Democratic Sentinel, Volume 10, Number 35, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 1 October 1886 — Page 2
ctljc DcntocrattcSfitlinel RENSSELAER, INDIANA. I. W. McEWEN, - Publish**
NEWS CONDENSED.
Concise Record of the Week. EASTERN. Severe frosts, - damaging to vegetation, are reported from Northern New Hampshire and Vermont. Dr. S. Buttemore, a member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives in 1883, made misrepre>entations which drew $12,500 from the State Treasury, for which offense he has been fined SI,OOO and sentenced to sixty days’ imprisonment. George M. Bartholomew of Hartford, President of the Charter Oak Life Insurance Company, is $157,000 short, and has disappeared. An application has been made for a receiver for the company. George M. Bartholomew, the President of the Charter Oak Life Insurance Company, who has just disappeared from Hartford, not only owed that corporation several hundred thousand dollars, but managed to get into debt at the banks over $2,000,000. In Philadelphia Councilman John R. Lloyd and Police Lieutenant D. B. Roche, both intoxicated, accompanied by a band of policemen and ward-workers, indulged in indiscriminate shooting at political opponents in saloons and on the street. A negro was fatally wounded in the back, and Charles Petroff was beaten to insensibility with black jacks. In aniron mnio at Jaysville, N. Y., after a charge of dynamite bad been fired, two men were killed by a fall of rock. Bishop Shannalian, of Harrisburg, ■was attacked by congestion of the brain, and died in a few hours. In enlarging a cellar at Mahanoy City, Pa., workmen found an earthen jar con tabling several thousand dollars in gold. The widow who owns the residence made the excavators surrender what they had pocketed.
WESTERN.
The date of the execution of Brooks, •who murdered Preller in a St. Louis hotel, has been postponed for sixty days, to permit of an appeal to the Supreme Court Hailstones five inches in circumference fell at Madison, Wis. Several thousand panes of glass wore broken, and hundreds of birds were killed. The Governor, Attorney General, and Live Stock Commission of' Illinois, accompanied by Dr. Salmon, of Washington, and veterinarians from several States, spent a couple of days in Chicago investigating eases of pleuro-pneumonia in tho distillery yards, and witnessed tho slaughter of some infected cows. It was decided that all tho cattle in tho infectod stables* some 3,000 in number, should be slaughtered and tho sheds burned. Texas fever has appeared among several herds of cattle in Saline Count)', Missouri. A. C. Sti'ong, a Knight Templar of Naperville, 111., was killed by a train at Cheltenham, near St. Louis, Mo. Charles Doll and Major James Morgan, members of the late Board of Public Works, of Cincinnati, and Charles T. Blackburn, its clerk, were arrested in that city charged with embezzling largo amounts of tho city funds. The Northern Sioux have decided to establish mail and transportation routes throughout the frontier region on the cooperative principle, the work to be done by the young men of the nation. As ail tho labor will bo performed on foot, young warriors are now in training for their part in the enterprise. Each runner is to make seventy-five miles per week.
Lightning started a conflagration in the I'oreßts of the Yellowstone National Park, which is destroying immense tracts of timber. The Indians of Leech Lake Reservation, in Minnesota, sold SIO,OOO worth of berries this season, most of which is certain to be expended for whisky. Commissioners Wright and Larabee report that at White Oak Point they learned of the sale of an Indian girl of fifteen years to a lumberman for a sack of flour. Pleuro-pneumonia was discovered last week near Akron, Ohio. Thirteen cattle have already died on a farm near there. The Governor of lowa issued a proclamation quarantining the Stato against Illinois cattle on account of the reported prevalence of pleuro-pneumonia. A Chicago dispatch says: “The infected cattle in the distillery yards at Chicago are guarded by twenty-nine deputies employed by the Federal Government, The Commissioner of Agriculture is willing to pay $25,000 toward the destruction of the animals now in quarantine, the Illinois authorities having $50,000 available. ”
SOUTHERN.
