Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, April 20, 1891, Image 1

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    fin iTfCrwitl
AFTER YOU HAVE
I fc. ., - - S I .
LET THE FXTBLIC KNOW
WHERE YOU ARE LOCATED.
THE EVERY MORNING DISPATCH XS
THE BEST WANT DIRECTORY
FORTY-SIXTH YEAB.
SCORESOFSCANDALS
Now Exposing the Moral Rotten
ness of Titled Europe and
Furnishing Strong
POINTS FOR SOCIALISTS.
Princes and Countesses, Statesmen
and Ministers, Involved in
the Eevelations.
THE KAISER'S EFFORTS AT REFORM
Jlore Bandits, DriTen From Their Cns
tosiary Haunts of Crime, Are Seek
ing a Ecfnrre in America.
AGAINST THE GOTEENMEKT TELEGEAPH
Agitates iaGtncsiiyCliiia TLit lie Esomou Pcwer
Thtrtty Eerciti Is JGsued to rcilitr
Polities! Purposes.
POOR RUSSIAN IMISKAKTS RFJCSE TO RETURN
' rsr pmixAr's cable compaxt.1
Berlin, April 19. Nearly every one of
the score or more European capitals is now
agitated by a scandal, usually several, with
which royal titles cr aristocratic names
are directly connected. This state of .
fairs is adding greatly to the pop"l .dis
content, and forms a strong
the Socialists and other re" .
formers.
One of the latest morsels is that Prince
Joseph de Bohan, Due de Bouillon, and
Fraulein Anne Linck, the well-known
opera bouffe singer and sister of the come
dian Linck, iormerly of Amberg s .theater,
New York, were secretly married at Schloss
Piankchslcin, Austria, on Friday. The
Prince is an officer in an Austrian hnrzar
regiment. He is a widower, his former
wife, nee Countess Pejacscvich, having died
some years ago. Fraulein Linck, in addi
tion to bsing ten years his senior, has been
concerned in many scandals.
A Baroness on tho Variety Stage.
The Baroness Alexanderissa Becsey is en
tertaining the Berlin jeunesse nigb'tly at a
cafe chantaht, with abbreviate'd skirts and
risque songs. She is the wife of one of the
proudest of Hungarian magnates and was at
one time the bosom friend of the Austrian
Empress. She receives $300 a month for
her performances and means to remain in
the profession-uuless her husband relents as
to the amount of pin money he will place at
her disposal.
Society is also sreMly -shocked, iry'thean.
nouncement of "the approaching marriage of
General Adjutant Count von der Goltz and
the widow ot Professor Preyer, of Jena.
The latter not long aeo celebrated the golden
wedding of herself and her husband, since
deceased. The widow is 69 years of age
and a millionairess. The Count will be
asked to resign his commission.
A Quarrel lu the Itoyal Household.
The Kaiser is much annoyed by the dis
recard of his wishes shown by a number of
cavalry officers in attending the Hurdle So
ciety's races. Last Sunday the Emperor's
brotber-iu-law.Duke Guntherof Schleswig
Holstein, who was among the delinquents,
received the full measure of the imperial
resentment.
So loud and menacing was the language
in which it was conveyed 'that the Empress
ran into the room to protect her brother,
whom the Emperor was denouncing as a
blasphemous jockey. The Duke and his
partners in guilt spent this Sunday in bar
racks deprived of tobacco and liquors and in
other respects treated as prisoners.
Pastor Holdoa, of Hamburg, has given a
great deal of scandal to religious people by
openly professing disbelief in the doctrine
of original sin. Another Hamburg parson,
Pastor Strasoky, of Great St. Thomas
Church, has also been the occasion of much
grief aud dissatisfaction to souls by pro
nouncing the Gospel narrative of the resur
rection legendary. It is rumored that the
Emperor, who is head oT the church, in ad
dition to the other parts he plays, will short
ly issue a pastoral, in which the various re
ligions will be reminded that it is not the
letter, but the spirit of Gospel they are to
uphold. The Kaiser's uncle, the Prince
Begent of Brunswick, caused such a mani
festo to be read from all the pulpits in the
Duchy on Sunday last.
English statesmen On tho List.
At London the House of Commons is
rather under a cloud just iA present in con
sequence of the Yerney-DeCobaiu-Storey
standal. The latter was charged with per
jury and committed for trial yesterday. All
three belong to the "unco guid" psalm sing
ing class. Storey was a teacher in a Sun
day school; DeCobain was a prominent ex
pounder and organizer of the Moody and
Sankcy meetings and has been a leader in
all religious functions since'the great Chi
cago evangelist and the reformed negro
minstrel made their bit in London some
years ago.
Verney is a member of the London County
Council and a bosom friend and a compan
ion oi the saintly Mr. McDougal, the modern
Siiggins. He was always among the .first to
denounce immorality in music balls. Two
years ago he said at a meeting of the County
Council that it was the duty of that worship
ful body to see that the music halls were not
being used to disgrace public morality and
to bring contempt upon the uprightness and
decency this country and to lower the
name of Englishmen in the eyes of foreigners
who come to our shores.
The friends of Verney could hardly recog
nize him as he stood in the dock yesterday,
"bearded like the pard." Miss Beckett,
whom it is alleged he attempted to abduct,
failed to pick him out among several others.
DeCobain, having sousht "fresh fields and
pastures new," is not expected back.
"WAR IN CHILE
The Cause of a Large Stonewaro Works
Closlnc Down Business.
IBT DDKXAP'6 CABLE COllPjLKT.l
Beblis", April 19. Two hundred more
A' . . I
MOVED.
workmen have been thrown out of employ
ment by the closing of the Dricson Stone
ware Works, in consequence of the war in
Chile and to instability of commercial rela
tions with Argentine.
The Dricsons did business exclusively
with South American firms, and their efforts
to extend their trade to other territories
haying failed, they decided on Thursday to
shut down and await the return of peace.
OBNOXIOUS CENSORS
OF TELEGRAPH MESSAGES CAUSING BAB
FEELING IN GERMANY.
The Liberals Will Make an Attempt to
"Wrest theTelegraph Monopoly From the
Government Newspaper Correspond
ents Subjected to Block Annoyance by
Officials.
