II V?t,T Tj-. 'WnHEBSnPPTT TTP 'I'lilFlki'ibl tfWi ' HWWi iWWUi'r1 IP1 il IWI'll" i' liTi'ft i.fl'1' i!i W'M VliMjBOsllWliiyssssM'lMs lLefiMKE9MiiV9MftflMsra ''"saHBBP? " -v sB3Wfra '"?-- - 'v, " f"r s r 5s " ' " " - VJF35T9wl$3J'SS9a i ' TTW iWMBllB I ii I III i Ml 1 1 nl Ji I irTiTrr mil i j m i mm y ill I ?aHNBKBHHlHKQHaH 1 I me pBttea PORTY SEVENTH TEAR PITTSBURG SUNDAY. AUGUST ; W- " ' f ''v- --vstp'"-- - .-i j(- wj-sy, swT'vKa;-'yj- IBQBPBT!!MB J , DOUBLE NUMBER. 14. 1892. " V FTVE CENTS J "" i i - . . t 3 A CULL FOR HID FROM HOMESTEAD labor Organizations Unite in a Circular on the Pres ent lockont. STATEMENT AS TO WAGES. The FiRht Being Waged Kot for High-Salaried Workers Only. President Gompers Addresses a MaBS Meeting in the VUlsgre The Workers Very Enthusiastic The Federation Officers Not Afraid to Declare a Boy cottCondemnation of the Attempt on Mr. Prick's Life The Men Coun seled to Keep Their Tempers The Pinkerton Battle Called the Lexington of the American Labor Movement The Workers Put on a Bold Front AU Along the Line. The Executive Council of the American Federation of Labor finished its work in connection with the Homestead affair at the Duquesnc Hotel last evening. After the mass meeting in the village was over the council returned to the hotel and completed the circular on the situation which is in tended for the American people, and will be sent broadcast all over the land. President Gompers, Secretary Chris Evans and P. J. McGuire returned to Xew York on the last line. They expressed themselves as well pleased with what had been done. Mr. McGuire said the meeting at Homestead was the largest ever held in the town, and the people there are greatly encouraged. The officers feel that the cir cular will correct all false impressions, and result in liberal contributions for the Home stead people. Mr. Gompers said the writ ten statement covered the ground and he had nothing further to add. He remarked that trade in general had recovered a little, but he talked as if the ontlook was not any too bright. The Signers of the Circular. The circular concludes by requesting all contributors to send their money to Presi dent Wiehe or Acting Chairman Thomas J. Crawford. The document is signed by President Samuel J. Gompers, P. J. Mc Guire, President of the Carpenters' Brotherhood; John B. Lennon, Secre tary of the Tailors' "Union; Secre tary Chris Evans, as the Ex ecutive Committee of the Federation; President Weihe, President-elect Garland and Secretary Steve Madden, for the Amal gamated Association, and Hugh O'Donnell, Burgess McLuckie, Thomas J. Crawford and David Lynch, for the Advisory Com mittee. The circular followst Seldom in the history of onr country have we witnessed the lines of battle so closely drawn upon the field or labor as it is wit nessed at Bomostead. The Carnegie Steel Company, one of the most gigantio monopo lies of the age, has undertaken to reduce the wages of their employes from 10 to 10 por cent. In their deipera tlon and avarice they hired and brought 00 armed mercenaries, Pinkerton detec tives, to Homestead to invade the homes of the men who created the millions that the Camegies now possess. Under cover of the Pmkertons the company endeavored to In trocmce a pauperized and degraded set of laborers to supplant onr fellow American workmen. The contest with the Tinker tons and its results are well known. The Claim as to High Tf ages. It is not true that the men are receiving the hich wages cenerahy supposed, nor do a large number own their homes. VTo have made a caiefnl investigation, and find that just before the lockout there weie 3,121 employed in the mills. Of this number there wero 13 whose wages averaged about $7 50 per day; 16 averaged hetn een $5 and 57 per day; 51 averaged from $1 to $5 per day; 1,178 averaged from $1 63 to $2 50 per day, and 1.G2J received It cents per hour or less, and further wo find so many erroneous and false statements have been published as to the causes for which the men are nobly contending, their conduct during the struggle, the present sit uation and the prospect of victory that we leel called upon to issue this statement to the American public From 8 to 10 per cent own their homes, and about 15 per cent more have homes nnder mortgage: the remainder pav rent and a number of these have been evicted by the Carnegies. It 1 not true that the men are only aelendins the wages of the higher puced workmen. It is In defense of the It-cents-per-hour men a much asnny other that the Homestead workmen are making their pallant flRht. i lie cunning, calculating company pro posed that the scale should terminate when the cold blasts of winter penetrate with biting severity. The company desired to place the men in the disadvantageous posi tion of negotiating with them upon a new scale in January instead of as formerlv in July. Jfot Grtllnc killed TVnrkmer. Notwithstanding th o military forces of the Slate or Pennsjlvania have been under aims at Homestead for nearly live weeUs, and the country has been ransacked to find brings so low as to hire themselves to the company, there are less than 600 persons in the mill, and less than a dozen skilled woik men who ca u perform the work requit ed. The situation is such we confidently asset t that at no time during the struggle w ere the prospects ot victory as bright as they are now. What the men in this contest need is your tuDstaiitial support as well as your s)inpath. The pooler paid men in Home stead and other Carnegie mills where men rib now ont to help tlieir brothers at Homestead, are the ones who need your im mediate help, and money is tcquired to maintain their manhood, honor and inter-f-i. Every worker and libeity-lovinc citi zen should contribute to the financial sup )it of the bravo men who to-day occupy thi po-ition of the advance guard of the labor movement of America Tno struggle at Homestead represents the lsne between freedom and slavery, progress and reaction, and most be maintained until the woikmen bae some lair meas ure of lecognition from the Cai ncgies. We fissure tou that every dollar contributed will be devoted to the men engaged in this contest. An ef leotivc sj-stem of relief has been