(yvww-1 1 nWWmm$!M!fWj!!$ ' TiSnwptJ w If yon want Board, Room, name r Help, advertise la THE DISPATCH. Purchaser can be found for everything offered For Sale In THE DISPATCH. THE DISPATCH I. the belt advertising; medium In Western Pennsylvania. Try lu FOETT-FOTJIITH YEAR. ft Carlos D. Graham Successfully Shoots the Lower Rapids of Niagara IN HIS PATENT BARREL He Comes Through Unscathed, and Calls it a Terrible Trip. TO TACKLE THE FALLS KEXT TIME HI Experience ns Told br Himself Sick When He Went Into the Water Ho Felt Worse Than the Four Condemned New York Murderers on Their Last Day Horror of the Spectntors as They Watched the Bobbins Cask His Wife Ilnd Ursed Him Not to Make the At tempt Rapid Transit on the Water HI Body Minicirlint Braised, bnt He's Othcrwlso Unhnrt. Carlos Graham, the Niagara hero, as he will now be known, is positive that he can shoot the falls in his barrel. He went through the lower rapids yesterday, and. though badly shaken up, was not badly hurt. As he says, it was a terrible trip. rsrzcui. teligilam to tids dispatch. Niagaba Falls, August 25. Carlos D. Graham this afternoon successfully per formed the most daring feat which he has yet attempted at Niagara, and the treacher ous water made him go beyond his expecta tions in showing what can be done in the gorge. Graham's ambition has been to co over Niagara, but to-day's adventure is just as dangerous, and a craft which will withstand the racking it receives over the rocks under the tempestuous lower rapids is sure to go over the falls all right That is what Graham will do next. The barrel used in this afternoon's trip was a new one, built of locust wood which came from China, and which was STRONG AND SOUGH. It was like the barrel which Graham lost in the whirlpool two years ago, but is smaller. It is four and one-fcalf feet tall, 22 inches in diameter across the head and 15 at the bottom. The diameter at the bulge near the top is 29 inches. The barrel weighs 150 pounds, hut the weight was increased fully 100 pounds by Band ballast and a drag piece of railroad iron. Besides this, the weight of the occu pant would keep the barrel upright. People here have refused to offer Graham any financial encouragement in these trips, and this was made principally as a prelimi nary to golny over.tbc cataract- His inten tion was known to-day, and the banks of the gorge were lined with THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE, while the railroad bridge and elevators were crowded. Graham was made a hero by his friends, and they kept him up pretty nearly all last night. They crowded around him in Andrew Horn's hostelry, and one man offered to sign articles of agreement, with a 550 forfeit, that he would accompany Gra ham if Constable Horn would not inter fere. To-day he did not show up. There was some talk of arresting Graham Tinder the act making attempts at suicide a lelony, bnt nobody took the initiative, and all arrangements were made to avoid inter ference. The barrel was secretly taken from town last night, and bidden near the old Maid of the Mist landing, just above the Cantilever bridge, where its bright red upper works were first seen in the water shortly before the starting time. Steve llrodie was understood to be in town, and an effort was made to find him so he could be invited to join in the launching party. AS BAD AS IP CONDEMNED. While Graham's friends were busy with these preparations this znorcing, he laid down for a nap. When he was awakened he said: "I feel worse than those four mur derers down in New York did on the day they woke to be executed." Graham had good cause for fear. He had arranged to go through without any hammock or harness, such as have been used in previous at tempts. "It's too bad," said one of his friends, "to see him go that way, for he will break his neck sure. One tnrn of the barrel will knock him out. Wc might as well get his measure for a coffin." The rest of the crowd looked gloomy. If it was not for disappointing the people Graham would not have made the trip. He was quite sick beforehand, and had been UNABLE TO EAT ANYTHING since yesterday. He refused to drink some brandy offered him, and slid down through the manhole into the barrel. Charles Wied nian,Jobn Kepford and John Wiesenberger towed the cask to the center of the river and set it adrift at 4:40 o'clock. It drifted slowly under the railroad bridges, giving Graham a chance to fasten the manhole cover nith an iron bar and brace himself for the danger ahead. The suspense was not long, for in a few moments the barrel was buried in the first breaker of the whirlpool rapids. As the gorge slightly narrows and the cuirent strikes the rocks it becomes a boiling, seeth ing mass, through which hardly anything can hope to safely pass. Graham's barrel got the full benefit of the anger of the tor rent, and the spectators shuddered as they saw the barrel overturned, spun like a top, or buried under a huge wave. When a quiet bit of the angriest water in the world, as Captain Webb called it, was reached, the barrel recovered its buoyancy and DASHED MADLY THOUGH PBOUDLY on into the whirlpool. The mile of rapids had been shot in Z minutes, a 20-mile-an-hour gait. Graham had not time to open the manhole cover in the whirlpool. His barrel rode quickly to the center of the maelstrom, and was carried toward the Canada shore, pass ing by a crowd of rescuers on the point. Constable Horn, with a rope attached to his waist, stood on a rock ready to spring into the water to aid the navigator, and William Severe, the theatrical man who has backed Graham in previous attempts, was there with a crowd to help him. A fountain of foam overswept Horn, and Graham's barrel passed down the river into the Devil's rapids, beyond reach. "That DAREDEVIL 4. settles him," remarked Mr. Horn. "He was not well enough to go this far, and the Devil's rapids will kill him." The party, including The Dispatch reporter, drove down to Xiewiston in a Carriage, but the rapids carried the barrel PASTEB THAN ELEET HOUSES could go, and it was lost sight of after it had been apparently drawn under by the maelstrom at Devil's hole. ' These lower rapids are faster, madder and more rocky than the ones above the whirl lool, and the danger is greater than in the upper rapids, through which ex-Policeman Kendall, of Boston, swam in August, 1880, iind in which Captain Webb lost his life. Graham was found at Lewiston, where he had been rescued, more dead than alive, by John Lonsdale and Seymour Fleming. He was in the barrel only 25 minutes alto gether, and, allowing for the time he was floating in smooth water, he made the four miles of angry rapids