SSSGHmSSm SKS9 FgMK ji UfaMITC Of all kinds are aunplied "flHC All daw or Advertisers have Vntu opportnnltv to utilize the clas- J&.4. 1 O through the ONE CENT A WORD columns Iff n D 1 of THE DIS PA1CH Situs nUn IV, tlans arese- UMmranu pciit oi ihi dis PATCH. Tie ' small "Arts" are HELP. vrell read. They area-good A UinDn are crowing In popularity. and rare Investment. IfUIIU. FORTY-SIXTH TEAK. P1TTSBTJKG, FRIDAY, NOYEMBER 13, 1891-TWELYE PAGES. THREE CENTS mmhHmmsKmrn. -". . - 77- I flje PpOf' VISIONARY VICTIMS, Misguided Communists Lured to Physical and Finan cial Destruction. THE CO-OPERATIVE COLONY "Which Was to Found a Tropical Paradise in Mexico a Gigan tic Bunko Scheme. STARVATION INSTEAD OP LUXURY, Poverty in Place of BicheB, and Practical Slavery "Where Boundless Free dom Was Expected. GRAVES MOEE PLENTIFUL THAN'HOMES. Oct End of Monty Tumtd Out en Printing Press to Ply tie Toilers, While Another Wu reminded by the Company. 6T0ME5-0F THOSE WHO ESCAFAD WITH LITE rprrciAL txlxcbak to thi ni6rATcnvi Topeka, Kan., Nov. 1Z A coloniza tion company promising choice fruits, but yielding only Dead Sea apples, is the In tegral Co-operative Association of Topolo bampo, in Mexio, on the Gulf of Cali fornia. This commnno has been in opera tion about seven years, and has, so far, ruined more than 1,000 famill-it, and has planted graves among the cact' of a desert, as well as wrecking the fortunes of those who were deluded by the bright pictures sent out by those interested in securing the money of -victims undor the guise of phil anthropy and communal possessions. List week another colony, numbering 100 persons, started from this State to join those who have gone before. As several parties have returned who have spent a year or more in that community they were interviewed in order to ascertain the exact facts. Among these was Mr. Ezra Comfort, who has just returned to his old home in Ottawa county with the sun bting remnant ff his family after a year's residencs in Topolobampc. Bright If opes That Were Blasted. He i as one year ago an adherent of the hctrines of the commune, and, joining sonw 70 others, went to Topolobampo with bright hopes for the future, believing he had at last fonnd a laud free from all ile Icious laws of mankind, where selfishness had no abiding place, and where all the good in man's nature w as del eloped to the exclusion j ot evil. He bad listened to the words of Albert K. Owen, the father of the scheme, and had followed the advice of C. B. Hofl matt, the financial head. Selling all his possessions he departed for the land where God was recognized as the good in man's nature, and the devil was a representative of such qualities as were left behind. In this new laud there were to be no individual homes, for the commune Mas to own all; there was to be no money, for ai;ain the commune stepped in and sup plied its script, which was to be the sole currency; there was to be no disease, for the commune would so regulate the people and their lubits that they would dwell in that delightful climate until a well-spent lite would carry all into beautiful old age, when the end would coine and annihilation would quietly close all. Suffering and want, famine and fever awakened him from his dream, and now he is at his old home a;ain, with his daughter-in-lau, while in hU memory the most vhid impresions are of two lonely graves beside a great cactus on the banks of the Fuerte river, where venomous life sings requiems over those who struggled and gave up to assaults of fever and famine. Financial Features or the Schem;. Before Mr. Comfort was permitted to join this happy family of now some 400 peo ple he was compelled to purchase stock in the Kanas-S5naloa Investment Company to the amount of $10 for each adult in his fam ily. On arriving at Topolobampo (Pacific City) he wa assessed 520 to. each member of his family, which gave him the privilege of an allotment cl the company's land, not the ownership, and one-half the amount in Credit Foncier script, which was good at the companv's store for the necessaries of life at such prices as the company deemed proper to charge. In dealing with individuals the "com mune" dropped out of sight and the "com pany" took its place Mr. Comfort soon found that he would not be permitted to sell anything except to the company, not even his labor, which company would dis poe of everything for the benefit of the commune and place the proceeds to the credit of such iunds as insurance, surplus, library, sustenance, improvement, etc., "in uring to the benefit of the whole colony." Mr. Comfort succeeded in reaching Topolobampo Bay by taking an open fishing smack at G nay mas and landed at Pacific City early in the morning. He was some what disappointed to find only a sterile, sandy beach and a gravel plain, whose 'tropical fruits and rich verdure" consisted of hugestumps of cacti. The "city," which had been so beautifully pictured, consisted of one stone house with a thatched roof, the supply store, three or four adobe or mud houses covered in the same manner, and hall a dozen wattled huts which would fail to keep the sun out during the dry season and would not shed the rain during the wet person. He was informed that the energy of the commune wns first directed to making homes on the farm at La Logia, oh the 3'uerte, and constructing a canaL to bring water from that river to the site on the bay, where the ideal city would soon be a reality. Printing Money Jnst as Required. Not discouraged by his first impressions, Mr. Comfort paid