organized, ix.li proper safeguards, and every cent will bo economically expended and rigidlv ac counted lor. We also advise all working men not to come to Homestead or Pittsburg lor employment until the pending dispute with the (Jainegie Steel Company is settled. The Address or President Compel-". The mass meeting in the afternoon aroused all latent enthusiasm among the locked-out men, and 1,500 who crowded into the rink cheered themselves hoarse over the encour aging utterances of the leaders of the Ameri can Federation of Labor. Last night confi dence in victory prevailed alone. The meeting was called to order by Acting Chairman Thomas Crawford, of the Advis ory Committee. Jerry Dougherty was ap pointed Chairman, and William McConeg ' ley. Secretary. President Gompers was introduced amid applause. He said: One scarcely knows how to begin an ad dress to his fellow worklngmen under the circumstances whioh surround you in Homestead to-dav. We find 'men who dare to do that which they believe and know to be rizht in deiense of their homes, their wives and children, and what tbey believe to be in de fense of their fellow citizens of these United States. I say that this is a peculiar situation where citizens meet under the gnus or the military of this proud State of Pennsylvania. The Carnegie Company owns immense plants. They have introduced wonder ful machinery, it is true, but they also pos sess an enormous monopoly of Bteel billets, and they want to introdnco a scale based upon a minimum of prices for steel billets, which they coutvoL I am informed that the men consented to a large reduction, but the firm wanted to reach men who mixht make $6 a day, but they do not want to call attention to mon working for si It a day. They do not want to call attention to the squalor and misery of those men. No, but they spread such rosv reports that instead of seeing the hovels, which I have seen, one would imagine every one lived in a palace. The steel workers have made a Carnegie possible. Mr. Prick signalized his advance ment to the proud position which he has by issuing his edlot saving, "I will brook no In terference from people who do not obey my order." The Introduction of the IMnkertons. IaskiTany autocrat could assume a more dictatorial attitude. Tou Homestead steel workers, if there is a rosebnsh blooming It is your work; if there is anything nnder the sun which shines upon you, which makes Homestead valuable. It Is your work. Tou refused to bow down to this wonderful auto crat, and the first answer he gave you was to send that band of hirelings into this peaceful community to force you to bow down to him, and ulti mately drive you from your peaceful homes. I know not wno fired the first shot on that memorable morning of the 6th of July, but I do know that the hearts of the great Ameri can people beat in unison and in sympathy with the brave men of Home stead. 1 am a man of peace and I love peace. out i am iiko mat great man, ratricic uenry, I stand as an American citizen and say: "Give me liberty or give me death." Animals cannot exist without food and water, and the true American citizen cannot live without his liDerty. The attempts of Frick to bring two boatloads of vagabonds into Homestead was the death knell of the interference of Pinkerton detectives with the rights of organized labor. I do not indorse the attempt on Frlck's life. It cer tainly did our cause no good. Attacking the Focketboolc I do not think it does any good to harm even a hair on the bead of such men. It Is better to touch their pocketbooks. and I think that you will ngree with me when I say that the Carnegie Company's pocket book is being touched pretty hard Just now. Mr. 'Gompers severely criticised Secre tary Lovejoy, calling him, among other things, "a telephonic voluble crank, who talks without motion, and doesn't care or know what he says." He continued: I hear that Lovejoy has said that if the Federation declares a boycott on Carnegie production the officers will be arrested for conspiracy. Now, I don't want to pose before you as an idle boaster and I certainly don't care to go to jail, but I do say this to you: If the Ameri can Federation believes that it will aid your cause to declare a boycott on Carnegie goods, 1 promise you that wben that time arrives 1 will come within the borders of this great State of Pennsylvania and declare it to the world. Above all don't lose your temper. Con tlnne as you have been doing in waging your fight under a curtain of apparent mas terly inactivity, and last of all and more im portant of all, don't work for Carnegie until he comes to your terms. The Speech of Secretary McQnlrr. When Mr. Gompers sat down , P. J. Mo Guire, Secretary of the Brotherhood of Carpenters and Joiners of America, was in troduced. He said among other things that the battle on the Homestead river front was to his mind the Lex ington of the labor movement, and that in the end it might also prove to be the Yorktown of the campaign, and that Carnegie and all of his kind would be loreed to surrender. After commenting in caustic terms on the presence and behavior of the militia and the methods of the asso ciate of the company, Mr. McGuire con cluded his speech with these words: It Is a bad thing to whistle when going through a graveyard to keep your spirits np, but Secretary Lovoloy does It to the Queen's taste. The mill looks like a graveyard and the furnaces are crematories for "scabs." John B. Lennon, Christopher E. Evans and William A Carney made brief ad dresses. They were listened to attentively, but the speeches ot Gompers and McGuire kindled the most enthusiasm. THE LAUREL POISONER Believed to Be One John Evans, Who Was Seen Prowling About. "Wilmington, Bel., Aug. 13. Dr. "W. E. Haines, of Seaford, Del., who is treating the six patients who were poisoned by drinking from John Bosser's well, near Laurel, reports that they are all doing well, and indications are favorable to their ulti mate recovery. The inquest yesterday was started without the body which is to he ex humed and the stomach analyzed before the jury reassembles. The discovery that the well has been poisoned was de veloped by an analysis made by Harlan