the sun. (new york, n.y.) 1882-06-05 [p ]. · 2017-12-20 · jh vol.xux.--y-278."new york,...

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jH VOL.XUX.--y- 278." NEW YORK, MONDAY, .JUNE 5, 1882. PRICE TWO CENTS. TAMMANY HALL'S BIG FOUR. I mill lACTICH A.VP I'UXS STIBIUM) i v ltr.nr.u.ios, . Hickirirlln'J'oBlreliiriln! Uiviiiilziillnnlin nilnfiit- -l nrerlitlnly A limit lnkii Kell's .tlllliiilr-tlluvv- le Over Allium Miiilit. On tin' night of lhn hint annual clivtluii of Ku'ltpmsof tlioTiiinmiinySoolotVMjvoriil pnuii Incut Tnmmuny men prmlii'tul that lirforu the ireno ml election in Novomliyt tlii-- would Uni contest for tho control of tho Tuinniaiiy irKnnlzatioti between tho men who ruHP-Mi- t tho Assembly districts In which Tniiiiniiiiy Is stroncaiulthewlnifof tho part which Is tailed by Its opponents "tho lllossoiu Club crowd " Tho district lenders who represent the lllof-so- Club Interest nro lMwurd Kean.eyof tho Thlrty-flrs- t District. Police Comoilsloner BIdnoy V. Nichols of tho Thirteenth Dis- trict. Gen. Frank 11. bplnola of tho District, and Alderman William Bauer of tho Elovnntli District. Thuy managed Tammany's alTiIra In Albany dtirlnc tho session of tho Legislature that has jut ad- journed, and are familiarly spoUen of in Tam- many Hall as "Tammany's Dip Tour." Thruo of tho Assembly districts which thoy control nro almost Invariably carried by tho Repub- licans, and the Tammany organization In tho Blxteonth District, which has always boon con- sidered one of Tammany's strongholds, N said by tbo Blossom Club's opponents to bo practi- cally worthless. There .ire indications that tho ilchtwlll begin very soon. Ths feeling between tbo two parties Is very bitter, and cannot bo restrained mui.li longer. Tho lenders of tho strong Tammany districts openly assert that tho "lllg Tour" nro bo bent upon controlling tho organization that they will, it necessary, cross swords with John Kelly. " Tho flght must begin soon." said one of these leaders yesterday. " Wo don't Intend to lollow the leadership of tbo Blossom Club. Tlioy want all the ofllces. but itivo the organi- zation no votes. If they Imve their way the districts which hae the Tammany tote will get nothing for their work. We are expected to spend our money and roll up our usual ma- jorities every year, and give tho olllces to peo- -' plo who cannot carry their own districts. Wo Hhall flght them on this Issue, and. unless Johu Kellv is aealnst us. wo shall win." Another argument used ngalnst the Blossom Club party is the conduct of the " big Four" at Albany. 'These men went there to loot out for the organization's Interests." a Tammany district leader said last evening, "nut of doing that, they have used Mr. Kellv's name and the name of Tammany toserve their own purposes. By their advloe our .Senators con- tinued allof Gov. Cornell's Itepublican appoint- ments, and our .senators and Assemblymen voted for every bad and every unpopular bill which passed tho Legislature. The or- ganization has not n benefited by their acta. Tho few clerkships and other ofllces which wero giver, to us were tilled by henchmen of tho Big Four without uuy I consultation with tho organization. Doe any- body suppose that tho organization would rec- ommend Charles H. Swan foi a tlerk In the As- sembly? Ho never belonged to the organiza- tion, and lives In Sew Jersev. But he Is n mem- ber of the Blossom Club I have no doubt that the Big Four havo promoted their own Inter- ests and tho interests of some of our members of the Legislature. But so far as J. can see they havo done nothing for tho organ- ization, except to put it out of tho Democratic party, and give It tho reputation of sustaining the corrupt measures passed by tho Legisla- ture. ManyTamman) voters in our districts havo already declared that they will not vote the Tammany ticket next fall. If tho Conven- tion which nominates it is controlled by those people." The probable attitude of John Kelly In tho event of this contest is much discustedbv his district leaders. Tho friends of the Big Four say that he authorized all their acts In Albiny wli eh were of a political nnture. nnd thnt ha ill therefore be on tboir6ide. Koine of them Intimate that he dare not oppose them. On tho other hjnd, the opponents of the Blossom Club partr say that Mr. Kelly feels bitterly toward lie Big Four because tno did not prevent tho lammany Senators and Aswoniblsmen from toting lor corrupt measures. An Intimate personal friend of his ".aid vesterdny Mr. Kelly feels tlmt Tarum inj Hull has been put In ' t very unenviable position by tho action of its representatives in the Legislature on the bills which aro belleveu to havo Ix'en passed by cor- rupt means. Ho siioakft in tein.b by no means 'omplimentary of the Tammany Senators and Assemblymen who voted for the Elevated Hall-roa- d and Broadway Jlallroad bills, and helped to kill tho Five-cen- t Fnre bill and the bill to re- duce the faro on the Thirty fourth Street Jerry. I know, too. Unit be nttachps much of the blame for this work to tho Big Four." I he leader of a district which Is always rar-le- d by Tammany Hall said yesteiday that jhcro were indications that tho Blossom Club party would soon attempt to take tho control of the First Assembly District from Patrick 0. Duffy. It they succeeded in that they would probably try to reorganize other dibtrlcls In theli Interest. " They wish to con- trol enough districts." he added, "to enable them to nominate the net county ticket, and I , hear that they are willing to try conclusions with Mr. Kelly himself if they And it neces sary; " How do tho districts stand now?" II an issuo Is made between tho Blossom Club party nnd Mr. Kelly, tho First. Second. Thud. Fourth. Fifth. Eighth. Ninth Tenth, lourte'-nth- . Fifteenth. Llghteenth, Nineteenth. Twentieth, and Twenty-soeon- d Districts, and probably the Twenty-fourt- h and bltth Dis- tricts,, will be with Jli. Kelly. Tho Blossom Club people can control the fenveuth. Eleventh. Thlitoonih Sixteenth, Seventeenth and Twenty-fi- rst Districts, ami possibly the Twelfth and Twenty third. Four of those districts aie ". no district leader admitted that the com- pletion of many of the districts would bo changed if Ml. Kelly should support tho Big Four. But even In that evenV' he added we will give them a good tight. There is an unusually large number of Independent men in Tammany Hall now, and they will not sub- mit to dictation. I am sine that Tammany cannot elect her county ticket if it is nominated by tho Blossom Club party." A CASUAL LEAF FIIOM II 10 II BBIDOE. lip. Brqvtu Volunteer. It, and Strike! tbe lVuter Flut Without Hurt. Shortly beforo noon yesterday a man of 0, la a rowboat. drew alongside tho restaurant of George W. Riley, moored In the Harlem Ittver about twenty yards this side of High Bridge. Leuvlng his coat and hat in tho boat he entered tbe barroom and drank a glass of beer. His gait Indicated that he had boen drinking be- fore. Ho asked 3Ir. IUley how deep the wator under the bridge was. and was told ten and thirteen feec. Then ho broke forth with: ' Donaldson thinks ho'a a gieat man don't ho1 Nobody else can jump off that bridge, can tlKiy ? You think I can't jump off that bridge, don't you t But I can. You bet your boots I cau and I'm going to do it, und I'm going to do it now," He unsteadily ascended the stops lending to the western end of the bridge. No one pievent-e- d him. It hHd occurred to nobody that ho would jump Several men In tho restaurant watched him carelessly. fhey aw him start across tho bridge. When Jionrnved over the central arch hj stopped climbed over the Iron railing, and stood upon tie granite projection. He looked down Into in river for a few seconds then turned mid climbed luck over the railing 'Ihen hor.af-P"ite- d with hl shoes and waistcoat oil and ut once leaped out into the air descending eut loretnost. His arun. weie sti etched ubuvi Ins head and his body was perfectly rigid until ho as within about twenty feet of the wim-- r liifii he turned ovei Hat mid fell into the wutcr oa his stomach with a reffi liomgbmack It was about half n minute Uifote he rose to thesuifnce He was uncoiisclnut mid wnmj have been drowned hut fm Mi. lliley, who re. cued him in u row boat He was cairled to the eastern shore and recovered consciousness about urteeii mlnules afterward. His clothing had been spill down the front but ho was Follceman Henry fachoinkie arresn d hlin for drunkenness, and walked him to the lwtli street station, 1', miles iiwnv Ho Mini l.e was John D Blown a butcher of 81J First avejiuo At that address nothing Is known of uch a person. He was much elated jei his Hiid said ho only wanted chance to jump J WMH'wUW,Mn I'le. Only a lew people '? Hiifli Bridge yesterday to see lilt, exploit UiiiiM-- s! )ilier whoreseuedhlm also saved !i M'Hfur nnJ Jo,l A- - Goidou, who tried 11 "'own tl enisulvea near the bridge on May ,1u 'n Colli, 0 M(lt kB Mtcmil,kll, .Mbuuiu. 'fho British bark Charlie Hickman, which arriud from lit nlmrj jutenluy reruns thatun ssiiir ar eituiiij while jur ln,(, ,,UUII, ,,,,, ilt. n,,,,, IorllnJ'.w"ri"ll,""ll H't steamship .Niagara bound ,' ; ",'" s!a.iriick.inl.rriBrloiiiJ hun mil lluUn hi f"" " ,ur" "T ll"' iiil'"f "luck tiiiiniiiu. i" M,",r ."'""' ru' nl"1 "' '"'"'n iwi.tSh '1,f,n:llW"y,iiil otler dsmika nm inKl. ..r.U.''"c T10,., "" i""",, '" Ulikiiuii r. to lib Lui ,'.",v, hVw much (Jsniart wm uoi to ih teaiu vr s m, utt. XL lnr wut ou hr . JU.11 DAYS Jtr THIS SKA. iMttg llranch In u Hull Nlorm-T- hn Advance of Niiinnipr Ht Cone lttuu.1. Wnnou Ijolanil, .Tr at tiiun tho voiamla of tho Ou'iin llotelat Long Branch yesterday noon giving moodily upon the surf nnd tho dark, threatening cloudi. Ml. Lcland hiber- nated in the big hitil, and the r 'suit of his wlniei i niedltalion is a leeturo Entitled "Thn Sanitary Condition of our Summer Uesoits." Having spent a few days In nceii'tomliig him- self to the light ami nil- om o moiu, Mr. Lcland had thought of dollvoiing his lecture yester- day A h ill stoim with plenty of lightning, thuiidi r.and lain. which swupt over tho Branch In the middle of the foit'nooii.had dampened his hopes of all nlldieni c. Ho was not to bo disappointed, however. Idle tho heavy clouds and dtlllng moinlng mny have deteried many ftom beuklng jileasmo nt the Branch yesteiday them weie inaiiy others who walked up the gang plnnU of tho Jesse Hoyt as she I iy . her pier in New Yoik. evidently with implicit faith that the day would bring forth something of value At 10 0 clock, when several utindieds had walked tho plank in the spit tt described, the steamer started down tho bay. making hoi way slowly ami with Ireiiucnt blasts of the whlMIe, In n dense fog and a pouring lain. Tho fogllfted and tho rain abated as she approached Sandy Hook. JMieu she reached the Branch faint piomlses of fnlrer vveatherwero given. They wue still eiiulvocal when the van of the excursionists came upon Mr. Vi nnen Leland. Jr.. seated upon his Instantly his steadfast gae upon the monotonous suif censed. Ho grasped each comer by the hand as if each were an old friend; the sun came out strong and blight, tho grass never looked frt slier or the sea warmer, trom Unit moment the metooiologlcnl improvement was marked nnd rapid, liming the afternoon seveinl elderly natives wero found who, wltii solemn enthusiasm averted that they haduever seen their section of the Jersey coast look so line. " It's a llttlo cool yet." snld one. " but then I don't suppose youimodown here to get warm." Tho excursionists devoted themselves chiefly to seeing how things would look when they wero IKed up. for the usuul spring renovation is still in progress at the various caravanseries which do not formally open forthe season until June 15. Caipenters, painters, and paper hangers have still moro or less to do in nearly all the large hotels The Elbeion is fairly open, and there aro a few guests at the other hotels. 1 ho cottagers are mm Inc in from duv to ibiv . Among the improvements Is a large club house or casino which Is approach- ing completion on tho grounds of the Ocean Hotel. It Is Queen Anne outside and mahogany within, and is to be utilized by turf- men und the sporting fiaternity generally during the sixty davsof raclngwhlch are prom- ised nt Monmouth l'ark this summer. Some of the suminei residents. Including A. J. Drevel, C. F. Voenshoffer. James Sellgman. Gen. Grant. O. Washington Child A. M Com- modore liarrlson. and others to the number of thirty, are rnislngo fund to Increase the slzo of Green's l'ond. on Ocean avenue, bttween West Lnd and Elberon. and surround It with n pink. Before delivering his lecture yesterday upon ThiiSanitiry Condition of our Summer Mr. Warren Lcland. Jr . made a few ex- tempore remarks upon music. He said as ho tumbled noliuir over in making a pielluilnary gesture,' Musio has been neglected in Long Music deserves mi exulted position. Now just look at this ' With that ho hastily led tho war to u nearly completed musio stnnd on the lawn in front of the Ocean Hotel. It was done in the Queen Anno style or should havo been, being nt Long Branch. "Uheie," he said. Indicating a pecu- liar lattice work running about tho house next the friee "is something worthy of tho sweet art." The lattice work consisted of an in- genious arrangement In wood of the score of the air from ' l'atlenco" 'Prithee I'retty Maiden." At the end of the bar is a huge sun- flower carved of wood. Mr. Leland also pointid out an iron vewtr.ign pipe which runs 1 ouofect out undo! the sea, and is dlschniged only wht n the tide is running out. It win, tr.ilu time be- fore he found time or could summon courage to deliver his lecture upon ' 1 ho Sanitary Con- dition of our Summer ltesorts-.- but.npparently in anticipation of such a catastrophe, ho had some printed copies, which he thrust into the hands of each excursionist at parting. Travel by all the routes to Coney llnndwns bilsk In the atti'iiioon nnd the famous stretch of sand was thickly peopled, though the strong wind made the promenade rather uncomforta- ble 'I he bathing pavilions will not tw ready for tluee wcoks more 'J ho season, which b-- at tho west end is advancing slowly to- ward Manhattan Beach mid the distant Orien- tal At West Brighton there was musle yester- day. Hnd the swings and merrv.o-iound- s wero in constant motion At Brighton there was an afternoon conceit, and the pi iyas wero thronged. At Manhattan Beach the llrst con- cert of the season was given There weie fewer petsons there th in anywhere else but the din- ing room was well patronized, and the hi a winds were kept out bv closed windows. On the boats theie were moor three lamentable catastrophes to big hats, of which tho wind robbed their fair owners. ltocknway hud comparatively few visitors, and they did not stny Into W hen the Columbia approached the pier on her last run to New York three persons were there, of whom oiily two got abo.ild. The trip home was onllvoned by what looked like a race between the Iron steamer Slrius and the Columbia. In which honors were easy. LITTLE rilOMM'S IIIO SXEEZE. .A. Critical Moment lit the Career or u Ten-Oun- Midget uf Tcutlfr Aire. Geoige Fronnn'sboy was baptized by the ltev. Mr. Adams In tho Episcopal Church, Law-lenc- o street, Manhattnnvllle. at 4 o'clock yes- terday afternoon. Tho boy weighed ten ounces ut the time of his birth, two weeks ago, and has not gained anything to sneak of since. A great Many neighbors and fuends of tho family called at tho house of Mr. Fromm, 87 Lawionco street, In tho course of the day. but only a fev were present ut tho christening. The child be- haved remarkably well, not only In the church, but at his home, where e.ichvlsitoi was per- mitted to hold him for a brief period. His principal exhibition of feeling consisted in gaping. In which he indulged nt short Inteivals displaying on each occasion two exceedingly trivlul teeth whose existence tho parents say. is to be dated from Thursday last. His robe was white and made short, so as to display his feet, which weie the size of largo closer leaves, and filnged with very sti.ilght, round distinct jdnk toes, on the becond and tliild lingers of his right hand he wore two rings, one of gold and one of gutu peicha. These oi n imeiits might slip easily-ove- r a knitting needle but they would haven tight SO.UI eve with a small quill toothpick. Ills rathci thin light-brow- n hair was a good deal rumpled by the impatient turning of hixhead in the hands of the luimeioiis eisoiiswhoweni permitted to hold him When ho was turned to lace tho light he fi owned perceptibly, notwithstanding that he Is destitute of the slightest tiain ol ovebiows, opened mid shut his eyes with astonishing mpidlty and became pu keied in the most emiouH manner, Hu Paid absolutely no attention to his old r brothtr aged I who was diessed ill long trousers ami a swallow tall oat ami rode a loi king horse Hisbiothei who Is a piofcs-sloii- midgut iit.ilhited by utteili Igunilng liln Ilio eiiler oilspilng .f Mi. rioium was stiiklngly iooI and uuninbainissed He had a uuulnt way ol bulging the head of his locking horse with an uon uieii-i- l uluch he had ub-s- ti acted imiii llu kitchen ami at inteivals in a small thin voice, I'm the boss " Iiniiiediati ly after the younger I'lomm was handed to the lejioitei It si .si 'Hint would not havo b en return knble If it had sneced ac- cording to Its sire, but ns.i mattni of fact, the sneeze was of a most inordinate hniacti t It wis filghtfully out of propoition to little lionim who recoiled in a cri'iial mnnnei, tn nibh-- violently tbtoiighout and gave eveiy indication ol being about to burst The little vessel proved sturdy howevi i. it giadually st t lightened out, sniffled, moved its to.s and smiled It was a pleasure to the n porlei to bo iiblo to redeliver young Fromm sound In body and limb. Anybody who has over let a go oil In 111.