all his fees, some $80, and was enrolled as part owner and director of this new Eldorado. He had not yet discov ered that the Kansas-Sinaloa Company owned everything and that the Credit Fon cier Company made all contracts and paid in scrip, which was limited in issue only by the capacity of the Gordon press on which it was printed. The Kansas-Sinaloa Com pany took in only gold, silver or green backs and the Credit Foncier Company paid all bills in scrip. The former owns every thing, the latter owns nothing. The ar rangement seems to be as nearly perfect as it can possibly be made. Comfort and his sons constructed a hut similar to those already occupied, which was to shelter his family. He was placed on the payroll of the commune while en gaged in this work, receiving scrip at the rate of 51 50 a day, eight hours' work. This he exchanged for'musty flour at 13 a hun dred, rusty salt pork at 60 cents a pound, and other supplies in like proportion. The flour comes from the mill ot the financial head of the scheme, located at Enterprise, Kan. The water was hot and brackish, the only good water coming from an island in the' bay, or from the lagoons in the interior. He was promised sweet water as soon as the canal to the Fuerte could be completed, which would irrigate these desolate plains and make them a blooming paradise. As soon as the women were sheltered, with such shelter as he could give them, he and his sons were assigned to work on the great ditch, which was to cive life to all. Here he worked like a Chinaman, hauling and carrying dirt, Hung in the open air. sleep ing close beside a huge cactus at night, eat ing such food as he could get and drinking such water as could be found. Death an Early Visitor. The food supply consisted of cornmeal and poor coffee, with occasionally stringy beef, while at all times the water was hot aud unfit to use. His strong frame and heretolore regular habits enabled him to withstand the privations, but his youngest son soon succumbed and was taken ill away from medical attendance. In a few weeks he was laid beneath the gravel and the Credit Eoncier, the communal paper an nounced that "our dear young brother Com fort has fallen a victim to the Mexican fever, brought on by indiscretion." Labor in the hot sun, poor food and bad water killed him. Mr. Comfort protested against this kind of work, discouraged rs he was, and de manded removal to the company farm at La Logia. After three months the commit tee ordered the change to be made. Ac companied by his family he made the trans fer, believing his troubles at an end. He was now going to the place where tropical fruits abounded, and wbere the products of the temperate zone would bring back health and strength. He saw the Fuerte for the first time and had his first taste of pure sweet water, warm, but refreshing. The "farm," however, was not productive, although over five years old, and its oranges and fruits were of but scant growth, owing to the drought. The river Was so far below the surface of the farm lands that water could be obtained only during the wet season, when the river was high, and when water was not needed. He was closer, though, to another of the company's stores, and his wages enabled him to give his family a scant living, but far better than that obtained at Pacific City. Betnrncd Without a Dollar. Unable to withstand the privations the older son here sickened, and Mr. Comfort abandoned the colony and hastened home only to sec his remaining son die as be reached the village. All that remained of a once happv family were the father and daughter-in-law, both broken in health, and both without a dollar in the world. Mr. Comfort had Credit FOncier scrip, represent ing the nominal valus of $1,500, but in fact worth nothing. He has oflered it to J. W. Breid.nthall, the Secretary of the Kansas Sinaloa Company, for 20 cents on the dollar, but tha: official refuses to redeem it on the ground that his company had nothing to do with issuing it. And yet all improvements havs been made on the kinds-of this coin- pan-. The prospectu- of the Credit Fancier Conupany sa s all impr'rwents made by thos? desiring to leave the colony will be purchased at actual cost. Mr, Comfort soon found that the Credit Foncis. was a New York myth, without funds, and that the Kansas-Sinaloa Company was in possession of e erything, improvements and all. He discovered another thing by this late inves tigation. The las', named company received a royalty from the Mexican Govcr"ent of $200foreac"j familv brought into that ter titory.which sum was paid in gold. Nor nas this all. The same company has pur chased some 200,000 acres of land from the Mexican Government, obtaining with it such concessions that practically rednce to a system of peonage the unfortunates who go "there The Experience of a Woman. Mrs. Thurston, of Hope, Kan., returned after a residence there of two years. She tells a sad story of suffering which comes from bitter experience. Giving her experi ence she said: " "When landing, to our sur prise, instead of the homelike dwellings which had been pictured in the prospec tuses and lectures there were nothing but adobe huts thatched with long grass and cornstalks, and hard clay for floors. Each colonist takes stock in Owens' Credit Fon cier Company. The money is paid into the treasury, which Owens and the directors guard, and for all work done the colonists get scrip payable in food at the commissary, or a portion of the farm products. As the farm has produced little or nothing the commissary