg?. i, -- 7 i&v 'r f "i. '". J5JiXiJ-'UXVxai a nn ru - iixxiouuxw, cij,uivuai, m,n. jl io, j.um j. ohjli r an a. .ol.vjujj. kwrj-jLA-LVAUAii v?aua.ij.u ,, fc ' -: : ; 1 ; ; iSTOifc -HE WAS HOT POSTED, Colonel Shepard Gravely An nounces That Cincinnati Saloons ARE CLOSED ON SUNDAY. He is Immediately Corrected by "Wire From the Queen City. ANOTHEE CEAMI CAUSES A SENSATION. He Distributes Circulars In the Presby terian General Assembly That Cnnse Him to be at Once Fired Ont The First Day Devoted to Reports A Reception la the Evening, nt Which Governor Beaver Slakes an Address The South ern Assembly In Favor of Brotherly Action Whenever Possible The Color Question to be Ignored. The first real day's work of the Northern General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church was completed last evening. Dur ing the day's exercises several peculiar things were developed. One was that Col onel Elliott F. Shepard made a report in which he said the Cincinnati saloons are closed on Sunday. This was so entirely contrary to the true status of affairs that a chill of doubt was thrown over his entire report. He was called down on the saloon question and the remainder of his report fell tat The Southern Assembly, in session in Chattanooga, developed a spirit of har mony and union, the color question being ignored. IKPICIAI. TELEGEAM TO THE DISFATCU.I New Yoke, May 17. It was a busy day to-day in the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in the Fourth Ave nue Presbyterian Church. It was the first day of the session entirely devoted to the transaction of business. The proceedings consisted of reports from special commit tees appointed a year ago .on topics of especial interest. There was one interruption of the pro gramme. Soon after the afternoon session began a small man with a peaked brown ard and a pale complexion stepped from lewhere to the head of the center aisle to the platform. He had under one in Oxford Bible, and in the hand a e ot circulars. He began by flinging 'fsengaged arm, and in a voice like he cried: "Men, brethren and fa jw ,1 time to awake out of sleep. You Sft.irF?fied " ' Time to Fire the Intruder Oat. "Yon have no right here," began the Bev. Dr. Howard Crosby. Other cries resounded through the church and. half the brethren were on their feet. Two or three gray-haired and spectacled doctors of divinity jumped out into the aisle, got behind the intruder and pushed him, unresisting, down the aisle toward the door. On the way out he showered the com missioners with black-bordered circulars. "I am an ex-Presbyterian clergyman," he said, "and your servant in Christ, S. I. Hickey. I'm sorry the brethren didn't ap prove of me. For further information ad dress me at Station B, Brooklyn. I have preached there with Brother Foote, and I have been attached to Bellevue Presbytery. -1 am only doing what I believe is mv duty." The circular was a little misty, but ap peared to be an argument in support of the doctrine of probation after death. There were other things in it, such as this: "We Presbyterians have an army of clergy, dis tinguished by flattering titles, seeking worldly advancement, who covetously re ceive honor one of another, many receiving princely salaries beside perquisites for their hire. Wherein the Inconsistency Lies. "We have as officers in our church the President of the United States, Cabinet offi cers, Supreme Court, Governors, editors and owners of metropolitan journals; mer chant princes, manufacturing monarchs, railroad magnates, stock manipulators, monopolizers of the earth and its bounties, and other great ones. Mark our flagrant duplicity, therefore, in claiming to be followers of Jesus Christ, whom the world's rich and great hated and despised, who said to His disciples: The world hath hated them because they are not of this world.' " - Mr. Hickey and a companion who con tinued to distribute circulars were finally put out on the sidewalk, where they at tempted to continue to peddle, but on com plaint of the Eev. Dr. Crosby they were driven away by the police. Captain Beilly was requested to have policemen at the door of the church hereafter. The assembly adopted Dr. Craven' report 'rt commending that to enable Presbyteries Jto take possession of the property of extinct churches, a standing committee of each Presbytery should see that clauses are in serted in the deeds of church properties per mitting the properties so to lar3se. A Serious Debate Postponed. The Committee on Revision of the Con fession cf Faith asked to have Prof. 'W. G. F. Shedd, of Union Theological Seminary, Prof. E. I). Morris, of Lane Theological Seminary, and Prof. E. B. Welch, of Au burn Theological Seminary, added to the committee, and the work continned until next year. The report was adopted, and this, probably, shelves the debate on arbi trary election for another year. Colonel Elliott F. Shepard, Chairman or the Committee on the Observance of the Sabbath, climbed on the platform and was glad to be able to report Chat there is an in creasing dispositibn to observe the Sabbath in this country, especially in the matter of 1 transportation; the committee had also reason to believe that the circulation of Sunday newspapers is decreasing. iVgTo this the brethren responded by ap- plause, and Colonel Shepard also reported that he was glad to learn that in Cincinnati the saloons are closed on Sunday. The committee hoped that the General Assembly would memorialise Congress to fix the first ftTedaeBdar in'March assauguration Day, ,t a voia.the preHaraTrBcTsWogfaeai gab-: bath breaking, when the day came too near one end of the week. The Colonel Sadly Mistaken. When the good Colonel had sat down a