· PDF fileI I L. 1 I THE EVEN.NO SUN Hj CZ?, THE EVENING SUN has a larger circulation than...

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I I L. 1 I THE EVEN.NO SUN Hj CZ?, THE EVENING SUN has a larger circulation than any ftP anfflSfiBfiSlBSSHSfe T Moro and Late, Nows than all other i W othor ovonlng nowopapor. 60? I J jgggTJggg 0Oty JH' $ Evening Papers combinod. p I 'Voij?0- - 7i ' EWr YORK, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11. 1888. -S- IXTEEN PAGES. PRICE FOUR CENTS. ft I LATEST NEWS FKOM EUROPE. .tfjD gjLianvitT i.orns us xx spite OF TIM SACKV11.LB AFFAIIt. 4fM Think Cleveland's Befeat U the Sril" H ruiUy l"51" Bounclnn; their Minister H Gladstone's Unexampled Trlumplt at Blr-- B Bdoghani A 'Talk with u Vomer I.svir H .f ike Latest Whltechapel Vlcttm-T- he I Hennest King on n Throne A Hook I Filled Willi (lie Prince of Wales's H rlseeches Booting French Term Out or H the Orrmun JLancuaice Mux O'Bell'n I Fussy Bemarks Abusing; American Olrls H IK". 1V In Bex TYlnllni and fuMUMn j Alio-- dados. I Losdos, Nov. 10. Benders of this pnper Vi and other Unltod 8tn.to3 Inhabitants may now treitho froolv. Af tor tho big dlnnor Inst nlirlit Lord Salisbury roso and brushod nsldo tho SackTlUa Incident as easily and good naturcdly ,H tehe hud Inched crumbs nnd otlior (ostivo m remnants I'.cm bis vory bushy board. It wns notroir'jotwoca two nations, not nt all. It mtcnl;Juat tbo bad tnsto of tlio statesmen I whoralo in Wnshlncton, and his Lordship wns H positively frlondly nnd patornal to us as n poo-- I r',e,and thought ho was entitled to say that I Tuesday's election provodthnt tho stntesmon tho lind sont Hnckvlllo avvny had not thomsolvcs to tho approval of tho poo- - Rpli of tho United States. Now wo know tho I BrtUsh Honhastakon It kindly, and does not I mean to send Mr. 1'holns homo or Indulge In H tay other form of vengeance, wo mny snfoly Bl imlle at tho coralo coolness with which Lord W'friL. ... nnd Jlritons generally nssumo that (U, the Americans elected Harrison simply to M punish Clov oland for ill treating Sackvlllo, nnd hurling Kngland'a people. I It must boconfossod that tho nvorngo Amorl- - can over horo. whoso mission in llfo Is to mls- - represent America for his own social benellt. tncournees this notion. Tho fact that such u I thins as tho tariff nuostion was nt issuo Is I Quito overlooked, which Is unusually funny eon for Englishmen. Tho first nows of tho election which canio In tho shnpo of n cablo to I your London correspondent, and was repro-- ducod la the Standard and other nowsoapors. was commented on ns evidonco of our dcslro to smooth over tho Sackvlllo affair. Mr. Clovo- - land, by tho way, may bo Interested to learn I that ono enterprising English nowspapor has I alrondy pt intod his picture marked " dent Cloveland." Tho English. In discussing ' United Statos affairs, are usually adrift. It will I no doubt be a reliof to them when wo shall hnv o I occupied North America so thoroughly as to I tree this country from nny interest In whnt m happens Here. The unusual amount of gran- - I dour displayed by tho Grand Old Mnn this ' week has filled all true political bellovors with I joy. So man at eighty has over .done what H Gladstone hns this weok, nor has ho him- - I self at any former tlmo equalled his performance at Blngloy Hall, Blrmlnc- - Lam. on WednOBdny. Tho Bpoctaclo pro-- I seated whon tho speoch was coins on was worth going miles to boo. It would havo been I a grievous sight forSocretary Endicott's future I who thought Ills old loador was colng down and so abandoned him. Thoro H stood the Orand Old Man on the platform in the contra of an acre and a half of upturned 8 laces squeezed close together. Above his head Was a sounding board as big as an ordinary lecture room. Bolow him wore 120 newspaper reporters, and close by all tho big men who havo stuck to their chief and homo rule. The way H Gladstone mauled Salisbury, perforated Bal- - tour, and pulled up tho Tory arguments by tbo H roots in every direction, cannot be doscrlbod. I His thin white locks floated about wildly. His strong old arms that still cut down trees woro I stretched right out or pounding blsdosk. Ills collar was unbuttoned to give his throat mus- cles play, and overy word ho said was hoard by all the huge crowd. 'Its cheering and yelling was more than crodltablo. No wonder Mrs. Gladstono cried. Horbort Gladstone down bolow went through the preliminary mozos of a triumphant war dance, and lean John Morloy shook hands with fat Sir William Harcourt till both were 1 Ted la tho faeo. Every ono was proud of tho I huge scroll over Gladstone's head, which read, ' "The old loader and the old flag." Tho Grand Old Man does not mind tho puppies that bark at him, and ho novor once alluded toCbam- - borlatn. who hnd sold him out to tho landlords. But the demonstration that was mado right in the turncoats' stronghold was enough to satisfy J nnygrundoldman longing forrovongo. Mr. Chamberlain's future bride should know. ! unpleasant as is tho task of telling hor, tbat Joseph Is not a political success for tho pros- - ent. In fact, his only recent display ot good i judgment hns been in the selection of an American girl for bis wifo. ( In regard to the Farnoll Commission, wo now know positively that tho rimes' enso will not ' be concluded by Christmas. Tbo conviction that Jlr. I'arnoll enn never bo shown to have j wrltton the forged lotters Is rapidly gaining ground nmonc tho dlsconeertod Tories. Kir Charlos llusfoll, Mr. rarnoll'a loading counsel, is openly ut loggerheads with Hannon. chief of tlio three Judges, nnd this worries somo rarnollltes. but I do not bel!eolt makes very mueudiffeience. Tho hostility of tho Judgos to Parnell, fairly woll concealed thus far, must ) break out some time. Ilannen has also mado ,' it plain that bo thoroughly despises Tim Healy j and tdwrd Harrington. These l'arnollltos do J not teem much afillctod. ' Nothing more, of courso. is known reenrd- - lng the Whltechnpel murder. The nowsoaoer ! reporters, who might do something, aro baflied bypolltoobHtructlon, for the regular force is terror lest somo outsldor should detect tho Jin London is waiting for a newmurdor , thooiMng about those already committed, j ffhilo the women grow raoro and moro terri fied, tho men, who plainly soo they are safo, peoulnto philosophically ns to when tho mur- derer will botiay himself. Tho opinion Is crowing that the muideror Is not insano, and . that he is n sailor who commits murders on his jwrlodlcal returns to tonn. Many think blra a Malay robbed, perhaps, of his savings by l somo fullen woman, and taking revongo In Malay fashion. Mnny blood-curdlin- g accounts are printod as to the Malay system of running .nmuckand Malay bloodthlrstlnoss generally. There Is reason to think that Warren, the Chief ot Police, or Matthows. tho Home Socre-- , tary. will be made a scapogoat and sacrificed . as, by tho way, thoy both doBervo to be-- to tho I ) popular clamor, Tho Torlos nro beginning to see j they must sacriflco somo one or loso every one of tho Humorous seats thoy bold in t ithe Kast Knd of London; and when a l'ory sees u prospect of losing ofllco ho glvos In to clrcumstancos and forgets .Kood form, nnd so on, with n spoed that tho t commonust ltopubllcnn machine politician cannot hopo to rival. This morning I tnlkod ' wlthJosoph Unrnott, alias Kelly, with whom I the murdered woman had llvod uomo tlmo be- fore 6ho was klllod. Ho was n oiy wretched tpeclmen of tbo human rneo, Tho dead worn- - fiu'a real name, ho said, was Murie Jeannetto I Kelly. 8he was bora in Llmorlck, was 21 Tears of ago, married u ooal minor named J Uavls at IB, and took to street walking in . Cardiff alter an explosion killed horhusbnnd . t the end of two years of married lifo. bhe ent with a ship Captain to Franco-- , stayed II there somo time, cnino back pretty nnd woll j jessed, ostnbllshed herself in tho Wott End ' London, drifted to tho East Endundor tho J wnueuco of drink thrco yonrs ago, took up 1,.hUa"ott. alias Kolly. a enr after, nnd was. t Hy tourfully said,' a very good girl f long as they llvod togothcr. Ho left f TOa bwauw lie was too tender heatted I zr uld allow poor miserable women I wm the knew to coma la oecasioaoily, U J Vsaji. thoy bad no othor sholtor, and slinro tho llttlo room In which they lhod. Tho rupture camo when Mnrlo Jeannetto nllowod n mtsorablo cioaturo namod Harney, who hnd not a penny for lodging, to share their ono bod two nights In succession. My Informnnt nssurod molho hnd Dot given tho doadwomnn up entirely, but thoy lived nopnrated simply on nccount of Incompati- bility. Whonovor ho had monoylio UBed to cull nnd share It with her. In fact, on tho vory morning of tho murder ho lind started to his formor mistress's room to rIvo her thrco-ponc- This last fact, stated In a most mnttor-of-fa- ct way, gives some idea ot what real Lon- don povorty Is llko. The latost raovo of tho authorities lust an- nounced has bcon to ollor n froo pnrdon to any nccomplico or nccossory who will donounco tho murderer. There la llttlo likelihood ot thlB producing any offect. Many Americans who know the present Gor-mn- n Lmporor as a studont, and who havo al- ways ohorlshod a poor opinion of that august monarch, will bo glnd to hear tbat n young wuman of oxcollont nnd impnrtlnl judgmont shares their view. This Is n description which this young lady, who saw tho Kaiser at Lolpslc, glvos of him. In thollrst place, she docl.iros that ho Is docldodly knock-knoo- which Is ab- solutely truo, and which Is ovldont ovon In many of his photographs, ror which his nttl-tud- are carefully studied. He is not tall, and ho Ib not robust. On tho contrary, ho Is slightly built, and gets a more conBldernblo share of his military build nud square shoulders from his military tailor than from nature His doformod nnn, for which, of course, ho is not responsible, keeps him constantly norvous, appears qulto stiff, and is noor moved. Tho welcomo clven him was not enthusiastic, excoot that which camo from tho crowds of military young mon. On thowholo, hols not really anybody's ldcnl of n conquoring hero. This young monarch now posos successfully with a tremendous nrmy ns n background for his braggadocio spoechos. but It seems, for tho present at least, much safer to predict disaster than glory for him when Bismarck dies. Tho nowspapore chronicle tho touching fact that tho Gorman Prlncoss Sophie, tho Emper- or's sister, who Is going to marry the son of tho King of Greece, Is polishing up her modern Greek In a most praiseworthy fashion, nnd has already writton a congratulatory letter to hor future fathcr-In-la- on the rocont celobrntlon of tho twenty-fift- h year of his reign. This Greok father-in-la- who. by tho way. Is a Dane, is really not worthy all the attention ho gets. Ho Is probably tho mennost King allvo from n financial point of view, has saved an immense fortune out of tho Greok people, and spends as llttlo ns ho possibly can. It Is for that reason that tho Greeks share to a largo oxtont tho opinion of diplomatists that King Goorgo had hotter resign in favor of his son, who Is inclined to spond all bo can get Anglomnnla, I am sorry to say, has settled most violently upon tho Indian prlncos. Long ago I told how desperately Maharajah Holkar fell in lovo with an American girl from Brook- lyn, tho result, no doubt, of tho Prlnco of Wales's English example, nnd now wo are in- formed that tbo Mabarajnh of Kuch Behar has blossomod out this yoar as India's champion lawn tonnls player and won a silver modal given by tho Viceroy nt tho vlcoregnl tennl3 court This carao Indian potentate goes In for fox hunting, nnd whon in England ho astonished overybody by his hard riding. Tho French nro vory much worried about the health of tho King of the Xothorlunds. Reliable information reports that bis rocovory is hope- less, owing to n fatal complication of diseases. Tho fact that the Duchy of Luxomburgat Ills doatb pnssos to Germany Ja tho circumstauco which accounts for 1'rancbmen's ansWty. A correspondent at Glasgow tells how the Prlncoss Loulso took her husband, tho Mar- quis of Lome, to tho Glasgow exhibition last weok. Tho correspondent's letter elves him n chance to tell American women what sort of things tho Queen's daughtor goes out walking in in this kind of weather. She wore a very plain, wnrm-Iookln- g woollen gray strlpo dross, small lavender bonnet, long gray fur boa, nnd short black velvet mantle. She didn't look par- ticularly smart. Austria Is beginning to worry about King Milan's sincerity. HavingEtood by him through his dlvorco troubles and induced Germany to oxool his wife from tbo country and to give up tho Crown Prince, his son, it Is now painful to noto tho Servian King's tendency to loan upon ltussln. It Is hinted tbat his mnjosty King Milan, tired of dlvorcos and trials, means to abdicato In favor of his son, but this is ex- tremely unlikoly. It Is much moro probablo that ho will continue reigning, an occupation which seems, to suit him, and to play off Rus- sia on ono side against Austria on tho other for bis own boncflt, Tho I'rlnco of Wales, who hns been having a vory gay tlmo of late, must interrupt his plcns-u- n son tbo 13th Inst, nnd go to Flushing to meet his sister, the Empress Frederick, who is coming over to visit her royal mother. Tho Prlnco la nbout to como out in print Somo-bod- y hns been collecting all his speeches nnd addresses for twenty-fiv- e yenrs past, and they aro to bo printed, nnd will, of course, form tho chief ornament of ovory roynl Briton's library. Tho profits will bolp toasmnlloxtent tomeot tho Princo's henvy expenses rondcred nocos-sar- y by bis views as to the way to onjoy life. Tho Shah of Persia novor stops Ldlng origi- nal. A llttlo whilo ago there was a liot at tiio Teheran llnllroad station, nnd now wo lenrn that his Majostj's plan to do away with such nuisances In future Is to stop nil traffic on tho road, and oblige the Minister for War and othor personages to rldo up nnd down tho en-ti- lino warning everybody around not to bo-g- in rioting any more. It Ih announced that tho Empress of Austria intends tn go ovor and look nt tho Unltod btstch. Her trip Is based really on hor desire toboridforn nrolongod tlmo of her husband, whom, us ovotybody knows, pho thoroughly dislikes, and also in tho hope that a chango of nlr may lessen the rhoumntlsm to which sho Is an absolute martyr. Tho only way In which she obtains nny reliof is by having two strong fomnles constantly In nttondnnco to treat her by massage, and, considering what the mas-sag- o prucofs must bo llko to ono Buffeting from violent rhoumntlsm. It can easily bo un- derstood that the poor Empress doos not on- joy life. Tlio Germans are hard at work digging French out of their language Ono of tho latost results of this purifying process can hardly bo commondod. Tho word " pntroulllo" Is to be cut out of tho list of military terms, and In Its plnco is to bo substituted " which Is not tho simplest conceivable manner of expressing tho meaning of tlio word patrol. Mux O'lloll has boon giving his opinion in a lecture as to what Americans nro llko, His exaggoiatlons nro umuslng. but extrava- gant as to tnko away nil vnluo from his criti- cism. Ho declares that no man with any has nnythlng to do with nflairs of fctnto with ub, and that if afionatoniccldentnlly gains admittance to n soltict ontertalnmont tho custom of tho master of tho houso Is to order that the silver as woll as the hats nnd coats in tho hall be carefully watched, There is moro common sonso In