Prpd I Tai Atp1 I Da · 2017. 12. 15. · e un- I j VOL LINO 195 NEW YORK THURSDAY MARCH 13 1884...

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e un- I j VOL LINO 195 NEW YORK THURSDAY MARCH 13 1884 PRICE TWO CENTS I THOUSANDS GONE WITH HIM rE MANHATTAN MCACIt RAILWAY COIANr JIBES A CLEUK I Two TeatV Prnflli rwoua Mr o H Pet UrtaaHI Handeai Haklte at tlptow- nokr I Taklea on C alary of SltOO A treat Hurry and s OnillUd Overcoat Tho Monhattnn Beach Railway Company notified the Stock Exchange yesterday that certain of Its stock certificates representing a total of 475 share wore Invalid having been Irregularly or fraudulently Iisued In explain- ing ¬ the matter tho counsel company lid On Friday lut I began an examination of the affairs of the company Tho oomlanTholdl ft certain amount of Its own tra ury and one of tho first books that I took up WU the stock lodger TAo figures in the ledger of the stock In the treuurydltl not agree with the amount that Is hold by the com- pany ¬ and spoke to the transfer clerk of the discrepancy Ha replied that the account had tot been completed I told him he had no business to leave It that way and to write the account up at on 0 He said he would do so As soon as my back was turned ho put on his bat and lef thn oflloo and we have not seen him Ills name Is J H Fullerton and be had been In tho employ of the company abut four years ho did not come back durlnl the After- noon ¬ we suspected was wrong and began an examination of the stock books We found that ho had Issued tho crtOcate men- tioned ¬ In our the Btook Exchange to fictitious persons or In fictitious names had signed the power of attorney or assignment upon the back of the certificates for the reputed- and fictitious owners witnessed signatures which gave the whole proceeding Lbs appear- ance ¬ 01 regularity and sold the certificates through certain brokers In the street The I certificate Issuod In this way now outstand- ing ¬ are A Nos 1316 1U70 and 936 for 100 shares each Nos 8H7 669 and 10i for 6 shares each and No 808 for 25 Wo also found tha he had been Issuing I treasury stock In manner described for two rear nnd that the aggregated abut Is 2000 shares All of the cer tiaoatosi abut those named have however been returned to tho ofllce and transferred to other names than the original fictitious ones and to persons who exist At the prevailing prices for the stock Ful ¬ lerton must have obtained about 45000 by his operations It was comparatively easy for him to obtain the signatures of tho officers of the company to the certificates that ho appropri- ated ¬ by running one of them In at a time In a batch of certificates Issued In making transfers After they bad passed through tho hands of the brokers who sold them for him they became to nil Intents and purposes a good delivery on the Stock Exchange under Its rule which provides that a member endorsing a stock certlflcato guarantees Its genuineness 80 fur as the company Is concerned there has been no overissue of stock and those who have guaranteed the certificates will under the rul- ing ¬ referred to have to stand the loss Fullerton also had charge of tho payment of the watchmen and other emploecl of tho com- pany ¬ during thowlntor on day ho left received a certified cheek for U2UI the amount of his pay rolls VIH have learned that when ho loft our ofllco he went directly to the American Exchange National Bank and drew the money He was In such a hurry to get- away that he loft hil overcoat In the oflleo An oDlcer of company Interrupted to Sa that be would give just 1150 for tho the man whom the overcoat fitted Members of tho Stock Exchange conversant- with the Intricacies of stock transfers ex- pressed ¬ the opinion that a very nice point might bo raised ni to who was liable for the improper Issue Is said that the certificates- were originally soll by half a dozen brokers at different One that was exhibited yesterday was guaranteed by Wm P Humbert Fullerton Is described as abut 35 years of ago of slight build and courteous manners His employers feared thru ho might develop consumption It IB understood that Flnkertons Detective Agency Is on the lookout- for him He was well known in certain resorts tup town end so fur UK eon bo learned spent the number of his evenings at card tables Eater of his In speaking of him saul that he first mot him abut Ilx years ago wbenhe was accustomed Iln ft wellknown sporting resort at a of poker for 300 and lJuO table stakes Ho used to froquent a wellknown ganiblinghouaenn- the west side of town where he bucked the tiger 11 If possessed of unlimited re- sources ¬ have since learned said the referred to that his salary was Why he apparently had more Entleman In his clothes every night 1 have to sit in a game of poker for twnn tyfour consecutive hours Ho was a very quiet person never drank and would never accept- an invitation to to out with the winners for a little fun about town Ills reply l in- variably ¬ was No I am going home and to bod seven months ago ha rus elected mem ¬ Abut the London Club in West Twuntynlnth Street and used to visit it two or three even- Ings each week He played baccarat and poker there chiefly tho former I should say that h- oP 3000 In on his playing in tho club a rule ho was lucky so far as I ever saw any of his operatIons No ono seemed to know much about him and I supposed he was well todo business man down town He was rarely Without several hundred dollars and used to cash checks for others regardless of any knowledge of them Ho 1a at the club on Thursday night last tho before he left He ran short nfjfunds and gave two checks for each They woro drawn on E O Fox 10 S Wal street Tho holders wanted the tho club to endorse them which be declined to do at first but did subsequently at the urgent request of Fullerton Today the endorser paid them and he also has made an ffldavlt that be will endorse no more It was rumored UD town last night that Ful ¬ lorton had committed suicide but no ground for the rumor could be discovered None o- fteJollllho associated with him knew him persisted in travelling alone Ha lived at 210 West Fifteenth street Noth- ing ¬ was known of him at that number last night except that ho had not been soon since Friday He leaves a wife and child A SHOT AT hEft UKART Tke Attempt at Suicide Mr ovllU SIcia- Faeklonnbl Is a Hoarding Uonte Miss Mary E Sinclair anil John L Lardy occupants of the fashionable boarding house at Ninth avenue and Twentythird street beard the report of a pistol followed- by 1 womans scream at 7 oclock last ventng Tho sounds appeared to come from the room on the third floor front of Mrs lllchard L Neville the wife of one of the editors of tho llrraM and formerly Mr James OorJon Bennetts private secretary There they found Mrs Novlllo groaning upon her Ied A small revolver was by her side Ulopd flowed over her lingers from a wound Immedi- ately ¬ below her heart Dr 0 1 E Gilbert who resides opposite was summoned Ho said that tho young woman had few chances of Sergeant Lonsdale found recovery room full of bud ¬ ers th ounl why she ¬ tempted suicide Hho turned her face to tho wall and made no reply He then told her that Ibe would be taken to the hospital She said not go wi will make you comfortable there said the Bergeint I do nt wish to be mado comfortable We trying to save your life sold Mrs Duchardt the landlady I wish to die Bhe consented to allow herself to be taken auletly to the New York Hospital when told do so she would b arrested I sue refused to Mrs Duchardt says that Mrs Neville came to the house a week ago yesterday from Port Chester where she had been living with her mother Mrs L0 Shaw Mrs Neville said she was living apart from her husband but was pot legally separated Mrs Duchardt said that she supposed that Mrs Neville had shot herself because of domestic trouble Mr Neville had not been to see his wife since she came to the house Hhe told Sergeant Lonsdilo pbs was 22 years of age Bhe Is a very pretty onde with regular features and blue eyes DeilruellT Tmad la MUalailaplB- TARXVILLB Miss March 12A destructive Stifle paiMd through Ibis county yesterday tvinlng- It court waif rom noulliweit ta northill about lie of th Canton Abede sail Nhvlil flsIlrod- aboul twtv mibe her It followed the rail roi4 closely for Ibout eight fliieS de truyliig Umbe s oln dow bOlo 101 br AI r mil mlleifrnm here every building wu blown and aeveral famlllea irs left deitlluta Otilan Qllltlple aa uoo frInln bid vr7 bullillng ownt fMm V grown daughter wai fatally hurl surly alllha bulltliig 01 EdwIn Montgonmrya plaea were deitroyvd A Ir Qrelrwu luitantly killed by lalhag llmbera Tba Agrlciilturil and Mechanical Colt rr ClarkTllle- aa aa damaged In Hie talent ot f aitlniaUd tki COlo I IIIIW il 1 MR BPR1NOEH OIYES STATISTICS He Say that Ik Oaaanion Talk has Tariff Only Taxed Inxartce le Oaatnaan Congressman William 1 Bprlnpor spk In Brooklyn last night on their Wages He said Government can help tho laborer by remov- ing ¬ oppressive taxation by stopping oMola peculation by regulating commerce abolishing the special privileges of the few When A tax Is laid on any article tho price Is Increased The people pay If tax Is laid on blankets and the Increase In price Inures to the benefit of the mnknr of blankets that Increase Is paid by all who uso blankets antI thus the many users are robbed to pay ono class The actual operation of tho tariff on wages Is shown i In boots ant In cotton goods In 1872 91000 hands made 829 pairs of sloe each and received UG3 each for the In 1880 111000 hands made 1129 pairs each and repolved only 3H7 for the years pay In 1870 135000 hands produced 2640 pounds of cotton goods each and received 238 each for theyeareworkIn 0150hlndsprodueAd 3600 pounds of goods each for the years work improved processes and growth of knowledge had Increased the power of Individual production but the Indi- vidual ¬ wages had been decreased in ono case nnd tU In the other 10 The protective tarif on boots and shoos was 33 per and on cotton aoll and under this system tho capitalist to his capital while tho employee had had hi- swlffcutownlk that tho tariff laws taxed I luxuries was gammon Mr Hnrlngor said Woollen goods of cheap grade four ounces to the yard are taxed 110 per The fine grades which only thl rich cnt afford are taxed 58 per cent pay 60 pot Cheap woollen dress goods are taxed 09 >cent cent whlloflnegoods ueyond the reach of the poor are taxed only 43 pot cent These goods before tbe war were taxed 19 per cent If the transatlantic steamers formed a mo- nopoly ¬ and put up freights to fifty per ad valorem on al Importations there cent nlhowl yet would protect tho American manufacturer competition as much as does the 60 per cent tariff Why cheapen freight I If the tariff I Is to bo raised The Mexican railroad which was to cheapen transportation between the two countries would hove been of no avail If the Mexican reciprocity treaty had not boon confirmed ELOPINQ rriTIZ AN EVANHELIST The HVIfe of a ftfaaifele O Merekant Fri veiled upon to Desert ker nnar MANSFIELD 0 March 12 Benjamin F Hottlnger a merchant tailor of this city made known today that his wife decamped on Fri ¬ day last to join Ansee M Roper at Falrmount- Ind Roper i Is 1 travelling revivalist belonging to that set styling themselves the Come Ou- ter ¬ and became acquainted with Mrs Het tlngor sIn religious meeting InRucyrus Roper came to Mansfield several times and aforar always stopped with the hus- band ¬ suspected nothing until at the last visit of the evangelist the latter took occasion to say that the marriage relation between Hettlngor and his wife was n farce because at the time 01 her marriage fifteen years ego she had a bUHbnntlYlnl from whom she was not disputed this point and unceremoniously caused the evangelistic take his doparturi at the same thnlluL111 his suspicions aroused tions existing between lope and his wife A week later Mrs to Attica Ohio- to visit relatives and while thoro was con- stantly ¬ In communication with Roper who had returned to Indiana and who besought her to leave hor husband and come to him Ills per- suasion ¬ finally availed and In response to a telegram from him on Friday last bh11nl her to come to him Immediately she During hor stay in Attica her husband b came convinced that all was not right and went to Attica His wife got on the samo train from which ho alighted bound for Falrmount Hettlnger I la 45 years of ago and his wife Is five years younger They were married at Ohio In 18C8 she at that tlmo be ¬ Hlorlburi widow lloporv formerly a law- yer but has latterly become an evangelist Ho has a wife In tairmount AN AnrKRTISINO BCUKXB ONLY Tfco Soenllrd Offer of m S1OOOO Prim for the llauUionaeat Wiiman la America PHILADELPHIA March 12Charlc H Day circus agent In n voluminous deposition flied in tho ofllco of tho Irothonotary of tho Common Pleas Courts today afllrmod the common suspicion that tho socalled offer of a prize of 10000 by Circus Manager Forepaugh- to tho handsomest woman In America was an advertising dodge Mr Day is about to leave tho city and his deposition was taken for use In tho coming trial of Louise Montagues suit- to recover tho alleged prize In his affidavit Mr Day en ft- Loulte tlintngtia called on me at my hotel with a I let- ter I ft Introduction frol Double Newcombe Ih1 that the withed to ma about the Jilul io lull to far at the Slouungoc dint U an advertising aclietne I Mie aniwertdt 1 thought I a much I told l her however that I thought I cmiil prevail on Mr Fore paughto give I her a nice lalary Mild toM her that the would only hare to ride In proreulon She sihd to tee the Icttirea of tltotc who I had already entered reF the prize hut I declined to lot nir look them Attrrward we met In I Ihe pretenca of M- rorrpaugh tt she wanted 1 5I li a week I told her I thought the lalary ahould lie about S73 She was Ing- Ing at tlm ilrand Central Theatre sod laid that aha thought idle could do butter than that In her profeulon rill It SIS hM Mr Forepaugh Ill mike up the dlderence In Ilia aale lit photograph An engagement wa agreed upon at that rate The beauty wanted whit stie called a contract In how her friend that he hit taken the prOc Forepaugh refuted to algn any piper to that effect hecauie ai lie atd ha might die Sod It might make trouble SIX CRIMINALS BSCAVK FROM AIL 0cc Found Dead Two Cpr sod Hasgid aid Oa of tk Paranera Killed SANTA FE March 12Whlo exorcising In the jail yard In yesterday Kit Joy Mike Loo Frank Tnggart Carlos Chavez Chas Spencer and George Cleveland a negro six of the most desporato criminals of the Boutn west foil on tho two guards from whom they took revolvers and keys with which they un ¬ locked their shackles Thoy then went to the office of the jai rot a supply of RrnS and walklug Into street 1 livery fttnblo mounted and rodo away A posse of citizens woro soon In hot pursuit and when live miles out came upon the body of Cleve- land ¬ riddled with bulot Further on the band was overtaken pitched battle en- sued ¬ Lee and Taggart were captured but the others escapod Joseph Laffers one of the QOSSO wnl killed Leo and Taggart were dragged n tree on the roadside and strung up The party then returned to town carry- ing ¬ the three bodies Lee Taggart Joy and Cleveland robbed a Southern Paclflo train on Nov 24 killing Engineer Webster Chavez murdered a Chinaman and had been sentenced to bo hanged bjionoer was horse thief and murderer NEW JERSEY Toirxanif ELECTIONS not Caaleala In la of Ike Ooantlca Oltl- aaaa Ticket KUattd la lllaoaaflaU Thirteen tickets were voted for In the town election at Bloomneld i K J on Tiictdar They were the remit of the bolt mado by many Republicans against Ib- renomlnatlonotmcn whom they hid got tired of acelag In office the principal nomination were the ticket called the Republican citizens ticket the Democratl- cltheeni ticket Ihe party tlckei the reiutar Republican tlckttand the Democratic ticket got out by both Demo- crat ¬ citizenticket and Republican Tin other tickets r styled Edward F