IBT DUJfLAP'S CABLE COJUMNT.l
Berlin, April 19. The Liberals are still
harping on what they call scandals in the
telegraph department' and the handling
of press messages. -The Freisinnige Deputy,
Von Bar.'says that the censorship exercised
by Dr. Ton Stephens clerks is becoming
daily more irritating. Bepnrls of meetings
of the Freisinnige party and of speeches in
the Beichstag have frequently been refused
transmission over the Government wires,
because of, perhaps, a single statement ob
jectionable to the jacks in office. Telegrams
from foreign correspondents or news
papers are scrutinized on the frontier, and
passages excised to meet the nice sense of
propriety of the Government operator.
I myself have frequently been summoned
to npp'ear at .the head telegraph office to an
swer questions touching the sources of my
information, particularly in relation to the
Kaiser and the royal family, and have more
than once been requested to return my re
ceipts lor money expended on telegrams and
to take back the cash. All originals of dis
patches are filed, and for aught I know mine
may yet be used to procure my banishment
from Berlin, when the measure of my in
famy shall be complete.
The Liberals aim at wresting the tele
graph and telephone monopoly from the
State, which obtained it, they say, by usurp
ation. A b'.l has been prepared to confer
upon private corporations and individuals
the power to maintain local telegraph and
te' none systems, on the proof of the pos-
.iou of ample capital for that purpose,'
ie municipal Government being exempted
from this condition; and last, but not least,
rendering the'Stste telegraph and telephone
liable to the payment of damages for dis
patches illegally withheld or thrown out.
MANY WERE KILLED.
Pauper Russian Emlcrants Meet Death by
Leaping on Trains.
IBT BURLAP'S CABLE COMPACT.
BEBL.ni, April 19. The Bremen authori
ties have been obliged by a new order of
Chancellor Caprivi' to return to Bussia sev
eral hundred subjects of the Czar, who were
bound for Brazil but had not' sufficient
money io pay for their passage. Most of
them had left Bussia secretly, and rather
than go back to undergo the penalty some
tried to escape from the escort by leaping
upon the trains. Several were killed in this
way aud others were injured. Four hun
dred people of both sexes and all ages, hail
ing from Bussia and Poland, are now being
cared for by the Berlin pauper commis
sioners, the Bremen Steamship Company
having refused to carry them in their desti
tute condition to Brazil, whither they were
bound.
The Bremen authorities placed them on
Prussian territory, where they were left to
starve. The Russian Consul General is
going to send them homo, again.
A VERT BAD LOT.
Hungarlan Brigands Encouraged to mi
grate to America.
rBT DTJfLAP'S CABLE C0MPA3TT.1
Berlis", April 19. The American Im
migration Commissioners will do well to
beware of immigrants sailing from such
parts of Hungary known as the Bacska
and the Banat, which have just had the
blessing of a local. police conferred upon
them.Uo the utter disgust of the festive
Magyar population, which for centuries has
followed the suit of brigandage and thieving
as the only means of livelihood worthy of
gentlemen.
Hundreds of them have already petitioned
the Government for leave to emigrate to
America, a request which is only too
readily granted. Yesterday a band of 18
passed through Pesth on their way to New
York. They made no secret of their reasons
for quitting the Fatherland, nor did the
local papers make any attempt to dissuade
them from going.
OFFENDING- SINGERS.
Pattland Other Artists Charged With De
frauding a Poor Fnnd.
IBT DUNLAP'E CABLE COMFAXT.l
Berlin, April 19. In connection with
the so-called poor fund at Bnda Pesth, dis
closures of a discreditable nature have just
been made. There is a law requiring that
5 per cent of the gross receipts from concerts
and recitations given by foreign artists
shall be paid into the poor fund. This law
has been systematically evaded for a num
ber of years and the fund defrauded of hun
dreds of thousands of 'florins.
This was done in a very simple manner.
The concert was advertised to take place for
the benefit of a specified local charity. The
latter, in fact, received some 20 or CO florins
for the misuse of its name, the test of the
money going to the managers. Adelina
Patti, Alice Barb and Lillian "Sanderson
are mentioned as some of the most notable
offenders.
LAST 2,000,000 MARKS.
A Good Subsidy Failed to Help One Ger
- rnan Steamship Line.
BT DintLAP'S CABLE C0MPAKT.3 '
Berlin, April 19. The Asian-Australian
mail steamship line, whibh is owned
by the North German Lloyd, and has re
ceived an annual subsidy of 4,500,000 marks
from the Government, lost nearly 2,000,000
marks on its last year's business, or 4 per
cent on its immense capital.
The consequence will probablv be that
the Samoan and Mediterranean line will be
abandoned.
NEARLY BLIND.
Kossuth's Eyesight lias Almost Failed Him,
but Ills Mind Is Intact,
IBT PUXLAr'B CABLE COMPANT.l
Berlin, April 19. Louis Kossuth, now
in his 89th year, has written a letter to a
friend in Berlin, in which he says that his
uind is as active as ever, but that he is
nearlv blind and consequently much hin
dered in his literary work, as he cannot
wear glasses of any kind.
He has consulted some of the greatest
living oculists.
Charged to McKInley Bill.
rBT DUNLAP'S CABLE COMPAKT.t
Berlin," April 19. The effect of the Mc
Kinley bill on the mother of pearl workers
of Vienna has been serious.. Official reports
show that out of 6,000 only 1,500 are now
following their trade. The rest are making
a precarious living as best they cau.
The Fish Are Inferior.
rsr DUXLAP'S CABLE coufaxt.i
.BEBiiiir, April 19. The herring fishery.
harvest on the coast of Pommerania is ex
ceedingly large this season, but, unfortu
nately, the quality of the fish is so inferior
that they can neither be pickled nor smoked.
MR. PARNELL AT ATHLONE.
He Strongly Denounces McCarthy's Oppo
sition to the Land Bill.
Dublin, April 19. Mr. Parnell deliv
ered a speech in Athlone on Saturday. He
denounced ULr. McCarthy's opposition to the
land bill, which measure, he asserted, con
ferred great benefits on Irish farmers, and
he expressed his pleasure at the defeat of the
opposition in the vote on the bill. In
a speech in Irishtown, County Mayo, to-day,
Mr. Parnell repeated these sentiments.
A CO-OPERATIVE TEST.
HEN
WITH PLENTY OF HONEY
NEEDED TO CABBY IT OUT.
ABE
It
Is Proposed to Send Ont Such a Colony
From Topeka Call for a Convention in
That City Views or Candidate Briden
thal. rSFECIAL IZ LEO RAM TO THE DIBFATCB.I
Topeka, Kan., April 19. John W.