his obocrvntlon ns to Amorlean fonduoss for pro- fanity. Ho tells of nn American poker pnrty on up English Blenmer nf which v)nch member laid down each card with n now nnd distinct oath. The same pokor party n short tlmo song hymns und psalms over two hours. Max O'lloll declares that he has met men in other countries who swore, and also ho Uulad to say who sans brans, but America . nlono produces mon who do both with equal facility. Ho thinks American women possess many charming qualltlos but overdress, nnd tho word simplicity Is unknown to America. American girls, by tho way, havo been vory thoroughly writton up in Englnnd ot Into. Tho writers, ns a rulo. havo unpleasant things to sny nbout them, but do not monngo satisfac- torily to account for tho extremo rapidity with which Englishmen aro marrying them. Tho fnvorlto aocusatlon Is that thoy aro loss roman- tic thnn English girls nnd less domostlc. that thoy know too much nnd sny It too plainly, and crow old too boor. ThlB sort of thing Ameri- can girls enn afford to treat with contompt, and, fortunntoly forthom, poor British matrons ennnot afford to trent Amorlean girls In tho samo way. Thoy havo largo suppllos of daugh- ters who nro vory romantic and no doubt ex- ceedingly domostle, but Englishmen bIiow a lack of Intorest in Investigating these qualities which becomes ovory day more distressing. Tho announcement of Mr. Chamborlnin's forthcoming marrlaco has proved tho last Btraw cast upon tho back ot tho g British mothor. The Lord Mayor was wise and good in de- ciding to do nwny with pompous tomfoolory in his procosslon, nnd to Bpcnd tho money In feodlng 10,000 poor people Your corre- spondent, who snw 3,000 of thorn fed, cannot say vory much for the judgmont shown In se- lecting the food. Somo, I am told, workhouse Inhabitants and others, had roast beef, plum pudding, nnd so on. but thoso 3.000 fed Inst ovoulng in Assembly Hall, erected by Mr. Chnrrman, wero not bo lucky. Each had pork pio, half u pound of broad and buttor, half a pound of cako, a quart ot ton, and nn apple, nnd ns a vast majority were starving thoy mnn-ngo- d to swallow all of theso things. Anybody who is acquainted with tho quality of English food when dealt out by wbolesalo will feel sym- pathy for tho 3,000 poor whoso Interior con- tained an English pork pie. swampod In n quart of English tea. in company witb n half pound of English cake, an apple, and tho rest A book just out Is attracting attontlon nB an- other specimen of the interest felt in English antiquities by two or three American writers, nnd ot their fitness for theso studies. Dr. B. Iw Martin, of whoso magazine work In this Hold nn English reviewer said that this Amorlean know more about London than most English- men, hns just brought out by tho houso of T. Fisbor Urwin a dntnty volume on old Chelsea, which Is praised for Its erudition nnd character. Harry Minor has arrived here from Now York nnd is going to llotuo nnd Nuplos. Ho says ho Is going to bring out an American play in Lon- don nt tho Vnudov Hie. " Across tho Sea," a now melodrama by Henry Pettltt, was produced ht nt tho Princess's, under tbo management of W. W. Kolly. who has run tho London thontro for Grace Haw- thorn longer nnd moro successfully thnn any American has succcedod in doing. The ploce was a success from the pit and gallery point of vlow. It Is believed by old thejitro coers that tho Princess's will steal tbo Adelphi audiences with this now pioco, which is Pettitt's best work nnd exactly fitted for that thontrc. The principal fenturo of tho porformanco was the acting of Harry Mackonzio. son of Sir Morell Mackenzie who portrayed tho part of an American under tho stngo name of II. II. Mo- rell. His performance differs from that of othor English actors whom 1 havo seen play Ameri- can characters, Inasmuch as he succeeded In looking and talking nnd doing as an exagger- ated form of the Chicago individual whom he represented might bo expected to do. All reports of oarly sown wheat contlnuo satisfactory. The plant abovo ground shows a healthy condition. Wheat nt the Baltic re- mained firm at full prices except secondary itusslan.whlch wapif 4sely offered at less mono. White wheats, especially Australian, woro firmly hold, in somo cases bringing an ad- vance. Mark Lane and tho country markets were very quiet Corn, owing to the scarcity and tho rise in America, brought ono to two centsa bushel ndvanco on-tli- week. On tho Stock Exchango tbo American mar- ket was without feature until Wednesday ,wbon tbo report of Harrison's election brought somo strong speculative buying horo, but in tho ovening tho markot becamo weaker, and reali- zations set In owing to heavy bullion with- drawals from the Bank of England for ship- ment and tho weak tone of the foreign market. There was n Blight recovery on Friday, nnd n better tone prevailed, with a general belief in better prices. KEVLY IX COSTC3IPT. The Motor Man Comca to Grler In tho Phila- delphia Court of Common Pleai. PniTjADEirniA, Nov. 10 Court of Com- mon Picas. No. 3, this morning made tho rulo to fssuo an attachment against John W. Keely for contempt of court in not obeying tho ordor of the court absolute. It also discharged the rulo to dissolve tho injunction, nswoll as tho rulo to open tho scaled packago which is in tho hands of tho Courtrdrtf which is said to contain n description of tljo ljeely motor. It also con- tinued tlio Injunction agaiubt Kuoly until fur- ther notice. The suit in whlcL Keely is thus brought to crlef Is tbo ono instituted In equity by llennet C. Wilson, in which experts wero appointed by the Court to exnmlpo the construction of Kee- ly 's mechanical apparatus, with tho vlow of de- termining whether It corresponded or was Identical with a certain motor dovlco which Keely nslgnod to Wllnon in 1B69. That tho Couit might be fully enlightened us to the mer- its of Mi. Wilson's clf.lm, a committee nf ex- perts was appointed to Inspect tlioKcolvmo-to- r. and a week ago to-d- an argiimont was had before Judgos rinleitornnd ltecd uponnp-plicatio- n of Mr. Wilson's counsol for an at- tachment upon Keely for contompt of tbo order of Aptil 7 last, in refusing to dlvulgo informa- tion, which tlio e.perts said they noeded to iimUo up their minds u to whothor tlio claim was justified. After sleoping on tho nuostion for nwook tho Court hns decided that Keolyls in contempt and proposes to nunNi him. Under the nttnohment Keely inn bo taken nt nny tiinunnd commlttod to tho ciuiuty piison pending tho pleasure of the Court. It Is thought that ifVirfonnb'o time will bo given , Keoly to come into court nnd declare his Inten- tion to comply lully with tho L'ourt'x order of April 7. Tlio Injunction, which Is continued, is to restrain him Irom transferring his discov- eries to n new Btocl; company until such tlmo ns It Is decided whether Bennett C. tlson, tho plaintiff in tho suit has nny claim to thorn Great Jtcmnnd lor TIAo Hun In Charleston. CnAitLE&TON, Nov. lrt. Tho demand for The Sun hero since elceVon day has been All tho nowsdonlors have doubled tholr orders, and are still unablo to supply thq domand. The returns of the elco-Ho- n publlshod In THE Ron kept its readers informednbout tho way tblngsnero going, whilo oilier Now York dallies wero publishing rain- bow despatches. Newsdealers horo say thut thodoninnd for Tim Sun bus boon moro than quadrupled wtthlu tho past II vo days, Eleven JIahlea In the Kexervolr, St, A JimtosE, Quebec, Nov. 10 Complaint has boon mndo recently concerning tho condi- tion of tbo city reservoir water. Tho authorities ilnally resolved to empty tho water to find out tho cause. Tlio tasl; was coinmencod a fow days ago and win, completed yesterday, whon tho remains nf cloven infants were discovered at tlio bottom of tho reseivolr, Tho authori- ties nro at n loss to know who are tho authors of tho murders. An Inquost has rovonled that ovory ono of the children was born allvo and breathed for savoral hours nt least Four Olrls ut a lllrlli, WoncESTKit, Nov. 10. Mrs. Anna do Groote of Mllbury gave birth to lour girl babies on tho 2d Inst, Mother and children aro doing nicely. Tlio llttlo ones all endy begin to cry forC'astorla. Tho smallest weighs thrco p.innds, and tho others noarly six pounds each. Tho mother says: " Wo have boen married twelve years, always gave our children Custorla, and you can de- pend that our four little darlings will not suffer itorthowiuitofit."-Mrfl,Aane.deGroot9.-- Jldfl . E.fc W. E. W, "Spokane." Inquire at yew rnrnUhtaf iter k be tola, ti new sulci In collars, A w,4, l Tonnr Smylla'a "Y. B." Stick Licorice asaUj lit but I csui as, cvlOa, aaa sore Uuoats.-.t- ilo SUE MAY DEFEND HERSELF. XUB DEFAULT Iff TUB BANES DITOttOB HUIT Ol'JiNEU. Affidavit ,of Sir. KAmeo, the 1)ereadaat, nnd her Brother, the The Suit 1VIU be Tried In Open Court. Justlco Wlllnrd Bartlctt, In tho Supremo Court ot Brooklyn, yesterday granted Mrs, Frank W. Eamos's motion to set aside tho do-fa- previously granted in the suit her hus- band brought against hor for dlvorco. Tho Btory was published In Tub Sun n week ngo. Mr. Eamcs alleged Gcorgo I'. Hamilton, his wifo's brother, as and produced the affidavit of Kitty Hoy, a sonant, that sho had witnessed through a crack in tho door sufficient to form evidence for the proposed suit Tho suit It was declared, had boon brought quietly, and pains tnken to keop it from tho knowlcdgo of the defendant Sho wns sorvod with pnpors, but sho considered It merely a davlco on tho part of hor htiBband to annoy hor. Sho nllcgod, through her iawyer, after dofault had been grantod by Justlco Harriott, that her husband had shown himself insanely Jealous, and sho moroly considered tho papors sorvod upon hor stating Indiscretions with hor own youngor brothor. nnownhasoof Mr. Eames's prosecu- tions. A weok ago yosterday Lawyer David Humphreys appoared before Justlco Bartlott In tho wifo's bobnlt and moved that tho dofault bo Bot nsldo. Mr. Ilumphroysllnformed theCourt of tho stnto of affairs, and said that tho co- respondent was tho wifo's own brother. Judgo Bartlott was abtoundod. Tho complaint on which ho had granted dofault had not specified tho relationship existing betvvoon tho nnd Ho oxclalmod: " This bIiow'ii how Important It is that dlvorco buHs should bo hoard In tho prcsenco ot publlo nnd press." Yosterday all hands woro prosont to arguo tho motion. Lawyer Humphreys appoared armed with n great bundlo of affidavits. Tor Mr. Eamos nnponrod Lawyers Charlos J. Pat- terson and V. D. Whitney, Jr. Mr. Whitney is a son of ex-M- or Whitney, and an Assistant Corpoiation Counsel of Brooklyn. Ho is also related to Mr. Eamcs, his slstor being the wife of lioraco A. Eamos, the ululntltl s brother. Horace A. Eatues H Presldont ot the straw goods manufacturing couip.inv for which W. EnmcB.lho plaintiff,!1 factory super- intendent. In support of his motion Lawyer Humphreys read affidavits of the dulendant und tho Mrs. Karnes's atlldav it deelured in general that she was not guilty In reference to Hamilton or uny other She euld bad nlwajs boeu-- a faith- ful wife. Ueorgo 1'. Hamilton, tho namod she said, was hor brother. Ho was 2ti yenrs old. and " bad always been ou friendly termB with tho plnintitT. her husband. Ho visited his homo at tho plaintiffs request frequently. The last time was since the begin- ning ot the snit Then bo spent bundny after- noon talking and smoking with hor husband." Mrs. Karnes declared she hover bolloveil hor husband really meant a separation. Sbo al- ways thought ho felt an itfioetion for her ex- cept when undor control of his almost Insane jealousy. Up to this tlmo his jealousy hadn't controlled him moro thnn ndny or two nt ono time, und she relegated the new chargo about her brotherto tho samo category, and henco paid no particular attention to it Sho ulleged thut since nbout the third yt ar or her marriage horhusbnnd had persistently and nlmost con- tinually accused ber ot impropriety with ono person or another, und frequent- ly ho pretended to leave home only to hang around tbo houBe to wutcb her ac- tions, lie bad frequently nM;ed hor to sign papers admitting hor cuilt. but sho had always declined, on tho grounds that sho would uot sign an untruth. In spltn or his allegations, sho declared that ho hnd lived with bur in the usual relations of man nnd wife up to Inst spring, when ho hnd clvon her nn excuse for the dlscontluunnco ot the relationship, a differ- ent exciibo from tbat alleged In bis complaint. Sho said that the brother who was mado tho was tvvslvo yonrs younivrtlinii shp. If o was next the youngest ot Uxo .1it,;ll . ' ni:, when ,i baby, wnd b .hlef care nnutlovo. Or late years ho had Iriquently calhd tl! tho house. Since the sscond yoar of hor marriage, when sho hnd discovered hor husbund's un- natural tondency to jealousy towurd nny and all. she had avoided cvxn the upiienranco of sisterly affection toward her young brother. Sho said that Kitty Hoy's stnteuiont was not only untrue, but an impossibility, since the ciuck In tux door was too small tobeo turough, nnd the lock on the parlor door, which Kitty Hoy said was turned, hail been broken for four jears. Mrs. Eames's affidavit wns supported by those of other persons alleging hor good character and reputation. Among tho affi- davits was ono by Miss Maud Dean ot liny Itldgi, alleging that sho hersolf had broken tlio lock four jenrs before, and know It hnd not been repnlred since. Miss Denn's Inthor. a wealthy florist, and Mr. Gould. nBayltidce merchant, were among many who presented affidavits to Mrs. Eamos's good character. George P. Hamilton, tho brother and nlso pro"entod an anldavit, which was read by Lawv or Humphreys. Ho said he frequently bad called ut his sister's homo, and that he bad dono so at tho special request of Ids sister's husband. Mr. Eames bad always shown a kindly and friendly spirit toward him. und frequontlv had requested him to sloop nt tho houso whon ho wjs nbnut to be absent from home. Ho knew nothing about his brothor-in-lnw- 's cluugos, nnd iiad received no notification, although the complaint had boen presented In June, and default was granted soveral weeks ago. On Oct. 1 ho had called at tho bouse for the last tlmo. nnd bad bcon by Mr. Eamos with the utmost He branded the accusation as "infa- mously fulse." After tho default was grantod, the matter camo to Ids oars, mid ho called on Mr, Eames in company with his brother, Will- iam 11. Hamilton. Mr. Tames told them that there was nothing in tho affair ns It wns print-o- il In Tub Hun ami the Jlrnnklun Eajle. nnd that tho whole thing would bo denied in tho next mornitic's papers. It wasn't denied, how-ove- r, and it proved truo ns reported. The luwj ere representing Mr. Eamcs read to Justlco Bartlott Mr. Eamos's additional affida- vit of a genenl denial und of spociflc denials of ovcry point in Mrs. Karnes's nnd .Mr. Hamilton's affidavits. Ttieu they road the affidavits j.f Messrs. Holmes and Whito to tho offect that Mrs. Eames bad been duly infonned of the suit against her In thoir presence. Mrs. Eames's ansvvor to this wns Hint cho hnd boon Informed, but Unit owlncr to hor 's i erslstcnt charges of infidelity ugninst her, she had not believed tho suit was meant in earnest. " To slmpllfr matters," asked Lawyor Hum- phreys, "toll met whothor Mr. Holmes und Mr. White lire not omplojoes of Mr. Eames In tho fuctory ? ' Tho lawyers for Mr. Eames said they woro. Justice Banlett granted Mrs. Emnoi's motion. Ho declared the doloult void, and oideredtho oilglnnl motion for divorce down for trial In upon court within two weeks. The lavrers for both sldos expressed satisfaction. Aftor ndjounrment Law) or Humphreys said to a Sun leporter: "In your first report of this caso you reported me ussa)lngthat Mr. Eauios bad charged his wife with iinduo intimacy, among other' Willi Mr. Eamos's own brother. Whitney's I did not intend to brln:r the mirno of Whitney's Intoihocuso nt all. You must havo boon mistaken in what 1 said." Improvement" In the New 1'nrk Nnvy Yard, AVashikotox, Nov. 10 Conimodorn IJnr- - roonyln his animal report sn)s that the ovv tlmbor dry dock nt the New York Navy Yard Is progrosslngfavorruly.nnd, it is expected, will 1m finished within tho stipulated two yearn. 