Farrand inept Township Cloth wai opposed by Edwin A Rtyner the nominee of tha Demo- cratic anti Ultlzoni tlckett I Joteph K Oakea Kepubll can Assessor for fifteen pairs was probably defeated bi- Htanfnrtl Farrand Chose I Freeholder I William Cad mile Ret was opposed by John Sherman Rep lOot lector Alexander Marr llndlhad no opnoiltlon for re- election Only lieu the tickets could be counted on Tueadar night Yesterday Iha count waa comple Tile citizen ticket was 1010 ar a large 1 ccitt ill tlte case of tlin Clerkship to which K Farrand wai elected Eight hundred and leventy Mvin ballots wera Cast The more Imoortant Union county downside ofllcaa were carried I by lIla Democrat and tha hoard of Chosen Freeholderi now Hand 10 Democrats to 7 Pc PuMlcant I Tha Uemiicrat carried Linden I township AttlieeUctlonln Monmouth county lh collie Demo- cratic ¬ ticket wa electid In Ocean township with the ax- crptlon of Chotan Fratholdar I The republican nude a clean sweep In Neptune township The new Hoard of Chosen Freeholder sheds U Democrat to 4 Hipubl CI majority of tin office of Printton township were carried by th Democrat The Heputllcane carried tha Boar of Freeholder I Paitalc 11 county by a majority of Twenlvtwo Democrat and tour Rapubllcani were elected FreeliOlJeri for Stitwx county Nearly all the utter once are ailed by Democrat- In Horn county tile Republican retain control of the Board of Freiholdin Wrecked OfDal a k- Aanunt PARK Match 12The crew of Lie Having Station I at Deal dlicoverad a several mllra from shore last night Upon visiting lit wreck they found II la b I twomailed acbeutiero about Don lun burden Th hull was under water sod Iba aims t veesci l uuia set ki tMMMIueO LITTLE PINT POT ROBBERS CAFT WALSH AND UH BAND Of NINK AND XKY FlAK OLDS All Mauled In nr a Uarlaaj Mldalgkt Theft of Tai c peeekea af Ik ISaaC at TeBeraon Market Canri Tkalr Lair Peter Oelrlohs a grocer who sleeps above his store at the southeast corner of Tenth avenue and Twentyfifth street was awakened- by the yelping of his dog at 1 oclock yesterday morning He hastily dressed himself and went down stairs The store window facing Twentyfifth street was smabed and fourteen cans of tomatoes wero Mr Oelrlohs called Policeman Michael Con ¬ nor who gave an alarm rap that brought 1 roundsman and two other polcmal Tho policemen saw three smal brl walk- ing ¬ rapidly down avenue Tho boys broke Into a run when the police- men walked toward thorn They wore caught and proved to bo Michael Lynch aged 9 of 414 West Twentysixth street Samuel Bradley aged 12 of 503 West Twentyfifth street and Thomas Walsh of 502 West Twenty sixth street They were accused of the rob- bery ¬ Walsh and Bradley assumed adellant air and said they know nothing about I Lynch cried and confessed that ho Walsh Bradley Henry Winters aged 9 of 304 Tonth avenue Matthew J Brady aged 11 of 21 Tenth ave- nue ¬ and Thomas Illckey aged of 502 West Twentysixth street had planned and com- mitted ¬ the crime Winters llrady anti Hlckoy were arrested In their beds and with tho others were taken to the Twentieth Street sta- tion ¬ They exhibited much bravado Their motnor manifested no emotion when thoy wee away Jefferson Market yesterday each urchin told a different story of his connection with tho robbery Walsh the acknowledged leader of the gang said as he twirled his slouch hat on hil Sneer I alnt got nuthln tar say When cans was swiped wasnt dote Bradley wore a long ulster and resembled the Artful Dodger lie spoke with calm de- liberation ¬ Whan I got dert de glass was smashed an dats a1 I got say Mickey both of whose trousers were split to the knee stowing ono black and one red stocklnl all I was sent wid a can of to Chard In de tonment house- at 508 West Twentyfifth street Bhe gimme four fer de can cent who wore a tattered overcoat that extended to his ankles and whose face and hands were dirty said Walsh nnd- IrnllAv1 nr was Rradley gimme two to Mrs OBrien and sho gimme four cents for em I tuk em to hor In do mid- dle ¬ of do night Brndy was sullen and merely said In answer to all questions Iaint sayln nuthln No files dont light on mo an dont yer rergell Lynch the smallest and slll tearfully I wont fer beer for do boys any elslt work In do growler I didnt take On complaint of Mr Oelrlchs tho boys were hold for examination Meantime Policeman Connor arroatod Mrs Julia OBrien Mrs Mary Chard and Mrs Mary Illckey nil nf whom hive In the rickety tenement at 508 West Twenty street for receiving stolen goods The nth said In court that they hal purchased the tomatoes not thinking they stolen They also were held for examination Grocer Oolrlchs says the boys have bOn a nrror In his neighborhood for nearly n year Thoy Invariably worked together Two would stand opposite a store and two near tho en trance The two opposite would sIgnal theIr confederates when the grocer retired to tho rear of his store Then the confederates would run Into tho store pick whatever they could and run off 11 it A boy named Irving was ordered away from tho front of Mr Oelrlchss torn last July lie threatened to shoot Oelrlchs soil his wife lelrlclis had the boy committed for five diets for disorderly conduct Two week ago Ool ¬ rich purchased a dO7en boxes i which were deposited on tho sidewalk In front of his store Ono of the boxes was taken while he was carrying the other boxes In Ho suspected the Walsh gang Accompanied by n policeman he went tn a woodshed In tho yard of CIO West Twontrnuti street where the gang met nnd Kot his box Tim gang mot afterward behind tho high piles of core boxoi In front of the foundry In Wet Twontyllftn street opposite tholr old quarters- A reporter vlattud tho woodshed yesterday I Is a very small structure On one side wits a and at ono end a Illle armchair Illus- trated ¬ vapors contulnlnlstorles of bandits all cowboys IJrend tho and pasted on boards of the shed A small boy living near by Raid that blor the discovery of the box of soap shod the hoys had mnt thorn periodically CIt Walsh occupied tho big armchair neil the latest frontier sensations to his band Then thoro was talk about tbo prospects an onergotlQ boy would have In the untutored Wont The meetings wore usually concluded- with beer drinking When the boya disposed of tholr plunder yes- terday ¬ morning they sent Lynch to tho naloon at Twentysixth street and Tenth nvonuo HO Lynch says and be got a quart of beer Thor drank tho beer or worked tho growler ns Lynch put It In a largo brewery wagon In cst- Twnntynfth street Capt Walsh took the llrft drink and drank with a liberality befitting his rank Than the other bora who Nat on tho edge of the wagon with their logs dangling Inside slaked tholr thirst llrsdy Winters and Hlekey then wont home It is supposed that Walsh Bradlny and Lynch were about to visit the Htore a second time when thoy were caught Winters Ball that when a corner store was to be while the storekeeper was In two boys one at either end of a string would secrete themselves one near the front and the other near the rear of the store Th boy at the rear would pull the whoa ho noticed the proprietor engaged In tho hack par of the storl Then the other boy would and himself The police believe that the women who bought the tomatoes have been In league with the boys for some time and have encouraged them SENATOR SHARONS LOTS UAK1XO Mia mil In her DIr Sail De lcrlba- aIlw hs Aapraaek1 her SAN FIUNCISCO March 12ln tho Sharon divorce case today Frank Itodner cousin of the plaintiff testified that on the evening bo fore Sharons arrest In September last ho ac- companied ¬ Miss Hill to the Palace Hotel He heard her say to Sharon You know Senator- I am your lawful wedded wife although you have told some of thobost people In the city that- I am your mistress Tho Senator denied the accusation The wines swore that tho mar- riage ¬ contract same document he bad seen in December 1881 Miss Hill the plain- tiff ¬ then testified In her OVbhll tiho said- I Ant converted with the spring of 1880 lleeatd that he lied heard that I was a stock hap soil I would come to his office I lie would om Ib11 I give him S7SOO to invest 1- 0hvlald love to me when 1 vlilted I tie omce me to love him and that I would let I him ton ma ha would give u 10 a month sad a noun I told blm ha lb woman and that millions could riot hUl He said ha was only teailng me that he intel I better than soy one since his wife died Ha proposed a secret marriage but I relented the proposition Ha told me about a woman In Philadelphia I with I a baby of which aha said Sharon wa Ihe fatter He said that ha hid Mill money to the mother 10 top her making trouble H Must be alcaced for Lift Daniel F Gearon President of the Kips Bay Coterie entered a liquor saloon 310 East Thirtyninth street on the afternoon of Jan 14 Us was under the Influence of liquor and the barkeeper refuted to glva him a drink Ha became abutlve and the barkeeper ejected him He broke the windows with llnl and ran away The barkeeper Joieph Ityner > uuog- Bokemlan for a policemanbut ha returned without one A few mlnutea later Jearon reentered the aaloon fol- lowed by Intel I F Donovan William Bradley and other member of the Ripe Ray Coterie They armed them selves I with hlUn cues Donovan approached Hyner who n billiard table Io tha who went for the policeman ha saidsnd then struck Ryner twice upon the head with I the butt ola rue Itynera ikull was fractured anti ha died halt an hour later Uearon Donovan and Bradley were arreited and jointly Indicted for murder In the lint degree Donovan demanded a teparata trial In the Jentril Sessions A Jury convicted him yesterday of murder In the lecond degree tile l fire became athen lISts and he ank Into a chair He waa remanded for eeulence Under tha I die ha nun be sentenced to ill prison for life Mkot Tkrauak Ik Ear After Thomas Lowery employed In the press room of Harper A Brother left his work to go to Ml home In Flushing I lilt evening he wa confronted In Frankfort Street between OUR ant Pearl streets by Jan Kelly ol 407 Km Eighteenth street a fellow workman with whom he hot had a mliunderitandlng Kelly pointed a aeven barrelled revolver at hia head am aria The bullet patted through one ear and wa Slit teiud against kuii Lowery was taken to the Chambers Street lloipltal- wlitre lift wouuil It conmlered dangerous Kelly who wai arrested aaya he nred In lilt defence Lowery says the shot wai without provocation Tk tendllluu OUr Myar I New IUvix March 13 Oliver Dyer the Yale udent nlniuro olluoIln1 while sparring dot tn it the aililuo lait ailll Ilia ins- critical I cun hush Tim dunce ate afalai all rK Try RIGHT MtCfORJf BJL Maui CknagM I be Prpd U tk Oily cud CvajBtjr Mpirteetc ALDA March 12The Assembly special committee that has been Investigating various departments of the New York city and county government will Introduce eight illls Intended to carry out the reforms that It wi recommend These hula ro late to Sheriffs office One of them educes that officers tees onehalf and leaves tho pity of his deputies and clerks to bo flied by the 10nre of Apportionment Another rr pools passed last year which forbids the doubling up of prisoners In cells In tho flty Prlbon and abolishes arrests on processes for debt Two bills hav been drawn to regulate the tnglvtor s One puts that officer un a salary not exceeding 200 and the other irovldcs that the 1oard Apllrlonmonthal Ix tho salaries of shod hl olerl Al ar abl Two bills apply to the County Clerk One gives him a salary antI the other provides for he payment of nil clerks according to the Board of Apportioninentechedule TheCuntF Clerks salary is not to exceed 00 fixed at 5000 b eighth and last bill makes the Park Jloarl single headed and provides for the sin gin Commissioners appointment by the next Inyor The committee will call attention In stronl terms to the specific violations of law 11 point out offenders- Tho Hurrogates office wi escape with loss up the Surrogate bo- ng ¬ a salaried officer Tile practice of taking Nepal fees by clerks In that office however will severely censured It Is said that tho illli If passed will effect a saving of over 100000 a year to the city JiM FROM THR SAUS FLATS Mr sad Mrs Likely lest Ialer Be for her lilvnre Halt wn Drongkt Tho tria of Eliza Alkalyg suit for a limited from her husband Joseph Alkaly was continued yesterday Mr Alkaly testified with much letnl as t tho differences between him- self ¬ hlswle He denied that ho ever struck- or He had heard ho said that his wife before their marriage had been on inti nate terms with a young man named Gustavo Lehman and had spoken to her about It A few weeks after their marriage she said to him I am sorry Joe but thnt which you heard about me before our marriage In reference to- Lhman Is true did you do after the eonrUI wai over r A I tat I In the rocking rbalr I I QDid you give her your forglvenett t AYes sir Mr Alkaly further testified- One night wo retired about It I oclock I About 2 oclock- awtiko I to find I was alone On going down stun I f- ound my wife atatidlng In the polo bWII the win- dow s with a muff In her lienS of bracelet- and nLhl jewelry protruded When I entered the room au hela to cry Thief thief poltcel I acted tier it hii meant and said I would go right away to her papa and I began to drape myielf Hhn was In her night Irene Hhe lockedt sit I the door and took amy the keys aylng No no nont go to papa you nlwaye said you didnt want papa and manna to Interfere I raid I nun gu to > our papa anti ask htm what thli tens Tho witness fuither testified recording an ntorvlnw ho hind with his wlfo when sho had oturnod to liar mother and refused to llvo any ongor with him They were in tho parlor at liar mothers Tim witness said We net I lierlile each other on the sofa eating Jomout ot the ranii plate My motherinlaw I camo In nndI ex- clnliaid What I ciiune plate t You eat with Pitch a nan who doe not want to rite you any proof that he- nrfl > on t Who RhonM transfer to > ou everything be ror a notary > You push not go Stack 10111 My wife up from tile sofa ami left the days at- vruard thl suit wa brought againt ma UNflll inxtsKtr FOR rOY Anton Ifnbar Hmoea In Vista to at liana Next Dr to kla retkciuf Anton hither 21 years old a brother of lloliert Huber of 323 East Fiftythird street worked In Ktelnways piano facoI In Astoria In December he met Ida Wel1 party and fell In love with her He loft his brothers houso and secured rooms In 1 house aljacen to that in which she lived in vivonth Mrcut To his tnrlntaw ho ex- plained ¬ that ho left her house pnual It was nocHSftary for him to see Miss every day- On rlunuay he United his sisterinlaw and bado her goodhy Ilirewell ho said to her at parting I am Rolm on a long journey ant may never see you nialn Ho then wont away and hanged himself In dmonsons lumber raid at the foot of East Havontynlnth street whore his body was found yesleruay morning In a memorandum book uo bnl written Uornum I In memory of my departure Farewell On- a eliot nf love Lifters I tile Ma iciso or Mr Well at- Ahler brewery Whoever flouts this liaise drllverltto- Ma Wclm or Mr tic lea lucauu I lime lkIIY Ufa un account ot l ie unites ultli Ma Welt d to marry in The old man I to blame aree ell until we- 5e each other oialn My name I is Anton luhe Mr- luiplnen I In In Stelnwaj a Whoever find me- to street Mr WI Lvilngton avenue SKI Kat Kortyieventh Alilera Ilrowery Is In Lexington avenue and Fortysixth Street A titan named Wolss works there but till watchman last nluht could not till whore lie lived At 1411 East Fortyseventh street no person namod Weiss Is known COMPLAINING OF TUB AVIOlSY The Story Ikat A Fiitkerund Mother Brought to tk I ° ollee Tho yearold baby of James McClosky 420 West Thirtysecond street died at i oclock yesterday morning In tho afternoon the fa- ther ¬ stated t the pollco that Dr L Emmet Holt had refused to give a certificate of doath unless tho family would consent to an autopsy on the child Mr BlcOloslcy said further that the child hall been sick for several days On Friday last the Doctor said it