T. "Wallace, who is associated in the drug busi ness wit h Dr. Haines. The Bosser family had been drinking the water from Thursday night week up to last Wednesday morning before the true nature ot their illness was discovered. It is now firmly believed that William Evans visited John Bosser's farm Thursday week while the family were away at camp meeting. A man answering his description was seen that day inquiring the way to Oak Grove and toward night was seen beyond Oak Grove, going in the direction of Cam bridge, skulking across lots and evidently trying to avoid being seen. The Bossers believe he was at their place and put poison into their well. MISTAKEN FOE A EEITISHEB. United States Marines I ire Upon a Steamer In Bering Sea. ' Port Townsend, Wash., Aug. 13. News has jnst been received irom Oun alaska that a detachment ot marines from the United States steamship Yorktown fired several volleys of rifle balls into the pilot house of the steamer Polar Bear, seriously wounding the chief engineer. The Polar Bear is used as a tender for the canneries lor Bristol Bay, and was returning to As toria alter last season's work. While pass ing through False Pass, August 1, she ran ashore. A crowd of men armed with long-range rifles appeared from behind the bluffs, and, without warning, fired upon the steamer. She finally got away, left for Ouoalaska and reported tne aflair to the captain of the United States steamer Adams, who said the commander of the Yorktown left- a detach ment of marines at False Pass with instruc tions to allow no vessels to pass by, and it was probable that the marines mistook the Polar Bear for a British poaching steamer. THE CBAHPS GET THE C0NTEACT. That Is the Inform itlon Given by the Inman Prrnldsnt Hlmseir. Philadelphia, Aug. 13. Clement A. Griscom, President of the Inman line steamers, arrived from Europe to-day on the steamship City of New York, and was interviewed on the subject of placing the Inman steamers nnder the American flag. He announced that he had secured from the British Admiralty the release of its con tract for the use, in case of hostilities, of the City of Paris and the City of New York. The owners of the Inman Line, he said, are prepared to place their vessels under the American flag, and also to build two large additional vessels for their fleet, pro vided they obtain the Government mail contraot for Great Britain and the conti nent William Cramp & Sous, of this city, he declared, would build the vowel KNIGHTS IN A WRECK. THE TRAIN WAS A SPECIAL CARnYJNQ FEJJNSYI.VANIANS. All or the 14 Injured Live In the Eastern Fart or the. State or In New Jersey Grand Commander Codding Was on Board. CLINTON, Ta., Aug. 13. A special pas senger train loaded with Knights Templar returning East from Denver, was nearing the city on the Chicago and Northwestern Railroad this morning when one of the sleeping cars was rolled down a 20-foot em bankment and two others left the track. Strangely enough no one was killed, though 14 were hurt, one of whom, Ruben Beisel, of Hazelton, Pa., is badly injured. He is bruised seriously, has internal injuries and his a bad cut on his head. About the time of the wreck of the passenger train two freight trains collided some ten miles west of the city on the same road, no one being injured. The train consisted ot an engine, Daggage car and seven sleepers, proceeding along the line of the Lehigh Valley Sailroad in Pennsylvania and New Jersey, with Grand Commander Codding, of Pennsylvania, in charge. Through an accident of some sort to the fifth sleeper it jumped the track and derailed the other two lollowlng it. The last one turned completely oyer and landed in the ditch beside the road. Aside from Mrs. Charles Ehoades, of South Bethlehem, Pa., and Buben Beisel, of Hazelton, all were able to proceed on their journey. Mrs. Khoades and Mr. Beisel were taken to Clinton and cared for. The following is a list of those who were injured but who were able to proceed: V. H. Everhart, Easton: Samuel Wells, Stanhope, N.J.: S. S. Cook and wire, Newton, N. J.; Hiss L. C. do Hart, Easton; Mrs. Harry Haines Easton; W. H. Obert, Lehighton; Miss Wells, Stanhope, N. J.: C. E. Brunkman. Lehighton: J. W. Fitz. Washington, N. J.; John Pursel, Phillipsburg, N. J.: J. Eilen berg, Phillipsburg, N. J.; Dr. C K. Davison, Stanhope, N. J. It is expected Mrs. Ehoades will be able to resume her journey to-morrow. ROWED 220 MILES. Adventures of Flsbermen In DoTles Who Lost Their Ship In a Fog. Halifax, N. S., Aug. 13. The Glouces ter schooner Helen F.Whit ten left Glouces ter seven weeks ago and went to Western Bank. After obtaining bait she went to Portland, Me., and landed it. She then baited and two weeks ago went to Tahave bank. On Tuesday, at 7 o'clock in the morning, AJonzo Monsoe, George Jessup, John Lougup and Andrew Strickland left the vessel in dories to set trawls. The dory ocenpied by the first two had a compass but no sail, while that occupied by the latter two had a sail but no compass. A thick fog prevailed and when the work was done they could neither find the vessel nor each other. At 3 o'clock in the afternoon the fog .lifted a few minutes and the two dories sighted each other long enough to get together, but the fog again settled densely and the men decided to row for land. They pulled all night and the next day. On the second night, as they were becoming exhausted, they abandoned one dorv and retained the one with the sail. With brief rests they stuck to their oars until 11 o'clock Thursday morning, when the steamer Lunenberg picked them up 15 miles off Sambro and took them toLunenberg, bring ing them back here yesterday. They were sent to .Boston to-day by the American Consul. Their hands .are very sore from rowing, and their feet are swollen from wearing rubbsr boots. They., rowed 220 miles, 'and during that time had but one bis cuit and a little water. - KOI AH EXPENSIVE' 0PEBATI0K. It Won't Cost Over S3.500 to ray Tor the Big Gold shipmnt. Washington, Aug. 13. The exact cost of carrying the big gold shipment across the continent is not known at the Treasury De partment, but Assistant Treasurer Whel pley says it will probably not be more than fe,500 altogether. It