'ho Commodore expresses regrets that Congress did not authoilro nn oxli'iision of its iotgith from 600 to CUD feet, which would havo adiiud matorlally to tho docking capacity of thovnrd lis woll ns to the poitof Now York. J'lirlher and cMenslvo repairs aro reported to ho urg- ently needed to tho (.'oh Dock, for which a ipe-ei- appropriation nf 178 tl".1) is asked An Is submitted for a kuiu of t no.uon to i ip. tlnue tho work of improving Whitney Jlnsli by eroding subMniitlal eilh work around tin e, so that tbo nocesxnrv dredging enn Im carried on to maku the basin available for larger vessels. Estimates are a! suhmi ted for a general paint and oil store to lesson dan- ger by lire and for thu further extension of the railroad system. She 1VI11 Wed to FulO.1 a Bet, Des Moikes, Nov. 10. -- A clerk In a Fotirtli street cigar store mado n novol bot on the elec- tion, which will result in n woddlng. A lady friend of his, who Is a strong Domncrat, agreed toninrryhlm In caso Cloveland was ilofentml, Boing a Domoemt and feeling sure of his election, tlio nows of tho election somewhat nurpilxed her, but she has agreed to fulfil her pmt ot tho programme, and thoro will bo a wedding lu about a month. OUABD OttAUAV AIUIESTED. Ills 'Wife. Hear the Ntni In her Roomi, by whose IVInriona hla Train Bun. Cottllnln, knowing: that sooner or later John II. Grabnu, tho brnkomnn on tho Socond nvonue olevntod road, aoeused ot pushing Philip Bnor off his train on Thursday evening, would bo arrested, gave him up to Ward De- fective Heap yesterday. Grabnu hnd no inten- tion of going into hiding. Ho was prevented from giving himself up by tho railroad com- pany. Ho was told on Friday night to report on Saturday morning nt 10,'i o'clock nt the ofllco, where ho wns nrrested soon nfter that time. Col. Haln promlsod to let Grnbau's wifo know If hor husband was arrested, so that sho could obtain ball: but when a Sun reporter cnllod at his home, 226 First avenue, at 3; o'clock yesterday afternoon, Grabnu had been four hours lu n cell on a charge ot homicide and his wifo knew nothing of ids nrroBt She cried bitterly whon told of It by tho roportor, for It was then too Into to havo ball nccoptod. Anton Spollninn, their landlord, was ready to go to court ns bondsman for Orubau, ot whom he snokelln the hlahest terms. Mrs. Grahau said that hor husband had told her none of the particulars of the accident. "lie said that It wasn't his fault," snld sho, nnd I bollovn him. l'rom whnt I hoar, liner renched ovor tho gnto to lift the latoh. and my husband pushed bin bnnd up from tho latch, but be novor pushed him off tho plutform, I'm euro." Newbergcr. the roar guard, wns arrested yos- terday, but released, ns tnero was not sufficient evidence to hold him. Grubuu comes of a good fnmtly. His father was a largo manufacturer. About a year ago, whilo employed by II ay ward A. Duffy, the contractors, Grabnu contracted a cold, resulting in n severe attack ot pneumo- nia. V hen he recovered sufficiently to go to work. Hayward ,t Duffy endorsed bis applica- tion for a place on tho elevated road, After serving n fow months ns gntomnn on the Sixth avenuo lino ho got the place of brakoman on the Second nvoniio lino at fl. SO a day. Ho and his wlfu moved tn their present quarters, on the third lloor of ?20 First nvonue. overlooking tho Second avenue road, so that they could see ench other ns his trnln pnst-e- the windows. ltollly, Julius Hnrburgor, und his formr employers give Grnbnu nn oxcollent character, especially for sobriety. Coroner John Nugent pays ho will subpoena every ono he can find that saw any part of the nccidont Tho Inquest will bo held next Wed- nesday. Baor will be hurled y In Wash- ington Cemetery from 313 East 121st streot. Ho leaves n wife ond three children, who will re- ceive $3,000 from benefit soclotles. OSCE a niriiftiY STCVEXT. Kow tn tfnll on Chnrgen or Fernery Young Charles Hnhr'n Career. Charles Hahr, once a reputable young mnn in Jersoy City, wns brought from De- troit by Dotoctlvo Gallagher of Hobo-ke- n yosterday. Ho enme to this coun- try Blx sears ago with his mothor and his brother Honry. They had n little money and Charles docldod to study for tbo ministry. Ono summer he camo home from college to spond his vacation, nnd he celebrntod his re- turn, ns it is alloged, by stenling tho yncht Eaglo Wing of tho New Jersey Yacht Club fleet nnd sniling off with It. Ho wns cnugbt throe days afterwnrd. but ho wns not prosecuted. Ills brother hnd tnken n placo In tbo First National Bank in Jersey City, nnd shortly nfter tho yncht oplsodo he got Into sorious trouble In tho bank. Mrs. Hahr then removed to Buf-fnl- o. taking Charles with her. Two years ago he left her. and a short time afterward turned up lu Chicago. Ho was accused of passlrg checks there on men whom he knew In Hoboken nnd .leisoy City amounting to several thousand dollars. Onoot bis alleged victims was the father of a young woman with whom he kept company while ho was studying for tbo ministry. Tho men whoso names were on the checks paid tbo checks nnd placed the mntter in the hands ot the Jersoy uoltco. Detectives were sent aftor htm. but for more than a yoar they could get no trace of him. In July, 1887, be was found tn this city and nrrested. He furnished J 5.000 boi.ds for Ms appearance fcr trisl. An soon ns ho was released he fled to Canada, where he staid soveral months. From Canada ho went to Detroit There he represented himself ns a newspaper correspondent He wns good look- ing and bright At n publlo banquet ho mot John W. Uresler. n retired morehnnt He was Invited to Mr. Bresler's home, nnd on tils first visit thoro be told n story nbout his being tbo son of wealthy parents who had died and loft him pennllosB. Mr. Ilreslor invited him to make his homo with blm. Hahr consented, nnd since thon ho has been fronted llko a son by Mr. Bresler, and hns been provided with allthomoney ho wanted to spend. Tho detoctlves who ran him down in New York began searching for him again when he forfeitod bis ball, and after a year's search discovered him in Dotrott living on tho fat of tho laud, Ho will bo tried on a charge of forcory. EEASZUS T. TKFIT DEAD. Head or the Wholesale Dry Good Bouse or Tent, Welter A Co. Ernstus T. TeiTt, tho hoad of tlio dry goods house of Tefft, Woller & Co., dlod at 7 o'clock yosterday morning of henrt failure at his homo In tho Dakota Hats. Mr. Tofft had been In poor health for two years, but last summer he im- proved greatly, ond rocovored his strengthnnd wns feeling well. Within a fow days, howevor, his henrt trouble returned, nnd ho ennk gradu- ally until his death )esterday. Mr. Tefft was born 78 years ago in Dudley, Winchcstor county, Conn. When a vory young mnn he bognn In the dry goods business in Herkimer county, and afterward inhjrncuso in this State. Ho camo to this city lu 1847. nnd founded tho houso which Is now so well known. Tho firm wus successively known as E. T. TofTt Co., Toflt. Grlswold A Kullocg, Toflt, Griswold A Co.. and Toflt. Woller A Co. Now thnt Mr. Tefft Is dead, tho firm consists of his sons William E. nnd Frnnk O. Tefft Theodore Wentr. Oeorgo C. Clarke, and John H. Bench. Mr. Teflt's mercantile carcor wus one of con- tinued success. Ho was not a speculator, and was preHininently conservative in his under- takings. Ho dlod a vory wealthy man. He was very retiring in his habits and fond of his home. Ho novermeddlod In politics, and was not a mombor of any club. Ho was a most genial man personally, and was extremely popular with hisemploycos,' Tho funeral will be on Monday morning from Dr. John Hall's church. 31 1!. OLCOTT II AX a ED IX EFFIGY. The Outromr of n Bitter Electloncerinc C'ouleit In Oiunge. Somo tlmo during Friday night nn efllgy in military uniform -- was hanged in Orange. The Improvised gibbet was a telegraph wire running out from tho roof of tlio nriuoryln William btroot A label on the feet of the ofllgy bora tho nnmo of IJunrtermiister Goorgo P. Olcottof thoThlidBattnllon, and ho wns tho angriest man in Orango when tho figure wns discovered yesterday morning. It was an ob- ject of curiosity until nearly noon, when some- body went tn the roof nnd ut It down. It is presumed that Mr. Olcott was hanged In effigy by some of tho guardsmen, bocnuxo it was said that ho took an active part during tho campaign In the light against Major hinder, who wns dofented lu his raco for n sent in tho Assembly. It was said that Mr. Olcott circu- lated n story that Major SiDderdixchnrged ono of his employees because he relused to voto the Democratic- ticket. This story Is supposed to have cost MnjorKnvder many votes, nnd his frleinls nro nngry nt Mr, Olcott. A court innr-tl- will iiiuUHiilr bo ordered and nn Investiga- tion mndo In find out who hnd n hand In milk- ing and hnnging tho tlguie. Mr. Olcott Is euoiigh to proceed to any length, and It l said that ho was iiish onough to offer f l.tulO yesterday for Inlormntlon leading to tho detection of tho'o vvbhad lieldhlin up ns nn objector scorn iindildicule. Killed Her Iliixliuiid With nn Axe. Iowa City, lov.n., Nov, 10, Samuel Brown, n farnior, who lived near North Liberty, In this county, was killed by his vvlfoyostorduy. Tho couple had not llvod happily together for somo time, and violent quarrels wero The woman was not of perfectly sound mind, nnd was at ono time confined lunn iisylum. Her tnmpor wns nuturally vio- lent, and. whon e.teltcd. shit became utterly crared, Yesterday Blown and his wife had ua uuuhii.illy angry dlxpute ovor a trivial matter, and tho wlln, Mdrlng nn ne, attacked her hus- band. He attempted to ward off tlio blows, .but the woman, roudercd imnnturnlly strong through excitement, pursued him through the house, hacking blm repeatedly, nnd finally felling him to the floor dead. Mrs. Brown has been arrested, and mill be examined u to her walty, .... , HISS ItATHF.D IS A DEStOCItAT. Ber StrnRKle irlth Mr. Bone to Keep Her Bundanna I.rada to mi Arrcat, t All through tho recent exciting campaign In Brooklyn Miss Sarah Hatred, n pretty at- tendant in a' hnlr dressing establishment nt 829 Fulton Btroot, hnd been nn onthuslastlo Cloveland nnd Thurmnn girl, and llko hor two handsome asslstnnts. sho hns possessod n Bilk bandanna. Her ardor for tho rod bandanna did not nbato oven nttor tho election, and sho still contlnuod to wear tho Domocratlo emblem around hor shopoly nock. Charles Honos, n clerk In tho jowolry Btore adjoining, wns a Har- rison mnn. nnd during tho cnmpnlgn ho and Miss Hatred had many llvoly discussions ovor the probablo result On tho morning nftor tlio election Mr. Honos cnllod nt the hnlr dressing cstnbllshment Hushed with oxcltement ovor tho ltepubllonn victory, nnd sporting n rooster nnd nn Amerlcnn line on bis lint Ho succoeteil thut It wns tlmo for Miss Hatred to, dlspenso with tho bandnnnn. hut she doclured thnt sho wns still proud of tho cnmpnlnn emblem of tho Old Ilomnu, nnd didn't propose to give it up. Mr. HoneH thon handod Miss Hntrod a 2 noto nnd asked hor to chnngo it for him. As sho picked up the bill ho grnbbed tho bandnniia, but sho manuged to retain It. although, in tlio struggle one of her flncors was sovorely hurt Tho )ounc Indvvvns very indignant, nnd sho rntusod to give Mr. Hones bnck his t'i unless honpologlrod for his rudeness. Ho rofusod to npologlre. nnd.Mlsn Hntrod lnld tho J2 nsldo to await future developments. Tho dovolopmentseamo on Friday In tho Bliupo or a warrant directing Miss Hatred to opi oar bofore Justlco Walsh on a chargo of Inrcony preferred by Mr. Honos. The examination took placo jesterday morning. Mr. Honos re- lated tho incident, describing how ho hud grab- bed the bandnnnn, but not uutil Miss Hntrod had waved It In hlsfaco. She perslstod in re- taining tho $2, bo enld, although ho apologized for Injuring hor bnnd. Miss Hatred said: "Mr. Honos camo In nnd asked us why wo did not hnvo our rooster out. 1 would hnvo kont hold of tho bnndanna oten had ho broken mynrm. I had no intention of stoallng tbo 12." Justlco Walsh dismissed tho complaint, nnd said that ho would not havo Issued a warrant hnd he known all tho facts In tho caso. "If you hnd had a spark ot manhood." ho Bald to Mr. Honos, " you would npologlze to tho young lady." "Woll, I do apologize" said Mr. Honos. TO SAFE HAULS llUltT'S BEAT. A Movement tn Content the Election of n ritate Henntor In Delaware. WiLMnwroN, Nov. 10. An Every Evening special from Dovor y reports a Demo- cratic movement to contest tho aloctlon of A. B. KIchurdson, the Kent county Republican Stato Senator-elec- t Ou tho fnco ot tho returns Mr. Richardson has a plurality of 133 over his Domocratlo comootltor, Dnnlol M. Ridgeloy. Such a contost would bo passod on by tho Domocratlo Stnte Sonnte. The grounds laid are three tho holding of election In districts where there were no Democratic judges nt the polls, fraudulent votes, and alleged Illegality of tho Huulsbury Republican combination bal- lots. Stress Is laid on tho latter ground. Tho uniform ballot law require tho heading to with the body of tickets. Tho combin- ation tickets wero beaded Democratic, but a majority ot tho candidates thoreon wero Re- publicans. Protest wns entered against them, and against tho ostracism? ot Democratic elec- tion otilccrs before and while the voting was in progress. Tlio cfTect of tho unseating of Richardson nnd tho seating of ltldgcley would be to make tho Legislature a tlo on joint ballot nnd pro-ve- tbo election by it ot a United States Sena- tor, thereby eventually placing tho nppolnt-rne- nt of Senator Salisbury's successor In tbo hands of tho Governor, who would, of course, bo expoctod to nnmo a Democrat. JlK. ALLEY'S Xiaiir IX 1UE COUNIItT. Went to See hla Girl, lvn Attacked by n Dos, nnd n as Tukcn for n Chicken Thler, Nyack, Nov. 10 Mr. Andiow Allen, who is engaged in business in Charlton streot New York, ooraos up to Rockland county once a woek, usually on Friday, to visit the dnughtor of a well-to-d- o farmer (tn tho lower pnrl of tno county. Ho came up yosterday. After spend- ing the ovonlng with tho ) oung lady, ho Btartod across lots to roach tho houso of a friond, whore bo pronosod to stny all night He had just scaled tho fence of a nolghborlng farmor's back yard when be was sot upon by tbo farm- or's big dog. With n stout cane which hn car- ried Mr. Allon beatofTthodog again nnd ngain. Presently, nrousod by the noiso. the farmer and his son appeared, ouoli armed with a revolver. " Call oft this brute I" shouted yonngMr. Allon. "Whnt business hnve you hero?" replied tho fnrmor, sternly. "Going to stonl some of my chickens, wero you? Lucky for you the dog didn't eat you up. Guess we'll tnko you iu chnrgo until wo can find a constable." In spite of his protestations Mr. Allen was mado n prisoner ami lod Into tho kitchen. Members of tho farmer's family camo down stairs and peered by turns through tho door nt tho wicked young rnnn. Whon it came tho turn of