THE PITTSBTJEG- DISPATCH, 'FRIDAY, JTJNE 17. 1892. APT TOJET LOST Are All the Little Booms Vhen They Get Into the "Wigwam at Chicago. A CLEVELAND ADVANTAGE That Must Hava Been Utterly Over looked by Chairman Brice. BOIES AND THE WHOOP OP BOIS Nearly All That Is Heard Among Earliest of the Arrivals. the GEOVER'S POPULARITY HIS STRONGHOLD tTROX A. STAFF COBKESFOXDENT. Chicago, June 1G. About all the news paper correspondents are baying accident tickets for the wisrwam, a large ice house here which the National Committee has erected to cool the temperature of 16,000 people. If the greatest accident in our his tory were to attend one of these National Conventions, might it not cnre the disease of them? The original wigwam in Chicago was a necessity of the city's infancy, but there are a hundred edihces now in the same city which would contain a respect able convention and a respectable andience besides. Less than 900 delegates would hardly 11 the average theater, and the .Auditorium could contain them all and seat ,000 spectators besides. In that huge audience how ineffectual must be the protest of one-third ot the del egates against a popular favoritel The few Christian captives in the Collosenm would not have been more lonesome on the day the big lion was let loose at them, with all Borne for an audience. If Mr. Brice made this wigwam and ex pected to defeat Mr. Cleveland, he must have had the logic ot an eeL Most of the other candidates for the Presidency will be unknown to the audience. Even Governor Boies, in spite of his having belonged to both parties, will have to change the spell ing of his name, that the boys may whoop for him. Palmer Driven to Bis Betreat. Impressed with the lonesomeness of the situation, old General Palmer, the Simon Btylites of the occasion, has sot down from his pillar and taken to his hole. He has be longed to both parties and challenged the regular army for stopping the fire on consti tutional grounds, since which time he has been an object of mystery to all conven tions, and, it nominated, should have on the ticket with him the Englishman who re fused to save a man's life when drowning because be had not been introduced to him. Hill is undoubtedly known to the major ity of the 18,000; he is known as the man who ran between Cleveland's legs in the at tempt to down him at the tournament. Car lisle is known to men of intelligence and to most people of Kentucky, but not to a ma jority of the politicians here. They would not let him enter the Senate on account of the mild and sensible imprint be had re ceived from living in Cincinnati. The re cording angel does not know the names of the Kentucky Senators w ho continuously beat Carlisle until an outer feeline from the North cried "for shame," and he was selected bv getting down to Frankfort and saying: "Your alms, friends," and now that he is to be " nominated by Kentucky- here, the orator from that State will not resign his chance to make a speech to give Mr. Carlisle the support of his State. The ruling States of a country can often be ascertained by their power to harmonize in the face of a great national occasion. Maine and Indiana understand that loyalty to a leader is better oratory than magazine gush. Totes Worth More Than Oratory. There is no eloquence like the rising of a State for its friend and delivering all its votes like a platoon of musketry. As long as speech is golden and silence is silvern, the orators of a State will cut a small fig ure. It is Mr. Breckinridge, of Kentucky, I think, whose father, a Bev. Mr. Breckin ridge, presided over the convention which nominated Abraham Lincoln for that fatal second term, which sowed the seeds oi dis ruption in his party, une clergyman can sometimes be unanimous with himself, but when Tom Donaldson brought a thousand clergymen in to help Mr. Blaine they fell afoul ot each other in the first few minutes. "Bum, Bomanism and Rebellion," says Mr. Burchard. "You have insulted my re ligion," says Father O'FJaherty. "Where do I come in?" remarked Mr. Blaine, and wept. The orator Breckenridge is a brother of the Arkansas Breckenridge. Their lather lies in the Lexington cemetery, with an American flag wrapped about the shaft of his tomb. Among the Presidents! names I see Gray, of Delaware not Gray, of Indiana who appears to be outside the calculations of the Cleveland men. The mugwump contingent here is talking lustily for Cleveland and Boies. Senator "Washburn is reported as having said in Minnesota: "What ticket will keep Bepublicans very ill up this way?" Re peating this to an old-time Chicago Demo crat from Kentucky he said: "Where do I come in with such a ticket as that one end of it mugwump and the other Republican?" baid 