was hauled by the railroads under their regular mail contracts, and came through as registered mail. The assistant treasurer at San Francisco had 00 boxes made especially lor the shipment at a cost of $1,000. Then there were the personal expenses of the 51 men who went out to San Francisco and guarded the treasure on its way East; These were the principal expendi tures. The laborers at the mint at San Francisco were pressed into service to pack and load the money, the regular employes of the railway mail service guarded it, the arms which the guards carried were taken from the arsenal, and the mail wagons of the postofEce department were used to carry the boxes to and from the cars. The lowest bid the Treasury Department could obtain from an express company for hauling the money was 13 per $1,000, or 60,000. This, of course, would have in cluded the risk of loss in transit by accident or theft. The Wells-Fargo Company, which controls all the territory west of the Missouri, made this rate. A ECEAMBLE FOB C0ESET5. Slobs of ZanesTllle tt omen Break Show Cases and Close Cp Stores. ZANESVILLE, Aug. 13. Special. War between rival drygoods dealers.Drucker and Sturtevant, over corset sales led to a mob of women taking possession of each store to-day, breaking show cases and counters and compelling proprietors to close their doors. The rivalry has been going on for weeks, and finally corsets were advertised for to day at 5, and then 1 cent Nearly 1,000 women surrounded each store, and alter doors were closed one dealer threw corsets from the second story window and the women scrambled in the streets for them. Several in the crowd tainted, but none were seriously injured. THEEE 8EEENAhEES SHOT By the Bridegroom They Were Torment ing, Who Narrowly Escapes Lynching. Titusville, Aug. 13. . Three yonng mill hands, John Wentworth, James Ellis and David Johnson, were shot by George Clifton Friday night at Newton, a station on the D., A. V. & P. B. B., about 10 miles east of this city. Clifton had just been married, and the boys were giving him a sharivari. The weapon used was a double-barreled shot gun loaded with birdshot Wentworth and Ellis are badly hurt, the shot taking effect in the head, lace and abdomens of each. The sight of Ellis' eyes is destroyed. There was strong talk of lynching Clifton before the officers could get him to jail. Tile Next ncmpment in Indianapolis. Chicago, Aug. 13. The George H. Thomas Post, G. A. B. last night indorsed Indianapolis as the place of holding the next annual encampment It had practi cally been decided to hold the encampment in this city, but as Chicago has so many vis itors at that time it was thought Indian apolis would be better able to entertain the encampment, and the action last night virtually decides in favor of Indianapolis. Representative Warwick III. Washington, Aug. 1& Bepresentative John G. Warwick, ot Massillon, O., is lying seriously ill at the Biggs House in this city. About a week ago he was taken with a se vere attack of dysentery which continued tor some days. It, however, finally yielded to treatment, bnt left him in a weak condition. JUDGE GRESHAM OUT In a Statement at Last, De nying That He WU1 Make Any Speeches at All. WON'T DISCUSS .POLITICS, But Claiming to Owe No SlaTish Obedience to. Any Party. EX-GAUGERS ON THE WAR5dTH, The Force to Ee Greatly Cut flown Under the Xew Law. SFKAT0R HILTi WILL TALK FOR GR0TER Thompson, Conn., Aug. 13. Judge W. Q. Greshom and wife have been the guests of J. W. Doane, of this city, since last Wednesday. This afternoon Judge Gresham made the' statement to a reporter that he would deliver no speeches during this cam paign. He was questioned concerning the statement given the press recently by Chair man Taubeneck, of the People's part, at St Louis, to the effect that he had con cluded to take the stump in the interests of the third party and would make an open, ing speech at Indianapolis the latter part of this month, Mr. Taubeneck claiming to have received this information from George O. Stoll, chairman of the State Central Committee of Indiana, to whom it was al leged Judge Gresham had written. The Judge said the statement was made without authority; that he should make no political speeches during the campaign. The Judge was asked to give his views on the political outlook, but answered that he did not wish to discuss the subject When asked concerning the truth of the Indian apolis special to a Boston paper, in whioh Chairman Stoll claimed that the Judge woald take the stump, Judge Gresham re plied that he had not known Mr. Stoll, and had no communication or correspondence with him, and that his first answer covers his reply to the contents of the Indianapolis dispatch. He declined to disouss the plat form and principles of the People's party. When asked what he had to say, if any thing, as to the reasons given by Indian apolis Bepublicans why he could not an tagonize the Republican party, he replied that as an American citizen he considered it his duty to vote according to his convic tions, and that he owed no slavish obedience to any party. He said he intended to return to Chicago in a day or two. A telegram from St Louis says: Chair man Taubeneck, of the People's party Ex ecutive Committee, received a letter this morning from Hon. Paul Vandervort, of Nebraska, ex-Grand Commander of the G. A. B., stating that John M Thurston had taken the stump in the interest of the Peo ple's party, and Is now making a tour of that State in behalf of General Van Wvck, the People's party candidate for Governor. Mr. Taubeneck has sent to Indiana for Judge Gresham's original letter, recently referred to in these dispatches, andp'rjbmises to make further statements whenfhV re ceives it --r-Ti EXrGAUGERS ON THE WARPATH. Twelve Ont or Twenty at Philadelphia Get the Bonnes and Are Mad. Philadelphia, Aug. 13. Specia'. Close upon the heels of the wholesale dis charge of Bepublican workers from the mint came the announcement to-day that 12 of the 20 gangers employed in the internal revenue office had been dropped, and that the others would also be removed gradually under the recent aot of Congress doing away with gangers and requiring rectifying