- flngets can form some u.ight nl '.t of the sensation which the explosive midget convi yed Gee Hem y was the name which the llov. Mr. Ad imsulllxed to the remarkable child, at tho request of Mi. and Mis. Fromm. Ilc.triiptlve Sloni lu .iplti Cuiullna. I'tTnLsnujiei Va June-- - A destructive hall am! vuiJ Hiorui miurrtd In .Xurth CarnMnntliU after noon extending from Halifax toiiury.t.uri;,illitunc if till unit. svttrHi hull.,, vteitt Lluun Juwn an liriv tret uuronfitl A lnme u inpnM l a colurul v .ma i iniiiHil Mull, la (lary nraroarj .huri: uatblown il OWI ami htr tVMXlNULllUr. tl'el4all 10)tfltrn Mere k.lt. i Hie otiiLr intiiil er. of ilu family narriovh e c i il m ltd tin ir h i . ii hull. turn . ere a. lurtce a. a in. ii nil. I Ilj.finrel that llm irn. Iimelefliil. mrolet Tlie train, from Hie south have Urn detatril iii constituent,! of Hie real leui Mockauul Ly fallen licet J'lpeniiin .luiup Kputi) Hull, Fireman James Kenny of Hngluo Company 21 m line an. w emu a false alarm of lire inl.a.t yorty fourth ttretl iHtteiemni; fell from tlia eniilna at lony fi urlli trti and riilrd uvenu and itui run over Ly Hie tender III. rhilit leu una cruhd, aud It 1 llioujlit It will lia te It auiLutatad. WQRK1NGMEN IN POLITICS. sin. AitJiBTitoxa's casdwacv ron aorvnsoit ;.v rvsysrLrASiA. Not tke Cnnilldiito ir Auj 1'iirtleiitiir Trade Orc'anlzatlnu, but of Intnr United In Action for Ita Otvn fpulecllon. l'lXTSUUlitiH, Juno 1 Theio has been con- siderable talk in labor circles In this end of tbe Stato over tho report by telegraph that tho Philadelphia Knights of Labor, dissatisfied with tho Greenback ttckot, had Issued a circu- lar to ovory organization In tho State, asking tho ofllcers to report If thoy wero in favor of holding a State labor political convention In July. As tho Knights of Labor In thisStnto number almost lOO.lioO membcis, nearly all of whom nro votors. indlvlduallyiillllhited with all political partios, but oflklnlly with none, such a movement would be of gieat moment in tho political Meld. In answer to tho letter of nottfl-eutlo- ii of his nomination as tho eaudldato of tho Greenback I.nbor party for Governor, Mr, Thomas Armstrong sent tho following reply on Saturday: XiTlOXll tUBOK Tri.CHL OrrlCK, i l'lmaim ii June J, IS.!. I ToThot J FotUr.lhal 31 Inifuy. and rhomtit tirundi tliiriAMifci your leiur of notification that I via. "ununlimiu.ly .elected a. caulldato for Uoiemor" by the allonal Lnlmr llnenback 1 onvclitinn. which met In llarri.hurL'on Mav IS la.t, h9 tieen rcccllcd In ac. cejilliig the honor llilla louferred I de.lra to kal, at on the orca.lon of the lonveiitlon, that my tlar la uti to day. ll will ! carried through the campantn. It will La up at the clone of the poll., an If Uod .pare, my lita ttMlllba uptLe mornlne artvr the election Ile.pect fully, Tuoitli A AhustRO'ic The reason assigned by the Philadelphia Knights is tho close connection of Mr. Arm-xtion- g and tho Hon. T. V. l'owdorly with tho Knights of Labor, the latter being on IheGrcen-bac- k ticket foi Lieutennut-Oovernn- and also Grand Master of tho knights In this State. Itegardlng the alleged dtsalToctloh Mr. Ann-stron- g y said: " It alw ay s causes a flutter among politicians when labor acts in politics, and the old parties geneuilly succeed In killing by cre- ating dissensions in our ranks. For this pur- pose they can generally llud men in l'hiladel-phlawh- o aro never satlslled with any action that is taken or candidates that aro nomi- nated." "The point I wish youtotalkiiuouiswhether yquiirethecandldnti'of the Knights of Labor." 'Well. I'll tell you I am a Mason; so aro Gen. Beaver and Senator Stewart. Are any of us .Masonic) candidates? I rtu a member of the Typographical Union and tho International Union. Ami the candidate of the printers ? Beaver nud Stewart belong to the ltai Assoc- iation, or lawyers' union. Does that commit the attorneys tothelrsupport.orcompronilse them In any vvnyr I am a member of the Grand Army, I am nn honorary member ol the Amal- gamated Association, 1 am Treasurer of the Coal Miners' .National Association. I am tho editor of tho olllelnl organ of nil forms of orgnn-be- d labor. Doe this make mo tho candi- date of tho puddlers, the coal miners, or glassblowors' I asked the Convention to namesotno othor person, and for this reason: 1 have been lighting for organized labor for twenty-tw- o years, and I did not want to be re- sponsible for nny harm that might eomo from my leieiving n small veto. Ours is not tho ticket of any particular trade organization, but of labor united In political action for its own protection. I have always claimed that laboriould not bo properly protected without standing shoulder to shoulder in politics. With this view I Iihvo taken this nomination, and if ours Is not tho successful ticket it will lo no fault of mine. You ask If Mr. l'owderly has dei lined. 1 do not know that ho has or will. I do not think he ought to." ritOGUESS OF THE JHO.V STIUKE. Tks Men Bkow nn Siena of fielding and Ike Junplojreie Mill Firm. St. Louis, Juno L Tho Trades Abserubly, representing workmen in nil lines of industry hero, held its fourth annual parade and picnic Thoioimerwas an Imposing demon- stration, but, contrary to general expectation, tho speeches by Dick Trovelyck, H. Martin Wil- liams, and other labor agitators contained no encouragement to tho striking ironworkers, nnd, contrary to tho Usual practice, no resolu- tions wore adopted in suppoit of the strike. It seems that tho Trades Assembly, which is a di legato body and subordinate to the Na- tional Trades Union, is not unanimous re- garding tbe policy of inaugurating the iron strike at this juncture. Meantime the iron workers are still out and show no signs of yielding, whllo the manufacturers are nulto as llrni in refusing the advance demanded. Of the l.JOO strikers, at hast 1,000 attended tho picnic, which was otherwise noteworthy only lu the bearing of tho red flag in the procession. CIKVU.AM1. June 4. 'Jho strikers of tho Cleveland Boiling Mills held a large open meet- ing at which their side of the case was presented in the usual speeches. Thoy then went Into executive session, and have been veiy d as to their purpose to- morrow. The impression is thnt the effort of the mills to start on Monday on half time with non-unio- n men will be practically successful, although attended with dilllcultios in tho start. No violence is expected now although there Is no telling what may develop within a few days, rew union men. if any, will bo among those who resume work. 1'iTTSDunoit. Juno 4. Tho iron situation In the 1'ittsburgh district is unchanged. Nothing new has been received y at the ofllces of tho Amalgamated Asso- ciation thnt indicates a weakening on nlthor side. No mills In the oungstown or tho W heel- ing district have signed the scalo. although it Is conlldontly assorted that somo now develop- ments will bo foithcomlng that will alter tho situation miterlally. Presi- dent Jarrutt of the Amalg minted Asso- ciation is lu tho city, but could not bo interviewed. ll is asserted that his action in telegraphing the Chicago association to use their judgment In malntainin tho lock- out is o lug to the fact that he Is not a candidate for reflection. I his Is denied, however, and Mr. .Tarrett could not bo scon to verify or deny the leport. No dlsturbmii es are roported. and everything is asquint and orderly as though no strike was iu progress. w iroItKIXMEST'S 3IEET1XOS. Clear Jiuktn freed lu Orsunlie Moro Effici- ent! 'Ike Ceulrul L'ulon. Soveial hunditsl cigar mnkers met in Ttttn Hall yesterday at the call of Union 144 of this city, to devise means of stiengthenlng the unions. Bepresentatives from Unions 8 and I'll of Jersey Cit), 37 of Brooklyn, and 132 of Willlamsburgh weie piesetit. Chairman Gut-sta- of the Brookly 11 delegation presided. "There aio 20,000 cigur makers in this city nlono," he said, "and only J, 300 in the unions. As uconseiiuenco out wagos have boen reduced till they are loss than a s.and our employers now tell us thnt nnother reduction uniht soon bo made. Shall wo go on submitting till ourcluldren starve Om only hope is to orginlM uiKhr the Hag of tho International ( igar.Miikets' Union, and to extend our mem- bership till we nro iu .1 position to demand our lights. I'losidontAdnlphStnisserof tho International cuion said It hnd ut tt m ineiit house clgiu luuniifactuiers.spoooil to dorcat at Albany tho bill abolishing theli system pit manufacture. Ho dnnouiued Asscmblynieii (lidioii Muiphy McMniuiH Sh.ihloy, and Culleii for their votes on the bill, mid recommended the lloycottln of Gideon who sells Manor, llesolutious look- ing towiud tho ree'nforcement of tho unions were adopted At a meeting of dock builders hold yesterday at 127 Secouilaveiiue, Michael Kline was chosen Chan man and Guorgo llloouian Secretary, 'iho meeting was ailed for the purpose of foiuillig a union nud a benellt society Hie llu mid slate rooluis held a meeting in the Mini" hall. They are .1 branch of tho'lln-smlth- s' Union and niopo-- c to demand soon an Ini reuse of wagibtmiiij to $1 ,50 a day and the stopping of woik 011 Siiliudays at 4 o clock, At the weekly meeting of the Coiitial Trade mid Labor Union iu silence Hall, Mi. Hi ed of thu bilcklnyeih presided A lommunlcatloii was nnelved from the County Committee of the Greenback-Labo- r inn ty, stating that that party was in sympathy with the union's con- demnation of the I'onal Code The communi- cation was laid 011 the table foi two weeks the meeting not w Ishing to h iu the cooperation ed any political fiicllon. icprtsentativn of the Bricklayers' I'nlou made mi address sliituu-tha-t his union oiitnmplateil joining the lxdy Ho said that the striking biukhiyeis had al- ready been victorious iu two-thir- d ol the shops, nud predliteil that the strike would in the mens' favor In another week A delegation of Biooklyn Navy i.ud woikmiui called on President Ailliur on Satutday afini-noo- n to urge the eiifon emeiit of the Eight-hou- r law on Government wniks. NlllclilP ill Nrveulj-al- a, STAxtioni) Conn , Juno I. Willluni Marsha 7d y ear. of aite who hat n llilin; with tit.oufultw I ol Mniouan I' rnirr, lu th s, j10 num. Ion on the I'm road lomuuttiil sulci lu ihit afternoon 1 .hoot luif himtvlf throuKh the heal Mur.hull hat halaian ier,uul Hiatal) wat ili.cutiratri I Ly hit kuflUrluif Ha used a larae naiy revolver, and Lluw thu wliula tup of hit head ed. 11IK BVSSIAX JET IMMiailAMH. London Aitvlaed to Leave tkem In tko Hands oftko American ftocletlea. A conferenco of prominent Hebrews from some of tho chlof cities of tho United States and Canada wns held yesterday In tho Hebrew Otphan Asylum In Roventy-sovent- h streot. It was called by tho Hebrew Emigrant Aid Society ofthoUhltod Btntos. whoso hoadquartcra are In this city, ita object being to secure sys- tematic and harmonious action In tho reception and dlspor.-lo- n of the Russian Jowswho aro coming to this country. Ilepicsentallves were present from Now York. Btooklyn, CInclnnntI, Chicago. Washington. Baltimore. Philadelphia. St. Louis, N'nw Orleans, Louisville, Hlchmotid, Albany, Buffalo, Rochester, KowHavon, Hurt-for- d, Houston, and Montreal. Mr. Honryl Henry. Presldcntof tho Aid So- ciety, called tho conferenco to order. Ho sail that slnco Its oiganiatlon In December, 1SH1, the society limit eeoived and dispersed through tho country a ti'J I immigrants, mid had oxpond-o- d nearly $70,000. Myer H.Isaacs was made per- manent ( hnlrman of the conference; Henry Mackof Clncinnnti. and JI. A. Kursheedt and Albert Arusleln, Secretaries. 'Ihen Mr. George S. Yntos was intioduced. Mi. Y'atcs Is an Lnglishmau who was sent to tills country by thu Lord Mayor of London nnd tho Mansion House committee to Impure into the ellbicncy of the lollef associations in tho United States, and to roport as to tho practlcn-bilit- y of aiding thoni In tho work of taring for tho Busso-Jowls- h immigrants. Hu begun by saying that the Loudon (ommltteo hnd been informed by lottois from individuals in America that the American Hebrew Aid was demoralized and unworthy of the support nnd aid of tho F.ngllsh sooletlos. He had, since ha nrrived in this country, vis- ited most of its largo cities, and mndo cm of ul imiuirlos of the piomlnent Hubrows. Ho hud become, satlslled that the statements which wero made to tho London committee were untitle, and he now believed that this country wn the Is'st place for tho Russian Jews. He had advised the London committee that the American Hebrew Emigrant Aid So- ciety should bo trusted Implicit ly : thut tho l'ngllsh committee should no longer send the Russian emigrants to particular cities In the United .States, but should leave tho reception and dispersion of those who go to tho United States to the Hebrew Emigrant Aid Socloty, und that the English committeo should aid tho American society with money. Morlt Ellinger. who visited the principal 1 Itles in Europe as the representative of tint society, presented a report of his w oik. and then made some suggestions. He said that tho work of providing the Russian Jews who como to this country with tho means of sup- porting themselves must lie done In a business way. and not as 11 charity. Tho society must glvu u start to those who aro able to work. 1 hose who are not able to suppott themselves by Inbor should bo sent back. The Aid Society should in no vvny countenance tho sending of paupers from Luropo to this country. To ac- complish its work would roiiulrn tho united efforts of all tho societies In Iho United States. When Europe .Is satlsllod that tlio Amerlcnn societies nro working together in n business wny. It will sond Its money. Mr. Simon Wolf told of his interviews with prominent French Jows In Paris, nnd also urged tho necessity of harmonious work. Mr. Sternberg, who hns charge of a colony of Rus- sian Jews in Vinoland. N. J., snoko of bo suc- cess of thnt experiment, and ndv Isod tho estab- lishment of colonies iu other places. TOVXO 3IB. 1E JIASTIDi: TltEIlE AOAIX. I'rolected hj- - Two Policemen nklto ks Dla-poe- or kla Atoek or Tructa. Morlnus do Bastlde, tho younp; French rrotostant tract distributor, who was nttucked by persons who camo out of tho Canadian Fronch Catholic Church lu East Seventieth street for scattering tracts at tho church door on Sunday of last weok, said, as ho picked him- self out of gutter: "Never mind. I shall como again with my tracts. I shall como with two pollcomen two," and ho hold up two flugors defiantly. Y'estordny. at tho closo of tho morning sen Ico.nt which Fnthor Dela- croix, trim tin French Catholic church tn Twenty-thir- d street, and a grand vicar from Canada ofllclated. the members of tho church saw in fiont of the door Mr. de Bastlde. with his hands full of tracts, and on each side of him was a policeman. They had sugcostud to him that he had bettor getaway, and so provonUa disturbance; but the frenchman remained. Those who came out first sauntered toward Mr. do Bas- tlde. Soon others came, nnd the tract and the policemen were surrounded. Mr. de Bastlde offerod his tracts, and thoy wero accepted, but as soon as his stock was disposed of those who had taken them tore up the tracts, spat upon them, and threw them into tbo gut- ter. Then one of tho policomen turned to Mr. de Bastille nnd remarked: lour brethren don t seem to nppreclnto yourofTorts. You enn move on now; gotnlongl" M. de Bastlde wont away, and the congrega- tion went homo. Tho sexton of tho church. A. Cherbonnenu. said yesterday that the priest who ofllciatcd on Sunday of last week was Father Gulsiot. Ho himself, ho said, suggested to Father Gulsiot that It would be well to mention the tract ped- dler to the congregation. Tho jirlest said: Those books aro inspired by hell, and your duty is to burn them." According to the sex- ton tho tract distributor had spoken of lather (julslotas 'the dog of a priest," nnd had said "tho French Canadians: aro an Ignorant set." FVS AT A CLAM HAKE. Colonel Crockaron Tried anil Convicted by a Jury or kla Frlendt. A spoelnl train glided out of the Long Island Railroad Depot at Hunter a Point yesterday morning Jutt a. the rain ceated an I the tun Liuko forth On It wu. a jarty bound for Bay tide', where, at Crochcron a retort on the .hore, they were to enjoy a llhoda Island clam bate Tho party include Kcnlitcr A T Docharty Alderman sauer, Col Jo.cph Croch trou, ex Alderman Oeorge Krautt, Major J 11, Connolly, Harry l.enet eapt Wllllmull Vlclntyre, Tony Udler Oen vue'iuuti C'apl J in I'ell, T 11 , Ilui 1,1 (' , and William 11 Johnson r bouovan r 11 l.iiminlll. JuUe I unrenee of Mu.hlui:, and Al Smith When the ground, were reached a luhtlunih wu enjoyed un the ihainiat.ne beiian to tlow vtdoiloek I a I Huhcoik an John Actelarut the eaperla why .ui crimen led the Luke, announced it waa reudl an! tile luhlea were toon turrouiieted lie leatt Wua follow, d t the lull of the day A watch ahmrue'e from the poekel of Mr Rutumlll wat found iu the postet.ion of CoL I rocherou, aid court wat tuiniedljtely i omened for a tummary Kill JulKt tuwreuce oeeupied the bench twelve chairs urramted lu prorer order were oeeupied lo ihu hatlilv Impanelled Jury o, whleti Iteiater Uochirly wat foreman 1.x Alderman Krau.a eouduettd tlu pro.eeution Ibepn.ouer wanted to plead guilty Lut at there wat tome doubt at to hit tgehcwaa not lermitlidlu The Judge departed troni thu UMlnl itiur.u m clunking the Jury befoie any wiliutftia had Leeli examined and oierruled the oujeetloti 10 kuch an aet ly ing thut the new cole Juttlflid it, rile complainant tettilled Ibal he had uiitorluuulily been acqualllli with the pritoner for keven year, an) lost ih watch while in hit company It wat u vellow watch fhd pritoner cro.t exuuiinel the wltnett ho emphatically refuted to antwer the ipie. lion. On what line of cart did ynu get the watch t on iht ground thai It might criminate him o wltnettet were examined for the defenec, which ateounted forthe pottettion of Iho walili he .taling that the ritoner conducted a pawnbroker t huilue.t without a hcente Mi Krautt elouenth Mimmitl up fur Ihe penile autquotid many auihontiet from an old campaikii pamphlet in auppori of hit arguu em Tin Jure returue I a verdict tilling the prltuuer, Court, an I Pibtricl Attorney two Lotllet of wine each riio lluet wire promptly paid Oilier amu.einelit wit in dulgel lu until i cixlock, when the parly returued to Ihe city Crulelng to Cuvun lolnt. The National Yacht Club of Jersey City had lit opening crulta yeittrday I arly In the day a fug hung over tha water, and a drizzling ruin dainpeiiel the enthu. latin of tha amateur tart, liotwlthttaudlug tha preteui o the chow dir pota and huge haiki It of ilamt and appropriate condiment. It had Leell propoted to iruite up the rlier to I ort Ue Lut at lhrf.lt ay owinuto the forf ha I caused Ihe Heel to lote the In it li le 11 wat ukleed to uttpouii the eiuiti and lime the elioiidirut the cluli lioute L ml Hlli oeloek hjweeer tlle.un thnne out alll Coulinolore foil! lilLtou tiwll lllnl the lleet toget up tatl Willi anrhoi uulroiiid down the bin tu luiaill'oiut The louiuiolori lid the tint out of the cole Willi the Johu s ttnt und the leatir vdilli tijiiuudorc Slug lleiien. sliurt Andrew, lliehaol Km limit I I I I) llrli u, Lottie and other follow, il iu null k tin ci Ihe win wu light hut an iliLlide-faiori- d ihe licit shortly alter ihe tlartit I gun to rain Bkain and tnutliwiti, rt and lurpaullut were iu demand soon however the tun i auie om and nuickly dried Hit die kt on l ae an I'olul the fleet lalueto ullihor for chowder an ntlirr n fiehhmeult on tho rt turn there w it at,i,od , upper reie from iho wettllllltl, before w hit ll Ihe Itttl tkliuiuel illlliklt airntthi t,uv to the line from the entrauieof width It wat ulrtut to windward lo the mn borate, ihe cluu will hale lit annual tailing luatehetrly lu July Tko Ckurck und Ike l.ndlva l.und I.c'iibiip. Cn vri.VM), Juiiii 1. The llov. T. 1'. Thiupe, an lili-- prlett who hut long luld lolilldeutlal rtlatlont with lllthop cllliuour tiitluy pritiihi d a tlroug leimi u iu fuvnr i f the potltlon utt iinid Li hi. chief toward the ladlet i f the I an !ai.lli Me mi wry wrt 111 Inwnr I u un ml er of Ihe I euj.ii, who had on rlli atlutked llu I 01 e y aaluritt ll illan pittl anion,, tluitu or tilhtr uiilii ualitlet imtued Ihe luliet ranch tit I mil mitt in day liaiim, adlouriiMl at tl sun lu nai tin lnh tfllie ill ale ire ludlt.lialit tiiwunl ihu llktholi who hat e nt thou u no sij.iit i f Lai king di wu I he raruell llritut h I f the I Hid l.iaglle lie! a teHtloll In kill lu whiih the lilt hup wilt tilt n ll t rillil te I ail I Ihelotitiun of the I vile di fended Vlltt Vluri l.nlali Iritidelitof the Ladiet Mranih htt addn tted an open lellt r to the lllthop luwhieh the tnrtt hliu .elerele au Idt lulu d.uuucc la tlia uaiue of tha Irl.U women of elevelaud. NE VS FItOM THE OLD WORLD. TUB TVItKtSU C031.VISSWXE118 TO LOYVT. Action tkat Make, tke I'oalponeroent or tko Conference Ireetrnble Arnbl laaka Haja tkat ke wilt Repel European ABgreealoo Co.ssTANTiNOPiiE, June 4. Bosldcs Dcr-visc- h Tasha, tho Commissioner, nndLeblb Boy, Assistant Commissioner, Ahmed Essad Second Assistant Commissioner, and Vllmy Bey, nttacbtf to the Commission, hnvo sailed (or Cairo. All tho foreign Ambassadors wero summoned to tho Porto last ovonlng and Informed of tho despatch of tho Commission, with tlio object of ondoavorlng to offoct a recon- ciliation between the Khedive and Arnbl Pasha and to restore order. Lord DufTorln, tho British Minister, telegraphed to Karl Oran-vlll- o yestordny, that In view of tho Hultnn's ac- tion in sending tho Commission to Egypt, a postponement of tho Conference w as dosirablo. A rumor Is current that the Porto has despatched a circular to tho pow ers. in w hlch it ondenvors to show thnt a conforenco would be inopportune. Said Pasha, Minister of Foreign Affairs, when receiving tho Ambassadors last ovonlng, expressed himself to a slmllnr effect. The I'orto has sont n circular to its repre- sentatives abroad expressing tho opinion that tho conforenco is no longer called for, since tho Commission sunt to Egypt will sufllce to restore order. Pabis. Juno 4. Advices havo been rocelvod from Constnntlnoplo that tho Porto bus not directly refused Its assent to tho conference, but has expressed to the powers Its desire to await the result of tho mission of Dorvisch Pushn to Lgypt. Athens, Juno I. According to advices from Constantinople, Ahmet Ur.nd, the Sultan's confidential agent In Egypt, has succeeded in establishing an understanding between tho military party and the Sultan, so that in tlio event of the landing of Turkish troops thoy and tbo Egyptian troops will fraternize. St. I'LTEiesnurto. June 4. An olliclal an- nouncement of ltussln's acceptance of tho con- ference at Constantinople to Bettle tho Egyptian question is published London, J tine 0 Tho Standard's correspond- ent at Cairo says he has had an lntervlow with Arabi Pasha, in which tho latter said that he cared little for Knglnnd's promises and throats, and would repel European aggression with his whole strength. London. Juno 5. Tho MjuCj despatch from Alexandria, dated Sunday, says: "Heavy guns are now going Into the earthworks erected around tho harbor." TUE FBESCir DEllBY. Tko Orand PrlE or l'arla Won by an jEa. llak llorao Hidden by Arcker. Pakih, Juno 4. Tho raco for tho Grand Prix do Paris for colts and fillies, dlstanco about ono mile nnd seven furlongs, camo oil hore and was vv on by Mr. II. ltymlll's bay colt Bruce. Tho Duko of Hamil- ton's chestnut colt "rfnt'lon camo In second, and Count F. do Lm o's bay colt Alhamhra third Mr. .T " ..uno'sbay colt Romeo, who was to havo been In tho race, met with an acci- dent this morning, in consequence of which ho did not run. The wlnnorof Hio raco Is an Eng- lish horse, and was ridden by tho jockey Archei. Eight ran. Including M. Michel Ephrussl's bay colt Blctuteur II. Bruce held a position in the contra until rounding the lust bend, when he mndo his effort, and won easily by half a length beforo Feneion, who was a nock ahead of Alhambra. Dlctateur II. ilnlshod a bad fourth. The othor stnrtors wero Ilnran do Chnmant's chestnut colt Bc'ussi. M. A. Bosvignes's bny colt Jasmin, and Count F. do Lagrange's chest- nut colts Boyalltou and Dundln. Tbe time of tlio raco was 3 minutes 20 5 seconds. The following Is a summary: Tha Orand Prlxde Pari! of 100,000 franca tn apecle, (Ives halt Ly tha city of l'arla, and bait by the five great railway copipanlet, for entlra cnltt end AUlea loaled In 1S70. of ev err detcrlptlon and country, added to aaweepttaieaof llXKlfranct each the tecond to re- ceive loctw franit. and the third oitu franca out of the atatea, about one rulla aud teveu furlonga, 3J4 rt Mr II Rymlllab c. Ilruce, by Sea Saw, out of Carina (Archer) . i Duke of Uamllton'a clu c. lenelon, by Mageolet.out of ranlalileiWatti) , 3 County de Lagrange a b c Atha.ubra, Ly Consul, out of the Ahbetl lllartlei) 3 M Michel Fphruttla b c Dlctateur II, by Kuy Blaa, ont of Dttcorde (Ucachl ... . .... , o The race for tho Prix do la Ville de Paris (handicap) of 0 000 francs, added to a sweep- stakes of 250 francs each, for entire horses, geldings and mares three years old and up- ward, and of overy description and country, dlstanco nbout two miles, was won by Mlnetta. (iornld (Fronch horse) came in second and Aurollo third. Moarnlnr; ror Garibaldi. Rome. Juno 4. All tho Liberal journals ap- pear la mourning and publl.li culoglei of (ltn Uarlbaldl. Tha action of the French Chamber of Deputiet yetterday In adjourning at align of mourning hat produced au linpretilon lllcelnttl (UrlLaldl alii Vtajor Can xlohaee arrliad at I aprera The preparation! for the rrematlon of the reiuaine have Leen tutpended Tha doctor, are ixftcted to arrive thlt evening I.otl.oN lune'i Vtletpalcli to the Mlllf.Vuj from Caprera tan that Oen llarlballla family obey Ihe In lunctlont of bit will The teremouy of cremation w ill be performed br Signor I'ranJIua. Anntveraary ortke Cziarlna'a lleatk. St. Pktersduro. June 4. Tho anniversary y etterday of the death of the late I.mprest w at obterved with tpeclal terviceaat the Cathedral of st Peter and bl Paul which were ntti tided by the r in c ror and I in tirett Tha Luiperor tubteiUently vitlted the Winter Palace Fatal Exploalon on a Ilrlttak Ironclad. London. June 4. A broech-lnudln- g gun on board tha llrltlth Ironclad Swlrtture bunt latt Wednetdai. when the thip wat near vttdelrs. It it re ported that one man wat kilted ant ruur other, received injuries from the affect, of w hlch they would di. Tke Itoatou Nkootlur Mjttery Clearod Up. Boston, Juno 4. The mystery surrounding the death of Charley Kipley hat been cleared up Kddle Crane, aged 7 ycart, who. with Perry llutchlniou, wat in company with tho Ripley boy In the from where lie met hit death, hut confetted that he shot him accidentally with a pltt.il lie tait "lharlie Klplei an I Percy Huntington and I were nut lu the ttable lliere wat a l.ox then, and we taw one of llaruuma Jiiiubo hooka on ll an we all went tn ttie I ox to get tt There wat a llttot In the box Bn.lt r the b tok 1 took hoi of It and lirtid It up and It caught koine wal, and there wua u I ang andiharlci felt down The j itehrork wut there be aide of i barley It beared me so lint I did not know whether the ang did it or ihe pitchfork ihen 1'iny and I ran out and met Mrt lliilcliluson she went Into the barn and took I harler up and carried hlin out Into the ttreet and a man droie up an t took rharlee home " While the boy't .tori uiae be true it it cenerally te lieved that the i ittol was luttiitlonally aiiucd at llurly in cbtldl.b. sport Mnt;en Davie. Mr. Nathan Magen, fancy goods dealer of 47S Orand ttreet, wat marrit 1 tn VI it Mora Pai it, daughter of Mr Morrit Davit, pawnbroker of 3 Sullivan street, tu the Chryttie Street Sy nagogue, v etterdav Tho bride was dretted lu while silk, with long train, and wore upon ber dark hair a wreath of orange (lowers, from which drop led along lace leli V band plilled during the eeremoni llieeliunll wat crowded Afti r Ihu marriage the wed ding parti and one hundred hinted rile.t. went to Irv Ingllall whtre dinner wat term! Vlore than two him drcd frlendt Wire prrunt at Ihe ball w lite tl follow ed Vniiint the guetlt wire ex Aldrrinuu William lleunell, Mr Jullllt Harlem, Mr ami Mrt Limit A levi Mr Kull ner Vlr aniMrt loteph An b rtou Mr laenb rrlheini viettrt I.ewlt and Abram stern au I vlltt stern vir au! Mrt Peter Wood vir and Mr. Henry llasenhor. Mr. Herman Joseph and the Mittet Joseph Arreat or tke Ileerfleld lloy Murderer, Oiiitshi.ii Mass., Juno 4. Walter Curtis, aged IU tha Dcerneld murderer nil arretled 111 Ulaud ford today bv Stale peleetive lleliion Vtunyan otWil llaiuihurg uul It In jull at Xonhamptou How I I be hiouicht hire on the first train tomorrow turlliwat on lilt way to a laic In lllaudford w lure he hit former ll worked and wut caught hi Ulan Hi rt partlet He wat barefoot at Iho ll un of hit arrest, aud had been w alklng acrutt coiiutri KcporCed Illtorder on an llxciirelon. On the return of uu uxctirson barge on which Uraiuli 11 nt hi I'atrlek t Vlulual Alllaneet went on a trip from lirooklyu yeiterday, asiiual of police in re .lon.e lo information riteltid mel It ul Ihe foot of Pa cilli street All w at foun Hole unlet op board ul11iiiui.il hi lend hruwlt hnd net uirtd during the day itwatre Itrteti hoit ever Hint oj potlte tulton terry twoyuuug men Jumped overboard Tkr Illaaliled lli.tp Hull 1'luyer. Titov, Juno 4. filllesple. tho Troy baseball llayirwlio was iujurid ut Sew Vork on Saturday ar rlitdhoiiie tlia morning Pr vklau uu eminent tur cetiu win, hut t hurgu of tin ifitt taya ho duet not i on aider tillleti le's wound duui,trout, und thut tils skull is nut trueliirid A Uioeer'i Niilclde. Martin Tletjen aged , '17, a grocer, who lived at Jt7 Watt Thirty fifth street was found banging to a beam in tha cellar latt nUu Ills wifo dltcotered hu body Ha had luffered from depraiiiouof splrili, but bad utrtr lUrtattutd suicide. LIFE INSqiiASCK IX MISSOVltl. Tko Uatual Ileaerve Proklhltcd from DolnsT Uuilnetal'WItkoiit a Uepoalt. St. Louis, Juno 4. John I'. Williams, Btato Suporlntondont of Insurance, has begun a vigorous onmpalcn against companies or In- dividuals doing or seeking to do llfo Insurance busluess hero without first complying w Ith tno laws of the State requiring tho deposit of ado-qua- surety to protect Missouri policy hold- ers. Yesterday suits wore Instituted against three such organizations doing business with- out tho llconso of tho department, and among tho defendants arraigned In thu Couitof Crim- inal Correction was tho Mutual Reserve Fund Llfo Association, whoso circulars locate tho parentolllco at 143 Broadway, itoiv York city. This association claims to bo Incorporated in Ivow York as n sort of charitable concern for mutual benotlt of membors rather than for pe- cuniary prollt: but tho department lu this Statu holds that insurance is insurance, under whatever gulso it la offered, and that this asso- ciation In not entitled to exemption from legal superv lslon or from tho deposit of a security to protect policy holders. Thus exemption is ac- corded lu Missouri only to secret societies and tho llko, which incidentally insure tholrown members by special contract, and do not solicit outside business. Tho .Mutual Unsorve Association claims to lio exempt In Now York from tho operation of tlio Insurance Inws there, and from supervisory control, but the Missouri depnrtmont treats tt ns a money making concern, speculative rather than charitable or benevolent. If this construc- tion Is affirmed by tbo courts, tho how lurk company and several lothers, including Man Insuranco Association agoncles. chiclly of Southern companies, will either have to put no $100 000 security with the Insuranco DoDiirt-me- or eonso doing business In Missouri. Tlio Mutual Rcsorvo has a reputable local agency lu St. Louis. O 0X1! TO J01X THE COW BOYS. JL lllnnraatA I.ad wht Head Traak fltorles Committing; n Double Murder. St, Paul, Juno 4. A lHoneer-l'res- a spe- cial says: "Tho bodies of young Washington aud Frod Febrack wore found In Rod Ryu, sev- enteen miles north of rVirham, Minn,, on Sat- urday. Washington wns shot back of tho right car with a load of buckshot. Fobrack's throat was cut, there was a bullet In his left cheek and a cut over his right eye, mado by a club, which was found nearby, covered with blood. Tho bodies were found nbout twenty rods apart. Washington was a surveyor from Buy City, Mich., about 30 years old. Febrack was u German, about 20 years old. and lived in Perham. The suspected murderer is John Frebbett. 