mmm . r3f . L t , .* ^ J< » * r *?**' ' f * ' * !i"4 *•£ »•'„ v jV >' -fcSgM s urg l̂aindenlrr VANtLYKE. Editor «M Publisher. '*""""" • 1,1 1 1 --' 'i!'11"1 "' tfcHENRY, - - ILLINOIS. THE NEWS CONDENSED. THE EAST. ICHE Military Order of the Loyal Legion opened its annual encampment at Phila delphia, with ex-President Rntherford B. Hayes in the chair. Gen. Philip H. Sher idan was elected to fill the vacancy caused by the death of Maj. Gen. Winfield S. Han cock. THE twenty-third annual convention of flw Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers convened in New lork Twenty-six Gloucester (Mass.) fishing vessels, valued at $164,000. and insured for $118,460, have been lost since Septem ber, 1885; 104 men perished, leaving twenty-two widows and fifty orphans. ....The will of Samuel i. Tilden was admitted to probate without opposition, and the trustees immediately qualified. A con test will be at once commenced on the ground of indefiniteness.. .-.JohnP. Terry, a petroleum broker of New York, with property estimated at $10,000,000, died of consumption in Paris J. A. L. Whit- tier, the Boston attorney who embezzled $250,000 from the estate of Miss Hied, has been sentenced to four and one-half years in the State prison. THE Supreme Court of Maine has de cided that the State courts have no juris diction over the sale of liquors at the Sol diers' Home at Togus, and that they are not liable to seizure while passing through the State, destined for the home. THE WEST. CONSTRUCTION train on the Burling ton and Missouri Road ran over a bull and was thrown down a twenty-five-foot em bankment, nine miles southwest of Fair field, Neb. Five men were killed instantly. President John Fitzgerald, of the Irish National League, was slightly injured. A FOREST fire which for ten days had been devastating the Turtle Mountains in Dakota, is estimated to have consumed timber worth $1,000,000 The business section of Oakland, Coles County, HI., was destroyed by fire. The explosion of 300 pounds of powder added to the terror of the occasion, but fortunately no person was injured. The loss is placed at $150,• 000, with at least one-third insurance. IN the Haddock assassination case a Sioux City, Iowa, it is reported that Kos- kinsky, alias "Bismarck," who was brought back from San Francisco, has made a statement corroborating the confession of Leavitt. It is rumored that one Plath, an •x-saloonist, who is believed to have wit nessed the murder, has disappeared from Milwaukee, whither he fled after the con spirators had performed their work. PRESIDENT CLEVELAND, accompanied by Secretaries Bayard, Endicott, Postmas ter General Yilas, and Private Secretary Lamont, attended the State fair at Rich mond, Va. The party were warmly wel comed along the route, and on the fair grounds at Richmond the President re ceived an enthusiastic welcome. The events of the day were addresses by Gov. Lee and Mr. Cleveland. The party in spected the Confederate Soldiers' Home, where two veterans were injured while firing • salute. LEADING wagon-makers throughout the country gathered at Chicago and organized an association designed to put an end to flie use of convict labor Frank J. F. Bradley, a defaulter to the Pullman Car Company for $5,000 or more, entered a plea of guilty in a Chicago court, and within two hours was on his way to Joliet, to serve five years in the penitentiary An incendiary fire at Grand Ledge, Mich., destroyed Hickson, Tinkham «fc Co.'s saw mill and Waldo <fc West's planing-mill and chair factory. The loss is $30,000, with $9 ,300 insurance The postoffice inspec tors engaged in investigating the accounts of Col. Bolton, late superintendent of sec ond-class matter in the Chicago office, are Srepared to prove the embezzlement of 20,2fil, but they estimate the total deficit at $32,000, based on his average pecula- •teOM jftr-ifeiee years. the dawn of a new day. He recommends the parceling oat of the San Carlos Reser vation, giving 640 acres to each head of a family. The Governor also gives interest ing statistics as to the resources of Ari- THE SOUTH. B®,- SlCKKNrNG details of the disaster caus ed by the recent TexaB high tide and floods continue to be received by telegraph. Out of a total population of 1,200 along John son's La\ ou, including the villages of Johnson's Bayou and Bradford, the dead number 85. The deaths at Sabine Pass exceed 90. The destruction of life and property is terrific in extent, the number of deaths exceeding 200. Over 8,000 cat tle in the valley of the bayou have been drowned or are dying of thirst, as it is flooded with salt water. MIKE MCCOOLE, the pugilist, died in a New Orleans hospital, at the age of forty- nine years. SALISBURY, Md., was swept over by a fixe which destroyed the business portion of the village; damage, over a million dollars. A* estate vatued at $1,000,000, built np by John Davison, at Augnsta, Ga., is now being distributed among relatives in Ire land. MRS. MARY SHREVE RANSOM, widow of Che late General H. P. Ransom, of Lexing ton, will shortly sail for England to get her •bare of the Shreve estate, which is now in the hands of the Bank of England to be turned over to the proper persons. The estate is said to be worth $100,000,000, and there are twenty-four heirs. Mrs. Ransom's part is said to amount to $4,145,883. THE Grand Lodge of Masons of Ken tucky decided that saloon-keeping was an offense against the order, and should be punished as such. J. W. Hopper, of Leb anon, was elected Grand Master. A HOB took three negroes, charged with •won, from a jail in Pickens County, Ala bama, and hanged them to a tree. A SPECIAL committee of the Charleston Cotton Exchange reports itself as agreea bly surprised by a field trial of a cotton harvester, which, however, is not vet a oomplete success. LIQUOR men held a convention at Chi cago last week, and affected an organisa tion under the tiame of "The National Protective Association." The platform op poses prohibition, denounces disreputable places, and favors license, temperance, and non-interference in politics... .George F. Edmunds, by an almost unanimous vote, has been re-elected senator from Vermont. S. S. Cos has been nominated for Con gress in the Ninth New York District by the County Democracy, Tammany Demo crats, and the German Independents. Other Congressional nominations: First Connecticut District, R. J. Vance, Demo crat; Second New York, Felix Campbell, Democrat; Fourth New York, P. P. Ma- lone, Democrat; Fifth New York, A. M. Bliss, Democrat; Eighth New York. T. N. Campbell, Democrat; Tenth