Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 13 July 1894 — Page 2

THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, FRIDAY, JULY' 13, 1504.

ceedincs. The main track and yards are now clear of all extractions. To-morrow trains guarded by troops will be run out. Trlvate Dugan. of Company L. Fifth Infantry, died during the night, making the fifth victim of yesterday's railroad wreck at the trestle west of Sacramento. The first conflict between the strikers ami police at West Oakland occurred shout 3 o'clock this evening, anil the strikers were worsted. Master Workman McKenzie started to clear the track, when three hundred strikers attacked the engine, but a force of deputy sheriffs kept them away. About one hundred of them rushed to the'r comrades, where they encountered Captain Wilson and twenty police. There was some tierce lighting. In which several strikers were knocked right and left by the clubs In the hands of officers. The mob then dispersed, but trouble Is feared later. Charles Hall, one of the most prominent leaders of the strike was arrested to-night during the fight with the police. He was charged with inciting riot and was refused ball. The mob lost heart ifter this, and the work of clearing the yard was continued without interruption. FIrwt Train ortli In Twelve I)nyn. LOS AXOELES, Cal., July 12.-Ho far as Los Angeles Is concerned the strike Is over. Even many of the strikers admit that the strike Is a thing of the past. The Santa Fe strikers are hastening to nut In applications for their old places. Freight trains are runnintr all over southern California and passenger trains are running ns they did before the strike. The Santa Fe is regularly sending out Its overlands with a complement of troops and deputies aboard each train. The greatest event of the day was the departure of a Southern Pacific passenger train for San Francisco. Shortly before noon the train milled out of the Arcade depot for the north. It was the first train sent north In twelve days. All local trains are running on the southern 1'aclfic on schedule time. Ilewnrd Offered ly Olney. WASHINGTON. July 12. The Attorneygeneral has offered a reward of $.7 each, or $2,000 in all. for testimony which will lead to the arrest and conviction of the person or persons concerned in the wreck at Sacramento last night, which resulted In the almost Instant death of engineer Clark and three regular United States soldiers. The reward is $." for conviction of the murderer of each person killed. I1IG FOIU FIIIEMEX.

rtunior Hint They Have All Ilecn Ortiered Out by O'Dell. CHICAGO. July 12, A special dispatch to the Times; from Cincinnati says: "District Master O'Dell. of the local assembly of the brotherhood of Locorrfotlve Firemen, has ordered out all the men of his assembly. O'Dell has Just returned from Terre Haute, where. It is iM, a meeting of prominent members of the brotherhood was held, and It was decided that a strike would be Inaugurated. Chief Sargent, of the brotherhood, who has steadily topposed a strike, will, it Is believed, be laid on the 6helf by the more conservative members of the brotherhood." CINCINNATI, July 12. Mr. Odell. chairman of the local assembly of Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen, was in this city this afternoon. He has been to Terre Haute. He refused to speak on the reported prospective strike of Dig Four locomotive firemen. To-night he returned to Terre Haute by way of Indianapolis, and firemen here deny there Is any strike ordered. Conferring with Snrxennt. TERRE HAUTE, Ind., July 12. Fred Kesler, of Texas, of the Grand Lodge, locomotive firemen, and Chairman G. P. Reed, ot the Missouri Pacific, and H. M. Lamb, of the Baltimore & Ohio divisions, are In this city, in conference with Grand Master Hirgent. Mr. Keeler is here to present a report relative to the action of Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen who were engaged In the present strike on the Texas Pacific system. Mr. Reed and Mr. lamb are here In the interests of brotherhood firemen who struck on the Missouri Pacific and the Baltimore & Ohio. Under the laws of the brotherhood a lodge may be forced to surrender its charter in a case where the men go out on illegal strikes, and to prevent this step being taken by Chief Sargent Is the errand on which these brotherhood chairmen