is practically abandoned, and the colonists subsist upon what each one can raise. The four crops a rear "told of in the prospectuses have been found to consist chiefly of corn, beans and a little oats, and they are compelled to live on such a variety as they can conjure up from this list. The condi tion of the women who are unable to return would make a stone heart melt with pity. "Without hope, thousands of miles from their friends, surrounded bv a strange horde of natives, they weep themselves to sleep ana pray ior some aid to come to tnem. Added to other difficulties the colonists suffer for pure wafer. They have been com pelled to carry their water for drinking and cooking purposes from a little island seven miles distant in the bay." "You cannot realize it," she said. "You do not know anything of it. The lonesome ncss and the sorrowfulness of the situation awav among the deserts of that foreign laud, in an atmosphere that seems to sap the very life. It is no wonder that women arc weary with weeping, and that I am glad to nave escaped wun Health uninjured alter my experience." Appeals to Friends for Assistance. The story told by these two is verified by the others who have been fortunate enough to have money on which to return. One woman writes an appealing letter to friends in Ottawa county to aid her to re turn to her old home while she has yet life left to travel. And so it goes. The officers all reside in New York and Kansas, reaping a rich harvest, but never visiting their victims in that distant land. The work of their -voluntary peons will make land costing a few cents an acre worth dollars. One company owns it while another company, composed of the same men, contracts the debts which are paid in worthless paper. All this is the practical working ot integral-co-operation. A. G. SlACEY. A CINCINNATI BEES TBUBT. All the Breweries in That City and It Ken tacky Suburbs to Combine Cincinnati, Nov. 12. A consolidation of the 27 breweries in Cincinnati, Coving ton and'Newport is now said to be agreed upon by all but two of the 27 breweries in those cities. These two will undoubtedly join in the movement if the plan is carried out The idea is to accomplish a consolidation byxincorporation under the laws of Ohio, Testing the authority in a board of trustees, who would have a central office, but each brewery would be managed by its present owners. A great reduction in expenses is claimed for the new plan, and also the virtual control of the beer trade, similar to that enjoyed by the "Whisky Trust. SUNDAY AT THE TAR Spirited Debate Between Pennsyl vania's Commissioners on the QUESTION OP SABBATH CLOSING. It Is Eeferred to the Executive Committee by Tote of 19 to 13. (MANI PLANS FOE THE STATE BUILDING f SPECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE CISPATCR.1 HaRrisbltrg, Nov. 12. The question of Sabbath desecration was warmly discussed by the State Board of "World's Fair Man agers at its regular monthly meeting in the Senate chamber this afternoon. The de bate was precipitated by the motion of Captain Hasson, to refer to the Executive Committee communications from the East Pennsylvania Synod of the Reformed Church and the Carlisle Presbytery, pro testing against keeping the Columbian Ex position open on Sunday. There was a large attendance of managers and considerable time was consumed in the discussion, which finally terminated in the adoption of Captain Hasson's motion by a vote of 19 to 13. Governor Pattison called the Board to order shortly after 12 o'clock, and it at once proceeded to business. Executive Commis sioner "Whitman made a comprehensive re port of his Office since the last meeting. The classification of the various interests and in dustries of the State has so far advanced that it will probably be completed by the end of the month. "When this is done, the purpose Is to make an immediate and per sistent effort to enlist the aid of all the im portant firms, corporations and associations of the State in making Pennsylvania's ex hibit what its patriotic citizens hope and dpflire. ' desire. Great Interest by the Ladles' Branches. Fifty-five of tha countiei have named their ladies' auxiliaries societies and the rec ommendations, as a rule, have been of a remarkably satisfactory character. In a majority of the counties a decided interest is shown in this feature of the work; and the societies will have the active services of many of the most prominent and intelli gent ladies in the commonwealth. The communications relative to keeping open the Fair on Sunday were read. Captain Hasson promptly wired that a report would be made at their next meeting. Secretary "Wright offered as a substitute a resolution that the communication be forwarded to the Director General, with the recommendation that the gates be not opened on Sunday. An animated debate followed, in which nearly all the mrnagers participated. Sen ator Gobin contended that Captain Hasson's plan of disposing of the question at this time was the proper one. "We are dealing in futures, without knowing the character of this exposition," said he. "It occurs to me at this time that there is no such neces sity for an opinion of the part of this ques tion. Certainly I think the matter should be deferred until we know whether or not the action of the commissioners of Penn sylvania will have any effect upon the Kational Commission. Unless there is an urgent necessity for our opinion going out now, our action is premature." Lieutenant Governor "Watres I am op posed ta-opening the doors on