the farmer's wifo, sho recognised Allen. Then the situation was explained, nnd Mr. Al- len wnslprovnilod upon to remain in tho house the rost ot the night, not us u prisoner, but as a guest. FLIOIIT OF A IWlLDEIt. Ble Wife Curries the Htrnllnen and they X.eiie Denver fur Good. Denver, Nov. 10. Tho Denver builders and lumbermen nro much worked up ovor the clover swindlo perpotratod upon thom by Alonzo Weibol, who recently camo bore from Englowood, u Chlcngo suburb. Ho brought such excellent lottors of recommendation that ho had llttlo difficulty In obtnlnlng tho best ot credit, nnd he quickly workod up a good busi- ness. On lastbutuidny Wcibelcolleotod noarly $s,000 on unfinished buildings nnd took his departure. Jouving behind unpaid bills nmouut-tn- g to S,l,f00, ln got away so hastily that a valuable house filled with costly furniture was left bohlnd. This lias been almost entirely plllagod by his unpaid laborers. Weibel, with all his cunning, was unablo to docolve a plas- terer named Carson. Tho latter found him nnd his wifo very near midnight on board a trnln en routo for Los Angeles. At the point of n pistol ho demnnded of Weibol the $3.75 duo blm, whereupon Welbel's wifo produced tlio cash. Sho had tho entire amount of hor husband's steal logs conce.dodupon herporson. Weibel has boon trncod to Los Angolos. Looking lor Tom Axworthy, Clevmand, Ohio, Nov. 10 Mayor Bab-coc- k of this city has loft Montreal, nnd us ho hasn't arrived hole yet It l's presumed thnt ho has dlncovorod Axworthy and Is with him in Canada. Babcock'sdesho is to recover somo of tho money If possible, and In nny event se- cure memoranda from Axworthy thut will enable him to protect tho city against bondsmen In the lawsuits pending. Rumors that Mayor Ilabcock had disappeared for good drow homo news out of his secretary. Bum llriggs, It seems that on Oct. Ill n long letter ns rccoived Irom Montreal and Axwoithy. The Mayor upon receipt of the let- ter wont to Montreal, and lias been there Book- ing Axworthy ever since. Close Iriondsof tho ilolnulter say that thoy know Axworthy to be in Europe, and they think ho loft the lottor behind him to bo mailed on aduto after ho was out of danger Boafa Deluled by Fog; ou the Utidron. ItONDOUT, Nov. 10,-- A bcvcro storm ect in near midnight lust night, und rain hns fallen Incessantly sinro thnt hour. At limes tho wind blew a perfect gnlo, Thoro was a heavy fog on tho river, nnd bontmon worn couipollod to run their vessels hlowly or to anchor. Tho propeller J. C. Hunt, which left Now York with the barges mirnh Smith and Enterprise last ulglit, and was duo here this morning, hns not yot arrived. Other towa are doinlned. The foglsunuMinlly thick and henvy on tho Hud- son ibis afternoon, and the Albany day boats have not yet passed this point. Reports Irom tho Interior snv thnt ruin is lulling In torrents, and Citsklll Mountain streams ui swollen. At this hour (7 o'clock) rain is still falling, und fours ot a frcuhat aro entertained. Chief Murphy l'roud of his Farce, Notwithstanding the fact that Chief of Police Murphy of JemyClty wan depoied from active com maud during the caDipitn bcrauic, at lift Pcmocratio tupertori ihooahi, he teok tooctlt a part tn Ktpubllcan politic, lie kept an ere on the cnntluctof ttieonlcrm iiial tlio men Vrtt-run- he tMunl it Iturr thanking tlirui rnr ilirlr rotirlui-- i ,liir,uzihe im utair period of Hie ibmp.Un. unil i muiiltiiitiitiiu tlinn lor tlio lion jijiniiuiutilpwhlili tuev uupujeit. ' That notariol ur'a worth of proiert hm ntnen even hv pickpockets fttirinir tie irreatrron limit iurdc nnil meeuitftihoui vour er.hlenoy," he eaU. The i rlef ul.i prohnniy pe re. Instated at the next iuectlcRot the Hoard ot Police Cora, niuilocn. PANIC IN PARADISE PARK, II jj Eiani HEX 11 Lit T AT A FLUB JIT f MISSIOX FLA OS. iW Tnmhllnc Bonn Klnlra nnd Oft Fire Escape Sffljl nnd Through n Cllnsa Boor-T- wo Fir. jf'Mli men et Bud Kill la In the Smoke. &&.$! At 3 to C M Isslon plnco, on tho west side ot ($$v Taradlso Park, is tho big printlnjr and paper . JfiPvf houso of Cornoll, Bingham A Co, jMtjl It is on tho two lowor floors. Abovo It oa thrco floors, nnd oxtondlnc Into tho next build- - 8.1 Jttjf ing nt HC Worth streot, is tho bookblndorr of ?, ivl Bonodlct .t Volontlnc. Eighty mon wore at Jlwl work in tho Mission plnco building at 7:12 SI ty ' o'clock yostordny morning, fifty of thom on tho ?i 11 first nnd second floors, whon emoko wns seen 1. curling up Into tho streot from tho bnsemont, i'Ji J nnd nn nlnrm of flro wns Bent out. Engines 7, v ?fj i 12. nnd 29 nnd Trucks 0 and 1 woro on hand tn i$ 5 a jiffy. Tho flromon found smoko coming ffiljE I from tho building In many plaoos nnd ' pnw at onco that they had a big job on ! )f, K hnnd. Elovon moro enclnos wore summoned, . &: , p but boforo thoy camo tho Dromon wore horri- - Ma! Hod to soo tho mou employod in the printing ' If- - t' works jumping from windows nnd rushing jR i K pnnlo strlckon down tho stairs of tho building, e 'tt si In such furious hnsto that a number of thera &t $! i woro crushed nnd bruised and stunned. Calls ib ft wore sont out for nil tho nmbalonccs in tho f H1 J city south of Fourteenth streot, and thoso Boon ' r- - lit ft camo rattling up. L" ii W The cry of fire had been raised In tho print- - g ff! ii Ing shops just boforo tho bells of tho enclnos '' , V bognn to bo board In Pnrndiso Park. Benedlot J, A & Valentino employ 230 people, but nearly 200 iik' t of thoso nro girls nnd do not go to work until 8 J, '?" ' o clock in the morning, nnd thoy woro outside I, J1 i tho flro lines, somo of thom half scared into i; f? E hysterics by what might havo happened to ! ' thom. A hrond stairway leads up through Cor- - k if noil. Hlnghain A. Co.'s building, as doos also nn fil '" ? olovntor ninift nnd a belting shaft from tho silv'l U onglno in tho bnsomont Those throo shafts nro ' i nenr onch other, and it didn't tako lone for tho t 1 i smoko to spread and create a panle ,:; Ut There vvus a grand rush for tho stairway, ft; Vt ' which was getting cloudy with smoke. Tho .' S, p mon and boys ran and jumpod nnd fell down SI vt tno stairs, screaming nnd struggling with each S1 ,' fc otlior. Thoy emerged into Mission placo with, l?i w i, white faces, breathless, nnd with torn clothes, 8' jw f.U but thanking heaven to got outof the building. s. vW Bonos woro broken nnd arms and legs wero 'J! $ bleeding, and tho nmbulnnco surgoons found w ,' pp olouty to do. Othor mon jumped from tho see- - ,; $i Mi ond story w Indows or sornmbfod down tho flro 1, !r ifef cscnpo which runs uu the front of tho building TC IB? In Mission place thoso who cot down am l&A by tbo fire oscnpo jumpod from It whon they J.i'c 'iSC' wore only hulf wny down, or foil in their haste. hi 9JT But tho mon vv ho had tho wildest experlenco I ! ;lf",s woro n fow who triod to got down by tho roar ?11Aa flro oscnpo nnd fell from tho socond story ft '- to through n glass-roofe- d shod in the roar of the E' 'jv i: building, an extension of Donaldson Brothors' JS 5V Pi lithographing shop on Park street Thoro ?! wore iron bidders loading down to the shed, ,tf si from tho sldos nnd windows of the buildings. K ,"T iff Tho Indders rested on a stono coping nround f v ! the woll hole, but tho mon who wore trying to U It ift oscnpo oithor didn't see the ladders in tho U al It Bmoko or wero too much in a hurry to uso H; S? AS them. One or two went down on tho Indders, ; tfii S but tho rest didn't. They jumpod or fell upon 1.1.X fc? the glass-roofe- d shod. Two or throo mannged ?,lli S toget upon tho coning, nnd wore pulled into ijii 4f tho adjoining windows by helping hands. Tho Jstltj Sil rest smnshed through tlio glass shod, to tho g$J W astonishment of Donaldson Brothors' em- - Ja" ff.' ployoos. who bad just begun to hear of the flro. Stt'Jff t'K It was hnroly ilfloon minutes after tho en- - "aSu rt: clnos first appealed In Paradise Park before vTal ?C the namoa begun to nnpoar at tho windows of 8ji?J wf tho printing nhop. There hnd boen plontyot fry Wl tlmo for nil in tho building to wnlk down htnlrs. ftl rAJ 5 A hen thoy wore nil out of tho building In ono Ft Jl 65 way or another, tho nmbulnnco doctors mndo fa "iff ii up this list of tho injured who wero takonto Sj Af'tR. the Chambers Streot Hospital: 'AVafl A? I'hl'lp Weletiere a compoeltor. 10 years oM. Ilvlnir at V SH iV jumpert from the tire eicape. ; ; 5J7 receh inp nevere contuaioua ot the leg and back and an ' ?H 411 usly ecalp wound. V '; wt John Kelily. a rreBHnan. 22 years old, of 17 Cherry tt li)l fl rtrect. Jumped through the shed and feu wt til fcS twelve feet more ou a pile of paper; bad cuts oa tha a.' i 3r bo til and arms. a, JM li ' miam Tracy, a pressman. 5 year old, of 47 Canton SVyu jp street. Urooklyn. Jumped through Ibe class roof : ri(ht n Wt'i leg broken and lever Injuries to spine; Is thought to M ilaWt' have luterual Injuries and may not rtcorer. ' ilria Timothy Klnic ot 07 Bast Mneteenih street felt i, y,m tbrninih the glass roof aud broke his left arm. M iJHfcjT Willlum Meyers ot l&J hat street Jumped and got h bad fall while trying to get down the stairs: head frfi?Hy ,? bruited and left nrm fractured. ji trfiiH front JlcKee of H2 spring street cut his head badly if H fr.K while tumbling down stairs. H. H faK. Tho report got around thnt ono of the Fivo Tffl& W1, 'i Points Mission Houses wns burning, nnd poo- - Ji'jS i!P plo going to thoir work thronged Into Paradise ' fvj Park. This report cot to Polioo lloaduuartors V;e;;fi (& and out on Broadway, l'ooplo rushed down ,f f' fs ' tho cross streets to the flro. and reserves of po- - Wii trs llco from outside stations came marching up. 'iSii IS- - ' All was smoko nnd confusion, nnd clnnglnjc ill ,5 ' l lire bells nnd nmbulnnco gongs. Finally tho v 'd i pnrkw.iB elenrod of tho crowd, nnd tho flro- - u JBHb, men got a chanco to work. Tho flnmos got at 'i 2'lWi i tho pnper stock, nnd It wns hnrd work putting; If '..'IfiSf out the fire Lines of hoso wore strung over 'i42;rl' ndjolninc buildings, nnd Btronms of wnter K'tfl ,i? from thom wero thrown upon tbo lire from nil ff j'- w i Hides. But tho flro hnd sprond throughout tho ,. - M building, and mndo n stubborn resistance for JV;) g l two hours. Thocontonts of tho building wero , ;nt pJ 8 ruined, nud tho building itsolf wns greatly 7 .;, i, A damaged. The second nnd third floors crashed ,a f'J 3 down at D o'clock, with tho rear of tho fourth LvJj", ill I lloor on top of them. Tho steam and smoko f ii. (I from tho d and thon water-soake- d i M i paper was donso ond suffocating, ovon nt a V, ,5u considerable dlbtnnco from tho lire Tho tire- - I; 3S mon hnd desperuto work getting nround in It, .' Mi S.k nnd did not escupe without injury. John F. ,, ' tr' Hlgglnsof Hook and Ladder Company No. B ,i f fell from n ladder and broko his leg. Charlos J!r ?l' M Wornor. u llromun, of 787 Ninth nvonue cut his ' .?, ffl right hnnd severely on tho stnirwny. ijI gl Cornell, lllnghnin A Co. loso 120,000: insured, j" siJ M Benedict t Valentino, $50,000 on stock and 'A3 M 5,00 on fixtures and mnchinery: partially in- - ? -' ffif surod. MlllenACo.. 148 Worth street bedding; ,)W. Vi manufacturers, $5.tK)0dumngo by water. Mark jj it Co.. hardware, und D. Kahnwellor, manufac- - LI'lj turor of llfo preservers, 140 Worth street. S ;tr "M $10,000 damago by wnter. Donaldson Broth- - P. Vi ors. $12,000 damago by flro and wntor. VJU ." No oue nttompts to nccount for the origin of l ("' m the fire A lighted clear stub In the baBement 't,' it tl of tho building might havo stnrtod a flro In tbo 'i n i paper, which would havo smouldorod tnrough ' m "ii the night, but with theloponlngof the doors ol c,i Kl tho building In tho morning would hnvo quick- - '4 vi hi oned Into iiblazo. There was n$250.OOO flro on 7. fv? tho samo ten years ago. I.JM. ijJM somo or tho ragamuffins who hang about tho "A', ti Bqunro nllego that thoy saw smoke coming out '' k I undor tlio iron stops of the building early in (,' CS the night nnd polntod It out to a pollcoman. Ii7l St M v, ho said It was stoam, not smoko, and paid no I tv v-- further attontlon to it i i !i ;,( - Btschurgcs In the Nary Tnrd. , AW'Jl During tho past wdok moro than 500 of tbo ' -- '! I'M 'I emergency men, who were uken on la the nary yard a t 'jj Ik fen weeks before election, and whose duties consisted rf Y Vl I for the most part In housing coal and hauling timber for i 3 fl the new cmler ilalne. hare been discharged, and 00 ' t y. yi 'U or.vsimoreof them are to go In aboot a week. Tbera ," 'li r fl Is nothing unuiual In these discharges. The employment 2'i wl H of u large additional force for a temporary period was , Tj f)r rnuililereil necessary by secretary Whitney, and new j M iU that there la no further need of their serrlces the men 'Xli l ami must 1.0. Many of them, however, felt very bitter yl h'A iaTi aguln.t the Democratic managers whom they aeeuseot ?K t B breaking their tirnmises, which they say U liii fl held out tho hopo of permanent employment. 1( r tr w ) Pollcemnn O'Connor With Aasanlt. 'K ft' fl Browor Bonjamin R. Caswoll of SIS East , k ffilB Tweuty fourth street says that Policeman John O'Oon- - i'f'7 WifB nor of the Tnent) second precinct, without prorcea- - hi tiaH tlon, struck him several times In the face on election f7 !jtf day. knocking him down and discoloring hla eye. ';' H if o I'onnnr says thai rsswell acted In a disorderly man li AY'llnTaTI tier lu the vfcinliy of the polling blace at Second ay, ,, ; IVitH enue and Tuent) fifth street, where O'Connor was en ', i VtloTSaTa ilutr. O'Connor renionitrateil with Caswell and Caa. . ' U I' lliTsal well struck at him, whereupon the policeman dsfsnded Anl&TsmTi himself with his flsts. In the Yorkvllle Court yesterday .' '. J rlinTsai O'Connor was he!d In (' hall. (!- -' f"i'i The Mothrrorilie Abandoned Child Aapeara. (, ' j'iJIH Tho mother of the baby which James and '' ,7,lJ!jH Cecilia tluetena are alleged to have abandoned In the "inlilLal woods, near ICTth street and Newcomb's road, ta Uar j 'yf jH rileu McUee. She appeared as complainant agalaat I )! IjfB Caetens and his wife when they were arralruedjyester. ' ' ? ItaaB 1ay at l'.seclarkeL Her story waathatshe hadcoms jTtiB frnin thehouili and had tried In Tain to place her - !) glllmate child In an Inititu'lon. Then Oaetens told her Obi JjaeTl that a man nameilVV atklns would take the child fnrWand ,;i( HbbtI shelurn-dlh- e baby over to tiaetens at once. Tbo prls- - ,' ! B oucrs were held wlihoutballforexatninaUonto-morrovr- , (i JH ' H H The I'nrade lu Brooklyn. ' , ' SIbB The pnrado ot the Republican clubs in Brook JiUJ 6fH Irn to morrow night In celebration of their victory wilt ji'ij'j -' IH be under Orand Marshal John VV. Jones, who expeota ta S W omal have more than 20.101 men In line Tin formation will "lit !'. llaai he on streets bordering the City Hall, and the Una of 1, j tM march will lie through Kicks and Henry streets to Mon, J. it "aTsal Isgue, to Clinton, to rcheruierhorn street, to Hanson lil H aTsal Place, to drrene avenue, to Cumberland street, to La, V h'JaaTsTI laveite avenue, ta lledford avenue to the fountain. i '" H'asal where the reriewlngatand is to he placed. j ' It'TnH Wllllnr: to I.el Homebody JMse dump Now, ) ' I H Ktovo Brodlo was at Richard K. Fox's of- - ''Mill flee jesterday, Ills muic'es was somewhat tender, I andhewalkedstHllylncomequencsof buJun-- from the '! I'ouehkeepsle trldge. r ; "" "Where wilt you Jump nejtr" a reporter asksd. !, 'naaH "Excusa me, I am througb wlthbrUie ltuablax.aa 1)bH Uaat vinut my last HCMUUltokta." !&)jijH