New York, F. B. Spinola, Democrat; Eleventh New York, T. A. Merriam, Democrat; Twelfth New York, W. Bourke Cochran, Democrat; Fifteenth New York, E. L. Viele, Democrat; Twenty-sixth New York, J. W, Downs, Democrat; Seventh New-York, J. D. Law- son, Republican. MINISTER Cox is willing to return to Turkey to close up some diplomatic mat ters left unsettled at his departure, if Mr. Bavard thinks it necessary; otherwise he will resign and again enter political life. MINISTER Cos has asked to be relieved of his duties at Constantinople, in view of his nomination for Congress from a New York district... .The World's Washington special says it is not deemed at the White House a violation of the President's order for a Federal official to be a delegate to any kind of county or State convention, provided he conducts himself while there with decorum and does not make his office prominent. INDUSTRIAL NOTES. THE strike at the Chicago Stock Yards was ended by T. P. Barry, a member of the Executive Board of the Knights of Labor, ordering the- locked-out employes to resume work on the ten-hour system, at the winter rate of wages. It is under stood that the new men will remain at their posts. The packing-houses of Swift i, Co. and Nelson Morris will continue on the eight-hour plan, subject to a contract for three days' notice of a change. ONE life was sacrificed after the great stock yards strike at Chicago had been set tled. Some of the Pinkerton guards on their return to the city fired into a dende crowd on Halsted street, and Terence Beg- lev, a dealer in crippled cattle and an in offensive citizen, was killed. RUMORS prevail at St. Paul, Minn., that Phil Armour, of Chicago, ordered 5,000 loaves of bread, to be held in readiness for shipment to Chicago, to forestall an ex pected boycott of the men who had taken the places of the striking packers. PLANS are being arranged at Pittsburg for the formation of a national syndicate of window-glass manufacturers, the object being to advance and maintain priceB. French recently had a fight with about two thousand pirates near Hoolac, Tonquin, in which more than five hundred Anamese were killed, their fortifications and maga zines destroyed, and a lot of cannon and small arms captured Major General Sir :H. T. MacPherson, commander of the British army of occupation in Burmah, is dead. COUNT REUTERN, an aid-de-eamp, was awaiting the Czar in the royal palace, and the weather being warm, unbuttoned his tunic. The Czar returned sooner than ex- Ected, and Reuturn arose hurriedly and gan to rebutton his tunic, whereupon the Czar, thinking that the officer was about to draw a weapon, shot him dead. BECKMANN, a Berliu architect, has con tracted with the Japanese Government to erect at Tokio a large palace for the future Imperial Parliament, a palace for the Min istry of Justice, and another for the Police Administration. All are to be built in Eu ropean style All the Papal Nuncios have been urged to cultivate good relations with the different Governments, with a view toward improving the situation of the church throughout the world M. Wad- dington, French Ambassador to London, has protested, under instructions from his Government, against the British occupation of Egypt. Turkey is in accord with France in the opposition to the occupation -and Russia support ' CTOHEKAIm A COURT at Toronto has ordered the commitment for trial of Patrick Burns, a Erominent coal-dealer, and John H. Vena-les, engineer at the city waterworks, for conspiring to defraud the city on a large scale. THE German who murdered his neigh bor's wife in the vicinity of Pembroke, Ont., a few days ago, has been arrested. His crime is a most atrocious one. He went to the shanty where the murdered woman lived, of which he was the land lord, and ordered her to vacate it. Being sick and alone with two small children, she refused to obey the tyrant's unreasonable demand, where upon he nailed np the door of the shanty from the outside and set fire to the premises, with the helpless familv inside. The mother recognized her perilous position and managed to break open the door and rescue her children from the burning building. The fiend, as soon as he saw her outside, pounded her life out with a club and threw her body back into the burning building. WIGGINS, the false weather prophet, has been elected a member of the St. Ananias Club of Topeka, Kan. Wiggins has been notified that he must eschew the making of weather predictions or ?uit the Canadian civil service The ongregational National Council con cluded its sixth triennial me ting at Chica go, after being in session a week. An elo quent farewell address was delivered by Dr. Noble, of the Union Park Church, and responded to by Moderator Cooke and the two assistant moderators. During the course of the week's session much impor tant business has been transacted.... Elliott & Co., wholesale druggists at Toronto, Ontario, were burned out. The loss is $100,000, with insurance of $80,000. ANOTHER Gloucester fishing schooner, the George L. Smith, with a crew of fourteen men, has been given up for lost. This makes a total of twenty-seven vessels of the Gloucester fishing fleet lost so far this year. The death roll has been increased to 116. CANON CARMODY, the Catholic chap lain at Halifax, refused to read service over the corpse of a soldier who died while in an intoxicated condition. Gen. Russell thereupon ordered the burial of the de ceased with military honors, after services by the Protestant chaplain. ADDITIONAL NEWS. SHARP shocks of earthquake were ex perienced at Charleston, Summerville, Co lumbia, Savannah, Wilmington, N. C., Raleigh, Angusta, Atlanta, Chattanooga, Louisville, and other Southern points, on the 22d. Washington also felt the quake. Rumbling sounds accompanied the vibra tions, which were very severe, causing, 'in some instances, a good deal of apprehen sion. Four shocks were felt at Charleston, while two or more disturbed the other cities mentioned, but no damage is reported. THE late hurricane along the gulf coast well-nigh ruined the orange groves of Pla- quemine parish, Louisiana, cutting Off two- thirds of the crop of the State. THE gamblers of Cincinnati have de clared a boycott against the playing-card firm of Russel, Morgan & Co. because Po lice Commissioner Morgan, a member of the firm, has been active in suppressing gambling dens. The gamblers have sent circulars to every gaming-house in the country and claim that they have already reduced the firm's business one-half. ... The situation at the Chicago Stock Yards' is