Bridenthal, of Neosha, candidate for the
People's party nomination for United States
Senator, and Chairman of the Union Labor
Central Committee, issued to-day a call for
a convention, to be held in this city May 6,
to thoroughly test the co-operative system
now in its inception at Topolobambo Bay,
Mexico. Mr. Bridenthal has associated
with him ex-Senator C. B. Hoffman, and 1b
backed by that wing of tho reform political
movement in this State which believes in
the ideas advanced by Bellamy.
More than 300 peojfle have already been
sent from this State to the town of Pacific
City on Topolobambo Bay, where 300,000
acres of ground has been purchased. There
are not enough people there to give the co
operative scheme a sufficient test and the
reformers propose to take a colony from
Topeka, which shall have enough money
behind it to demonstrate the practical work
ings of the theory. Iu calling the conven
tion, Mr. Bridenthal says:
"I have addressed this communication to
the old guard with the hope that they who
in years past have devoted their time, their
means and their talents to the cause of polit
ical reform, without any hopeof reward,
might assist in making a practical demon
stration of .the fact that co-operation is the
key to a proper solution of the industrial
pryblem and thereby open the way lor its
adoption throughout our entire country."
Mr. Bridenthal. consulted with the lead
ers in the Citizens' Alliance before calling
this convention. In an interview to-day he
said: "It is a difficult matter to induce
people to believe s that a plan so much at
variance with our present industrial system
is practicable, but we have in Kansas
enough men who have confidence in the co
operative system to test it. A colony where
mechanics and laborers may enjoy the full
fruits of their labor, free from rent, interest
and taxes, sounds Utopian, but the experi
ment has already proceeded far enough to
convince us of its ultimate success."
DEPEW HICELY "W0BKED.
A Box Car Pilgrim Gets S5 Out of Him
Very Neatly.
' JKPECIAL, TELEOI1AM TO Till DISPATCH.'.
Lakamie, WTO., April 19. While the
fast mail was changing engines here to-day
Messrs. Depew, Vanderbilt and Twombley
exercised themselves by walking up and
down the platform vigorously. Just be
fore the bell rang "all aboard'," a
box car pilgrim, who had floated
in from the "West during the nieht,
approached Mr. Depew and said: "Hellol
Mr. Depew; don't you know me?" , "Well,
I do not at present -recall your features. "
"What? My name Is'Tohn' Beed, of-Saratoga
Springs, N. Y. I used to work in the
United States Livery Stables there and used
to take care of your rigs." "Now, Mr. De
pew," pleaded the pilgrim, "lam faraway
from home and want you to pass me home
again." "Why, I can't pass you over this
road," replied Mr. Depew, "but here," and
he handed him $5, which looked crisp and
bright as a green bay tree.
The spectators laughed outright at the
situation, and Mr. Depew, thinking he had
been duped, turned to the crowd and said:
"Does he play that on everyone?" The
tramp, who was equal to Chauncey at re
partee, laughingly remarked: "What is
the use of having friends if you don't use
them: that's what I am here for." The
crowd roared with laughter, and Mr. Depew
and friends joined in it heartily. John
Beed proceeded to a whisky joint, and was
soon drinking to the health ot Chauncey.
QUAYS LLETJIENAHT.
Collector Martin Says the Senator Has Mo
Intention of Resigning.
ICrECIAL TELXOBAX TO THE DISPATCH.!
Philadelphia, April 19. During his
stay here Senator Quay did not talk on
political subjects for publication, nor were
any conferences or consultations held re
garding the prospective State or National
tickets. After his departure to-day
his lieutenant in this city talked
freely about the rumor which came
from New York to the effect that Senator
Quay will resign the chairmanship of the
Bepublican National Committee at the next
meeting ot that body. Collector David
Martin said in relation to this report, that
while Senator Quay made no reference to
the National Committees' affairs while he
was in this city, he (the Collector) was sure
that the Senator has no intention of resign
ing the Chairmanship.
"It is well known," said Mr. Martin,
"that Mr. Quay has for some time been
anxious to lur down the burdens imposed
by the Chairmanship, because the onerous
duties are too heavy and exacting for a man
with the Senator's varied business interests
to look after. But in view of all the cir
cumstances it is not at all likely that he
will resign at the next meeting of the com
mittee, nor the next after that."
THEY FED THOUSANDS.
Two Noble, Patriotic Ladies Who Are Now
In Abject Poverty.
mrECIALTELEOUAM TO THE DISPATCH. I
Philadelphia, April 19. Thirty years
ago to-day the flower of the New York State
militia, the Seventh Bcgiment, of New
York City, reached Philadelphia on its
way to the front. The train arrived
here at 4 o'clock in the morning,
and that afternoon at 420 the
command took passage from Washington
avenue wharf on the.transport Boston for
Annapolis. The soldiers had not been pro
vided with rations and were hungry. Two
sisters. Mrs. Ellen Barlow and Mrs. Eliza
beth Horton, living then at No. S Mary
street, opened their hospitable doors and fed
as many of the soldiers as their larder would
admit of.
Their example was followed by others of
the Southwark dames, and the good work
thus begun was continued day after day un
til the attention of the whole city was at
tracted to their unselfish labors.and a feeling
was awakened that ultimately bore fruit in
the great Volunteer Refreshment Saloon.
To-day these ladies are living in extreme
poverty.
Thirteen Deaths From Grip.
tSrECIAL TELEG11AM TO TUB DIRrATCO. 1
Sew Yoke, April 19. There were 14
deaths in the Bellcvue Hospital to-day. Ail
are attributed to the grip, with the excep
tion of Patrick Connors, who accidentally
fell from a window at hu home while intoxicated,
PITTSBURG, MONDAY,
T&OUBLfl TO FOLLOW
When t'je Evictions Begin at MorV
. wood' and Other Points To-Day.
TWO ACBS OP GL'OOND OFFERED
For Strikers' Tent?, Bringing: Oat a-Threat
Against the Donor.
CHARGES OF CRDELTI MADE BY. WISE
rritOM A STAFF COBBXSPOlTDElrr.
Mt.'Pleasant, April 19. To-morrow
the evictions will begin at Morewood and
trouble is anticipated by the officers, though
the people say they will go anietly. They
claim to have a large numberof tents which
they can pitch in the flu Sheriff Claw
son left Morewood this morning, but will
probably return to-niorrow"in time to direct
the work of eviction.