15 years old. who was soon In Pcrhnm with olenty of monoy. a watch, and a revolver which was known to havo been In Washing- ton's possession. Ho was in Fargo on Friday night and said he was going to join the cowboys In Montana. Despatches weie sent to Moreheud to arrest him. but hu got uvviii. Tho murder is supposed to have been committed at least a week ago. Frebbett'B mother, who lives In Perham, Foems lndlfforent about the boy's crime. Ho was a reader of tbe llo)of ,ra I'orA: and similar literature, and had often been hoard to say that he would join tho cowboys. DISASTER J.V LAKE 3110110 AX. Jk Sckooner Capsized, and all on lloard Drowned IVItkln Mlzkt efHhore. South Haven, Mlch.Juno 4. This even- ing thu schooner Industry, Capt. King, from St. Josoph. capsized just north of this harbor, nnd all on board wore drowned. Tho disaster occurred near the shore, and was witnessed by hundreds, but. owing to tho terrible sea, It was lmposslblo to render any assistance to thu crow, who wero washed from the rigging one by ono. Capt. King was tbo last to go down. At one time ho was so near land us to bo recognized by acquaintances on tho shore. A part of tho rigging camu ashore, with a board bearing the naino Industry." Oallunt efforts were mudj by the sailors on tho shore to rescue thu perish- ing crow, but the wreck was carried so rapidly by tho gale that nothing could reach her. The severest storm of tbe season Is raging, nnd it is lmpoxslblo to do uuy thing except wait till morning, when a seurch for tho bodies will bo begun. BABBIXO OUT TUE FIBE3IEX. Ai Attempt to Fire a Factory Wutckman Jkf cCaaaen As reeled. A citizen passing by the big factory of tho Kew York Consolidated Card Company, at r8and'JO West fourteenth street, at It o clock latt night, law what appeared to be a fierce tire going on on the second floor, and gave an alarm While attempting to force an entrance lltto the building the firemen were confronted by Watchman McCanien, who was within They shout ed to liiin to open the door but he refuted, aud threatened tn shoot If they burst It o en They broke through the windows aud dashed up ttitirt On the second floor they found a barrel ailed w itli paper and raga, soaked in varnish and ablaze It was the work of a luoiuetil to extinguish the names, whleti had at ready spread to the Uoorlllg Aiting Capt Wilton of tho Charles street police put McCatsen un ler arrest. Iheprltouer teemed daetl when arretled, and kept re pealing, I know who s dona that " lleseeiacd tu have been drinking heavily Tke KiiTlltk Yackt Maggie. Boston. June 4. Tho English yacht Magglo arrli ed by steamship The Maggie it Intended by Mr Warren to be enrolled In the Uaslera acht Club, of which he Is a member, but she will La obheed to fly tbe hngtish flag. The boat Is very sharp, narrow, and deep, and has an ugly overhanging fan tall The hull is coppered from the keel to above tha water line, and the remainder Is painted black, w Ith a narrow ribbon of gold just t elow the rail The Interior Is divided Into three compart luetits au after cabin with bunks for tuo, a main cabin, and a forecastle The cabins are fitted en tdalnly tn redwood, trimmed with teak Her accommodations do notfaioratdy compare withthoseoraily nfteen tonyacht In these waters Larce shears have teen erected on the dock deck, and it Is llioucht that in two weeks she will ba ready to saiL t te will br tailed br Capt Henri Itau dall who hat been male on her for two tears lie will have the assistance of two British tailors who were brought uier on purpose to man the cutter Her dlnitnsions are Length from stein to pott, on deck 45 feel, beam, 6 feet 6 Inches, deplhnf hold, H feet, drauchl sfeetolnchet She has u; tons of lead on her kei I and Mont In. hie Iter tpart are as follows matt deck to hounds, Js feet U inches , topmast J i leet bowsprit outboard, Jl feet, main Loom J7feet, gaff Jo ft;, t 0 inellet. toptall lurdt 14 and JJ feet, apauker Loom, oS feet she it 15 tons measurement Emma lleea Artested ror Mariler, rillLLirsDUita, June 4.Tho dead body of a newlv biru child wat found in a cesspool at Rediugtoti, near Pa , latt Tuesday Dr 9 S ltachlnautf hatlon testified that It wat Lorn alive and healthy, and summoned by coroner Uliler of hastoltreudcre a verdict to thai effect and that bmnia lltss aaervaut was Its mother The girl hat keen arrested on tha charge of murder, and Is now tn the Fastou I ill Muiti her arrest she hat coufethed to being the mother of iho chill butahatlrnlet that the killed it she attribute t its death loan accident She is th? mnth.T of u bright chill of ten years of age, and she claims to have Leen married about eleven yeara ago The reputed fattier of the child litis lu the vicinity of ratten Detectives who are working on the case withhold his name for the preteut It li averred that lu publication would create general surprise Hkot Wklle Htopplntr ker .Sun's Flkt. Mrs. Anne flibson aged 45, of 4j() West Twon-t- y tsventti ttreet, wat thot in the abJomeu and proL ably fatally Injur, ,1 at 10', o'clock last night Tu Pr Hardy, who was called, she said "1 was Bitting up reading and waiting for my son tn come home I hetrd him nuarulflng In front of the houtt an I went to tee what the matter wat 1 fouu him lighting wilh anuthrr man ran up nnd separated them and then I wm thot " Mir did not know wtin hrt d the pltlol vtrt tllbion t ton hat nut been leen tiuci thr tliootliig aud those who witnessed it coul not tell who fired the shot Mrs Uibsoti was taken tu tho hew ork llosj Hal Tke Knlfo In Wllllaineburck. John Kramer of 101 Moore streot. Wlllinms-burg- h was stabbed and seriously wounded about 3 n clock yesterday morning by Chat Slrely, a carpenter, aged JO yeara Krainir and hli brother Androw were itndlng In hwenilreet when two unknown men came up ant lri.au lo wrangle with thelu While the illtpiitu wat lu i riarttt streli uppruache and knoiked Vn Ir.w itnwu lit brother tried to retect hliu und In ,Ii,i-i- l to wat nabbed four tinit i. hi Slrelt once In thu nrck mil three t Hi. t iu Ihe ack mulcting serious ut hut Ueees tardy fatal wounds, strely wat arrested An Overturned uwl. A seventeeu-foo- t yawl boat, with the namo Matilda on tho stern, was found yesterday moriili g at the foritof Hudson uleuue llrookllll A black olertoal, wlthvelict collar und blae'k striped tilk llulug, wat round lull BVAKKS FHOU HIE lELEOIIAPll. Print e ( harles of Prussia has tnet wilh an accident by w hie Ii his leg was fractured vmoug the passengers uu the steamer Servla which sailed froiu hlvtrpool on Saturday for New Vork were I'rof (Iraliam Hell, Vir h J Ktid,aQdslr J W Mackey und family Henry Hryan (colored) whobat been on trial lu .New t""! V ,."" Ihe last two days forthe murder, on 1'UJM,J, A.f'.'.xu"' n employee of tha Midland .North Carolina Hallway, hat Leen """""" ef the Jury btcug luat ba was lBiau.H ' LIFE IN THE METROPOLIS, JH dashes uriti: axd TitnitK nr run 'tlH SUX'S ItEVOttTlUtS. ,fl.j.H . sH Incidents oT t June Si.m.i.y ltlc-xrn- y Itob. iiil bery tiy I)u .IffM A Ntruy llnllet Honvr IIIH nlr or FI BhtftNmi.il tIol for (he Police- - H Ilunrr Mooroof 13 Klntr street wn nsHaultod .'IbI at Houston and Madonna. H recti cptcrctr forenoon J H by tuo men One irii-t- liltu by tho ttirott with bota j H hfttirli and choknl him 10 that lie cotiM make no ouU,rj, lH while the other near died hit pocket fie had alrdj I tH taken a Bilk handkerchief, and wai In tho act of btat jH lux lilt wateh frum the chain, w hen Boreral paiiciaby mI came to Moore'a rescue and thu hiffhwa) met) ran, .let eliiH lnjt upon dcscrlpllnun furnUhtd by Moon, the Pr loo ' iH Htreet pullce arretted Jatnei Keiiian, a profeitlotxai jH thlf, who wai by Moon. The police .ben lent H out ageiiftral alarm, deicrlblntt Moore other atlaiifiDt. j Tlili wai received at the Mvrcer street atatloa Jait at tho nirKfuu, Dr. Uoru, wat JtckIdk aeral iol jH wounds on the head of William liumm of S3 Sooth FifU aeitue who had mid that he cot bla inurla at tb H haudi of an unknown mau at UouRton and MacduDrf M ttrreta. Htt was IdttitlUed by Moon us tbe other lUgU H w n man an Is alto a profef ilonat thief M .itihn Malioue nf Klulitv seventh street and CleTetitta H avinue api lied at tbe ,Muet LiUitli stixit IIoipUal,ya- - SH tenlay, fur trtatiuent for aiicep wuund over the boart, H which he said be not in a barrvom early yitrday M lunriilng Ue was drunk at the luie, be safd. and ali be t H remembered was a tllit iu which he and bis trot t rem 1 H Kot the wont of It rite wuund had evidently bten la I M illittd with tbe bbr bladeiof a pen knife Aithoaxn tt ' WM netrated the perlcardLUtu, U is not couldered arluus. FH ii lahuue, who Is u uuun fUlowof J J, lr suld to be tbe I H iiiHiiwlto rescued Miks Clapp of est Fountnth street, 1 1 v. In ii sbo threw bersvlt Into tbe liudson Hiver for tbe I !H purposu ut commltt tig; suJcMe sum wtets aja M Jacob Mei.tnholih rof mj hast tonv sistb street, waf 1 severely cut in the rttiht thigh br bauiuel ltodhein to a H wuarrcl In Jacob Loudon's slaughter hoaseat W Eatl H fourth street eterday iJe was uluu to Bile aH lie Hospital Lvndhelm was arrested. H uolden.J years old, of aio Weet Tenth strct, H waif hot in th lert letc bv some person cmkuowu t H him al Uleecker and Barrow streets, at about ouon, yea-- ,H terUa. The wound Is slight lie was taiea wat. Via- - H Hospital H 1'oliceman Nugent caught three men in the act of rH forcing oji-- u tliL rear windows of Ueoriie Scbrovdwa H btertaloon 1.4r7 tecoiit avenue, at 4 o'clock ycsteitlay M tuuriilug He arrested Joseph aM ofSJi Last Thirty- - tl Urn street, and found lu lut pockets a revolver, four jLH kulves, nine handkerchiefs and a collection of copter H cent The other men got away. Ward wai ComioiUe4 eiH tn the York ville Follce Court iM Tke Complaint of n Cur llrlTer Whose) Vr liiB Kxlsleuce vrue Orerlooked. l A Bux reporter shared the front plutform ot a H Third avenue car with the driver yttttrday, and on tba way up town called the driver's attention to a party of w omen who had hailed the car " Let 'em hall," said the driver. The car rattled onward, and two or three men leaped ssfl on the rear plitform, entered the car, and sat down. Lflfl Other men and women alighted: tbe car was soon hailed flAH b another Kruup of women ihe driver taw tbem. and jH pretended not to "There's more of 'em." laid he. H Ihev can take the next car" tie muttered to bimteiT, KfAfAffl aud the reporter could distinguish anget and profanity KfAfAfS In vv he said LfgfgfgfgfgfgfS "Aro ou behind time?" he a iked JM "No. said "the driver, but I don't Intend to take any H more passenKers than 1 can belp That condnctor can Kt sHB all he can and keep all be get but 1 aln t agoln' to flejp H hliu 1 11 run bun vtt the road If I can tie a tbe meanest 1 man that ever ran a car He don t nver dlrry with c !l driver ho. tit. not a cent's worth A decQut, square con ,H duptur Is worth ten cents n haif trip to a d liter, and " aH there a plenty of 'em that'll chuck In a paper ot tobacco 1 and a telax of beer lu tbe count of a day. fiuttbat M ft. How Uon t act as If he knew there was a driver aboard ' fsH The End ofa Carrier iUon. H A man holding a yountf carrier pigeon stood LsH on the bow of the Sta en Island steamboat Pomona yes ' terday afternoon. When the boat was within half e uUe of New Urlghton he tossed the bird Into the air. Ik H Mew ahead for a short dlntanee, then turned and went tLLH toward .New rtrt Agnlu chanulng ltn flight, it returned 1 to tha Pomona and aliphttd on the tap of the smoke, bbH ilpe The heat drove it away, and It flew rowvrU, ifrH Sen York Its winps appeared to be weak, and once ur M tvltuit nearlv fell Into the bay Maklnir apparently a an f1,! premeedort.lt returned to the beat, hovered ever tbe 1 vmokc t Ipe, attempted to settle on the lieu, and aoddenly dropped Into it It was seen no more 1 Dedicating m eti- - Chapel. H Tho Sovonty-flr- Street Methodist Episcopal H Chapel was dedicated last erenlnc by the IWv. Olshop Andrews The chapel ts In West Serenty sixth street, IH between Muth aveuue and the Boulevard Itisahaod H some structure of brick, with a brovn stone front, and. jH will seat about four hundred persons It was built by H tbe Methodist Church ta ten Ion Society of .New Tort, jH 1 he chapel aud the land cost 4Jyno About I1S.UUU the j.1 a liouiit reiiiitimiiff unpaid, was raised by subscription u?.liH durimf,vPien1u'SMTvics Die pastor of thecbapl. f lUklH the ltev J llatusny Before tbe dedication the ltev, H vr a U ail preached, and Mr J R Cornell and ue& 1 H Uluion H MsL made addresses. H The Chlltlrea from the .Nemesis. H Commihbloners of Emigration Hansel t. Tain- - jH torand btephenion went to the Ward's Island Emirant H Hospital yesterday tto see the children who were taken from the steamship Nemesis sufleriJig, as tt U H alleged from the effects of bad air and poor water Dr HLV lutiie Phvsiclan in chief, said that there had been no bH iKutlis sine e bis report was banded In on Saturday, and VieaLH there iniftbt be but one more After Questioning ttM MSPEiLb l ureiits the toinmlfastoucrs were latlstfed that the do ! MrH torn report was true In all respects Couimlsalonu 9 UaWH llauelt vaid last i Ufht that the matter Diight come up la AjK9 the special meeting to be hi Id on 1 hureday next H Funeral of Man ace r Ileruard. The funeral of the Into Oscar G. Bernard. JPH who wa a purtuer of Charles an I Danjcl FToooaan la mMI the management of Square Theatre, look flHslii place )etterdav from Ut residence of hi trutberdn I IKI law Mr v U Trebfeldtr. 11 East street. i sHH Mr Kvrunrd died in ban Francisco on Ma 2X Mr iH licrnard camt on to New ork vlth the bodv, arrlrlui i VH on baiurJn The Kev Or Kabln of tbe tilth Avenu flsLI Temple conducted the funt-ra- service Rclativs froa MLLH IiUujjo i leveland, and were present Th Hill hndv was j laced iu the Trabfelder family Yaolt Inhaled. Ii JHIH t lelds Cemeter flufll Jutlffe lllllon Iteelgne ae Law lrolaaor. . HDM Judu'o John r. Dillon who, when he left tha 't9QI bench of the tultcd Elates Circuit Court In Missouri and , iBI came to this city accepted an appointment as one of the iBI I rofessnrs of Columbia College Lnw School, has Just re JVHsb! .1 .Tiicd his professorship The reasons given for tho step Vlatal hi.vt not vet bcvii proiuulitHted but tiiev are prothlj , WBfl the ludkc s i ruftiiional en.aiiiitnts as counsel for the alLaU Lnion I'aiitli Halivvav Company, of which Ids uncle. f fffllH biduey union is PreHtdttit und fur otter railroad cor I mMM toratious uud the tlnauci.! magnates connected wit I H them ' H "William J. Uutehlueun'e Troublea. i Vj 'William J. Hutchinson, the stock broker, who sHI recently paid Juha Dull $7U),lkO In settlecieut of a suit J !Vnl for money of which VuS chanted ho had been defrauded Hllfl bv him and whose tn.nvactio.it iu he matter are now t lBil the subject of proct-duik- bv the Governing Cotiiiulttet iLBaV of the ackUxchauice, has been sued again ty Mr DuU , for other and additiunai sums of w hicli he alleges he hat j HlLal been wromtfullv deprived lu the course of his stock op 1 flBH eriitlons Tho lltiKatlun promises to result in some lu ! il terctiiigdevilopmeutsof Wall street ways and inethoJa I flH Iort M'nrden aumtnrri'i Condition. , KlH Thu condition of Capt. Moos Summery the IffV Port Warden whose spine was frrtured and dislocated I) ilB ouhalurday by falling Into the bold of the bark. Royal j ,H Arthur, at the foot of Amity street BrooUvn. reuaim ' il,'sfl (ito ttlt-sa- Tht phsicians Jt the Lonx Island col 'lAV'tV Ii ge lio pltal hold out v erv Unit hope of tilt roov(ry tfM JleU enilrei cous.ious but all his limbs arc parairi. r vH HU brother and other relatives arrived jestorday from ilf'.al bracuto j ' (AtH In 3Icmory or UurlbalilL XjV Tho Garibaldi Hoeioty. of which Louis V. fc Ym Tutrnzy is Captain met in the Maulnl Hotel, 7d South j wanhlngtou square, last night and sent a drepatehot ) iljlB rondylviue to the family of tbe late Gen. OarlbaldL JL Jvjfl niittlug of all Italian aud fren h societies baa been ' 3 M lalhd furti-nirfh- t wheu some Joint arrangement will U fi,lxlH mi.d for a pubUc demoustrutlvD ;i .11 T.H f)'h sal To.nltfhfe. Meeting. 'M Tho mooting of trades unionists and otbeJ. k UU worMiikineu lu Cooper Institute tonlitbt to prot-- jt KH airaliist the new penal code is to be particLpated in by F ffc!B larLnumiiter wf orgaiilrations and wiu undoubtedly Le .r j grcut success ItfjH Tha President JCIdiuv a Mile a Mlnnt. ' 'til When rrnsident Arthur, accompanied by ex ) YJU euator (.onkluiif uud Mr Cur bin rcJu uvvr the Lou ' Ifiand Itallnmd last week, thi train tiMVcbeJ at Mvrut- - 41'tH of a mile a ui.uutc fur u dlitauceof over tweutv flre rtaml km Blunul utiles 1'iedlillon. Fnlr vrentlier, north to west wind, tliihbt ,' Ufl Laruiiittr tlilit chaunea in uiitcraiuse ' frlH jorn.Mis ahuct loirs. W Tut us list rrcelveU for Mrs MiCjJSkv SMcue. , ill tr.,1 e. fmaL 11 : t U I hrM.it la r Drlliuth of VlUlit a enui nial Kiliilt I (H trik.rial uasf unJ ii'uomii nt In ib stmt ricu l,it i.tM..iulal liitfal U is tuptostU Ibal bo Uud itvm I, I H alald ( i J llurnll rlilcrel the l.Mtti S!li rolUt ll tinit h rJa auj anuouiKcJ iliut he liaJ suia , ijjc H lle iltuil lu tilt Kiwr.lJ,. Ilutpllal nlin tiruolLer jitlH tin all jiix valUllts nun uerefuuuj rtUfCu A ! Ihe ITUItallaus ntu liaiuK'J .mturcJlc rttttttnl lu. t M Imrf, ri iua nt tin, Italian Liuur ,ut Aid 2uO,tr the '!klH "Hlin tor Hit I'ruvtriiU'u or Lrutltv uj Chi dren tlia l,H i uiiitiiiatLc ntra of I nniratlun, and turlmis irnau itt I ) tint and have trained ill tlitlr luy altr lu tin te nlo ,1 ! ' I ruiulii itttui rruin ititir Imiiirv sptnt tlvrda) Us Cat h ImiH and rtcritet Mtits frum somt uf ihtircuuii it vIH trjiiu'ii UolHt luro aud liad hraid uf lh.lr wudliiua l!H Hatll Itoaclie stroke uf tli Uauntlrst tlwli' lltl f IH dtbarrtd at an amateur bt tl, xtbtilive i uuiudtti... ut fl Hit llarlulil llri-alt- Vssuciatl ill, luis had hit items. '( w hlch tiunorr natuvvir iti turn litre rrtturri or 1 i M th. (iniiuillttt and th. tlfhl mil ruw twit Irilav 0 H Lipiltt bo uf lait t ear t tia takes the lave ut V , IVH U li.iuarett whu Is sua The vrn nil) t,aU stuu 1B tulle ruc.ua ll llerltiu to luerruw vtilltUi aluubulk , tana. JJ II