delegate-arose and said he held in his hand a dispatch from a minister in Cincinnati, declaring that saloons in Cincinnati are open on Snnday. That was the turning point in the last election, and the liquor men won. Colonel Shepard said he had been misin formed and would correct the report. The report and corrections will be considered on Friday, when the truthfulness of the entire report will be attacked, as well as one por tion of it. The Eev. Dr. Joseph T. Smith, of Balti more, Chairman of a committee which met a similar committee of the Southern General Assembly, reported that the committees agreed to work together in many ways not to trespass on each other's territory, and to let the work in the colored churches go on as heretofore. A minority report by S. M. Breckenridge, of Kentucky, declared for an absolute union of the Northern and Southern General Assemblies. The reports will be debated on Wednesday. President Harrison's minister in Wash ington, the Eev. Dr. Tennis S. Hamlin, of Baltimore Presbytery, objected, on behalf of his presbytery, to a report on the Board of Missions for Freedmen, read by the Eev. Dr. C. A. Dickey, of Philadelphia, Why the Complaint Was Made. The Eev. Dr. Diokey's committee had re ported in favor ot continuing the present Board of Missions to Freedmen, with the commendation of the General Assembly. Dr. Hamlin said the Baltimore Presbytery were sore about the present board, wbicn has its headquarters in Pittsburg, but that he had not been able to get a hearing before Mr. Dickey's committee. Warner Van Norden, President of the Union, welcomed the delegates, and Mod erator W. C. Eoberts responded. Governor Beaver, of Pennsylvania, as ruling elder in the assembly, spoke, the Eev. John E. Paxton made a witty speech, and -Colonel Elliott F. Shepard told what a good time the commissioners will have on the pilgrimage he is to take them on to morrow. Supper was served in the assembly room, and a concert was given by the orchestra and quartet, one ot whom is Mrs. C. M. Raymond, lormerly Annie Louise Carey, and now of Dr. Paxton's chnrch cboir. Supper was over at 12:50. The drinks were iced coffee and lemonade. THE SOUTHERN ASSEMBLY. A Document Introduced That May Cause Se rious Trouble The Report of the Joint Committee on Union The Colored Knee a Canse of Contention. Chattanooga, May 17. The General Assembly of the Southern Presbyterian Church met in its second day's session at 9 o'clock this morning. Com mittees were appointed and reports heard. The following paper, which promises to, cause trouble, was submitted by the Secretary and assistant secretary of the Executive Committee of the Foreign Mission. Board. . General Assembly convened at Chattanooga: The undersigned beg leave respectfully to state that within the past year in the transac tion of business entrusted by the church to the Executive Committee on Foreign Mis sions, difficulties of a painful nature have been created; and especially charges of a serious character, some of them relating to both of the undersigned, others relating only to the Secretary have been madaby the Rev. man of ibe Executive Committee, Believing these charges to be wboly unjust, the undersigned would respectfully ask of the General Assembly that an investigation of them and all these difficulties be made with out delay, that snch relief may be granted as the case may require. Very respectfully, M. H. Hotstow, D. C. Kakket. The clerk read the report of the Commit tee on Conference of tbe Northern and Southern General Assemblies on co-operation in church work. After referring to the causes which led to the rupture of the two organizations, the joint committee agreed to submit to the two assemblies the following recommendations as a basis for action of two bodies: This joint committee, waiving tbe considera tion of their differences heretofore stated, acres to recommend to the two assemblies: First That the relations of the colored peo ple In the two churches be allowed to remain In statu quo. The work among them to proceed on the same lines as heretofore. Second That all proper aid. comfort and en couragement in a spirit of kindly Christian brotherhood and confidence shall be extended by each church to the educational and evangel iilng efforts of the other for the colored race, with a view to the encouragement of every laudable effort to this end on both sides. STOEMS IN THE WEST. Bala Fell la Torrents la Many Localities, Causing Some Fatntittcs. rSFZCIAl- TELIGKAl! TO THI DISPATCH.1 Chicago. May 17. Reports from Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska and Mississippi show that those States were swept to-day by ter rific thunder storms. Near Kansas City the rain fell in torrents, and many washouts are reported by railroad men. In Iowa hail stones of enor mous size beat down the growing crops and broke windows in hundreds of buildings. In Illinois the lightning was unusually de structive. Fatalities are reported from Bockford, Lodi, Bock Island, Amherst and Warren. In Milwaukee the rainfall was phenome nal. Three men were drowned in the Com merce street tunnel by bursting of a sewer, which had become overtaxed. At Bacine, Kenosha and Burlington the storm raged furiously, many buildings being struck by lightning and burned. The heat in Chicago was oppressive but no rain felL MIN1STEE BICE HAD TO DIE. A Post Mortem Examination Proves That Nothing- Conld Have Saved His Life, I8FBCUT, TELXQBjUt TO TEX DISPATCH.! New Yoek, May 17. It has been sug gested that Minister Bice's life might have been saved had the operation of tracheotomy been jserformed in time. Any such conjec tures were set at rest by an autopsy held this afternoon. Following is