houses to do that part of the work, together with the stamping. As the act was passed upon the recommendation of President Harrison, he is getting all the blame for the removals, and it is safe to say that nothing ever done by the present adminis tration, even during the fight for delegates, has stirred up so much dissatisfaction and antagonism as those removals made on the eve of election. While the names of the 12 have not been given out, it is known that they are promi nent workers, for the entire lorce of gangers is composed of picked men, appointed by David Martin, leader of the combine, with a view to hard and practical work, and every one of them is good for several di visions, at least in a close fight The lead ers and their followers do not hesitate to openly condemn the administration, and un less there is some change in its policy the Bepublican majority in Philadelphia promises to be small, for in the words of one ot the members of the combine, "you can't expect the boys to pitch in and work after they have just been fired out of a posi tion." The new act, which goes into opera tion, will affect all tne internal revenue of fices in the country. GB0VEB IS VEBY QEATEPuX For the Snpport Offered nim by the Em ployes of a G nss Factory. New York, Aug. 13. E. P. Gleason, an extensive glass manufacturer of Greenport, L. L, recently sent a letter signed by sev eral hundred employes of his factory to Grover Cleveland, congratulating him on his nomination to the Presidency. Mr. Gleason yesterday received the following reply: Git at Gables, Buzzard's Bat, Mass, To Mr. E. P. Gleason i Mr Deab Sib Please accept my thanks for your personal congratulations on my nomi nation to the Presidency and for your earn est pledge of support. While this is most gratifying to me, I must confess that I am doubly touched by the letters which accom pany yours, signed by the employes in your worts, tendering their congratulations and expresslnz their confidence arid regard. I am more thanpleased with this manifesta tion on their part, ' because it f nrnlshes strong evidence anu suppoit for my conten tion that our fellow citizens who earn their living by dally toil appreciate the merits of a question Involving their Interest and the good of tho country when pioperly pre vented to their consideration. I should like to express to them directly the encourage ment and satisfaction which their assur ances afford me. but, not knowing precisely how this sbonld be done, I hope that yon will convey to them my acKnowledgements. Hoping that the faith and confidence which you and they exbress Is not misplaced, and assuring you and them of the determination to follow steadfastly the course marked out for my political gutdanoe, I am very truly yours, Grover Cleveland. KOBE THAR A MAJ0BITY HEEDED To Secure Senator Davis' Re-Electlon by the Minnesota Legislature. St Paul, Aug. 13. A decision which is certain to cut considerable of a figure in the Senatorial election next fall was rendered by Attorney General Clapp yesterday. That official holds there will be no eleotion this fall, for the reason that under legislative enactment all members of 'the Senate hold over, making their term four instead of two years. una senate consists or 20 iiepuDUcans, I ijCl III ( (111 iM is 1 1 m m J MJjSh yftfhj Tennessee Convicts Driven -M iwHl IwCK! L Ht on EreigIlt Car8 M wISSIIJBm lllf lHSWPHIL and the Stockades M IliP BUENED' BY WORKMEN. A VMmf Mj fcS&j1hTJirl 1 Mm MrwMtt S&&J A Secret Oath-Bound Organization 'S wSlfft inifcp&4 sl IllflClS fc JK' ffiifflw v IrM ili Fxecutes a Skillful Coup. 1 IfflnMK w v" WMlmwMA eMm pbisonees break foe liberty. 1 PlTWV yfyfe' WwmIT I PT ntwiM ' TTffflMlf BeTeral Maie Good Tlieir Escape After , m WsT- -CJMiif .Jl II mSglV, Vaf if )vSmU Fatal Shots Were Fired. jj ItHiuHBUku1i vi'yra, "cZrAUM mVsjSU' I vHH i Willi. lllHaHHlrTw'tXoyBi tmKrJs IQEkkt. i . 1 W U xyfmn iZ&S&m. mstjzW -mm three of whom are classed as Independent Bepublicans; 13 Alliance and 15 Demo cratic members. The Bepublicans must, under the ruling, secure more than a bare majority of the House to insure the return of a Bepublican United States Senator to succeed C. K. Davis. WRIGHT'S CAMPAIGN PLAN. The Democratic State Chairman Selects His Mne Division Assistants Brennen and Clarke Chosen for the Supervision of the Local Work. Philadelphia, Aug. 13. Special Immediately following the Democratic State Convention, Chairman J. Marshall Wright established headquarters at Allen town, and lost no time in proceeding upon a plan of party reorganization in every county. The scheme of conducting the campaign by division chairmen, with bureaus in nine leading centers of the State, has met with warm ap proval by the leaders, and Chairman Wright states that when headquarters open at the Girard House, September 5, there will be a complete plan of campaign, in which nothing shall be wanting to bring out the Democratic vote. Special effort will be made to educate public sentiment on the tariff question, and to this end every voter in he various districts will be supplied with an abundance of campaign literature. Chairman Wright has steadily refused to mere than indicate his plans, but a series of mass meeting? ore now in course of prepara tion under Secretary Nead's supervision, and thev will cover every town in the State. The division chairmen will have charge of the meetings, and among others on Chairman Wright's list of speakers ap pear the names of Senator Carlisle, Gov ernor Boies, of Iowa, Congressman Springer, Senator Gorman, Governor Abbett, W. Bourke Cockran, Speaker Charles F. Crisp and William S. Holman, the great ob jector. The division chairmen are: First Divis ion, Benjamin F. Meyers, with headquar ters at Harrisburg; Second Division, Fiske Conrad, Tyrone; Third Division, W. J. Brennen1 for Pittsburg and Allegheny, and Austin Clarke, of Wnynesburg, for Arm strong, Butler, Beaver, Lawrence, Fayette, Greene, Indiana, Jefferson, Washington and Westmoreland counties, comprising the rest of the district; Fourth Division, Perry D. Clark, Warren; Fifth Division, J. S. Snangler, Bellefonte; Sixth Division, P. F. Hyatt, Lewisburg; Seventh Division, J. M. Healey, Fottsville; Eighth