are supposed to be here. SECOND OM. Mill's IJlXCTIOX. Delia, HfMvurI, Hoer, et nl. Ileutrnlned at Cincinnati. CINCINNATI, O.. July 12. Another omnibus restraining order was Issued against 12. V. Debs and others by Judge Taft, of the United States Circuit Court, to-day, similar to that filed here July 4. The persons enjoined are E. V. Debs, George W. Howard, L. W. Rogers, Sylvester Kellher, John Hotchkiss. A. Paseybok, H. Elfin, James Ilannarx, John Mastenbrook, William Smith, Edward O'Nell, Charles Nailer. John Duffy. William McMulIen. U. Shelly, Fred Ketchum. John W. Doyle, .. M. Steele, Mack Roberts. L. D. Llndley, Frank Cross, and all conspiring with them. It covers the Pittsburg. Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis, the Columbus, Hocking Valley & Toledo, the Cleveland. Cincinnati. Chicago & St. Louis, the Columbus, Akron &. Cleveland, the New York, Iake Erie & Western, the New York, Pennsylvania & Ohio, the Norfolk & Western, the Baltimore & Ohio, the Baltimore K: Oh'o Southwestern, the Cincinnati, Hamilton & Dayton, and the Wheeling & Like Erie roads. It was issued at the solicitation of Sv.ayne. Swayn & Hayes, of Toledo, funeral counsel of the Wheeling S; Lake Erie railroad. at toi.x:iio. Yardmen Hei'mislder Their Determination to Strike Train IlTiaiila. TOLEDO,. July 12. -The Michigan Central yardmen, who were expee'ed to strike this r-oriilng, decided not to do so and are all at work. The eight yardmen of the Cloverk.ii" who went out yesterday morning were notified last nfght to report for duty this morning or their places would be tilled by outsiders. This morning two went to work ar.d the others arc? e xpected to follow. That T?r sent out two freights, and expects no further trouble. Five of th? striking yardn: a of tne 1 ;.. H. & D. road here returned t' work to-t'ay. The ten who remained out were discharge-1 and nonunion m?n employed In their places. This gives the road its full force here. The Toledo & Ohio Central is sending no freights out of Toledo, tut is operating its Columbus division as usual. The striking Wabash switchmen held a meeting this morning, abandoned the strike and all returned to work. This action r.pens the blockade on that road, as this vas ihi last point at which the men were out. twls Potts, one of the new Lake Shore swiicr.rnen, a running a pony engine in the jard.s at noon, when he was fired on by an unknown jri'on from behind some t'vpty freight cars. Five shots were fired. i.razlng his neck, but not wounding him. The assailant escaped. STA!li:ii: OF SUUKHHS. All AnxlouM to ( on the Hand WaK'Mi at Cleveland. CLEVELAND, July 12 There was a perfect stampede to-day among the striking railway employes to get back to work, and the b!g strike, so far as this city is concerned, is a thins; of the past. The old men are all getting their former positions with very few exceptions. Freight trains are .being made up and sent out in all of the various yards, and to-day there was nothing to indicate that freight traffic had been tied up for a week. SO EMIIAIlfiO AT ST. LOUIS. Ilullrrnys Handling All Trnflle with Iroinptnef. ST. LOUIS, July 12,-With the railroads handling all traffic offering with their usual promptness, interest In the strike hre so far as it may have been a railroad strike has almost disappeared. All trains, loth passenger and freight, are running without Interruption and handling easily all traflle to be had. though it must be confessed that business is as yet far below the normal. Ires?''.?rt Devreaux and all other officers of the Building Trades Council were very secretive to-day about the action said to have been taken at a meeting last tilcht. From a strictly reliable source, lowever. it was learned that a resolution to strike thi morning was unanimously carried, but reconsidered later. A motion was then adopted to send delegates to the teneral labor conference to be held Saturday night, the council pledging itself to abide by the decision of their delegates. President Hofhler. of the Trades and I.abor Union, nald to-day that everything depended upon to-day's conference in Chicago. If a general strike Is favored at Uut ssaXeresce t&&9 wlU not la a union

man at work in St. I,ouis next week, he said. If declared here it means a walkout of between 25,m and 40,000 union men. To-day. for the first time tn two week.