James McGregor, a farmer living near
McClure's. offered the strikers two acres of
land on his place on which to pitch their
tents. He says that last night William
Dayton, the ex-Secretary of the Painter As
sembly, now working, Went to his house and
told him that Manager Brennan said if he
allowed the strikers to camp on his place his
goose was cooked meaning he could sell no
more to the company stores. McGr6gor re
plied that he paid for the goose and if it was
cooked he'd eat it. This caused considera
ble merriment among the strikers.
Last night at McClure's the Italian strikers
had a band out and paraded up and down the
roads of company houses. They sang,danced
and cheered, and declared that they had
money enongh to stay out all summer.
Will Aeslst the Sheriff.
The evictions there occur Wednesday, un
less the men go to work. One of the strikers
there to-day quietly remarked that there
would be warwhen the Sheriff comes around
to put them out
The labor leaders, Peter Wise, James Mc
Bride and William Hay, passed through
this place .to-night, en route to Scottdale,
after having held a meeting at Whitney.
They reported that about 600 people were
present and the men were unanimous for
holding ont the strike. They say that there
will not be as many men at work at Whit
ney to-morrow as there were Saturday.
Labor men traveled all around the region
to-day, urging those at work to quit. Bosses
lrom the different works were out all day,
too, looking after new men for to-morrow,
and, as a result, both sides claim that they
will have a gain. Peter Wise says that at
Whitney they induced two haulers to quit.
One of the Morewood bosses said he had
secured promises from 25 men that they
would be on duty to-morrow. The other side
claim that men have promised to quit their
jobs there, and will not be on duty to-morrow.
The same reports come from all over
the region, both sides claiming recruits.
Breach of Faith Charged.
Speaking about the evictions to take place
at Morewood to-morrow, Mr. Wise said: "I
don't think there will be any trouble there,
though it is a clear breach of faith on the
part of Mr. Ramsay. At our last confer
ence, held on Maroh 2, Mr. Bamsy de
clared that there would be no attempt to
start the works until coke advanced to snch
a price as would enable them to pay the
proper wages. He further said that the
men would be allowed to occupy the houses
until thev resumed work on the above con
ditions, a'nd that thew would' be no evic
tions. "Now he goes back on his pledge to ua
and to-morrow'some of our people will have
to leave their bouses, r The whole trouble
was brought on by his, eoing .back, oa hJvyA, Cxowdof B0O Strikers, With a Band,
Pinkertons wonld be put on duty, and yet
UiUWIICfctfUQ BU.U U. Uf U.JU... w
before a move was made he had a lot of
deputies there to protect his property, which
was in no danger whatever. It was just
like flaunting a red flag in the face of a bull
and then trouble followed. I believe that
stories of riots at Leisenring are greatly ex
aggerated. I-know the trouble nt Trotter
was caused by the Sheriff trying to evict a
.Hungarian woman who is soon to be a
mother, and as she relused to go out, he
struck her. She is now serionsly ill.
"I saw another poor Hungarian woman
in Connellsville who was struck in the face
by a yard boss, and her head was badly cut
open. We don't object to these stories
about riots being published if they only
give our side of the case." Pabeeb.
EVICTIONS THE CAUSE,
Governor Pattison Says, of the Trouble
Now Demanding Troops.
ISrECIAL TELEQRAK TO THE DI9PATCIT. I
HABKISBUBO, April 19. Governor Pat
tison to-day received two telegrams from
Adjutant General McClelland, who reached
Uniontown this morning, stating that quiet
reigned in the vicinity of the disfurbance of
yesterday. The Governor feels confident
that there will be no necessity for calling
out troops in addition to the two companies
that have been detailed to remain at Mt.
Pleasant and Uniontown. He is also satis
fied that if it had not been for the eviction
of tenants, the trouble which called forth a
demand for troops by Sheriff McCormick
would not have occurred.
The Governor is determined that the
troops shall not be used to suppress disturb
ances unless there is a substantial demon
stration that the civil power is unable to
cope with the disorderly elements.
Adjutant General McClelland was directed
to visit the scene of yesterday's outbreak, so
that the Governor might be apprised of the
real condition of affairs, to guide him in his
future action.
J
ITALIANS BEHAIN FIRM.
A Number of Them Refuse to Stop Work
at the Snmmlt Plant.
ntTECIAI. TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATOB.1
Scottdale, April 19. With a brass
band to stir up their spirits, a mass meeting
of several hundred strikers was held this
afternoon at the Summit plant, where the
imported foreigners have, been at work.
Addresses were made and every effort put
forth to get the Italians to attend, butrwithout
avail. They are quartered in what is
known as the "soup house," whieh is situ
ated near the Summit plant, and are heavily
guarded by Deputy Sheriffs to prevent in
terference from the strikers.
Twenty-four of these Italians were at work
at this mine yesterday. The strikers held
their meeting on the public road and exer
cised great precaution to keep oS the com
pany's premises.
THE COBONEB'S VEBDICT.
General Opinion That It Will Exonerate the
, Firing Sqnad.
I FKOJI A STAFF COERESrONDEXT. 1
,Mt. Pleasant, April 19. There was
considerable discussion here to-day as to the
probable verdict of the Coroner's jury, which
is to be given out here to-morrow.
The general opinion seems to be that the
verdict will exonerate the men in tho firing
squad.
IHPOBTING NEGB0ES.
Colored Workmen to De Shipped in
to
Supply Strikers' Places.
ISrECIAL TELE011A1I TO TnEDISFATCn.!
Mt. Pleasant, April 19. From a
trustworthy source it was learned to-day
that colored workmen would be shipped
intor the coke- region- during the -coming
APRIL 20. 1891.
week. The informant stated that if the
strikers at Summit and Broad ford refuse to
return to work their places will be filled
with negroes.
He went on to say that 110 of them would
be given employment at Bist Slope, Broad
ford, and about 100. at Summit and adjoin
ing plants.
TROOPS IN READINESS
TO MOVE AT SHEBIFF M-COBMICK'S CALL
WHEN BEQUIBED.