now as if there had never b. en a stfike. All the guards have been withdrawn^ and all the houses are running. GENERAL MILES reports the capture of Mangus and ten others belonging to Gero- nimo's band, who for forty days had been pursued by Lieutenant Johnson.... A mee.ing of the House Committee on Ap propriations will be held in Washington Nov. 2. It is Mr. Randall's intention to have the ap; ropriation bills ready for action by the House soon after it assembles. BUSINESS failures for the week number 188, against 179 last week. The casualties in the * Eastern and Micldle States are light, while in the Western, Sout em and Pacific States the number reported is above the average Captain Grace, of the steam ship Americi, uf the National Line, died at Sea, the 10th in6t. His body was brought to New York on the steamer of which he was master. JOSEPH B. CLARKE, formerly Mayor of Manchester, N. H., hanged himself be cause of political disappointment and busi ness cares.... W. J. Sherman, the Catholic priest of Brooklyn charged by Julia Mul- vaney with deceiving her by a mock mar riage, pleaded not guilty and was held for examination.... In the Supreme Court of New York, George H. Tilden has brought an action to contest the will of Samuel J. Tilden The planing-mill of Calkins & Co., at Tonawanda, N. Y., valued at $25,- 000, was destroyed by fire. The works of the Canada Paper Company, at Windsor, were also burned, the loss being $200,000, which falls wholly on insurance companies in the United States. ON a farm near Shueyville, Iowa, Martin Souknp fired a barn and killed the wives of two neighbors who went to suppress the flames. The fire in the house was put out by neighbors, who Captured the madman after a desperate struggle, but the barn was consumed, together with forty hogs, a horse, and a large quantity of hay and grain. Souknp was taken to the Sioux City jail for safe-keeping, and threats to lynch the saloon-keeper who sold him the whisky were made.... From a mine discovered last June in the Negaunee range of Michigan six thousand tons of iron ore have already been shipped... .The disease known as "pink-eye" is prevalent to a large extent among horses at Milwaukee Lawyer Haseltine, on trial at Stevens Point, Wis., for the murder of Cashier A. E. Morse, who was criminally intimate with Mrs. Haseltine, was acquitted. UNKNOWN parties wrecked a national school at Cahirmurphy, Ireland, to which the teachers had admitted children of boy cotted citizens.... The Skinners' Company has sold 35,000 acres of land in London derry to 1,000 tenants, in accordance with the provisions of the Ashbourne act, on terms similar to those of the sales made by other city companies. A SMALL bonnet or a soft hat are the most useful head-gear for trave'ing. A veil is very desirable to keep off dust and cinders from head and neck, or to protect the face and eyes when facing the wind on the boat. THE MARKETS. FOREIGN; WASHLUCTOar. PRESIDENT CLEVELAND has appointed Benjamin Folsom, of New York, Consul •t Sheffield, and Frank H. Goodyear, of Buffalo; a Commissioner to examine a sec- «wtL of the Northern Pacific Road recently constructed in Washington Territory. William L. Hall, of Chicago, a son of the Secret Service officer recently murdered has been promoted to Assistant Operative. THE total cash in the Treasury at the Commencement of business on the 18th was $513,098.318 President Cleveland has sent $100 to Buffalo to aid the sufferers by fee recent storm... .The Chief of the Bu reau of Engraving and Printing again de nies the story that there are counterfeits of tbfi $10 silver certificates in circulation and says it would be impossible for such a counterfeit to be in existence without the knowledge of the bureau. GEROMMO and fourteen of his band Jbk*ve been ordered to Fort Pickens, in Close custody, while the remainder of the _. JPtoty are to be 6ent to- Fort Marion. Gov. ZULICK, of Arizona, in his annual " report, says that in the removal of the rene- fltad* Apaohes from the Territory he sees HERR SCHMIDT, the Austrian Director of Railways, died in Vienna from cholera, contracted in Pesth... .Proposals have been sent to Berlin from the Vatican for the re sumption of clerical negotiations... .It is stated that the Inman Steamship Compa ny has entered into voluntary liquida tion for the purpose of reorganization... .A meeting of notable persons was held at the residence of the Archbishop of Canterbury for the purpose of organizing a movement; PORK--Megs to erect a memorial church in honor ot the " attainment of the fiftieth year of Queen Victoria's reign. Mr. Gladstone declined to permit the use of his name as a member of a committee which was appointed. CHAMPION, a socialistic leader in Lon don, declares that the poor people of the metropolis will fellow the Lord Mavor's NEW YOBK. BKKVBS.... HOGS WHEAT--Ko. 1 White... No. 2 Bed Coax--No. 2 OATS--Whit© POM--New Mess CHICAGO. BEEVES--Choice to Prime Steers Good Shipping Common .. HOGS--Shipping Grades... FLOUR--Extra, Spring............ WHEAT--NO. i R«d CORJI--No. 2 OATS--No. 2 BCTTBB--Choice Creamery Fine Dairy CHEESE--Full Cream, Cheddar.. Full Cream, new EGGS--Fresh POTATOKS--Choice, per bu. R00 4.50 83 .8i .45 .83 10.00 9 5.50 & 5.00 <3 .83% @ .85 & .45)6 <9 .46 ©10. >0 WHEAT--Cash. CORN--No. 2... OATS--No. 2.... RTK--No. 1.... PORK--Mesa... MILWAUKEE. TOLEDO. 5.00 4.00 3. 3.50 4.00 .73 .34 C<3 .25 & .25 .16 & ,l\% « .11*4® .40 & 8.50 & 5.50 <@ 4.75 & 3.59 ;<t 4.25 & 4.50 74 MX .25* .26 .20 .11* .1254 -18V& W .45 @ 9.00 procession, contrasting the aristocracy and poverty of England, unless the Govern ment promises to institute an inquiry into the needs of the unemployed... .Small pox is epidemic at Cochawamba, Bolivia, and children are reported dying daily by hundreds New j rifles will be provided for the French army next spring at a cost of $20,000,000. i ....All the Powers, including England, have formally assured Russia that they will not approve of Prince Alexander's re election to the Bulgarian throne. Russia has officially notified the Prefect of Philips popolis that she cannot recognize the re cent elections for the Great Sobranje a- legal. IN a sermon at Dublin, the Catholic Bishop of Meajh denounced moonlighters as the greatest enemies of Ireland, and in sisted that through him or the parish pri isls they should restore stolen arms to the rightful owners, or he would organize a committee to br.ng offenders to justice. ....Advices from China say that the . • WHEAT--No. 2 CORN--No. 2 OATS--No. 2 DETROIT. BEEF CATTLE .