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Page 1: The Sun. (New York, N.Y.) 1882-06-05 [p ]. · 2017-12-20 · jH VOL.XUX.--y-278."NEW YORK, MONDAY, .JUNE 5, 1882. PRICE TWO CENTS. TAMMANY HALL'S BIG FOUR. I mill lACTICH A.VP I'UXS

jHVOL.XUX.--y- 278." NEW YORK, MONDAY, .JUNE 5, 1882. PRICE TWO CENTS.

TAMMANY HALL'S BIG FOUR.

I mill lACTICH A.VP I'UXS STIBIUM)i v ltr.nr.u.ios,

. Hickirirlln'J'oBlreliiriln! Uiviiiilziillnnlinnilnfiit- -l nrerlitlnly A limit lnkii Kell's.tlllliiilr-tlluvv- le Over Allium Miiilit.

On tin' night of lhn hint annual clivtluii ofKu'ltpmsof tlioTiiinmiinySoolotVMjvoriil pnuiiIncut Tnmmuny men prmlii'tul that lirforuthe ireno ml election in Novomliyt tlii-- wouldUni contest for tho control of tho TuinniaiiyirKnnlzatioti between tho men who ruHP-Mi- t

tho Assembly districts In which Tniiiiniiiiy Is

stroncaiulthewlnifof tho part which Is tailedby Its opponents "tho lllossoiu Club crowd "

Tho district lenders who represent the lllof-so-

Club Interest nro lMwurd Kean.eyof thoThlrty-flrs- t District. Police ComoilslonerBIdnoy V. Nichols of tho Thirteenth Dis-

trict. Gen. Frank 11. bplnola of thoDistrict, and Alderman William

Bauer of tho Elovnntli District. Thuymanaged Tammany's alTiIra In Albany dtirlnctho session of tho Legislature that has jut ad-

journed, and are familiarly spoUen of in Tam-many Hall as "Tammany's Dip Tour." Thruoof tho Assembly districts which thoy controlnro almost Invariably carried by tho Repub-licans, and the Tammany organization In thoBlxteonth District, which has always boon con-sidered one of Tammany's strongholds, N saidby tbo Blossom Club's opponents to bo practi-cally worthless.

There .ire indications that tho ilchtwlll beginvery soon. Ths feeling between tbo two partiesIs very bitter, and cannot bo restrained mui.lilonger. Tho lenders of tho strong Tammanydistricts openly assert that tho "lllg Tour" nrobo bent upon controlling tho organization thatthey will, it necessary, cross swords with JohnKelly.

" Tho flght must begin soon." said one ofthese leaders yesterday. " Wo don't Intend tolollow the leadership of tbo Blossom Club.Tlioy want all the ofllces. but itivo the organi-zation no votes. If they Imve their way thedistricts which hae the Tammany tote willget nothing for their work. We are expectedto spend our money and roll up our usual ma-jorities every year, and give tho olllces to peo- -'

plo who cannot carry their own districts. WoHhall flght them on this Issue, and. unless JohuKellv is aealnst us. wo shall win."

Another argument used ngalnst the BlossomClub party is the conduct of the " big Four" atAlbany. 'These men went there to loot outfor the organization's Interests." a Tammanydistrict leader said last evening, "nutof doing that, they have used Mr. Kellv's nameand the name of Tammany toserve their ownpurposes. By their advloe our .Senators con-tinued allof Gov. Cornell's Itepublican appoint-ments, and our .senators and Assemblymenvoted for every bad and every unpopular billwhich passed tho Legislature. The or-ganization has not n benefited bytheir acta. Tho few clerkships and otherofllces which wero giver, to us were tilled byhenchmen of tho Big Four without uuyI consultation with tho organization. Doe any-body suppose that tho organization would rec-ommend Charles H. Swan foi a tlerk In the As-sembly? Ho never belonged to the organiza-tion, and lives In Sew Jersev. But he Is n mem-ber of the Blossom Club I have no doubt thatthe Big Four havo promoted their own Inter-ests and tho interests of some of ourmembers of the Legislature. But so far as J.can see they havo done nothing for tho organ-ization, except to put it out of tho Democraticparty, and give It tho reputation of sustainingthe corrupt measures passed by tho Legisla-ture. ManyTamman) voters in our districtshavo already declared that they will not votethe Tammany ticket next fall. If tho Conven-tion which nominates it is controlled by thosepeople."

The probable attitude of John Kelly In thoevent of this contest is much discustedbv hisdistrict leaders. Tho friends of the Big Foursay that he authorized all their acts In Albinywli eh were of a political nnture. nnd thnt ha

ill therefore be on tboir6ide. Koine of themIntimate that he dare not oppose them. On thoother hjnd, the opponents of the Blossom Clubpartr say that Mr. Kelly feels bitterly towardlie Big Four because tno did not prevent tho

lammany Senators and Aswoniblsmen fromtoting lor corrupt measures. An Intimatepersonal friend of his ".aid vesterdny Mr.Kelly feels tlmt Tarum inj Hull has been put In

' t very unenviable position by tho action of itsrepresentatives in the Legislature on the billswhich aro belleveu to havo Ix'en passed by cor-rupt means. Ho siioakft in tein.b by no means'omplimentary of the Tammany Senators andAssemblymen who voted for the Elevated Hall-roa- d

and Broadway Jlallroad bills, and helpedto kill tho Five-cen- t Fnre bill and the bill to re-duce the faro on the Thirty fourth StreetJerry. I know, too. Unit be nttachps much ofthe blame for this work to tho Big Four."

I he leader of a district which Is always rar-le-dby Tammany Hall said yesteiday thatjhcro were indications that tho Blossom Club

party would soon attempt to take tho control ofthe First Assembly District fromPatrick 0. Duffy. It they succeeded in thatthey would probably try to reorganize otherdibtrlcls In theli Interest. " They wish to con-trol enough districts." he added, "to enablethem to nominate the net county ticket, and I

, hear that they are willing to try conclusionswith Mr. Kelly himself if they And it necessary; "

How do tho districts stand now?"II an issuo Is made between tho Blossom

Club party nnd Mr. Kelly, tho First. Second.Thud. Fourth. Fifth. Eighth. Ninth Tenth,lourte'-nth- . Fifteenth. Llghteenth, Nineteenth.Twentieth, and Twenty-soeon- d Districts, andprobably the Twenty-fourt- h and bltth Dis-tricts,, will be with Jli. Kelly. Tho BlossomClub people can control the fenveuth. Eleventh.Thlitoonih Sixteenth, Seventeenth and Twenty-fi-

rst Districts, ami possibly the Twelfth andTwenty third. Four of those districts aie". no district leader admitted that the com-pletion of many of the districts would bochanged if Ml. Kelly should support tho Big

Four. But even In that evenV' he addedwe will give them a good tight. There is anunusually large number of Independent menin Tammany Hall now, and they will not sub-mit to dictation. I am sine that Tammanycannot elect her county ticket if it is nominatedby tho Blossom Club party."

A CASUAL LEAF FIIOM II10 II BBIDOE.

lip. Brqvtu Volunteer. It, and Strike! tbelVuter Flut Without Hurt.

Shortly beforo noon yesterday a man of 0,la a rowboat. drew alongside tho restaurant ofGeorge W. Riley, moored In the Harlem Ittverabout twenty yards this side of High Bridge.Leuvlng his coat and hat in tho boat he enteredtbe barroom and drank a glass of beer. Hisgait Indicated that he had boen drinking be-

fore. Ho asked 3Ir. IUley how deep the watorunder the bridge was. and was told ten andthirteen feec. Then ho broke forth with:

' Donaldson thinks ho'a a gieat man don'tho1 Nobody else can jump off that bridge, cantlKiy ? You think I can't jump off that bridge,don't you t But I can. You bet your boots Icau and I'm going to do it, und I'm going to doit now,"

He unsteadily ascended the stops lending tothe western end of the bridge. No one pievent-e- d

him. It hHd occurred to nobody that howould jump Several men In tho restaurantwatched him carelessly.

fhey aw him start across tho bridge. WhenJionrnved over the central arch hj stoppedclimbed over the Iron railing, and stood upontie granite projection. He looked down Intoin river for a few seconds then turned midclimbed luck over the railing 'Ihen hor.af-P"ite- d

with hl shoes and waistcoat oil and utonce leaped out into the air descending eutloretnost. His arun. weie sti etched ubuvi Inshead and his body was perfectly rigid until hoas within about twenty feet of the wim-- r

liifii he turned ovei Hat mid fell into the wutcroa his stomach with a reffi liomgbmackIt was about half n minute Uifote he rose tothesuifnce He was uncoiisclnut mid wnmjhave been drowned hut fm Mi. lliley, who re.cued him in u row boat He was cairled to theeastern shore and recovered consciousnessabout urteeii mlnules afterward. His clothinghad been spill down the front but ho was

Follceman Henry fachoinkie arresn dhlin for drunkenness, and walked him to thelwtli street station, 1', miles iiwnv Ho Minil.e was John D Blown a butcher of 81J Firstavejiuo At that address nothing Is known ofuch a person. He was much elated jei his

Hiid said ho only wanted chance to jumpJ WMH'wUW,Mn I'le. Only a lew people'? Hiifli Bridge yesterday to see lilt, exploitUiiiiM-- s! )ilier whoreseuedhlm also saved

!i M'Hfur nnJ Jo,l A- - Goidou, who tried11 "'own tl enisulvea near the bridge on May ,1u

'n Colli, 0 M(lt kB Mtcmil,kll, .Mbuuiu.'fho British bark Charlie Hickman, which

arriud from lit nlmrj jutenluy reruns thatun ssiiirar eituiiij while jur ln,(, ,,UUII, ,,,,, ilt. n,,,,,IorllnJ'.w"ri"ll,""ll H't steamship .Niagara bound,' ; ",'" s!a.iriick.inl.rriBrloiiiJ hun millluUn hi f"" " ,ur" "T ll"' iiil'"f "lucktiiiiniiiu. i" M,",r ."'""' ru' nl"1 "' '"'"'niwi.tSh '1,f,n:llW"y,iiil otler dsmika nminKl. ..r.U.''"c T10,., "" i""",, '" Ulikiiuii r.tolib Lui ,'.",v, hVw much (Jsniart wm uoi to ih teaiuvrs m, utt. XL lnr wut ou hr .

JU.11 DAYS Jtr THIS SKA.

iMttg llranch In u Hull Nlorm-T- hn Advanceof Niiinnipr Ht Cone lttuu.1.

Wnnou Ijolanil, .Tr at tiiun tho voiamlaof tho Ou'iin llotelat Long Branch yesterdaynoon giving moodily upon the surf nnd thodark, threatening cloudi. Ml. Lcland hiber-nated in the big hitil, and the r 'suit of hiswlniei i niedltalion is a leeturo Entitled "ThnSanitary Condition of our Summer Uesoits."Having spent a few days In nceii'tomliig him-self to the light ami nil- om o moiu, Mr. Lclandhad thought of dollvoiing his lecture yester-day A h ill stoim with plenty of lightning,thuiidi r.and lain. which swupt over tho BranchIn the middle of the foit'nooii.had dampened hishopes of all nlldieni c.

Ho was not to bo disappointed, however.Idle tho heavy clouds and dtlllng moinlng

mny have deteried many ftom beuklng jileasmont the Branch yesteiday them weie inaiiyothers who walked up the gang plnnU of thoJesse Hoyt as she I iy . her pier in New Yoik.evidently with implicit faith that the daywould bring forth something of value At 100 clock, when several utindieds had walked thoplank in the spit tt described, the steamerstarted down tho bay. making hoi wayslowly ami with Ireiiucnt blasts ofthe whlMIe, In n dense fog and apouring lain. Tho fogllfted and tho rain abatedas she approached Sandy Hook. JMieu shereached the Branch faint piomlses of fnlrervveatherwero given. They wue still eiiulvocalwhen the van of the excursionists came uponMr. Vi nnen Leland. Jr.. seated upon his

Instantly his steadfast gae upon themonotonous suif censed. Ho grasped eachcomer by the hand as if each were an old friend;the sun came out strong and blight, tho grassnever looked frt slier or the sea warmer, tromUnit moment the metooiologlcnl improvementwas marked nnd rapid, liming the afternoonseveinl elderly natives wero found who, wltiisolemn enthusiasm averted that they hadueverseen their section of the Jersey coast look soline." It's a llttlo cool yet." snld one. " but then Idon't suppose youimodown here to get warm."

Tho excursionists devoted themselves chieflyto seeing how things would look when theywero IKed up. for the usuul spring renovationis still in progress at the various caravanserieswhich do not formally open forthe season untilJune 15. Caipenters, painters, and paperhangers have still moro or less to do in nearlyall the large hotels The Elbeion is fairly open,and there aro a few guests at the other hotels.1 ho cottagers are mm Inc in from duv to ibiv .Among the improvements Is a large clubhouse or casino which Is approach-ing completion on tho grounds of theOcean Hotel. It Is Queen Anne outside andmahogany within, and is to be utilized by turf-men und the sporting fiaternity generallyduring the sixty davsof raclngwhlch are prom-ised nt Monmouth l'ark this summer.

Some of the suminei residents. Including A.J. Drevel, C. F. Voenshoffer. James Sellgman.Gen. Grant. O. Washington Child A. M Com-modore liarrlson. and others to the number ofthirty, are rnislngo fund to Increase the slzoof Green's l'ond. on Ocean avenue, bttweenWest Lnd and Elberon. and surround It withn pink.

Before delivering his lecture yesterday uponThiiSanitiry Condition of our Summer

Mr. Warren Lcland. Jr . made a few ex-tempore remarks upon music. He said as hotumbled noliuir over in making a pielluilnarygesture,' Musio has been neglected in Long

Music deserves mi exulted position.Now just look at this ' With that ho hastilyled tho war to u nearly completed musiostnnd on the lawn in front of the OceanHotel. It was done in the Queen Annostyle or should havo been, being nt LongBranch. "Uheie," he said. Indicating a pecu-liar lattice work running about tho house nextthe friee "is something worthy of tho sweetart." The lattice work consisted of an in-genious arrangement In wood of the score ofthe air from ' l'atlenco" 'Prithee I'rettyMaiden." At the end of the bar is a huge sun-flower carved of wood. Mr. Leland also pointidout an iron vewtr.ign pipe which runs 1 ouofectout undo! the sea, and is dlschniged only wht nthe tide is running out. It win, tr.ilu time be-fore he found time or could summon courageto deliver his lecture upon ' 1 ho Sanitary Con-dition of our Summer ltesorts-.- but.npparentlyin anticipation of such a catastrophe, ho hadsome printed copies, which he thrust into thehands of each excursionist at parting.

Travel by all the routes to Coney llnndwnsbilsk In the atti'iiioon nnd the famous stretchof sand was thickly peopled, though the strongwind made the promenade rather uncomforta-ble 'I he bathing pavilions will not tw readyfor tluee wcoks more 'J ho season, which b--

at tho west end is advancing slowly to-ward Manhattan Beach mid the distant Orien-tal At West Brighton there was musle yester-day. Hnd the swings and merrv.o-iound- s weroin constant motion At Brighton there was anafternoon conceit, and the pi iyas werothronged. At Manhattan Beach the llrst con-cert of the season was given There weie fewerpetsons there th in anywhere else but the din-ing room was well patronized, and the hi awinds were kept out bv closed windows. Onthe boats theie were moor three lamentablecatastrophes to big hats, of which tho windrobbed their fair owners.

ltocknway hud comparatively few visitors,and they did not stny Into W hen the Columbiaapproached the pier on her last run to NewYork three persons were there, of whom oiilytwo got abo.ild. The trip home was onllvonedby what looked like a race between the Ironsteamer Slrius and the Columbia. In whichhonors were easy.

LITTLE rilOMM'S IIIO SXEEZE.

.A. Critical Moment lit the Career or u Ten-Oun-

Midget uf Tcutlfr Aire.Geoige Fronnn'sboy was baptized by the

ltev. Mr. Adams In tho Episcopal Church, Law-lenc- o

street, Manhattnnvllle. at 4 o'clock yes-terday afternoon. Tho boy weighed ten ouncesut the time of his birth, two weeks ago, and hasnot gained anything to sneak of since. A greatMany neighbors and fuends of tho familycalled at tho house of Mr. Fromm, 87 Lawioncostreet, In tho course of the day. but only a fevwere present ut tho christening. The child be-

haved remarkably well, not only In the church,but at his home, where e.ichvlsitoi was per-mitted to hold him for a brief period. Hisprincipal exhibition of feeling consisted ingaping. In which he indulged nt shortInteivals displaying on each occasion twoexceedingly trivlul teeth whose existence thoparents say. is to be dated from Thursdaylast. His robe was white and made short, soas to display his feet, which weie the size oflargo closer leaves, and filnged with verysti.ilght, round distinct jdnk toes, on thebecond and tliild lingers of his right hand hewore two rings, one of gold and one of gutupeicha. These oi n imeiits might slip easily-ove- r

a knitting needle but they would haventight SO.UI eve with a small quill toothpick. Illsrathci thin light-brow- n hair was a good dealrumpled by the impatient turning of hixheadin the hands of the luimeioiis eisoiiswhowenipermitted to hold him When ho was turnedto lace tho light he fi owned perceptibly,notwithstanding that he Is destitute ofthe slightest tiain ol ovebiows, opened midshut his eyes with astonishing mpidlty andbecame pu keied in the most emiouH manner,Hu Paid absolutely no attention to his old rbrothtr aged I who was diessed ill longtrousers ami a swallow tall oat ami rode aloi king horse Hisbiothei who Is a piofcs-sloii-

midgut iit.ilhited by utteili Igunilngliln Ilio eiiler oilspilng .f Mi. rioium wasstiiklngly iooI and uuninbainissed He had auuulnt way ol bulging the head of his lockinghorse with an uon uieii-i- l uluch he had ub-s- ti

acted imiii llu kitchen ami at inteivalsin a small thin voice, I'm the boss "

Iiniiiediati ly after the younger I'lomm washanded to the lejioitei It si .si 'Hint wouldnot havo b en return knble If it had sneced ac-cording to Its sire, but ns.i mattni of fact, thesneeze was of a most inordinate hniacti t Itwis filghtfully out of propoition to littlelionim who recoiled in a cri'iial mnnnei,tn nibh-- violently tbtoiighout and gave eveiyindication ol being about to burst The littlevessel proved sturdy howevi i. it giaduallyst t lightened out, sniffled, moved its to.s andsmiled It was a pleasure to the n porlei to boiiblo to redeliver young Fromm sound In bodyand limb. Anybody who has over let a

go oil In 111.- flngets can form someu.ight nl '.t of the sensation which the explosivemidget convi yed

Gee Hem y was the name which the llov.Mr. Ad imsulllxed to the remarkable child, attho request of Mi. and Mis. Fromm.

Ilc.triiptlve Sloni lu .iplti Cuiullna.I'tTnLsnujiei Va June-- - A destructive hall

am! vuiJ Hiorui miurrtd In .Xurth CarnMnntliU afternoon extending from Halifax toiiury.t.uri;,illituncif till unit. svttrHi hull.,, vteitt Lluun Juwn anliriv tret uuronfitl A lnme u inpnM l a colurulv .ma i iniiiHil Mull, la (lary nraroarj .huri: uatblownil OWI ami htr tVMXlNULllUr. tl'el4all 10)tfltrn Merek.lt. i Hie otiiLr intiiil er. of ilu family narriovh ec i il m ltd tin ir h i . ii hull. turn . ere a. lurtce a.a in. ii nil. I Ilj.finrel that llm irn. Iimelefliil.mrolet Tlie train, from Hie south have Urn detatriliii constituent,! of Hie real leui Mockauul Ly fallenlicet

J'lpeniiin .luiup Kputi) Hull,Fireman James Kenny of Hngluo Company

21 m line an. w emu a false alarm of lire inl.a.t yortyfourth ttretl iHtteiemni; fell from tlia eniilna at lonyfi urlli trti and riilrd uvenu and itui run over LyHie tender III. rhilit leu una cruhd, aud It 1 llioujlitIt will lia te It auiLutatad.