Division, Mi chael Cassidy, Mauch Chunk; Ninth Divis ion, C. H. Krumbhaar,Philadelphia. HILL TO TAKE THE STUMP. A Tammany Leader Gives Away a Part of the Senator's Surprise. New York, Aug. 13. A prominent Tam many officer says that Senator Hill will take the stump in October and will make a number of speeches in this city and State. Most of the speaking will probably be done in the interior of the State, but he will make one or more speeches in this city, and probably in Brooklyn. His first speech may be made at Tammany Hall. Two monster mass meetings will be held at the Wigwam on Fourteenth street in the interest of the National ticket, at which some of the greatest orators in the country will make speeches. The first of these meet ings will be held about the last of Septem ber. The other will take place in October. The plan of campaign agreed upon by the Tammany leaders is to do work for the Na tional ticket first, and put off the local fight to the three weeks preceding the election. k CLAIMING ALMOST EVEEYTHINi General Field Says the People's Party Is Going to Sweep the United Statea. Memphis, Aug. 13. General Field, Vice Presidental candidate on the People's party ticket, passed through Memphis to-day on his way to address a meeting of citizens at Bipley, Tenn. To a reporter the General spoke enthusiastically, claiming that his party would break up the solid North, the solid' South, the solid G. A. B. and the Bolid negro vote. Said the General: "We will carry every State west of the Missouri river, viz.: Colorado, Nebraska, Kansas, Nevada, Wyoming, Washington, California, Montana, North and South Da kota. Then we will carry one-third of the electoral vote in Michigan. Iowa is doubt ful, but General Weaver, the head of the ticket, is lrom that Statej and our chances are good." Of the Southern States General Field claims North and Seuth Carolina, Georgia, Alabama, Texas, probably Ten nessee and very probably Arkansas. Harrison's Lette: Nearly Ready. Loon Lake, N. J., ciated Press corresp JAug. 13. The Asso- ndent called upon day and asked him xjieuienaut .tranter iuiu concerning a report hat President Har rison would take th stump in the North west He replied: 'The president has no such plan. Mr. Hadiison is now working on his letter of acceptance, and it will be ready in a day or sol Campaign FuiJJ by Subscription. New" Yobk, And 14. The World to-day, in a double-leaded editorial, says in part: "To-morrow we shlll lay the foundation of a Western Democi&tic campaign fund, to be built up by pipular' subscription. It will be a natiunaLttund. Already we have sought and obtained the co-operation of iour of the most poent Democratic journals in tne country.;' HYPNOTISM m POLITICS. CHAIRMAN HaerITT If Profetior Whitney can't harmonize the BURIAL OF A DUMMY To Allow a Broken Bank's President to Get Away to Mexico. A BROTHER REPEATS THE STORY. President Harrison Pardons a Man Who Doesn't 1 hank I!im BECAUSE IIE HAD BUFFERED SO L0XG rPFECUL TZLXOKAU TO TIHt OISPATCTT.l Danville, N. Y., Aug. IS. The bitter ness between the brothers Faulkner, who owned and were convicted of wrecking the First National Bank at Danville, has not ceased with the pardon by President Har rison of the manager of the bank, James Faulkner, which was reported in TnE Dis patch last Monday. As intimated then, James Faulkner will not be further prose cuted. Since James Faulkner's second liberation he has been talking freely with his ac quaintances and has revived the story that his brother, General Lester B. Faulkner, did not die on January 27, 1890, but that a dummy was buried and the General left the country. When General Faulkner died or 'fled, according to his brother he was out on bail on an appeal from a conviction whioh meant seven years' Imprisonment if the conviction was affirmed. General Faulkner was liv ing apart from his wife, from whom he had never been divorced, and she knew nothing personally about his death. There was great secrecy about it and the announce ment made a stir at the time. The Albany Journal first printed the story in March, 1890, that General Faulkner was alive and n ell in Mexico. That story has never been disproved by the most effectual test exhuming the body and James Faulkner now says that they did not dare go to that extreme in the denial of the re port Story of the General's Conspiracy Reported. James Faulkner reports the charge that a conspiracy existed to pass off a gardener's body as she General's, and bo says he knows that a mask was made for the gardener's corpse. The story told by James Faulkner about this branch of the case is as follows: "I do not believe that my brother is dead, and I have heard lately, from parties I be lieve to be reliable, that he is engaged in the banking business in Mexico. In Jan uary, 1890, when his death was reported I was in confinement and viewed the scene from a distance. Lester had a nicely fixed-up ranch about eight miles southwest of the villaee. Knhn and Allen, who were mixed up in the bank's failure. were both at the place where Lester is said to have died. According to them the fu neral was to take place on Thursday, but the body was buried on the previous day (Wednesday), a very suspicious circumstance. There were many other sus picious circumstances. Why, I know a prominent Buffalo business man who told me the name ot the person who made the death mask for the corpse buried ou that occasion." General Faulkner's death, as reported at the time, occurred under unusual circum stances. Just before January 27, the day he was reported to have died, he was around and in apparent good health' He was sick and died at Dr. A. T. Bacon's house, on his farm. No announcement was made of the death until the day of the funeral, when it wai announced that the body would be buried the next day. Oniv a few persons saw the corpse. Eev. W. It Ward, who performed the services, did not see the face, it is now asserted. The Lively Corpse RecozniZ'd. A farmer who was drawing a load of wood to the New York, Lake Erie and Western Railroad, just after 4 o'clock Monday morn ing of that week, says ho saw a man coming toward him across lots, whom he recognized as General