Three brothers named Morgan were drowned while bathing in the river near Chattanooga. The youngest was seized with cramps, and the others were lost in their attempt to save his life. Charleston and Summerville, S. C., were again shaken by earthquake! on the morning of Sept. 21, the vibrations being accompanied by heavy detonations, similar to the report of great cannon. Arresures’ family asks SIOO,OOO indemnity of the Mexican Government for his murder. The Relief Committee at Charleston, S. C. reports itself ab e to furnish food and shelter to the needy, but calls attention to the fact that many houses must be repaired, if at all, by public aid. Government engineers report a damage of #2,000,000 sustained by the six hundred buildings already inspected. The prediction made,by Wiggins has done much to unnerve the pdbiic. P. S. Humphries was hanged at
Milledgeville, Go., for the murder of his niece and sister-in-law. At Baltimore Mrs. C. H. Rudolph, aged 23, who had been married but a few weeks, shot herself four times and expired in a short time. The orange crop of Louisiana is said to be a complete failure, on account of last winter's freeze. Nine years of propitious weather will be required to fully restore the bearing capacity of the trees. At a prayer-meeting in Washington, Georgia, two young men quarreled about their right to escort home a female worshiper, the result being a murder. Louisiana’s orange crop is said to be almost a failure Ibis year, owing to last wintsr’s severe frerzi. , ' Reports from several counties in the cotton belt of Texas tell of the disastrous results to open cotton by the late heavy continuous rains, also of serious damage resulting from the cotton-worm. A feud at Ash Flat, Arkansas, arising out of a divorce case, led to the poisoning of a well, by which twelve persons were prostrated. One of the wealthiest farmers in the county has been arrested for the crime.
WASHINGTON.
A gathering of the employes of the public printing office at Washington for the purpose of bidding farewell to 8. P. Rounds was cut short by tlio sudden death of Captain Otto Leissring. The Land Office has received news of the seizure by Government agents of timber which enterprising Canadians were cutting south of the forty-ninth parallel. President Cleveland, his wife, Mrs. Folsom and Colonel and Mrs. Lamont reached Washington Wednesday, Sept. 23. Colonel Lamont announced to the newspaper men that the President had said he was glad to get back. Col. Hugh D. Gallagher, of Greenshurg, Ind., has been appointed Indian Agent at the Pine Ridgo Agency in Dakota. He succeeds Dr. McGillicuddy. Washington officials deny the reports of negotiations between Great Brita'n and the United States for a new Canadian treaty. Commissioner of Pensions Black’s report shows that there are 305,783 pensioners on the rolls, there being 1,539 survivors of tho war of 1812, and 13,397 widows of the soldiers of that war. There was paid out for pensions during the year $63,797,831. The Acting Secretary of War has received a dispatch from the Indian Agent at the San Carlos Agency stating that the removal of the Warm Spring and Chiricahua Indians is a cause of rejoicing to the Indians left there, who are relieved of their fears of attack, and are afforded better opportunity for acquiring habits of industry. Late information received at the National Agricultural Department regarding the cenditiou of hogs is that in Illinois and Indiana cholera prevails generally. In the former State heavy losses are reported in several eountios. In Ohio and Michigan the condition of tho animals is fair. In some parts of Wisconsin farmers are afraid to keep hogs on account of cholera, and reports from lowa aro of a similar character in some cases. Cholera, pink-eye and measles aro reported from Missouri, and in Nebraska tho condition is considerably below the average. Kansas and Kentucky hogs are generally in good condition.
POLITICAL.
Congressional nominations: Ornam Pierson, Itepublican, Twelfth Illinois District; Frank Hiscock, Itepublican, Twenty-second Now York; Charles It. Buckalow, Democrat, Eleventh Pennsylvania; James Phelan, Democrat, Tenth Tennessee; W. E. Itobinson, Democrat, Sixth Louisiana;, C. Newton, Democrat Fifth Louisiana; Amos Townsend, Republican, Twenty-first Ohio; R. W. Dunham, Republican, First Illinois; Andrew Haben, Republican, Sixth Wisconsin; Lewis C. McComas, Republican, Sixth Maryland; William Elliott, Democrat, Seveuth South Carolina; James Brocklin, Democrat, Eighth Wisconsin; Joseph E Washington, Democrat, Sixth Tennessee; John P. Sanborn, Republican, Seventh Michigan.