1: "lou come into the ark, will get very wet." Bayard a Family Legatee. Mr. Gray, of Delaware, I had the pleas ure of knowing before he became publiclr known. He lived in the healthy and once important town of New Castle, the old Dutch emporium of the Delaware. His father was a Whig who had no patience with the moral evasions of John M. Clay ton, and sulked in his tent The son was very good looking: large, and of an amiable yet positive character, the familv descend ant Thomas F. Bayard receiving the honors of the Democratic party, Mr. Gray putting in no claim, but he was so much of a law yer, so steady, so comfortable to "have around when a cool intellect was to be con sulted, that Bayard respected him as much as Harrison respects Miller, his partner. When Mr. Bayard went into the Cleveland administration Mr. Gray came to the Sen ate. The Bepublicans thought him an abler man than Bayard. The influence of Bayard is somewhat like that of Cleveland in the didactic habit of addressing men as soon as he opens his shutters in the morn ing and apparently reading out of the old English reader. The preacher, after all, leadi the politi cians, and at the head of every era was some .preacher. It is not impossible that in the increase of large States, monotonous bv that increase, some little State like Delaware might become a favorite like Benjamin among his brethren. The Democratic party does not contain a sounder heart and head and body than George Gray. Delaware has been described as Bourbonism modified by Wilmington, a place ot near 70,000 people, which is but three or four miles from New Castle, to which it mav one day extend. The new elevated railroad in Chicago has its trains of cars made in Wilmington. To that city Mr. Pullman, of Chieago, goes for the best Eastern skilled labor on cars. Cleveland Just Like Iiarrison. Mr. Cleveland superficial! v appears to have about the same strength in this con vention which Harrison had a week before the Minneapolis Convention, namely, 500 votes out ot 898, but as he will require to hate two-thirds, it leaves him about 100 votes short. This figure is not allowed by Cleveland's opponents, ibut neither did Harrison s opponents allow it, yet it was -I there. Now, can the minor candidates com bine? If they could do to, either as tacti cians or as personal opponents of 'Cleve land, they might hold a choice off for some time. But there are but two positive can didates against Cleveland Hill and Boies. Boies has the whole support of his State, Hill has the whole support of his Slate. The Boies men want the Presidency, and nothing short of it, and this brings up the question whether the South will support so recent a Republican as Boies. The alleged strong managers at Minne apolis, with good candidates in sight, failed to come to any agreement, and Harrison swept the floor up with them, his solid Indiana delegation checking the whole con vention. Now, what State is eoing to picket this convention? May it be Iowa? They have shown the determination of com ing here already and opening their head quarters, just as the Indiana men did at Minneapolis. Some ot them argue so far from Boies' Republicanism being to his detriment, that he is The Logical Candidate or the Honr, and as Cleveland has moved the Demo cratic party 20 years ahead Boies will give them 30 years' movement more, so that the prejudices of the war in the North will en tirely fade out. They say this is the heroic time of the Democracy to make the conces sions in fact which thev have long made in spirit, and meet the day in which we live and extinguish sectionalism. Yet Boies is but a boy compared to Cleve land in celebrity. It takes the most intel ligent country in the'world a whole genera tion to absorb a single name. Cleveland has had eight years ot advertising, and Boies has only had a part of a year. His family did him a cruel disqualification in spelling his name. It sounds like boys, with affectations. His locality is more cen tered into the heart of the country than either party has yet presumed to go. The representative agricultural State of the en tire Union is Iowa,in that it has no prepon derating cities, and its entire civil citizen ship is subordinate to the farms, while the transportation question appears in a com petitive yet concentrated form in Iowa, so many trunk lines from East to West cross ing it and the Mississippi being at its east and the Missouri at its west. As Chicago takes on the metropolitan character, Iowa becomes the new Ohio of the land. Onre it was the banner Republican State of the whole Union, but Puritanism antagonized the habits of both the soldier and the for eigner. The soldier went to Kansas and Nebraska, and the foreigner stayed