Transcript of · PDF fileI I L. 1 I THE EVEN.NO SUN Hj CZ?, THE EVENING SUN has a larger circulation than...

Page 1: · PDF fileI I L. 1 I THE EVEN.NO SUN Hj CZ?, THE EVENING SUN has a larger circulation than any ftP anfflSfiBfiSlBSSHSfe T Moro and Late, Nows than all other i W othor ovonlng

I I L. 1I THE EVEN.NO SUN Hj CZ?, THE EVENING SUNhas a larger circulation than any ftP anfflSfiBfiSlBSSHSfe T Moro and Late, Nows than all other i

W othor ovonlng nowopapor. 60? I J jgggTJggg 0Oty JH' $ Evening Papers combinod. pI 'Voij?0- - 7i ' EWr YORK, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 11. 1888. -S-IXTEEN PAGES. PRICE FOUR CENTS. ftI LATEST NEWS FKOM EUROPE.

.tfjD gjLianvitT i.orns us xx spiteOF TIM SACKV11.LB AFFAIIt.

4fMThink Cleveland's Befeat U theSril"H ruiUy l"51" Bounclnn; their Minister

H Gladstone's Unexampled Trlumplt at Blr-- B

Bdoghani A 'Talk with u Vomer I.svirH .f ike Latest Whltechapel Vlcttm-T- heI Hennest King on n Throne A HookI Filled Willi (lie Prince of Wales'sH rlseeches Booting French Term Out orH the Orrmun JLancuaice Mux O'Bell'nI Fussy Bemarks Abusing; American OlrlsH IK". 1V In Bex TYlnllni and fuMUMn j Alio--

dados.I Losdos, Nov. 10. Benders of this pnperVi and other Unltod 8tn.to3 Inhabitants may now

treitho froolv. Af tor tho big dlnnor Inst nlirlitLord Salisbury roso and brushod nsldo thoSackTlUa Incident as easily and good naturcdly

,H tehe hud Inched crumbs nnd otlior (ostivom remnants I'.cm bis vory bushy board. It wns

notroir'jotwoca two nations, not nt all. Itmtcnl;Juat tbo bad tnsto of tlio statesmenI whoralo in Wnshlncton, and his Lordship wns

H positively frlondly nnd patornal to us as n poo--I

r',e,and thought ho was entitled to say that

I Tuesday's election provodthnt tho stntesmontho lind sont Hnckvlllo avvny had not

thomsolvcs to tho approval of tho poo--

Rpli of tho United States. Now wo know tho

I BrtUsh Honhastakon It kindly, and does not

I mean to send Mr. 1'holns homo or Indulge InH tay other form of vengeance, wo mny snfoly

Bl imlle at tho coralo coolness with which LordW'friL. ... nnd Jlritons generally nssumo that(U, the Americans elected Harrison simply toM punish Clov oland for ill treating Sackvlllo, nnd

hurling Kngland'a people.

I It must boconfossod that tho nvorngo Amorl- -

can over horo. whoso mission in llfo Is to mls- -represent America for his own social benellt.tncournees this notion. Tho fact that such u

I thins as tho tariff nuostion was nt issuo Is

I Quito overlooked, which Is unusually funnyeon for Englishmen. Tho first nows of thoelection which canio In tho shnpo of n cablo to

I your London correspondent, and was repro--

ducod la the Standard and other nowsoapors.was commented on ns evidonco of our dcslroto smooth over tho Sackvlllo affair. Mr. Clovo- -

land, by tho way, may bo Interested to learnI that ono enterprising English nowspapor hasI alrondy pt intod his picture marked "

dent Cloveland." Tho English. In discussing' United Statos affairs, are usually adrift. It will

I no doubt be a reliof to them when wo shall hnv o

I occupied North America so thoroughly as toI tree this country from nny interest In whntm happens Here. The unusual amount of gran- -

I dour displayed by tho Grand Old Mnn this' week has filled all true political bellovors withI joy. So man at eighty has over .done whatH Gladstone hns this weok, nor has ho him- -

I self at any former tlmo equalled hisperformance at Blngloy Hall, Blrmlnc- -Lam. on WednOBdny. Tho Bpoctaclo pro-- Iseated whon tho speoch was coins on wasworth going miles to boo. It would havo beenI a grievous sight forSocretary Endicott's futureI who thought Ills old loador wascolng down and so abandoned him. Thoro

H stood the Orand Old Man on the platform inthe contra of an acre and a half of upturned

8 laces squeezed close together. Above his headWas a sounding board as big as an ordinarylecture room. Bolow him wore 120 newspaperreporters, and close by all tho big men who havostuck to their chief and homo rule. The way

H Gladstone mauled Salisbury, perforated Bal- -tour, and pulled up tho Tory arguments by tbo

H roots in every direction, cannot be doscrlbod.I His thin white locks floated about wildly. Hisstrong old arms that still cut down trees woroI stretched right out or pounding blsdosk. Illscollar was unbuttoned to give his throat mus-cles play, and overy word ho said was hoard byall the huge crowd.'Its cheering and yelling was more thancrodltablo. No wonder Mrs. Gladstono cried.Horbort Gladstone down bolow went throughthe preliminary mozos of a triumphant wardance, and lean John Morloy shook handswith fat Sir William Harcourt till both were

1 Ted la tho faeo. Every ono was proud of thoI huge scroll over Gladstone's head, which read,' "The old loader and the old flag." Tho Grand

Old Man does not mind tho puppies that barkat him, and ho novor once alluded toCbam- -borlatn. who hnd sold him out to tho landlords.But the demonstration that was mado right inthe turncoats' stronghold was enough to satisfy

J nnygrundoldman longing forrovongo.Mr. Chamberlain's future bride should know.

! unpleasant as is tho task of telling hor, tbatJoseph Is not a political success for tho pros- -ent. In fact, his only recent display ot good

i judgment hns been in the selection of anAmerican girl for bis wifo.

( In regard to the Farnoll Commission, wo nowknow positively that tho rimes' enso will not

' be concluded by Christmas. Tbo convictionthat Jlr. I'arnoll enn never bo shown to have

j wrltton the forged lotters Is rapidly gainingground nmonc tho dlsconeertod Tories. KirCharlos llusfoll, Mr. rarnoll'a loading counsel,is openly ut loggerheads with Hannon. chiefof tlio three Judges, nnd this worries somorarnollltes. but I do not bel!eolt makes verymueudiffeience. Tho hostility of tho Judgosto Parnell, fairly woll concealed thus far, must

) break out some time. Ilannen has also mado,' it plain that bo thoroughly despises Tim Healyj and tdwrd Harrington. These l'arnollltos doJ not teem much afillctod.' Nothing more, of courso. is known reenrd- -

lng the Whltechnpel murder. The nowsoaoer! reporters, who might do something, aro baflied

bypolltoobHtructlon, for the regular force isterror lest somo outsldor should detect thoJin London is waiting for a newmurdor

, thooiMng about those already committed,j ffhilo the women grow raoro and moro terri

fied, tho men, who plainly soo they are safo,peoulnto philosophically ns to when tho mur-

derer will botiay himself. Tho opinion Iscrowing that the muideror Is not insano, and

. that he is n sailor who commits murders onhis jwrlodlcal returns to tonn. Many think blraa Malay robbed, perhaps, of his savings by

l somo fullen woman, and taking revongo InMalay fashion. Mnny blood-curdlin- g accountsare printod as to the Malay system of running.nmuckand Malay bloodthlrstlnoss generally.There Is reason to think that Warren, theChief ot Police, or Matthows. tho Home Socre-- ,tary. will be made a scapogoat and sacrificed

. as, by tho way, thoy both doBervo to be-- to thoI ) popular clamor, Tho Torlos nro beginning to seej they must sacriflco somo one or loso every one

of tho Humorous seats thoy bold int ithe Kast Knd of London; and when al'ory sees u prospect of losing ofllco ho

glvos In to clrcumstancos and forgets.Kood form, nnd so on, with n spoed that tho

t commonust ltopubllcnn machine politiciancannot hopo to rival. This morning I tnlkod

' wlthJosoph Unrnott, alias Kelly, with whomI

the murdered woman had llvod uomo tlmo be-fore 6ho was klllod. Ho was n oiy wretchedtpeclmen of tbo human rneo, Tho dead worn- -fiu'a real name, ho said, was Murie Jeannetto

I Kelly. 8he was bora in Llmorlck, was 21Tears of ago, married u ooal minor named

J Uavls at IB, and took to street walking in. Cardiff alter an explosion killed horhusbnnd. t the end of two years of married lifo. bhe

ent with a ship Captain to Franco-- , stayedII there somo time, cnino back pretty nnd wollj jessed, ostnbllshed herself in tho Wott End

' London, drifted to tho East Endundor thoJ wnueuco of drink thrco yonrs ago, took up

1,.hUa"ott. alias Kolly. a enr after, nnd was.t Hy tourfully said,' a very good girl

f long as they llvod togothcr. Ho leftf TOa bwauw lie was too tender heattedI zr uld allow poor miserable womenI wm the knew to coma la oecasioaoily, U J

Vsaji.

thoy bad no othor sholtor, and slinro tho llttloroom In which they lhod. Tho rupture camowhen Mnrlo Jeannetto nllowod n mtsorablocioaturo namod Harney, who hnd not a pennyfor lodging, to share their ono bod two nightsIn succession.

My Informnnt nssurod molho hnd Dot giventho doadwomnn up entirely, but thoy livednopnrated simply on nccount of Incompati-bility. Whonovor ho had monoylio UBed tocull nnd share It with her. In fact, on thovory morning of tho murder ho lind started tohis formor mistress's room to rIvo her thrco-ponc-

This last fact, stated In a most mnttor-of-fa- ct

way, gives some idea ot what real Lon-don povorty Is llko.

The latost raovo of tho authorities lust an-nounced has bcon to ollor n froo pnrdon to anynccomplico or nccossory who will donounco thomurderer. There la llttlo likelihood ot thlBproducing any offect.

Many Americans who know the present Gor-mn- n

Lmporor as a studont, and who havo al-ways ohorlshod a poor opinion of that augustmonarch, will bo glnd to hear tbat n youngwuman of oxcollont nnd impnrtlnl judgmontshares their view. This Is n description whichthis young lady, who saw tho Kaiser at Lolpslc,glvos of him. In thollrst place, she docl.irosthat ho Is docldodly knock-knoo- which Is ab-solutely truo, and which Is ovldont ovon Inmany of his photographs, ror which his nttl-tud-

are carefully studied. He is not tall, andho Ib not robust. On tho contrary, ho Is slightlybuilt, and gets a more conBldernblo share of hismilitary build nud square shoulders from hismilitary tailor than from nature His doformodnnn, for which, of course, ho is not responsible,keeps him constantly norvous, appears qultostiff, and is noor moved. Tho welcomo clvenhim was not enthusiastic, excoot that whichcamo from tho crowds of military young mon.On thowholo, hols not really anybody's ldcnlof n conquoring hero. This young monarchnow posos successfully with a tremendousnrmy ns n background for his braggadociospoechos. but It seems, for tho present at least,much safer to predict disaster than glory forhim when Bismarck dies.

Tho nowspapore chronicle tho touching factthat tho Gorman Prlncoss Sophie, tho Emper-or's sister, who Is going to marry the son oftho King of Greece, Is polishing up her modernGreek In a most praiseworthy fashion, nnd hasalready writton a congratulatory letter to horfuture fathcr-In-la- on the rocont celobrntlonof tho twenty-fift- h year of his reign. ThisGreok father-in-la- who. by tho way. Is aDane, is really not worthy all the attention hogets. Ho Is probably tho mennost King allvofrom n financial point of view, has saved animmense fortune out of tho Greok people, andspends as llttlo ns ho possibly can. ItIs for that reason that tho Greeks shareto a largo oxtont tho opinion of diplomatiststhat King Goorgo had hotter resign in favor ofhis son, who Is inclined to spond all bo can get

Anglomnnla, I am sorry to say, has settledmost violently upon tho Indian prlncos. Longago I told how desperately Maharajah Holkarfell in lovo with an American girl from Brook-lyn, tho result, no doubt, of tho Prlnco ofWales's English example, nnd now wo are in-

formed that tbo Mabarajnh of Kuch Behar hasblossomod out this yoar as India's championlawn tonnls player and won a silver modal givenby tho Viceroy nt tho vlcoregnl tennl3 courtThis carao Indian potentate goes In for foxhunting, nnd whon in England ho astonishedoverybody by his hard riding.

Tho French nro vory much worried about thehealth of tho King of the Xothorlunds. Reliableinformation reports that bis rocovory is hope-less, owing to n fatal complication of diseases.Tho fact that the Duchy of Luxomburgat Illsdoatb pnssos to Germany Ja tho circumstaucowhich accounts for 1'rancbmen's ansWty.

A correspondent at Glasgow tells how thePrlncoss Loulso took her husband, tho Mar-quis of Lome, to tho Glasgow exhibition lastweok. Tho correspondent's letter elves him nchance to tell American women what sort ofthings tho Queen's daughtor goes out walkingin in this kind of weather. She wore a veryplain, wnrm-Iookln- g woollen gray strlpo dross,small lavender bonnet, long gray fur boa, nndshort black velvet mantle. She didn't look par-ticularly smart.

Austria Is beginning to worry about KingMilan's sincerity. HavingEtood by him throughhis dlvorco troubles and induced Germany tooxool his wife from tbo country and to give uptho Crown Prince, his son, it Is now painful tonoto tho Servian King's tendency to loan uponltussln. It Is hinted tbat his mnjosty KingMilan, tired of dlvorcos and trials, means toabdicato In favor of his son, but this is ex-

tremely unlikoly. It Is much moro probablothat ho will continue reigning, an occupationwhich seems, to suit him, and to play off Rus-sia on ono side against Austria on tho otherfor bis own boncflt,

Tho I'rlnco of Wales, who hns been having avory gay tlmo of late, must interrupt his plcns-u- n

son tbo 13th Inst, nnd go to Flushing tomeet his sister, the Empress Frederick, who iscoming over to visit her royal mother. ThoPrlnco la nbout to como out in print Somo-bod- y

hns been collecting all his speeches nndaddresses for twenty-fiv- e yenrs past, and theyaro to bo printed, nnd will, of course, form thochief ornament of ovory roynl Briton's library.Tho profits will bolp toasmnlloxtent tomeottho Princo's henvy expenses rondcred nocos-sar- y

by bis views as to the way to onjoy life.Tho Shah of Persia novor stops Ldlng origi-

nal. A llttlo whilo ago there was a liot at tiioTeheran llnllroad station, nnd now wo lenrnthat his Majostj's plan to do away with suchnuisances In future Is to stop nil traffic on thoroad, and oblige the Minister for War andothor personages to rldo up nnd down tho en-ti-

lino warning everybody around not to bo-g- in

rioting any more.It Ih announced that tho Empress of Austria

intends tn go ovor and look nt tho Unltodbtstch. Her trip Is based really on hor desiretoboridforn nrolongod tlmo of her husband,whom, us ovotybody knows, pho thoroughlydislikes, and also in tho hope that a chango ofnlr may lessen the rhoumntlsm to which sho Isan absolute martyr. Tho only way In whichshe obtains nny reliof is by having two strongfomnles constantly In nttondnnco to treat herby massage, and, considering what the mas-sag- o

prucofs must bo llko to ono Buffetingfrom violent rhoumntlsm. It can easily bo un-

derstood that the poor Empress doos not on-

joy life.Tlio Germans are hard at work digging

French out of their language Ono of tholatost results of this purifying process canhardly bo commondod. Tho word " pntroulllo"Is to be cut out of tho list of military terms,and In Its plnco is to bo substituted "

which Is not thosimplest conceivable manner of expressing thomeaning of tlio word patrol.

Mux O'lloll has boon giving his opinion in alecture as to what Americans nro llko, Hisexaggoiatlons nro umuslng. but extrava-gant as to tnko away nil vnluo from his criti-cism. Ho declares that no man with any

has nnythlng to do with nflairs offctnto with ub, and that if afionatoniccldentnllygains admittance to n soltict ontertalnmont thocustom of tho master of tho housoIs to order that the silver as wollas the hats nnd coats in tho hall be carefullywatched, There is moro common sonso In hisobocrvntlon ns to Amorlean fonduoss for pro-fanity. Ho tells of nn American poker pnrtyon up English Blenmer nf which v)nch memberlaid down each card with n now nnd distinctoath. The same pokor party n short tlmo

song hymns und psalms over twohours. Max O'lloll declares that he has metmen in other countries who swore, and also hoUulad to say who sans brans, but America .

nlono produces mon who do both with equalfacility. Ho thinks American women possessmany charming qualltlos but overdress, nndtho word simplicity Is unknown to America.