had pneumonia but Mace its doath ho said It had had malaria aDi that tho autopsy was necessary to the rest of the people from dUraso The Doctor was said to have toll the parents not to spook of the autopsy Mrs McClosky said that the Doctor brought a can to thn house when ho made tho autopsy and carrlnd some part of the child away Hho has saved tho medicines given so that they may bo examined- Dr Holt when the complaint was stated to him said The child had pneumonia and then developed malaria I was a dispensary case The neighborhood very unhealthy I made no throat and did not refuse to give the certificate They wero perfectly willing I shoull make the examination Obituary- Mr Zadok H Jarman the retired member of the clothing Arm of Treadwell Jarman A Slot 373 end 377 llrondway died on Tuesday of consumption at tie homo811 State street Brooklyn SI year old Dr Fdward A McAuley year old died yesterday at tile raildcnea 0 Fifth street Wllllamiburgh after a hurt Illnei Beach Vanderpoo ot Newark died yeiterday I morning He was born In Newark In ISO lie was rich at no years of ege anti then retired from business He was after- ward iretldrnl of tha Morris and Riles Ktllrotd Direc- tor of the National Newark flunking Company and 1 Ireildent of tha Howard savings Inttltutlon Lnten- his conservative management the Howard weathered all financial norma smut met the demand of Itt dtpoi iCon when the otter talngt bank of tile city anponded payment Sir Vanderpool I was Mayor of Newark seT aral year iso trEdwaid A MoAuley a wellknown Brooklyn phy 111 died on Tnetday night at Ml lOUt street trunk Wrltley I proprietor nf the Victoria lintel was struck with apoplexy about 3 oclock jetterday afternoon and died four hours later without recovering contclouine ifs was formerly I connected with I the Rover Home unit Tremont Douse of Roiton In 1870- he opened the Victoria Hotel Ha left a widow I and three daughters Trouble Betvrcaa Mnaattr and Actor SYRACUSE March 12Tho John J Collins theatrical company arrived hers tItle mornlnllldr- nnImnt to play three nllhl for bellloBh- Klllhl of Pythlai city frederlck Ward tile Id1 Ration Pa on Saturday aloe arrived In reply to a deipatch front the manager of tha- Opvra Homo aiklng him 10 coma aunt nil hit engage munt according to advortliement Tub denpatch was ent without tha knowledge of Mr Colllim who on hall of II and that Weed was on lund refuted to or to permit him 10 play with the company AI though they are at tile lame hotel thny refnio to rccog nix each other John T Malone takeeWrdes part here Early Opt of the IIudaa Navigation on tho Hudson was opened a far aa roiiglikeiiila on Tuetday night I by the Idewhee Ale Daniel 8 MllUr which arrived at her Io Kranklm Street at midnight Ipl liar pouter said that ha left Iouthkeeptle at 3 oclock In the afternoon and rum as far as Newturgh through ice vary log tron three to twelve incites In tblrknex The Ice us- tnd within thirtyeight mites of New York with only the Miller track Iholii The iteamer doel net stoiC a icratch Iron ih I Ibis iteamer two trips beginning two weeks ago lait night but wee thin frozen II at 1 roughkeepila TFnelctkuraa NEWPORT March 12Mr Robert Bailey Wade- an Importer of New York and Mrs Ellen Bcrlveu Chaffea of New York arrived here yesterday accompanied by friends They oama brlo avail tbemielvei of Eked island I marriage apellcaUoa for a llcaaaa hewed thi brlda to bava bus dlrarcad Iba marriage t1 l WI TiE DYNAMITE TRAGEDY TRIAL or run Jkuur INDICTED rom ma MVRDXR I IAWLI Deeperadeee Atp1 I BUw Vf a fleas wk M Innalaa Infariacd Antiial TheseOs Maa Killed nd 0 CI- POUOJDt t < March 12Tho trial of Sonec Miller and George klulklns Indicted for the murder of Samuel Greener of Pawling on the night of Oct 61883 by throwing a dynamit cartridge In the house where he was today the ease against Griffin being called first About an hour was consumed In procuring a jury W A Lee opened the case for the prosecution detailing the history of the crime he said that awllng had long bean cursed with a gang of desperadoes and cattle thieves and that the prisoners wore a Dart of tho gang Ho traced their movements from two to three days before the commission the crime to Its perpetration and their wanderings a day or two afterward until they were arrested The witnesses for the prosecution were In the main occupants the house of Ann Elz Dibble where Crooner lived They seeing Griffin Mulklns and Miller running from the house after the explosion occurred and ono or two testified that Griffin had a gun In his hand Other testimony was to the effect that tho attack on tho house was premeditated by all three because of tho belief on their part that some of tho Inmates had Informed against iioin In relation to stealing cattle Stiller warned tho inmates that Orlmn was mad and that atuuvful crime wets going to be committed by him and urged his brother to go away Irom the house Groaner nntomortom statement showed that hp saw Orlflln In the yard of the house after tho explosion and that Griffin shot him through the open door Itvcordur Frank Ii Town was titan called to the stand and the District Attorney offered in evidence tho following confessions or state- ments ¬ made by Miller and Mulklns Accord- ing ¬ Mulklns s confusion the prisoners wore threatened with arrest for stealing hoof on In ¬ formation said to have been given by Ann Eliza Dibble and Jonah PIuco rhoy felt un ¬ easy about It They woro engaged In blasting rocks with dynamite cartridges and Iriflln proposed to fix tho Ulbblo folks by blowing up tholr house with ono of the cartridges Griflln got Heneca Miller to join them in tile plot and tho three agreed to meet at Hiram Urlttons barn on the evening of Oct G They mot at the ap- pointed ¬ time and alter taking several dinks of whiskey started down toward Ann house Mulklns continues- When we trot to Ann Kllzaa Grlflln fare Seneca the cartridge ami said t Will you throw her In t riciuca audi Yen Ill I In Seneca took the car trldffe Crlniii laid rorII you throw It lit tile nlndiiw- I mill tire I ithe Ilnlf opel the door I am Pure that Irimu handed dictate tile cartridge while we all Hood In the ma by the hiilllo 1CI took the cartridge anti lot liy the lit It anti while he itnoil there Uritlln and I walked to whvra I we could look at the door anti the window Seneca threw ito lluhted cartridge through the window Then the door opened slid Seneca ran up to where we were sOil ai the door opened John H fired the gun f heardI I thought two explosion rounding like a double barrel rut Roinff off Then I heard eoine one In tho boiler exclaim Ohnear i I Oh dear John ptild Damn you aonte ot you hero irotltl t We atarted turn and went up the road aunyt end then Into tile wooiti nut then on the turnpike main to Zeke Kuckley We Biayed titer a 11 having drank- lip the pint of ivhulcey on tile war then went to John COIr lly the time I 101 there I wn drunk I dont letting there The first thing t knew atler coming to I round mjielC II a lot just for day alone Ihl II Miller In his confession says that Griffin handed tho cartridge tohlm asking him to bout It a moment that as lie took It Griffin stopped back a few stops cocked his gun and so II with an oath You go and throw that In win- dow ¬ Grlflln told hun to push It clear under the bOIl but he only nuBhod It through the glass of the window He lit tim fuse bolero ho ptiHliud it through As soon ns ho pushed the cartridge through the window he ran back and nil threo ran toward tile little pond near the hon Ao they started to run stouio one came of the house anti opened It and it- iooksdasifheluut a gun In his hand Griffin turned right around anti lot toward tho man The nine did not spunk but shut the door quickly In a moment time cartridge exploded After argument Juduo llarnard decided not to admit the confessions In evidence John II GrIffin the prisonor was then called to tile stand by tho dofniiro He Hworo that he never hnd anything nualnst arty Inmate of tIllS linuHO 11 OlmlUoc that ho hud talked with Miller about throwing the car ¬ tridge nun tno nouso llo OntO no was in the matt when the cartridge wan thrown and that Miller told him Unit no hail thrown tho car ¬ tridge In tile window Ho added that neither on that night tier at any other time had ho any Intent iiujuiingMatnuulClrooneroranyothor- person lie said that when the explosion oc ¬ cured ho hoard a door of the house open nnd llrod toward the house because ho thought he hoard sonic ono else shoot Ho explained his movements that night by assert- ing ¬ that thoy wero nil three crazy drunk At the conclusion of hiM examination hn asked If ha might he allowed to say a word The Court nodded as ont anti ho said I hnvo told tithe thing just I I Wa I wa not out of tho highway at have toLl It just us It was Wlllliim I Thorn summed UP for the prison ¬ er nOI District Attorney Hackott for tho people liulkn liarnard charged the jury and thoy retired for deliberation They returned In a short time with a verdict of murder In tile first Uecreo Griffin wore a sullen look after the verdict was announced He told his coun- sel ¬ that no hadnt lean squarely dealt with by the jury that he did nut throw the cartridge and it was the cartridge that killed Greener Miller and Mulklns wll be tried tomorrow GEM GRAHAM ADrANCIXH The Allnok tohave lire Mud n Ik Bbl Cnmp HlIlHTkreak Todny SUAKIM March 12The British forces reached Baker Pashas position nt Berelba on Tuesday nt midnight At about 1 oclock the British started for the rebel camp They are advancing In squares The rebels are without Intrenchmonts Five thousand of the enemy have been sighted antI a battles is Imminent The rebels are twelve miles from Stmklm March 18220 A JfThe British have taken a position ono mile front the rebel camp The attack will bo made nt daybreak Dlutrceciente la the Brlllak CakUt LONDON March 12Mr Gladstones Indis- position ¬ li hollered to be of a diplomatic nature Tha Cabinet It li reid li not working harmoniously Mr lladilone dl iirreln with the decision announced hy the Marqul uI llsrtiigion Secretary ot Slate Our Wor that England must control the Red bea ports ot Egypt MunUitkoa Tlalla the Crnt do Purla PAnIC March 12 Marshal MaoMahon ex Pretldentaf the Republic today u lilted tha Comtede Paris at Cauiiti The many letters uhloh the Couita la receiving congratulating him upon hU recent atcapa from death hy dynamite are Causing much disquiet tha doe erument TrackIng the Dymsmlisee LONDON March ID Inspector Moser has re- turned ¬ to London from France Ha failed to nnd evi- dence that the Fenlane In rant make dynamite or were Implicated In the London explosion He believes that nine men un biard tie steamer Danube brought the dynamite to London TheSe men tha police are after Duel IB Portugal LISBON March 12A duel with swords was fouifht hero this noring between VUcoum htoberdq and Major Serpa Iinto The former received live wounds Ileut Hkodra DuukU- NKwronr AMieti March 11 Lieut John Rhodes ot the rcvenua cutter Samuel lester the hero of the Oay Head dlsailer ha today suffered a deep affliction In Iho Inca of hut young eon who died of pneumonia In North Mullion Conn Not lone ago he lost his wife and was itft with two moiherleM children At tha wreck of the Ulty of Columbui when be put the rope around tie body prior to jumping Into the surf In tIle effort to sate liven ha said to cart ilahrleUon Cap tain If anything happens to me see that my children are taken care of He ha only one left llrodlock In ke PCMH Murk Noiworz Yo March 19 A deadlock Is growing In the peanut market here out of dlinuta be tween buyers and teller the sellers claiming that the cheduloof weights and price laid down br the buyers It arliilrary and unjust A meetlnir waa beta today but no odliutment wit effected The aeller will appeal to the growers and In the mean time builnrn will be at a landtill The peanut trade li a large one here amount- Ing to million of dollars annually The Hoidcd WhIskey Bill WAShINGTON March 12 Representative Wlllli aaya that another effort to pin the bill extending the bonded whiskey period will be mid immediately after the pauagtof the Poll Offlce Appropriation bill lie says thin I is an understanding that no appropriation hilt will he reported to antagonize the measure until s vote on It hu been secured MOOO fur the feilUrV aug Murker Tue I4taten Islanil iia1iid Transit Comtnls item appointed dii appraice Ii value of property to be- laku fir lii railroisel 1151 3 eoterday it New Srijhtoft and showed 3lOJtiduwass talk saitoraattllaSbOf PRKS1DEXTTAZ CANDIDATES Payee LeaSe la Nvrlkar Oklwllk Haee4- kSedWht Mr F y- CLKTKIIAND Neya March 11Interviews with fifty leading Democrats ot northern Ohio during the past few days shows that twenty nine out ot the fifty favor Henry B Payne for resident Hancock Is second choice with ilandall third and McDonald Bayard Thar man Holman English and Flower In the order named Very little Is heard of Tllden In north- ern ¬ Ohio It being considered that ho will not be a candidate Senator lnyno was approached by a reporter today and asked whether he was a candidate lie said that he had no desire to parade his name before the public and that he had ex lausted every effort to convince the people that he had no political aspirations In regard to other candidates named ho said It would not do for mo at the present time to speak of some ot the gentlemen prominently mentioned its Unmocratln candidates for the Presidency Mr Tllden Mr Bayard and other gentlemen in the East are warm personal friends of mine and I could not express an opinion of them without doing myself an Injury Expressions and opinions made In these days are so changed mil misconstrued that It Is a dangerous thing to bo Interviewed KICKiNG AGAINST THE STAClinfK- P arlemlit Htpubllcane Opposed to Ie caring a legatloa for Arthur FmHDunon March 12A conference ot independent Itopubllcans was held here today which forty representative men were present The action of the County Committee directing that delegates to the National Convention be elected by the State delegates was denounced by all present and a committee was appointed to Inquire concerning Its regularity Kesolu ions wore offered condemning the action the County Committee ns a scheme to secure votes for Arthur and to mist cprosent tile sentiment of the people and calling on true Republicans to unite to dnloat the Echomo by fighting the committee on Its own ground anti electing del centos to tho State Convention who In turn will elect delegates to the Chicago Convention who will represent the majority The consid- eration ¬ of the resolutions was postponed A CITY TREASVRKR MISSING Dejected Over kU DefEat for a ThIrd Tr A Nkortoge In his Accounts ERIE March 12The mysterious disap- pearance ¬ of City Treasurer John Boyle and his deep melancholy over a recent defeat for a third term gave color to the theory that he had committed suicide which was strengthened by the fact that ho delivered to his wife his life Insurance policies with Instructions to pay up the assessments at once An Investigation of lloylos accounts Is In progress and up to this time n defalcation of about 7000 has boon dls- covorod On Saturday he received a chock for 1000 which be had cashed for his own benefit It ts not known whore Boyle Is When last seen ho was going toward the lake and his friends fear that he has committed suicide THEY FOVaitT llf A CAR Slut it Jury DecIdes that Sir Kelly Old Not Slur ci Mr a lIke The trial of the suit of Haydon 0 Kelly a- New Jersey lawyer against I erael it like the proprietor ot a gentleman furnlnhlng atore In Brooklyn for f1000 damage wa brought to a close In the City Court la the tatter city yesterday The occurrence on which the suit was based took I Into list September while tha plaintiff the defendant and his wife were pauengera In a Sutton avenue car Hrooklyn Mr Kelly said that he boarded the front plat furm and imoked a cigar Ha au n threw his cigar away end entered the car All the seats being occnpled tie took a position at the front door