in ten minutes, aver aging 25 miles an hour. When Graham had sufficiently recovered from the shock he told his story of the ad Tenture in a modest manner. "This is the roughest experience," he said to The Dis patch reporter, "that I ever want to have. I made the trip in 25 minutes, but it seemed an age, and I did no: know any minute but I would be dashed to death on the hidden rocks which abound in the gorge. When they let go of the barrel, above the Cantilever bridge, I fastened the manhole over so tightly that I was in pitch darkness and couldn't see the other side of the barrel. I braced myself in a crouching position, and waited for the battle with the water. I heard a train rumbling over the bridge just then; visions of home and my family were buried in the darkness. I had not told my wife in Buffalo when I cams down that I would make the attempt She had urged me not to. My little girl fol lowed me to the cars, and said pathetically: "Come home soon, won't you napa?' "Just then I struck the rapids, and was nearly thrown on my head, my arms and legs having become cramped, but the barrel TUENED BIGHT SIDE UP in a minute. The blood, which had rushed to my head, returned to my body, and I took a fresh brace, crouching as low down as I could on the cask. I felt seasick, though I have crossed the ocean many times. I nearly fainted from the heat until the water began to drip in through the tightly-closed manhole, forced in by the pressure when the barrel was sucked down by the undercurrent This was a new danger, for the barrel was so heavily weighted that if too much water en tered it would sink. I grazed a rock occa sionally, and my body is badly bruised from being overturned so often. It was a terri ble trip." A PUBLIC BENEFACTOR. The Death or Ilenry bbavr, the Venerable Philanthropist, of St. Louis His Cancer From Poverty to Wealth The Famous llotanl- cal Garden. St. Louis, August 25. Henry Shaw, the venerable philanthropist and the bestjfriend St Louis ever had, died at 325 this morn ing. He died without showing evidence of physical pain or mental, suffering. At hir bedside were Mrs. Julius Morriss, Mr. Shaw's sister, and a number of his most in timate friends. Henry shaw was an Englishman by birth. At the age of 19 he came to America and located in St Louis, arriving here on May 4, 1819. He first embarked in the Yiarflpnfa Kn.inoce .. 1 and for a time was proprietor, clerk and porter. He also gave some attention to Indian supplies. He prospered, and after 20 years of commercial life had amassed a sufficient fortune to enable him to retire from business, which he did at the age of 40. He went abroad and visited nearly every quarter ot the globe, being away from this country about, ten years. It was upon his return that he commenced the studr and cultivation of plants and flowers, and it was in the prosecution of these studies that the now world-famous botanical gardens had their origin. He made his gardens and beautiful estate free to the public With the death of Henry Shaw the fa mous botanical gardens become the proper ty of the State of Missouri. Another and perhaps more valuable munificence was the gift to the city of Tower Grove Park, a resort of peculiar beauty. Mr. Shaw's residence, where he died, was at Tower Grove Park, and he passed but little time at bis down town home. Mr. Shaw's estate is valued at $2,500,000, and it is thought the greater part will'be left to the city of St Louis in various bequests. Mr. Shaw was by leaning an Episcopalian, and the charitable institutions of that church, it is understood, will be particularly favored in Ills will. The only relatives of deceased in this countrv are "his sister, Mrs. Julius Morriss, and a cousin, Mr. Frank Bradbury. A large number of distant relatives reside in Manchester, England. DISASTEEON WATER. Two River Steamers Meet In Collision Nenr Cincinnati, and Another Is Totally De stroyed by Fire Narrow Escape of tbo Kngineer. Cincinnati, August 25. At 10 o'clock to-night the Coney Island steamer Common wealth, coming down the11 river, came into diiect collision with the little harbor steam er Lame Dnck, going up the river, just a quarter of a mile above the Newport and Cincinnati Itailway bridge, and utterly annihilated the Lame Duck. There was a crew of five on the Lame Duck and four of them were picked up uninjured by men in a yawl. Mr. George B. Alexander, the engineer, and the fifth man on the little cralt, went under the revolving paddle wheels of the big steamer Commonwealth, which was back ing, and came to the surface near the guard of the boat, where a plucky passenger caught the exhausted engineer by the hair and held him up until others could draw him on the boat, where he was found to be uninjured. The Lame Duck was valued at ?2,000. The Commonwealth immediately alter the collision discharged her big load of Coney Island passengers and returned to her landing. At 11:15, less than an hour and a half af ter the collision, the fine passenp er steamer Commonweath was on fire. A double fire alarm sounded, but it was of no use. The big steamer burned to the water's edge in less than three-quarters of an hour. She is a total loss. Nobody knows how the fire started. The loss -is about 530,000, pretty well insured. A CX0IUCIDK IN DANGER, A Kansas Mob Making Preparations for a Lynching Bee. rSFECIAI. TXLEOBAX TO THE DISPATCH.1 Wichita, Kan., August 25. A dis patch is just received by Sheriff Hays from Eldorado, stating that a train load of men had just left there lor Wichita to take from jail wife murderer Snyder and his mother and lynch them. Hays is making ready lor a guard of 50 men, and has notified the oity police to respond promptly at any call. Some days ago Snyder was rescued from a mob at Eldorado, and brought here for safe keeping. ffo $ffl$fattg SAYED BYA BOOK. A Flacky Young Baltlmoreau's Almost Mi raculous Escape Attacked by a Bar glar With a Kazor His Note Book saves nis Life. rSFECIAI. TELEGBAH TO THE DISPATCH. 