American girls, by tho way, havo been vorythoroughly writton up in Englnnd ot Into. Thowriters, ns a rulo. havo unpleasant things tosny nbout them, but do not monngo satisfac-torily to account for tho extremo rapidity withwhich Englishmen aro marrying them. Thofnvorlto aocusatlon Is that thoy aro loss roman-tic thnn English girls nnd less domostlc. thatthoy know too much nnd sny It too plainly, andcrow old too boor. ThlB sort of thing Ameri-can girls enn afford to treat with contompt,and, fortunntoly forthom, poor British matronsennnot afford to trent Amorlean girls In thosamo way. Thoy havo largo suppllos of daugh-ters who nro vory romantic and no doubt ex-ceedingly domostle, but Englishmen bIiow alack of Intorest in Investigating these qualitieswhich becomes ovory day more distressing.Tho announcement of Mr. Chamborlnin'sforthcoming marrlaco has proved tho lastBtraw cast upon tho back ot tho g

British mothor.The Lord Mayor was wise and good in de-

ciding to do nwny with pompous tomfooloryin his procosslon, nnd to Bpcnd tho money Infeodlng 10,000 poor people Your corre-spondent, who snw 3,000 of thorn fed, cannotsay vory much for the judgmont shown In se-

lecting the food. Somo, I am told, workhouseInhabitants and others, had roast beef, plumpudding, nnd so on. but thoso 3.000 fed Instovoulng in Assembly Hall, erected by Mr.Chnrrman, wero not bo lucky. Each had porkpio, half u pound of broad and buttor, half apound of cako, a quart ot ton, and nn apple,nnd ns a vast majority were starving thoy mnn-ngo- d

to swallow all of theso things. Anybodywho is acquainted with tho quality of Englishfood when dealt out by wbolesalo will feel sym-pathy for tho 3,000 poor whoso Interior con-tained an English pork pie. swampod In nquart of English tea. in company witb n halfpound of English cake, an apple, and tho rest

A book just out Is attracting attontlon nB an-other specimen of the interest felt in Englishantiquities by two or three American writers,nnd ot their fitness for theso studies. Dr. B. IwMartin, of whoso magazine work In this Holdnn English reviewer said that this Amorleanknow more about London than most English-men, hns just brought out by tho houso of T.Fisbor Urwin a dntnty volume on old Chelsea,which Is praised for Its erudition nnd character.

Harry Minor has arrived here from Now Yorknnd is going to llotuo nnd Nuplos. Ho says hoIs going to bring out an American play in Lon-

don nt tho Vnudov Hie." Across tho Sea," a now melodrama by Henry

Pettltt, was produced ht nt tho Princess's,under tbo management of W. W. Kolly. whohas run tho London thontro for Grace Haw-thorn longer nnd moro successfully thnn anyAmerican has succcedod in doing. The plocewas a success from the pit and gallery point ofvlow. It Is believed by old thejitro coers thattho Princess's will steal tbo Adelphi audienceswith this now pioco, which is Pettitt's bestwork nnd exactly fitted for that thontrc. Theprincipal fenturo of tho porformanco was theacting of Harry Mackonzio. son of Sir MorellMackenzie who portrayed tho part of anAmerican under tho stngo name of II. II. Mo-

rell. His performance differs from that of othorEnglish actors whom 1 havo seen play Ameri-can characters, Inasmuch as he succeeded Inlooking and talking nnd doing as an exagger-ated form of the Chicago individual whom herepresented might bo expected to do.

All reports of oarly sown wheat contlnuosatisfactory. The plant abovo ground showsa healthy condition. Wheat nt the Baltic re-

mained firm at full prices except secondaryitusslan.whlch wapif 4sely offered at less mono.White wheats, especially Australian, worofirmly hold, in somo cases bringing an ad-

vance. Mark Lane and tho country marketswere very quiet Corn, owing to the scarcityand tho rise in America, brought ono to twocentsa bushel ndvanco on-tli- week.

On tho Stock Exchango tbo American mar-ket was without feature until Wednesday ,wbontbo report of Harrison's election brought somostrong speculative buying horo, but in thoovening tho markot becamo weaker, and reali-zations set In owing to heavy bullion with-drawals from the Bank of England for ship-ment and tho weak tone of the foreign market.There was n Blight recovery on Friday, nnd nbetter tone prevailed, with a general belief inbetter prices.

KEVLY IX COSTC3IPT.

The Motor Man Comca to Grler In tho Phila-delphia Court of Common Pleai.

PniTjADEirniA, Nov. 10 Court of Com-mon Picas. No. 3, this morning made tho ruloto fssuo an attachment against John W. Keelyfor contempt of court in not obeying tho ordorof the court absolute. It also discharged therulo to dissolve tho injunction, nswoll as thorulo to open tho scaled packago which is in thohands of tho Courtrdrtf which is said to containn description of tljo ljeely motor. It also con-tinued tlio Injunction agaiubt Kuoly until fur-ther notice.

The suit in whlcL Keely is thus brought tocrlef Is tbo ono instituted In equity by llennetC. Wilson, in which experts wero appointed bythe Court to exnmlpo the construction of Kee-ly 's mechanical apparatus, with tho vlow of de-termining whether It corresponded or wasIdentical with a certain motor dovlco whichKeely nslgnod to Wllnon in 1B69. That thoCouit might be fully enlightened us to the mer-its of Mi. Wilson's clf.lm, a committee nf ex-perts was appointed to Inspect tlioKcolvmo-to- r.

and a week ago to-d- an argiimont washad before Judgos rinleitornnd ltecd uponnp-plicatio- n

of Mr. Wilson's counsol for an at-tachment upon Keely for contompt of tbo orderof Aptil 7 last, in refusing to dlvulgo informa-tion, which tlio e.perts said they noeded toiimUo up their minds u to whothor tlio claimwas justified. After sleoping on tho nuostionfor nwook tho Court hns decided that Keolylsin contempt and proposes to nunNi him.

Under the nttnohment Keely inn bo taken ntnny tiinunnd commlttod to tho ciuiuty piisonpending tho pleasure of the Court. It Isthought that ifVirfonnb'o time will bo given ,

Keoly to come into court nnd declare his Inten-tion to comply lully with tho L'ourt'x order ofApril 7. Tlio Injunction, which Is continued, isto restrain him Irom transferring his discov-eries to n new Btocl; company until such tlmons It Is decided whether Bennett C. tlson, thoplaintiff in tho suit has nny claim to thorn

Great Jtcmnnd lor TIAo Hun In Charleston.CnAitLE&TON, Nov. lrt. Tho demand for

The Sun hero since elceVon day has beenAll tho nowsdonlors have

doubled tholr orders, and are still unablo tosupply thq domand. The returns of the elco-Ho- n

publlshod In THE Ron kept its readersinformednbout tho way tblngsnero going, whilooilier Now York dallies wero publishing rain-bow despatches. Newsdealers horo say thutthodoninnd for Tim Sun bus boon moro thanquadrupled wtthlu tho past II vo days,

Eleven JIahlea In the Kexervolr,St, A JimtosE, Quebec, Nov. 10 Complaint

has boon mndo recently concerning tho condi-tion of tbo city reservoir water. Tho authoritiesilnally resolved to empty tho water to find outtho cause. Tlio tasl; was coinmencod a fowdays ago and win, completed yesterday, whontho remains nf cloven infants were discoveredat tlio bottom of tho reseivolr, Tho authori-ties nro at n loss to know who are tho authorsof tho murders. An Inquost has rovonled thatovory ono of the children was born allvo andbreathed for savoral hours nt least

Four Olrls ut a lllrlli,WoncESTKit, Nov. 10. Mrs. Anna do Groote of

Mllbury gave birth to lour girl babies on tho 2dInst, Mother and children aro doing nicely. Tliollttlo ones all endy begin to cry forC'astorla. Thosmallest weighs thrco p.innds, and tho othersnoarly six pounds each. Tho mother says:" Wo have boen married twelve years, alwaysgave our children Custorla, and you can de-

pend that our four little darlings will not sufferitorthowiuitofit."-Mrfl,Aane.deGroot9.-- Jldfl

.

E.fc W.E. W, "Spokane." Inquire at yew rnrnUhtaf iter

k be tola, ti new sulci In collars, A w,4,l

Tonnr Smylla'a "Y. B." Stick LicoriceasaUj lit but I csui as, cvlOa, aaa sore Uuoats.-.t- ilo

SUE MAY DEFEND HERSELF.

XUB DEFAULT Iff TUB BANES DITOttOBHUIT Ol'JiNEU.

Affidavit ,of Sir. KAmeo, the 1)ereadaat,nnd her Brother, the TheSuit 1VIU be Tried In Open Court.

Justlco Wlllnrd Bartlctt, In tho SupremoCourt ot Brooklyn, yesterday granted Mrs,Frank W. Eamos's motion to set aside tho do-fa-

previously granted in the suit her hus-

band brought against hor for dlvorco. ThoBtory was published In Tub Sun n week ngo.Mr. Eamcs alleged Gcorgo I'. Hamilton, hiswifo's brother, as and producedthe affidavit of Kitty Hoy, a sonant, that shohad witnessed through a crack in tho doorsufficient to form evidence for the proposedsuit Tho suit It was declared, had boonbrought quietly, and pains tnken to keopit from tho knowlcdgo of the defendantSho wns sorvod with pnpors, but shoconsidered It merely a davlco on tho part ofhor htiBband to annoy hor. Sho nllcgod,through her iawyer, after dofault had beengrantod by Justlco Harriott, that her husbandhad shown himself insanely Jealous, and shomoroly considered tho papors sorvod upon horstating Indiscretions with hor own youngorbrothor. nnownhasoof Mr. Eames's prosecu-tions. A weok ago yosterday Lawyer DavidHumphreys appoared before Justlco BartlottIn tho wifo's bobnlt and moved that tho dofaultbo Bot nsldo. Mr. Ilumphroysllnformed theCourtof tho stnto of affairs, and said that tho co-

respondent was tho wifo's own brother. JudgoBartlott was abtoundod. Tho complaint onwhich ho had granted dofault had not specifiedtho relationship existing betvvoon tho

nnd Ho oxclalmod:" This bIiow'ii how Important It is that dlvorco

buHs should bo hoard In tho prcsenco ot publlonnd press."

Yosterday all hands woro prosont to arguotho motion. Lawyer Humphreys appoaredarmed with n great bundlo of affidavits. TorMr. Eamos nnponrod Lawyers Charlos J. Pat-terson and V. D. Whitney, Jr. Mr. Whitney isa son of ex-M- or Whitney, and an AssistantCorpoiation Counsel of Brooklyn. Ho is alsorelated to Mr. Eamcs, his slstor being the wifeof lioraco A. Eamos, the ululntltl s brother.Horace A. Eatues H Presldont ot the strawgoods manufacturing couip.inv for which

W. EnmcB.lho plaintiff,!1 factory super-intendent. In support of his motion LawyerHumphreys read affidavits of the dulendantund tho Mrs. Karnes's atlldav itdeelured in general that she was not guilty Inreference to Hamilton or uny other

She euld bad nlwajs boeu-- a faith-ful wife. Ueorgo 1'. Hamilton, tho namod

she said, was hor brother. Howas 2ti yenrs old. and " bad always been oufriendly termB with tho plnintitT. her husband.Ho visited his homo at tho plaintiffs requestfrequently. The last time was since the begin-ning ot the snit Then bo spent bundny after-noon talking and smoking with hor husband."Mrs. Karnes declared she hover bolloveil horhusband really meant a separation. Sbo al-ways thought ho felt an itfioetion for her ex-cept when undor control of his almost Insanejealousy. Up to this tlmo his jealousy hadn'tcontrolled him moro thnn ndny or two nt onotime, und she relegated the new chargo abouther brotherto tho samo category, and hencopaid no particular attention to it Sho ullegedthut since nbout the third yt ar or her marriagehorhusbnnd had persistently and nlmost con-tinually accused ber ot impropriety withono person or another, und frequent-ly ho pretended to leave home onlyto hang around tbo houBe to wutcb her ac-tions, lie bad frequently nM;ed hor to signpapers admitting hor cuilt. but sho had alwaysdeclined, on tho grounds that sho would uotsign an untruth. In spltn or his allegations,sho declared that ho hnd lived with bur in theusual relations of man nnd wife up to Instspring, when ho hnd clvon her nn excuse forthe dlscontluunnco ot the relationship, a differ-ent exciibo from tbat alleged In bis complaint.Sho said that the brother who was mado tho

was tvvslvo yonrs younivrtliniishp. If o was next the youngest ot Uxo .1it,;ll . 'ni:, when ,i baby, wnd b .hlef care nnutlovo.Or late years ho had Iriquently calhd tl! thohouse. Since the sscond yoar of hor marriage,when sho hnd discovered hor husbund's un-natural tondency to jealousy towurd nny andall. she had avoided cvxn the upiienranco ofsisterly affection toward her young brother.

Sho said that Kitty Hoy's stnteuiont was notonly untrue, but an impossibility, since theciuck In tux door was too small tobeo turough,nnd the lock on the parlor door, which KittyHoy said was turned, hail been broken for fourjears. Mrs. Eames's affidavit wns supportedby those of other persons alleging hor goodcharacter and reputation. Among tho affi-davits was ono by Miss Maud Dean ot linyItldgi, alleging that sho hersolf had broken tliolock four jenrs before, and know It hnd notbeen repnlred since. Miss Denn's Inthor. awealthy florist, and Mr. Gould. nBayltidcemerchant, were among many who presentedaffidavits to Mrs. Eamos's good character.

George P. Hamilton, tho brother andnlso pro"entod an anldavit, which

was read by Lawv or Humphreys. Ho said hefrequently bad called ut his sister's homo, andthat he bad dono so at tho special request of Idssister's husband. Mr. Eames bad alwaysshown a kindly and friendly spirit toward him.und frequontlv had requested him to sloop nttho houso whon ho wjs nbnut to be absentfrom home. Ho knew nothing about hisbrothor-in-lnw- 's cluugos, nnd iiad received nonotification, although the complaint had boenpresented In June, and default was grantedsoveral weeks ago. On Oct. 1 ho had called attho bouse for the last tlmo. nnd bad bcon

by Mr. Eamos with the utmostHe branded the accusation as "infa-

mously fulse." After tho default was grantod,the matter camo to Ids oars, mid ho called onMr, Eames in company with his brother, Will-iam 11. Hamilton. Mr. Tames told them thatthere was nothing in tho affair ns It wns print-o- il

In Tub Hun ami the Jlrnnklun Eajle. nndthat tho whole thing would bo denied in thonext mornitic's papers. It wasn't denied, how-ove- r,

and it proved truo ns reported.The luwj ere representing Mr. Eamcs read to

Justlco Bartlott Mr. Eamos's additional affida-vit of a genenl denial und of spociflc denials ofovcry point in Mrs. Karnes's nnd .Mr. Hamilton'saffidavits. Ttieu they road the affidavits j.fMessrs. Holmes and Whito to tho offect thatMrs. Eames bad been duly infonned of thesuit against her In thoir presence. Mrs.Eames's ansvvor to this wns Hint cho hndboon Informed, but Unit owlncr to hor 's

i erslstcnt charges of infidelity ugninsther, she had not believed tho suit was meantin earnest.

" To slmpllfr matters," asked Lawyor Hum-phreys, "toll met whothor Mr. Holmes und Mr.White lire not omplojoes of Mr. Eames In thofuctory ? '

Tho lawyers for Mr. Eames said they woro.Justice Banlett granted Mrs. Emnoi's motion.Ho declared the doloult void, and oideredthooilglnnl motion for divorce down for trialIn upon court within two weeks. The lavrersfor both sldos expressed satisfaction. Aftorndjounrment Law) or Humphreys said to a Sunleporter:

"In your first report of this caso you reportedme ussa)lngthat Mr. Eauios bad charged hiswife with iinduo intimacy, among other' WilliMr. Eamos's own brother. Whitney's

I did not intend to brln:r the mirnoof Whitney's Intoihocusont all. You must havo boon mistaken in what1 said."

Improvement" In the New 1'nrk Nnvy Yard,AVashikotox, Nov. 10 Conimodorn IJnr- -

roonyln his animal report sn)s that the ovv

tlmbor dry dock nt the New York Navy Yard Isprogrosslngfavorruly.nnd, it is expected, will 1m

finished within tho stipulated two yearn. 'hoCommodore expresses regrets that Congressdid not authoilro nn oxli'iision of its iotgithfrom 600 to CUD feet, which would havo adiiudmatorlally to tho docking capacity of thovnrdlis woll ns to the poitof Now York. J'lirlherand cMenslvo repairs aro reported to ho urg-ently needed to tho (.'oh Dock, for which a ipe-ei-

appropriation nf 178 tl".1) is asked AnIs submitted for a kuiu of t no.uon to i ip.

tlnue tho work of improving Whitney Jlnsli byeroding subMniitlal eilh work around tin e,

so that tbo nocesxnrv dredging enn Imcarried on to maku the basin available forlarger vessels. Estimates are a! suhmi tedfor a general paint and oil store to lesson dan-ger by lire and for thu further extension of therailroad system.