Faulkner. He corroborated the railroad man's story that this man boarded the caboose of a Lehigh Valley Bailroad freight train, which runs over the Erie Bailroad tracks to Buf falo. THe undertaker, however, says: "If General Faulkner Mas not dead wheu I got him he was dead when I got through with him." Outside uf the undertaker tncre are two positive witnesses to the death Bev. Mr. "Ward and Dr. Bacon. James Faulkner savn he was the tool of others and lost 100,000 of his own money in the failure. Ho docs not thauk Presi dent Harrison at all for his pinion. "II I am entitled lo mv pardon nor," lie said, "I vras entitled to it 18 months ago. I was dragged around the courts lor three yeari, and helped win cases for the Government. The arrangement was that I was to plead guilty, receive my sentence and be at once pardoned." Qaeen Tic. Stntt Ton the Mnrtt. New York:, Aug. 13. Judge Lawrence, in the Supreme Court, to-day decided that Queen Victoria will hare to find surety to the amount of $250 for court costs it she wants to bring suit against the Standard Asphalt Company to recover $9,000, the value of a quantity of asphalt alleged to have been stolen from Trinidad. Back Diphtheria Not -preadlng. MoKeespobt, Aug. 13. Special There were no new cases of black diphtheria reported to-day, and the doctors here think there is very little danger of it spreading. The patients are all doing well. factions, Til give vp. AN UNPLEASANT SURPRISE. CHILDREN OF A MILLIONAIRE LEARN HE WAS MARRIED. They Thought Him a Widower and Them selves Ills Sole Belri A Woman Comes Forward With the Claim That He Was Her Husband In the Sight or God. NevtYork, Aug. 13. Special When Jacob Halsted, the millionaire, died in June, 1891, it was supposed by every body, his family included, that he was a widower. His wife, Mary Elizabeth Hal sted, died in 1876. Mr. Halsted left five children. February 15, 1892, one of his daughters, MaryE. Halsted, received a let ter from Mrs. Floria Von Ax claiming to be Halsted's widow. Mrs. Von Ax said: "He said he considered me his wife un der the laws of the State of New York and in the sight of God. He said he would take me to his borne and acknowledge me to tne world as his wife if it were not for his daughters; that at his time of life he could not become estranged from his chil dren." In this letter Mrs. Von Ax also asserted that Mr. Halsted had visited her during the last years of her life almost daily be tween tne hours of 3 o'clock and 6 o'clock in the afternoon, in the evening when his children were out of the city and often In the morning. He would never stay after 6 o'clock when his family was home because he said hU absence from dinner might cause comment He promised her many times that he would always care for her, and that when he died he would provide for her. This letter was considerable of a shock to the Halsted family. It was placed in the hands of John M. Bowers, their attorney, and it was not long afterward that suit was begun by Mrs. Von Ax. Yesterday Mr. Bowers applied for a bill of particulars. In the original papers lurs. y on ax simply made general claims and accusations. Mrs. Von Ax doesn t want to give a bill of par ticulars. Her side is told, however, in affidavits made by her in formally opposing the petition. One of these affidavits says: "My late husband was a professing Chris tian and an ardent churchman. Thus he once wrote me that he considered a viola tion of the seventh commandment a worse sin than rnurder, and so, during Lent of 1889, he brought me a copy of the Book of Common Prayer, turned to page 255, and went with me through the prescribed cere mony of marriage. There were present at the time my maid, Helene D'Enghien, and my French instructor, George Bafiiard." BUFFALO SWITCHMEN OUT. They Begin an Authorized Strike for Higher Wnges and Shorter Hours. Buffalo, Aug. 13. The switchmen on the New York, Lake Erie and Western, the Lehigh Valley or Beading and the Buffalo Creek are on strike. Its object is virtually to obtain higher wages, although the ques tion of the 10-hour day is involved. The decisive action was taken at a meeting of the local organization of the Switchmen's Mutual Aid Association of North America last evening. The strike begins at midnight The Switchmen are those employed to couple cars, make up and send out trains, and in a general way perform the work around the yards. They are not, as the name would seem to imply, those who turn the switches. The strike was fully sanc tioned by Grand Master Sweeney, who was present at the meeting. About 200 men thus far are out The men who struck last night demand that their pay be $65 per month for night switchmen "and $70 per month for night conductors; 60 per month for day switchmen and 565 for day conduc tors, 26 days of ten hours each to constitute a month's work. It is claimed that the roads against which the strike was ordered were only paying 21 and 22U and 19 and 21 cents an hour for night and day work respec tively. THE DISPATCH DIRECTORY. The issue of The Dispatch to-day consists of 20 pages made np in two parts. The table below will assist hasty readers of the second part: Page 9. EvoLtsrt'WAOisrxlROX Henry Tnckiey Early Dats rx Oil .Thomas Mellon West Pocst Plebis. Foriiqx Nbws. Gladstone's Cabibxt. Page 10. THB MUSIC WORLD. TOT S rnUTUALISTS. Page 11. Shall Acvexttsiitexts CLAssmzn. rage la. SOCIETY Doixgs Jlirlon C. GslUher Tiieatbical Nxws. Page 13. THE SflDSTOirr SEN J. A. HlU Br autY at the SintiNE Dot Dimmlck A Texas Chuck Waoo.v..... Alice MacGowm The Virtue in Kaiv Margaret II. Welch Page 14. Am atz era athletics Horace J. Bin ' Page 15. Future OF Russia Frank G. Carpenter The Saratoga or Japan EUPerklni Mekcyfou the Beast ReneEache The Last Sioxal. DoraRurten Pag 18. GCXSTA OF eftuxe T. C. Crawford A CojiTUrxxT's Heart J. Orton Eerbey Late elictbio News. Pace II. On HccitLEBKitBT Hill XdMott The Unjcst Stewabo Rev. George Hodges A bTOBT Of COLUMBUS LATE SCIENTIFIC NEWS Page 18. Review of Sports John D.Pringle Obqans in Politics...