He lied only teen In the car a few minnIe when ha haul hIs attention arawn to a beautiful diamond ring worn by Mr Pike who continued to tare at thin until tIm car reached Fulton ferry Before he ciiuld get off the car Mr Pike jumped up In hie seat and without aword if explanation began to pummel him and aald I will teach > ou not to look at me Sir lik tried Ii jiisilfy the aseult on the groutid that the lilsintlO lied grossly insulted tile wife ty hitting lien will his feet and knee staring at tier and in other ways tryiiig to attracttier attentioi lie said he asked the SlalntllT to desist hide annoyance but that he refuted to He then puttied him aside No wltneifte were Introduced to support tie elite of the story Tbe Jury gave arerdlctof STOU In favor of Mr Kelly Job Swlnton to the liar Gonde Saloee- The Equality Association of Dry Goods Sales ¬ men gave an entertainment In Pythagoras Hall last evening to raise funds for the eitabllthmentof a library and reading room for the use ot all employee of dry goods flrms About OM pmoni were prtlent end a consIderable sun wa raised There was vocal end In itrumentat niutlo and dancing Mr John Swlnton toads an aildreo He saul that no clan of work demanded It rightly performed more mental activity or a greater knowledge of nature than that of a dry goods oterk The mechanic paid Mr Swlnton hasonly lila boss to please the imoe takes care to pleaie hi cuitomere but this dry good clerk most pleaie boss and cimtomer both He atand between the two antI mut aatlftyon the one hand petty meanneii and exaction end on the other hand grailng covetoufne I test that you are demanding that the utiops eliould close at U oclock In the veiling It seems In me that that is a u cry modest de mind that you ihotild not liars to work more than ten hour a day If the life of 3011 young men and women Is i to be nothing better than going to work at 7 > f In the lornlng slid leaving at TH at night anti finally dying at is or 40 year nf age then I say better universal cut clUe for such a hits ii no Mr a Da Slrcaltka Experience In Dog Kllllac A pot dog belonging to Mrs S De Slrentth a French lady residing tn Btnyveiaut place New Brighton was badly Injured by another dog Aa It appeared to utter Ha mlitrtii decided to end its inliory sad tired three shots at It from tier parlor window She then ordered her coachman Joseph Homer to kilt tho ani- mal which he did Mr K Hamilton a nextdoor neigh- bor of Mrs DeSircnlth regarded the affair as cruel and Inhuman and sent a note to Henry llergh The French Indy and her coachman were arrested and taken before Joillce Vaughn at Clifton Mrs Hamilton appeared aa a WitnesS agaInst then MM De Strenlth told the Court that the hail the dog killed tn put It out ot its misery She admitted that one of the shot she hIred had only wounded the animal Police Commloloner- Whlttemora said be knew Mrs Da fllrenlth to be an eitlmauio lady and kind to her pets Juttlca Vaughn dlimlntd the case Dr Craabr Octs Back his Eurlpld A young man In a long ulster wont up the steps of lie East Nlnetieuth street last evening with a book under hi arm unit asked a young man who opened the door If Dr Howard Uroiliy was In lie was told ha- Wat not I might as well leave this then ha said turning the hook over to a son of Dr Crosby X found It In the gutter on last Krlday night It was the copy of Euripides that Dr Crosby lost In hi fall gulmt up hi door ttep after leaving the Greek Club Tha young man said ha could not mate anything tIlt of It until Informed what kind of a book It was through the papers Rnanwnr Boys Arruled la Jcrear City The police of Jersey City arrested yesterday seven runaway boys Five of then named George Starker George Long Thomas Mack Alfred Francis and Jobn Mason were trim Morrlivlll Fa The other two were William McKenzie coed 14 years and Fred- erick Uoldlng aged 13 years They had walked all the way from Chamberabiirg near Trenton Ruth were armed with pistols and ammunition They said they wanted to conic to this city but had no money to pay ferriage They wilt b sent home Dcaarllac kar FBrlk flebud Carl Borgwelt who said he lived at C31 West Fortytecond street called at Polio Headquarters la- Jeraey City yellerday and said that hi wife who had lied three husbands before ha married her haul run away from him taking along all their portable posse alona Ha said that ha had heard that iha was In Jersey City and wasted the police to look for hr Pros rilktlaa ea IIkkai Ferrykant James Casey and Adolph Hnrtlng box moker while intoxicated on the ferryboat Weehawken yesterday fought itt tha way from the starting the boat from Sunday street tilt It arrived In llobokan They beat aeveral deck hands and many paiaaogara They were arrested and held on a dozes charges Bllaa Harvey Muck Better Miss Maggie Harvey who was gagged anti bound by tha mulatto Jesse Williams In this sloana BaU on Saturday evening w ai much better last night JOTTltitlX ABOUT TOWN President James D Vista ot the Marina Bank baa pall txv ouu for 91 and 31 Droadiray James Ward a deckhand on the ferryboat Kluihlag felt overboard yesterday and wu drowuad A despatch wee lent to Mlnlitir Astor at Ronse last night that hit mother wai entirely out ot danger The iteamer reported astor on Great Egg Harbor Sat wa this lifer of Bother Feint She tank yesterday morning The crew were rescued A bulldlnj sitU lot on Thirtyfourth atreet ona door from Para avenue ha been bought for S4UUOO by tier iieltui Vandirblll from Annie Real Nat Goodwin had in far recovered from thidliabtlng effects of hlicarlitincle last evening that ha was able U play In tho fourteenth Street Theatre Charles Zwtlnir 28 years old ot 444 East Twentieth street fell from a rtr and was run over In Second ave iiue near Twentieth atrict Itil evening lilt right leg was brakes Recorder myth reiteulay leutiuceil Joseph Panlixa who was convicted of extorting S3UI from Vlnceio Dragons a flute player In tna Casino orchestra to State prlKjn for four yean antI six months Time baat remedy for all pulmonary oornplalnU U f >T lulls Vaagh srsy fl33 gseiagdp TRAGEDY IN A THEATRE IWO nesiERADOKs SHOT DEAD tir- QVARRXL 4 TENT HAD PROVOKED Men wk Had La Da a Terri es lbs Toxa Border Shot lo Death Motors tkoy Had SalltDad theIr Thirst for Blood s SAN ANTONIO Tex March 11Bon Thomp- son ¬ anti Nlng Fisher shot each other dead 1 la- the Vaudeville Theatre last night Joe Poster who attempted to quiet the combatants WM shot In the log and will probably die of hem- orrhage Thompson and Fisher had bees drinking together and entered the theatre 1 Ik e company They mot Foster In the dress circle some words were exchanged and soon attar ward shots were exchanged The dress circle was quickly cleared tha occupants jumping I Into this parquet below and through the aids windows Into the street No onosooms to know who llrod the first shot or how many wore en tl Batted In the shooting Before the theatre WM fairly cleared of Its occupants fifteen hundred persons on the outsldo were clamoring at tha closed doors for admittance Soon after tha shooting Thompsons brother put in appear anco but WOK promptly arrested A jury was hastily Impanelled and It wu ascertained that Thompson had received four mortal wounds And that Fisher had been wounded tliroo tImes two of which would bays caused Instant death The remains ot the two victuals were tnkon In charge by a host of friends and the obsequies hnvo been ordered on the grandest scale regardless of expense The theatre where the affray occurred was the scene last year ot the killing by Thompson ot Jack Harris who wits tile proprietor of the place Fisher and Thompson wore probably C ho two most duHpcrato and widely known men In Texas They have each killed a largo num- ber ¬ of nion 5 The tragedy has boon placed In an entire now light by the testimony brought out by the Coroners jury The Impression that the shoot log was the result ot n private difficulty be- tween < the patties killed has been erased by tha proof that Thompson and Fisher wont to tha variety hall as friends drank as friends and remained together as friends up to the time that tIm shooting began Hilly Hlmms manager of the Vaudeville tcs- tillod that ho was up stairs when lion Thomp- son ¬ came up Thompson asked him to sit down and the conversation turned to the kill beg of Jack Harris Thompson said he never wanted to kill Jack Harris and pointing to Joo Foster said That is the 1 wanted to kill After some further talk the party rose to go down to the bar Thomp ¬ son stopped at the door and walking up to Foster offered him his hand Foster refused to shako hands The trouble grew won until the firing began Hlmms think that Fisher would have participated In the shooting but his pistol siihpedt 1 too far behind him and ho received his death wound before ho could get It front the scabbard JB Coy testified t am a special policeman on duty at the Vaudeville Theatre and v aa on duty there lat night- when I saw lien Thoupion killed I flrit aaar Thompson and rfihpr In lie bar room white they drank together and then went up Stairs I went up stairs and took a teat by Thompson Fisher anti SImm were on the other side Mien drinking as Fuller expciim the convention tinned on the klinnf of Jack harris but so low that I cnuM not nnderitand Mint wa tald soOn usher remarked tuThompioni Mr Thompson I thought we were going to baYs aomefun Dont talk about past time Thompson re- plied ¬ Dont tig unease s we will have it soon riihar then rose and call Well lets go down stairs The narty thin ioe anti Started toward tile door Fisher and I In front Ihompiton and Slinm behind When wa reached the door Thompion turned ant asked Billy aint that 1cc Frtter Blmm told him It wit and went to outer n lie came antI joined the party Tliomp on asked him to take a drink Foiter replied Toll know lien I would not drink Thompson then aald something about ahaktng handi and Foster replied that he did Slot want to shake hands with him Thomp- son ¬ said with an oath I am flied you woos drink nor shake hands with me I requested him to believe sail ha ordered ma to get ouS of his way laying Let mo settle this matter with Fa ten lie then called Foster a thief and Happed him wlih lilt left drawing a pistol with tile right hand I jumped and grabbed tile pistol on the cylinder and U- waidltcharceit I asked liltu todnltt mid be told me to turn the plitol Inoie We tcuttled from the door Ce the corner We all three fell Flther In the middle I tied hold ot this plitol alt thn tints Whet ha tall Thnmjuan releaied ida pistol I did not see who alas had pittola Joe Foster who was shot through the leg was unable to testify The limb was amnutated this evening and he will probably dl Th Coroners jury then brought in a verdict of death from pistol wounds inflicted by tha- handa of Wm Hlmms Jacob Coy and Joe Poe tor and that the killing was justifiable homl- cldo C Thompson possessed a wide reputation as ft nina killer Ho had frequently threatened ta take San Antonio and the San Antonio polio were determined he should not His des < porato ferocity when roused his fearless disregard of his own and other lives ana his fatal proficiency In the use of the revolver wore top well known to fail In acting as a warn Ing to the employees of a house whose former owner had boon killed name months ago Front the moment of his entrance to the theatre ho was a doomod tuna Fisher was the younger man but the greater desperado Ho was originally from Oollod county and his baptismal name was John King His murders were Innumerable Ha was for years the Captain ot the celebrated Breeton gang and in every town on the lUo Urando mi name was n terror It Is the Irony of fate that mon of such repu ¬ tation for personal prowess ns these two dee peradoes should have boon shot to death with not one lifo to render up in exchange for their own Foster was accidentally shot by one of his own party One Dusk Man re be Punished Mr August Blackman was bunkoed out of tV on this 3d of Starch Ho knew ha was being victim lied and under the pretence of going for more money went out of the place anti secured aid The result was the seizure of the entire ettabllthinent Including the layout Mr Blackman recovered hit money and its proprietor Win llntcliln wa locked up In default ot 93000 ball The prisoner wa Indicted and many delays Were put Into practice by his connel hoping to tire Mr Blackman out Via latter however was determined ta see It out and yesterday hail the latlifactlon of healing the bunko man plead guilty before Judge UUdinlaav Ill wilt be sentenced on Friday Fireman Klrcknvr Gets the Bennett MedaL The name of Fireman William B Kfrchner now of EngIne II was sent to time truiteel ot the Bas net medal fund yesterday by the Fire toinmliiloner as that nt tha propir person to receive the medal for 18ML On Planet 2tf of let year Klrchncr then a member of Engine 17 rcfcutrt Jane McCabe and lilt wife from a burning dnelllug at 134 EMrldge itreet Ha rescued tin at groat peril to bimielf and then with the woman Rian arm ha was obliged to lump an alley aeparatlaf 134 from IOU The medal will be praaented by O v- Cliviland In the jitua In Union iqnare on June 4 Jraal Waldroaa SisSy Clog Ham Andrew J Waldron father ot the giantess MloJeula Waldron who died on Tuesday mortlng la Buffalo received a telegram yellerday which said that the holy would reach nil house 01 Newell street Grata point this morning Mr Waldrona home li a until onatory frama eok tags on the rear of a lot and a It will be Impoulbl U take the bouly thera It will on Its arrival be placed In the Union Aventia Baptlet Church It will be Interred at New Kocbelie Joka D Ncnmuna Daughter Married Miss Louise Newman the daughter of WIs- klnikle John D Newman was married tail evening ii the Church ot the Holy Spirit fitxtyilxth street asS Madison avenue to Mr loionard J Men Tha Rev Robert Loony and the Ret Edmund Oullbert offlclatad Walter F Stratton was belt man There was no recap Ion The couple started Immediately a Southern loa it Tk Iliad OMc Frdletla fi Slightly colder fair weather northwesterly veering tu northeasterly winds SPARKS fSOX TUB TELKQRAFa Prince Blimarck has arrived In Berlin AttorneyQenaral OBrien U recovering 4 The MarquIs Tung hat arrived In London The Australian cricketers have started for England Mr Bennett Robb ot Rail Waverly N T couimltMl suicide by taking aconlla on Tuesday night The ahareholden of tie Suez Canal Company baTn- rattfled the convention between M da Leuefi and las Knglltn ihipownira- Tha Republican County Committee of Monroe coaatr decided lo held the District Convention to select del gate to the Ublcago Uonvintlon on April 9 In Hoc bettor Christopher Hammond of Albany ba sued Iha Dde Wars end hudson Canal Company for fJOODQ damagaa for the lose ot his arnie whUe In their employ Ha was run over near Admiral Worden who has ben at the point of death fur a long tint U greatly Improved and returned to bit collage In Newport last night from the Maiaa- ouuieltl General Hospital Garret r Servlii Secretary of tha Americas Aitroaoam kit Society dellvarrd his Illustrated lecture on Mires omy before llt students of Cornell University and alttI- IDI at Ithica last evening There was a complete overturn In the town election la Franklin M H on Tuiaday The town which had bn under Democratic ruts for nine years has again beeoas Republican by alarge majority Frank alias flat Harold who was formerly llotman In rhlladlphlaand who was recently arleafed for planning a great number ot ronbcrlei wlilcbwer- cominltlid i In that oily under hU direction wu cia vlctel yesterday The Edge Blevatad Railroad bill hu patted the M- chuietta aaaa Ugliltture II nominally permit tha- tructlon nndir certain reitrlctloni of elevated rail roads under Oleigs systeieSbrough any of iht towas or clttea of lie Stale Tha resignation by the hot Tliomu Talbot at Use Chairmanship anl membership ID Iha MaaaaebaaalM Stat Board at health Lunacy and Ckarlly bu accepted by the Government Kvorttt Taaay bl BttUt SM bela appeUta4 l M fill lbs vatascy r 1