She 1VI11 Wed to FulO.1 a Bet,Des Moikes, Nov. 10. --A clerk In a Fotirtli

street cigar store mado n novol bot on the elec-tion, which will result in n woddlng. A ladyfriend of his, who Is a strong Domncrat, agreedtoninrryhlm In caso Cloveland was ilofentml,Boing a Domoemt and feeling sure of hiselection, tlio nows of tho election somewhatnurpilxed her, but she has agreed to fulfil herpmt ot tho programme, and thoro will bo awedding lu about a month.

OUABD OttAUAV AIUIESTED.

Ills 'Wife. Hear the Ntni In her Roomi,by whose IVInriona hla Train Bun.

Cottllnln, knowing: that sooner or laterJohn II. Grabnu, tho brnkomnn on tho Socondnvonue olevntod road, aoeused ot pushingPhilip Bnor off his train on Thursday evening,would bo arrested, gave him up to Ward De-

fective Heap yesterday. Grabnu hnd no inten-tion of going into hiding. Ho was preventedfrom giving himself up by tho railroad com-pany. Ho was told on Friday night to reporton Saturday morning nt 10,'i o'clock nt theofllco, where ho wns nrrested soon nfter thattime. Col. Haln promlsod to let Grnbau's wifoknow If hor husband was arrested, so that shocould obtain ball: but when a Sun reportercnllod at his home, 226 First avenue, at 3;o'clock yesterday afternoon, Grabnu had beenfour hours lu n cell on a charge ot homicideand his wifo knew nothing of ids nrroBt Shecried bitterly whon told of It by tho roportor,for It was then too Into to havo ball nccoptod.Anton Spollninn, their landlord, was ready togo to court ns bondsman for Orubau, ot whomhe snokelln the hlahest terms.

Mrs. Grahau said that hor husband had toldher none of the particulars of the accident."lie said that It wasn't his fault," snld sho,

nnd I bollovn him. l'rom whnt I hoar, linerrenched ovor tho gnto to lift the latoh. and myhusband pushed bin bnnd up from tho latch,but be novor pushed him off tho plutform, I'meuro."

Newbergcr. the roar guard, wns arrested yos-terday, but released, ns tnero was not sufficientevidence to hold him. Grubuu comes of a goodfnmtly. His father was a largo manufacturer.About a year ago, whilo employed by II ay wardA. Duffy, the contractors, Grabnu contracted acold, resulting in n severe attack ot pneumo-nia. V hen he recovered sufficiently to go towork. Hayward ,t Duffy endorsed bis applica-tion for a place on tho elevated road, Afterserving n fow months ns gntomnn on the Sixthavenuo lino ho got the place of brakoman onthe Second nvoniio lino at fl. SO a day. Ho andhis wlfu moved tn their present quarters, onthe third lloor of ?20 First nvonue. overlookingtho Second avenue road, so that they could seeench other ns his trnln pnst-e- the windows.

ltollly, Julius Hnrburgor, und hisformr employers give Grnbnu nn oxcollentcharacter, especially for sobriety.

Coroner John Nugent pays ho will subpoenaevery ono he can find that saw any part of thenccidont Tho Inquest will bo held next Wed-nesday. Baor will be hurled y In Wash-ington Cemetery from 313 East 121st streot. Holeaves n wife ond three children, who will re-ceive $3,000 from benefit soclotles.

OSCE a niriiftiY STCVEXT.

Kow tn tfnll on Chnrgen or Fernery YoungCharles Hnhr'n Career.

Charles Hahr, once a reputable youngmnn in Jersoy City, wns brought from De-

troit by Dotoctlvo Gallagher of Hobo-ke- n

yosterday. Ho enme to this coun-try Blx sears ago with his mothor andhis brother Honry. They had n little moneyand Charles docldod to study for tbo ministry.Ono summer he camo home from college tospond his vacation, nnd he celebrntod his re-

turn, ns it is alloged, by stenling tho ynchtEaglo Wing of tho New Jersey Yacht Club fleetnnd sniling off with It. Ho wns cnugbt throedays afterwnrd. but ho wns not prosecuted.Ills brother hnd tnken n placo In tbo FirstNational Bank in Jersey City, nnd shortly nftertho yncht oplsodo he got Into sorious troubleIn tho bank. Mrs. Hahr then removed to Buf-fnl- o.

taking Charles with her. Two years agohe left her. and a short time afterward turnedup lu Chicago.

Ho was accused of passlrg checks there onmen whom he knew In Hoboken nnd .leisoyCity amounting to several thousand dollars.Onoot bis alleged victims was the father of ayoung woman with whom he kept companywhile ho was studying for tbo ministry. Thomen whoso names were on the checks paid tbochecks nnd placed the mntter in the hands otthe Jersoy uoltco. Detectives were sent aftorhtm. but for more than a yoar they could getno trace of him. In July, 1887, be was foundtn this city and nrrested. He furnished J 5.000boi.ds for Ms appearance fcr trisl. An soon nsho was released he fled to Canada, where hestaid soveral months. From Canada ho wentto Detroit There he represented himself ns anewspaper correspondent He wns good look-ing and bright At n publlo banquet ho motJohn W. Uresler. n retired morehnnt He wasInvited to Mr. Bresler's home, nnd on tils firstvisit thoro be told n story nbout his being tboson of wealthy parents who had died and lofthim pennllosB.

Mr. Ilreslor invited him to make his homowith blm. Hahr consented, nnd since thon hohas been fronted llko a son by Mr. Bresler, andhns been provided with allthomoney ho wantedto spend. Tho detoctlves who ran him down inNew York began searching for him again whenhe forfeitod bis ball, and after a year's searchdiscovered him in Dotrott living on tho fat oftho laud, Ho will bo tried on a charge offorcory.

EEASZUS T. TKFIT DEAD.

Head or the Wholesale Dry Good Bouseor Tent, Welter A Co.

Ernstus T. TeiTt, tho hoad of tlio dry goodshouse of Tefft, Woller & Co., dlod at 7 o'clockyosterday morning of henrt failure at his homoIn tho Dakota Hats. Mr. Tofft had been In poorhealth for two years, but last summer he im-

proved greatly, ond rocovored his strengthnndwns feeling well. Within a fow days, howevor,his henrt trouble returned, nnd ho ennk gradu-ally until his death )esterday.

Mr. Tefft was born 78 years ago in Dudley,Winchcstor county, Conn. When a vory youngmnn he bognn In the dry goods business inHerkimer county, and afterward inhjrncusoin this State. Ho camo to this city lu 1847. nndfounded tho houso which Is now so well known.Tho firm wus successively known as E. T.TofTt Co., Toflt. Grlswold A Kullocg, Toflt,Griswold A Co.. and Toflt. Woller A Co. Nowthnt Mr. Tefft Is dead, tho firm consists of hissons William E. nnd Frnnk O. Tefft TheodoreWentr. Oeorgo C. Clarke, and John H. Bench.

Mr. Teflt's mercantile carcor wus one of con-tinued success. Ho was not a speculator, andwas preHininently conservative in his under-takings. Ho dlod a vory wealthy man. He wasvery retiring in his habits and fond of hishome. Ho novermeddlod In politics, and wasnot a mombor of any club. Ho was a mostgenial man personally, and was extremelypopular with hisemploycos,' Tho funeral willbe on Monday morning from Dr. John Hall'schurch.

31 1!. OLCOTT IIAX aED IX EFFIGY.

The Outromr of n Bitter ElectloncerincC'ouleit In Oiunge.

Somo tlmo during Friday night nn efllgyin military uniform -- was hanged in Orange.The Improvised gibbet was a telegraph wirerunning out from tho roof of tlio nriuorylnWilliam btroot A label on the feet of the ofllgybora tho nnmo of IJunrtermiister Goorgo P.Olcottof thoThlidBattnllon, and ho wns thoangriest man in Orango when tho figure wnsdiscovered yesterday morning. It was an ob-

ject of curiosity until nearly noon, when some-body went tn the roof nnd ut It down.

It is presumed that Mr. Olcott was hanged Ineffigy by some of tho guardsmen, bocnuxo itwas said that ho took an active part during thocampaign In the light against Major hinder,who wns dofented lu his raco for n sent in thoAssembly. It was said that Mr. Olcott circu-lated n story that Major SiDderdixchnrged onoof his employees because he relused to votothe Democratic- ticket. This story Is supposedto have cost MnjorKnvder many votes, nnd hisfrleinls nro nngry nt Mr, Olcott. A court innr-tl-

will iiiuUHiilr bo ordered and nn Investiga-tion mndo In find out who hnd n hand In milk-ing and hnnging tho tlguie. Mr. Olcott Is

euoiigh to proceed to any length, andIt l said that ho was iiish onough to offerf l.tulO yesterday for Inlormntlon leading to thodetection of tho'o vvbhad lieldhlin up ns nnobjector scorn iindildicule.

Killed Her Iliixliuiid With nn Axe.Iowa City, lov.n., Nov, 10, Samuel

Brown, n farnior, who lived near North Liberty,In this county, was killed by his vvlfoyostorduy.Tho couple had not llvod happily togetherfor somo time, and violent quarrels wero

The woman was not of perfectly soundmind, nnd was at ono time confined lunn

iisylum. Her tnmpor wns nuturally vio-lent, and. whon e.teltcd. shit became utterlycrared, Yesterday Blown and his wife had uauuuhii.illy angry dlxpute ovor a trivial matter,and tho wlln, Mdrlng nn ne, attacked her hus-band. He attempted to ward off tlio blows,

.but the woman, roudercd imnnturnlly strongthrough excitement, pursued him through thehouse, hacking blm repeatedly, nnd finallyfelling him to the floor dead. Mrs. Brown hasbeen arrested, and mill be examined u to herwalty, .... ,

HISS ItATHF.D IS A DEStOCItAT.

Ber StrnRKle irlth Mr. Bone to Keep HerBundanna I.rada to mi Arrcat, t

All through tho recent exciting campaignIn Brooklyn Miss Sarah Hatred, n pretty at-

tendant in a' hnlr dressing establishment nt829 Fulton Btroot, hnd been nn onthuslastloCloveland nnd Thurmnn girl, and llko hor twohandsome asslstnnts. sho hns possessod n Bilkbandanna. Her ardor for tho rod bandannadid not nbato oven nttor tho election, and shostill contlnuod to wear tho Domocratlo emblemaround hor shopoly nock. Charles Honos, nclerk In tho jowolry Btore adjoining, wns a Har-rison mnn. nnd during tho cnmpnlgn ho andMiss Hatred had many llvoly discussions ovorthe probablo result On tho morning nftor tlioelection Mr. Honos cnllod nt the hnlr dressingcstnbllshment Hushed with oxcltement ovortho ltepubllonn victory, nnd sporting n roosternnd nn Amerlcnn line on bis lint Ho succoeteilthut It wns tlmo for Miss Hatred to, dlspensowith tho bandnnnn. hut she doclured thnt showns still proud of tho cnmpnlnn emblem of thoOld Ilomnu, nnd didn't propose to give it up.Mr. HoneH thon handod Miss Hntrod a 2 notonnd asked hor to chnngo it for him. As shopicked up the bill ho grnbbed tho bandnniia,but sho manuged to retain It. although, in tliostruggle one of her flncors was sovorely hurtTho )ounc Indvvvns very indignant, nnd shorntusod to give Mr. Hones bnck his t'i unlesshonpologlrod for his rudeness.

Ho rofusod to npologlre. nnd.Mlsn Hntrodlnld tho J2 nsldo to await future developments.Tho dovolopmentseamo on Friday In tho Bliupoor a warrant directing Miss Hatred to opi oarbofore Justlco Walsh on a chargo of Inrconypreferred by Mr. Honos. The examinationtook placo jesterday morning. Mr. Honos re-

lated tho incident, describing how ho hud grab-bed the bandnnnn, but not uutil Miss Hntrodhad waved It In hlsfaco. She perslstod in re-

taining tho $2, bo enld, although ho apologizedfor Injuring hor bnnd. Miss Hatred said:

"Mr. Honos camo In nnd asked us why wodid not hnvo our rooster out. 1 would hnvokont hold of tho bnndanna oten had ho brokenmynrm. I had no intention of stoallng tbo 12."

Justlco Walsh dismissed tho complaint, nndsaid that ho would not havo Issued a warranthnd he known all tho facts In tho caso.

"If you hnd had a spark ot manhood." hoBald to Mr. Honos, " you would npologlze to thoyoung lady."

"Woll, I do apologize" said Mr. Honos.

TO SAFE HAULS llUltT'S BEAT.

A Movement tn Content the Election of nritate Henntor In Delaware.

WiLMnwroN, Nov. 10. An Every Eveningspecial from Dovor y reports a Demo-

cratic movement to contest tho aloctlon of A.

B. KIchurdson, the Kent county RepublicanStato Senator-elec- t Ou tho fnco ot tho returnsMr. Richardson has a plurality of 133 over hisDomocratlo comootltor, Dnnlol M. Ridgeloy.Such a contost would bo passod on by thoDomocratlo Stnte Sonnte. The grounds laidare three tho holding of election In districtswhere there were no Democratic judges nt thepolls, fraudulent votes, and alleged Illegalityof tho Huulsbury Republican combination bal-lots. Stress Is laid on tho latter ground. Thouniform ballot law require tho heading to

with the body of tickets. Tho combin-ation tickets wero beaded Democratic, but amajority ot tho candidates thoreon wero Re-publicans. Protest wns entered against them,and against tho ostracism? ot Democratic elec-tion otilccrs before and while the voting was inprogress.

Tlio cfTect of tho unseating of Richardsonnnd tho seating of ltldgcley would be to maketho Legislature a tlo on joint ballot nnd pro-ve-

tbo election by it ot a United States Sena-tor, thereby eventually placing tho nppolnt-rne- nt

of Senator Salisbury's successor In tbohands of tho Governor, who would, of course,bo expoctod to nnmo a Democrat.

JlK. ALLEY'S Xiaiir IX 1UE COUNIItT.

Went to See hla Girl, lvn Attacked by nDos, nnd n as Tukcn for n Chicken Thler,Nyack, Nov. 10 Mr. Andiow Allen, who

is engaged in business in Charlton streot NewYork, ooraos up to Rockland county once awoek, usually on Friday, to visit the dnughtorof a well-to-d- o farmer (tn tho lower pnrl of tnocounty. Ho came up yosterday. After spend-ing the ovonlng with tho ) oung lady, ho Btartodacross lots to roach tho houso of a friond,whore bo pronosod to stny all night He hadjust scaled tho fence of a nolghborlng farmor'sback yard when be was sot upon by tbo farm-or's big dog. With n stout cane which hn car-ried Mr. Allon beatofTthodog again nnd ngain.Presently, nrousod by the noiso. the farmer andhis son appeared, ouoli armed with a revolver.

" Call oft this brute I" shouted yonngMr. Allon."Whnt business hnve you hero?" replied tho

fnrmor, sternly. "Going to stonl some of mychickens, wero you? Lucky for you the dogdidn't eat you up. Guess we'll tnko you iuchnrgo until wo can find a constable."

In spite of his protestations Mr. Allen wasmado n prisoner ami lod Into tho kitchen.Members of tho farmer's family camo downstairs and peered by turns through tho doornt tho wicked young rnnn. Whon it came thoturn of the farmer's wifo, sho recognised Allen.Then the situation was explained, nnd Mr. Al-len wnslprovnilod upon to remain in tho housethe rost ot the night, not us u prisoner, but asa guest.

FLIOIIT OF A IWlLDEIt.

Ble Wife Curries the Htrnllnen and theyX.eiie Denver fur Good.

Denver, Nov. 10. Tho Denver buildersand lumbermen nro much worked up ovor theclover swindlo perpotratod upon thom byAlonzo Weibol, who recently camo bore fromEnglowood, u Chlcngo suburb. Ho broughtsuch excellent lottors of recommendation thatho had llttlo difficulty In obtnlnlng tho best otcredit, nnd he quickly workod up a good busi-ness. On lastbutuidny Wcibelcolleotod noarly$s,000 on unfinished buildings nnd took hisdeparture. Jouving behind unpaid bills nmouut-tn- g

to S,l,f00, ln got away so hastily that avaluable house filled with costly furniture wasleft bohlnd. This lias been almost entirelyplllagod by his unpaid laborers. Weibel, withall his cunning, was unablo to docolve a plas-terer named Carson. Tho latter found himnnd his wifo very near midnight on board atrnln en routo for Los Angeles. At the pointof n pistol ho demnnded of Weibol the $3.75duo blm, whereupon Welbel's wifo producedtlio cash. Sho had tho entire amount of horhusband's steal logs conce.dodupon herporson.Weibel has boon trncod to Los Angolos.