home to vote for Boies and an endtothelnterfeience of one stomach with another. So a majes tic majority has been given away for sump tuary legislation. Hill's Work Exactlr Like Boles'. Hill, on the other hand, has attained his WlND.WAILSANDWOE. Death and Devastation Mark, Terrible Trail left by ' the A CYCLONE OUT IN MINNESOTA. Happy Homes Wrecked, Fruitful Farms Destroyed, Forests Leveled and HANI MANGLED CORPSES SCATTERED wind you main advantages in New York precisely as Boies has done, by taking the platform that no man shall nominate any other man's drink, whether it be rtucI, water or whisky. The motto of the prohibitionist is that "No tub shall stand on its own bottom and we shall be the keeper." By having enough moral issues any party can fire away its majority. Those who want to beat Cleveland might barely do it by rallying around Boies. In New York there is no objection to Boies, for he came from that State and from the vicinity of Buffalo, which produced Cleve land. Boies is as genuine a farmer as Gen eral Palmer, and while Palmer is said not to make money out of his farms, Boies makes them pay. If Hill would join the West and bring up the South, Mr. Cleve land's nomination might be blocked, and as there is no ill-feeling between him and Boies, Boies might get it. Indeed, our people think so fast that already one thinks lie feels in the air the Boies atmosphere prelude to some such movement as set Illi nois 100 years in advance by nominating Lincoln. The moat evident fact in all the West is Chicago, with her 1,200,000 inhabitants. Illinois was nearly an unknown State till 18G0, or chiefly remembered for having killed Joe Smith at Nauvoo. and Loveiov at Alton, and for having been noticed by' Dickens in his description of Cairo. The nomination of Lincoln, the passing of the port-of-entry bill, and the getting of the World's Fair in Congress mark three great steps in political power, and every one of them was gained in the field of politics. Greater politics overarches business. Douglass and Lincoln, opposing but kindred men, created material and spiritual Illinois. One Combine That Conld Be Made. The States west of the Mississippi river, from Minnesota to Texas, are in the fore part 'of the second American century, and, with the exception of Joe Lane and possi bly John C. Fremont, have never had a Presideutal or Vice Presidental candidate. If a tide of unison could run through these States, and they could loop on to New York, Maryland and some other disaffected States, Mr. Boies might emerge as the rep resentative of a new zone and idea in the world, for nearly all the great questions which divide parties are Western Ques tions. The power of the courts, the disci plining of railroads and transportation, river and levee improvements, grain, dis tilling, brewing, milling and public lands; tbe mines; the currency itself, have become Western questions. Far beyond Iowa is the silver issue arising among'the mountain ranees. Nothing stands in Boies' way but Bour bonism, which will not forgive a man for having been right when it was wrong, and Cleveland's popularity. Gath. NEW XIH PLATE WOBKS. A Large Plant to Be .Erected in the Vicin ity of Chicago. Foreign and home capital is interested in the Diternational Tin and Refinine Com pany now being formed in Chicago. N. D. Lewis, of Swansea, B. H. Buckingham and A. J. Warner, of Chicago, are actively in terested in the scheme. The company pro poses erecting a large works within a reas onable distance of Chicago, probably on the route of the Burlington system. The capacity of the first works to be operated win ne z,uuv doxcs a weec This will mean an average annual output of over 2,500,000 pounds of tin plate. Special steel plates will be purchased in Chicago and the supply of pure tin will be obtained from Australia and the Strait settlements. Ar ticles of incorporation have been applied for and work on the new factory will likely be commenced inside of 90 days. MILLS' SUCCESSOR A DEMOCRAT. Snch a Light Tote Polled That an Accident Nearly Occurred. Galveston, Tex, June 16. The re turns, which are practically complete, in the election held in the Ninth Congressional district (Mills' old district) show that An tony, Democrat, has a maiorityof 3,511 over Barber, Third party. It was thought that tbe election would indicate the rela tive strength of the Democrats and the Third party in that district A very light vote was polled, however, and there is not much meaning to it Only 19,383 votes were polled altogether, while Mills' majority alone at the last elec tion was 17,500. The feature of the election was that' Barber carried Mills' home county, as well as Milan county, the home of Antony. r St. Paul June 