Sunday. If this question is referred to a committee it will be discussed by tbem and then be re-' ferrcd back to us vlth a recommendation. X set no reason for referring it to a commit ter I am willing to meet this question at any tims. Kemonstrance-. All Over the Country. Secretary "Wright Every member has his opinion on thil subject. Beferring to a committee would result in no good". The Question is being discussed in Chicago; re monstrances are pouring in from all over the country,and I don'tvsee why Pennsyl vania should hesitate to express an opinion now when it may have weight with the Na tional Commission. I think we ought to express an opinion at the very earliest opportunity. Ex-Senator McAleer I regret that the question has been raised so eztly. Some action should be taken now, aud I can see no reason why it should be referred to the Executive Committee and then referred back to us. "We can't ignore what the members of the Synod and Presbytery have asked of us. Are we going to set this thing aside and wait for a month and let them hear nothing from us? I am prepared to vote now against the opening of the exposi tion on Sunday. I sar: take action on this now; the people are looking to us to decide this question. Gobin There is no one question that will agitate the country more thoroughly than this, and I agree with Senator McAleer that we do something. In view of this discus sion there is going to be antagonistic views, and I can see no reason why we should in vitevthe criticisms of persons who favor the gates being opened oa Sunday, when there is no necessity for taking the ground now. A. B. Farquhar We are here to represent the industries of the State, and not to dis cuss questions of religion and morality. We can't represent the State in this matter now. Mrs. Mabel Cronise Jones Last Septem ber the ladies' auxiliary of the national board voted against the opening of the gates on the Sabbath. Over two months ago their vote was given on inisquestionj ana 1 tnlnt we should give our opinion on it as a board at this time. The Question As a Sectional One.' A G. Boenigk I believe this question a sectional one, and I don't believe, we ought to hurry up aud hasten these church people in their opinion. I don't think we ought decide any important question of this kind on a few moments' notice. I tn op posed to this board making a recommenda tion of this kind to the national directors. J. W. Woodside This question has never been discussed in the Xational Commission, as it has never been officially brought there. Within the last year almost every village and hamlet in the commonwealth" where a chbrch spire points to heaven has suit Us petitions, asking us to give our vote in op position to opening the gates on Sunday. I am opposed to opening tue exposition on Sunday. Lewis W. Emery I do not think we ought to be hasty in deciding this matter. While I am in harmony with the Christian religion I think this question should be con sidered carefully. It is not fair to those who are opposed to the closing of the gates that they should not be heard. It will cause trouble and vexation to the people who are opposed to the resolution. I shall vote for this resolution 'to go to the com mittee. Watres We can't evade this question, In my opinion, we will make nothing by postponing it. We must meet it, and we should do so now. I will vote for the mo tion offered by the gentleman from Lehigh. Emery We are" not here as individuals, but as representatives of the people, and they are the ones who shall be heard. Mr. Watres, I do not want to be understood as favoring the closing of the gates, as ought to be the case if I vote In favor of the mo tion of Captain Hasson. The peopleof the State might misunderstand our position. Sir. Watres Always a Partisan. Governor Pattison They may think you arc a non-partisan Watres I am always partisan. Wright I know no great harm may come from postponing action for thirty daysbut np flood may come. The longer the ques tion is held over the more general the dis- cussion will become. You might wait for months to deeide it, yet when the time comes each member will-vote on his con victions as they are to-day. This question will probably be decided at Chicago son. I think there is no donbt that it is the ex pression of this board that the gates should bo closed on Sunday. My judgment of the people of Pennsylvania is that they aie op posed to ODeuinc them on Sunday. This sentiment ought to be expressed at the time when, if it is to have any weight, there is an opportunity. A vote was then taken on Mr. "Wright's resolution, and it was defeated by a vote of yeas, 13; nays, 19. Captain Hasson's mo tion was then adopted. The resignation of J. B. Oliver, of Pitts burg, was read. Mr. Olive, resigned on ac count of lack of time to attend to the duties. Mayor Merritt, of Beading, was elected to fill the vacancy. Twenty-seven plans for the Pennsylvania building at the "World's Fair were sub mitted bv the following architects. Bobert Cole, Bellefonte; Miss Ada O'Brien, Erie; Syrus T. Bean, Erie; James D. Bowyer, Danville; Hillman & Shirk, Phila delphia: C Balderston, Philadelphia; J. D. Allen, Philadelphia; Thomas N. Frazer, Philadelphia; Miller Smith, Harrisburg; John P. Brennan, Pittsburg; J. P. Leach, Pittsburg; W. Lansdale, Phil adelphia; Furness, Evens & Co., Philadel- jj mil, a. z. .nc&er, jcmittuciuiua, u. ivcuuuu White, East Liberty; J. Alvin Jackson, Philadelphia; Hazleyburst &Trickel, Phil adelphia; H. Broomfield Barre, Philadel phia; Addison