1 Baltimore, August 25. A murder very nearly like the Luca homicide in Brooklyn was only prevented this morning by a morocco-covered notebook which Mr.Fredenck Bates, son of the senior member of the jew elry house of Hennigan, Bates & Co., car ried in his breast pocket. Mr. Bates,who is 21 years of age, sleeps at his father's house in Park avenue during the absence of the family at the seashore. Beside him there are two servants, who occupy the upper floor. About 1 o'clock this morning he was awakened by a noise like the rattling of silver. He remained quiet until the sound was repeated. Then, throwing on his coat and arming himself with a revolver, he started down stairs and silently groped his way to the dining room. As he entered he could just make out near the window facing the back yard, the figure of a man in a stooping position, in the act of -filling a bag. Without a word he leveled his revolver and fired at the thief. Before he had time to determine whether the bullet bad taken effect, he heard a noise in his rear. He wheeled around just in time to receive a slashing cut over his right shoulder, which was intended for his hack. At the same mo ment the burglar grasped the hand holding the revolver and dealt the young man two more blows, both in a line with the first The weapon used he made out to be a razor and, but for a morocco case which he carried in his breast pocket the keen weapon would have gone far into his body. As it was, the book was cut half way through and his shoulder very much lacerated. Bates, who still had hold of his revolver, though unable to use it on his assailant, fired in hopes cf summoning assistance. It was then that the burglar suddenly broke away and dashed out of the house, pursued by the plucky young man, but in the darkness he disappeared. His accom plices had prcvicusly made good their es cape. Mr. Bates is pretty badly cut up, bnt not dangerously wounded. From the fact that razors were used it is thought the thieves were negroes. It was too dark to distinguish the color of their faces. FRED DOUGLASS ALL EIGHT. His Recall as Minister to Hay tl Not ot AH Probable. ISFECTAI. TELECKAM TO THE DISrATCH.1 Washington, August 25. The reporta that the President would probably withdraw the appointment of Hon. Fred Douglass as Minister to Hayti are manufactured out of whole cloth. No such movement has at any time been canvassed between the President and the State Department during the ap- Jiarent ascendency of Legitime, and ccrtain y would not be now when Hippolyte is at the head of affairs: Legitime was the repre sentative of the white or yellow element in Haytian politics, and Hippolyte of the blacks, and it is not to be presumed that the latter would look upon the appointment of Douglass in any other light than as a compliment It was Legitime who criti cised the appointment of Douglass, and who excited bad feeling against the present Minister. When Admiral Gherardi telegraphed that the new Minister should come on at once it was assumed that he would be entirely ac ceptable to 'the new order of things Jn Havti. It is hinted, however, by an official of the State Department that notwithstand ing the request of the Admiral, the depart ment would be injEO-JastP akonlotdcring "Mri "Douglass to Hayti until.affatrVwere somewhat settled and the feeling in regard to Hippolyte more definitely known. It is not desirci to recognize anyone as head of the Government unless his tenure is con sidered secure. K0 WONDER THEI DESERT. A Soldier's Life Is Not What It Is Cracked Up to Be. St. Louis, August 25. The Post Sis patch prints a page article giving the exper ience of a reporter who enlisted as a soldier and investigated the causes of so many desertions. The reporter is Frank Wood ward, formerly of Minneapolis, served three months as a recruit at Jefferson Barracks, near this city, and then secured his dis charge. The revelations are interesting, owing to the fact that during the year end ing about June 1, out of an army ot about 22,000 men there were 2.842 desertions, an increase over the previous year of 372. The story shows that enlisted men in the United States army are treated worse than slaves, many of them worse even than dogs. So terrible is this treatment that notwith standing five years' imprisonment in a mil itary prison, desertions are increasing at an alarming rate. Woodward claims that offi cers, and especially non-commissioned offi cers, arc needlessly cruel and offensively tyrannical; that the food furnished is unfit to eat; that vermin make the soldier's couch unfit to sleep npon; that the recruit's money is absorbed by the sutler, and charges that private soldiers have been murdered by non commissioned officers without even an in vestigation. Further interesting details of the expose are promised. A BLOW TO TAB BLOWERS. The Flint Glass Workers Refuse to Co Operate With Them. I SPECIAL TELEGKAK TO THE DISPATCH.1 Philadelphia, August 25. It has just been made known that the recent con ference held in this city between the execu tive boards of the American Flint Glass Workers' Union and Green Glass Blowers' Assembly No. 199, Knights of Labor, re sulted in the refusal of the flint glass work ers to co-operate with the green glass blowers in their efforts to resist a reduction in wages announced by the varions manufacturing concerns. The flint glass men have arranged a schedule of wages which will go into operation when the factories start up next month, while the green glass manufacturers insist that a reduction shall be made before they will commence work for the fall. The blowers were confident of receiving the sup port of the flint glass men, and that confi dence led Master Workman John Coffey to predict an early and satisfactory settlement of the existing difficulties. The refusal is a severe blow to the hopes of the blowers, and their course of proce dure has not yet been determined upon. A DEFICIENT GAS RANGE Causes a Fire at Columbus Which Does 8100.000 Worth oi Damage. Columbus, August 25. Fire broke out in the Sterne Chittenden building at High and Gay streets at an early hour this morn ing. Owing to the fact that it was in the heart ot the city exaggerated rumors as to the extent were soon afloat and the excite ment ran high. The princinal industry in the Chittenden building is a mammoth restaurant that occupies the entire first floor and basement In the rear end of the restaurant the fire started, the result of a deficient gas range, and it had gained con siderable headway before the department arrived. The department was still fighting the flames at 5 o'clock, but the fire was well under control at that time. The loss will figure abont $100,000, several stocks ot goods being flooded with water and badly damaged. This is perhaps an exaggerated estimate, as the damaged stock can part of it be utilized and a thorough examination has not as yet been made. Nearly everything is covered by insurance. v . i PITTSBURG, MONDAY, AS BIG AS A BAKREL Was the Stream That First Came Through a Rhode Island Dam. JOHNSTOWN ON A SMALL SCALE. Three Persons Drowned Ij the Bursting of a Reservoir. THE NARRATIVE OF AN ETE WITNESS. lie Slakes a Heroic Eescne or.a Bovine That Was In Imminent Danger. A reservoir near Fiskville, B. L, burst yesterday.flooding the surrounding country. Three persons were1 drowned. The