Transcript of Prpd I Tai Atp1 I Da · 2017. 12. 15. · e un- I j VOL LINO 195 NEW YORK THURSDAY MARCH 13 1884...

Page 1: Prpd I Tai Atp1 I Da · 2017. 12. 15. · e un- I j VOL LINO 195 NEW YORK THURSDAY MARCH 13 1884 PRICE TWO CENTS THOUSANDS GONE WITH HIM rE MANHATTAN MCACIt RAILWAY COIANr JIBES A

e un-I

j

VOL LINO 195 NEW YORK THURSDAY MARCH 13 1884 PRICE TWO CENTSI

THOUSANDS GONE WITH HIM

rE MANHATTAN MCACIt RAILWAY

COIANr JIBES A CLEUKI

Two TeatV Prnflli rwoua Mr o H PetUrtaaHI Handeai Haklte at tlptow-

nokrI Taklea on C alary of SltOO

A treat Hurry and s OnillUd Overcoat

Tho Monhattnn Beach Railway Companynotified the Stock Exchange yesterday thatcertain of Its stock certificates representing atotal of 475 share wore Invalid having beenIrregularly or fraudulently Iisued In explain-ing

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the matter tho counsel company lidOn Friday lut I began an examination of

the affairs of the company Tho oomlanTholdlft certain amount of Its own traury and one of tho first books that I took upWU the stock lodger TAo figures in theledger of the stock In the treuurydltl not agreewith the amount that Is hold by the com-

pany¬

and spoke to the transfer clerk of thediscrepancy Ha replied that the account hadtot been completed I told him he had nobusiness to leave It that way and to write theaccount up at on0 He said he would do soAs soon as my back was turned ho put on hisbat and lefthn oflloo and we have not seenhim Ills name Is J H Fullerton andbe had been In tho employ of the company

abut four yearsho did not come back durlnl the After-

noon¬

we suspected was wrong andbegan an examination of the stock books Wefound that ho had Issued tho crtOcate men-tioned

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In our theBtook Exchange to fictitious personsor In fictitious names had signedthe power of attorney or assignmentupon the back of the certificates for the reputed-and fictitious owners witnessed signatureswhich gave the whole proceeding Lbs appear-ance

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01 regularity and sold the certificatesthrough certain brokers In the street The

I certificate Issuod In this way now outstand-ing

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are A Nos 1316 1U70 and 936 for100 shares each Nos 8H7 669 and 10i for 6shares each and No 808 for 25

Wo also found thahe had been IssuingI treasury stock In manner described for

two rear nnd that the aggregatedabut Is 2000 shares All of the certiaoatosi abut those named have howeverbeen returned to tho ofllce and transferred toother names than the original fictitious onesand to persons who exist

At the prevailing prices for the stock Ful ¬

lerton must have obtained about 45000 by hisoperations It was comparatively easy for himto obtain the signatures of tho officers of thecompany to the certificates that ho appropri-ated

¬by running one of them In at a time In a

batch of certificates Issued In makingtransfers After they bad passed through thohands of the brokers who sold them for himthey became to nil Intents and purposes agood delivery on the Stock Exchange under Itsrule which provides that a member endorsinga stock certlflcato guarantees Its genuineness80 fur as the company Is concerned there hasbeen no overissue of stock and those who haveguaranteed the certificates will under the rul-ing

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referred to have to stand the lossFullerton also had charge of tho payment of

the watchmen and other emploecl of tho com-pany

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during thowlntor on day ho leftreceived a certified cheek for U2UI the amountof his pay rolls VIH have learned thatwhen ho loft our ofllco he went directly to theAmerican Exchange National Bank and drewthe money He was In such a hurry to get-away that he loft hil overcoat In the oflleo

An oDlcer of company Interrupted to Sathat be would give just 1150 for thothe man whom the overcoat fitted

Members of tho Stock Exchange conversant-with the Intricacies of stock transfers ex-

pressed¬

the opinion that a very nice pointmight bo raised ni to who was liable for theimproper Issue Is said that the certificates-were originally soll by half a dozen brokersat different One that was exhibitedyesterday was guaranteed by Wm P Humbert

Fullerton Is described as abut 35 years ofago of slight build and courteousmanners His employers feared thru ho mightdevelop consumption It IB understood thatFlnkertons Detective Agency Is on the lookout-for him

He was well known in certain resorts tuptown end so fur UK eon bo learned spent the

number of his evenings at card tablesEater of his In speaking of him

saul that he first mot him abutIlx years ago wbenhe was accustomed Iln

ft wellknown sporting resort at a ofpoker for 300 and lJuO table stakes Ho usedto froquent a wellknown ganiblinghouaenn-the west side of town where he buckedthe tiger 11 If possessed of unlimited re-sources

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have since learned said thereferred to that his salary was

Why he apparently had moreEntlemanIn his clothes every night 1 haveto sit in a game of poker for twnn

tyfour consecutive hours Ho was a very quietperson never drank and would never accept-an invitation to to out with the winners fora little fun about town Ills replyl in-

variably¬

was No I am going home and to bodseven months ago ha rus elected mem ¬Abut the London Club in West Twuntynlnth

Street and used to visit it two or three even-Ings each week He played baccarat and pokerthere chiefly tho former I should say that h-oP 3000 In on his playing in tho club

a rule ho was lucky so far as I ever sawany of his operatIons No ono seemed to knowmuch about him and I supposed he was welltodo business man down town He was rarelyWithout several hundred dollars and usedto cash checks for others regardless of anyknowledge of them Ho 1a at the clubon Thursday night last tho before he leftHe ran short nfjfunds and gave two checks for

each They woro drawn on E O Fox10S Wal street Tho holders wanted thetho club to endorse them which be

declined to do at first but did subsequently atthe urgent request of Fullerton Today theendorser paid them and he also has made anffldavlt that be will endorse no more

It was rumored UD town last night that Ful ¬

lorton had committed suicide but no groundfor the rumor could be discovered None o-

fteJollllho associated with him knew himpersisted in travelling alone

Ha lived at 210 West Fifteenth street Noth-ing

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was known of him at that number lastnight except that ho had not been soon sinceFriday He leaves a wife and child

A SHOT AT hEft UKART

Tke Attempt at Suicide Mr ovllU SIcia-FaeklonnblIs a Hoarding Uonte

Miss Mary E Sinclair anil John L Lardyoccupants of the fashionable boarding houseat Ninth avenue and Twentythird streetbeard the report of a pistol followed-by 1 womans scream at 7 oclock last

ventng Tho sounds appeared to comefrom the room on the third floor front ofMrs lllchard L Neville the wife of one of theeditors of tho llrraM and formerly Mr JamesOorJon Bennetts private secretary Therethey found Mrs Novlllo groaning upon herIed A small revolver was by her side Ulopdflowed over her lingers from a wound Immedi-ately

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below her heartDr 01 E Gilbert who resides opposite was

summoned Ho said that tho young woman hadfew chances of Sergeant Lonsdalefound recovery room full of bud ¬

ers th ounl why she ¬

tempted suicide Hho turned her face to thowall and made no reply He then told her thatIbe would be taken to the hospital She said

not gowiwill make you comfortable there saidthe Bergeint

I do ntwish to be mado comfortableWe trying to save your life sold Mrs

Duchardt the landladyI wish to die

Bhe consented to allow herself to be takenauletly to the New York Hospital when told

do soshe would barrested I sue refused to

Mrs Duchardt says that Mrs Neville came tothe house a week ago yesterday from PortChester where she had been living with hermother Mrs L 0 Shaw Mrs Neville said shewas living apart from her husband but waspot legally separated Mrs Duchardt saidthat she supposed that Mrs Neville had shotherself because of domestic trouble MrNeville had not been to see his wife since shecame to the house Hhe told Sergeant Lonsdilopbs was 22 years of age Bhe Is a very pretty

onde with regular features and blue eyes

DeilruellT Tmad la MUalailaplB-

TARXVILLB Miss March 12A destructiveStifle paiMd through Ibis county yesterday tvinlng-

It court waif rom noulliweit ta northill aboutlie of th Canton Abede sail Nhvlil flsIlrod-aboul twtv mibe her It followed the railroi4 closely for Ibout eight fliieS de truyliig Umbesoln dow bOlo 101 br AI r milmlleifrnm here every building wu blown andaeveral famlllea irs left deitlluta Otilan Qllltlple aa

uoo frInln bid vr7 bullillng ownt fMmV grown daughter wai fatally hurl

surly alllha bulltliig 01 EdwIn Montgonmrya plaeawere deitroyvd A Ir Qrelrwu luitantly killed bylalhag llmbera

Tba Agrlciilturil and Mechanical Colt rr ClarkTllle-aa aa damaged In Hie talent ot f aitlniaUd

tki COlo IIIIIW

il1

MR BPR1NOEH OIYES STATISTICS

He Say that Ik Oaaanion Talk has TariffOnly Taxed Inxartce le Oaatnaan

Congressman William 1 Bprlnpor spkIn Brooklyn last night ontheir Wages He said

Government can help tho laborer by remov-ing

¬

oppressive taxation by stopping oMolapeculation by regulating commerceabolishing the special privileges of thefew When A tax Is laid on anyarticle tho price Is Increased Thepeople pay If tax Is laid on blankets and theIncrease In price Inures to the benefit of themnknr of blankets that Increase Is paid by allwho uso blankets antI thus the many users arerobbed to pay ono class

The actual operation of tho tariff on wagesIs shown iIn boots ant In cotton goods In 187291000 hands made 829 pairs of sloe each andreceived UG3 each for the In 1880111000 hands made 1129 pairs each andrepolved only 3H7 for the years pay In1870 135000 hands produced 2640 pounds ofcotton goods each and received 238 each fortheyeareworkIn 0150hlndsprodueAd3600 pounds of goodseach for the years work improved processesand growth of knowledge had Increased thepower of Individual production but the Indi-vidual

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wages had been decreased inono case nnd tU In the other 10Theprotective tarif on boots and shooswas 33 per and on cotton aoll andunder this system tho capitalist tohis capital while tho employee had had hi-swlffcutownlk that tho tariff laws taxedIluxuries was gammon Mr Hnrlngor said

Woollen goods of cheap grade four ounces tothe yard are taxed 110 per Thefine grades which only thl rich cntaffordare taxed 58 per cent pay 60 potCheap woollen dress goods are taxed 09 >centcent whlloflnegoods ueyond the reach of thepoor are taxed only 43 pot cent These goodsbefore tbe war were taxed 19 per cent

If the transatlantic steamers formed a mo-nopoly

¬

and put up freights to fifty perad valorem on alImportations there centnlhowl yet would protect tho Americanmanufacturer competition as much as doesthe 60 per cent tariff Why cheapen freight IIfthe tariff IIs to bo raised The Mexican railroadwhich was to cheapen transportation betweenthe two countries would hove been of no availIf the Mexican reciprocity treaty had not boonconfirmed

ELOPINQ rriTIZ AN EVANHELIST

The HVIfe of a ftfaaifele O Merekant Friveiled upon to Desert ker nnar

MANSFIELD 0 March 12 Benjamin FHottlnger a merchant tailor of this city madeknown today that his wife decamped on Fri ¬

day last to join Ansee M Roper at Falrmount-Ind Roper iIs 1 travelling revivalist belongingto that set styling themselves the Come Ou-

ter¬

and became acquainted with Mrs Hettlngor sIn religious meeting InRucyrus Ropercame to Mansfield several times andaforaralways stopped with the hus-band

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suspected nothing until at the last visitof the evangelist the latter took occasionto say that the marriage relation betweenHettlngor and his wife was n farce becauseat the time 01 her marriage fifteen years egoshe had a bUHbnntlYlnl from whom she wasnot disputed this pointand unceremoniously caused the evangelistictake his doparturi at the same thnlluL111his suspicions arousedtions existing between lopeand his wife Aweek later Mrs to Attica Ohio-to visit relatives and while thoro was con-stantly

¬

In communication with Roper who hadreturned to Indiana and who besought her toleave hor husband and come to him Ills per-suasion

¬

finally availed and In response to atelegram from him on Friday last bh11nl herto come to him Immediately she

During hor stay in Attica her husband bcame convinced that all was not right andwent to Attica His wife got on the samo trainfrom which ho alighted bound for FalrmountHettlnger Ila 45 years of ago and his wife Isfive years younger They were married at

Ohio In 18C8 she at that tlmo be ¬Hlorlburiwidow lloporv formerly a law-yer but has latterly become an evangelist Hohas a wife In tairmount

AN AnrKRTISINO BCUKXB ONLY

Tfco Soenllrd Offer of m S1OOOO Prim forthe llauUionaeat Wiiman la America

PHILADELPHIA March 12Charlc HDay circus agent In n voluminous depositionflied in tho ofllco of tho Irothonotary of thoCommon Pleas Courts today afllrmod thecommon suspicion that tho socalled offer of aprize of 10000 by Circus Manager Forepaugh-to tho handsomest woman In America was anadvertising dodge Mr Day is about to leavetho city and his deposition was taken for useIn tho coming trial of Louise Montagues suit-to recover tho alleged prize In his affidavitMr Day en ft-

Loulte tlintngtia called on me at my hotel with aI

let-

terI ft Introduction frol Double Newcombe Ih1that the withed to ma about the Jilul iolull to far at the Slouungoc dint U an advertisingaclietneI Mie aniwertdt 1 thoughtI a much I toldlher however that I thought I cmiil prevail on Mr Forepaughto giveI her a nice lalary Mild toM her that thewould only hare to ride In proreulon She sihdto tee the Icttirea of tltotc who Ihad already enteredreF the prize hut I declined to lot nir look

them Attrrward we met In IIhe pretenca of M-rorrpaughtt she wanted 1 5Ili a week I told her I

thought the lalary ahould lie about S73 She was Ing-

Ing at tlm ilrand Central Theatre sod laid that ahathought idle could do butter than that In her profeulon

rill It SIS hM Mr Forepaugh Ill mike up thedlderence In Ilia aale lit photograph An engagementwa agreed upon at that rate The beauty wanted whitstie called a contract In how her friend that he hittaken the prOc Forepaugh refuted to algn any piperto that effect hecauie ai lie atd ha might die Sod Itmight make trouble

SIX CRIMINALS BSCAVK FROM AIL0cc Found Dead Two Cpr sod Hasgid

aid Oa of tk Paranera KilledSANTA FE March 12Whlo exorcising In

the jail yard In yesterday Kit JoyMike Loo Frank Tnggart Carlos Chavez ChasSpencer and George Cleveland a negro six ofthe most desporato criminals of the Boutnwest foil on tho two guards from whom theytook revolvers and keys with which they un ¬

locked their shackles Thoy then went to theoffice of the jai rot a supply of RrnS andwalklug Into street 1 liveryfttnblo mounted and rodo away A posse ofcitizens woro soon In hot pursuit and whenlive miles out came upon the body of Cleve-land

¬

riddled with bulot Further on theband was overtaken pitched battle en-sued

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Lee and Taggart were captured but theothers escapod Joseph Laffers one of theQOSSO wnl killed Leo and Taggart weredragged n tree on the roadside and strungup The party then returned to town carry-ing

¬

the three bodies Lee Taggart Joy andCleveland robbed a Southern Paclflo train onNov 24 killing Engineer Webster Chavezmurdered a Chinaman and had been sentencedto bo hanged bjionoer was horse thief andmurderer

NEW JERSEY Toirxanif ELECTIONS

not Caaleala In la of Ike Ooantlca Oltl-aaaa Ticket KUattd la lllaoaaflaU

Thirteen tickets were voted for In the townelection at Bloomneld iK J on Tiictdar They were theremit of the bolt mado by many Republicans against Ib-

renomlnatlonotmcn whom they hid got tired of acelagIn office the principal nomination were the ticketcalled the Republican citizens ticket the Democratl-cltheeni ticket Ihe party tlckei the reiutar Republicantlckttand the Democratic ticket got out by both Demo-crat

¬

citizenticketand Republican Tin other tickets r styled

Edward F Farrand inept Township Cloth waiopposed by Edwin A Rtyner the nominee of tha Demo-cratic anti Ultlzoni tlckettI Joteph K Oakea Kepubllcan Assessor for fifteen pairs was probably defeated bi-

Htanfnrtl Farrand ChoseI FreeholderI William Cadmile Ret was opposed by John Sherman Rep lOotlector Alexander Marr llndlhad no opnoiltlon for re-

election Only lieu the tickets could be counted onTueadar night Yesterday Iha count waa compleTile citizen ticket was 1010ar a large 1ccitt ill tlte case of tlin Clerkship to which K

Farrand wai elected Eight hundred and leventy Mvinballots wera Cast

The more Imoortant Union county downside ofllcaawere carried Iby lIla Democrat and tha hoard ofChosen Freeholderi now Hand 10 Democrats to 7 PcPuMlcantI Tha Uemiicrat carried LindenI township