- .Bill Nje NoTis and Queries. y Page 10. '" The market RxrosTS. Oil Field Nxws The Gband aiuit. Sxcsxt Societies Page SO. The sunn resobts. The Outtno Hotels TROUBLE IS BREWING AT COAL CREEK SFSCIAL TItlOBAM TO TOT DISPATCH.! Nashville, Aug. 13. Startling news was received to-day from Tracy City, a town about 100 miles from this city, on a branch of the Nashville, Chattanooga and St. Louis Bailway, where extensive coal mines belonging to the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Bailway Company are located. This company leases the convicts from the State and has had 390 convicts and probably 400 free miners employed in the mines. To-day the prison stockade at Tracy City was burned by free miners, and there is an other crisis in the lease system, which has for year3 been odious to honest labor. The wires between Tracy City and Sewore, the nearest telegraph station, were cut by the miners, and it has in consequence been very difficult to obtain full intelligence of the uprising. At 5 o'clock this morning a committee of miners awoke E. O. Nathurst, superintend ent of the mines for the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Bailroad Company, and asked him that the miners be allowed as may hours' work in each week as the convicts. A Secret Oath .Bound Organization. Mr. Nathurst replied that he would sub mit the matter to the company and do what he could. The committee then left and Mr. Nathurst, knowing that a secret, oath bound organization had been formed some weeks ago for purposes unknown, at once began to suspect trouble. He went to Deputy Warden Burton and together they began to circulate among the miners who were gathering in groups and try to influence them to keep quiet Their efforts were of no avail. Slowly the ominous air of suppressed ex citement became tinged with open threats of destruction to the stockade or a battle. At 8:30 o'clock an organized body of 150 men, 100 of them armed and SO apparently unarmed, advanced npon the stockade. To capture it wa3 the work of a moment Without undue confusion, every piece of ?ropertv belonging to the Tennessee Coal, ron and Bailroad Company was carefully removed to a safe distance and the con victs, who were in the stockade, were led out under guard. The Convicts Loaded on Rox Ca' Then the -rorch-'rtS'ta2plie o'clock the buildings were a mass The miners at once proceeded to tht took possession of the convicts, ma. them to the railroad station and loader them in box cars. The trainmen, being covered with guns, were compelled to leave with the train at once. Next the telegraph wires were cut and a guard was placed over every engine in the yards to prevent the carrying of the news down the mountain. When the train had reached the country between Sewore and Mount Eagle the con victs cut the train in two and 10 or 15 mads a break for liberty. Several shots were fired. Matt Wilson, white, was killed and Tom Smith, colored, wounded. Six or eight made good their escape. Great ex citement prevailed among the convicts, but they were finally gotten under control by the'guards. The news of the trouble was conveyed to the Governor by the telegram to Baxter. At the time of Its delivery there were in the Governor's office B. Bennett, John A. Wilson and John Lewis, a committee of miners from Coal Creek, who had come to request the removal of the soldiers from that place and assure the Governor that if this was done there would be no further trouble. News Came at an Unfortunate Time. The committee stated to the Governor that a bad feeling existed beetween the sol dires and the miners which might result in serious trouble if the former remained. The committee was appointed at a meeting of miners held a few nights ago, when it was decided not to trouble the convicts if the soldiers were removed. The Governor was much pleased with the report the committee brought, and had about made up his mind to recall the sol diers next Monday when the telegram was handed to him. The committee was in formed of the contents. They at once left and will hasten back to Coal Creek to await any possible trouble that might occur there by reason of the aflair at Tracy City. Two of three members of the State Board of Prison Inspectors are out of the city, but Governor Buchanan ordered the N. C & St L, Bailroad Company to have the convicts who were kept at Cowan brought to Nash ville, and arrangements were made at the main prison for the reception. The" Gov ernor said the convicts would be kept hero until a new stockade could be built, when they would be returned, as had been dons at Coal Creek. The presence of State troops at Coal Creek for the past eight months, and the frequent disturbances between these soldiers and ths free miners there and a reduction in work ing hours at Tracy City, have tended to in crease the feeling of uneasiness among the Tracy City miners. For several days there has been "rumors of bad feeling existing among these men and that an outbreak was bound to occur at any time. A Tery Misleading Eoport. This Information, coming to the knowP edge of Governor Buchanan, he at once dis patched O. B. Wade, State Superintendent of Prisons, to Tracy City with instructions to make a full investigation and report at once. Superintendent Wade obeyed the in structions, and on the following day tele graphed to Governor Buchanan that every thing was quiet and nothing had transpired to warrant the reports that had been circu lated. In the meantime there were report that the miners at Coal Creek were anxious to have the Governor remove the soldiers stationed there, and that they were signing a petition asking the Governor to act prompt ly, an assurance being given that the de parture of the troops would mean a restora tion of peace. Following the reDort from the Superin tendent of Prisons to the Governor came s letter early this morning from EL O. Nat hurst, superintendent of the mines of the Tennessee Coal, Iron and Bailroad Com pany, to Nathaniel Baxter, Vice President of the company, in whioh the whole situa-' tion was reviewed, the communication con cluding with the assurance that everything would remain orderly, but the unexpected happened at noon,'' Mr. Baxter received a telegram from JUr. Nathurst, announcing the deslruclior ft the stockade and giviug a brief rcsurr " 'tie cvcu;j ot me oar. -jbmsc f -It I ka "aS&SalaHH sawesK-EEM