Dr. A. C. Wedge, of Albert Lea, presided over the Minnesota ltepublican State Convention, at St Paul. A. R. McGill was nominated for Governor, A. E. Rice for Lieutenant Governor, Hans Mattson for Secretary of State, W. W. Broden for Auditor, Joseph Bobletter for Treasurer, and M. E. Clapp for Attorney General. The platform adopted favors laws prohibiting railroad companies from furnishing passes to legislators; the establishment of a bureau of labor statistics; the payment to women of the same wages paid to men for the same labor; the prohibition of the employment of children under 12 from working in mines, etc.. 11 opposes prison labor. It favors the free coinage of silver, and declares that laws should be enacted quaking employers liable in damages to employes injured in their services, whether the employes are negligent or not It favors the reduction of the tariff on the necessaries of life, and declares in favor of civil-service reform.
The committee appointed at the National Labor Convention to select a State ticket for Massachusetts met at Boston last week and agreed on the following: Governor, George E. McNeill, of Boston; Lieutenant Governor, Robert Howard, of Fall River; Secretary of State, A A. Carleton, of Somerville; Treasurer and Receiver General, Frank K. Foster, of Haverhill; Auditor, T. C. Thompson, of Boston; Attorney General, Asa F. Hall, of Hudson.
RAILROAD INTELLIGENCE.
At the meeting of the Board of Directors of tlie Northern Pacific Railroad, Robert Harris was re-elected President The Central Pacific Road is building two hundred l'ruit-cars, of an improved pattern, for next season’s traffic. An engine using petroleum as fuel is successfully drawing trains between Cliiro and Alexandria in Egypt
Apparently authoritative reports are current at Winnipeg that the Canadian Pacific has obtained control of th 9 Manitoba Railway. The Chicago and Northwestern announces that the $2,000,000 Winona and St Peter bonds falling due Jan. 1, 1888, will be paid on presentation. John D. Taylor, Treasurer of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company, died at Philadelph a. The Omaha Road has reduced its local passenger rates to 3 cents per mile in lowa, Dakota, Minnesota, and Wisconsin. The price of transportation in Nebraska is fixed by law a{ 3% cents per mile.
THE INDUSTRIAL OUTLOOK.
Austin Corbin has been elected President of the Reading Road, P. B. Gowen having resigned. The strikeof Western window glass workers, in progress since June, has been settled, and work resumed in all factories west of the Alleghanies. Chester M. Dawes, of Chicago, has been appointed assistant solicitor of the Burlington Road. A jury in the Superior Court at Taunton, Massachusetts, gave a verdict against the New York Central Sleeping-Car Company for the principal and Interest of money stolen from two travelers in a coach.
MISCELLANEOUS. In the matter of the recent grave disaster on tho Nickel-Plate Road, a majority of tho Coroner’s jury holds the conductor and engineer of the excursion train responsible, while the minority finds that the accident was caused by a misunderstanding of flag orders. The Odd Fellows’ Sovereign Grand Lodge, in session at Boston, adopted a report declaring it inexpedient to establish a home for orphans of Odd-Fellows. The headquarters of the Sovereign Grand Lodge were located at Columbus, Ohio, by a vote of 76 to 73 for Chicago. The Knights Templars at St. Louis selected Washington as the place for the triennial conclave in October, 1889. Business failures for the week in the United States and Canada numbered 187, against 185 the previous weak. A loss of $150,000 was sustained at Toronto by a fire which. originated in the wholesale liquor house of David-on & Hay, and extended to the adjoining buildings. Lieutenant Henn, of the Galatea, expresses himself as satisfied that he has no chance with the Mayflower in any breeze in which she can carry her topsail, but he is anxious to learn what she can do in a gale without it In the Bay of St. John, N. T.; the British schooner Summerset collided with the schooner Mary Ann, cutting her in two. There were thirty-seven persons aboard tho ill-fated craft, four of whom were drowned. The others saved themselves by clinging to the main rail of the Summerset, or were picked out of tho water bv her boats. Gen. Booth, of the Salvation Army, lias arrived at New York, and will inspect his forces in this country.
FOREIGN.
Lord Randolph Churchill in effect states that the gag law is to be established in the British House of Commons at the next session as a means of further repressing the Parnellites. Edward Solomon, Lillian Russell’s husband, has been arrested in London on the charge of bigamy, preferred by his first wife. Two naturalized American citizens, who have been visiting their birthplace in Germany, have been ordered to leave the empire. A Sofia dispatch says that the Russian ultimatum, of -which General Kaulbars is the bearer, demands the immediate raising of the state of siege in Bulgaria, the liberation of all political prisoners, and the indefinite postponement of the elections for members of the National Assembly. However, there are no signs of flinching on the part of tho regency; on the contrary the anti-Russian feeling increases daily. The British Government has decided to greatly increase the garrison at Belfast. In a railroad accident at Berlin three soldiers were killed and twenty wounded.