AttlieeUctlonln Monmouth county lh collie Demo-

cratic¬

ticket wa electid In Ocean township with the ax-

crptlon of Chotan FratholdarI The republican nude aclean sweep In Neptune township The new Hoard ofChosen Freeholder sheds U Democrat to 4 HipublCI majority of tin office of Printton township werecarried by th Democrat

The Heputllcane carried tha Boar of Freeholder I

Paitalc11county by a majority of

Twenlvtwo Democrat and tour Rapubllcani wereelected FreeliOlJeri for Stitwx county Nearly all theutter once are ailed by Democrat-

In Horn county tile Republican retain control of theBoard of Freiholdin

Wrecked OfDal a k-

Aanunt PARK Match 12The crew of LieHaving Station I at Deal dlicoverad aseveral mllra from shore last night Upon visiting litwreck they found II la b I twomailed acbeutieroabout Don lunburden Th hull was under water sodIba aims t veescil uuia set ki tMMMIueO

LITTLE PINT POT ROBBERS

CAFT WALSH AND UH BAND Of NINKAND XKY FlAK OLDS

All Mauled In nra Uarlaaj Mldalgkt Theftof Tai c peeekea af Ik ISaaC atTeBeraon Market Canri Tkalr Lair

Peter Oelrlohs a grocer who sleeps abovehis store at the southeast corner of Tenthavenue and Twentyfifth street was awakened-by the yelping of his dog at 1 oclock yesterdaymorning He hastily dressed himself andwent down stairs The store window facingTwentyfifth street was smabedand fourteencans of tomatoes wero

Mr Oelrlohs called Policeman Michael Con ¬

nor who gave an alarm rap that brought 1roundsman and two other polcmal Thopolicemen saw three smal brl walk-ing

¬

rapidly down avenue Thoboys broke Into a run when the police-

men walked toward thorn They worecaught and proved to bo Michael Lynch aged9 of 414 West Twentysixth street SamuelBradley aged 12 of 503 West Twentyfifthstreet and Thomas Walsh of 502 West Twentysixth street They were accused of the rob-bery

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Walsh and Bradley assumed adellant airand said they know nothing about I Lynchcried and confessed that ho Walsh BradleyHenry Winters aged 9 of 304 Tonth avenueMatthew J Brady aged 11 of 21Tenth ave-nue

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and Thomas Illckey aged of 502 WestTwentysixth street had planned and com-mitted

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the crime Winters llrady anti Hlckoywere arrested In their beds and with thoothers were taken to the Twentieth Street sta-tion

¬

They exhibited much bravado Theirmotnor manifested no emotion when thoywee away

Jefferson Market yesterday each urchintold a different story of his connection with thorobbery Walsh the acknowledged leader ofthe gang said as he twirled his slouch hat onhil Sneer I alnt got nuthln tar say When

cans was swiped wasnt doteBradley wore a long ulster and resembled

the Artful Dodger lie spoke with calm de-liberation

¬

Whan I got dert de glass wassmashed an dats a1 I got say

Mickey both of whose trousers weresplit to the knee stowing ono black and onered stocklnl all I was sent wid a can of to

Chard In de tonment house-at 508 West Twentyfifth street Bhe gimmefour fer de cancent who wore a tattered overcoat thatextended to his ankles and whose face andhands were dirty said Walsh nnd-

IrnllAv1 nr was Rradley gimme twoto Mrs OBrien and sho gimme

four cents for em I tuk em to hor In do mid-dle

¬

of do nightBrndy was sullen and merely said In answer

to all questions Iaint sayln nuthln Nofiles dont light on mo an dont yer rergellLynch the smallest andslll tearfully I wont fer beer for do boys

any elslt work In do growler I didnt takeOn complaint of Mr Oelrlchs tho boys were

hold for examination Meantime PolicemanConnor arroatod Mrs Julia OBrien Mrs MaryChard and Mrs Mary Illckey nil nf whom hiveIn the rickety tenement at 508 West Twenty

street for receiving stolen goods Thenth said In court that they hal purchasedthe tomatoes not thinking theystolen They also were held for examination

Grocer Oolrlchs says the boys have bOn anrror In his neighborhood for nearly n year

Thoy Invariably worked together Two wouldstand opposite a store and two near tho entrance The two opposite would sIgnal theIrconfederates when the grocer retired to thorear of his store Then the confederateswould run Into tho store pickwhatever they could and run off 11it A boy named Irving was ordered awayfrom tho front of Mr Oelrlchss torn last Julylie threatened to shoot Oelrlchs soil his wifelelrlclis had the boy committed for five dietsfor disorderly conduct Two weekago Ool ¬

rich purchased a dO7en boxes i whichwere deposited on tho sidewalk In front ofhis store Ono of the boxes was takenwhile he was carrying the other boxes In Hosuspected the Walsh gang Accompanied by npoliceman he went tn a woodshed In tho yardof CIO West Twontrnuti street where thegang met nnd Kot his box Tim gang motafterward behind tho high piles of core boxoiIn front of the foundry In Wet Twontyllftnstreet opposite tholr old quarters-

A reporter vlattud tho woodshed yesterday

IIs a very small structure On one side wits aand at ono end a Illle armchair Illus-

trated¬

vapors contulnlnlstorles of bandits allcowboys IJrend thoand pasted on boards of the shedA small boy living near by Raid that blorthe discovery of the box of soapshod the hoys had mnt thorn periodicallyCIt Walsh occupied tho big armchair neil

the latest frontier sensations to his bandThen thoro was talk about tbo prospects anonergotlQ boy would have In the untutoredWont The meetings wore usually concluded-with beer drinking

When the boya disposed of tholr plunder yes-terday

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morning they sent Lynch to tho naloonat Twentysixth street and Tenth nvonuo HO

Lynch says and be got a quart of beer Thordrank tho beer or worked tho growler nsLynch put It In a largo brewery wagon In cst-Twnntynfth street Capt Walsh took the llrftdrink and drank with a liberality befitting hisrank Than the other bora who Nat on tho edge ofthe wagon with their logs dangling Insideslaked tholr thirst llrsdy Winters andHlekey then wont home It is supposed thatWalsh Bradlny and Lynch were about to visitthe Htore a second time when thoy were caught

Winters Ball that when a corner store wasto be while the storekeeper was Intwo boys one at either end of a stringwould secrete themselves one near the frontand the other near the rear of thestore Th boy at the rear would pullthe whoa ho noticed the proprietorengaged In tho hack parof the storl Thenthe other boy would and himselfThe police believe that the women who boughtthe tomatoes have been In league with the boysfor some time and have encouraged them

SENATOR SHARONS LOTS UAK1XO

Mia mil In her DIr Sail De lcrlba-aIlw hs Aapraaek1 her

SAN FIUNCISCO March 12ln tho Sharondivorce case today Frank Itodner cousin ofthe plaintiff testified that on the evening bofore Sharons arrest In September last ho ac-

companied¬

Miss Hill to the Palace Hotel Heheard her say to Sharon You know Senator-I am your lawful wedded wife although youhave told some of thobost people In the city that-I am your mistress Tho Senator denied theaccusation The wines swore that tho mar-riage

¬

contract same document he badseen in December 1881 Miss Hill the plain-tiff

¬

then testified In her OVbhll tiho said-I Ant converted with the spring of

1880 lleeatd that he lied heard that I was a stockhap soil I would come to his office Ilie would

om Ib11 I give him S7SOO to invest 1-0hvlald love to me when 1 vliltedI tie omceme to love him and that I would letIhim ton ma ha would give u 10 a

month sad a noun I told blm ha lbwoman and that millions could riot hUlHe said ha was only teailng me that he intel I betterthan soy one since his wife died Ha proposed a secretmarriage but I relented the proposition Ha told meabout a woman In PhiladelphiaI withI a baby of whichaha said Sharon wa Ihe fatter He said that ha hidMill money to the mother 10 top her making trouble

H Must be alcaced for LiftDaniel F Gearon President of the Kips Bay

Coterie entered a liquor saloon 310 East Thirtyninthstreet on the afternoon of Jan 14 Us was under theInfluence of liquor and the barkeeper refuted to glvahim a drink Ha became abutlve and the barkeeperejected him He broke the windows with llnl andran away The barkeeper Joieph Ityner > uuog-Bokemlan for a policemanbut ha returned without one

A few mlnutea later Jearon reentered the aaloon fol-

lowed by Intel IF Donovan William Bradley and othermember of the Ripe Ray Coterie They armed themselvesI with hlUncues Donovan approached Hynerwho n billiard tableIo tha who went for the policemanha saidsnd then struck Ryner twice upon the head withI

the butt ola rue Itynera ikull was fractured anti hadied halt an hour later

Uearon Donovan and Bradley were arreited andjointly Indicted for murder In the lint degree Donovandemanded a teparata trial In the Jentril Sessions AJury convicted him yesterday of murder In the leconddegree tilel fire became athen lISts and he ank Into achair He waa remanded for eeulence Under tha Idie ha nun be sentenced to ill prison for life

Mkot Tkrauak Ik EarAfter Thomas Lowery employed In the press

room of Harper A Brother left his work to go to Mlhome In Flushing Ililt evening he wa confronted InFrankfort Street between OUR ant Pearl streets byJan Kelly ol 407 Km Eighteenth street a fellowworkman with whom he hot had a mliunderitandlngKelly pointed a aeven barrelled revolver at hia head amaria The bullet patted through one ear and wa Slitteiud against kuii

Lowery was taken to the Chambers Street lloipltal-wlitre lift wouuil It conmlered dangerous Kelly whowai arrested aaya he nred In lilt defence Lowery saysthe shot wai without provocation

Tk tendllluu OUr Myar

I New IUvix March 13 Oliver Dyer the Yaleudent nlniuro olluoIln1while sparring dottnit the aililuo lait ailll Ilia ins-criticalI cun hush Tim dunce ate afalai all rK Try

RIGHT MtCfORJf BJLMaui CknagM I be Prpd U tk Oily

cud CvajBtjr MpirteetcALDA March 12The Assembly special

committee that has been Investigating variousdepartments of the New York city andcounty government will Introduce eightillls Intended to carry out the reformsthat It wi recommend These hula rolate to Sheriffs office One of themeduces that officers tees onehalf and leavestho pity of his deputies and clerks to bo fliedby the 10nre of Apportionment Another rrpools passed last year which forbidsthe doubling up of prisoners In cells In thoflty Prlbon and abolishes arrests on processesfor debt

Two bills hav been drawn to regulate thetnglvtor s One puts that officer un asalary not exceeding 200 and the otherirovldcs that the 1oard ApllrlonmonthalIx tho salaries ofshod hlolerl Al arabl

Two bills apply to the County Clerk Onegives him a salary antI the other provides forhe payment of nil clerks according to theBoard of Apportioninentechedule TheCuntFClerks salary is not to exceed 00fixed at 5000b eighth and last bill makes the ParkJloarl single headed and provides for the singin Commissioners appointment by the nextInyor

The committee will call attention In stronlterms to the specific violations of law 11point out offenders-Tho Hurrogates office wi escape with loss

up the Surrogate bo-ng

¬

a salaried officer Tile practice of takingNepal fees by clerks In that office howeverwill severely censured It Is said that thoillli If passed will effect a saving of over100000 a year to the city

JiM FROM THR SAUS FLATS

Mr sad Mrs Likely lest Ialer Befor her lilvnre Halt wn Drongkt

Tho triaof Eliza Alkalyg suit for a limitedfrom her husband Joseph Alkaly was

continued yesterday Mr Alkaly testified withmuch letnl as ttho differences between him-

self¬

hlswle He denied that ho ever struck-or He had heard ho said that hiswife before their marriage had been on intinate terms with a young man named GustavoLehman and had spoken to her about It Afew weeks after their marriage she said to him

I am sorry Joe but thnt which you heardabout me before our marriage In reference to-

Lhman Is truedid you do after the eonrUI wai over r

A I tat IIn the rocking rbalrI I

QDid you give her your forglvenett t AYes sirMr Alkaly further testified-One night wo retired about ItI oclockI About 2 oclock-awtikoI to find I was alone On going down stunI f-

ound my wife atatidlng In the polo bWII the win-dow s with a muff In her lienS of bracelet-and nLhljewelry protruded When I entered the roomau hela to cry Thief thief poltcel I acted tierit hii meant and said I would go right away to herpapa and I began to drape myielf Hhn was In her night

Irene Hhe lockedt sitI the door and took amy the keysaylng No no nont go to papa you nlwaye said youdidnt want papa and manna to Interfere I raid Inun gu to > our papa anti ask htm what thli tens

Tho witness fuither testified recording anntorvlnw ho hind with his wlfo when sho hadoturnod to liar mother and refused to llvo anyongor with him They were in tho parlor at

liar mothers Tim witness saidWe net Ilierlile each other on the sofa eating Jomout ot

the ranii plate My motherinlawI camo In nndI ex-

clnliaid What I ciiune plate t You eat with Pitch anan who doe not want to rite you any proof that he-nrfl > on t Who RhonM transfer to > ou everything beror a notary > You push not go Stack 10111 My wife

up from tile sofa ami left the days at-vruard thl suit wa brought againt ma

UNflll inxtsKtr FOR rOYAnton Ifnbar Hmoea In Vista to at liana

Next Dr to kla retkciufAnton hither 21 years old a brother of

lloliert Huber of 323 East Fiftythird streetworked In Ktelnways piano facoI In AstoriaIn December he met Ida Wel1 party andfell In love with her He loft his brothershouso and secured rooms In 1 house aljacento that in which she lived invivonth Mrcut To his tnrlntaw ho ex-plained

¬

that ho left her house pnual It wasnocHSftary for him to see Miss every day-On rlunuay he United his sisterinlaw andbado her goodhy

Ilirewell ho said to her at parting Iam Rolm on a long journey ant may never seeyou nialn

Ho then wont away and hanged himself Indmonsons lumber raid at the foot of EastHavontynlnth street whore his body was foundyesleruay morning In a memorandum bookuo bnl written Uornum

I In memory of my departure Farewell On-a eliot nf love Lifters I tile Ma iciso or Mr Well at-Ahler brewery Whoever flouts this liaise drllverltto-Ma Wclm or Mr tic lea lucauu I lime lkIIY Ufa unaccount ot l ie unites ultli Ma Welt d tomarry in The old man I to blame aree ell until we-5e each other oialn My name Iis Anton luhe Mr-luiplnen IIn In Stelnwaj a Whoever find me-tostreet

Mr WI Lvilngton avenue SKI Kat Kortyieventh

Alilera Ilrowery Is In Lexington avenue andFortysixth Street A titan named Wolss worksthere but till watchman last nluht could nottill whore lie lived At 1411 East Fortyseventhstreet no person namod Weiss Is known

COMPLAINING OF TUB AVIOlSY

The Story Ikat A Fiitkerund Mother Broughtto tk I°ollee

Tho yearold baby of James McClosky 420West Thirtysecond street died at i oclockyesterday morning In tho afternoon the fa-

ther¬

stated t the pollco that Dr L EmmetHolt had refused to give a certificate ofdoath unless tho family would consent toan autopsy on the child Mr BlcOloslcysaid further that the child hall been sick forseveral days On Friday last the Doctor said ithad pneumonia but Mace its doath ho said Ithad had malaria aDi that tho autopsy wasnecessary to the rest of the peoplefrom dUraso The Doctor was said to have tollthe parents not to spook of the autopsy