a copy of the result: In the case of Allen Thomdyke Bice, at a post mortem examination made at 4.30 P. K. on Friday. May 17, 1889, we detect acute general extensive oedema of both lungs and very mod erate cedema of the glottis. . We believe that tbe lung complication was the chief immediate canse of death. The brain weighed 0 ounces. K. Ij. KETES. E. g. J ASK WAT. E. E. DtfNTAM. H. GOLDTrrWAlTE, E. FULT.KB. C. H. OHETWOOrj Dr. Fnller.who was also present when Mr. Bice died, said that this result showed that tracheotomy conld not have prolonged life. SUICIDE IN A !BATH HOUSE. X Denver Man Selects an Almost Certain Manner of Death. rsrxciAX. nuoxixTo tub dispatch. l CHICAGO, May 17. Peter Schmidt, of j uenver, ii., went into tne Datn nouse under Chambers' jewelry store this morning and bought a bath check. Then he went to a private room, undressed, filled the tub, with water and jumped into it He fired a uuucb iuw his jicbu juiu wien 2611 Dace lni the water to die. A poltee officer who heard the shot, bun osen L&ei deer aad, drappert Schmidt nat . -. or - -... the ,,l8A.vTJi,wHuida , aSllvent AN ACTUAL STUfflER. f a rriTT r tt nffiTTtriTrm I i ' nfr t iftitait TTn I i mxr mTT m "nTiTTvn l irTTT i titv a tttttt tjii i mi5JBfjLT Carnegie's Homestead Hes Oct Less Wages' Bather Than More. A WIDE DIFFERENCE IS FIGURES. Instead of 30 Per Cent Advance, 20 Per Cent deduction Comes. A SLIDIHG SCALE fOE 'THREE TEAKS Is Proposed, but Some Amalgamated Workmen Tab tbe Idea Lightly. There will be a big surprise in Homestead to-day. Carnegie, Phipps & Co. will an nounce a reduction of wages at their large mills. It will affect 2,500 workmen. It comes as a reply to the demand of the men for an advance. The announcement will tell why it was necessary to make the cut, which is very heavy in some instances. A struggle is anticipated as the result of this unexpected news. A demand for an advance in wages was made upon Carnegie, Phipps & Co. by their employes in ihe great Homestead Steel Mills about three weeks ago. While it was supposed to average 30 percent over the wages at pres ent paid, it was found to actually mean an advance ranging from 25 per cent in some departments to 68 per cent in others. This is the mill at which armor plate for the navy, other marine work and structural steel is made. It was one the most expen sive mills to build in this country, and is filljd with ponderous machinery. A report reached The Dispatch office to the effect that the firm would to-day an nounce its reply to their men. Nothing could be learned about the matter in labor circles so a reporter was sent'direct to the city offices of Carnegie, Phipps & Co. There the rumor was confirmed. This morn ing printed notices will be posted up at the mills in Homestead, notifying employes that hereafter schedules will be put in force, based on a price for steel blooms, billets and slabs, of 527 50 per gross ton on cars. Wages will be advanced or reduced, according to the average monthly selling price, but wages will not go below 525 per ton. This is a eliding scale something after the method in use at Braddock. IT IS A BEDUCTIOH. Mr. Abbott, a member of the firm, in re ply to the reporter's questions, said that tbe schedules make a very material reduction below the present wages at Homestead. Heretofore, he says, the Homestead works have been paying far more than any'other works with which they come in competition. The new scales will bring about equality, but the wages will be in excess of those paid by any other works outside of the Amalga mated Association of Iron and Steel Workers. As the leading competitors of the Homestead mill are outside of the Amal gamated Association, he. regards this as fair to the men. -lki Abbott regards thetep-BB!Teryo'4 mentous one. He says it was only taken after a full consideration and careful study of the wages with which they come in com petition. The new scales affect about 2,500 workmen. He expects that the change will cause a prolonged struggle, but it has been decided to be necessary, or else the works will have to go out of competition with those paying less wages to their em ployes. OBJECTIONS ABE EXPECTED. "The men have said they wish a rest this summer," said Mr. Abbott, "and it will probably he given them. We have no quarrel with organized labor. We are per fectly willing that onr men shall belong to either the Amalgamated Association or the Knights of Labor if these organizations will permit a scale -ot wages anywhere near as low as those of onr competitors. But we recognize that association will object to the reduction proposed, and, consequently, after deliberation, we are preparing for the straggle which we expect with the determi nation to make wages upon whioh we can run onr works steadily and profitably." It was learned in some further conversa tion that the schedule makes the heaviest reduction on the highest-priced labor. It is understood that in some instances this is as high as 50 per cent The cut is smallest on the low-priced labor. In some instances among laborers it is actually no reduction, but an advance. Laborers, for example, who get $1 90 per day are advanced to $2. This is done on the well-known principle of Andrew Carnegie to equalize wages when ever possible to do so equitably. The firm feels that with the present state of trade, and at the rate of wages they have been paying, that they cannot compete with many other mills working out the same products, but nbt having the same favora ble situation for natural advantages that they have. They claim to be doing this to provide 12 houU' work for their men daily rather than shut down the whole works. VASTtFEEIOHT SHIPPERS. John Garner, who