Buetton, Philadelphia; A J. "Wagner, Wllliamsport; S. W. Foulk, New Castle: John Lawrence & Son, Phila delphia; Ed F. Bertolette, Philadelphia; Day & Young, Thiladelphia, and three without signatures. These designs, which embrace all designs of architecture, were referred to the Execu tive Committee, which, in tnrn, referred them to the sub-committee, with instruc tions to employ an expert to examine them and report the next meeting. DON PIATT IS DEAD. A FAMOUS JODKXAI.IST PASSES AWAT MSAR CLEVELAND. A Complicated Torm or the Grip Cavrles Him Away His Life Befo-e and After His Retirement From Active "Work His Death a Surprise. Cleveland, Nov. 12. Colonel Don Piatt died at his home, Mac-o-Chee, at 3 o'clock this afternoon. He had been ill for two weeks with a form of the grip, but it was only in the last few days that his in disposition was regarded as serious. The announcement of his death came as a com plete surprise to his friends in this city, and owing to Imperfect telegraph facilities it is impossible to learn full particulars. Since Colonel Piatt's retirement from active journalistic work he has lived qnietly at his fine country home in Logan county. He was called from this retirement in 1888 at the urgent request of Mr. Cleveland to found JSdford'g Magazine in New York. After one year at that work he returned to Ohio and engaged upon an extensive biographical history ot General George IL Thomas, which was almost completed at the time of his death. His latest work for the press was a series of letters to the Cleveland Plain, dealer on the issues and candidates of the late campaign which attracted wide atten tion. Colonel Piatt was born in Cincinnati, Juno 19, 1819. He prepared for the law and was elevated to the Common Pleas Bench at a very early age. His subsequent public career needs no recapitulation. As a journalist and editor of his paper in Washington he worked a revolution in cer tain ways of the profession and pained a reputation that Is world t?e. 'feoloncl Piatt has been twice married and his second wife, for many years an invalid, survives him. The funeral will be held Sunday. A 1EMPEEANCE BESTA.TTBANT CLOSED: The Sheriff Swoops Down on a W. C. T. V. Enterprise In Chicago. CnicAGO, Nov. 12. ferial The Cen tral W. C. T. TJ. restaurant was closed by the Sheriff to-day. The corporation owning the restaurant was composed of 30 members of the Women's Christian Temperance Union, Mrs. M. B. Corse being the Presi dent. The assignment is due to some old indebtedness which has embarrassed the concern for a long time. The liabilities are 518,000, of which amount J8.000 is due var ious supply houses. The President of the company holds a claim for $8,000 for money loaned to the business, and Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Hobbs, prominent temperance, workers, arc creditors for $2,000. The assets consist of the plant and stock, the cost of the former being $20,000. For many months the restaurant thrived upon the trade df shop girls in the great downtown retail stores, but when the mer chants established -lunch rooms in their houses the mission of the temperance res taurant was at an end, and trade fell off until the indebtedness called for the pres ence of the Sheriff. CHICAGO NOT A C0MPETIT0B, Jttat if the Republican Convention Host Meet There It "Will Be Welcome. Chicago, Nov. 12. One hundred and fifty o Chicago's prominent business men, with a sprinkling of Illinois politicians, as sembled at the Grand Pacific Hotel this afternoon to consider ways and means for capturing the Bepublican National Conven tion for Chicago. After some discussion the following resolutions were passed by the meeting: Wuereas, Chicago has been specially hon ored in being selected as the place of hold ins the Columbian Exposition, and Whereas, The ohoico was largely duo to the friendly support of the 'representatives in Congress of the great Central empiro.tliat developed and made Chicago possible, there fore, Eesolved, That in grateful appreciation of the aid tendered in securing the Columbian Exposition, Chicago is not a competitor lor the next Bepublican National Convention. Kesolved.ln the event the National Ke publican Committee should select this city as the place for the convention, Hon. Will lam J. Cbambell, member of the National Committee from Illinois, is authorized to state that Chicago will liberally provide for its accommodation. A FATAL CASE OF TOOTHACHE. Arnin Friedman Shoots Himself, Because He Couldn't Stand the Pain. Net- York, Nov. 12. Special A Cen tral Park policeman found the dead body of a young man, with a bullet hole in his right temple, in the shrubbery at Ninety ninth Btreet to-day. A 38-caliber revolver was in the suicide's right hand, and the small hand mirror with which he had di rected the shot was in his left hand. He was Arnin Friedman, formerly a lieutenant in the Austro-Hungarian army. His father is the foreman of a machine shop in Hun gary, and one of his brothers, Charles, is a machinist in this city. Arnin came to this country about eight months ago and worked for his brother un til recently. He fiaally ,-ave up on the score that the work was too hard. An aching tooth brokeoff when being extracted Thursday, and the pain in the remaining root became agonizing. H; had also neu ralgia. The pain, it is supposed, drove him to suicide. A Judge Kills a Litigant. Paso Robles, Cal., Nov. 12. Judge John Kelshaw yesterday shot and killed A. M. Sherwood, the defendant In a case which was tried before Kelshaw. Sherwood at tacked the Judge, who