16. A storm of and rain, which, in some sections, developed into a veritable cyclone laid waste the southern central portion of this State late yesterday afternoon. It will be days be fore the full extent of the disaster is known. Time alone can tell how many lives went out in the unnatural darkness of that ter rible day. Jackson, Martin, Faribault, Freeborn and Blue Earth counties seem to have been the scene of the storm, although it was storming at the time pretty much all over the State. The cyclone began to form near Jackson, Jackson county, and after sweep ing across Martin and Faribault counties was scattered near Wells, close to the boundary of Freeborn. Its course was to the northeast at first, but it later took a sudden sweep to the south, disappearing below Wells, whieh is almost directly east of Jackson. Reports place the loss of life between 50 and 100 souls. Swept Off Everything In Its Path, Aheavyrainstormbrokeoutat4:30 o'clock and before that had passed away clouds be gan to gather in all their terrifying black ness. Soon the terrible looking cone putin its appearance, and as it .whirled across the country it licked up houses, barns, trees, crops and people everything in its path. Many houses that were but partially de stroyed covered the mangled remains of the former occupants and owners of the farms. Debris was strewn along railroad tracks so that where traffic was not interfered with by washouts it was blocked by wrecked Duiidings and trees. Last night a freight, after pulling out o Mankato, discovered a huge obstruction across the track. It proved to be a house, and the engine was almost touching it when stopped. Within the building were half & dozen people lying among the broken timbers, all seriouslv and some fatally hurt The cyclone had taken the building from its foundations some distance off, A Pltlfnl Trail at Devastation. Along the Milwaukee road from Jackson to Minnesota Lake the scene is one of de vastation. Not every house is wrecked, but so many are destroyed that the scene is pitifuL This section is one of the richest in the State, and one of the most thiokly settled. Wrecks of houses, barns and torn up forests line the road. People who were happy yesterday in the consciousness of an assured crop and a united family circle are to-day mourning not only the loss of crops, but also the death or serious injury of loved ones. Near Sherbourne a teacher and 18 scholars were kept in by the afternoon rains, and when tbe cyclone struck the schoolhouse the building was wrecked and 16 killed, in cluding the teacher. A man with his wife and child was" killed at Linden and others injured. John Brown and three others were killed south of Minnesota Lake. Mrs. Brown, a hired man and the school teacher were badly injured. The Death Boll Will Be Heaw. The first reports from Wells were to the effect that from 40 to 50 had been killed near there, the worst of the storm having been to the west and south of that village. As yet no reports have been received in confirmation of this loss. Ten are reported killed in the neighborhood of-Mapleton and 20 injured. The. cyclone passed four miles south of Mapleton, and that village suffered little loss. The northwest corner of Freeborn county was in the path of the storm and consider able damage to property and crops was done there. Andrew Hanson, aged 22, was killed there. Iu Freeborn township Mrs. Mike Iverson and three children and a child of J. Steen are reported killed, while many more are more or less seriously in jured. It is yet almost impossible to get names of the dead and injured. A pouring, drenching rain accompanied the wind storm. "Reports have reached Waterloo, la., of a very disastrous hurricane which passed through the northeast portion of that county early this afternoon. The storm dropped down oa the farm owned by General A. C. Fuller, of Bellividere, HL, completely wrecking almost everything on the place. Five large barns are totally destroyed. As far as heard from no lives were lost -Fatalities in Many Place. At Harland, five people were killed and many others injured. One mile eaBt of that place three people were killed. The storm demolished a log house in which were Mrs. Mat Nagle and child. It took the child in a baby carriage some distance not hurting it Mrs. Nagle was landed in a tree some distance away also without injury. It then went west to Hewey's, where it took a house and com pletely tore It to pieces. Here it evidently split, and the west "wing passed to the south to. Critton Sutton's place and took tbe roof oS his barn. It then struck northwest to Henry Adams' house taking the kitchen about four rods south and landing it right side up. The balance ot the house was