Not to Assist In Evictions or Do Folico Duty
-General McClelland's Orders to the
Eighteenth and Tenth Pattlson Not to
Visit the Region.
rSPICIAL TELSaUAM TO THE DISPATCHl
Uktontows", April 19. The Sunday
quiet in Uniontown was broken throughout
the whole forenoon by the notes of the bugle
sounding the assembly call to the boys of
Company C. The company is at the arsenal
awaiting orders' to move when
Sheriff McCormick decides that lie
needs their services. Adjutant Gen
eral McClelland arrived here at 8
o'clock tbis motning, having left Harris
burg at midnight He found the situation
so unwarlike that he began the day by at
tending Sunday school. He met Sheriff
McCormick at the hotel, and notified him
that Company C of this place and Company
E (Captain Loar's company) were assem
bled and ready to move whenever he (the
bheriil) decided that their services were
needed.
The Adjutant General laid great stress
upon the fact that the troops were not to be
used to assist in evictions, or to do police
duty at any of the works, but to quell dis
turbances and maintain order when Sheriff
McCormick's means, have failed. In in
structions given to Captains Frasher and
Loar the Adjutant General said: "The
Sheriff is the only one to determine when
you shall assist him. Keep vour men well
in hand, permitting them to Be absent from
the armory and on the streets as little as
possible." " In conclusion he says: "It is
the desire of the Governor that your men de
port themselves as true guardsmen."
What the Adjutant General has done is
told briefly in his official telegrams. Imme
diately upon his arrival he telegraphed the
Governor that he had arrived and found
everything quiet. He sent the following to
Colonel Hawkins at Little Washington:
By direction of the Governor. Company E
continues on dnty. Company U is on dnty
here. Send two boxes ot ammunition by ex
press to Captain Frasher.
The following was sent to General Wiley,
who is at his home in Franklin:
Companies E and C on duty in response to
Sheriff's request. Advise me of your where
abouts. General Wiley replied that he would be
there for several days. He telegraphed to
Captain Loar at Mt. Pleasant to be ready to
move at thecallot the Sheriff. Loaf replied:
All quieti awaiting orders; my men are rtady
to move at 15 minutes' notice.
The Adjutant General sent the following
telegram to Colonel Norman Smith of the
Eighteenth:
Keep' regiment well in hand, ready to move
at any time.
The Adjutant General is almost on the
sick list. He reached Harrisburg from Mt.
Pleasant at 4 o'clock yesterday morsing,
and in the evening the Governor sent for
him after receiving Sheriff McCormick's
first teleeram, and asked him if he would
go to Uniontown. "I was only too glad to
come," said he, "for I saw that the Gov
ernor was greatly worried over the prospect
of sending th troops out again." He aid
not think that Governor Pattison contem
plated a trip to the coke country.
MABOHrNG ON 3TMT0WN.
r Going-to That Point.
rSPECIAI. TSLEOBAM TO THE DISFATCB.1
Uniontown, April 19. This evening
Adjutant General McClelland was handed
the following telegram from Mt Pleasant:
A great crowd of men, numbering fully 600,
were met at 3 P. M. at Tlnstman's station,
marching in the direction of Jim town; had a
brass band with them.
"I do not like the looks of that," he said,
and wanted to know if Jimtown was iu
Fayette county.
To-morrow morning Sheriff McCormick
will set out with a posse to visit the three
most dangerous points in the region. He
will first visit Leith and evict two families,
and he will then proceed to Trotter and evict
the family of Strousack, the Polander who
caused the trouble there on Thursdav and.
with his comrades, drove off the Sheriff and
his deputies. He will then join Deputy
Crawford at Leisenring No. 2, to serve the
injunction papers on a number of those who
were engaged in yesterday's riot.
THE PBIE8TS' ADVICE
Polish Pastors Urge the Men to Stay Quietly
at Their Homes.
IFBOM A STAFF OOEnESPONDENT.
Mt.Pleasant, April 19. At the Polish
Catholic churches here and at Scoftdale the
priests made strong addresses to their charges
on the subject of the strike. They advised
the men to stay off the companies' grounds
at all times and remain at home all the
time.
They said if the strikers do not obey the
laws, Pinkertons will be jmported, and no
mercy will be shown.
BIG MEETINGS HELD.
Bat Everything Was Quiet Except at the
Leisenring No. 2.
SPECIAL TELEGBAM TO THE DISPATCII.l
Uniontown, April 19. Eeports to
Sheriff McCormick indicate that everything
is quiet, except at Leisenring No. 2, where
the strikers were holding meetings to-day
and marching about the works, but no out
break is reported.
PROHIBITION BEER.
A Noted Chemist Sounds a Warning Against
People Drinking It.
rFPHCIAL TKLEPBAJJ TO THE DISPATCH;:
Brunswick, Me., April 19. Prof. F.
C. Bobinson, the noted chemist of Bowdoin
College, has made public some facts about
the "prohibition beer." which many people
have been drinking of lite years. The pro
fessor says: "I cannot but warn the people
of Maine and the no-license towns of Massa
chusetts, against the light beers which 'are
now being put so extensively on the market.
They come within the law, as they do not
contain over 1 per cent of alcohol, but it is
far better for a man to stick to plain raw
whisky than to indulge in this prohibition
beer.
"The injurious effect of this beer lies in the
fact that suite a percentage of the com
pound is salicylic acid, that is added to
stay fermentation, which would occur on
account of the absence nf alcohol. Salicylic
acts with a very dangerous effect upon the
kidneys, and a frequent use is almost sure
to bring on Bricht's disease. There is
hardly any beer sold in this country which
does not contain some of this acid."
STILL THE SICILIANS COME.
Several Hundred More of Them to Bo
Landed at New Orleans.
New Obleans, April' 19, The steamer
Olympia, from Palermo, arrived at the
quarantine station this morning with 450
Sicilians, who will be-east adritt in this city
on Monday morning from the "northeastern
wharf,
A PECULIAR IIUBDER.
With Her Throat Cnt a Wornan Is
Led Into'a Drugstore by a Kegro,
EXPIRING ALMOST IMMEDIATELY.
The
Strange Story of Her Companion
Hesnlts in His Arrest.
A PROTEST OF INNOCENCE ENTERED,
MllUJ
$
t r
SPECIAL TELEQHAM TO TILE DISPATSa.l
New York, April 19. The Mrpse of a
woman of 35, with sandy haufslreaked here
and there with gray, lUatfn one of the slabs
at the morgue awaUttfgidentification. There
are no signsf-dfstress on her lace, which is
comely.iSi 'rapine wound over six inches
JoflgT'extending from behind her left ear to
a point underher chin, showed how she had
met her death.