WQRK1NGMEN IN POLITICS.

sin. AitJiBTitoxa's casdwacv ronaorvnsoit ;.v rvsysrLrASiA.

Not tke Cnnilldiito ir Auj 1'iirtleiitiir TradeOrc'anlzatlnu, but of Intnr United In

Action for Ita Otvn fpulecllon.l'lXTSUUlitiH, Juno 1 Theio has been con-

siderable talk in labor circles In this end of tbeStato over tho report by telegraph that thoPhiladelphia Knights of Labor, dissatisfiedwith tho Greenback ttckot, had Issued a circu-lar to ovory organization In tho State, askingtho ofllcers to report If thoy wero in favor ofholding a State labor political convention InJuly. As tho Knights of Labor In thisStntonumber almost lOO.lioO membcis, nearly all ofwhom nro votors. indlvlduallyiillllhited with allpolitical partios, but oflklnlly with none, sucha movement would be of gieat moment in thopolitical Meld. In answer to tho letter of nottfl-eutlo- ii

of his nomination as tho eaudldato of thoGreenback I.nbor party for Governor, Mr,Thomas Armstrong sent tho following reply onSaturday:

XiTlOXll tUBOK Tri.CHL OrrlCK, il'lmaim ii June J, IS.!. I

ToThot J FotUr.lhal 31 Inifuy. and rhomtit tirunditliiriAMifci your leiur of notification that I via."ununlimiu.ly .elected a. caulldato for Uoiemor" by

the allonal Lnlmr llnenback 1 onvclitinn. which metIn llarri.hurL'on Mav IS la.t, h9 tieen rcccllcd In ac.cejilliig the honor llilla louferred I de.lra to kal, at onthe orca.lon of the lonveiitlon, that my tlar la uti today. ll will ! carried through the campantn. It will Laup at the clone of the poll., an If Uod .pare, my litattMlllba uptLe mornlne artvr the election Ile.pectfully, Tuoitli A AhustRO'ic

The reason assigned by the PhiladelphiaKnights is tho close connection of Mr. Arm-xtion- g

and tho Hon. T. V. l'owdorly with thoKnights of Labor, the latter being on IheGrcen-bac- k

ticket foi Lieutennut-Oovernn- andalso Grand Master of tho knights In this State.Itegardlng the alleged dtsalToctloh Mr. Ann-stron- g

y said:" It alw ay s causes a flutter among politicianswhen labor acts in politics, and the old partiesgeneuilly succeed In killing by cre-ating dissensions in our ranks. For this pur-pose they can generally llud men in l'hiladel-phlawh- o

aro never satlslled with any actionthat is taken or candidates that aro nomi-nated."

"The point I wish youtotalkiiuouiswhetheryquiirethecandldnti'of the Knights of Labor."

'Well. I'll tell you I am a Mason; so aro Gen.Beaver and Senator Stewart. Are any of us.Masonic) candidates? I rtu a member of theTypographical Union and tho InternationalUnion. Ami the candidate of the printers ?

Beaver nud Stewart belong to the ltai Assoc-iation, or lawyers' union. Does that commit theattorneys tothelrsupport.orcompronilse themIn any vvnyr I am a member of the GrandArmy, I am nn honorary member ol the Amal-gamated Association, 1 am Treasurer of theCoal Miners' .National Association. I am thoeditor of tho olllelnl organ of nil forms of orgnn-be- d

labor. Doe this make mo tho candi-date of tho puddlers, the coal miners, orglassblowors' I asked the Convention tonamesotno othor person, and for this reason:1 have been lighting for organized labor fortwenty-tw- o years, and I did not want to be re-sponsible for nny harm that might eomo frommy leieiving n small veto. Ours is not thoticket of any particular trade organization,but of labor united In political action for itsown protection. I have always claimed thatlaboriould not bo properly protected withoutstanding shoulder to shoulder in politics.With this view I Iihvo taken this nomination,and if ours Is not tho successful ticket it willlo no fault of mine. You ask If Mr. l'owderlyhas dei lined. 1 do not know that ho has orwill. I do not think he ought to."

ritOGUESS OF THE JHO.V STIUKE.

Tks Men Bkow nn Siena of fielding and IkeJunplojreie Mill Firm.

St. Louis, Juno L Tho Trades Abserubly,representing workmen in nil lines of industryhero, held its fourth annual parade and picnic

Thoioimerwas an Imposing demon-stration, but, contrary to general expectation,tho speeches by Dick Trovelyck, H. Martin Wil-liams, and other labor agitators contained noencouragement to tho striking ironworkers,nnd, contrary to tho Usual practice, no resolu-tions wore adopted in suppoit of the strike. Itseems that tho Trades Assembly, which is adi legato body and subordinate to the Na-tional Trades Union, is not unanimous re-garding tbe policy of inaugurating the ironstrike at this juncture. Meantime the ironworkers are still out and show no signs ofyielding, whllo the manufacturers are nulto asllrni in refusing the advance demanded. Ofthe l.JOO strikers, at hast 1,000 attended thopicnic, which was otherwise noteworthy onlylu the bearing of tho red flag in the procession.

CIKVU.AM1. June 4. 'Jho strikers of thoCleveland Boiling Mills held a large open meet-ing at which their side of the case waspresented in the usual speeches. Thoy thenwent Into executive session, and have beenveiy d as to their purpose to-morrow. The impression is thnt the effort ofthe mills to start on Monday on half time withnon-unio- n men will be practically successful,although attended with dilllcultios in tho start.No violence is expected now although there Isno telling what may develop within a fewdays, rew union men. if any, will bo amongthose who resume work.

1'iTTSDunoit. Juno 4. Tho iron situationIn the 1'ittsburgh district is unchanged.Nothing new has been received y

at the ofllces of tho Amalgamated Asso-ciation thnt indicates a weakening on nlthorside. No mills In the oungstown or tho W heel-ing district have signed the scalo. although itIs conlldontly assorted that somo now develop-ments will bo foithcomlng thatwill alter tho situation miterlally. Presi-dent Jarrutt of the Amalg minted Asso-ciation is lu tho city, but could not bointerviewed. ll is asserted that hisaction in telegraphing the Chicago associationto use their judgment In malntainin tho lock-out is o lug to the fact that he Is not a candidatefor reflection. I his Is denied, however, andMr. .Tarrett could not bo scon to verify or denythe leport. No dlsturbmii es are roported. andeverything is asquint and orderly as thoughno strike was iu progress.

w

iroItKIXMEST'S 3IEET1XOS.

Clear Jiuktn freed lu Orsunlie Moro Effici-ent! 'Ike Ceulrul L'ulon.

Soveial hunditsl cigar mnkers met in TtttnHall yesterday at the call of Union 144 of thiscity, to devise means of stiengthenlng theunions. Bepresentatives from Unions 8 andI'll of Jersey Cit), 37 of Brooklyn, and 132 ofWilllamsburgh weie piesetit. Chairman Gut-sta-

of the Brookly 11 delegation presided."There aio 20,000 cigur makers in this city

nlono," he said, "and only J, 300 in the unions.As uconseiiuenco out wagos have boen reducedtill they are loss than a s.and ouremployers now tell us thnt nnother reductionuniht soon bo made. Shall wo go on submittingtill ourcluldren starve Om only hope is toorginlM uiKhr the Hag of tho International( igar.Miikets' Union, and to extend our mem-bership till we nro iu .1 position to demand ourlights.

I'losidontAdnlphStnisserof tho Internationalcuion said It hnd ut tt m ineiit house clgiuluuniifactuiers.spoooil to dorcat at Albany thobill abolishing theli system pit manufacture.Ho dnnouiued Asscmblynieii (lidioii MuiphyMcMniuiH Sh.ihloy, and Culleii for their voteson the bill, mid recommended the lloycottlnof Gideon who sells Manor, llesolutious look-ing towiud tho ree'nforcement of tho unionswere adopted

At a meeting of dock builders hold yesterdayat 127 Secouilaveiiue, Michael Kline was chosenChan man and Guorgo llloouian Secretary,'iho meeting was ailed for the purpose offoiuillig a union nud a benellt society

Hie llu mid slate rooluis held a meeting inthe Mini" hall. They are .1 branch of tho'lln-smlth- s'

Union and niopo-- c to demand soonan Ini reuse of wagibtmiiij to $1 ,50 a day andthe stopping of woik 011 Siiliudays at 4 o clock,

At the weekly meeting of the Coiitial Trademid Labor Union iu silence Hall, Mi. Hi ed ofthu bilcklnyeih presided A lommunlcatloiiwas nnelved from the County Committee ofthe Greenback-Labo- r inn ty, stating that thatparty was in sympathy with the union's con-demnation of the I'onal Code The communi-cation was laid 011 the table foi two weeks themeeting not w Ishing to h iu the cooperation edany political fiicllon. icprtsentativn of theBricklayers' I'nlou made mi address sliituu-tha-t

his union oiitnmplateil joining the lxdyHo said that the striking biukhiyeis had al-ready been victorious iu two-thir- d ol theshops, nud predliteil that the strike would

in the mens' favor In another weekA delegation of Biooklyn Navy i.ud woikmiui

called on President Ailliur on Satutday afini-noo- n

to urge the eiifon emeiit of the Eight-hou- rlaw on Government wniks.

NlllclilP ill Nrveulj-al- a,

STAxtioni) Conn , Juno I. Willluni Marsha7d y ear. of aite who hat n llilin; with tit.oufultwI ol Mniouan I' rnirr, lu th s, j10 num. Ion on theI'm road lomuuttiil sulci lu ihit afternoon 1 .hootluif himtvlf throuKh the heal Mur.hull hat halaianier,uul Hiatal) wat ili.cutiratri I Ly hit kuflUrluif Haused a larae naiy revolver, and Lluw thu wliula tup ofhit head ed.

11IK BVSSIAX JET IMMiailAMH.

London Aitvlaed to Leave tkem In tko Handsoftko American ftocletlea.

A conferenco of prominent Hebrews fromsome of tho chlof cities of tho United Statesand Canada wns held yesterday In tho HebrewOtphan Asylum In Roventy-sovent- h streot. Itwas called by tho Hebrew Emigrant Aid SocietyofthoUhltod Btntos. whoso hoadquartcra areIn this city, ita object being to secure sys-tematic and harmonious action In tho receptionand dlspor.-lo- n of the Russian Jowswho arocoming to this country. Ilepicsentallves werepresent from Now York. Btooklyn, CInclnnntI,Chicago. Washington. Baltimore. Philadelphia.St. Louis, N'nw Orleans, Louisville, Hlchmotid,Albany, Buffalo, Rochester, KowHavon, Hurt-for- d,

Houston, and Montreal.Mr. Honryl Henry. Presldcntof tho Aid So-

ciety, called tho conferenco to order. Ho sailthat slnco Its oiganiatlon In December, 1SH1,the society limit eeoived and dispersed throughtho country a ti'J I immigrants, mid had oxpond-o- d

nearly $70,000. Myer H.Isaacs was made per-manent ( hnlrman of the conference; HenryMackof Clncinnnti. and JI. A.Kursheedt and Albert Arusleln, Secretaries.'Ihen Mr. George S. Yntos was intioduced.Mi. Y'atcs Is an Lnglishmau who was sent totills country by thu Lord Mayor of London nndtho Mansion House committee to Impure intothe ellbicncy of the lollef associations in thoUnited States, and to roport as to tho practlcn-bilit- y

of aiding thoni In tho work of taring fortho Busso-Jowls- h immigrants. Hu begun bysaying that the Loudon (ommltteo hnd beeninformed by lottois from individuals inAmerica that the American Hebrew Aid

was demoralized and unworthy of thesupport nnd aid of tho F.ngllsh sooletlos. Hehad, since ha nrrived in this country, vis-ited most of its largo cities, and mndocm oful imiuirlos of the piomlnent Hubrows.Ho hud become, satlslled that the statementswhich wero made to tho London committeewere untitle, and he now believed that thiscountry wn the Is'st place for tho RussianJews. He had advised the London committeethat the American Hebrew Emigrant Aid So-ciety should bo trusted Implicit ly : thut thol'ngllsh committee should no longer send theRussian emigrants to particular cities In theUnited .States, but should leave tho receptionand dispersion of those who go to tho UnitedStates to the Hebrew Emigrant Aid Socloty, undthat the English committeo should aid thoAmerican society with money.

Morlt Ellinger. who visited theprincipal 1 Itles in Europe as the representativeof tint society, presented a report of his w oik.and then made some suggestions. He said thattho work of providing the Russian Jews whocomo to this country with tho means of sup-porting themselves must lie done In a businessway. and not as 11 charity. Tho society mustglvu u start to those who aro able to work.

1 hose who are not able to suppott themselvesby Inbor should bo sent back. The Aid Societyshould in no vvny countenance tho sending ofpaupers from Luropo to this country. To ac-complish its work would roiiulrn tho unitedefforts of all tho societies In Iho United States.When Europe .Is satlsllod that tlio Amerlcnnsocieties nro working together in n businesswny. It will sond Its money.

Mr. Simon Wolf told of his interviews withprominent French Jows In Paris, nnd alsourged tho necessity of harmonious work. Mr.Sternberg, who hns charge of a colony of Rus-sian Jews in Vinoland. N. J., snoko of bo suc-cess of thnt experiment, and ndv Isod tho estab-lishment of colonies iu other places.

TOVXO 3IB. 1E JIASTIDi: TltEIlE AOAIX.

I'rolected hj- - Two Policemen nklto ks Dla-poe-

or kla Atoek or Tructa.Morlnus do Bastlde, tho younp; French

rrotostant tract distributor, who was nttuckedby persons who camo out of tho CanadianFronch Catholic Church lu East Seventiethstreet for scattering tracts at tho church dooron Sunday of last weok, said, as ho picked him-self out of gutter: "Never mind. I shall comoagain with my tracts. I shall como with twopollcomen two," and ho hold up twoflugors defiantly. Y'estordny. at tho closoof tho morning sen Ico.nt which Fnthor Dela-croix, trim tin French Catholic church tnTwenty-thir- d street, and a grand vicar fromCanada ofllclated. the members of tho churchsaw in fiont of the door Mr. de Bastlde.with his hands full of tracts, and on eachside of him was a policeman. Theyhad sugcostud to him that he hadbettor getaway, and so provonUa disturbance;but the frenchman remained. Those whocame out first sauntered toward Mr. do Bas-tlde. Soon others came, nnd the tract

and the policemen were surrounded.Mr. de Bastlde offerod his tracts, and thoy weroaccepted, but as soon as his stock was disposedof those who had taken them tore up the tracts,spat upon them, and threw them into tbo gut-ter. Then one of tho policomen turned to Mr.de Bastille nnd remarked:

lour brethren don t seem to nppreclntoyourofTorts. You enn move on now; gotnlongl"

M. de Bastlde wont away, and the congrega-tion went homo.

Tho sexton of tho church. A. Cherbonnenu.said yesterday that the priest who ofllciatcd onSunday of last week was Father Gulsiot. Hohimself, ho said, suggested to Father Gulsiotthat It would be well to mention the tract ped-dler to the congregation. Tho jirlest said:

Those books aro inspired by hell, and yourduty is to burn them." According to the sex-ton tho tract distributor had spoken of lather(julslotas 'the dog of a priest," nnd had said"tho French Canadians: aro an Ignorant set."

FVS AT A CLAM HAKE.

Colonel Crockaron Tried anil Convicted by aJury or kla Frlendt.