shot in self-defense. II I III ATlr 'fASSBrt' LjJ h,. WEERE JURISDIOTIOy BEGINS AND ENDS. MILLS OH THE MOVE. The Texas Candidate for Speaker Goaded to a Declaration BE BAS BAD NO SILVER BARGAIN. Dis Denial of a Humored Conference Hade Decidedly Emphatic. LITELt CONTEST FOE THE CLERKSHIP trr.oM x stait coerespondkt. Washington, Nov. 12. The Baltimore Herald of this morning, in a dispatch from Washington, undertook to explain the ap parently inconsistent attitude on the sub ject of free silver by a circumstantial ac count of how Mr. Mills had agreed to or ganize the House of Bepreseniatives against free silver as the price of his elevation to the Speakership. The story, in more or less detail, has been in circulation in Wash ington ever since Mills made his memora ble speech In Ohio dnringthe late campaign deprecating the agitation of the silver question at this time. The story has been widely believed, and has been used as an effective argument against Mills among the free silver men of the party. Mr. Mills had doubtless heard the story, but he let it pass unnoticed until it was printed this morn ing, when he proceeded to denounce it and its author in the following emphatio letter, which he has caused to be generally circu lated to-night: House op Kftresbstatives. l "Waswhotos, D. a. Nor. li, 1891, Editor Morning Ueraldi ' Sly-ftttcntjon Juts bem-cnHcd to a dlspateh. sont from here dated November 11 by your correspondent. In which he charges I went to New York prior to the lato election at the invitation of certain anti-silver Democrats, the editor of the New York Times and several other strong opponents of fiee sil ver, and Colonel Jones, of the St. Louis Mc jmbiic; that 1 pledged myself, if elected bpeaker, to frame the committee on cotnago legislation, and that the names of members to constitute the committeo were dictated tome and I agreed to appoint them as named. Every word of the dispatch is raise. I have had no conference with anti-silver men in New York ill leferenco to the organ ization of the House; I haven't seen Colonel Jones stnCo last June.and then in St.louis: I have never bad anyone propose to me that I organize the House, if elected, ajrainst a sil ver legislation. In short, the dispatch is false from beginning to ending. Your cor respondent has imposed a palpable false hood upon you. You owe it to yourself to retract the false statement to which yon have given circulation. Yours truly, In spite of the vigorous and characteristic denial front Mr. Mills some of the friends of other candidates for the Speakership still profess to believe the story, and it will probably figure quite largely in the contest for the gaveL TBE CONTEST FOR CLERK OPENS UP EABLTAT WASHINGTON IN FELL BLAST. Four Candidates Bnttonhollnc Members of Congress for a Desirable Position Two Pennsylvanlans Catting; Each Other's Throats All the Applicants Are Ex Congressmen. Washington, Nov. 12. Special. The contest of the clerkship of the House of Bepresentatives, which is one of the most desirable offices within the gift of Congress, has opened up here, and promises to be as lively as the speakership fight. Already there are four candidates in the field, and there will no doubt be more before the first Monday in December, when the present clerk, Edward McPherson, will call the House to order. The clerkship carries with it a salary of $5,000, with a few desirable perquisites thrown in, and the duties are not onerous.' Mr. McPherson has been the clerk of every Eepublican'House since he ceased to represent the Gettysburg district, shortly after the close of the war. The four men who have already expressed their desire to succeed him are the ex-Clerk and ex-Representative John B. Clark, Jr. of Missouri, and ex-Bepresentatives Kerr and Maish, of Pennsylvania, and Gibson, of Maryland. The three last named were members of the last House. It Messrs. Kerr aud Maish both remain the field the chances of either of them will not be flattering, and they might as well count themselves out on the start. Mr. Clark will be supported by some of the old members who were his colleagues in the Forty-third, Forty fourth, Forty-fifth, .Forty-sixth and Forty-seventh Congresses, and by some of those whose friendship he gaincotwniie uierK. Many oi tne new mem bers, however and they will bj in a large majority in the incoming House do not know Mr. Clark, neither do they care to waste their strength in supporting either of the Pennsylvania candidates, who, bvdivid ing their own delegation, will be fighting a losing battle. These men will be apt to sup port Mr. Gibson, who was one of the most genial, popular and eloquent members of the Forty-ninth, Fiftieth and Fifty-first Congresses. Mr. Maish has not yet put in an appear ance, but Mr. Clark, who lives in the su burbs of Washington, has a fine opportunity to buttonhole every member who comes to town, and he is not without hope, that he will again be chosen. IUPBOYEKEBT 0? THE'BITEBS. Estimates on the Amount of Money to Be Needed Next Year. Washington, Not. 12. Special Gen- eral T. L. Casey, Chief Engineer, has sub mitted to the Secretary of War his annual report of the work done under the direction of the corps of engineers, together with estimates for the fiscal year ending June 30, 1893. The review of the work is substan tially the same as in the reports of the en gineers published in July. The estimates have not before been made pub"". Among tne latter are tne louowing: For the general improvero rt Ohio -r l i -rn.i : o-rf. m& t Me dim in tho Ohio