• HOGS SHKEP , VVHKAT--Michigan Bed CORN--No. 2 OATS--No. 2 White. BT. LOUIS. WHEAT--No. 2 CORN--Mixed OATH--Mixed PORK--New Mess CINCINNATI. WHEAT--No. 2 Bed CORN--No. 2 OATS--No. 2.... .• PORK--Mess LIVE Hcos BUFFALO. WHEAT--No. 1 Hard CORN--No. 2 CATTLE ., INDIANAPOLIS. BEEF CATTLE..'. H"OS T-HKKL' *" WHKAT--HO. T BED CORN--NO. 2..' ; OATS EAST LIBERTY. CATTLE--Best Fair Common \\\ BOOS.m.,*... SHEEP .72 .34 .23 .50 8.50 .77 .38 .20 4.00 4.0) 3.50 .77 .38 .30 .74 .81 .25 0.U0 .72*4 @ .34)4 .26^ f 51 @ 9.00 .78 .27 5.00 v.4 4.75 & 4.50 .7754 & .99 & .31 .78 & .33 >4 & .26 <$ 9.50 .77 ® .77U .39 (<» .40 & .27*4 9.7-i & 4.50 .27 9.2"I 4.00 .82 .fl34# .83 .42 H 8.50 4.2.J 4.25 4.0J 3.0) .78 .84 .25 4.50 4.25 8.50 4.S5 3.50 & 5.00 a 4. .0 &. 8.75 & .74 M .35 & .28 & 5.25 .<* 4.S0 e 4.00 Oft 5.00 & 4.00 A FATIt BULLET. .... ? Rioting •* the Chicago Yard* Reanlts in the Death of a Bystander. A Mob Attacks a Train, and Pink erton Men in It UseTheiiV Weapons. The Hea Who Fired Placed Under [Chicago special.] When it was announced that the jitrike was over the big packers went out to pur chase hogs. Armour & Co. bought 2,000, and the market went up twen%'-five cents per 100 pounds. The fact that the old men were to be taken back sent consternation to the hearts of the imported men, and they concluded that they had belter tender their resignations. Mr.' Cudahy, of Ar mour's house, asked the men to remain, and head clerk Bomers told them that if they remembered their numbers they could at anytime secure employment at Armour's. No inducement could be given the men to stay. They dally refused, and finally a train was Bent for tp take them to the city. One hundred and sixty Pinkerton men, under the command of Capt. Frank Joy, Were detailed to escort the men. They oc cupied the three rear coaches of the train. At the Stock Yards Y, at Thirty-ninth street, the train was blocked for a moment by a freight train. Another detachment of guards was taken on board at this point, and the train again started for the city. A crowd of about two hundred men and boys, who had been detained by parsing trains, were gathered at the soutn side of the crossing. They broke out into a chorus of jeers and cat-calls, but • it is claimed by witnesses that no demonstra tion of actual violence was made. On the other hand, it is charged that they bom barded the train with rocks, and that some body in the crowd fired a pistol. However this may be, the train had scarcely passed Halsted street crossing when a man on the rear platform fired a revolver into the crowd. The Pinkerton men in the rear followed with a regular volley of shots out of the windows of the train, aimed at the crowd, and Terence Begley, a well-known citizen of Lake, was mortally wouuded. The Pinkerton men, as eye-witnesses say, fired in every direction, and did not cease the fusillade until Wallace street, three blocks distant from Halsted street, was reached. Shots were fired into Schimmerman's packing-house, and George Barnum, the superintendent of tne firm, had a narrow escape. He was standing at a window on the second floor and the bullet almost grazed his head, imbedding itself in the wall. Several shots were fired into Flanni- gan & Huff's packing-house, where several men were stand ng at open windows. J. Shaunuessy, a flagman, and L. Carroll, a brakeman, were standing at the door of the switch shanty, about one hundred feet from Halsted street. They say that bullets whizzed in all directions, one passing through the sash and two through the boards on the opposite side of the shanty. These two bullet holes are almost directly in line with the place where Begley stood when he was shot. Estimates of the num ber of shots fired by the guards vary from twelve to one hundred, twenty being the average number. Terence Begley, the fatally injured man, was leading his horse slowly westward on Halsted street when the shot was fired. He dropped the bridle and exclaimed: "I am shot:" A brakeman named Russell helped the wounded man to a saloon near by, where a hasty,extyninati jn was made. The wound was not discovered, and Begley was told that he was only frightened. In a dazed manner he started toward Flannigan's packing house. He had tak -n but a few- steps when he suddenly fell to the ground. A wagon was procured and he was taken to his home, 4211 Emerald avenue, where a thorough examination showed that the bul let had passed through the abdomen, en tering at the right side and coming out on the left side, glancing upward. Late in the night the unfortunate man died. Previous ly his ante-mortem statement was taken. It is as follows: "My name is Terence Begley. I am 41 years old. I think I cannot live, and make this as my dying statement as to how I re ceived the shot this l!*th day of October, 188(>. At about 12 o'clock I was going with a cripple cart containing one hog to Shoencman's slaughter house, near Fortieth and Halsted Btreets, in the Town of Lake, county of Cook, and State of Illinois. I had passed the Lake Shore and Michigau Southern crossing, and was going north and was near Mr. M. Schmidt's Ealoon on Halsted street, and was leading my hot se by tho head. Immediately after passing the crossing a passenger train of the Lake Shore and Michigan Sonthern Railroad came irom the Stock Yards east filled with Pink erton i olicemen. As they passed this crossing, where a large crowd had congre gated, cries* of 'Scabs' were heard fiom the crowd. As the rear end of the train pass ed the east side of Halsted street four or five or six shots were tired. I saw qnite a number of Pinkerton men standing on the rear platform of the train. I saw no one shout, but heard the shots and felt that I was shot, and left my horse and ran to Shoeneman's slaughter-house and sat down and told Pat Martin, a police officer of the Town of Lake, that I was shot. I at no time made any outcry or allusion to the Pinkerton men, and had nothing whatever to do with the crowd at the crossing, but attended strictly to my own business. Begley was too weak to sign his name, . but touched the pen, and his mark was j made. The witnesses were J. P. Mulcahey, Sergeant of Police; Frank Becker, and William Ryan. Immediately after the shooting the great est excitement prevailed, and had Capt. Markev, of the Town of Lake Police, stopped the train, as was suggested, gen eral riot and bloodshed would have been inevitable. The Captain let the train pass, j and telephoned to the Twenty-second Street Police Station. From.this place and ! from the Armory squads of officers were I immediately dispatched