A spoelnl train glided out of the Long IslandRailroad Depot at Hunter a Point yesterday morningJutt a. the rain ceated an I the tun Liuko forth On Itwu. a jarty bound for Bay tide', where, at Crochcron aretort on the .hore, they were to enjoy a llhodaIsland clam bate Tho party include KcnlitcrA T Docharty Alderman sauer, Col Jo.cph Crochtrou, ex Alderman Oeorge Krautt, Major J 11,

Connolly, Harry l.enet eapt Wllllmull Vlclntyre, TonyUdler Oen vue'iuuti C'apl J in I'ell, T 11 , Ilui 1,1 (' ,and William 11 Johnson r bouovan r 11 l.iiminlll.JuUe I unrenee of Mu.hlui:, and Al Smith When theground, were reached a luhtlunih wu enjoyed un theihainiat.ne beiian to tlow vtdoiloek I a I Huhcoikan John Actelarut the eaperla why .ui crimen led theLuke, announced it waa reudl an! tile luhlea weretoon turrouiieted lie leatt Wua follow, d t the lullof the day A watch ahmrue'e from the poekel of MrRutumlll wat found iu the postet.ion of CoL I rocherou,aid court wat tuiniedljtely i omened for a tummaryKill JulKt tuwreuce oeeupied the bench twelvechairs urramted lu prorer order were oeeupied lo ihuhatlilv Impanelled Jury o, whleti Iteiater Uochirlywat foreman 1.x Alderman Krau.a eouduettd tlupro.eeution

Ibepn.ouer wanted to plead guilty Lut at there wattome doubt at to hit tgehcwaa not lermitlidlu TheJudge departed troni thu UMlnl itiur.u m clunking theJury befoie any wiliutftia had Leeli examined andoierruled the oujeetloti 10 kuch an aet lying thut the new cole Juttlflid it, rile complainanttettilled Ibal he had uiitorluuulily been acqualllliwith the pritoner for keven year, an) lost ih watchwhile in hit company It wat u vellow watch fhdpritoner cro.t exuuiinel the wltnett ho emphaticallyrefuted to antwer the ipie. lion. On what line of cartdid ynu get the watch t on iht ground thai It mightcriminate him

o wltnettet were examined for the defenec, whichateounted forthe pottettion of Iho walili he .talingthat the ritoner conducted a pawnbroker t huilue.twithout a hcente Mi Krautt elouenth Mimmitl upfur Ihe penile autquotid many auihontiet from an oldcampaikii pamphlet in auppori of hit arguu em

Tin Jure returue I a verdict tilling the prltuuer, Court,an I Pibtricl Attorney two Lotllet of wine each riiolluet wire promptly paid Oilier amu.einelit wit indulgel lu until i cixlock, when the parly returued toIhe city

Crulelng to Cuvun lolnt.The National Yacht Club of Jersey City had

lit opening crulta yeittrday I arly In the day a fughung over tha water, and a drizzling ruin dainpeiiel theenthu. latin of tha amateur tart, liotwlthttaudlug thapreteui o the chow dir pota and huge haiki It of ilamtand appropriate condiment. It had Leell propoted toiruite up the rlier to I ort Ue Lut at lhrf.lt ay owinutothe forf ha I caused Ihe Heel to lote the In it li le 11 watukleed to uttpouii the eiuiti and lime the elioiidirutthe cluli lioute L ml Hlli oeloek hjweeer tlle.unthnne out alll Coulinolore foil! lilLtou tiwll lllnl thelleet toget up tatl Willi anrhoi uulroiiid down thebin tu luiaill'oiut The louiuiolori lid the tint outof the cole Willi the Johu s ttnt und the leatirvdilli tijiiuudorc Slug lleiien. sliurt Andrew,lliehaol Km limit I I I I) llrli u, Lottie and otherfollow, il iu null k tin ci Ihe win wu light hutan iliLlide-faiori- d ihe licit shortly alter ihe tlartitI gun to rain Bkain and tnutliwiti, rt and lurpaullutwere iu demand soon however the tun i auie omand nuickly dried Hit die kt on l ae an I'olul the fleetlalueto ullihor for chowder an ntlirr n fiehhmeulton tho rt turn there w it at,i,od , upper reie from ihowettllllltl, before w hit ll Ihe Itttl tkliuiuel illllikltairntthi t,uv to the line from the entrauieof widthIt wat ulrtut to windward lo the mn borate, ihe cluuwill hale lit annual tailing luatehetrly lu July

Tko Ckurck und Ike l.ndlva l.und I.c'iibiip.Cn vri.VM), Juiiii 1. The llov. T. 1'. Thiupe,

an lili-- prlett who hut long luld lolilldeutlal rtlatlontwith lllthop cllliuour tiitluy pritiihi d a tlroug leimi uiu fuvnr i f the potltlon utt iinid Li hi. chief toward theladlet i f the I an !ai.lli Me mi wry wrt 111 Inwnr I

u un ml er of Ihe I euj.ii, who had on rlli atlutked lluI 01 e y aaluritt ll illan pittl anion,, tluitu or tilhtruiilii ualitlet imtued Ihe luliet ranch tit I mil mittin day liaiim, adlouriiMl at tl sun lu nai tin lnhtfllie ill ale ire ludlt.lialit tiiwunl ihu llktholi whohat e nt thou u no sij.iit i f Lai king di wu

I he raruell llritut h I f the I Hid l.iaglle lie! a teHtlollIn kill lu whiih the lilt hup wilt tilt n ll t rillil te I ail I

Ihelotitiun of the I vile di fended Vlltt Vluri l.nlaliIritidelitof the Ladiet Mranih htt addn tted an openlellt r to the lllthop luwhieh the tnrtt hliu .elereleau Idt lulu d.uuucc la tlia uaiue of tha Irl.U women ofelevelaud.

NE VS FItOM THE OLD WORLD.

TUB TVItKtSU C031.VISSWXE118TO LOYVT.

Action tkat Make, tke I'oalponeroent or tkoConference Ireetrnble Arnbl laaka Hajatkat ke wilt Repel European ABgreealoo

Co.ssTANTiNOPiiE, June 4. Bosldcs Dcr-visc- h

Tasha, tho Commissioner, nndLeblb Boy,Assistant Commissioner, Ahmed Essad

Second Assistant Commissioner, andVllmy Bey, nttacbtf to the Commission, hnvosailed (or Cairo. All tho foreign Ambassadorswero summoned to tho Porto last ovonlng andInformed of tho despatch of tho Commission,with tlio object of ondoavorlng to offoct a recon-ciliation between the Khedive and Arnbl Pashaand to restore order. Lord DufTorln, thoBritish Minister, telegraphed to Karl Oran-vlll- o

yestordny, that In view of tho Hultnn's ac-

tion in sending tho Commission to Egypt, apostponement of tho Conference w as dosirablo.

A rumor Is current that the Porto hasdespatched a circular to tho pow ers. in w hlch itondenvors to show thnt a conforenco would beinopportune. Said Pasha, Minister of ForeignAffairs, when receiving tho Ambassadors lastovonlng, expressed himself to a slmllnr effect.

The I'orto has sont n circular to its repre-sentatives abroad expressing tho opinion thattho conforenco is no longer called for, sincetho Commission sunt to Egypt will sufllce torestore order.

Pabis. Juno 4. Advices havo been rocelvodfrom Constnntlnoplo that tho Porto bus notdirectly refused Its assent to tho conference,but has expressed to the powers Its desire toawait the result of tho mission of DorvischPushn to Lgypt.

Athens, Juno I. According to advices fromConstantinople, Ahmet Ur.nd, the Sultan'sconfidential agent In Egypt, has succeeded inestablishing an understanding between thomilitary party and the Sultan, so that in tlioevent of the landing of Turkish troops thoyand tbo Egyptian troops will fraternize.

St. I'LTEiesnurto. June 4. An olliclal an-nouncement of ltussln's acceptance of tho con-ference at Constantinople to Bettle tho Egyptianquestion is published

London, J tine 0 Tho Standard's correspond-ent at Cairo says he has had an lntervlow withArabi Pasha, in which tho latter said that hecared little for Knglnnd's promises and throats,and would repel European aggression with hiswhole strength.

London. Juno 5. Tho MjuCj despatch fromAlexandria, dated Sunday, says: "Heavy gunsare now going Into the earthworks erectedaround tho harbor."

TUE FBESCir DEllBY.

Tko Orand PrlE or l'arla Won by an jEa.llak llorao Hidden by Arcker.

Pakih, Juno 4. Tho raco for tho GrandPrix do Paris for colts and fillies,dlstanco about ono mile nnd seven furlongs,camo oil hore and was vv on by Mr. II.ltymlll's bay colt Bruce. Tho Duko of Hamil-ton's chestnut colt "rfnt'lon camo In second,and Count F. do Lm o's bay colt Alhamhrathird Mr. .T " ..uno'sbay colt Romeo, whowas to havo been In tho race, met with an acci-dent this morning, in consequence of which hodid not run. The wlnnorof Hio raco Is an Eng-lish horse, and was ridden by tho jockeyArchei.

Eight ran. Including M. Michel Ephrussl'sbay colt Blctuteur II. Bruce held a position inthe contra until rounding the lust bend, whenhe mndo his effort, and won easily by half alength beforo Feneion, who was a nock aheadof Alhambra. Dlctateur II. ilnlshod a badfourth.

The othor stnrtors wero Ilnran do Chnmant'schestnut colt Bc'ussi. M. A. Bosvignes's bnycolt Jasmin, and Count F. do Lagrange's chest-nut colts Boyalltou and Dundln.

Tbe time of tlio raco was 3 minutes 20 5

seconds. The following Is a summary:Tha Orand Prlxde Pari! of 100,000 franca tn apecle,

(Ives halt Ly tha city of l'arla, and bait by the fivegreat railway copipanlet, for entlra cnltt end AUlealoaled In 1S70. of ev err detcrlptlon and country, addedto aaweepttaieaof llXKlfranct each the tecond to re-ceive loctw franit. and the third oitu franca out ofthe atatea, about one rulla aud teveu furlonga, 3J4 rt

Mr II Rymlllab c. Ilruce, by Sea Saw, out of Carina(Archer) . i

Duke of Uamllton'a clu c. lenelon, by Mageolet.outof ranlalileiWatti) , 3County de Lagrange a b c Atha.ubra, Ly Consul, outof the Ahbetl lllartlei) 3

M Michel Fphruttla b c Dlctateur II, by Kuy Blaa,ont of Dttcorde (Ucachl ... . .... , oThe race for tho Prix do la Ville de Paris(handicap) of 0 000 francs, added to a sweep-

stakes of 250 francs each, for entire horses,geldings and mares three years old and up-ward, and of overy description and country,dlstanco nbout two miles, was won by Mlnetta.(iornld (Fronch horse) came in second andAurollo third.

Moarnlnr; ror Garibaldi.Rome. Juno 4. All tho Liberal journals ap-

pear la mourning and publl.li culoglei of (ltn Uarlbaldl.Tha action of the French Chamber of Deputiet yetterdayIn adjourning at align of mourning hat produced au

linpretilon lllcelnttl (UrlLaldl alii Vtajor Canxlohaee arrliad at I aprera The preparation! for therrematlon of the reiuaine have Leen tutpended Thadoctor, are ixftcted to arrive thlt evening

I.otl.oN lune'i Vtletpalcli to the Mlllf.Vuj fromCaprera tan that Oen llarlballla family obey Ihe Inlunctlont of bit will The teremouy of cremation w illbe performed br Signor I'ranJIua.

Anntveraary ortke Cziarlna'a lleatk.St. Pktersduro. June 4. Tho anniversary

y etterday of the death of the late I.mprest w at obtervedwith tpeclal terviceaat the Cathedral of st Peter andbl Paul which were ntti tided by the r in c ror and I intirett Tha Luiperor tubteiUently vitlted the WinterPalace

Fatal Exploalon on a Ilrlttak Ironclad.London. June 4. A broech-lnudln- g

gun on board tha llrltlth Ironclad Swlrtture bunt lattWednetdai. when the thip wat near vttdelrs. It it reported that one man wat kilted ant ruur other, receivedinjuries from the affect, of w hlch they would di.

Tke Itoatou Nkootlur Mjttery Clearod Up.Boston, Juno 4. The mystery surrounding

the death of Charley Kipley hat been cleared up KddleCrane, aged 7 ycart, who. with Perry llutchlniou,wat in company with tho Ripley boy In thefrom where lie met hit death, hut confetted thathe shot him accidentally with a pltt.il lietait "lharlie Klplei an I Percy Huntingtonand I were nut lu the ttable lliere wat a l.ox then,and we taw one of llaruuma Jiiiubo hooka onll an we all went tn ttie I ox to get tt There wat allttot In the box Bn.lt r the b tok 1 took hoi of It andlirtid It up and It caught koine wal, and there wua uI ang andiharlci felt down The j itehrork wut there beaide of i barley It beared me so lint I did not knowwhether the ang did it or ihe pitchfork ihen 1'inyand I ran out and met Mrt lliilcliluson she went Intothe barn and took I harler up and carried hlin out Intothe ttreet and a man droie up an t took rharlee home "

While the boy't .tori uiae be true it it cenerally telieved that the i ittol was luttiitlonally aiiucd at llurlyin cbtldl.b. sport

Mnt;en Davie.Mr. Nathan Magen, fancy goods dealer of 47S

Orand ttreet, wat marrit 1 tn VI it Mora Pai it, daughterof Mr Morrit Davit, pawnbroker of 3 Sullivan street, tuthe Chryttie Street Sy nagogue, v etterdav Tho bride wasdretted lu while silk, with long train, and wore upon berdark hair a wreath of orange (lowers, from which dropled along lace leli V band plilled during the eeremonillieeliunll wat crowded Afti r Ihu marriage the wedding parti and one hundred hinted rile.t. went to IrvIngllall whtre dinner wat term! Vlore than two himdrcd frlendt Wire prrunt at Ihe ball w lite tl follow edVniiint the guetlt wire ex Aldrrinuu William lleunell,Mr Jullllt Harlem, Mr ami Mrt Limit A levi Mr Kullner Vlr aniMrt loteph An b rtou Mr laenb rrlheiniviettrt I.ewlt and Abram stern au I vlltt stern vir au!Mrt Peter Wood vir and Mr. Henry llasenhor. Mr.Herman Joseph and the Mittet Joseph

Arreat or tke Ileerfleld lloy Murderer,Oiiitshi.ii Mass., Juno 4. Walter Curtis,

aged IU tha Dcerneld murderer nil arretled 111 Ulaudford today bv Stale peleetive lleliion Vtunyan otWilllaiuihurg uul It In jull at Xonhamptou How I I behiouicht hire on the first train tomorrow turlliwaton lilt way to a laic In lllaudford w lure he hit formerll worked and wut caught hi Ulan Hi rt partlet Hewat barefoot at Iho ll un of hit arrest, aud had beenw alklng acrutt coiiutri

KcporCed Illtorder on an llxciirelon.On the return of uu uxctirson barge on which

Uraiuli 11 nt hi I'atrlek t Vlulual Alllaneet went on atrip from lirooklyu yeiterday, asiiual of police in re.lon.e lo information riteltid mel It ul Ihe foot of Pacilli street All w at foun Hole unlet op board ul11iiiui.ilhi lend hruwlt hnd net uirtd during the day itwatreItrteti hoit ever Hint oj potlte tulton terry twoyuuugmen Jumped overboard

Tkr Illaaliled lli.tp Hull 1'luyer.Titov, Juno 4. filllesple. tho Troy baseball

llayirwlio was iujurid ut Sew Vork on Saturday arrlitdhoiiie tlia morning Pr vklau uu eminent turcetiu win, hut t hurgu of tin ifitt taya ho duet not i onaider tillleti le's wound duui,trout, und thut tils skull isnut trueliirid

A Uioeer'i Niilclde.Martin Tletjen aged ,'17, a grocer, who lived

at Jt7 Watt Thirty fifth street was found banging to abeam in tha cellar latt nUu Ills wifo dltcotered hubody Ha had luffered from depraiiiouof splrili, butbad utrtr lUrtattutd suicide.

LIFE INSqiiASCK IX MISSOVltl.

Tko Uatual Ileaerve Proklhltcd from DolnsTUuilnetal'WItkoiit a Uepoalt.

St. Louis, Juno 4. John I'. Williams,Btato Suporlntondont of Insurance, has beguna vigorous onmpalcn against companies or In-

dividuals doing or seeking to do llfo Insurancebusluess hero without first complying w Ith tnolaws of the State requiring tho deposit of ado-qua-

surety to protect Missouri policy hold-

ers. Yesterday suits wore Instituted againstthree such organizations doing business with-

out tho llconso of tho department, and amongtho defendants arraigned In thu Couitof Crim-

inal Correction was tho Mutual Reserve FundLlfo Association, whoso circulars locate thoparentolllco at 143 Broadway, itoiv York city.This association claims to bo Incorporatedin Ivow York as n sort of charitable concern formutual benotlt of membors rather than for pe-

cuniary prollt: but tho department lu thisStatu holds that insurance is insurance, underwhatever gulso it la offered, and that this asso-ciation In not entitled to exemption from legalsuperv lslon or from tho deposit of a security toprotect policy holders. Thus exemption is ac-

corded lu Missouri only to secret societies andtho llko, which incidentally insure tholrownmembers by special contract, and do not solicitoutside business.

Tho .Mutual Unsorve Association claims to lioexempt In Now York from tho operation of tlioInsurance Inws there, and from supervisorycontrol, but the Missouri depnrtmont treats ttns a money making concern, speculative ratherthan charitable or benevolent. If this construc-tion Is affirmed by tbo courts, tho how lurkcompany and several lothers, including Man

Insuranco Association agoncles. chiclly ofSouthern companies, will either have to put no$100 000 security with the Insuranco DoDiirt-me-

or eonso doing business In Missouri. TlioMutual Rcsorvo has a reputable local agency luSt. Louis.

O 0X1! TO J01X THE COW BOYS.

JL lllnnraatA I.ad wht Head Traak fltorlesCommitting; n Double Murder.

St, Paul, Juno 4. A lHoneer-l'res- a spe-

cial says: "Tho bodies of young Washingtonaud Frod Febrack wore found In Rod Ryu, sev-

enteen miles north of rVirham, Minn,, on Sat-urday. Washington wns shot back of tho rightcar with a load of buckshot. Fobrack's throatwas cut, there was a bullet In his leftcheek and a cut over his right eye,mado by a club, which was foundnearby, covered with blood. Tho bodies werefound nbout twenty rods apart. Washingtonwas a surveyor from Buy City, Mich., about 30years old. Febrack was u German, about 20years old. and lived in Perham. The suspectedmurderer is John Frebbett. 15 years old. whowas soon In Pcrhnm with olenty ofmonoy. a watch, and a revolver whichwas known to havo been In Washing-ton's possession. Ho was in Fargo onFriday night and said he was going to join thecowboys In Montana. Despatches weie sent toMoreheud to arrest him. but hu got uvviii. Thomurder is supposed to have been committed atleast a week ago. Frebbett'B mother, who livesIn Perham, Foems lndlfforent about the boy'scrime. Ho was a reader of tbe llo)of ,raI'orA: and similar literature, and had often beenhoard to say that he would join tho cowboys.

DISASTER J.V LAKE 3110110 AX.

Jk Sckooner Capsized, and all on lloardDrowned IVItkln Mlzkt efHhore.

South Haven, Mlch.Juno 4. This even-ing thu schooner Industry, Capt. King, fromSt. Josoph. capsized just north of this harbor,nnd all on board wore drowned. Tho disasteroccurred near the shore, and was witnessed byhundreds, but. owing to tho terrible sea, It waslmposslblo to render any assistance to thu crow,who wero washed from the rigging one by ono.Capt. King was tbo last to go down. At onetime ho was so near land us to bo recognizedby acquaintances on tho shore. A part of thorigging camu ashore, with a board bearing thenaino Industry." Oallunt efforts were mudjby the sailors on tho shore to rescue thu perish-ing crow, but the wreck was carried so rapidlyby tho gale that nothing could reach her. Theseverest storm of tbe season Is raging, nnd it islmpoxslblo to do uuy thing except wait tillmorning, when a seurch for tho bodies will bobegun.

BABBIXO OUT TUE FIBE3IEX.

Ai Attempt to Fire a Factory WutckmanJkf cCaaaen As reeled.