She was murdered somewhere near the
corner of Park avenue and Ninety-sixth
street about midnight Alfred Botts, a
colored hodcarrier, is the man who led her,
bleeding, to the drug store where she died.
Botts, up to the present time, is the only
man under arrest. Captain Carpenter thinks
that he has ".not told all he knows about
what happened. Whoever the murderer is
he could not have chosen a neighborhood
where he could have been more seenre in
his work. For half a block either way from
the crossing of street and avenue the only
habitations are three shanties perched on the
rocks.
Tho Story of the Negro,
The story Botts tells to Captain Carpenter
is that he worked for a contractor as a hod
carrier on some buildings, in one of which
he bad been sleeping lor the last two or
three months. He had been spending the
evening, he said, with a colored friend, and
ctarted to walk home. He was walking Qp
on the north side of Ninety-sixth street
and when he reached Park avenue he saw
a woman standing on the southwest corner.
There was no one else in sight The woman
caught sight of Botts and ran across the
street to him.
"For God's sakei She saia, cet an of
ficer, quick, or take me to the hospital."
Botts told the woman that there was not
an officer anywhere around, but there was a
drug store at the corner of Ninety-sixth
street and Third avenue.
''Take me there, then," the woman said,
and Botts started back down the street with
her. Under the glare of a gas lamp he saw
blood trickling down the front of her dress,
and he said: "You have been hit"
"No, I haven't," the woman replied, with
a gasp. "I've been cut, and I know the
man -who did it."
Botts says he didn't ask her who did it
He says he was too much disturbed to ques
tion her any more. He led her into Bruck
mann'a iirntr store. She tried to speak, but
only a tew unarticulite sounds came from
her throat. Policeman Angelein sent out a
call for an ambulance to the Presbyterian
Hospital, but before the ambulance arrived
the woman was dead. The policeman took
Botts down to the station house, where he
was locked up.
No Blood About His Person.
The Sergeant plied him with qnestion9,but
got nothing out of him but just this story.
Two pocket knives were found upon him
and a bundle of sausages, whieh be said he
was carrying home. There was no blood on
the Knives and there was no blobd on his
clothes. He was taken to the Harlem Po
lice Court, where at Captain Carpenter's re
quest he was remanded for the Coroner.
.Captain Carpenter is inclined to think
that the murder is the work of a negro, be
cause. a raxor was usgd. .Bottt.jwajjery
nervous all day Jo-day. There are some
things that do not tally with his story. He
says that he saw the woman on the south
side of Ninety-sixth street There . are
blood stains on the north side walk from a
point half way between Madison and Park
avenues, but none on the south side walk.
There is a larce stain on the flagging at the
point where Botts says he was standing
when he first saw the woman.
Dr. Jenkins says that with the windpipe
partially severed'it would have been very
hard work for the woman to speak at all.
He thinks it very doubtful if she did speak
at all. Not one of the occupants of the
shanties in the neighborhood will admit
hearing any outcry.
liate lo-nlgbt tne body was identified by
Mr. and Mrs. Carthy as that of Emily Tay
lor, 33 years old, a widow, a native of
England, who had been eight years in this
country. The woman had boarded with the
Carthys since the death of her husband, two
months ago. Mrs. Carthr says she knows
who murdered the woman, and that it was
not the negro Botts. She, however, refused
to mention any names. The police were
immediately notified, and it is probable
that the mystery will be cleared up to-day.
CLEANED HIM OUT.
Florida Women's Disastrous Bald on a
Honey Beer Speak-Easy.
rSFECIAL TELEGBAM TO THE DISPATCH.!
SATANNAn, April 19. A letter from
Hermando county, Flo., gives an interesting
account of the breaking up of a "blind
tiger" in the leading town of that section.
It was a local option town and not a saloon
was in the place. Peace reigned supreme
until a newcomer opened in the outskirts an
establishment, at which he professed to sell
"honey "beer." In a short time the wives
and'motheis of the town noticed that their
masculine belongings spent an undue
amount of both time and money at the
"honey beer" place, and they also noticed
that the effects of the beverage were quite
unlike those produced by honey consumed
at home, so they gathered in solemn conclave
and resolved on a course of action.
One dark night they assembled, and,
armed with axes and hatchets, marched in
procession to the store where "honey beer"
was sold. The place was crowded with men
as they went in, but thev said no word,
merely went to work with a will, using
their weapons' with such effect that not a
barrel or cask escaped them husbands, sons
and sweethearts standing by and not 'daring
to so mnch as offer a word ot remonstrance.
AVhen they were through there was quite a
fine lot of kindling wood left on the ground,
and the town was minus a citizen the next
morning.
COOPEB'S DECLARATION
Causing Considerable Surprise at tlie State
Capital.
.SPECIAL TELEOBAM TO THE DISPATCH. 1
Harrisburg, April 19. The public
declaration of Collector Cooper against a
constitutional convention has excited great
surprise among those who heard his speech
at the close of the session of the Senate of
1889.
At that time he took strong ground in
favor of a convention to amend the Consti
tution, because of the many difficulties ex
perienced in legislating on a -number of sub
jects of great importance.
ALL ABE HERETICS.
Sweeping Condemnation of Religious Sects
by an Episcopal Minister.
1SPECIAL TELEOBAX TO THE DISPATCH. I
NEW Yobk, April 19. The Bev. Dr.
Hughes spoke on the question now agitating
the local Episcopal Cnurch the admission
of non-Episcopalians to Episcopal pulpits
at the Church of tba Holy Sepulchre this
morning. At the trai one of the signers of
IF you
TO
the remonstrance against Drs. Bainsford
and Heber Newton's alleged violation of
the canons in that regard, his discourse was,
necessarily of the natnre of an apologyrfor
his act. He said that while he bacTgladly
listened to the Baptist Spsrgeon, and to
Methodist and Presbyerfin preachers, and
had attended a Quaker-meeting with spirit
ual profit, he couWnot ask "non-conformists"
to preachThis pulpit.
This was-ffSt a matter of discretion, he
argued. tfSrist left a definite ministry,
composer of the three orders of bishops,
priesftrand deacons, to whom he gave the
pawEr to remit sins, and the Church. as the
jruuruiau 01 trnin, can recognize no wiii'
ist
istry not having these orders. Hs called
the Boman Catholics, as well as Baptists,
heretics, and said that while "some of the
most excellent men in the world have been
Unitarians, it would be as .logical for him
to ask a Mohammedan to preach to the
congregation of St. Sepulchere as a Uni
tarian." He added that he had listened to
Mohammedan sermons with edification.