to the scene. | Excited groups of people assembled on ] every corner and t xpr used by word and j action the deepest indignation. There | were no violent demonstrations, but the ; word went around ti.at if the Pinkerton men who did the shooting were brought back and lodged in the" town jail there would be trouble before morning. j The train was met at llariison street by ' the city police, and 123 Pinkerton men and about sixty men and boys who had left em ployment in the stock yards were marched to the Armory. The workmen, being un armed. were at once discharged. The Pinkerton men then arranged themselves in lines, and throe sm ill bo^s from Lake, John lioland, Timothy Neila:id, and B. Hie key, who claimed to have seen the shooting, were told to identify the men who had tired. The lads, after some hesitation, picked our of the crowd Joseph l-Iill and Walter At drews, both young men. Aft r the identification of the two the Pinkerton men were marched into the police court-room, whe e each man's ritte or pisLol was exam ined. Only one weapon that showed evi dence of having recently been discharged was found. An empty shull was found in the W inchester carried by Emmons Shaw. After the examinaton William A. Pinker ton stepped forward, calling out: "All who fired shuts from tho cars stand up like men. There's nothing to be fright ened about." One youug man rose and went to Mr. Pinkerton. His name was Robert J. Ba tram. "There must be more," said Mr. Pinker ton, "for about twelve ohots were ftred." Two bewrdtoMr young feOowa who were Bitting together, Blehard D. Labes and Gfey Stivers, then went forward. The six were locked np, and will be held pending judicial inquiry. Hill and Andrews, whom the boys claimed to have identified, did not admit having done any shooting. The other Pinkerton men were released. .-v,? The Local Pien. Chicago Daily News: Yesterday** Oc currences should be the death-knell of the employment of armed men by any but the lawfully constituted authorities. Until them have demonstrated their inadequacy to protect property and preserve the peace, no private citizen, nor any number of such may usurp their functions. That way lie civil warfare and the reign of the mob. Inter Ocean: Tho action of the Pinker ton police, shootiag into a crowd of people, appears to have been wholly unjustifiable. Lnless circumstances more palliating than any yet brought out can be shown, tli« men who participated in the dastardly deed ought to receive the full punishment allot ted to such crimes by the law. It is very unfortunate that just when the labor trou bles were being amicably adjusted, a few bad men, intrusted with guns and tempo rary authority, should, by an act both foolish and criminal, stir up anew the spirit oc re sentment. In such times only cool-headed men should be intrusted either with author ity or fire-arms, as action such as that yes terday not only incites the people against the guardians of the peace, but tends to bring them into contempt. Mr. Pinkerton's future usefulness will be lessened by yester day's occurrence. REVIEWING THE 8TKIKE. • A Short Hixtory of Its Causes and tt Crai* parison with Former Strikes. | from the Chicago Daily News.] V ' Regarding the great stock yards strike which has just terminated, a short review of its history and the causes which led to it may not prove uninteresting, because it occupies a peculiar position in the history of great labor troubles. It may be said to be the first occasion on which a large body of organized men retreated in good order, with ranks unbroken. In this respect it is entirely different from its great predecessor of 1879-80. In the early months of 1879 a number of men met and, organized the Butchers' Union. Previous to the organization of this union there had been no combined action on the part of (the men employed in the packing industry'. This union was a success from the 6tart. It rapidly drew into its circles the large majority of the 10,000 men employed in the yards. Con fiding in its strength, the union demanded and obtained from the packers an increase of 25 cents a day. This was in August. The union grew in power and began to arrogate to itself supreme control of the whole packing industry. Jack Hart, a butcher in ti.e employ of Armour, was asked to join the union and ret used. Sev eral others declined to join, and the union demanded their discharge, laying down the rale that non-union men should not work with union men. The packers called a halt, and refused to accede to a demand they considered flagrantly unjust. They had foreseen trouble, and ha I per fected an organization similar to the one now existiug. They resolved not' to recog nize the union as a body, and prep ired for the strike which was inevitable. The men struck on December 18, 1879. No body of men were ever more confident of success. The same arguments and statements were made by both sides as were advanced in the last strike. The men claimed that they were indispensable, and that it was impos sible to till their places. The packers claimed that they were paying bigger wag's than any others in the country. .They called attention to the advantages of West ern^ packing points, and threatened to move their business to these, the natural loca tions of the packing industry. The news papers deplored the situation, aad predict ed the decadence of Chicago as a packing center. The fight was a long and bitter one. The men exhausted all the weapons used in former strikes and invented new ones. As fast as experts were obtained they were in duced to quit, the union paying them their wages in full. The packers advertised all over the country for help, and hundreds of £reen hands poured in from all directions. They were put to work as last as they ap plied. All the packers were not -involve d in the struggle, several of the smaller firms acceding to the demand of the union. The following firms were directly interested: Armour & Co., Ric her Provision Company, Fowler Brothers, Chapin & Cudahy, Allerton Packing Com pany. Jones & Stiles, and Baldwin. Tho strikers received a severe blow when Father Ca ten, a leading Catholic priest, advised the men to concede the right of the packers to employ whom they pleased. The new . men were subjected to all the annoyances which 10,000 men could devise. They were beaten and mobbed whenever an opportu nity presented itself. A large number of special police were sworn in, and with much difficulty preserved a semblance of order. On December 27 the packers be came alarmed, and succeeded in having the militia