giving way of the dam is minutely described by an eye witness. Peovidence, It I., August 25. The Spring Lake reservoir, near Fiskville, in the southwest corner of Cranston, about 15 miles from the city, which supplies a whole row of mill villages, burst this aftei noon. Three persons jjseje drowned and some damage done to property. A man named Yeaw, who was about a quarter of a mile off, noticed the water com ing through the masonry of the dam, as ha described it, in a stream about as big as a barrel. The hole was apparently growing very rapidly. The only living object in sight was a cow, a few hundred feet across the fields, and Yeaw, as he started to run, made up his mind to rescue the cow. When he reached the animal the field was a lake, and the water was up to his neck. THE BOVINE KESCUED. He got out of it, however, and so did the cow. Meanwhile, down the valley were Mrs. Greene Tew, aged CO; a Mrs. Hawkins, aged 90, and Mrs. Tew's son, 7 years old. They were walking through a strip of wood and were overtaken by the flood and drown ed. Their bodies were found in the wood, through which the water quickly ran, until it emptied into the Pawtucket river. The river rose rapidly and caused con siderable alarm among people along its banks, who thought that the Poncgansett reservoir, the biggest in the State, had gone. Many of them left their houses and fled, but the flood subsided as rapidly as it had come. The path of the water from the reservoir was through a thinly-settled country, and the only damage to property was the wrecking of a stable belonging to Bussell Matthew son, the capsizing of a carriage shop belong ing to Dr. E. K. Clarke, and the demolish ing of three road bridges. The dam was built in 1887 for the service of the Pawtucket "Valley Company redeem ing a small swampy pond, locally known as Spring Lake. Tlie reservoir covered J8 acres, contained 35,000,000 gallons of water. The dam U 925 feet long, 17 feet 9 inches high and 8 feet wide on top and 35 feet wide at the bottom. The embankment is composed or clay and gravel in layers and puddled. The lower slope is retained by a stone wall and the upper slope is paved with stone. THE ONLY WITNESS. H. B. Barton, a civil engineer, living in the vicinity, built the dam. The gap left K thf. irntpr i hpturftun fin anA 7ft f..t lAn- It is jn& above, the waste pipe.' The man"' Yeaw is the only witness to any part of the casualty. Nothing was known of the three people drowned In the woods until the, excited villagers, learning the dam had' given away, hurried up the valley and found the bodies on the way. The reser voir was practically emptied. The cause of the bursting of the dam is believed to be a spring that existed under the middle of the dam. The builders did not take sufficient precaution to choke this spring and it undermined the dam. Earl Dodge, 9 years old, was with the party that was overtaken and drowned. He escaped with braises by clinging to a tree. TRAVELING ON THE TRUCKS. A Young Conplo Dentins Their Way From California to New York. ISFXCIAI. TELZOKA1I TO TUX DISFATCIt.1 Deuvek, August 25. Several months ago Charles Fish, of San Francisco, a clerk, while attempting to board a ferryboat fell over some ropes into the arms of Miss Mary Bathbnrne, daughter of a retired mer chant of San Francisco. A few nights afterward they met at a social party, and from that time on a friendship sprung up and finally they were engaged. Finding that the girl's parents were opposed to the match, the pair eloped and were married at Sacramento. The young man bavins only $33 told bis wife if they could manage to reach New York they would be all right, as he had wealthy relatives there. This proved satis factory. The wile adorned herself in men's attire and they started for the East From Sacramento they beat their way over the Central Pacific Bailroad by riding on freight trains and on the trucks'of pas seneer coaches. A week ago they arrived at Ogden, and desiring to see some Colorado scenery they started for the Bio Grande. After having been put off a half dozen trains the couple reached Ben ver this morn ing. As it happened, the Union Pacific ran a Grand Army excursion train ont last night, and the couple managed to go on the train as porters. To-night they will reach Omahj, and probably the pair will get through to Chicago, reaching New York next month. The girl is very pretty, scarcely 19, while her husband is 22. A FARMER'S FDNEKAL P1EE. Philip Helnlcklc Gets Ont of Bed and Cre mates nimself in HH Barn. rSFECIAI. TELEOIIAK TO TUB DISPATCn.1 Pine Gbove, Pa., August 25. Philip Heinickle, a German farmer of Pine Grove township, aged 67 years, and living about two miles northeast of the borough, delib erately set fire to his barn early this morn ing and was himself burned up with it. Just before midnight Mrs. Heinickle noticed her husband was restless. He put on extra heavy clothing, and bidding two of his children, Eleanor and Emma (who slept In another room),good-by, he went downstairs and taking a handlul ot matches went to the stable, where he loosened the cattle, drove them in the street and fired the barn. It is the supposition that he threw himself into the flames, and when the ruins fell to gether his body rolled, outside the wall, where it was found this morning. A G0TBKN0R INJDEED. The Executive of West Virainla Fignres In i Knnawnj. ZFPXCTAI. TH.SGBAX TO THX D IS PATCH. 1 Chableston, W. Va., August 25. Governor E. W. Wilson and his aged father-in-law, Dr. J. T. Cotton, met with a very serious accident last evening while out driving. The horse, a fiery animal, took fright at a point where the road ran along the edge of a 35-foot bank and finally fell over the edge, carrying Dr. Cotton with him. Governor Wilson was thrown out falling on the edge of the bank, where he made a desperate.effort to save the horse from going over, but was unsuccessful. Dr. Cotton had his left-shoulder broken, and the Governor was painfully hurt about the legs and is .confined to hit bed. AUGUST 26, 1889. IN A NEW GUISE. Bona Raymond, the Notorious, Tarns Up In England At His Old Tllcks The Name Under Which lie Is Nonr Saltlnff. IBPECIAI. TXLEOBAM TO TIIB DISPATCH. t New Yobk, August 25. Inspector Byrnes received on Saturday a letter and photograph from John C. Derebaur, Chief Constable of Blackpool, England. The Bicture was labeled "Ernest Neville Kolfe," but the inspector recognized it as Boss Ray mond's. The letter asEedif the New York police knew Kolfe, who was recently com mitted at the Manchester Assizes for pass ing a forged bill of exchange for 21 upon John Harhng. director of the Blackpool Winter Garden. The bill