torn to pieces. It . went directly east passing about three-quarters of a mile north of the city and unroofing the schoolhouse and destroyed a wind mill and then passed east and disappeared. The next heard of it was from Wells, where considerable damage was done and a number killed. The other portion of the cyclone was more destructive. It went whirling about four miles south of Minne sota Lake, destroying everything in the way. Not a building was left standing, and many people were killed and injured. The Bad Case of One Family. The case of John Brown has already been mentioned. His fine house was reduced to kindling wood and all its occupants are dead or dying. Mr. Brown, his daughter and a lady school teacher who lived with them, were killed instantly, while Mrs. Brown was fatally injured. A son of a neighbor was killed, as also were five horses. The log house occupied by a Bohe mian family was completely destroyed, but me jamiiy ui eigni escaped injury. it ants have suffored most A poor man named Anseltn Houle has lost everything, and in place of bis dwelling there remains only aheap of rubbish. Taking refuge in his house at the time the storm broke, his wife and children, four in number, were buried in the ruins. The babe, 3 months old, was killed in its mother's arms, and tbe woman herself was crushed under a beam which broke her thigh. There are but slight' hopes of her recovery. All the other children were also badly injured. Some minutes before the accident two chil dren of Alphonse Miquette entered the house. These four children suffered the fate of the inhabitants of the house. Considerable damage was done in the neighboring parishes. At St Nazaire, Mr. Dufault was lifted up as he went out to shut a window and borne into his garden, where ne was lound almost aeaa. At ate. nelene 52 buildings were wrecked and 15 persons wounded, some seriously. Numbers of peo ple are destitute and without a roof to cover them. A SALVATION WEDDING. A Pittsburg Warrior Marries. a Chicago Lassie It Was a Big Aflalr Parade, Ilnslc, Feasting and. Prayer the Feat ures. Chicago, June IB. Spedd. Salvation Army circles made great preparations for tne celebration of tbe marriage of Adjutant Farrer, of Pittsburg, to Cadet Clara Carl, of this city. The ceremony took place this evening at 8 o'clock at the Bap tist Church, Briga dier Fielding officia ting. The wedding was made as public as possible in order that many who came to ridicule remained to pray. Several hundred red-shirted, uniformed officers and poke-bonneted hallelujah lasses assembled under the com mandership of Brigadier Fielding, and with drums, fifes, and a brass band paraded throngh the streets with all the.pomp and display of a political pro cession'. The bride and groom led the line, escorted by 20 bridesmaids, who were attired 'like the bride in their usual Sal vation army dress, except a sash of white silk encircling their waists. The bride is a bright-looking young woman, and her face was beaming with smiles. "How long have I belonged to the Salvation Army?" smiled Cadet Clara in answer to a query, as she paused a moment on her way through the parlor. "I believe it was two years ago, and for sometime I have been in Mil waukee at the train ing garrison of the Salvation Army. That is where tbe women who wish instruction in the work go to be taught I have just returned from there. The bridegroom is AtJ'. Farm: a handsome fellow and talks enthusiastic ally of Salvation Army work. He has be longed to the army six years and now has charge of a district, including a circuit of eight cities, with headquarters at Pittsburg. TWO PURSUED BY 200. Ennaway Lovers Nabbed in Sight of a New York Gretna Green AFTER A MOST EXCITING CHASE. The Groom a Shiftless Farm Hand ployed by the Bride's Pa. Em- SHE FLED THROUGH A WINDOW SCREEN f $ ilii 1 '4bOSz' Cadet Cima Cart. A LOCAL LABOB MATTES ISPXCTAI, TXLXOBAK TO TRK DISrXTCB.l Erie, June 16. The Erie police this morning joined Sheriff Burroughs, of Geauga county, O., in frustrating the plans of Thomas Carrahar and his affianced, Miss Josie Morris, and to-night Cupid weakened and Miss Josie is nestled beneath the roof of her wealthy farmer parent, John Norris, of Hart's Grove, O. Carrahar is 28, and had been a farm hand in Mr. Norris' employment He had won Josle's affections years ago, but he was a shiftless sort of a fellow and used to raise ructions at the country spelling bees. His suit was not looked on with favor by Josie's Earents. The suspicion .of the Norris ousehold had been aroused of late, and Josie, who is but sweet 16 was sent to her room with her little brother, Willie. Late last night Willie's cries aroused the family, and when the parents rushed to the room