assemble in their armories. They were not called to the yards, but were held in readiness for several days. The Butchers' Union was rapidly becom ing demoralized. Their funds vanished, and the families of the strikers were in want of food. One bv one they joined the ranks of the so-called "scabs," a word which had just entered the vocabulary of labor nomenclature. As the cause waned, the remnant of the strikers grew more desperate. Assaults and overt acts in creased. Several men were shot at; oth ers were stabbed and cut. The whole town of Lake was permeated with lawlessnes. Meanwhile the packers were having things all their own way. House after house joined the non union movement. The strikers who returned were requested to Bign an obliga tion binding themselves to join no society inimical to the interests of the packers. The union was on the point of dissolution. On Jan. 14, 1880, the great strike made its last desperate struggle and expired, and with it the Butchers' Union, which gave it birth The rush to secure positions became a stampede. On that day thousands made application for work. Many were refused. Infuriated by a sense of overwhelming de feat, and maddened by rage and hunger, they made an onslaught on the houses. Armed with clubs and "gam-sticks," they forced their way into th j houses, their ranks swelled by hundreds of thngs and roughs. The men in the houses fled for their lives. Many were beaten, some se- verly, and for a day the mob reigned. It was the last of the stiike. Order was soon secured and maintained. Hundreds of the Strikers never regained those situations they imperiled when they struck. The strikers lost $350, (KiO in wages, besides their time. Tney gained an experience, however, which may have been worth the price paid. No local, organization ever superseded the Butchers' Union. The Knights of La bor obtained a footing in the stock yards, and to-day include fullt' 23,u00 stock yard employes. The eight-hour day was earned last spring, after a nominal s rike last ng but two days. The Coopers' As sembly of the Knights of Labor appointed a commi:t e, wh eh waited ou th • p sck^rs. Mr. Kent offered ten hours' pay for nine hours'work, o" nine hours'pav for eight horn's' vork. The m n accepted the latter proposition The same day the men t rough- out the ynrJs struck for ten hours' pay for ei^ht hours' work. The seco id day of the strike the superintend nt of G. W. Swift, by a misapprehension, it is claimed, put up a noti e granting the de mand. The news spread throu h the yards, and before night the same surrender was made by nearly every house in P >cking- town. Ken soon gave the same terms and the strike came to a S| e dy and b'oodk ss termii a ion. The eight-hour svstem has been in operation since, and the puckers claim that for them ii has proven a fai ur . All otters made by them to ti e employes for a compromise having failed, ihey decided Ito return to tho ten-hour day, and the strike now terminated is the result. -"•"ViV. SWIFT DI8TBU0TI0N. Johnson's Bayon and Radford, Hear Sabine Z*ass, Swejpt -iE Ont It Is Now Thought That the Total toss ot Life Will Reach Tw? .v Hundred and Fifty. [Beaumont (Texas) special.] Refugees from the flooded district about Sabine Pass continue to arrive on every small craft that comes up the river. It is estimated by persons here who have been over the scenes of devastation at Sabine Pass, Johnson's Bayou, and Taylor's Bayou that the death-list will exceed 250 souls. Eighty-five corpses have been re covered and buried around Johnson's Bayou, and fifty-four bodies thus far have been buried at Sabine, while sixty-six persons are still missing at Sabine, and these are, of course, dead, as it would be impossible for any human being to survive thus long in the Bwamp and lagoons with out food or shelter. An examination of the country back of Sabine and immediately in the vicinity of Beaumont shows that the salt water came back from the coast fully forty miles through the swamps, and hundreds of thousands of acres are still submerged by water that was forced back and has no outlet. This fact makes the search for bodies very difficult. Carcasses of thousands of drowned cattle, hoes, horses, and fowl are strewn evervwhere, and clouds of sea gulls and buzzards hover over the desolate country for an area of thirty square mileB. It is known thai the number of sufferers around Johnson's Bayou, who have lost everything, will reach 1,200, while the Sabine sufferers number 300, one half of whom are now in Beau mont. Parties who returned to-day from the Johnson Bayou district say that sixty persons are still missing there, and the searching parties have almost reached the conclusion that many of these missing were drowned and their bodies carried out sea by the receding waves. A correspondent who has just returned from Sabine Pass telegraphs from Orange that the turkey-buzzards are soaring over Sabine for miles around on land and water, it is one vast charnel-house. The town is swept out of existence. What was a pros perous village when last Tuesday dawned is now the center of wreck and desola ion. There are 127 persons missing and sup posed to be dead. Only about twenty-five bodies have thus far been recovered. There is not one sound house in the town of Sabine. The residences of Dr. Gail- land and Editor McClanahan are the only ones that can be repaired. Every other house is an absolute wreck. This, in brief, is the Btory of the storm. Innumer able touching, heartrending incidents of the storm are related by the survivors. One house containing fourteen colored persons was seen to go down with a crash, aud every one of them was lost. Incidents are related of husbands lashing wives and children to floating wrecks and then seeing them killed by heavy logs being diiven against them. The damage to property can only be estimated by the value of the town, for all is lost. The Sabine and EaBt Texas Railroad track is washed out for a distance of ten miles. The trees have floated off, and the rails are twisted like wires, the effect of the great hurricane. Millions of dead fish were cast up by the waves, and thousands of birds also strew the ground. A woman in a perfectly nude state was found roaming around on the prairie yesterday, five miles from Sabine. She was demented, and could not tell her name. When the Government boat Pen rose reached there Columbus Martie was found rowing around the delta looking for the bodies of his family. He said: "My self, wife, and three children were clinging to a floating roof which was