purported to be signed by George Augustus Sala. The Inspector sent word to the Blackpool authorities that Itavmond, alias Captain Rexford. alias Frank" Neville, alias Frank Kolfe, alias Ernest Norton, became known here in 1871, when he arrived from Chicaco and got work on the Herald. In 1873 he was sentenced by Recorder Hackett to two years in State's prison for stealing an over coat from the Fifth Avenue Hotel. Ori July 28, 1886, he was arrested for passing a forged check on Proprietor Edmund Koop, of the Belvidere Hotel. Juge Cowing gave him two yearsand after serving his sen tence he -went to" Philadelphia, where he passed more bogus checks aad skipped to Boston. He swindled there right and left and fled to Paris. From Paris he went to London, and afterward turned up at Alex andria, Egypt, as "Bennett Burleigh, war correspondent of the London Post." Baymond swindled awhile upon this pre tense and then returned to Paris, and repre sented to the proprietor of the Splendide Hotel that he was the private secretary of the Khedive, who was soon to follow him. The hotelkeepcr perfamed rooms for the Khedive and treated Baymond like a prince. Bay mond borrowed" 3,000 francs from him and cleared out on the day the Khedive was to have arrived. A BOGUS CHECK MAN KABBED. He Trlod Just Once Too Otten to Work His Little Racket. rsrECIAL. TELEGRAM TO TUX DISPATCH. New Yobe, August 25. A man whojgave his name as Martin F. Gilmorc, and his residence as the Union Hotel, Bowery, was remanded in the Yorkville police court, to day, to give Inspector Byrnes a look at him. The prisoner went into the cigar factory of David Hirsch, Friday, and ordered $350 worth of cigars, saying that they were for Martin F. Gilmore, who keeps a saloon, "and that he would come in on Saturday morning and pay for .them. Mr. Hirsch, knowing Gilmore the saloonkeeper, sent a man down there to tell Mr. Gilmore that he would ship the goods the next morning, whether pay ment was made or not. Mnch to the sur prise of Mr. Hirsch, word was sent back that Mr. Gilmore had ordered no goods and authorized no one to do so, for him. A few minutes after 12 o'clock on Satur day the man who ordered the cigars came in and told Mr. Hirsch that he could not get down to the bank before it closed to get the money, and that he would have to give a check. He thereupon produced a check signed "Martin F. Gilmore," and handed it to Mr. Hirsch, who told the man it would take some time to pack the cigars, and that he could in the meantime go alter an ex pressman. When he returned he was ar rested. After the arrest it was learned that the prisoner has bought (roods under similar circumstances ot Morris, Jacoby & Co. PAIL FOE HALF A MILLION. A Western Carriage Company Gets Into Financial Dlfllcnltlcs. St. Paul, Augut 25. The J. H. Mahler Company, of this city, one of the largest carriage and wagon houses in the West, made a voluntary assignment yester day to cx-Congressmau John L. McDonald. The ttatement ot assets and liabilities has not yst been filed, but from the magnitude of the company's operations the liabilities will probably not fall short of ?500,000. The failure caused a sensation in commer cial circles, as the- company has been doing a business throughout the West second only to one other in importance. It is learned that the company has been in financial straits for several months, but the officers mortgaged their property and expected to weather the storm until yester day, when a large amount of paper fell due and was allowed to go to protest. The offi cers of the company are J. H. Mahler, Prcsi nent and Treasurer; L. B. Clark, Vice Presi dent, and H. M. Miller, Secretary. The company has been in business 20 years. ON TI1E ANXIOUS SEAT. Grancers WhoAre Not Satisfied With Either of Two Candidates. ISPXCIAI. TKLIOEAU TO TIM DISPATCH.! Yodngstowit, August 25. A quiet meeting of Bepnblican farmers of Trumbull end Mahoning counties was held here yesterday afternoon, the conference being called to discuss the Senatorial situation. Every effort was made to keep the meeting secret, and those who attended were notified by letter. John M. Sears, of Goshen, this county, was elected Chairman. The sentiment expressed was that,while they were dissatisfied with the renomination of Senator Stull by reason of his record, which seemed inimical to their interests, they did not want to vote for the Democratic nominee. It was finally decided' to select three from each township to interview the farmers as to what they believed was the best course to pursue and report at another meeting to be called by the President. A COMPANY'S CAPITAL. Tbo Concern Which Is Now Cnltinc a FIsure In South Dakota. Pieiike, S. Dak., August 25. The coa test that was waged over the location of the capital of North Dakota is as nothing to the battle now being fought for the same prize in this State. An organization which will probably decide the location of the capital is the Woonsocket Capital Invest ment Company, whose stockholders are scattered all over the new State. This com pany was organized for the purpose of spec ulation in lands at some point to be decided on by the stockholders as tho place where the capital should be. In response to invitation of the directors of the company six of the seven capital contestants have sent in bids for the support of the company, and the company will decide oh the matter about the middle of the present week. Great interest attaches to the decision. A CURIOUS COINCIDENCE. Tiro Boys Meet With a Similar Accident at the frame Time. IEPZCIAL TELEGRAM TO THK DISPATCH.1 Altoona, August 25. Homer Foutz and Howard Harris, aged 14 and 1C respect ively, while playing with a dynamite cart ridge this afternoon, both met with a serious accident. In some manner the caps ex ploded, tearing the fingers from each of iheit, hands. The boys claim that the cart ridges were given to them by an Italian in exchange for a smoking pipe. This accident is a coincidence. Both boys were at their homes in different parts of the city, and the accidents took place at the tame time and in the same manner. -"BB "S v ' W ADTERTTvE yonr business In THE D1S- lL.M.'frvfc'. . 