Looking lor Tom Axworthy,Clevmand, Ohio, Nov. 10 Mayor Bab-coc- k

of this city has loft Montreal, nnd us hohasn't arrived hole yet It l's presumed thnt hohas dlncovorod Axworthy and Is with him inCanada. Babcock'sdesho is to recover somoof tho money If possible, and In nny event se-cure memoranda from Axworthy thut willenable him to protect tho city against

bondsmen In the lawsuits pending.Rumors that Mayor Ilabcock had disappeared

for good drow homo news out of his secretary.Bum llriggs, It seems that on Oct. Illn long letter ns rccoived Irom Montreal andAxwoithy. The Mayor upon receipt of the let-ter wont to Montreal, and lias been there Book-ing Axworthy ever since. Close Iriondsof thoilolnulter say that thoy know Axworthy to bein Europe, and they think ho loft the lottorbehind him to bo mailed on aduto after ho wasout of danger

Boafa Deluled by Fog; ou the Utidron.ItONDOUT, Nov. 10,-- A bcvcro storm ect in

near midnight lust night, und rain hns fallenIncessantly sinro thnt hour. At limes tho windblew a perfect gnlo, Thoro was a heavy fog ontho river, nnd bontmon worn couipollod to runtheir vessels hlowly or to anchor. Thopropeller J. C. Hunt, which left Now York withthe barges mirnh Smith and Enterprise lastulglit, and was duo here this morning, hns notyot arrived. Other towa are doinlned. ThefoglsunuMinlly thick and henvy on tho Hud-son ibis afternoon, and the Albany day boatshave not yet passed this point. Reports Iromtho Interior snv thnt ruin is lulling In torrents,and Citsklll Mountain streams ui swollen.At this hour (7 o'clock) rain is still falling, undfours ot a frcuhat aro entertained.

Chief Murphy l'roud of his Farce,Notwithstanding the fact that Chief of Police

Murphy of JemyClty wan depoied from active commaud during the caDipitn bcrauic, at lift Pcmocratiotupertori ihooahi, he teok tooctlt a part tn Ktpubllcanpolitic, lie kept an ere on the cnntluctof ttieonlcrmiiial tlio men Vrtt-run- he tMunl it Iturr thankingtlirui rnr ilirlr rotirlui-- i ,liir,uzihe im utair period of Hieibmp.Un. unil i muiiltiiitiitiiu tlinn lor tlio lionjijiniiuiutilpwhlili tuev uupujeit. ' That notariol ur'aworth of proiert hm ntnen even hv pickpocketsfttirinir tie irreatrron limit iurdc nnil meeuitftihouivour er.hlenoy," he eaU. The i rlef ul.i prohnniy pe re.Instated at the next iuectlcRot the Hoard ot Police Cora,niuilocn.

PANIC IN PARADISE PARK, IIjj

Eiani HEX 11 Lit T AT A FLUB JIT fMISSIOX FLA OS. iW

Tnmhllnc Bonn Klnlra nnd Oft Fire Escape Sffljlnnd Through n Cllnsa Boor-T- wo Fir. jf'Mlimen et Bud Kill la In the Smoke. &&.$!

At 3 to C M Isslon plnco, on tho west side ot ($$vTaradlso Park, is tho big printlnjr and paper . JfiPvf

houso of Cornoll, Bingham A Co, jMtjlIt is on tho two lowor floors. Abovo It oathrco floors, nnd oxtondlnc Into tho next build- - 8.1 Jttjfing nt HC Worth streot, is tho bookblndorr of ?, ivlBonodlct .t Volontlnc. Eighty mon wore at Jlwlwork in tho Mission plnco building at 7:12 SI ty '

o'clock yostordny morning, fifty of thom on tho ?i 11first nnd second floors, whon emoko wns seen 1.curling up Into tho streot from tho bnsemont, i'Ji Jnnd nn nlnrm of flro wns Bent out. Engines 7, v ?fj i12. nnd 29 nnd Trucks 0 and 1 woro on hand tn i $ 5a jiffy. Tho flromon found smoko coming ffiljE Ifrom tho building In many plaoos nnd 'pnw at onco that they had a big job on ! )f, K

hnnd. Elovon moro enclnos wore summoned, . &: , pbut boforo thoy camo tho Dromon wore horri- - Ma!Hod to soo tho mou employod in the printing '

If- - t'works jumping from windows nnd rushing jR i Kpnnlo strlckon down tho stairs of tho building, e 'tt siIn such furious hnsto that a number of thera &t $! iworo crushed nnd bruised and stunned. Calls ib ftwore sont out for nil tho nmbalonccs in tho f H1 Jcity south of Fourteenth streot, and thoso Boon ' r-- lit ftcamo rattling up. L" ii W

The cry of fire had been raised In tho print- - g ff! iiIng shops just boforo tho bells of tho enclnos '' , Vbognn to bo board In Pnrndiso Park. Benedlot J, A& Valentino employ 230 people, but nearly 200 iik' t

of thoso nro girls nnd do not go to work until 8 J, '?" 'o clock in the morning, nnd thoy woro outside I, J1 itho flro lines, somo of thom half scared into i; f? Ehysterics by what might havo happened to ! 'thom. A hrond stairway leads up through Cor- - k ifnoil. Hlnghain A. Co.'s building, as doos also nn fil '" ?olovntor ninift nnd a belting shaft from tho silv'l Uonglno in tho bnsomont Those throo shafts nro ' inenr onch other, and it didn't tako lone for tho t 1 ismoko to spread and create a panle ,:; Ut

There vvus a grand rush for tho stairway, ft; Vt 'which was getting cloudy with smoke. Tho .' S, pmon and boys ran and jumpod nnd fell down SI vttno stairs, screaming nnd struggling with each S1 ,' fcotlior. Thoy emerged into Mission placo with, l?i w i,white faces, breathless, nnd with torn clothes, 8' jw f.Ubut thanking heaven to got outof the building. s. v WBonos woro broken nnd arms and legs wero 'J! $bleeding, and tho nmbulnnco surgoons found w ,' ppolouty to do. Othor mon jumped from tho see- - ,; $i Miond story w Indows or sornmbfod down tho flro 1, !r ifefcscnpo which runs uu the front of tho building TC IB?In Mission place thoso who cot down am l&Aby tbo fire oscnpo jumpod from It whon they J.i'c 'iSC'wore only hulf wny down, or foil in their haste. hi 9JTBut tho mon vv ho had tho wildest experlenco I ! ;lf",sworo n fow who triod to got down by tho roar ?11Aaflro oscnpo nnd fell from tho socond story ft '- tothrough n glass-roofe- d shod in the roar of the E' 'jv i:building, an extension of Donaldson Brothors' JS 5V Pilithographing shop on Park street Thoro ?!wore iron bidders loading down to the shed, ,tf sifrom tho sldos nnd windows of the buildings. K ,"T iffTho Indders rested on a stono coping nround f v !the woll hole, but tho mon who wore trying to U It iftoscnpo oithor didn't see the ladders in tho U al ItBmoko or wero too much in a hurry to uso H; S? ASthem. One or two went down on tho Indders, ; tfii Sbut tho rest didn't. They jumpod or fell upon 1.1.X fc?

the glass-roofe- d shod. Two or throo mannged ?,lli Stoget upon tho coning, nnd wore pulled into ijii 4ftho adjoining windows by helping hands. Tho Jstltj Silrest smnshed through tlio glass shod, to tho g$J Wastonishment of Donaldson Brothors' em- - Ja" ff.'ployoos. who bad just begun to hear of the flro. Stt'Jff t'K

It was hnroly ilfloon minutes after tho en-- "aSu rt:clnos first appealed In Paradise Park before vTal ?Cthe namoa begun to nnpoar at tho windows of 8ji?J wftho printing nhop. There hnd boen plontyot fry Wltlmo for nil in tho building to wnlk down htnlrs. ftl rAJ 5

A hen thoy wore nil out of tho building In ono Ft Jl 65way or another, tho nmbulnnco doctors mndo fa "iff iiup this list of tho injured who wero takonto Sj Af'tR.the Chambers Streot Hospital: 'AVafl A?

I'hl'lp Weletiere a compoeltor. 10 years oM. Ilvlnir at V SH iVjumpert from the tire eicape. ; ; 5J7

receh inp nevere contuaioua ot the leg and back and an ' ?H 411usly ecalp wound. V '; wt

John Kelily. a rreBHnan. 22 years old, of 17 Cherry tt li)l flrtrect. Jumped through the shed and feu wt til fcStwelve feet more ou a pile of paper; bad cuts oa tha a.' i 3rbo til and arms. a, JM li '

miam Tracy, a pressman. 5 year old, of 47 Canton SVyu jpstreet. Urooklyn. Jumped through Ibe class roof : ri(ht n Wt'ileg broken and lever Injuries to spine; Is thought to M ilaWt'have luterual Injuries and may not rtcorer. ' ilria

Timothy Klnic ot 07 Bast Mneteenih street felt i, y,mtbrninih the glass roof aud broke his left arm. M iJHfcjT

Willlum Meyers ot l&J hat street Jumped andgot h bad fall while trying to get down the stairs: headfrfi?Hy,?bruited and left nrm fractured. ji trfiiH

front JlcKee of H2 spring street cut his head badly if H fr.Kwhile tumbling down stairs. H. H faK.

Tho report got around thnt ono of the Fivo Tffl& W1, 'i

Points Mission Houses wns burning, nnd poo-- Ji'jS i!Pplo going to thoir work thronged Into Paradise ' fvjPark. This report cot to Polioo lloaduuartors V;e;;fi (&and out on Broadway, l'ooplo rushed down ,f f' fs '

tho cross streets to the flro. and reserves of po- - Wii trsllco from outside stations came marching up. 'iSii IS- - 'All was smoko nnd confusion, nnd clnnglnjc ill ,5 '

l

lire bells nnd nmbulnnco gongs. Finally tho v 'd ipnrkw.iB elenrod of tho crowd, nnd tho flro- - u JBHb,men got a chanco to work. Tho flnmos got at 'i 2'lWi itho pnper stock, nnd It wns hnrd work putting; If '..'IfiSfout the fire Lines of hoso wore strung over 'i42;rl'ndjolninc buildings, nnd Btronms of wnter K'tfl ,i?from thom wero thrown upon tbo lire from nil ff j'- w iHides. But tho flro hnd sprond throughout tho ,. - M

building, and mndo n stubborn resistance for JV;) g ltwo hours. Thocontonts of tho building wero , ;nt pJ 8

ruined, nud tho building itsolf wns greatly 7 .;, i, Adamaged. The second nnd third floors crashed ,a f'J 3

down at D o'clock, with tho rear of tho fourth LvJj", ill Illoor on top of them. Tho steam and smoko f ii. (I

from tho d and thon water-soake- d i M ipaper was donso ond suffocating, ovon nt a V, ,5uconsiderable dlbtnnco from tho lire Tho tire- - I; 3Smon hnd desperuto work getting nround in It, .' Mi S.knnd did not escupe without injury. John F. ,, ' tr'Hlgglnsof Hook and Ladder Company No. B ,i ffell from n ladder and broko his leg. Charlos J!r ?l' MWornor. u llromun, of 787 Ninth nvonue cut his ' .?, fflright hnnd severely on tho stnirwny. ijI gl

Cornell, lllnghnin A Co. loso 120,000: insured, j" siJ MBenedict t Valentino, $50,000 on stock and 'A3 M5,00 on fixtures and mnchinery: partially in- - ? -' ffif

surod. MlllenACo.. 148 Worth street bedding; ,)W. Vimanufacturers, $5.tK)0dumngo by water. Mark jj

it Co.. hardware, und D. Kahnwellor, manufac- - LI'ljturor of llfo preservers, 140 Worth street. S ;tr "M$10,000 damago by wnter. Donaldson Broth- - P. Viors. $12,000 damago by flro and wntor. VJU ."

No oue nttompts to nccount for the origin of l ("' mthe fire A lighted clear stub In the baBement 't,' it tlof tho building might havo stnrtod a flro In tbo 'i n i

paper, which would havo smouldorod tnrough ' m "iithe night, but with theloponlngof the doors ol c,i Kltho building In tho morning would hnvo quick- - '4 vi hioned Into iiblazo. There was n$250.OOO flro on 7. fv?tho samo ten years ago. I.JM. ijJM

somo or tho ragamuffins who hang about tho "A', tiBqunro nllego that thoy saw smoke coming out '' k Iundor tlio iron stops of the building early in (,' CSthe night nnd polntod It out to a pollcoman. Ii7l St Mv, ho said It was stoam, not smoko, and paid no I tv v--further attontlon to it i i !i ;,( -

Btschurgcs In the Nary Tnrd. , AW'Jl

During tho past wdok moro than 500 of tbo ' --'! I'M 'Iemergency men, who were uken on la the nary yard a t 'jj Ikfen weeks before election, and whose duties consisted rf Y Vl Ifor the most part In housing coal and hauling timber for i 3 flthe new cmler ilalne. hare been discharged, and 00

't y. yi 'U

or.vsimoreof them are to go In aboot a week. Tbera ," 'li r flIs nothing unuiual In these discharges. The employment 2'i wl Hof u large additional force for a temporary period was , Tj f)rrnuililereil necessary by secretary Whitney, and new j M iUthat there la no further need of their serrlces the men 'Xli l amimust 1.0. Many of them, however, felt very bitter yl h'A iaTiaguln.t the Democratic managers whom they aeeuseot ?K t Bbreaking their tirnmises, which they say U liii flheld out tho hopo of permanent employment. 1(

r tr w )

Pollcemnn O'Connor With Aasanlt. 'K ft' flBrowor Bonjamin R. Caswoll of SIS East , k ffilB

Tweuty fourth street says that Policeman John O'Oon- - i'f'7 WifBnor of the Tnent) second precinct, without prorcea- - hi tiaHtlon, struck him several times In the face on election f7 !jtfday. knocking him down and discoloring hla eye. ';' H ifo I'onnnr says thai rsswell acted In a disorderly man li AY'llnTaTItier lu the vfcinliy of the polling blace at Second ay, ,, ; IVitHenue and Tuent) fifth street, where O'Connor was en ', i VtloTSaTailutr. O'Connor renionitrateil with Caswell and Caa. . ' U I' lliTsalwell struck at him, whereupon the policeman dsfsnded Anl&TsmTihimself with his flsts. In the Yorkvllle Court yesterday .' '. J rlinTsaiO'Connor was he!d In (' hall. (!- -'

f"i'iThe Mothrrorilie Abandoned Child Aapeara. (, ' j'iJIHTho mother of the baby which James and '' ,7,lJ!jH

Cecilia tluetena are alleged to have abandoned In the "inlilLalwoods, near ICTth street and Newcomb's road, ta Uar j 'yf jHrileu McUee. She appeared as complainant agalaat I )! IjfBCaetens and his wife when they were arralruedjyester. ' ' ? ItaaB1ay at l'.seclarkeL Her story waathatshe hadcoms jTtiBfrnin thehouili and had tried In Tain to place her - !)glllmate child In an Inititu'lon. Then Oaetens told her Obi JjaeTlthat a man nameilVV atklns would take the child fnrWand ,;i( HbbtIshelurn-dlh- e baby over to tiaetens at once. Tbo prls- - ,' ! Boucrs were held wlihoutballforexatninaUonto-morrovr- , (i JH

' H HThe I'nrade lu Brooklyn. ' , ' SIbBThe pnrado ot the Republican clubs in Brook JiUJ 6fH

Irn to morrow night In celebration of their victory wilt ji'ij'j -' IHbe under Orand Marshal John VV. Jones, who expeota ta S W omalhave more than 20.101 men In line Tin formation will "lit !'. llaaihe on streets bordering the City Hall, and the Una of 1, j tMmarch will lie through Kicks and Henry streets to Mon, J. it "aTsalIsgue, to Clinton, to rcheruierhorn street, to Hanson lil H aTsalPlace, to drrene avenue, to Cumberland street, to La, V h'JaaTsTIlaveite avenue, ta lledford avenue to the fountain. i '" H'asalwhere the reriewlngatand is to he placed. j ' It'TnHWllllnr: to I.el Homebody JMse dump Now, ) ' I H

Ktovo Brodlo was at Richard K. Fox's of- - ''Millflee jesterday, Ills muic'es was somewhat tender, IandhewalkedstHllylncomequencsof buJun-- from the '!I'ouehkeepsle trldge. r ; ""

"Where wilt you Jump nejtr" a reporter asksd. !, 'naaH"Excusa me, I am througb wlthbrUie ltuablax.aa 1)bHUaat vinut my last HCMUUltokta." !&)jijH