In a compartment of an underground railway carriage in London Moritz A. IGser, the bead of an important foreign house, was murdered by unknown persons. His watch and chain were not disturbed, but his money had evidently been taken. By an explosion of fire-damp in a coal mine near Sohalke, Germany, forty-five persons were killed and sixteen injured. An Italian brig loading with benzine at Fiume, Austria, was set on fire by lightning, and eight men perished in the flames. Rumor has it that King Charles of Roumania may not unlikely be chosen Princo of Bulgaria. His friendship toward that unfortunate country has endeared him to its citizens. Six persons, including three Glasgow magistrates, were suffocated while viewing a monster blast at Lochfyneside quarries in Scotland. The Pope is actively put suing his project to found an important university at tho Lateran Pal ico for advanced scientific and literary studies o:i the part of the clergy. . The forcible collection of school fees in London is accompanied by ■ cases where every scrap of household furniture has been seized and sold. The Radical clubs advise resistance to the law. The speech of Queen Victoria proroguing Parliament until November 1L states that a successor to Prince Alexander is to be elected in accordance with the provisions of the treaty of Berlin, and that a commission has been appointed to inquire into the failure of the recent acts respecting the tenure and the purchase of laud in Ireland. In the Federal Court at Buffalo four cigarmakers from Binghamton were held in 51,000 each for on attempt to boycott non-union factories.
LATER NEWS ITEMS.
It is stated that the Knights of Labor know no distinction as to race, creed, or nationality. Thiß statement is made because of the fact that colored delegates to the General Assembly, soon to meet at Richmond, Va., have been refused quarters at the hotels. The conductor and engineer of the excursion train recently in collision at Silver Creek, N. Y., by which a number of lives were lost, have been indicted for manslaughter. Colonel Charles C. Greene, ex-editor of the Boston Post, died at Boston last week, aged eighty-two. He was connected with several newspapers prior to 1831, when he founded the Post, with which paper he was connected for nearly a half century, retiring in 1879, at the age of seventy-five. A session of the Board of Public Works at Jersey City was interrupted by the horsewh'pping of a reporter named Leuhart by Miss Mamie Gannon, one of the belles of the city, who has $210,000 in her own right. She was enraged by a stat3ment in the Evening Journal that she forged checks on her father. After vindicating herself she was serenaded at her residence by a large party of admirers. Assistant Secretary Fairchild has issued a call for the redemption of $15,000,000 of 3 per cent bonds. Commissioner Colman, of the Bureau of Agriculture, refuses to permit the sale of any of the infected cattle quarantined at Chicago. He has requested four eminent veterinarians in the Eastern States to proceed to Chicago and ass st in ascertaining the condition of the quarantined beeves. The agricultural population of Italy is so oppressed by tuxes and lngh rents that serious agrarian disturbances are threatened. Gov. Rusk, of Wisconsin, has issued a quarantine proclamation against the importation of Illinois cattle.
Chicago elevators contain 8,561,628 bushels of wheat, 5,429,645 bushels of corn, 1,249,942 bushels of oats. 2.4,460 bushels of rye, and 681,579 bushels of barley; total, 16,128,254 bushels of all kinds of grain, against 13,533,271 husho’s a year ago.
Dr. Joseph Le Conte, write? from Berkelen, Cal., to Science , calling attention to the fact that Dr. Dowdeswell’s claim, in the London Lancet , of discovery of the hydrophobia germ, was ante-dated by Prof. Fol, of Geneva. “I do not remember,” says the Doctor, “that the attention of your readers has been drawn to the fact that this discovery had been previously claimed, with much show of reason, by Prof. H. Fol, of Geneva (Archives des Sciences, vol. xiv., p. 449, 1895, and vol. xv., p. 414, 1886). According to Fol, also, it is a micrococcus found only in this disease, and so minute that it requires a good 1-12 objective to see it at all. Of til's micrococcus he has made pure cultures, which by inoculation communicate the disease with certainty.” Prof. Fo.’s discovery was editorially discussed in the Daily News, but Dowdeswell describes in the Lancet a very different organism—fully thfee times the dimensions given by M. Fol, and not found in the same tissues. Like Fol’s microbe, however, Dr. Dowdeswell claims that pure cultures of his hydrophobia germ will also communicate the disease with certainty. Dr. Spitzka and others do the same with inoculations of all sorts of substances. If this sort of thing continues much longer, Pasteur will be imploring to be saved from his friends. They are proving too much for him.