'ssT -A A EJTCH. Prompt returns assnrod. TM Am M Ml M M 1 I M 1 vtsPk5TS aT" "'" promptly responded jfl 2Lw 123 JL3CL'JLk, mm raard....raEnMFATcn. - a f ' lW -w " &' W J&54&S,e cnn h throueU adver- WK W J & tSD'&TOStflE DISPATCH. K HITTINfi AT HUMBERT The Monarch of Italy Has Been Ex communicated by tho Pope. BRUNO'S STATUE THE LAST STRAW Which Beached the Extreme Limit of the Papal Patience. r THE STRIKE OF THE DOCK LABORERS. Many Persons Are Djlc; of Etarratloa In the Interior of Effjpt. It is stated on good authority that King Humbert and Queen Marghcrita, of Italy, have been excommunicated by the church. The facts seem to bear out the statement. All relations between the royal family and the Vatican have been terminated. Eome, August 25. At last the Pope has commenced to .strike back at the Italian Government, as at present constituted. King Humbert and Queen Margherita have been placed under the ban of the Church. The sentence ot excommunication is staled by the "Venice Gazette, one of the best in formed and most widely circulated papers of the kingdom, to have been pronounced by the Pontiff in person on the occasion of the secret Consistory held a few days after the dedication of the statue of Bruno, the infidel, which was sanctioned by the Gov ernment. The assertion of the Gazette is universally believed, and there is much to corroborate the authenticity thereof. In the first place, all the ordinary courtesies which have been customary until recently between the Vatican and the Quirinal have been entirely stopped. Queen Margherita, who, like her brother-in-law, tbe Duke of Aosta, is sincerely and unaffectedly religions, has for the past 12 or or 15 years been in the habit of spending the hottest weeks of each summer at Venice for the purpose of enjoying the sea baths there. Hitherto the Patriarch Archbishop, Cardinal Agostino, has never tailed to call at the palace shortly after her arrival in order to welcome the fair sovereign to the city and to his diocese. This summer, for the first tlmo, the Cardinal failed to pay his customary visit, and took no notice of the Queen's arrival. He, however, caused it to be privately intimated to Her Majesty that his discourtesy was due to strict commands received from the Pontiff in person. Another circumstance which tends to con firm the truth of the assertion that the sen tence of excommunication has been pro nounced is the fact that King Humbert's recent contribution of 50,000 lire toward the restoration of an old church at Naples has just been returned to the Treasurer of the F.oyal Household, with the curt remark that no gifts could be accepted from such a source. The studied insult of this pro ceeding was all the more marked inasmuch as thegift had been accepted in due form by the Chapter of the Diocese, a member of which had been delegated to call npon the monarch in order personally to convey to him the thanks of the diocese for tbe gift Moreover, a notification was issued in the official gazette of the Vatican stating that the chapter at Naples had been severely censured for their action in the matter, and that the member thereof who had been re ceived in audience by the- King had been subjected to'dfscipllnary'meatures. The correspondent of the London Chron icle here writes his paper that preparations are being made for the Pope's departure from Borne. EOULANGISTS IN TROUBLE. They Are Unable to Atrree Upon Candidates for the Elections. Paeis, August 25. The Boulangists held a stoimy meeting to-day to discuss the selec tion of candidates for the coming general election. M. Laguerre declared that al though be was a personal friend of General Boulanger, he was not prepared to follow Boulanger blindly. His paramount desire was to witness the triumph of the ideas which Boulanger represented. The meet ing dispersed in disorder. No candidates were chosen. IN MEMORY OF KOSSUTH. Celebrations In Hnnenry la Honor of the National Patriot. London, August 25. To-day, which was the named day of Louis Kossuth, the Hun garian patriot, was celebrated in Pesth by the performance of special theatrical pieces.. Several societies, in observance of the day, held meetings, and thousands of people marched in procession through the streets. There were similar demonstrations in other Magyar towns. BLAINE WILL HAVE TO SETTLE. An Enelish Comment on tbo Premier's Ac tions in the Bebrins; feea Trouble. LoNDONAugust 25. Commenting upon the seizure of Canadian vescels in Behring Sea the Daily Nevis says: "Secretory Blaine is in a manner committed to a policy of un friendliness toward England. There are many signs, however, that in the present dispute he has to reckon with his own countrymen as well as with ours." ANOTHER JOSEPH NEEDED. Scarvlnff People LAvlns on Dead Corpses In Lower Esypt. London, August 25. Dispatches from Egypt say that a famine prevails at Khar toum, Kassala, Tokar and other river towns. The survivors are said to be feeding upon the bodies of the dead. Abont 20 deaths from starvation daily reported at Tokar. Tiie-Strlkinc Dock Laborers. London, August 25. The striking dock laborers marched to-day from the East End to Hyde Park, where they held a meeting. Speeches were made from several platforms. Besolutions in favor of continuing the strike were adopted. Boulnncer Will Stand Trial. Paeis, August 25. It is reported that, at the urgent request ot friends. General Boul anger'will come to Paris to stand trial be fore the elections. CAUGHT FOR EIGHT BLOODED COLTS. A Hnrrlsbers; Horse Dealer Gets Nothing for 81,050 Worth or Horseflesh. tSPECIAI. TELEOTIAM TO THE DISPATCH. 1 Haerisburg, August25. Last June a man who registered his name at a Harrls burg hotel as V. Bessay, of Hamilton, Out., called on Gabriel Heister, son of Judge Heister, of this county, and introduced him self as the agent of George H. Pngsiey, for tbe purchase of a number of blooded colts which Heister had to sell. The negotiations resulted in the purchase of eight, at,an ag gregate price of $1,050. Tne agent gave in payment a sight dralt. for $100 and a note tor tbe balance. The colts were shipped to Canada, but the draft and note were 'found to be worthless. Suit has beenlnstitnted against Pugsley, Bessay and M. W. Griffin, the manager of, the Western Union Telegraph Company at Lockport, N. Y., to recover the cost of the colts. Pugley is alleged to have swindled a large number of people in New York State by the game played on Heister, and Bessay and Griffin are said to be his confederates GREASE BURNS EASIL ABIa-Flre In the Swift Packing Establish ment at KansasClty TheWIndAlone Prevented Its Totnl Destruc- tion Loss. 8150,000. Kansas CiTY.August 25. The immense packing house of Swift & Co., at the corner of Berger avenue and First street, in Kan sas City, Ka., was saved from total de struction by ire to-day by a fortunate shift of the wind. As it was, the smokehouse, a structure of corrugated iron, 40x40 feet, was wholly destroyed and the rendering house, 128x40 feet, was consumed. The fire started at 9:30 this morning in tho smokehouse from some cause unknown. Fire has broken out several times recently in nearly the same place, and it