WELCOMED TO BALTIMORE.
SURVIVORS OP THE SIXTH MASSACHU
SETTS GUESTS OF THAT CITY.
The People Give Them an Enthusiastic Re
ception, and the Mayor Greets Them in
His Official Capacity The' Anniversary
of the Attack Upon the Regiment.
Baltimore, April 19 Before 3 o'clock
this afternoon Duchesne Post, with drum
and fife corps, and the post guard, in all 225
men, under command of Captain Nolen, a
detachment of the Ellsworth Camp of Sons
of Votera'ns, commanded by Captain Ladd,
and a' section of Lincoln Post, No. 7,
marched to the Baltimore aud Ohio Bailroad
station. They were soon joined by a great
crowd of people. At 325 the train rolled
in bearing the Worcester (Mass.) Light In
fantry, veterans of the corps, and veterans
of the historic Sixth Massachusetts, a por
tion of which had a conflict with the mob in
the streets of Baltimore just 30 years ago to
day. Colonel Love, the Mayor's secretary,
and Captain Nolen boarded the train and
soon reappeared with Captain Davis, com
manding (' "'iting soldiers, and presented
him to li fe u dson and others.
The LTfV "oj 'tion was soon com
pleted, ant "JP rt - moved to the Car
roll ton Hotel, ., o 'e the quarters
of the lieht infant. Vt
Oh . curing their
stav In this city.
As "?. "to ssachu-
setts filed into the 3rlJ'
- -. . . - . . . jr yx . .
iv'-''
Dana
played "My Maryland," ."5 grace
ful compliment was recog. a by a
rousing cheer for the old Bay State. The
Light Infantry were formed in the great
rotunda of the hotel, their veterans in front
and facing them was the Mayor supported
by Captain Knowes, Pay Director Pritchard,
General Boss, Colonel Love and a few other
special guests. Mayor Davidson then de
livered the following address of welcome:
It is at once mv privilege, as it is my pleasure,
as the chief magistrate of the city of Balti
more to tender to you its freedom and hos
pitality. Without aeir-praisa or vain glory,
the city of Baltimore can truthfully say tnatiu
doors are always thrown wide open to receive
the soldier from any other section of
our common country. Bat, gentlemen, your
visit is qnite apart from that of the ordinary
traveler for business or pleasure. Ic is another
ot the many evidences ot that broad and liberal
spirit ever to be expected and generally found
In the brave and loyal veterans ot the war. who
have forgotten long since the heat and bitter
ness ot the struggle between the States and
laid them aside for the more permanent con
quests of generosity 3Qd kindness and broth
erly affection.
wo welcome yon to our southern land, whose
people have forcotten, save as a matter of his
tory, the conflict which brougntout so much of
bravery, of fortitude, and so many of the other
virtues which spring up In a cause prosecuted
In honest conviction, but whose people dr
not forget, wbilo keeping creen the graves
of the soldiers of the lost cause,
to spread the fragrant blossoms alBO upon
the mounds which cover the sloping dust of the
Federal soldier. From the day that Grant and
Sherman took off the mailed glove of military
,porer-and-tslir,tb'ort hand of soldierly for
giveness noon tne head or tbeir prostrate foe.
to the present hoar, the true soldiers of the
''RXi..H an.? Cnlh an wait h.va haan urfTltnn. m
consider .the war at an end.
AFRAID OF THE DAM BREAKING.
Residents Near Denver to Protest Against a
Bis New Reservoir.
Denver, April 19. Farmers living
along Cherry Creek, above Denver, have
held an indignation meeting in- the office of
the Board of Pnblic Works here and ex
posed a startling state of affairs. The Den
ver Water Storage Company has just
finished a reservoir 35 miles above the city
to supply water to an immense tract of
heretofore arid land, of which they have
secured control. The dam is 65 feet high
and drains 300 square miles of country. The
capacity of the reservoir is manv millions of
gallons and the trend of the Cherry Creek
basin is such that if the dam gave way the
whole of the enormous body of water would
he precipitated upon a large part of the city
ot Denver, after tearing over the homes of
hundreds of ranchmen.
The fanners claim that there is now 40
feet of water behind this dam and that the
vast pressure has already forced several
streams through it. They claim to have dug
down and found that the dam is built upon
quicksand instead of on bedrock, and that
the materials used are so poor that its erec
tion was criminal. The company deny the
charges and furnish statements showing that
it expended 5450,000 in doing the work welL
The question will probably be brought to
the Supreme Court immediately.
HEBEB NEWTON'3 VIEWS.
No One Particular Chnrcli Can Claim to Be
the Trne One.
ISrECIAL TELEGBAM TO THE DISPATCH.t
New York, April 19. In All Souls'
Church to-day the Bev. Heber Newton re
plied to the remonstrance against his action
in allowing clergymen of other than the
Episcopal denomination to officiate in his
church dnring the Lenten season. His text
was, "And there shall be one flock under
one fold." In the course of his remarks he
said:
Folds, if they exist, are not to be ex
clusive., one of another. Then, standing
within the true fold, we might rightly seek
to brine the other sheep into our fold, and if
they would not come, feel constrained to
have especial fellowship with them. In the
absence of such a form of the sheep
fold, no oue particular church can.
claim to be the only trne fold, save
by ,an arrogance excusable only on the
ground of mental blindness. To rear high
walls, to shut up the sheep in a little pen,
to refuse to enter anv- other folds or to let
sheep from those other folds browse within
our own all such actions may be churchly,
but they are not Christian.
CHURCH FUNDS HISSING.
They Disappeared With a Nice "Woman Who
Was the Treasurer.
.SPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCTM
Springfield, O., April 19. The village
of Eimwood, a few miles south, is all agog
over the sudden disappearance of Mrs.
Amelia Winston. She is one of the oldest
members of tile M. E. Church there,
and was noted for her Christian qualities.
The church, which has outgrown its pres
ent quarters and congregation, determined
to secure a new lot and build a new struct
ure upon it Mrs. Winston, because of her
extensive acquaintance and high religious
standing, was chosen to act as custodian of
the funds raised to buy and build it.
The first of a series of entertiinments was
given on March 28 for the purpose stated.