THE MARKETS.
NEW YORK. Beeves 54.00 @ 5.75 Hogs 4.75 @ 5.50 Wheat—No. 1 White 85 @ .85^ No. 2 Red 84 @ .84 Corn—No 2 46 @ .47 Oats—White 35 @ .40 Pork—New Mess 11.25 @11.71 CHICAGO. Beeves—Choice to Prime Steers 5.00 @5.50 Good Shipping, 4.00 @4.75 Common 3.00 @ 3.50 Hogs—Shipping Grades.... 4,25 @5,00 Flour—Extra Spring 4.25 @ 4.75 Wheat—No 2 Red 73 @ .74 Corn—No. 2 37 @ .37)4 Oats—No. 2 .25 @ .25^ Butter—Choice Creamery.. 23 @ .24 Fine Dairy 16 @ .18 Cheese—Full Cream, Cheddar.. .11 @ .IV,it Full Cream, new .11)£@ .12 Eggs—Fresh 16' @ .17 Potatoes—Early Rose, per bu.. .50 @ .55 Pork—Mess 9.50 @IO.OO MILWAUKEE. Wheat—Cash 72 @ .73 Corn—No. 2 .36 @ .37 Oats—No. 2 .25 @ 25 Rye—No. 1 52 @ .53' Pork—Mess 9.50 @IO.OO TOLEDO. Wheat—No. 2 76 @ .76 14 Corn—No. 2 40 @ '.42 ~ Oats—No. 2 .27 @ .28 DETROIT. Beef Cattle 4.00 @ 5.25 Hogs 4.00 @ 6.25 SAeep 3.50 @ 4.50 Wheat—Michigan Red 76 @ .77 Corn—No. 2 41 @ A 2 Oats—No. 2 White 30 @ .31 ST. LOUIS. Wheat—No. 2. 74 @ 75 Corn—Mixed 35 (it .'3514 Oats—Mixed 25 @ .26 Pork—New Mess 10.00 10*50 CINCINNATI. Wheat—No. 2 Red 76 @ 77 Corn—No. 2 41 <m 42 Oats—No. 2 27)4@ .28)6 Pork—Mess 10.00 tulo 50 ~ Live Hogs 4.30 @6 00 BUFFALO. Wheat—No. 1 Hard 82 @ .82)4 Corn—No. 3 Yellow 44>£@ .4514 Cattle 4.50 @5.50 INDIANAPOLIS. Beef Cattle 3.50 @6 00 Hogs 4.00 @ 475 Sheep 2.00 @ 2.50 Wheat—No. 2 Mixed 75 @ .76 Corn—No. 2 37 @ 38 Oats—No. 2 26 @ >26 >4 EAST LIBERTY. Cattle—Best 4.75 @ 525 Fair 4.25 @ 4.75 Common 3.00 @ 4.00 Hogs 6.00 t<4 5.50 Sheep 3.50 @4.50
LAND OFFICE STATISTICS.