has had charge of the freight interests of the firm of Carnegie, Phipps & Co. for the. past two years, will resign shortly to go into the manufacture of domestic hadware with his father-in-law, S. Jarvis Adams. He will be succeeded by E. H. Utley) of the Allegheny Valley road. The person who fills the position attends to the shipping of the Upper and Lower Union mills, thejEajrar Thomson, the Homestead works, Keystone Bridge Company and the Hartmar Steel Works, at Beaver FaUs. E. H-fCTtley hands over the management of the i&Ilegheny Valley Ballroad freight department to C. S. McCargo. J. P. Ander son bjecomes General Passenger Agent of the illey road. THE! TEEAT IT LIGHTLY. Amalgamated Men, In President Welhe's Absence, Talk a Little. Tie residence of President William We'ihe, o! the Amalgamated Association, was visited last nicht, but Mr. Weihe had gone to Philadelpuia. At Odd Fellows' all. on South .bignteentn street, a nam- prof iron workers were spoken to and kuked what thev supposed would be the rri- nnlt n( the nroDOsed sliding scale ahdredno- ttnn t. TTnmpstead. Thev treated the matfpr jocularly, -stating that there uldbe noth- Ing in it, as the men towsImm tract whion aoes not expire until J une l. Some of them said that thing's would be heard dropping all oyer the country about that time, and that strikes, lockouts, etc., -would, in all .probability, be the order of taetday. GUIRI CV UssM? eomrtoWfiimwIfcfe ipAMK tftmtfafi tfjMmmerjitaMf wW tWx. v"w CTTywswgiy wwes ,wm-e. mmnmtw.09mmmm A.unAMnujM mm. j xlili IJiAT BlJNiJo. i-uajui a Yuaaha, Alsaprl AltbaBflrlead and Oat of Training-, He Meets, AH the Doss That, Challeneo Htm aad Lays Them Ont - ,-' J$i- I" ,D0 Mud. rsrctu: ian-xoKAU to tttje sisrATca.1 ScBAirxeir; May 17. Two dogs got after a stray hog-on the village green in Goulds boro the o(er day. The hog was rooting up the sward when the dogs set out to tackle it, but they barked on the way, and the hog gave assort and started off toward Jay Gould's old tannery dam on a lively canter. It-was lean, long-legged, strong and spry, and it ran so fast that the dogs had to scratch gravel to reach it; but the foremost dog soon caughfitby the tall, and then the hog whirled round and rouni until it threw the dog into a ditcbby the road side. While the dog was scrambling around in the trench the hog squealed as thongh it had been stuck with a knife and started on again, but it had not gone half a dozen rods before the dogs dashed upon either side of it and 'got a hold just back of each of its shoulders. All three then went kiting down the'muddy road toward the Lehigh river, the- hog squealing with all its might and the dogshaneingon. Twice the noisy hog partly stopped and tried to shake the dogs off, but they stuck like ticks, and then the hog steered straight for a big mud pud dle. At the edge of the puddle the hog stopped so suddenly as to loosen the holds the dogs had upon its flabby sides and the qurs went end over end and struck head first in the sticky mire. The hog was fighting mad by this time, and it plunged in after the wallowing curs and bit of e of them on the hind leg till he howled. The other one got the hog by the ear and held on till the hog ripped a hole in his throat and gave him a fatal wound, fol lowing that up by trampling the enr into the mud. The first dog crawled out and ran limping and yelping up tbe road, and the bleeding bog chased him a few yards, but couldn't eaten him. ' The owner of the dead cur wants 56 from the owner of the hog, and he threatens to sue for damages unless the owner of the hog forks over that amount by the 1st of June. .-- -i, .,, -P0IS0NED0NICECEBA1T. Over Oae Hundred People Seriously III. Many of Whom Mar Die. ISFECIAL TELEOItAM TO THE DISFATCH.1 NEWHAVEif, Conn., May 17. There was a church festival at Glastonbury Conn., to-night, and, ice cream was par taken of plentifully by the persons pres ent. Over 100 developed symptoms of poisoning in a short time, and 32 are very seriously ill, while ten are not expected to recover. All the doctors in the place are engaged in attending the needs of ihe , sick and dying, but can do little to stop the progress ot the illness, which is as mysterious as though the proximate cause was unknown. Tyrotox icon is the poison usually blamed, when ice cream creates trouble, and it is supposed that this is the noxious agent in these cases. There is no suspicion that malicious poisoning has been done. Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Glazier were enter taining Mrs. B. F. Williams and Mr. and Mrs.,William S. Williams, of North Glas tonbury, during the evening. A messenger was sent to the festival for two quarts of vanilla ice cream. Mr. and Mrs. Glazier and their visitors ate plenty of the cream, and a few hours afterward vrere taken sick. The serv ants in the house were given a portion of the cream, and they are also ill. Mrs. Gtei&and jhe two Mrs. WiUianis are! seriously vaeciea. at. xiesry jounce, ice town Coroner, has obtained a sample of the cream, and will analyze it to determine the cause of the poisoning. HISS TOWN'S DEATH STILL A MISTEEI. Investigation Lead to the Discovery of a Probable Eomnncc. rSFECIAL TELEOEAH TO THE DISPATCH. New Yoek, May 17. The mystery of Miss Tobin's death, at Staten Island, re mains as dark as ever. Investigation to-day developed the fact that Miss McTammany, the ticket agent at the West Brighton station of the Eapid Transit road is positive that Miss Tobin did not pass through the station on the night of April 15 when Dr. Brown said he left her at the station entrance. Detective Edward Fulton discovered to day that another lady of West Brighton had seen Miss Tobin about the