Others followed, and there were some pri
vate subscriptions. About $500 was thus
secured, and Mrs. Winston, with this
amount. Is missing. It is believed she has
gone to Chicago. In case she is found there
will be a vigorous prosecution,
REAL ESTATE
SEIX, OB "WANT TO BUT,
ADVERTISE in The DISPATCH
IT IS CLOSELY BEAD BY
ALL WHO SEEK INVESTMENTS.
THREE CENTa
THE CONGO'S COMING
Expected to Be the Feature of the
Republican Clnb Convention.
M'KIKLEY ALREADY ON THE FIELD.
He Belieyes That Harrison Will Be
nominated in 1892, With
Ee-
1IE. CLEVELAND 05 THE 0THEE TICKET
rSPECIAL TZXEOBAX TO THE DISPATCH. J
Cincinnati, April 19. Whether it Is
through design or the eccentricity of fate that
the Pennsylvania delegation comes the best
advertised lot of men expected can't be
determined, but that such is the fact is
patent to every one. It has received more
advance notice in the local press and been
more talked about than any two or half
dozen delegations expected. As is usual
all sorts of rumors and ideas as to the time
the Congo was expected were afloat, and
from noon on crowds filled the leTee to see
her round in. It was a generous, enthusiastic
crowd, that believed the Pennsylvanians
were fo be the lions of the occasion. Dele
gates caught the infection and if the old
superstition is true, the auricular appen
dages of the Congo crowd must have needed
ice all this afternoon.
Much Fcellnc Concernlns 1892.
The delegates arriving to-day were mostly
isolated groups but the Blaine sentiment
was very pronounced among nearly all
Northern delegations. Kentuckians, Ten
nesseeans and Missourians are kindly dis
posed toward Harrison. Stuart, of Phila
delphia, is a good second for a league presi
dency. One of the certainties is that pro-,
tection will be given an enthusiastic in
dorsement Harrison will also get a hearty
resolution.
Major McKinley is present in Cincinnati
as the guest of the Bepublican National
League Convention. The champion of a
high protective tariff has been interviewed
at some length, this being the first question,
asked:
"What about the Governorship, Mr. Mc
Kinley; you know your name is the most
prominently mentioned in connection with
the Bepublican nomination?"
"About the nomination there is only this
to say: If it is the sentiment of the conven
tion that I shall be the nominee I shall ac
cept, and esteem it a great honor."
'What do you think of the tariff as an
issue in the campaign?"
"The issues of the campaign I should
think would cover all the divisions between '
the Democratic and Bepublican parties,
State and National, principles and adminis
trations." "What will be the importance of this
League meeting to the Bepublican party?"
"It will doubtless be of great service. The
League is a valuable accession to the general
organization ot the party. It has been a
positiva force in the past, and ought to ba
even a greater one in the future."
'iWill this National League Convention
have a noticeable effect upon the State cam
paign?" Sure to Help tho Party.
"A 'Bepublican convention, such as lha
one contemplated here on Tuesday, coming
from all the States in the Union, ought to
be helpful to the Bepublican party every
where, and especially in the city and Stats
where it is held, and it ought to project inti)
the campaign of 1892."
"Have you followed the Presidental-roni'
through the South and noted the speeches of
General Harrison?"
"Yes, and have been both pleasednd-rif
lerested. HI TrCip.fos".Vas-bee uotoniy
respectful, but enthusiastic, and" hu
speeches have been models. In the cant.
paign of '88 his speeches were wonderfully
terse and forceful, 'Blaine, you know, said
that each sentence was a proverb. His re
cent addresses. I believe.excel those of 1888,
and show what those who have been closest
to him have always known his intellectual
force and grasp of publie affairs and the
varied interests of the country."
"Major, what is yonr opinion of the Har
rison administration?"
"It has been clean, conservative, dignified
and able."
"What about reciprocity."
"Since the passage of the new tariff law
and under its provisions, the administration
has concluded an important treaty with Bra
zil, looking to the extension of our trade,
and I see by the papers to-day that ex-Mi n
ter Foster is returning with a treaty which
he has negotiated with Spain."
"Who wilt be the Presidental nominee
of the Bepublican National Convention in
1892?"
McKInley Says It Will Be Harrison.
"Everything points now to PresidentHar
rison'srenomination." "Whom will the National Democratic
Convention nominate?"
"Cleveland, I suppose."
"Will his manly stand against the free
coinace of silver in any way militate against
Lhis renomination?"
"a thins: not. xney win not hnd it dim
cult to nominate an anti-silver man upon sj
silver platform."
"Has Governor Hill, of New York, any
chance for the nomination?"
"I am sure I cannot tell."
"Have you received that California block
of American tin?"
"That is at Canton, but I have not seen
it"
Mr. McKinley stated that the operations
of the tariff were encouraging; that Mr.
Blaine's treatment of the Italian affair had
been so thoroughly indorsed by the people
of the United States that he felt he could
add nothing to that which had been already
said on the subject.
SYRIANS QUARANTINED.
One of Their Number Has a Bad Case of
Malignant Typhus Fever.
tSPEClAL. TELEQHAM TO THE DISPATCTLl
New York, April 19. The French
steamship La Bourgogne, which sailed from
Havre nine days ago, brought a case of ma
lignant typhus fever to Quarantine to-day.
The patient is a Syrian peddler. He was
one of the steamship's 793 steerage passen-.
gers. "He became ill enough on Thursday
last to need the attention ot the ship's phy
sician. When La Bourgogne got to Quar
antine he was immediately transferred to
the reception hospital at the foot of East
Sixteenth street.
Immigrants who slept near the Srrians,
or who came in contact with them, will have
a place to themselves at Hoffman Island,
whither all the regiment of steerage passen
gers will be removed to-morrow. The other
passengers were allowed to land to-night
MUSICIANS GRIEVANCE.
They Will Invoke tho Contract Labor Law
Against Edward Straass Again.
ISrECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE DtSFATCIT.l
New York, April 19. The musical
unions in New York think that they have a
grievance. They have heard that Edward
Strauss is organizing another orchestra in
Berlin to perform at Madison Square Gar-
H'den and in the principal cities of this
country. They arc going to invoke the con
tract labor law again, although the decision
on the question when be came to this country
some months ago was that his musicians
were artists, and therefore were exempt
The members of these unions argue thai
musicians are workingmen, and as sach ara".
entitled to protection.
1