river near th" vfiU river ueiuw .ruisuurir. cjuu.. "i. 7. -ih DiMinr rio Pn SWrt fUM- tmnnt nprbv" -' the Allesheny river. $50,000: dam atj P.tZ Island, Allegheny river, $200,000; impru,. '0 y.rt, ment of falls of the Ohio river, $30O,00OK'ft, 'fc. Indiana chute, falls of the Ohio, $75,000; Erie Pa., harbor, $430,000. For work on fortifications, including gun and mortar batteries, casemates for sub-marine mines and other items, General Casey submits an estimate of $3,489,500. SAM SMALL IN A FIGHT. ASSAULTED AND KICKED IN AN AT LANTA BABBEK SHOP. The Evangelist Thinks Things Would Have Gone Differently if He Had Had Warn ing; A Saloonkeeper Takes Him at a Disadvantage and Beats Him. Atlanta, Nov. 12. Special. Her. Sam Small was assaulted, beaten and kicked by Dom Minor, a saloonkeeper, in Nash's barber shop on Peachtree street, just after 1 o'clock to-day. George Yarborough, one of the barbers, told a reporter that the fight was brought about as foilows: Mr. Small came in the shop. Ope of the barbers said: "Shave, sir." Small said no, that he would wait for Yarborough, who was then busy, and then Small took a seat in an unoccupied barber chair. Yar borough socn finished shaving his man and Small then took his seat. While Small was getting his share Minor walked ,'in and took a seat, also waiting for Yarborongb. When Small was through shaving he arose and stood up while the boy brushed him off Yarborough turned to Minor and asked him if he wanted a shave. Minor said: "No, here is the man I want to see," and walked np to Small and struck him a stunning blow in the face. The two men clinched and fell to the floor, and rolled over and over." Two barbers and a customer ran up, and, after some trouble, pulled the two men apart. Yarborough says as the two men were pulled apart Minor kicked Small in the month. The two men left the shop, and soon the officers wfere looking for them, Mr. Small was seen in the office of Mr. A. A. Murphy. His lip was bruised and some what swollen.but otherwise he was all right. "I will be out to speaU at the meeting to night," he said to a reporter. In speaking of the fight, he said: "I'm having a state ment written out on that type-writer for publication," and then, turning to some of his friends who were present, Mr. Small said: "If I'd known the fellow was coming at me we would have had more fun than a box of monkeys. I'd have grabbed one of those razors, opened it, and said, 'Now, you dirty skunk, come on if you want to.'" " AH EX-EVAHGEllSrS ELOQUENCE Saves Him From a Term In the Missouri Penitentiary for Bigamy. Sedalia. Mo., Nov. 12. Special. The most pathetic appeal for mercy ever heard in Pettis county was made to-day in the criminal court room by Charles Shelby Hughes, the printer-evangelist, who pleaded guilty to the charge of bigamy,-he having married Miss Mollie Borngesser in St.Louis last summer while he had a wife living at Mt. Vernon, I1L Hushes is a morphine fiend, and has wasted away to almost a skeleton during his four months' confine ment in jail. He looked like atorpsc as he arose to address the court, and a pin could have been heard to drop, so quiet was it. For 20 minutes the ex-evangelist spoke, and before he had half concluded his re marks Judge Byland and one-half the mem bers of the bar and spectators were in tears. At the close there was scarcely a dry eye in the courtroom, and the effort had had its effect, for the Court meted out the minimum sentence three months in the county jail and a fine of $100, which fine can be served out at $1 a day. Hughes has worked in nearly every city in the Country as a print er, and at the time he contractedhis biga mous marriase was employed as city editor of the Bazoo here. He had expected to go to the penitentiary, and is highly elated at the success of his appeal for mercy. TABLE OP CONTENTS. Page. Communist Colonists Victimized 1 Pennsylvania at the World's Fair......... I Milts Denies a Sliver Charge 1 Anarchist Balded by Police 1 A Conscience-Stricken Chinaman 2 Foreign Factories Coming to America.... S Henry Dallmeyer's Death 3 Classified Advertisements 3 Editorial ,. 4 The lo!ngs of Society 4 Bankers Discuss Free Coinage 5 Deaths Here and Elsewhere.... S Sherman Aheaa In Ohio.,,... 6 industrial Intol'g-nce C The Situation in Chile.... 7 News From Neighboring Towns...... .... 7 Yellow Fever On Board Ship 7 Hotel Arrivals and Personals. S Sporting; Features and Weather Outlook.. S Denials of the Brazilian Revolution 9 China's Rebel Leader Captured 9 Train Robbery In Wisconsin 9 The Latest in Fashions 10 Work in the OH Fields 10 Mrs. Toomey's Lire and Death 10 Financial and Commercial Markets 11 Court Proceedings 12 ...... .A I man ior me name...... ia i Alleghany Committees at War IS I BOMB THIS TIME Chicago Police Baida Meeting of the Again Violent Anarchists. GUNS AM) PISTOLS DBATO. Only the Prompt Action of the Offi cers Prevents Bloodshed. MANTOPTBE LEADERS ARRESTED. Allegations Hade That Startling Plots Hare Eeen Discovered. THE FEOHT OF A BUILDING TOES OUT rSFZCIAX, TXLXOEA3I TO TUX nlSPAK R.J Chicago, Nov. 12. One hundred po licemen marched down upon an An archist meeting to-night in Grief's Hall, and the scenes that took place inside the hall, reminded some of the officers of that awful night when the bomb was thrown in Hay market square. A crashing of glass and the bursting in of the street door followed by the heavy tramp of the police as they rushed in was the first intimation the An archists had that the meeting was to be broken np. Every officer grasped his