time Mrs. Horace Hillyer believes she saw her on the road near the Athletic Club boathouse. The rumor which has been cur rent that Dr, Bryan had engaged himself to another girl, and that the breaking of this news to Miss Tobin caused her to kill her self was thoroughly sifted to-day, and the supposed fiancee found to be Miss Fanny Washburton, a trained nurse at Bellevue Hospital who lives in Taylors street, West Brighton. Miss Washburton denied that she had ever been engaged to Dr. Bryan, although she admitted that they were very good friends and had been so for some time. Mrs. McKinney noticed a little chamois skin burse which Miss Tobin told Mrs. McKinney that she always wore it This purse was not found on the body when it was recovered. JONES' LATEST FEEAK. The Ex-Senator From Florida Will Write a Historical Novel. rsrzciAi. tzlequam io thi dispatch, i Detroit, May 17. Ex-Senator Jones contemplates writing a historical novel. The hero of the story will be a young plebeian, poor in fortune but of good fam ily, who attained a place in the Eoman Senate. The patricians and the plebeians, alike jealous of his pre-eminent mental prowess, determined to destroy him. They murdered his wife and favorite son, pursued his remaining children almost to the grave and arranged to murder him. He took reluge in Mesopotamia, where he was followed" by the. conspirators. The great Bishop of Constantinople, hearing of his persecution, determined to serve him and his surviving children, and all the powers of the Catholic Church were put in motion to effect this end. . The denouement will, the Senator says, deal with the intensely interesting detail? of a miraculous deliverance, despite the persistence an organized and powerful persecution. It is believed that Jones is Himself the Hero of this story. NOT SO MUCH AS LAST TEAE. Postmaster General Wanamaker Shares HI Profits With His Employes. Philadelphia, May 17. The second annual distribution of profits at John Wanamaker's establishment in this city took place to-night A certain percentage of the profits is set aside for the benefit of those employed who have been seven years or longer in service. This fund for th&year ending April 15, 1889, amounts to 544,182, and was distributed among nearly 400 em ployes who haye served the required time. iLa buuuids wj.iius lucre is a monthly uis- LSteS towg&S rided a aI1 the . tributlon of profits which, during the past month, amounted to $58,263. This was di vided among all the emnloves irrespective of length of service. Last year 5109,439 was distributed in this way. An Indiana Town Is Sarnlagv rsrECTAI. TELEGRAM TO THB DISrATCH.l Indianapolis, May- 17. Noblesville, cpsatyseatef HamllteH,' 36 miles aorth.k . aeewoyea ny snsiiNsMNH ay- P"mm xwjswsyneg-HyMBtsuuiMs sjSjTaesjS-J Hew Haven School Girls Discover a Talisman Which Never Fails TO SPEEDILY SECURE HUSBANDS. They Organize a Society With Only One, but a Very Potent Secret THE P0WEE OF A lELIOTf 6AETEE, A Way in Which Matrimony is Hide Easy to All Who Are Tired of IlTlng Alone. A number of secret marriages and elope ments fn New Haven disclose the fact that a regularly organized society exists there among the young ladies, who have vowed they will become brides within a year. As each one's oath is kept, she passes to her dearest friend the yellow garter, which has served as a talisman to speedily secure her a husband. rSFXCTAL TZLXGfeAU TO THE DISPATCH. New Haven, Conn., May 17. There have been a series of queer incidents in the matrimonial line during the past few-weeks, but to-day the announcement of the engage ment of Antonio Eabino and Pasquale Eose capped the climax. Antonio is one of the characters of the city, and for more than ten years has ground out music to people pass ing up and down Chapel street from a dilap idated organette. He is an Italian, not far from 80 years of age. This morning he ap peared before Eegistrar Carr and asked for his marriage license. His intended bride claims to be a widow, but the funny part of the engagement is the fact that this is An tonio's first venture on the sea of matrimony. People have just ceased talking about the marriage of Charles Walker, of the dry goods house ot Munson &Co., to Miss Mary Hnghson, one of the clerks in the employ of the firm. To win his bride, Walker was compelled to renounce the Protestant re ligion and become a Boman Catholic. This he did by being baptized in St. Mary's Cathedral, and THE MAIJEIAQE WAS SOLEMNIZED in St. Patrick's Church, a day or two ago. Walker was one of the popular society men of the city, and his uncle, the senior mem ber of the firm, at first threatened to dis solve the partnership, but afterward modi fied his threats. Walker has lived at one of the swell boarding houses in the city, but when he expressed a desire to bring his bride there his landlady informed him that it woum oe impossioie. JM ext ne turned to the Kensington, the only flat of which the city boasts. Here he secured rooms, but was not a little chagrined to learn that the owner objected to his occupying them when he learned of the circumstances of his ten ant's marriage. Closely on the Walker-Hughes wedding followed the story of the elopement of Miss Nellie Thompson, daughter of Alderman Sherwood S.Thompson, and Henry Pardee, to New York City, were they were married on Saturday last and returned to this city. They KEPT the MATTEB QTJIET until Thursday. NeUie is an- 18-yearold School girl who resides with her grand mother on Davenport aVenue. Pardee is about the same age and works in the freight office of the Consolidated Bailroad. They had met a few times at church and parties, but on the day of the elopement they met by chance in