the east-bound roads have signified their ability to forward live stock and dressed beef, and several shipment have been made. The coolers of the East St. Iouis' packing houses have been packed with from 12.000 to 13.(m quarters of beef since the strike was declared. None of the perirhable freight has been permitted to leave the coolers, because none of the railroads out of East St. Louis would consent to receive it for shipment. TWO DEPITIES KILLED Anil Two Injured In n Hullwny Collilon nt ChleMK", CHICAGO, July I2.-Two deputy United States marshals met their deaths and two others were more or less seriously Injured at 1 o'clock this afternoon in a collision between freight trains on the Wisconsin Central tracks, near the Sixteenth and Jackson streets crossing. Two locomotives and several cars were wrecked in the accident, and the three-story brick warehouse of Purdett, Smith & Co. was partly destroyed. Th? men who met death were: J. B. BRISTOL deputy United States marshal, crushed under box tar, and taken out dead. W. A. PROSS. deputy United States marshal, both legs crushed and injured Internally; dbd at county hospital. The injured were: Andrew Blaes. United States deputy marshal. left foot and leg mangled; leg amputated-condition critical. Augustine Wright, deputy marshal from Baltimore, not serious. The Baltimore A- Ohio and Wisconsin Central Jointly use this track, and by some misunderstanding of orders loth trains were moving toward each other on the sime track. They met on a curve, and the Impact as the two engines cam? together was tremendous. Both engines were buried under the mass of shattered cars they were hauling, and the helpless deputies who were riding on top of the cars next to the engines were caught and crushed beneath the debris. Fire broke out in the wreckage, but was goon controlled. The train crews, seeing that a collision was inevitable, saved themselves by jumping. SITUATION AT U EX VEIL All but Two ItonilM In Operation Ilnyeott United. DENVER. July 12. All the railroads entering Denver were In full operation today as before the strike except the Union Pacific and Rock Island. The Union Pacific sends only one passenger train a day west on account of the crippled condition of tho Southern Pacific. Rock Island officials announce that a train from Chicago Is on the road, and to-morrow night the return trip will begin. General McCook has located his troops so that a large force can be concentrated in less than twenty-four hours at any point where rioting might occur, but he does not antlcinate any further trouble on account of the strike. Superintendent Turner, of the Santa Fe railway, visited Nlckerson. Kan.. where the townspeople refused to furnish food or accommodations of any kind for the deputies or new employes to take strikers' places on the road. He called on the leading citizens and said that unless the boycott was raised at once Newton would be made tha division terminal instead of Nlckerson. Mr. Turner's threat caused the business men of Nickerson to change their policy in a hurry. Demand for Troops In Ohio. COLUMBUS. O.. July 12. The Columbus. Hocking Valley & Toledo Railroad Company this evening made a demand on Sheriff Riley, of Hocking county, for protection at Nelsonville, where it will make an effort to move freight to-morrow morning. The situation there was threatening this afternoon, but there was no violence. The sheriff has had no opportunity as yet to determine whether he is equal to the eituatron, and until he has made an effort and failed there will be no demand for troops. The Adjutant-general has been in consultation with Governor McKinley to-night, and everything Is In readiness to move the militia as soon as a demand is made and It is deemed necessary. It Is thought the militia may be asked for to-morrow morning. Mmt Withdraw from the A. II. I. LOUISVILLE. July 12. Division Superintendent Pike, of the Louisville & Nashville railroad, has Issued an order requiring all members of the A. R. U. in the employ of the road to withdraw from the order. No man known to be a member will be permitted to go out with a train without showing a certificate of withdrawal from the organization. Applications for reinstatement by strikers have been refused, and the men were informed that their places had been filled. The local lodge of the A. R. U. held a meeting to-day and decided not to issue any cards of withdrawal. All trains are running on schedule time, and the strike Is a thing of the past so far as this city is concerned. I'ryor'it View of the Strike. liOXDOX, July 12. Judge Roger A. Pryor, who defended the New York strik ers In 1879, In an Interview to-day, said: "All Americans are proud of President Cleveland's attitude. In my opinion he has not exceeded the federal power in any re spect. Not only transit malls b't Inter state traffic has been Interrupted ana fed eral property Imperiled. I consider that the success of the 3trike, under the circum stances, would have resulted in practical anarchy. I do not doubt that railroad labor has a grievance, but this is not the way to obtain redress, nor can the grievance be considered until the supremacy of the law has been perfectly restored and the rioters reduced to obedience. Del- itMunnlu." LONDON. July 12.