is supposed that it originated trom some defect in the flues. The fire departments of both cities re sponded to the alarm, and they were on the grounds in sufficient time to have checked tbe blaze in its incipiency. When the hose connections were made and the water turned on it was found that the pressure was wholly insufficient the water barely ran out of the nozzles. Handicapped as thev were, the firemen could do practically nothing to subdue the flames, wnich by that time had almost consumed the smoke house and had communicated through a viaduct to the rendering establishment. Nothing could be done bnt let the water fall in streams from the nozzles of the hose upon the fire, and the flames had their own way for about an hour. By this time the fire had got full headway in the rendering works, and fed with the inflammable contents oil and lard gave promise of spreading to tbe main packing works not more than 40 feet distant. Just at this time the wind, which had been blowing in the early morning from the sohth, shifted to the northwest and carried the flames away from the adjoining build ings. Shortly afterward the water pressure became sufficient to force the water from the lines of hose, and in an hour from then the firemen had the flames under control. Tbe smokehouse was totally destroyed. The south end of the refining house was saved by a fire wall. During the fire Master Mechanic Tate fell from the roof of the smokehouse while attempting to descend bv a rope, and was instantly killed. The total loss on buildings, machinery and stock is placed by Superintendent Young at $150, 000, with $120,000 insurance, placed with 42 companies. TRIBUTE OF A FRIEND. Colonel IngersoM Delivers a Characteristic Oration ia Ueraory of Horace Beaver He Is Often Inter rupted by Applause. rSPICXAt TKLIOHAM TO THE DI8FATCU.1 Boston, August 25. Horace Seaver, the free thinker, was buried at Forest Cemetery this afternoon, and only a few friends saw the sod placed over the coffin. Colonel Robert G. Ingersoll, the lifelong friend and associate of the infidel, said "Goodby" as the last sod was placed in position. This was all the ceremony seen at the grave. At Paine Memorial Hall, however, there was a great crush of the deceased leader's friends, who heard in Mr. Ingersoll's eulogy an oratorical effort of the greatest eloquence and power. Alluding to Mr. 'Seaver as a pioneer and toiler, who had fallen asleep at tbe end of bis tas, ait. Ingersoll said: Horace. Seaver followed tbe light of bis brain, the impulse ot his heart: tbo reHrion of his day niled his heart with horror, as ho was kind, compassionate and tender1. He attacked the creed of New England, a religion that had a monster for a God: a religion whose dogmas would have .shocked cannibals feasting upon babes. This man had that superb thing which wo call moral courage, com age in itsbizbest form. He knew that his thoughts were not the thoughts of others; that he was with tho few, and. where one would take his side, thousands would bo his eager foes. He believed In the religion of free thought and good deed, in a religion for every day. He lived for this world; if there be another, he will lire for that. Ho did what he could for the destruc tion of fear, tbe destruction of the imaginary monster who rewards the few in heaven, the monster who tortures the many in perdition. How little, after all, we know of what is ill or well. How little of this wondrous stream of cataracts and pools, this stream of life that ries in a world unknown and flows to that mysteri ous sea who-e shore tho foot of one who comes hath never pressed. How little of this life we know, this struegling ray of light twixt gloom and gloom, this strip ot land by vcrdnre clad between the unknown wastes, this" throbbing moment filled with love and pain, this dream that lies between tho shadowy shores ot sleep and death. We'stand npon tbisycrge of cram blinc time and we love, we hope? we disappear. Again we mingle with tbe dust, and the knot intrinslcate forever falls apart. Several times Mr. Ingersoll was inter rupted by the applause ot his hearers. A MIDNIGHT MURDER. Jealousy the Cause of a Homlcldo and an Attempted Suicide. Indianapolis, August 2G. At a late hour last night, jnst north of the city, on North Illinois street, Edward Azmann. of Cincinnati, cut the throat of Bertha Elff, a young woman living in this city, and then, walking a few steps away, he attempted to take his own life in the same way. The scene of the mur der is just beyond the city limits and some distance fiom any dwelling. The body of the woman was not discovered un til after midnight by an old man living in the neighborhood. Azmann was found lying unconscious 'about 200 yards from where the woman lay. He was taken to the city hospital and to-day the physicians an nounced that he will probably recover. The woman was dead when found, her head being nearly severed from her body. The two had been to Kissel's beer garden north of the city, and had been drinking. Azmann is of the firm of H. F. Azmann & Co., proprietors of a small drygood3 store at 305 Central avenue, Cincinnati. He is 40 years old, and has a wife and two children, from whom be is separated. They are now at Kotcomo, Ind. A STEAMER'S CARGO AFIRE. The Hindoo Comes Into Port at Boston With n Bis; Fire Aboard. CSPECTA1. TKLEOEAJt TO THE DISPATCH. Boston, August 25. The freight steamer Hindoo, of the Wilson line, arrived here this morning with her cargo afire. The fire started in mid-ocean, but baffled all efforts to fight it out. It continued to bnrn in the third compartment, and when the hatches were opened, on reaching the dock, the fire blazed fiercely. Among the other contents of that part of the ship were a great number of wooden covered cans of oil. The wooden sides of these were all burned off to the tin. A fpw mnrt hntirv nf mntftnr wrti,!l nwnK ably have resulted in disaster. The steamer is one of the largest of the line, carrying 5,000 or 6,000 tons ot cargo. THE CR0NIN CASE TD-DAY. It Is Scarcely Believed That It Will belm. mediately Tried. CniCAGO, August 25. The Cronin case will be called to-morrow morning in Judge McConnell's court. Arguments on the mo tions of Coughlin, O'Snllivan and Burke tor separate trials could easily occupy an entire day. but there is little prospect that such arguments will be heard to-morrow. The result may be that without either side asking for or being charged with a continu ance, the case will go over until next month or the September term. Annngemeuts have been made to keep a large crowd out of the courtroom to-morrow. The courtroom is a small one, and no more spectators will be allowed to enter than the seats will accommodate. HSMV "y. rnTT-DTmn -rEivrmcj . 