gradually breaking to pieces. One of the little ones dropped off and then another. I was holding the youngest, aud soon my wi:'e said, 'tiood- by, husband; I am going.' I could not reach her. The piece of the roof supporting her broke off and she sank before my eyes. I held onto the voungest child, named Pearl, some time longer. The child, ad dressing me, said: 'Papa, I'm tired; won't you walk with nieV The piece of the roof I was on now was crumbling to pieces. I told the little one to kiss me. She put both her little arms around my neck, gave me a big squeeze, and just then a wr,ve dashed us off, and I saw her no more. Great God! Why didn't 1 go down, too?" He was pressed to go on board the Penrose, but refused, saying: "Here among these la goons are tne bodies of my wife and chil dren, and here will I stop until I can find tlsem." No tongue can tell how the people have suffered during the past few days. In many cases the dead ones are considered the lucky ones. [Orange (Texas) dispatch.] The steamer Emily P. has returned, bringing 160 additional sufferers from Johnson's Bayou, who are entirely desti tute of everything that is necessary to sus tain lite. They were received at the wharf by our relief committees, who are doing all in their power to make them comfortable. Mo t of them are women and children. The Emily P. will return to the Bayou im mediately to bring back 150 more persons who are waiting there, and who are now homeless, penniless, and without clothing. We now have to take care of 210 persons from that section. One can only know the heartrending condition of these people by seeing and conversing with them. The corrected list of the drowned at John son's Bayou, as near as can be obtained is as follows: Whites--F. Gallon, wife, and grandson; ei^ht children of Sam Brown; Mr^. E. Foushet's four children; Joseph Kuke, wife, und sewn children; four of Frank Tomer's children; Mrs. S. Galler and five children, Mrs. Joe Luke; four of George Stephens' children; Mrs. Shell Wayley and four children; . Mrs. A1 ford Lam I eit aud two children; Mr. Berry and daughter; Al- phonse Degard; Adam Smith, and one child; Mis. George Smith, and four chil dren. Colored--Henry Jofinson, wife, and three children; Mrs. Jack Lewis; Dick Ham- brick, wife, and four children, and James Lewis. Only a few of their bodies were recovered on the trip. We have two steamers, two schooners, and twenty-five sail boats doing active work in gathering in the Buffering and burying the dead from Sabine and tne Bayou. Orange has not yet received, thus far, a ; ingle dollar to assist in taking c tie of all these people. The citiz ns earnestly ap peal to all on behalf of the d stituto suf- lerers. Contributions may be sent to J. Sanders, M.iyor of Orange. Xiik llarons. (Chicago special. 1 The regular semi-annuil meeting of the Milk-Shippers' Central Union was held at the Sherman House ye-terday morning. The Union is composed of shippers of milk to Chicago from the States of Illinois, Indiana, and Wisconsin, and represents about *J,t3()0 cans of milk of eight g .Hons each, being three-fourths of the milk brought into Chi ago. The union was organized last April, when prices were tiifcd at 85 cents per ':an for the iollowing six months. The meeting yesterday was to fix prices for the ensuing six months, Novem ber to April, inclusive. Mr. W. W. Norton, of Dund e, 111., presided. The union had resulted in the making of 10 cents per can to even* member for the last six montlis,' which means $r>00 per day on the basis of 5,000 cans. That in a year would amount to $182,500, which would pay for_22B,125 caus, equal to ah increase of 623 cans a day KNI9HT8 0F L4B08. Proceedings of the Rtehmmtd \ Convention. ; ̂ - ' " v >}*.; J^t^vKognm was mate at '«&' mm-' •iona of OH Oeanal Ai--mhlv A* on th* 16th. Mr. Powd«rty was and was absent from the convention, remaining in hiB room the greater part of thedky. In hS absence -GenenS'seoreSry £itollman presided. The new constitution was taken up ana seven! sections were acted upon. The duties of cer<1 first passed, and the important Question of whether the locals should be to form State Assemblies was also settled. There was a big fight on this matter. J. E. Qulnn. of New York, opposed tho provision, sad A7T Schafer, of Michigan, led the dol»gat*g who were in favor of state Assemblies. Firrt the whole section was adopted. It provided that the locals should form State assemblies and be subjeot to the oetion of such. This was finally changed so as to allow ten locals to form a State assembly, but those who deeline to eo into it will not bo bound in anv way by that body. Schafer declared that the whole section having been adopted it could not be changed by a majority vote. Litchman declared that he was out of order, and Schafer exclaimed: "I know that I am right, and you can't bamboozle me, as you have others. "Let him go on record," said the Chairman to his clerkti. The question of dis- tricts wftB settled to tho SAtinfaction of alL Any twenty-five locals of one trade mav form a National district. Another important change was that locals which aro attached to tho Gen- eral Assembly shall not have representation in that body. Then the question of represents- tion was taken up nnd settled. There wero & score of plana and twice as many amendments, but out of the whole finally oame the decision that hereafter the representation shall be on» from each 3,000. Thomas O'Reilly, of the telegraphers' district, offered a resolution, at the -Richmond assembly, on the 18th, that the Knights cf Labor demand tho passage of a bill by Congress authorizing the purchase by tho Government of the tela- graph system of the country. Tho motion to- refer the balance of the revised constitution to the executive board and a committao of four was adopted. This leaves the matter of national trade districts exactly where it was befoie tho convention. Similar action was taken with the balance of the report of the committee on law. including all documents on the revision of th* constitution. Ths Committee on the State of tho Order indorsed the report of the General Master Workman and General Secretary-Treas urer. Reports of numerous committees were adopted and indorsed. A resolution expressing sympathy with Ireland was passed. A report suggesting the formation of a con gress of thirty-eight Knights of Labor to sit in •Washington during the session of Congress, was referred to the local ussemblies. All matters in relation to stamps, labels, or protective designs placed on articles made by knights of Labor