they found a badly frightened boy and their Josie missing. The window screen had been sawed out from the out side, and the girl had been helped to the ground with the assistance of a ladder. Then an exciting chase began. A brother of Carrahar's had been in waiting nearby with a carriage, and the young couple dashed out of Ashtabula county, through Geauga county, over many miles of country road to Painesville, the nearest station. The father and brother of the girl, with the Sheriff, followed dose in the wake of the lovers, but arrived too lata in Painesville to overtake them. The purchase of Carrahar of two round trips to Dunkirk Indicated the purpose of their trip. Carrahar had anticipated the trouble and the chase he would have from the girl's friends,and he had armed himself. -None of the telegraph offices were open un til the Erie office had a let-up and then the order for arrest arrived before tbe lovers. Then they were almost in sight of tbe gret na green of New York State, where there was little likelihood of their apprehension. Carrahar was terribly incensed, but Josie, when she heardfrom Sheriff Burroughs how badly her parents felt, decided that she would return and wait until she obtained her majority. The elopement caused in tense excitement in Ashtabula and Geauga connties, and fully 200 men were in pur suit of the runaways. Carrahar returned to Ashtabula on tbe same train that carried his affianced captive back to Ohio. amputated, by stiokinjr it out of a Dnquetna car window as another car was passing. It was the same car which killed 0. C. Jeffries two weeks ago. THE CATHOLIC CHAUTAUQUA. THE BOLL OF ACCIDENTS. One Case Fatal, Another Probably So and the Others Not Serious. The record of accidents yesterday in cluded one railroad fatality, several minor accidents and one that will probably result in death. As far as could be learned there were no cases of prostration or death from the extreme heat Lowxby Tnomas Lowery, a brakeman on tbe Panhandle Hall road, was killed last night at McDonald's station by being rnn over by a freight train. Tbe body was re moved to his borne at Mansfield, Pa., and Coroner McDowell will Investigate to-day. Scott Jonn Hcott, a painter employed on a new house on Ward street, was painting the cornioe yesterday, when be lost his bal ance and fell across a picket fence, break ing four rib and injuring himself Internally. Be was removed to his home on Stevenson street, where Dr. Barckley attended him. There is little hope or bis recovery. lie Is married, and bas a wife and two children. Hikdibsox A horse attached to a buggy driven by William Henderson became frightened at a Dnquesne car on Center avenue last evening and ran away. At Liberty avenue tbe bugay collided with a telegraph pole and Henderson was thrown out His head struck the curbstone render ing blm nnconsolons and Inflicting a deep sash. Tb'e horse was caught by Officer Beckert and Henderson was removed to His home on Wylle avenue in a carriage. Coubkt JobnCorrey. of Altoona, had his leg crashed by a freight train at Woods' Bun yesterday on the Ft Wayne Ballroad. Ha was stealing a ride. Hixx 8aniueT Hill, of Mabon street, had bis arm so badly broken that It bad to be Arrangements Completed for Its Opening Early In July. Bev. Father Joseph H. McMahon. in charge ot the Cathedral in New York, and Warren E. Mosher, editor of the.-jfeadin Circle Jteviea, of Yonngstown, O., were in Pittsburg yesterday and with Bev. Father Sbeedy perfected the arrangements for opening the Catholic Chautauqua at New London, Conn., on July 5. A prospectus, application blanks and membership cards were issued. Cardinal Gibbons will pre side at the opening and it is expected that all the distinguished clergy of the Church in this conntry will attend. The faculty in English literature will be Composed ot Bicbard Malcolm Johnston, George Parsons Lathrop. Dr. Francis Bgan, of Notre Dame, and Ernest Lagarde, of Emmetsbnrg, Md. RahaTZ& cT ery vestige of Ca tarrh in the Head, no matter how bad the case, or of how long stand ing, by Dr. Sage't Catarrh Remedy. Not only Catarrh Itself, but all the troubles that come from it thsry'ra rjerf ectl v and tier vnanently cured by its mild, soothing, cleans ing gn healing properties. it you could only be sure of that, it enough. The proprietors of Dr. Sage's Remedy try to provo ft to you. They are sure enough of it a record of 25 years, with thousands of the most hopeless cases, has satisfied them but how can they prove it to ycntT There's no better war than with money. So they say this, and they mean it: " if we eant cur? your Catarrh, no matter what your case is, well pay you $500 in cash. There's a chance that you cant be cured, but it's so