'mi 3tg&. 1 Yfil&vfW TTTT? n"RniT If .rHTsV-l-' -LiX-Li iU.rLA.UJLl. TBBdArmyYeterans Are Stream fff ? Toward Milwaukee. M LIVELY FIGHT FOR COMMANDER. M Alger and Dalzcll-Are Already STarshaUlng Their Forces. THE ODDS WITH THE MICHIGAN MAN. His Wealth and Railroad Influence Gives Bha a Tery Strong fall. Everything is now ready for the annual G. A. B. Encampment at Milwaukee. The veterans are coming in from all directions, and the candidates for Commander are al ready on the field. Major Warner is on the way with a guard of honor. Milwaukee, August 25. Most of tho State departments of the Grand Army and the large bulk qf .the posts will arrive to morrow. There have arrived the depart ments of Michigan, Georgia, Oregon, Cali fornia, Maine, New Hampshire and part of Bhode Island. Hassendenbel' Post, ot St. Louis, 400 strong, came in this morning with a flag to be presented to the first post of Indian veterans ever organized, who are coming from the northern part of Wiscon sin. Part of the Dakota and Minnesota contingent arrived to-night. They num bered 500. Commander in Chief Warner and staff, escorted by Blair Post, of St. Louis, will get here to-morrow morning by special train. General Alger, of Michigan, accompanied by John A. Logan and Judge Veazey, of the Vermont Supreme Court, leading candi dates for Commander in Chief, are expected to-morrow. Private Dalzell, another candi date, arrived to-night from Ohio. ALL GOING ONE TVAT. A dispatch from Chicago says: The outgoing boats and trains were crowded this evening with delegations on their way to Milwaukee to attend the G. A. B. National Encampment. The travelers were mainly from the Western States. Kansas sent a large contingent, and squads from different sections of Iowa and Illinois were among the passeneers. National Commander Warner will be at the Grand Pacific to-morrow morning, where, accom panied by his staff, he will be serenaded by a glee clnb from his post General William Tecumseh Sherman is expected at the same time, as well as General Alger 'and other prominent Michiean and Grand Army officers. They will breakfast at the Grand Pacific and receive Chicago comrades in formally, and proceed to Milwaukee at an early hour. The late trains to-night brought in a num ber of delegates and marching bodies from the East, from which direction the larger Sroportion of the attendance is expected. 'ew England has a good representation in the hone of giving the office of National Commander to Major Veasey, of Vermont, but there is strong talk also of General Alger for the place. It is urged that Gen prjFAlger is a railroad MAN OP INFLUENCE and may be strongly in strata en tal in deter mining the question of railroad rates for next year; that his wealth will permit him to be liberal in making preparations for the next encampment; that he will take prida in iostering an uranu Army interests ana that he was the devoted friend of General Logan. It is believed the support of the Illinois delegates will be unanimously in his favor. A dispatch from Kansas City says: From the appearance of the streets to-day, one might easily have imagined it was in" Kan sas Citv that the reunion of the members of the G. A. B. was about to occur. The army hat with its baud of gofd, the blue coat with its simple bntton badge and the flag of the United States were conspicnous everywhere. Fully COO veteran comrades from Kansas and Missouri had come to escort Commander-in-Chief Warner to the train that was to carry him to Milwaukee, and to bid him goodby. An equal number of resident veterans as sembled at the Third Regiment Armory at 2 o'clock, when they were also drawn up, the Hale Zouaves, in their gaudy regiment als, contrasting strangely with the unassum ing uniforms of the veteran soldiers. At the head of the G. A. B. posts and the other organizations were placed bands and standard-bearers and when the line of march was taken up there were about 1,500 men in line. WAKNEK ON THE MARCH. Commander-in-Chief Warner, as he ap- Iieared escorted by the commanders of the ocal and visiting posts as aids-de-camp, was cheered to the echo. The march to the depot was then begun. The streets on the line of march were lined with thousands of sightseers, who cheered lustily the bowing Major. At the depot the noted veteran was escorted to his car on the Alton track by the Post Commanders, who will accompany him to Milwaukee. About it the bands as sembled and serenaded him until the calls for his appearance became so mandatory that he was forced to step out on the plat form and address a few words to hi3 com rades. It was time for the train to start, the band playing the "Commander-in-Chief March," composed for the occasion, and the veterans shouted goodby and waving a farewell with their hajts and flags. . About 250 old army men went by the same train, mostly from this city. The escort was composed of J. B. John son, Judge Advocate General E. G. Gran ville, Assistant Adjutant General Alfred Brant, E. F. Rogers, L. B. Evland, O. P. Smith, T. A. Axtcll, J. W. Kidwell, J. C. Greenman, W. H. Yeaton, George Gaston, J. H. Jenks, aid-de-camp to Commander-in-Chief, and A. J. McCoy. Past Com mander of the Department of Wisconsin, Adjntant General Weigel, started for Mil waukee Friday to convey the records of the G. A. B. and establish headquarters for the Commander-in-Chief. TOO GREAT TO BE COUNTED. Tbo Loss of Life Occasioned by the Floods in China. SAN Fbanqisco, August 25. The steam er Oceanic arrived to-day from Hong Kong and fokahoma, bringing advices to August 10 of further details of the bursting of the Yellow river embankment in the Province of Shantung July 22, which state that the destruction is widespread. The breach is over 2,C00 feet in length, and a swift cur rent swept through, flooding to a depth of 12 feet a large extent of the country lying adjacent. Many houses were washed away, and a dispatch from Chefoo states that the number of persons drowned is too great to be counted. Ten districts are already sub merged, and it is feared many more in the low-lying country south will suffer a similar fate. The latest advices concerning the earth quake at Mumamota, July 23, place the number of killed at 18 and the wounded at 19. Fifty-two dwellings were demolished. A telegram on the 30th ot July states that 53 shocks had been experienced, and that they continued to be felt. The inhabitants were sleeping in the open air. The same earth quake was felt in the province of Clukujo. Considerable loss of Hie is reported-, but no particulars have been received. r i 't i J - ' jjMiMjfl irtirp