Mrs McClosky said that the Doctor broughta can to thn house when ho made tho autopsyand carrlnd some part of the child away Hhohas saved tho medicines given so that theymay bo examined-

Dr Holt when the complaint was stated tohim said The child had pneumonia andthen developed malaria Iwas a dispensarycase The neighborhood very unhealthy Imade no throat and did not refuse to give thecertificate They wero perfectly willing I shoullmake the examination

Obituary-Mr Zadok H Jarman the retired member of

the clothing Arm of Treadwell Jarman A Slot 373 end377 llrondway died on Tuesday of consumption at tiehomo811State street Brooklyn SI year old

Dr Fdward A McAuley year old died yesterdayat tile raildcnea 0 Fifth street Wllllamiburgh after ahurt Illnei

Beach Vanderpoo ot Newark died yeiterdayI morningHe was born In Newark In ISO lie was rich at no yearsof ege anti then retired from business He was after-ward iretldrnl of tha Morris and Riles Ktllrotd Direc-tor of the National Newark flunking Company and1Ireildent of tha Howard savings Inttltutlon Lnten-his conservative management the Howard weatheredall financial norma smut met the demand of Itt dtpoiiCon when the otter talngt bank of tile city anpondedpayment Sir Vanderpool I was Mayor of Newark seTaral year isotrEdwaid A MoAuley a wellknown Brooklyn phy111 died on Tnetday night at Ml lOUt street

trunk WrltleyI proprietor nf the Victoria lintelwas struck with apoplexy about 3 oclock jetterdayafternoon and died four hours later without recoveringcontclouine ifs was formerlyI connected withI theRover Home unit Tremont Douse of Roiton In 1870-

he opened the Victoria Hotel Ha left a widowI and threedaughters

Trouble Betvrcaa Mnaattr and ActorSYRACUSE March 12Tho John J Collins

theatrical company arrived hers tItle mornlnllldr-nnImnt to play three nllhl for bellloBh-Klllhl of Pythlai city frederlck Ward

tile Id1Ration Pa on Saturday aloearrived In reply to a deipatch front the manager of tha-Opvra Homo aiklng him 10 coma aunt nil hit engagemunt according to advortliement Tub denpatch wasent without tha knowledge of Mr Colllim who on

hall of II and that Weed was on lund refuted toor to permit him 10 play with the company AI

though they are at tile lame hotel thny refnio to rccognix each other John T Malone takeeWrdes part here

Early Opt of the IIudaaNavigation on tho Hudson was opened afar

aa roiiglikeiiila on Tuetday night Iby the IdewheeAleDaniel 8 MllUr which arrived at her IoKranklm Street at midnight Ipl liar

pouter said that ha left Iouthkeeptle at 3 oclock In theafternoon and rum as far as Newturgh through ice varylog tron three to twelve incites In tblrknex The Ice us-tnd within thirtyeight mites of New York withonly the Miller track Iholii The iteamer doel netstoiC a icratch Iron ih I

Ibis iteamer two trips beginning two weeks agolait night but wee thin frozen II at1 roughkeepila

TFnelctkuraaNEWPORT March 12Mr Robert Bailey Wade-

an Importer of New York and Mrs Ellen Bcrlveu Chaffeaof New York arrived here yesterday accompanied byfriends They oama brlo avail tbemielvei of EkedislandI marriage apellcaUoa for a llcaaaahewed thi brlda to bava bus dlrarcad Iba marriage

t1 lWI

TiE DYNAMITE TRAGEDY

TRIAL or run Jkuur INDICTED romma MVRDXR IIAWLI

Deeperadeee Atp1 I BUw Vf a fleaswk M Innalaa Infariacd AntiialTheseOs Maa Killed nd 0 CI-

POUOJDtt <

March 12Tho trial of

Sonec Miller and Georgeklulklns Indicted for the murder of SamuelGreener of Pawling on the night of Oct 61883by throwing a dynamit cartridge In the housewhere he was today the easeagainst Griffin being called first About anhour was consumed In procuring a jury W ALee opened the case for the prosecutiondetailing the history of the crime he said thatawllng had long bean cursed with a gang ofdesperadoes and cattle thieves and that theprisoners wore a Dart of tho gang Ho tracedtheir movements from two to three days beforethe commission the crime to Its perpetrationand their wanderings a day or two afterwarduntil they were arrested

The witnesses for the prosecution were Inthe main occupants the house of Ann ElzDibble where Crooner lived Theyseeing Griffin Mulklns and Miller runningfrom the house after the explosion occurredand ono or two testified that Griffin had a gunIn his hand Other testimony was to the effectthat tho attack on tho house was premeditatedby all three because of tho belief on their partthat some of tho Inmates had Informed againstiioin In relation to stealing cattle Stillerwarned tho inmates that Orlmn was mad andthat atuuvful crime wets going to be committedby him and urged his brother to go away Iromthe house

Groaner nntomortom statement showedthat hp saw Orlflln In the yard of the houseafter tho explosion and that Griffin shot himthrough the open door

Itvcordur Frank Ii Town was titan called tothe stand and the District Attorney offered inevidence tho following confessions or state-ments

¬

made by Miller and Mulklns Accord-ing

¬

Mulklns s confusion the prisoners worethreatened with arrest for stealing hoof on In ¬

formation said to have been given by AnnEliza Dibble and Jonah PIuco rhoy felt un ¬

easy about It They woro engaged In blastingrocks with dynamite cartridges and Irifllnproposed to fix tho Ulbblo folks by blowing uptholr house with ono of the cartridges Grifllngot Heneca Miller to join them in tile plot andtho three agreed to meet at Hiram Urlttons barnon the evening of Oct G They mot at the ap-pointed

¬

time and alter taking several dinksof whiskey started down toward Annhouse Mulklns continues-

When we trot to Ann Kllzaa Grlflln fare Seneca thecartridge ami said t Will you throw her In t riciucaaudi Yen Ill IIn Seneca took the cartrldffe Crlniii laidrorIIyou throw It lit tile nlndiiw-II mill tire Iithe Ilnlf opel the door I am Pure thatIrimu handed dictate tile cartridge while we all Hood Inthe maby the hiilllo 1CI took the cartridge anti

lot liy the lit It anti while he itnoilthere Uritlln and I walked to whvraI we could look at thedoor anti the window Seneca threw ito lluhtedcartridge through the window Then the door openedslid Seneca ran up to where we were sOil ai the dooropened John H fired the gun f heard I I thought twoexplosion rounding like a double barrel rut Roinff offThen I heard eoine one In tho boiler exclaim Ohnear iI

Oh dear John ptild Damn you aonte ot you heroirotltlt We atarted turn and went up the road aunytend then Into tile wooiti nut then on the turnpike mainto Zeke Kuckley We Biayed titer a 11 having drank-lip the pint of ivhulcey on tile war then went toJohn COIr lly the time I101 there I wn drunk Idont letting there The first thing t knewatler coming to I round mjielC II a lot just for day

aloneIhl IIMiller In his confession says that Griffinhanded tho cartridge tohlm asking him to boutIt a moment that as lie took It Griffin stoppedback a few stops cocked his gun and soIIwithan oath You go and throw that In win-dow

¬

Grlflln told hun to push It clear underthe bOIl but he only nuBhod It through theglass of the window He lit tim fuse bolero hoptiHliud it through As soon ns ho pushed thecartridge through the window he ran back andnil threo ran toward tile little pond near thehon Ao they started to run stouio one came

of the house anti opened It and it-

iooksdasifheluut a gun In his hand Griffinturned right around anti lot toward tho manThe nine did not spunk but shut the doorquickly In a moment time cartridge exploded

After argument Juduo llarnard decided notto admit the confessions In evidence

John II GrIffin the prisonor was then calledto tile stand by tho dofniiro He Hworo that henever hnd anything nualnst arty Inmate of tIllSlinuHO 11 OlmlUoc that ho hud talked withMiller about throwing the car¬

tridge nun tno nouso llo OntO no was in thematt when the cartridge wan thrown and thatMiller told him Unit no hail thrown tho car ¬

tridge In tile window Ho added that neitheron that night tier at any other time had ho anyIntent iiujuiingMatnuulClrooneroranyothor-person lie said that when the explosion oc ¬

cured ho hoard a door of the house open nndllrod toward the house because ho

thought he hoard sonic ono else shoot Hoexplained his movements that night by assert-ing

¬

that thoy wero nil three crazy drunk Atthe conclusion of hiM examination hn asked Ifha might he allowed to say a word The Courtnodded as ont anti ho said

I hnvo told tithe thing just IIWa I wanot out of tho highway athave toLl It just us It was

Wlllliim I Thorn summed UP for the prison ¬

er nOI District Attorney Hackott for tho peopleliulkn liarnard charged the jury and

thoy retired for deliberation They returnedIn a short time with a verdict of murder In tilefirst Uecreo Griffin wore a sullen look afterthe verdict was announced He told his coun-sel

¬

that no hadnt lean squarely dealt with bythe jury that he did nut throw the cartridgeand it was the cartridge that killed GreenerMiller and Mulklns wll be tried tomorrow

GEM GRAHAM ADrANCIXH

The Allnok tohave lire Mud n Ik BblCnmp HlIlHTkreak Todny

SUAKIM March 12The British forcesreached Baker Pashas position nt Berelba onTuesday nt midnight At about 1 oclock theBritish started for the rebel camp They areadvancing In squares

The rebels are without Intrenchmonts Fivethousand of the enemy have been sighted antIa battles is Imminent The rebels are twelvemiles from Stmklm

March 18220 A JfThe British have takena position ono mile front the rebel camp Theattack will bo made nt daybreak

Dlutrceciente la the Brlllak CakUtLONDON March 12Mr Gladstones Indis-

position¬

li hollered to be of a diplomatic nature ThaCabinet It li reid li not working harmoniously Mrlladilone dl iirreln with the decision announced hy

the Marqul uI llsrtiigion Secretary ot Slate Our Worthat England must control the Red bea ports ot Egypt

MunUitkoa Tlalla the Crnt do PurlaPAnIC March 12 Marshal MaoMahon ex

Pretldentaf the Republic today u lilted tha ComtedeParis at Cauiiti The many letters uhloh the Couita lareceiving congratulating him upon hU recent atcapafrom death hy dynamite are Causing much disquiettha doe erument

TrackIng the DymsmliseeLONDON March ID Inspector Moser has re-

turned¬

to London from France Ha failed to nnd evi-

dence that the Fenlane In rant make dynamite or wereImplicated In the London explosion He believes thatnine men un biard tie steamer Danube brought thedynamite to London TheSe men tha police are after

Duel IB PortugalLISBON March 12A duel with swords was

fouifht hero this noring between VUcoum htoberdq andMajor Serpa Iinto The former received live wounds

Ileut Hkodra DuukU-NKwronr

AMietiMarch 11 Lieut John Rhodes ot

the rcvenua cutter Samuel lester the hero of the OayHead dlsailer ha today suffered a deep affliction InIho Inca of hut young eon who died of pneumonia InNorth Mullion Conn Not lone ago he lost his wifeand was itft with two moiherleM children At thawreck of the Ulty of Columbui when be put the ropearound tie body prior to jumping Into the surf In tIleeffort to sate liven ha said to cart ilahrleUon Captain If anything happens to me see that my childrenare taken care of He ha only one left

llrodlock In ke PCMH MurkNoiworz Yo March 19 A deadlock Is

growing In the peanut market here out of dlinuta between buyers and teller the sellers claiming that thecheduloof weights and price laid down br the buyersIt arliilrary and unjust A meetlnir waa beta today butno odliutment wit effected The aeller will appeal tothe growers and In the mean time builnrn will be at alandtill The peanut trade li a large one here amount-Ing to million of dollars annually

The Hoidcd WhIskey BillWAShINGTON March 12 Representative

Wlllli aaya that another effort to pin the bill extendingthe bonded whiskey period will be mid immediatelyafter the pauagtof the Poll Offlce Appropriation billlie says thin Iis an understanding that no appropriationhilt will he reported to antagonize the measure until svote on It hu been secured

MOOO fur the feilUrV aug MurkerTue I4taten Islanil iia1iid Transit Comtnls

item appointed dii appraice Ii value of property to be-

laku fir lii railroisel 1151 3 eoterday it New Srijhtoftand showed 3lOJtiduwass talk saitoraattllaSbOf

PRKS1DEXTTAZ CANDIDATES

Payee LeaSe la Nvrlkar Oklwllk Haee4-kSedWht Mr F y-

CLKTKIIAND

Neya

March 11Interviews withfifty leading Democrats ot northern Ohioduring the past few days shows that twentynine out ot the fifty favor Henry B Payne forresident Hancock Is second choice withilandall third and McDonald Bayard Tharman Holman English and Flower In the ordernamed Very little Is heard of Tllden In north-ern

¬

Ohio It being considered that ho will notbe a candidate

Senator lnyno was approached by a reportertoday and asked whether he was a candidatelie said that he had no desire to parade hisname before the public and that he had exlausted every effort to convince the peoplethat he had no political aspirations In regardto other candidates named ho said It wouldnot do for mo at the present time to speak ofsome ot the gentlemen prominently mentionedits Unmocratln candidates for the PresidencyMr Tllden Mr Bayard and other gentlemenin the East are warm personal friends of mineand I could not express an opinion of themwithout doing myself an Injury Expressionsand opinions made In these days are so changedmil misconstrued that It Is a dangerous thingto bo Interviewed

KICKiNG AGAINST THE STAClinfK-

P arlemlit Htpubllcane Opposed to Iecaring a legatloa for Arthur

FmHDunon March 12A conference otindependent Itopubllcans was held here todaywhich forty representative men were presentThe action of the County Committee directingthat delegates to the National Convention beelected by the State delegates was denouncedby all present and a committee was appointedto Inquire concerning Its regularity Kesoluions wore offered condemning the action theCounty Committee ns a scheme to secure votesfor Arthur and to mist cprosent tile sentimentof the people and calling on true Republicansto unite to dnloat the Echomo by fighting thecommittee on Its own ground anti electing delcentos to tho State Convention who In turnwill elect delegates to the Chicago Conventionwho will represent the majority The consid-eration

¬

of the resolutions was postponed

A CITY TREASVRKR MISSING

Dejected Over kU DefEat for a ThIrd TrA Nkortoge In his Accounts

ERIE March 12The mysterious disap-pearance

¬

of City Treasurer John Boyle and hisdeep melancholy over a recent defeat for athird term gave color to the theory that he hadcommitted suicide which was strengthened bythe fact that ho delivered to his wife his lifeInsurance policies with Instructions to pay upthe assessments at once An Investigation oflloylos accounts Is In progress and up to thistime n defalcation of about 7000 has boon dls-covorod On Saturday he received a chockfor 1000 which be had cashed forhis own benefit It ts not knownwhore Boyle Is When last seen ho wasgoing toward the lake and his friends fearthat he has committed suicide

THEY FOVaitT llf A CAR

Slut it Jury DecIdes that Sir Kelly Old NotSlur ci Mr a lIke

The trial of the suit of Haydon 0 Kelly a-

New Jersey lawyer against I erael it like the proprietorot a gentleman furnlnhlng atore In Brooklyn for f1000damage wa brought to a close In the City Court la thetatter city yesterday

The occurrence on which the suit was based tookI Into list September while tha plaintiff the defendantand his wife were pauengera In a Sutton avenue carHrooklyn Mr Kelly said that he boarded the front platfurm and imoked a cigar Ha au n threw hiscigar away end entered the car All the seatsbeing occnpled tie took a position at the frontdoor He lied only teen In the car a few minnIewhen ha haul hIs attention arawn to a beautiful diamondring worn by Mr Pike who continued to tare at thinuntil tIm car reached Fulton ferry Before he ciiuld getoff the car Mr Pike jumped up In hie seat and withoutaword if explanation began to pummel him and aald