A Statement of the Public Lands Disposed Of Dnrlngr the Last Fiscal Year. [Washington special.] The amount of public lands disposed of the past five years is 100,974,134 acres. This is equal to four States like Kentucky, four like Indiana, nearly three like Illinois, or one like California. It is a good dftal larger than Great Britain and Ireland, add is equal to about three-fourths of France or Germany. On an average the United States has disposed of one Ireland per annum for the past five years. The area disposed of last year was 20,974,134 acres, which is nearly a million acres more than the previous year, but nearly six million acres Jess than in 1884, when more than eleven million acres were disposed of in Dakota alone. Dakota, which in 1879-80 jumped far ahead of Kansas and which has been immensely ahead of Nebraska since that year, has fallen now to the rear of both these States. Nebraska dropped below a million acres in 1881 and 1882, but it has.riseu above three million acres in each of the Inst three years. Kansas has come rapidly to the front, partly becam e the extraordinary Dakota boom has spent much of its force, and partly because there has been some rainfall lately in the western part of the Slate. Kansas fell from a million and a half acres in 1880 toluss than a million in 1882, but the acreage disposed of in Kansas rose to nearly fourteen hundred thousand in 1884, over three milliins in 1885, and more than five and a half millions last year. Last year the total receipts from public lands were $7,412,767, and tne total expenses $625,234. There were 37,836 cash sales, including preemptions, desert-land entries, etc., covering 3,773,498 acres, for which $5,757,891 was received. There were 61,638homestead entries, covering 9,145,135 acres, for which $892,210 was received. There were 34.996 timber-culture* entries, covering 5,389,309 acres, for which $480,630 was received. The following table shows the disposals for cash and' under the homestead and timber-culture laws by States and Territories for the year 1885-6:
Timber Homestead culture Cash sales, entries, entries, States. acres. acres. acres. Alabama....— ~ 27,225 307,087 Arkansas 2-1,801 240,881 2,(25Arizona 110,275 28,027 15,772 California 72 103 172,110 15.5,074 Colorado 262,593 281,801 710,947 Dakota..... 700,009 1.185,188 1,110,2.50' Florida 70,888 139,174 Idaho 119,157 102,332 49,059' lowa 420 907 2,809 Kansas 390,334 3,224,214 1,920,802 Louisiana 49,194 81,017 9,914 Michigan 47,778 50,550 Minnesota 110,702 235,810 05,020Mississippi 31,901 95,874 Missouri 20,420 214,155 ...... Montana 152,309 08,033 43.031 Nebraska 477,530 1,599,410 907,706 Nevada 573 2,717 ISONew Mexico 117,953 6-,894 1 5 003 Oregon 114,821 287,231 93,100 Utah 9 ,220 70,975 25,032. Washington 90,885 290,513 85,045Wisconsin 131,815 135,709 ...... Wyoming 293,182 59,447 100,107 Total 3,773,198 9,115,135 5,389,309
TUB HOG CROP.
Estimates of the National Agricultural l)e----ptr tm out. [Washington special.] The September crop rcpoit, issued by the Department of Agriculture, says, by way of summarizing the estimates from: different localities, of the hog crop: The returns of the number of hogs forfattening indicate about (1 per cent, reduction in numbers. Should prices increase,, however, the breeding stock might be depleted and increase the numbers for slaughtering. There appears to be an in-crea-e of swine in the Territories and on the Pacific coast. The following figures give the numbers, of hogs fattening, as compared with last, year, and the average condition as to weight, and size. In both cases the figures are percentages: Num- CouStato. her. dition. Ohio 93 95 Michigan.... 94 93Indiana 90 97 Illinois 90 93Wisconsin 93 95 Minnesota 105 li)0 lowa 97 92. Missouri .. 99 90 Kansas 90 uoNebraska 98 95 Averaging these figures,the number is 94.8 per cent, of last year, and the condition 94 per cent, of au average. The figures for all the States and Territories give the following percentage: Number, 93.7; condition. 93.9. Dakota reports one-fifth more hogs than last year, and states the condition at 97 per cent. All the Bther Territories report slightly greater numbers of hogs than last year. Great Britain reports 302,834 fewer swine in 1880 than in 1884, a failing off of 14 per cent. Ireland reports in 1880 the same number of sivine as in 1884, and about 180,000 more than in 1885. The province of Ontario reports 800,125swine in 1880 as aga inst 822,202 in 1885.
Labor and Laborers.
Two hundred carpenters in Bath, Me. v are on a strike against a reduction. The Cleveland Leader is now fighting a boycott movement. This is its second, tussle. Only one person in every two hundred in New York City owns the house lie lives in. The Dominion Government proposes toestablish at once a Bureau of Labor Statistics at Ottawa. Typoguaphical Union, No. 12, of Baltimore. Las ordered that all non-union ollices be boycotted. A co-operative stove company has been organized in Bloomington, 111., with a capital of SIO,OOO. Officers of the Window-Glass Workers’ Association are in New York waiting for the importation of contract workmen from Belgium. Twelve hundred hands have been discharged in two weeks in the Moquette Carpet Mills, at Yonkers, N. Y., on account of boycotting. The Jack Tars of San Francisco, to thenumber of 1,000, members of the Coast. Seamen’s Union, are idle, and many ships are tied up.