-The Pall Mall Ga zette in an article under the caption "Debsomania" says the men comprising the American Railway 'Union must be cursing ths hour when they Intrusted their liberties into the hands of Dobs. Con cerning the strike itself the Gazette says th fact that the decision to order a gen eral strike was postponed may be accepted as proof that there Is no serious intention of striking. The riots in Chicago and other places nave proved that the States are too loosely knitted together for good government. The future policy of the State ought to be toward centraliza tion rather than decentralization. Eaeli Cilven Thirty Days. TOPEKA. Kan.. July 12. J. W. Kuth and Patrick Sullivan, both of Atchison, were to-day Sentenced by Judge Foster to serve a term of thirty days In the Shawnee county jail. Kuth Is a Missouri Pacific em ploye and Sullivan works in an Atchison foundry. They were arraigned for contempt of court in disregarding Judge roster s re cent restraining ordor. They assaulted II. E. Ferguson, a Santa te switchman, beciu.se he dared to take the place of strikWhen arraigned they pleaded igno rance, raying they d.d not know the Santa Fo was in the hands of receiver. lu II mati at Xew York. CLAYTON, N. Y.. July 12.-George M. Pullman and party of two secured state rooms on a Wagner sleeper of the 9:10 train to-night for New York. They were conveyed from their summer home. Isle Resi, on the private steam yacht F. S. Livnsr. arrtvinjr at Clayton about s:.v p. m. They bearded the train immediately. They ore due in the Grand Central Depot in Nc.v- ork city at 7:4j m tna mornlnsr. Mr. Pullman was inaccessible to-dav. and no one in his employ would say anything to newspaper men. Charged with Contempt, TACOMA. Wash.. July 12. C. A. Bands. ex-chief of the freight department of the Northern Pacific, was arretted to-day for contempt of court. The complainants, George Hunter and A. C. McClelland, claim he tried, with threats and Intimidation, to induce them to quit working for tiie company. He was held in $2.0 bonds bv Judge Gdbert for a hearing to-rnorro-.v. J itst titter Barnes was taken into court the federal grand jury brought in an indictment against him on the same charge. Ended nt Decatur and Peoria. DECATUR. III.. July 12. The Wabah strike collapsed here to-d.iy. Two or thre-i men asked for work. That was the beginning of what proved to be a stamped ! ovsr two hundred applications being made by night. All passenger and freight trains are tunning. PKOKIA. III.. July 12. -The strike ended here to-day. Most of tne men on the Rock Island and Peoria t Ptki:i Union have returned to work. The Vnlal (ietfln; on It IVet. SPRINGFIELD. 111.. July 12 The Wabash, for the lirM time since the stride ' roniirf need, to-day got every passenger I train through. Several fre.ghts were al?o ' moved. The offioiils here say they will soon have n full force of men. Tne United States marshal this afternoon withdrew a'd J deput.ta from points oa the Chicago & Al-

ton. The State troops stationed at Decatur were to-night ordered to their respective homes by the Governor. Want WarMi Restored. PARKERSBURG. W. Va.. July 12. Employes of the Ohio River railroad, representing the Brotherhood of Locomotive

Engineers. Locomotive Firemen. I ilway Conductors and Association of Machinists. have asked their chiefs to order a strike against the Ohio River railroad. Thi3 is not a sympathetic strike, but to compel the company to restore a 10-per-cenL, cut In wages. Stoned by Striker. POMEROY. O.. July 12,-Striking rail roaders stoned a freight train here to-night on the Columbus, Hocking Valley & Toledo railroad and ran the crew off. The sheriff and deputies rescued the train with out difficulty. A nonunion nreman was hanged In efflgy. causing considerable ex citement. A. R. U. Men Pnlil Off. FORT SCOTT, Kan., July 12. The Fort Scott & Memphis road to-day paid off and discharged all members of the A. R. I'. None of the men sought reinstatement, as they adhere to the idea that they will win. Malln on Time. NEW YORK. July 11 The first mails from San Francisco since July 1 were re ceived in this city to-day. via Los Angeles. All other mails are arriving on time. Strike lit Yuma Ended. YUMA. A. T., July 12. The strike has ended here. All the railroad men have gone back to work and all trains are moving east and west. STORMY L.VitOR 3IEETI. Cle vela nd, Olney and Pull ma u Denonneed ut Xev Vrk. NEW YORK. July 12. The labor demon stration held to-night in Cooper Union to express sympathy with the strikers in Chi cago and the West was an extraordinary outnourlne of people. The hall was crowd ed to excess and three thousand people sur rounded the building, unable to get an ad mittance. The meeting was a vehement one In the manner it expressed its convictions. The name of President Cleveland was re ceived with such a storm of hisses and hootings that Henry George, who was speaking, had to cry, "What's the use?" Damet Harris presided, and introduced Henry George, who was the star speaker of the evening. The apostle of single tax was unusually bitter. Vehemently he de nounced the use of general troops to put down the strikers. Governor Altgeld and Governor Stone were right in the stand they took, and the action of the President in sendincr out the troops was an arrogant assumption of authority. Mr. George said he would rather see all the railway prop erty In the country burned up, all the rails torn up, than to see them preserved by troops. The millionaires made their money by robbery and debauchery; by the pur chase of judges and legislators, and now they wanted to preserve them by the bay onet and the arms of the federal troops, and for that purpose the rights of States were being