the street, and Harry declared his love then and there. An hour later they were on their way to New York, where they got married, and were back in this city be fore dark. Being a married woman, Mrs. Pardee thought it beneath her dignity to at tend school, and in her refusal to do so the fact of her marriage became known. Living but a short distance from Nellie was Miss Georgie Cook, who is now Mrs. Samuel Parker. This couple was united in marriage by the Eev. CO, Camp, of All Saints' Episcopal Mission, three or four weeks ago, but ihe marriage was not gener ally known until recently. Miss Cook lived with her married sister. Mrs. Knott, in Greenwich avenue, who objected to the attention which Parker paid her sister. She, however, offered Alexander Finout every possible opportunity of courting Georgie. He MET WITH ILL SUCCESS, and finally things were brought to ahead by Miss Cook's announcement that she was Mrs. Parker. So enraged was her sister (Mrs. Knott), that she shut Georgie up in the cellar and compelled her to skate on roller skates over the concrete bottom. ' To-day the marriage of Walter Dilling ham and Miss Edith Jardiene was an nounced. It took place last January, and has been kept a secret ever since. Carl Treitlein and Miss Lizzie Fletcher eloped about two weeks ago to Port Chester and were married. Nearly all of the ladies above mentioned live moderately sear each other, and are said to haye been members of the Secret Union, a society formed last summer con sisting of a dozen or more girls, mostly at tendants on the public schools, who vowed to get married within a year. One peculiar custom of the members of the society is that as fast as one of tlfem succeeds in' getting married she gives to her dearest unmarried friend in the society A TELtOW GABTEE. This garter is said to have some secret power in it which renders the wearer espe cially charming and attractive in the eyes of the young men, and is a sort of talisman wnicn will secure "steady company at least for the wearer. There is another similar society in one of the swell boarding schools in this city, where the members, five in number, have all started to wear yellow garters. As fast as they become engaged the garters are trans ferred to girls outside of the society, and they then become members. About the latest thing in the yellow gar ter craze was shown by a prominent belle who, alter she had been married and was about to take a carriage awaiting at the door, threw her bridal boquet to one of her bridesmaids. The stems of the white roses were found to be clasped by a yellow garter having a beautiful silver buckle, on which was engraved the monogram of the lady and space enough left foranother monogram beside it. A MUTUALLY AGEEEABLE APPAIB. The PennsrlTania Railroad Makes a Good Contract With a Connecting- Koad. tfPECIAL TELEOKAM TO TBE DISPATCTt.l Newbueg, N. Y., May 17.-The Lehigh and Hudson Bailroad, which is the natural connecting link between the Pennsylvania Bailroad system and the Poughkeepsie bridge via Campbell Hal, in Orange County, has entered into a 100-years' con tract with the Pennsylvania for a mutual traffic agreement between the two road, whereby the trains ot the Pennsylvania will run over the Lehigh and Hudson to the Poughkeepsie bridge connecting railroad, whiie tbe Lehigh and Hudson, which con nects at Belvidere with the Pennsylvania system, will run their cars over the latter system to all points north of Phillipburg. The contract is thought-to be a favorable one for both sides; awWefafw.io mrram't;0meArem;" eryi fculrnsWsg te rsssj set JHfcsj The Railroad Magnate Gains the Fight for tbe Control of tbe Oregon Trans continental Exciting Scenes Ot the Slock Exchange The Advance In Price. , New Yoek, May 17. The last hour of business iji the New York Stock Exchange to-day marked the climax of one of the most exciting chapters of Wall street his tory, and closed the fiercest fight that has ever been known on the floor of the ex change. The prize for which the bat tle was fought was the control of the Oregon Transcontinental Company, a corporation, with a capital of 540,000,000, and holding control of the most important railways in the Pacific Northwest. The control of the company is now held by Henry Yillard. and associated with him are the managers of the Standard Oil Company, Baron Bleichroder, Bismarck's financial agent, Edward T. Abbott, John Trevor, W. T. Colbyand some of the largest bankers in the city. This aggregation of capital the enemies of Yillard worked against. The opposition included all tbe biz insiders in the Union Pacific road, Charles Francis Adams, Syd ney Dillon, Fred Ames, Elijah Smith and others equally as prominent. Elijah Smith had charge of the campaign to oust Yil lard, and proposed to take his place as he did once before, when Yillard went down in the crash following the driving of the golden spike on the Northern Pacific road. For a long time both sides were active in quietly ac cumulating stock, but it was not until to-day, the last day on which to register stock to vote at the election, that the supreme effort was made. The price moved up to 564 12yf per share before the Exchange closed. From 540 to 545 the stock moved upl per cent at a time. Then it jumped 5 per cent on a single transaction, and after moving up 1 per cent more made a jump of 9 per cent to 560. It soon sold at 564 12, the highest point reached in six years. All the time the trading was marked by intense excitement, and the day will never be forgot by those who took part in the dealings. After the registry books closed Yillard met Elijah Smith, and said: "I have won. I have 201,000 shares locked up in my boxes." As the