I will teach > ou not to look at meSir lik tried Ii jiisilfy the aseult on the groutid that

the lilsintlO lied grossly insulted tile wife ty hitting lienwill his feet and knee staring at tier and in other waystryiiig to attracttier attentioi lie said he asked theSlalntllT to desist hide annoyance but that he refuted to

He then puttied him aside No wltneifte wereIntroduced to support tie elite of the story Tbe Jurygave arerdlctof STOU In favor of Mr Kelly

Job Swlnton to the liar Gonde Saloee-The Equality Association of Dry Goods Sales ¬

men gave an entertainment In Pythagoras Hall lastevening to raise funds for the eitabllthmentof a libraryand reading room for the use ot all employee of drygoods flrms About OM pmoni were prtlent end aconsIderable sun wa raised There was vocal end Initrumentat niutlo and dancing Mr John Swlnton toadsan aildreo He saul that no clan of work demanded Itrightly performed more mental activity or a greaterknowledge of nature than that of a dry goods oterk

The mechanic paid Mr Swlnton hasonly lila bossto please the imoe takes care to pleaie hi cuitomerebut this dry good clerk most pleaie boss and cimtomerboth He atand between the two antI mut aatlftyonthe one hand petty meanneii and exaction end on theother hand grailng covetoufne I test that you aredemanding that the utiops eliould close at U oclock In theveiling It seems In me that that is a u cry modest demind that you ihotild not liars to work more than tenhour a day If the life of 3011 young men and womenIsi to be nothing better than going to work at 7> f In thelornlng slid leaving at TH at night anti finally dying atis or 40 year nf age then I say better universal cutclUe for such a hits ii no

Mr a Da Slrcaltka Experience In Dog KllllacA pot dog belonging to Mrs S De Slrentth a

French lady residing tn Btnyveiaut place New Brightonwas badly Injured by another dog Aa It appeared toutter Ha mlitrtii decided to end its inliory sad tiredthree shots at It from tier parlor window She thenordered her coachman Joseph Homer to kilt tho ani-mal which he did Mr K Hamilton a nextdoor neigh-bor of Mrs DeSircnlth regarded the affair as cruel andInhuman and sent a note to Henry llergh

The French Indy and her coachman were arrested andtaken before Joillce Vaughn at Clifton Mrs Hamiltonappeared aa a WitnesS agaInst then MM De Strenlthtold the Court that the hail the dog killed tn put It out otits misery She admitted that one of the shot she hIredhad only wounded the animal Police Commloloner-Whlttemora said be knew Mrs Da fllrenlth to be aneitlmauio lady and kind to her pets Juttlca Vaughndlimlntd the case

Dr Craabr Octs Back his EurlpldA young man In a long ulster wont up the

steps of lie East Nlnetieuth street last evening with abook under hi arm unit asked a young man who openedthe door If Dr Howard Uroiliy was In lie was told ha-Wat not

I might as well leave this then ha said turning thehook over to a son of Dr Crosby X found It In thegutter on last Krlday night

It was the copy of Euripides that Dr Crosby lost Inhi fall gulmt up hi door ttep after leaving the GreekClub Tha young man said ha could not mate anythingtIlt of It until Informed what kind of a book It wasthrough the papers

Rnanwnr Boys Arruled la Jcrear CityThe police of Jersey City arrested yesterday

seven runaway boys Five of then named GeorgeStarker George Long Thomas Mack Alfred Francisand Jobn Mason were trim Morrlivlll Fa The othertwo were William McKenzie coed 14 years and Fred-erick Uoldlng aged 13 years They had walked all theway from Chamberabiirg near Trenton Ruth werearmed with pistols and ammunition They said theywanted to conic to this city but had no money to payferriage They wilt b sent home

Dcaarllac kar FBrlk flebudCarl Borgwelt who said he lived at C31 West

Fortytecond street called at Polio Headquarters la-

Jeraey City yellerday and said that hi wife who hadlied three husbands before ha married her haul runaway from him taking along all their portable possealona Ha said that ha had heard that iha was In JerseyCity and wasted the police to look for hr

Pros rilktlaa e a IIkkai FerrykantJames Casey and Adolph Hnrtlng box

moker while intoxicated on the ferryboat Weehawkenyesterday fought itt tha way from the starting theboat from Sunday street tilt It arrived In llobokanThey beat aeveral deck hands and many paiaaogaraThey were arrested and held on a dozes charges

Bllaa Harvey Muck BetterMiss Maggie Harvey who was gagged anti

bound by tha mulatto Jesse Williams In this sloana BaUon Saturday evening w ai much better last night

JOTTltitlX ABOUT TOWN

President James D Vista ot the Marina Bank baa palltxv ouu for 91 and 31 Droadiray

James Ward a deckhand on the ferryboat Kluihlagfelt overboard yesterday and wu drowuad

A despatch wee lent to Mlnlitir Astor at Ronse lastnight that hit mother wai entirely out ot danger

The iteamer reported astor on Great Egg Harbor Satwa this lifer of Bother Feint She tank yesterdaymorning The crew were rescued

A bulldlnj sitU lot on Thirtyfourth atreet ona doorfrom Para avenue ha been bought for S4UUOO by tieriieltui Vandirblll from Annie Real

Nat Goodwin had in far recovered from thidliabtlngeffects of hlicarlitincle last evening that ha was able Uplay In tho fourteenth Street Theatre

Charles Zwtlnir 28 years old ot 444 East Twentiethstreet fell from a rtr and was run over In Second aveiiue near Twentieth atrict Itil evening lilt right legwas brakes

Recorder myth reiteulay leutiuceil Joseph Panlixawho was convicted of extorting S3UI from VlnceioDragons a flute player In tna Casino orchestra to StateprlKjn for four yean antI six months

Time baat remedy for all pulmonary oornplalnU U f>T

lulls Vaagh srsy fl33 gseiagdp

TRAGEDY IN A THEATRE

IWO nesiERADOKs SHOT DEAD tir-QVARRXL

4TENT HAD PROVOKED

Men wk Had La Da a Terri es lbsToxa Border Shot lo Death Motors tkoyHad SalltDad theIr Thirst for Blood s

SAN ANTONIO Tex March 11Bon Thomp-son

¬

anti Nlng Fisher shot each other dead 1la-the Vaudeville Theatre last night Joe Posterwho attempted to quiet the combatants WMshot In the log and will probably die of hem-orrhage Thompson and Fisher had beesdrinking together and entered the theatre 1Ik e

company They mot Foster In the dress circlesome words were exchanged and soon attarward shots were exchanged The dress circlewas quickly cleared tha occupants jumping IInto this parquet below and through the aidswindows Into the street No onosooms to knowwho llrod the first shot or how many wore en tlBatted In the shooting Before the theatre WMfairly cleared of Its occupants fifteen hundredpersons on the outsldo were clamoring at thaclosed doors for admittance Soon after thashooting Thompsons brother put in appearanco but WOK promptly arrested

A jury was hastily Impanelled and It wuascertained that Thompson had received fourmortal wounds And that Fisher had beenwounded tliroo tImes two of which would bayscaused Instant death The remains ot the twovictuals were tnkon In charge by a host offriends and the obsequies hnvo been orderedon the grandest scale regardless of expenseThe theatre where the affray occurred was thescene last year ot the killing by Thompson otJack Harris who wits tile proprietor of theplace Fisher and Thompson wore probably C

ho two most duHpcrato and widely known menIn Texas They have each killed a largo num-ber

¬of nion 5

The tragedy has boon placed In an entirenow light by the testimony brought out by theCoroners jury The Impression that the shootlog was the result ot n private difficulty be-tween

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the patties killed has been erased by thaproof that Thompson and Fisher wont to thavariety hall as friends drank as friends andremained together as friends up to the timethat tIm shooting began

Hilly Hlmms manager of the Vaudeville tcs-tillod that ho was up stairs when lion Thomp-son

¬came up Thompson asked him to sit

down and the conversation turned to the killbeg of Jack Harris Thompson said henever wanted to kill Jack Harris andpointing to Joo Foster said That is the

1 wanted to kill After some further talkthe party rose to go down to the bar Thomp ¬

son stopped at the door and walking up toFoster offered him his hand Foster refusedto shako hands The trouble grew wonuntil the firing began Hlmms thinkthat Fisher would have participatedIn the shooting but his pistol siihpedt1 too farbehind him and ho received his death woundbefore ho could get It front the scabbard

JB Coy testifiedt am a special policeman on duty at the Vaudeville

Theatre and v aa on duty there lat night-when I saw lien Thoupion killed I flrit aaarThompson and rfihpr In lie bar room whitethey drank together and then went up StairsI went up stairs and took a teat by Thompson Fisheranti SImm were on the other side Mien drinking asFuller expciim the convention tinned on the klinnfof Jack harris but so low that I cnuM not nnderitandMint wa tald soOn usher remarked tuThompioni

Mr Thompson I thought we were going to baYsaomefun Dont talk about past time Thompson re-plied

¬

Dont tig unease s we will have it soon riiharthen rose and call Well lets go down stairs Thenarty thin ioe anti Started toward tile door Fisher andI In front Ihompiton and Slinm behind When wareached the door Thompion turned ant asked Billyaint that 1cc Frtter Blmm told him It wit andwent to outer n lie came antI joined the party Tliompon asked him to take a drink Foiter replied Tollknow lien I would not drink Thompson then aaldsomething about ahaktng handi and Foster replied thathe did Slot want to shake hands with him Thomp-son

¬

said with an oath I am flied you woosdrink nor shake hands with me I requestedhim to believe sail ha ordered ma to get ouSof his way laying Let mo settle this matter with Faten lie then called Foster a thief and Happed himwlih lilt left drawing a pistol with tile right hand Ijumped and grabbed tile pistol on the cylinder and U-

waidltcharceit I asked liltu todnltt mid be told meto turn the plitol Inoie We tcuttled from the door Cethe corner We all three fell Flther In the middle Itied hold ot this plitol alt thn tints Whet ha tallThnmjuan releaied ida pistol I did not see who alashad pittola

Joe Foster who was shot through the legwas unable to testify The limb was amnutatedthis evening and he will probably dl ThCoroners jury then brought in a verdict ofdeath from pistol wounds inflicted by tha-handa of Wm Hlmms Jacob Coy and Joe Poetor and that the killing was justifiable homl-cldo C

Thompson possessed a wide reputation as ftnina killer Ho had frequently threatened tatake San Antonio and the San Antonio poliowere determined he should not His des <porato ferocity when roused his fearlessdisregard of his own and other lives anahis fatal proficiency In the use of the revolverwore top well known to fail In acting as a warnIng to the employees of a house whose formerowner had boon killed name months ago Frontthe moment of his entrance to the theatre howas a doomod tuna

Fisher was the younger man but the greaterdesperado Ho was originally from Oollodcounty and his baptismal name was JohnKing His murders were Innumerable Hawas for years the Captain ot the celebratedBreeton gang and in every town on the lUoUrando mi name was n terror

It Is the Irony of fate that mon of such repu ¬

tation for personal prowess ns these two deeperadoes should have boon shot to death withnot one lifo to render up in exchange for theirown Foster was accidentally shot by one ofhis own party

One Dusk Man re be PunishedMr August Blackman was bunkoed out of

tV on this 3d of Starch Ho knew ha was being victimlied and under the pretence of going for more moneywent out of the place anti secured aid The result wasthe seizure of the entire ettabllthinent Including thelayout Mr Blackman recovered hit money and itsproprietor Win llntcliln wa locked up In default ot93000 ball The prisoner wa Indicted and many delaysWere put Into practice by his connel hoping to tire MrBlackman out Via latter however was determined tasee It out and yesterday hail the latlifactlon of healingthe bunko man plead guilty before Judge UUdinlaavIll wilt be sentenced on Friday

Fireman Klrcknvr Gets the Bennett MedaLThe name of Fireman William B Kfrchner

now of EngIne II was sent to time truiteel ot the Basnet medal fund yesterday by the Fire toinmliiloner asthat nt tha propir person to receive the medal for 18MLOn Planet 2tf of let year Klrchncr then a member ofEngine 17 rcfcutrt Jane McCabe and lilt wife from aburning dnelllug at 134 EMrldge itreet Ha rescued tin

at groat peril to bimielf and then with the womanRian arm ha was obliged to lump an alley aeparatlaf134 from IOU The medal will be praaented by O v-

Cliviland In the jitua In Union iqnare on June 4

Jraal Waldroaa SisSy Clog HamAndrew J Waldron father ot the giantess

MloJeula Waldron who died on Tuesday mortlng laBuffalo received a telegram yellerday which said thatthe holy would reach nil house 01 Newell street Gratapoint this morning

Mr Waldrona home li a until onatory frama eoktags on the rear of a lot and a It will be Impoulbl Utake the bouly thera It will on Its arrival be placed Inthe Union Aventia Baptlet Church It will be Interredat New Kocbelie

Joka D Ncnmuna Daughter MarriedMiss Louise Newman the daughter of WIs-

klnikle John D Newman was married tail evening iithe Church ot the Holy Spirit fitxtyilxth street asSMadison avenue to Mr loionard J Men Tha RevRobert Loony and the Ret Edmund Oullbert offlclatadWalter F Stratton was belt man There was no recapIon The couple started Immediately a Southern loa it

Tk Iliad OMc Frdletla fiSlightly colder fair weather northwesterly

veering tu northeasterly winds

SPARKS fSOX TUB TELKQRAFa

Prince Blimarck has arrived In BerlinAttorneyQenaral OBrien U recovering 4The MarquIs Tung hat arrived In LondonThe Australian cricketers have started for EnglandMr Bennett Robb ot Rail Waverly N T couimltMl

suicide by taking aconlla on Tuesday nightThe ahareholden of tie Suez Canal Company baTn-

rattfled the convention between M da Leuefi and lasKnglltn ihipownira-Tha Republican County Committee of Monroe coaatr

decided lo held the District Convention to select delgate to the Ublcago Uonvintlon on April 9 In Hoc bettorChristopher Hammond of Albany ba sued Iha Dde

Wars end hudson Canal Company for fJOODQ damagaafor the lose ot his arnie whUe In their employ Ha wasrun over

near Admiral Worden who has ben at the point ofdeath fur a long tint U greatly Improved and returnedto bit collage In Newport last night from the Maiaa-ouuieltl General Hospital

Garret r Servlii Secretary of tha Americas Aitroaoamkit Society dellvarrd his Illustrated lecture on Miresomy before llt students of Cornell University and alttI-IDI at Ithica last evening

There was a complete overturn In the town election laFranklin M H on Tuiaday The town which had bnunder Democratic ruts for nine years has again beeoasRepublican by alarge majority

Frank alias flat Harold who was formerlyllotman In rhlladlphlaand who was recently arleafedfor planning a great number ot ronbcrlei wlilcbwer-cominltlid iIn that oily under hU direction wu ciavlctel yesterday

The Edge Blevatad Railroad bill hu patted the M-

chuiettaaaaaUgliltture II nominally permit tha-

tructlon nndir certain reitrlctloni of elevated railroads under Oleigs systeieSbrough any of iht towasor clttea of lie Stale

Tha resignation by the hot Tliomu Talbot at UseChairmanship anl membership ID Iha MaaaaebaaalMStat Board at health Lunacy and Ckarlly buaccepted by the Government Kvorttt Taaay bl BttUtSM bela appeUta4l M fill lbs vatascy

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