encroached upon by the federal authorities. Mr. George then entered into a lengthy condemnation of President Cleveland and hks employment of federal troops In the wot Pvenr mention of the President's name was received with nisses, and when Mr. George asked: . m. "What are you going to do about It?" a voice shouted: "Impeach him!" "Hang him!" shouted another. VmpIv evsrvhnHv foil owe 1 with SUCCeStlons until the hall was in an uproar. Mr. differed with all the remedies pro posed by his hearers. The system, he said. would nave to oe lunaameniauy i-uitugeu. Strikes were useless, and always resulted in faiiuro At thi nolnt the sneaker drift ed into his well-known single-tax theories. and told his audience tnmgs wouiu De better when his tneones snau nave oeen adopted. . After Mr. ueorge naa nmsneu a, leicgittiii was received from Samuel Gompers, of Chicago, asking that the voice of labor , i v, v. KCcri fi-oTTi Vew York, and advis ing calmness and assuring them final suece's. Frank E. Foster, a lawyer, of Boston, was the next speaker. He, too, denounced President Cleveland and Attorney-general Olney. Cleveland and Olney, he said. would pass away, dui tne wwi llv carrv all before it. It was a movement of evolution not revolu tion, and when the wave was strong enough God help the Pullmans, rhe Carnegles and the Olneys. t Father Thomas J. Ducey, pastor of St. Leo's Church, said the criminal in this case was not President Deb3. but Pull- , n-y, trniihu rne our of the arroiiiaii. me nvm.v. -- - - - gant attitude of the latter, who said there was nothing to arDitraie. in i-ohcjuswu, h affirmed hi belief in the righteousness of the cause of the present strike. The resolutions auopiea wmrafiwcu me decisive action of the A. R. U. in demand ing arbitration. Little sympainy was ex-n-it viAlanco Knt the resolutions demanded the removal of conditions provo cative of violence, ui tne auinori'.ies ui. Washington the resolutions said: "We denounce and condemn that perversion of the functions of the federal judiciary by which unprecedented orders, granted manifestely on untrue allegations, are made the basis for the assumption of military authority. "That the unwarranted and anti-republican interference of the federal govern ment with the airairs or tne siaies, even in spite of the protests of their Governor, is an usurpation of power which should be condemned by all liberty-loving Americans." . , . 4 . , The government was declared to be In the interest of corporations and conspiring against the liberty and civil rights or citizens. The Senate was denounced for rushing to the defense of monopolies and corporations in the sacred name of liberty. The protection of the mail service was declared to be a mere pretext, and as private corporations have shown their inability to perform their duty as public carriers, consequently Congress Is asked to nationalize the railways. ijfmtwtiii- was extended to the people of California, and Congress is asked to fore close the Nation s mortgages on me i-a-ciflc railroads. In conclusion, the workingmen were called upon to use their political rights. James A. Hearn, the actor, and author of "Shore Acres," said the cause of labor nnh' ho advnnred hv Indenendent nolitical action. Secretary Charles Wrignt, of Typographical Union, No. 6, read the resolutions, wnicn were unanimously adopted. The meeting then adjourned. Cleveland and 3IUe Crltlelsed. WACO, Tex.. July 12. At a mass meeting of union laborers to-night resolutions were unanimously adopted commending Debs and the strike of the American Railway Union and criticising severely Cleveland and General Miles for interfering with the struggle now being waged. President Riggins. of the Waco Commercial Club, addressed the workingmen. urging them to closer union, united effort, highly eulogized Debs and berated the capitalistiee oppressors. A Letter to the People.. BALTIMORE, July 12. Mosher Assembly, No. 1233. K. of L., has issued a lengthy letter to the people. It says: "The question at issue in Chicago Is whether our American Republic was est "dshed to foster human life or Insensate property." It protests against the President's action in sending troops to Chicago. Killed One and Wounded Another. MILWAUKEE. July 12.-Dick Failes. a well-known prize fighter, yesterday afternrwm shot and killed James McCarthy, exdeputy sheriff, and wounded "Boiler" WaMh. who was a few weeks ago acquitted of killlnsr "Toddy" Hallorean. McCarthy and Walsh had an old score to settle with Failes and started in to whip him, with the result stated. Ohio Town AlmoKj Wiped Out. TOLEDO. ., July 12. Edon. a small town InWilllams county, was visited to-day by a most disastrous conflagration, resulting in the loss of one hundred and seventyfive thousand dollars' wortn of property. Sevfnty-two buildings were destroyed.- including nearly the entire business portion of the town. In many cases there was no Insurance. Detroit Street Car Id lie Sold. OR A NO K, N. J.. July 12. Contractor Thomas Nevins has purchased the streetcar lines in Detroit. Mich. The contret was signed last wek. He will pay for the roads, which comprise eighty miles .:f tracks, thlrtv of which are already equipped with the trolley system. $S,2T.:Hi' Jf.co.o o In ca.h and the balance in bends Obituary. CHICAGO. July 12. Dr. Sidney Sawyer. I an old resident of Chicago, died to-dav, I aired eiRhty-four. Dr. Sawyer was tmm in Albany county. New York, graduated from . Union College in 1S32, and had resided in I Chicago fifty years.