small that we're willing to take it" What moro can they say or do to convince you? Isnt that enough J PEOPLE WHO KNOW THEIR OWN MINDS, ATTENTION! WE WOULD RATHER YOU WOULD NOT READIMARTICLE If you are not a careful newspaper reader, because every line is a valuable item that requires attention, and if you follow this carefully IT WILL CREATE A FEELING OF JOY. LIKE Is TVhat New York Printers Call Their Set tlement With Mr. Reld. Philadelphia. June 16. A session of tbe Typographical Union Convention was held this evening. The following telegram was read: New York, June IB. Johjj D. Buses Please read to convention or show around: The settlement with tbe Tribune is completed and tbe office union ized. It is entirely a local matter. witti wuioti tiio international union I cannot legally interfere. The action I In the Judgment of myself and other old members of tbe nnlon, a piece of supurb tac tics. The committee are above suspicion and acted within their rights and powers. Tnis settlement will make it almost impossi ble hereafter for leading party newspapeis to run a non-union force. Let No. 6 alone. J. B. O'DOHKILL. A motion to lay the telegram upon the table was lost. Mr. Burke, of New York, moved to refer the entire consideration of the question to Typographical Union No. 6, of New York City. The confusion was so treat that no vote was taken on Mr. Burke's motion. Finally, by a Tote of 125 to 20, the question was de ferred until the President of the New York Typographical Union should arrive. THE SUN IT SHINES FOR ALL Last Saturday a week ago we proclaimed to the people of Pittsburg and vicinity that we were the lucky purchasers of 69,000 DOLLARS Worth of TailoT-Made Clothing at our own price, procured from a financially embarrassed 1 'firm, who made a sacrifice rather than be thrown into bankruptcy, and on that which we pride so well, OUR PAST RECORD " GOOD FAITH 10 FAIRNESS A Wonderful Increase. The increase in the Camellia trade of the Marshall Kennedy Milling Company can be imagined when it is stated that in Novem ber they occupied their new mill, which had double tbe capacity of their old one. Last week the wagons were kept standing for hours waiting for their orders, which were far in excess of the supply. As fast as the flour came from the packers it was loaded and hurried out, but, withal, the demand is greater than the supply. The same won derful increase is being felt in Bavard Am b;r, their medium-priced family flour, which, by the improved methods employed in their 'mill, compares with many of 'the best-known brands more costly in price.' Since "Camellia" trade has grown so they are paying especial attention to their Bay ard Amber, and the fact that it is so fast leaping into popularity as a splendid flour at low price shows their efforts are being appreciated by the people. With the people for nearly forty years, that a SPECIAL SALE would be sufficient assurance, and that it would be in the people's minds NO FEATHERWEIGHT ARGUMENT, like a great many lame excuses that are introduced to the unthinking public day in and day out. IT IS A MOST REMARKABLE "VTOTORT With Three Cardinal Points: A True Lesson in Economy; A Sure Cure to that Terrible Malady Called Chronic Extravagance, and A DEATH BLOW TO IMITATORS Who introduce sales to extort BIG PROFITS by the persuading methods of oily tongues. THIS SPECIAL SALE Will continue until due notice is given through all the leading newspapers in this section of the country. Exhibition. Prof. Worth, the inventor of the "Worth" safety, will give an exhibition Saturday evening, Jnne 18, 7 o'clock, at Wheelmen's Headquarters, Center and Ellsworth ave nues. PlTTSBCBO 'CroLE COMFASY. Tbe People's Party In Michigan. IiANSrifO, Mich., Jnne 16. At the Peo ple's party convention to-day a resolution was pasted against fusion, and Captain B. S. Osborn was nominated for Secretary of State. Our Dally Bread Free. The first' edition of the beautiful booklet published by the Marshall-Kennedy Mill ing Company, of Allegheny, Pa., has been exhausted. So great 'has been tbe demand a second edition had to be printed and is now ready, a copy of which any lady can secure by sending postage, a 2-cent stamp. The book is beautifully illustrated, printed on heavy enamel paper, and contains valu able hints on flour buying and bread bak lncr. It is a gem. Send for one before the edition is exhausted. wfsu Onr Lantern Parade Takes place to-morrow evening. Bead the route In another column and apply for dec orations to-day and to-morrow at salesrooms, Center'and Ellsworth avenues. PrrrsBCBa 'cycm Compaht. The territory that was yesterday so-badlr wrecked was to-day covered with a sea of water and mud. In the mud. and water hundreds of