A citizen passing by the big factory of thoKew York Consolidated Card Company, at r8and'JOWest fourteenth street, at It o clock latt night, lawwhat appeared to be a fierce tire going on on the secondfloor, and gave an alarm While attempting to force anentrance lltto the building the firemen were confrontedby Watchman McCanien, who was within They shouted to liiin to open the door but he refuted,aud threatened tn shoot If they burst It o enThey broke through the windows aud dashed up ttitirtOn the second floor they found a barrel ailed w itli paperand raga, soaked in varnish and ablaze It was the workof a luoiuetil to extinguish the names, whleti had atready spread to the Uoorlllg Aiting Capt Wilton oftho Charles street police put McCatsen un ler arrest.Iheprltouer teemed daetl when arretled, and kept repealing, I know who s dona that " lleseeiacd tu havebeen drinking heavily

Tke KiiTlltk Yackt Maggie.Boston. June 4. Tho English yacht Magglo

arrli ed by steamship The Maggie it Intended byMr Warren to be enrolled In the Uaslera acht Club, ofwhich he Is a member, but she will La obheed to flytbe hngtish flag. The boat Is very sharp, narrow,and deep, and has an ugly overhanging fantall The hull is coppered from the keelto above tha water line, and the remainderIs painted black, w Ith a narrow ribbon of gold just t elowthe rail The Interior Is divided Into three compartluetits au after cabin with bunks for tuo, a main cabin,and a forecastle The cabins are fitted en tdalnly tnredwood, trimmed with teak Her accommodations donotfaioratdy compare withthoseoraily nfteen tonyachtIn these waters Larce shears have teen erected on thedock deck, and it Is llioucht that in two weeks she willba ready to saiL t te will br tailed br Capt Henri Itaudall who hat been male on her for two tears lie willhave the assistance of two British tailors who werebrought uier on purpose to man the cutterHer dlnitnsions are Length from stein topott, on deck 45 feel, beam, 6 feet 6 Inches,deplhnf hold, H feet, drauchl sfeetolnchet She hasu; tons of lead on her kei I and Mont In. hie Iter tpartare as follows matt deck to hounds, Js feet U inches ,topmast J i leet bowsprit outboard, Jl feet, mainLoom J7feet, gaff Jo ft;, t 0 inellet. toptall lurdt 14and JJ feet, apauker Loom, oS feet she it 15 tonsmeasurement

Emma lleea Artested ror Mariler,rillLLirsDUita, June 4.Tho dead body of a

newlv biru child wat found in a cesspool at Rediugtoti,near Pa , latt Tuesday Dr 9 S ltachlnautfhatlon testified that It wat Lorn alive and healthy, and

summoned by coroner Uliler of hastoltreudcrea verdict to thai effect and that bmnia lltss aaervautwas Its mother The girl hat keen arrested on thacharge of murder, and Is now tn the Fastou I ill Muitiher arrest she hat coufethed to being the mother of ihochill butahatlrnlet that the killed it she attribute tits death loan accident She is th? mnth.T of u brightchill of ten years of age, and she claims to have Leenmarried about eleven yeara ago The reputed fattier ofthe child litis lu the vicinity of ratten Detectiveswho are working on the case withhold his name for thepreteut It li averred that lu publication would creategeneral surprise

Hkot Wklle Htopplntr ker .Sun's Flkt.Mrs. Anne flibson aged 45, of 4j() West Twon-t- y

tsventti ttreet, wat thot in the abJomeu and proLably fatally Injur, ,1 at 10', o'clock last night Tu PrHardy, who was called, she said "1 was Bitting upreading and waiting for my son tn come home Ihetrd him nuarulflng In front of the houtt an I

went to tee what the matter wat 1 fouu himlighting wilh anuthrr man ran up nndseparated them and then I wm thot " Mir did not knowwtin hrt d the pltlol vtrt tllbion t ton hat nut been leentiuci thr tliootliig aud those who witnessed it coul nottell who fired the shot Mrs Uibsoti was taken tu thohew ork llosj Hal

Tke Knlfo In Wllllaineburck.John Kramer of 101 Moore streot. Wlllinms-burg- h

was stabbed and seriously wounded about 3n clock yesterday morning by Chat Slrely, a carpenter,aged JO yeara Krainir and hli brother Androw wereitndlng In hwenilreet when two unknown men cameup ant lri.au lo wrangle with thelu While the illtpiitu

wat lu i riarttt streli uppruache and knoiked Vn Ir.witnwu lit brother tried to retect hliu und In ,Ii,i-i- l towat nabbed four tinit i. hi Slrelt once In thu nrck milthree t Hi. t iu Ihe ack mulcting serious ut hut Ueeestardy fatal wounds, strely wat arrested

An Overturned uwl.A seventeeu-foo- t yawl boat, with the namo

Matilda on tho stern, was found yesterday moriili g atthe foritof Hudson uleuue llrookllll A black olertoal,wlthvelict collar und blae'k striped tilk llulug, watround lull

BVAKKS FHOU HIE lELEOIIAPll.

Print e ( harles of Prussia has tnet wilh an accident byw hie Ii his leg was fractured

vmoug the passengers uu the steamer Servla whichsailed froiu hlvtrpool on Saturday for New Vork wereI'rof (Iraliam Hell, Vir h J Ktid,aQdslr J W Mackeyund family

Henry Hryan (colored) whobat been on trial lu .Newt""! V ,."" Ihe last two days forthe murder, on1'UJM,J, A.f'.'.xu"' n employee of tha Midland.North Carolina Hallway, hat Leen """"""ef the Jury btcug luat ba was lBiau.H '

LIFE IN THE METROPOLIS, JHdashes uriti: axd TitnitK nr run 'tlH

SUX'S ItEVOttTlUtS. ,fl.j.H. sHIncidents oT t June Si.m.i.y ltlc-xrn- y Itob. iiilbery tiy I)u .IffM A Ntruy llnllet Honvr IIIH

nlr or FI BhtftNmi.il tIol for (he Police- - HIlunrr Mooroof 13 Klntr street wn nsHaultod .'IbIat Houston and Madonna. H recti cptcrctr forenoon J H

by tuo men One irii-t- liltu by tho ttirott with bota j Hhfttirli and choknl him 10 that lie cotiM make no ouU,rj, lHwhile the other near died hit pocket fie had alrdj I tHtaken a Bilk handkerchief, and wai In tho act of btat jHlux lilt wateh frum the chain, w hen Boreral paiiciaby mIcame to Moore'a rescue and thu hiffhwa) met) ran, .let eliiHlnjt upon dcscrlpllnun furnUhtd by Moon, the Pr loo ' iHHtreet pullce arretted Jatnei Keiiian, a profeitlotxai jHthlf, who wai by Moon. The police .ben lent Hout ageiiftral alarm, deicrlblntt Moore other atlaiifiDt. j

Tlili wai received at the Mvrcer street atatloa Jait attho nirKfuu, Dr. Uoru, wat JtckIdk aeral iol jHwounds on the head of William liumm of S3 Sooth FifUaeitue who had mid that he cot bla inurla at tb Hhaudi of an unknown mau at UouRton and MacduDrf Mttrreta. Htt was IdttitlUed by Moon us tbe other lUgU Hw n man an Is alto a profef ilonat thief M

.itihn Malioue nf Klulitv seventh street and CleTetitta Havinue api lied at tbe ,Muet LiUitli stixit IIoipUal,ya- - SHtenlay, fur trtatiuent for aiicep wuund over the boart, Hwhich he said be not in a barrvom early yitrday Mlunriilng Ue was drunk at the luie, be safd. and ali be t Hremembered was a tllit iu which he and bis trot trem 1 HKot the wont of It rite wuund had evidently bten la I Millittd with tbe bbr bladeiof a pen knife Aithoaxn tt ' WMnetrated the perlcardLUtu, U is not couldered arluus. FHiilahuue, who Is u uuun fUlowof J J, lr suld to be tbe I HiiiHiiwlto rescued Miks Clapp of est Fountnth street, 1 1v. In ii sbo threw bersvlt Into tbe liudson Hiver for tbe I !Hpurposu ut commltt tig; suJcMe sum wtets aja M

Jacob Mei.tnholih rof mj hast tonv sistb street, waf 1severely cut in the rttiht thigh br bauiuel ltodhein to a Hwuarrcl In Jacob Loudon's slaughter hoaseat W Eatl H

fourth street eterday iJe was uluu to Bile aHlie Hospital Lvndhelm was arrested. Huolden.J years old, of aio Weet Tenth strct, H

waif hot in th lert letc bv some person cmkuowu t Hhim al Uleecker and Barrow streets, at about ouon, yea-- ,HterUa. The wound Is slight lie was taiea wat. Via- - HHospital H

1'oliceman Nugent caught three men in the act of rHforcing oji-- u tliL rear windows of Ueoriie Scbrovdwa Hbtertaloon 1.4r7 tecoiit avenue, at 4 o'clock ycsteitlay Mtuuriilug He arrested Joseph aM ofSJi Last Thirty- - tlUrn street, and found lu lut pockets a revolver, four jLHkulves, nine handkerchiefs and a collection of copter Hcent The other men got away. Ward wai ComioiUe4 eiHtn the York ville Follce Court iMTke Complaint of n Cur llrlTer Whose) Vr liiBKxlsleuce vrue Orerlooked. l

A Bux reporter shared the front plutform ot a HThird avenue car with the driver yttttrday, and on tbaway up town called the driver's attention to a party ofw omen who had hailed the car

" Let 'em hall," said the driver.The car rattled onward, and two or three men leaped ssfl

on the rear plitform, entered the car, and sat down. LflflOther men and women alighted: tbe car was soon hailed flAHb another Kruup of women ihe driver taw tbem. and jHpretended not to "There's more of 'em." laid he. H

Ihev can take the next car" tie muttered to bimteiT, KfAfAfflaud the reporter could distinguish anget and profanity KfAfAfSIn vv he said LfgfgfgfgfgfgfS

"Aro ou behind time?" he a iked JM"No. said "the driver, but I don't Intend to take any Hmore passenKers than 1 can belp That condnctor can Kt sHBall he can and keep all be get but 1 aln t agoln' to flejp Hhliu 1 11 run bun vtt the road If I can tie a tbe meanest 1man that ever ran a car He don t nver dlrry with c !ldriver ho. tit. not a cent's worth A decQut, square con ,Hduptur Is worth ten cents n haif trip to a d liter, and " aHthere a plenty of 'em that'll chuck In a paper ot tobacco 1and a telax of beer lu tbe count of a day. fiuttbat Mft. How Uon t act as If he knew there was a driver aboard '

fsHThe End ofa Carrier iUon. H

A man holding a yountf carrier pigeon stood LsHon the bow of the Sta en Island steamboat Pomona yes

'terday afternoon. When the boat was within half euUe of New Urlghton he tossed the bird Into the air. Ik HMew ahead for a short dlntanee, then turned and went tLLHtoward .New rtrt Agnlu chanulng ltn flight, it returned 1to tha Pomona and aliphttd on the tap of the smoke, bbHilpe The heat drove it away, and It flew rowvrU, ifrHSen York Its winps appeared to be weak, and once ur Mtvltuit nearlv fell Into the bay Maklnir apparently a an f1,!premeedort.lt returned to the beat, hovered ever tbe 1vmokc t Ipe, attempted to settle on the lieu, and aoddenlydropped Into it It was seen no more 1

Dedicating m eti- - Chapel. HTho Sovonty-flr- Street Methodist Episcopal H

Chapel was dedicated last erenlnc by the IWv. OlshopAndrews The chapel ts In West Serenty sixth street, IHbetween Muth aveuue and the Boulevard Itisahaod Hsome structure of brick, with a brovn stone front, and. jHwill seat about four hundred persons It was built by Htbe Methodist Church ta ten Ion Society of .New Tort, jH1 he chapel aud the land cost 4Jyno About I1S.UUU the j.1a liouiit reiiiitimiiff unpaid, was raised by subscription u?.liHdurimf,vPien1u'SMTvics Die pastor of thecbapl. f lUklHthe ltev J llatusny Before tbe dedication the ltev, Hvr a U ail preached, and Mr J R Cornell and ue& 1 HUluion H MsL made addresses. H

The Chlltlrea from the .Nemesis. HCommihbloners of Emigration Hansel t. Tain- - jHtorand btephenion went to the Ward's Island Emirant H

Hospital yesterday tto see the children who weretaken from the steamship Nemesis sufleriJig, as tt U Halleged from the effects of bad air and poor water Dr HLVlutiie Phvsiclan in chief, said that there had been no bHiKutlis sine e bis report was banded In on Saturday, and VieaLHthere iniftbt be but one more After Questioning ttM MSPEiLbl ureiits the toinmlfastoucrs were latlstfed that the do !MrHtorn report was true In all respects Couimlsalonu 9 UaWHllauelt vaid last iUfht that the matter Diight come up la AjK9the special meeting to be hi Id on 1 hureday next H

Funeral of Man ace r Ileruard.The funeral of the Into Oscar G. Bernard. JPH

who wa a purtuer of Charles an I Danjcl FToooaan la mMIthe management of Square Theatre, look flHsliiplace )etterdav from Ut residence of hi trutberdn I IKIlaw Mr v U Trebfeldtr. 11 East street. i sHHMr Kvrunrd died in ban Francisco on Ma 2X Mr iHlicrnard camt on to New ork vlth the bodv, arrlrlui i VHon baiurJn The Kev Or Kabln of tbe tilth Avenu flsLITemple conducted the funt-ra- service Rclativs froa MLLHIiUujjo i leveland, and were present Th Hillhndv was j laced iu the Trabfelder family Yaolt Inhaled. Ii JHIHt lelds Cemeter flufll

Jutlffe lllllon Iteelgne ae Law lrolaaor. . HDMJudu'o John r. Dillon who, when he left tha 't9QI

bench of the tultcd Elates Circuit Court In Missouri and , iBIcame to this city accepted an appointment as one of the iBII rofessnrs of Columbia College Lnw School, has Just re JVHsb!.1 .Tiicd his professorship The reasons given for tho step Vlatalhi.vt not vet bcvii proiuulitHted but tiiev are prothlj , WBflthe ludkc s i ruftiiional en.aiiiitnts as counsel for the alLaULnion I'aiitli Halivvav Company, of which Ids uncle. f fffllHbiduey union is PreHtdttit und fur otter railroad cor I mMMtoratious uud the tlnauci.! magnates connected wit I Hthem ' H

"William J. Uutehlueun'e Troublea. i Vj'William J. Hutchinson, the stock broker, who sHIrecently paid Juha Dull $7U),lkO In settlecieut of a suit J !Vnl

for money of which VuS chanted ho had been defrauded Hllflbv him and whose tn.nvactio.it iu he matter are now t lBilthe subject of proct-duik- bv the Governing Cotiiiulttet iLBaVof the ackUxchauice, has been sued again ty Mr DuU ,for other and additiunai sums of w hicli he alleges he hat j HlLalbeen wromtfullv deprived lu the course of his stock op 1 flBHeriitlons Tho lltiKatlun promises to result in some lu ! ilterctiiigdevilopmeutsof Wall street ways and inethoJa I flH

Iort M'nrden aumtnrri'i Condition. , KlHThu condition of Capt. Moos Summery the IffV

Port Warden whose spine was frrtured and dislocated I) ilBouhalurday by falling Into the bold of the bark. Royal j ,HArthur, at the foot of Amity street BrooUvn. reuaim ' il,'sfl(ito ttlt-sa- Tht phsicians Jt the Lonx Island col 'lAV'tVIi ge lio pltal hold out v erv Unit hope of tilt roov(ry tfMJleU enilrei cous.ious but all his limbs arc parairi. r vHHU brother and other relatives arrived jestorday from ilf'.albracuto j ' (AtH

In 3Icmory or UurlbalilL XjVTho Garibaldi Hoeioty. of which Louis V. fc Ym

Tutrnzy is Captain met in the Maulnl Hotel, 7d South jwanhlngtou square, last night and sent a drepatehot ) iljlBrondylviue to the family of tbe late Gen. OarlbaldL JL Jvjflniittlug of all Italian aud fren h societies baa been ' 3 Mlalhd furti-nirfh- t wheu some Joint arrangement will U fi,lxlHmi.d for a pubUc demoustrutlvD ;i .11 T.H

f)'h salTo.nltfhfe. Meeting. 'M

Tho mooting of trades unionists and otbeJ. k UUworMiikineu lu Cooper Institute tonlitbt to prot-- jt KHairaliist the new penal code is to be particLpated in by F ffc!BlarLnumiiter wf orgaiilrations and wiu undoubtedly Le .r jgrcut success ItfjH

Tha President JCIdiuv a Mile a Mlnnt. ' 'tilWhen rrnsident Arthur, accompanied by ex ) YJU

euator (.onkluiif uud Mr Cur bin rcJu uvvr the Lou 'Ifiand Itallnmd last week, thi train tiMVcbeJ at Mvrut- - 41'tHof a mile a ui.uutc fur u dlitauceof over tweutv flre rtaml

kmBlunul utiles 1'iedlillon.

Fnlr vrentlier, north to west wind, tliihbt ,' UflLaruiiittr tlilit chaunea in uiitcraiuse ' frlH

jorn.Mis ahuct loirs. WTut us list rrcelveU for Mrs MiCjJSkv SMcue. , illtr.,1 e. fmaL 11 : t UI hrM.it la r Drlliuth of VlUlit a enui nial Kiliilt I (H

trik.rial uasf unJ ii'uomii nt In ib stmt ricul,it i.tM..iulal liitfal U is tuptostU Ibal bo Uud itvm I, I Halald ( iJ llurnll rlilcrel the l.Mtti S!li rolUt ll

tinit h rJa auj anuouiKcJ iliut he liaJ suia , ijjc Hlle iltuil lu tilt Kiwr.lJ,. Ilutpllal nlin tiruolLer jitlHtin all jiix valUllts nun uerefuuuj rtUfCu A !

Ihe ITUItallaus ntu liaiuK'J .mturcJlc rttttttnl lu. t MImrf, ri iua nt tin, Italian Liuur ,ut Aid 2uO,tr the '!klH"Hlin tor Hit I'ruvtriiU'u or Lrutltv uj Chi dren tlia l,Hi uiiitiiiatLc ntra of I nniratlun, and turlmis irnau itt I )tint and have trained ill tlitlr luy altr lu tin te nlo ,1 ! 'I ruiulii itttui rruin ititir Imiiirv sptnt tlvrda) Us Cat h ImiH

and rtcritet Mtits frum somt uf ihtircuuii it vIHtrjiiu'ii UolHt luro aud liad hraid uf lh.lr wudliiua l!HHatll Itoaclie stroke uf tli Uauntlrst tlwli' lltl f IHdtbarrtd at an amateur bt tl, xtbtilive i uuiudtti... ut flHit llarlulil llri-alt- Vssuciatl ill, luis had hit items. '(w hlch tiunorr natuvvir iti turn litre rrtturri or 1 i Mth. (iniiuillttt and th. tlfhl mil ruw twit Irilav 0 HLipiltt bo uf lait t ear t tia takes the lave ut V , IVHU li.iuarett whu Is sua The vrn nil) t,aU stuu 1Btulle ruc.ua ll llerltiu to luerruw vtilltUi aluubulk ,tana. JJ

II