night stick in his left hand and his right hand was buried in the breast of his great coat with a firm clutch on his revolver. Determination was .written on the faces of the officers, for some of them had lost brothers in flesh as well as in name, at the Haymarket square riot. The Power of the Police Denied. "M , " moment ine nrst squao. oi police, I mt. x.t. . - ,. neaaea Dy Lieutenant wneeier, Durst in " the Anarchists who were sitting at ?. nntini. Viu. f rf 4tin . hm.m v '",. UA..U ,tA, UilCI, .UO IJlUJUCIlUi VO'. V." e, shouted: "Get out of here. jyV v- .0 Dusmess lnterienng witn our mees: ' Grief was standing guard at the door leading to the hall above the saloon, where two meetings were in progress. A man named Daniel Snctter, who claims to hail from Buffalo, was standing at his side. "Come on men," commanded the Inspect or, and in rushed the police in double file, Officers Trehorn, Gary and Simscott were in civilian dress and were standing within a few feet of Grief and Suetter. The latter quickly reached for a revolver in his hip pocket when the command wo3 given by In spector Lewis, but before he could use it Trehorn, Gary and Simscott had over powered him. The two first named officers grasped him by either arm and Simscott took the weapon from his pocket. It was an ugly looking seven-shooter, and a cart ridge reposed in every barrel. A Desperate Anarchist. Sutter made a desperate resistance biting and kicking the officers, until the irons were put on his wrists and be was hustled off to the Desplaines street station. On the way to the station he fought like a mad man ana at every step he took he cursed the jiolice from the chief down. "Anarchy for ever is my motto"" he screamed at the top of his voice as the officers' dragged him along. "Shoot me" he exclaimed witha derisive lauch, as he stood before the desk at the station. "Shoot me, and I'll be like the other heros, Parsons, Fielding and the rest of them who were murdered." The 25 or 30 men who were sitting in the barroom tried to force their wjt out to the street, but it was like going against an iron wall to get past the police. It seemed as though the last officer would never get in side the place, so long did the line extend west op Lake street from the saloon door. Officers in citizens dress who had mingled with the crowd all evening formed a barrier in the rear and prevented any of the An archists from escaping. Every man was then searched for weapons. While this was going on the first squad of police with Inspec tor Lewis, Captain 3Iahoney and Lieutenant Wheeler leading the way rushed up the narrow stairway into the halls above. Tried to Lock the Door. "The police are coming, lock the door," shouted a man in the meeting on the second floor. The dooi was quickly barred and the men who were assembled in this dingy, lit tle hall making inflammatory speeches waited for the attack. Inspector Lewis and Captain Mahoney threw their com bined weight against the door and it flew from its hinges. In rushed the police 13 Of them with drawn revolvers, and if any Anarchists there intended to resent the at tack he quickly changed his mind at sight of the brass buttons and gleaming stars. August Kieckner, seemed to be the Chair man of the meeting. "If we had known a mob of police like these was coming," Kieckner declared, in a loud voice, "we would have been prepared to meet you." Bed bunting that hung from tne walls and ceiling was seized by the police and dragsed down. In a dark closet was found a truuk, and, upon opening it, two silk banners of a fiery red hue were dis covered. On one was inscribed: "In Union There Is Strength," and on the other "Our Martyrs." These, with the 'bunting and numerous other banners found in the build ing, were taken to the police station. A Charge With Drawn Revolvers. While the first squad of officers were in this hall another" force of men headed by Lieutenants Beard and Pensen tramped np the stairs to the hall above. When the Anarchists heard the police coming they made a rush tor the stairway and attempted to force their way down. The police charged upon them with drawn revolvers and captured seven of them, who were armed. During the rioting the entire front of the famous den of the anarchists was torn out. Twenty-five of the reds were arrested. On their way to the station they threatened the lives of the Mayor and Chief of Police, and declared that within a short time the city would be rocked as it has not rocked sines the bomb exploded at Haymarket, Several guns were taken from the arsenal. The hall is in the center of town and was famous as the place where the dynamite outrages of 1886 were plotted. The police, it is uid, are in possession of information of a most startling character as to the plans of the reds. MBS. CXBVEIAND'S P0BJBAIT. Bell, the Washington Photographer, Loses His Cincinnati Copyright Suit. CINCINNATI, Not. 12. The case of C M. Bell, the Washington photographer, against the Henderson-Achert-Krebs Lith graphing Company, of this city, for $34,000, as penalty for an alleged infringement of Mr. Bell's copyright on the pictures of Mrs. ex-President Cleveland, was ended to-day by a verdict for the defendants under in structions from Judge Sage, of the United States District Court. The defendants, when they bought out the lithographing establishment, found a large quantity of Mrs. Cleveland's pictures in the stock. Upon being advised that they were illegally made they destroyed them. The court directed the jury to find for.tht J.fJ., , , . aeiencants.