were referred to the executive board. Reso- tutions were adopted favoring the establish ment of libraries devoted to labor literature at. state capitals; against convict labor; recom mending local assemblies to work and vote only for candidates who pledge themselves to sustain the principles of the Knights; favoring the ad mission of colored apprentices in shops on the same basin as white ones. A proposition favor ing the establishment of orphan asylums for the children of deceased members ot the order was referred to local assemblies with favorable mention. All other matters referred to the Committee on the Htate of the Order were re ferred to the Executive Board. It was voted that a committee by appointed to promote fra ternal relations between the Knights and ttw VatronR of Husbandry. The Committso on Appeals and GrievAnoes obtained the floor when the general assembly went into session at Richmond on the 19th* The report relates to matters of general dis cipline that are of little intjrest to others than members. One of the cises dealt with was a charge of conduct unbecoming a delegate, brought against Sam L. Lefflngwcll, of District Assembly No. 105, of Indianapolis. His namo was ordered to be stricken from the list of delegates. A com mittee was appointed, which Bent the following telegram to Gov. Rich vrd J. Oglesby. of Illinois, at Quincy, HI., where tho Soldiers Home was dedicated : "The General Assembly Knights of Labor, in annual convention assem bled, both the blue and the gray, sends yon greeting on tha occasion of tho dodication of the Soldiers and Sailors' Horn ) at Quincy. May the duty so nobly done by your State be an in centive to other States to do likewise, until ev ery needy hero may havo tho shelter of a home." At the afternoon session the General Assembly Continued consideration of the report of the Committee on Appeals and Grievances, and adopted a resolution deciding that members of the International Cigar- Makers' Union must elect whether they will remain members of that union or of ttae Order of Knights of Labor, but that they cannot re main members of both. The report of the Com mittee ou Finance was presented and a lopted. It provides that the salary of tho Grand Master Workman shall henceforth be J -.ODJ a year, and those of General Secretary and General Treas urer S2.030, and that the m ambers of the Ex ecutive Board and General Worthy Foreman shall receive St per day and expanses wtitte OB d^y. o The General Assembly Knights of Labor be gan its last session of the convention Of 1S83 at nine o'clock the morning of the 2Jth inst. The first business t ikon up was tha rsport of tho standing Committee on Co-operation. After that came the reports of half a dozen sp^ial com mittees. One of these was thiit from the Committee on Woman's Wo.'k. Among the rec ommendations it present id 11 the assembly was one in favor of the appointment of a woman who should investigate and report on all subjects conaectel with female wage- workers, and aid in the organization of local assemblies of women employed in the various industries throughout t ie country. Resolutions were passed asking mercy for the seven men condemned to the gallows at Chicago, while disavowing sympathy with the action of the an archists. Among other important moasures re ferred to the incoming legislative commit tee wa< a resolution demanding laws' to prohibit any member of Congress or any State Legislature from acting as attornoy for any per son or corporation personally interested in the legislation of tho body in which ho sits: also & proposition that the coinage of silver bo carried to the full extent of tho present legal limit, and that obligations of the United States be paid in the some; also a resolution in favor of woman suffrage. The Com- mittoo on Convict Labor reported in fa vor of taking strong grounds against the com petition of convict labor with free labor, which was adopted. The report of a special committee against continuing the Importation of Chinese contract labor and in favor of the abrogation of the Burlingame treaty with China was adopted. The Committee on Railway Insurance presented a report, which was adopted, protesting against insurance schemes for tho allegad benefit of tho employes of the Baltimore and Ohio and Pennsylvania Railroads, and calling on all legislators to take action against what the reso lution calls "compulsory voluntary insurance." Tho Committee on Education was continued until tho noxt session, when it is expected they will present a plan for the education of the members of the order. Tlis Executive Board was authorized to purchase ahoine in Philadel phia for the family of the late Uriah S. Stevens, the founder of ths order. Mr. Powaerly then oongratulat 'd t ie members upon the good work accomplished during tho Hetsion, and the gen eral assembly aduviniod. Miracle** of the (ioldsinith'8 Art. The curving petal of a double pur ple violet sliowtribe under glint of gold. Ten little snowy Marguerites cluster together on the pin with three dia monds. A wild rose drooping from its stem has the dolicate pink of the enamel veined with hair lines, and a diamond gleams from the center. Dark purple violets form a crescent, each holding a diamond in the stamens, and the single, double-dark l]arma vio let clinging to the stem. A South African cat's-eye is out in ft horse's head with ruby eyes set in a horseshoe of antique gold; the^ veil beads are sapphires, rubies, and dia monds. Another delicate specimen of filigree is a eurviDg fern; a diamond dewdrop glitters in the stem, and near it is a four-leaved clover holding dewdrops of diamonds. A neat ly black pansy with exquisite ly shaded petals golden near the heart* with hairlines of darker shades, has one or two diamond dewdrops glittering on its petals. In a beautiful butterfly the grada tions of pale colors in the wings are in allovs of gold of finest tinting, studded with red and green garnets; the body is of palest green gold; the eves are rubies. Fashionable garters are of black, blue, and other shades of silk elastic, with claspB of elaborate chased gold and enameled floweis set with dia monds, emeralds, and rqbies, or a daisy in white enamel, with diamonds in the stamens of gold. _ In filigree work of the finest descrip tion, delicate as a cobweb, are various other charming fkee pins. Among these is a gold tennis racket with deco ration of Marguerit s, a bud of rosy apple blossoms, exquisitely tinted en amels, and a little cluster of forget-me- nots tied together with a tiny band of diamonds.