people searched for some rem nants of their homes and in some cases for missing friends. Where buildings were de stroyed it was done so thoroughly and com pletely that not a vestige remains. Atone place the tornado destroyed eight houses in succession, and in another case a house was so completely destroyed that not a trace of either house or ccenpants remained. FREAKS OF QUEBEC'S STORM. It Comes Upon the People Almost on the Instant of the First Bound Sad Destrno-' tlon in One Household All Over as Soon as Begun. , Ste. Bosb, Que., June 16. Further in telligence of Tuesday's tornado shows that the destruction and loss of life were not con fined to this place, but spread over many localities. Advices from St. Ephriem say that district was .devastated. At 3 p. is. Tuesday a sudden noise was heard in the distance, and almost in the same moment a tremendous storm, accompanied with hall) broke over the country. The work ot de struction was completed almost Immedi ately, so sudden was the blow. Houses and barns were overthrown over a considerable distance. In the parish of St. Nazaiere the Inhab CHOICE PROPERTIES. DON'T PAY RENT. Pause and Consider Well That This is the Substance of What the Above Means. WILL you pay $20 for a Suit of Clothes when you can buy a tailor-made one for just ---.-- Elegantly made and trimmed with Italian satin $9.90 WILL you be persuaded by magnetic print, chock full of fictitious stuff, to invest $24 for a Suit of Clothes when our recent lucky pur- T i i Qt chase enables us to offer them for - - 4) 1 1 . O U WILL you allow yourself ,or anybody else to persuade you to visit any other house when such a good chance as this presents itself? We know what you will do after deliberating. Now, gentlemen, if you wish a Suit of Clothes made by custom tailors of a nobby or sedate nature, worth 30, you know who it becomes necessary to patronize without any further areument. Our price on this special occasion is J-Suits and Pants for Men, for Young Men, for Boys, for Children. !! Hats and Gentlemen's Furnishing Goods all go at an unheard-of sacrifice at this great sale that is now in progress. $14.65 BUY A HOME ON YOUR OWN TERMS. FOR SALE. Fonrnew framo bouses, Beltzhoover ave nue. Thirty-first ward. Just completed. Six rooms and large finished attlo, lovely vesti bule, largo ball and hall on second floor, double parlors, sliding doors,handsonie china closet, front and rear porches: lots 23x106 feet. See Charles F. Barr, office No. 1 Beltz hoover avenue, from 1 to 8 v. jc FOR SALE. GREAT BARGAIN. Faolfio avenue, new press brick house of 11 rooms. Extra finish; open plumbing. Lot 50x183. Special price for ten days. W. A. LINCOLN, 1M Fourth avenne. :j TWO STORY AND MANSARD Brick house on North Hlland avenue, near Station street, containing 13 room, larsre halls, bath room, tooth eases, electrio light and all modern Improvements. House In perfect repair. Will be sold furnished or un furnished. Lot 63x130 leet. One ef the most desirable residences In thw East End. Per mits to view the premises can be obtained from FmiUTr Trrxx aitd Trust Co., 12S Fourth Avenue. Most every person who reads the newspapers, and especially those who are our patrons, well know of our Neckwear buyer's wonderful faculty. His selections of patterns are most handsome. Those that we offer for 25 cents you will have to pay 50 cents for, and those that .we sell at a trifle higher are suitable for any dress oc casion. Just look in our show win dow and judge for yourself. Why do parents take such pride in visiting our establishment? It's be cause our grand assortment is a sight to behold and also all the prices are regulated to suit economical people who don't believe in paying outrage- By our small profit sys- and children's suits can for 2.75, $3, $4 to ous prices, tem boys' be bought 16. 75 Not one hat house in this city han dles such a beautiful assortment of Hats as can be found in our establish ment. Straw Hats in the latest shapes, that you will have to pay $1 for; our price just 48 CENTS. Yacht, Sailor shape, in all the beau tiful colors, at an astonishingly low price. Nobby Stiff Derbys, in all the fash ionable shades, from One Dollar up, and every Hat guaranteed worth 38 per cent more than our charge. GENTLEMEN Attention ! Do you need a Negligee Shirt, or a Cheviot Shirt, in fact, anything in the line of Shirts or Underwear? Remember, we keep them from the cheapest grades to the very finest. All that's necessary is to bear in memory the SPECIAL.UNHEARD-OF SACRIFICE is in progress at EISNER & PHILLIPS' UNION CLOTHING HOUSE, COR. FIFTH AVE. AND WOOD ST. JOlS-J-WT !j-(ii.Vxfcr,..i?ti,-iva:-'jik.-,.. ff&m.ssssmwmstismi jiglijl'g ltiffifVifiitf fifiifr"ii iii! rtrtMJlWilr