capital stock of the com pany is 400,000 shares, this would give the Villard party 2,000 shares majority, but Smith would not admit that he was de feated, although he did not claim a victory. PEEPETUAL MOTION. A Baltimore Inventor Thinks He Has Solved the Problem. rSFXCIAt. TXLXQBAKTO TOX DISPATCH. Baltimore, May 17. Mr. Gottfried Grill, the boss carver of the Atlantic Fur niture Company, of this city, has a machine for developing per petual motion. The machine is sim ple in construction, consisting mainly of a straight shaft hung between two upright standards, moved by weights. Upon this shaft are hung at their centers six peculiar arms, about a foot long, that carry the weights. .Four of them are shaped like two Hogarth lines of beauty, with their ends brought together, but with a space of two inches between them at the middle. These arms are hung at different angles, and within each is a gutter in which runs a leaden ball. When the machine starts each arm is in such a position that the ball is rolled to one side and acts as a downward weight, there always being a little mor weight on the downward than the up ward side.. .This would -not turn 'the shaft all the way around, but the two other arms, shaped like large dollar marks, carry the balls in their gutters to a point where they act as downward weights in the nick of time to continue the motion and carry other arms off their dead center. The shaft at its end is connected'by a cog wheel with a fly-wheel which assists still further the rotary motion. The machine has a rod through it only for the purpose of stopping it. Mr. Grill says he has been tinkering at per petual motion for ten years, during which his friends have confidentially called him some very plain names, but he says he has the laugh on them now. EX-SECEETAEY BAIAED'S WEDDING. A Member of Bis Family Says it Will Take Place Very Early. IBPXCUL TELEGRAM TO TIM DISrATCH.l WlliMiNGiON,DEL.,Mayl7, The Every Evening this afternoon says: "The rumor that has been in circulation the past few dayB to the effect that ex-Secretary of State Bayard was shortly to be married to a lady prominent in Washington society, attracted comparatively little notice, from the fact that tne name ot ilr. .tsayara nas been men tioned in newspaper rumors upon one or two Erevions occasions in a similar way. It is, owever, announced upon the most reliable authority in fact, from a member ot the family "that the ex-Secietarv will marry Miss Clymer, daughter of Dr. Clymer, TJ. S. N. It is stated that the wedding will occur early this summer, and that the ex Secretary and his bride will pass a few months in Europe. THOMAS INAUGUEATED. He Is Daly Installed as Gorernor of Utah Territory. Salt Lake, Utah, May 17. Hon. Arthur L. Thomas qualified as Governor of Utah yesterday, and entered upon the duties of his office. He has the full confidence of the loyal men of Utah. In the dif ferent offices as Secretary, Commissioner, etc., he has shown himself an honest, alert man. The Chamber of Commerce last even ing warmly indorsed him, and by the act echoed the sentiment of the best people of Utah. Ex-Governor Caleb W. West retires with the full respect and confidence of Ameri cans of Utah. He more than once ran connter to the wishes of his own party in doing what he thought was his duty. He carries into retirement the respect of the true men of both parties. NOT FOE A L0SG TIME IET. The Parnell Commission Will Blake no Re port Until Tebrnary, 1S90. London, May 17. Father O'Donovan testified before the Parnell Commission to-day. He said that the moonlight ers at Tula were opposed to the Leasue. They had threatened wit ness, who was under police protection, while he was connected with the branch of the League at that place. Father O'Dono van attributed the increase of crime during the Aieague's existence to the action of the landlords in enforcing evictions. Wit ness had denounced crime from the altar of his church on 40 Sundays. The commission will not make their re port to the House of Commons until Feb ruary, 1890. SAMOA IS BEING SETTLED, The Negotiations at Berlin Are Progressing In a Satisfactory Manner. London, May 18. The Berlin corre spondent of the Times says that the Ameri can delegates must refer to Washing ton the points of detail, but that on the general principles all the delegates agree and that the next meeting onght to conclude the conference. The Standard' t correspondent at Berlin says: One or more sittings of the conference are still necessary. The chief sabjeet debated to day was tbe aaestle of government. A basis of agreesest has bees aweody arrived at for tbe ynlotpatlon of sfce-tteM-yower ra oer- HBsm snVfd bbVbSJSw'sbbVbb' st BfMssBF VMlgJMfaal 1 WITH BUM. V i j Governor Beaver at Last Declares He is for the Amendment. t CAPTAIN DRAV0 SEES DANGEE. Unless Prohibition Carries the Republics Party Will Lose Votes, i - ' HOW ME. QUAY WAS BE0UGHT TO TUB.' Unless He Besig-ns to Becoae flmzuor He Breab a Great Secord. GovernorBeaver announces he will vote? for the prohibition amendment. Captain Dravo says if it un't carried thaBeprrblicaa party will lose votes. He induced Quay to take up the question and would like to see him Governor. Governor Beaver persistently refused, to tell the correspondents at Harrfsburg whether he intended to vote for the prohibi tion amendment. He disliked, he said, to publicly announce himself, because of his representative position. He considered the question one that should be left to the calm judgment of the people, uninfluenced by anyone in an official position. The Gover nor, however, has reconsidered this position, and in the privacy of his office, free from the awe-inspiring presence of the press, has placed himself squarely on record, in a tele gram addressed to ex-Congressman Miller, of Mercer. The telegram, a copy of which is sent The Dispatch by its Greenville correspondent, is as follows: I have never had any question as to my per sonal duty in regard to tbe amendment, and will vote for it. of course, as I have always in tended to do. The only question in my mind has been one of duty as a representative of the party. Without pretending to represent" tiio Bepnblican party, I expect to take grounds publicly In favor of the amendment In due time. Jakes a. Beatee. . A PEOHIBinON PIONEEE. Hon. John F. Dravo, of Beaver, the old warhorse of prohibition, came to town last evening to attend the Allegheny College alumni banquet. Captain Dravo was one of the prominent figures of the last Legislature, as he has 'been in the politics of Western Pennsylvania for a long term of years. His white tie and his steel-rimmed spectacles aro badges of benevolence. Stanch in his Be publicanism, he labored to bring his party up to the point of taking the liquor question by the horns and has the pleasure of now seeing it submitting to the people an amend ment to the Constitution, designed to wipe out the entire traffic in intoxicating beverages. Captain Dravo has already made 15 speeches in favor of the Constitutional amendment, has an engagement to make another in his own county to-night, and on Sunday night will speak'in Dr. Holmes' church in Alle gheny. The Captain is a local Methodist preacher and looks like a full fledged min ister of the gospel. He is one of the shrewd est politicians of the State, and is an appli cant for the position of Surveyor of the Port of Pittsburg. In conversation last' night with a Dispatch reporter ha talked , freely on the subject of prohibition, and as serted without reservation that nnless the amendment was carried the party would necessarily suffer severely. AN IBEEPBE3SIBLE CONFLICT. "There are a large number of men in the Bepnblican party," he said, "who believe strongly in moral questions in politics. There is really little in politics just nqw of great importance, and the prohibition of liquor is the great question with them. It is the old abolition fight over again. It is something that has come to stay, and it is going to trouble us unless we dispose of it properly. There are a great many Demo crats with us in this fight All the Prohi bitionists are with us, and there are a great number of people who would have leitus for the prohibition party if we had not taken the question up. If the amendment is not carried we will lose them. They will charge bad faith and will point to what Senator Cooper tried to do In the line of amending the Brooks law in the last Legis lature as an evidence of it I am very much afraid, too, of what will happen in the next Legislature unless tbe amendment is cairied. There was enough in the session just closed to show that the high license law will be almost entirely swept away." "Do you think, Captain, that if the amendment is defeated in June Speaker Boyer will be elected State Treasurer in the fall?" "Yes, Ithink he will, bnt it will be much easier to elect him if the amendment is car ried. If I were in the place of Boyer and his friends I would pray night and day that the amendment be carried." "Captain," ventured the reporter, "wasn't it you who induced Quay to take up the pro hibition question?" "Well, now," was the response, "I don't like to take too much credit to myself for anything of that kind." "But I have heard it so asserted." TACKLING PEOHIBITION. "Perhaps I was responsible," returned the Captain. "I believe there is some secret law in nature that communicates ideas from person to person through hundreds of miles and with.no especial demonstration. Why, 20 years ago, for instance, the pulpits thun dered fire and brimstone at the people, and the preacher who didn't make a practice , of it-wasn't considered orthodox. See what a difference between then and now, and yet tbe revolution has been accomplished with no great noise. The feeling against the hurling of fire and brimstone at the people was communicated quietly from mind to mind and accomplished the change. When I was making my first Legislative campaign in Beaver county I found out tbe prohibi tion sentiment tnee, and a made up my mind that the sentimentwas general. Some occult influence had carried it through the State. I said to Quay: The time has come to take up this question.' In the conven tion three years ago we resolved to submit it to the people, and it is now before them. When Quay was elected State Treasurer I told him we wanted him lor United States Senator. He pooh-poohed the idea, thought better of it, and there he is. ON" TO HIGHEE THINGS. "After the Chicago convention I told him he was needed for National Chairman to pull us ouVot a hole. He shook his head at the idea, bnt he took the place, and yon; know the result" "Captain," said a listener, "what do yoa think of Quay as next Governor of Penn sylvania?" "He would make a good one. I am for him for anything." -"I wouldn't be surprised, returned the other speaker to see him nominated for the place. Yon know it's on record that he has resigned every office hehas ever held. Why, I am -told that the very hntv office he ever held, that of Township Supervisor, he re signed, aad he has kept on resigning ever since. It would only be in order for him to resign his United States Senatorship, bnt I don't see how he is to get out of it nnless it is into the position of Governor of the State. We may need him as a candidate after the prohibition election." SUMMER m&-S2SSb ,PATCgyfiMismgiwaras of .warning , and a-l ;i 1 ;i -a v