MANY MORE 'VICTIMS

OVER lOO PKRSOXS KILLED BY EARTHQUAKES IX TURKEY. Steamer Chartered by Japan for Conveying Troops to Corea Vigilant Beaten by Britannia Acaiu. CONSTANTINOPLE. July 12. Slight earthquakes continued from time to time throughout the night. The seismic disturbances extended throughout a wide area. The casualties were greater than earlier reported. A shock was felt through the peninsula of Anatolia, 236 miles from here. Many railway stations have been damaged and the town of Janova is almost destroyed. At Stamhoul the principal undulation appears to have followed a straight line from the mosque of Sultan Ahmed to Edirne Kapon, a distance of twenty miles. Great damage was done all alonp: the line and manv lives ere lost. At the village of San Stefano the sea suddenly receded for a distance of two hundred yards and then returned as suddenly, hurling the boats violently over the quays and doing great damage. The number of victims of the earthquakes up to last evening is officially stated to be 110. but the real number is believed to be far larger. The center of the disturbances seems to have been the town of Brusa. at the north foot of Mount Olympus, seven miles southeast of Constantinople, one of the oldest and most important commercial cities of Turkey. No fresh earthquakes have occurred. Several persons have been taken out of the ruins of the Bazaar alive. The mosque of St. Sophia has been examined and found to be intact. The village of Galateria is completely destroyed. JAPAN'S AYAH ritl2PAUATIOS. Twelve BrltUh Steamers Chartered to Convey Troop i u Coren. LONDON", July 12. Ihe Japanese government has chartered twelve English steamers at present in Japanese waters for the transportation of troops. Lloyds are asking a premium on their vessels on account of the war risk in Eastern waters. A dispatch from Seoul, Corea, says: "A conference of foreign representatives today proposed the neutralization of Corean treaty orts. The Japanese minister accepted the principal of the proposition so far as Chemulpo was concerned, but reserved his answer of this question in regard to the other ports, pending instructions from his government. The King yielded to the Japanese government and appointed three commissioners to discuss the internal administration of the country. The conditions imposed by the Japanese government in regard to the neutralization of the port of Chemulpo will virtually nullify the concession, as Japan still insists upon retaining troops within the settlement. Britannia Won AKnin. ROTHESAY, Firth of Clyde. July 11For the sixth time the Gould yacht Vigilant was defeated to-day by the Prince of Wales's cutter Britannia. The course was that of the Royal Northern Yacht Club, fifty miles, the same as the yachts sailed yesterday. The prize was . offered by the Royal Northern Yacht Club. Britannia finished at 4h. 3Cs; Vigilant, 4:02:10. With time allowance of three minutes, therefore, Britannia won by 4m, 34s. The American boat Dakotah won the race for ten-raters. George J. Gould, for the Vigilant, has challenged for the Victoria gold cup. The rules of the club require eight months notice, but it Is expected that the rules wdll be waived in favor of the American yacht, in view of the circumstances of the challenge. ' Pnlltser's Gift to rnrls. PARIS, July 12.-Joseph Pulitzer, of NewYork, has presented to the city of Paris a bronze group, twelve feet high, reproducing Bartholdi's work, portraying the founders of American independence (Washington and Lafayette), which was exhibited in the salon of 1892. The authorities have accepted the gift, and the group will be placed upon a stone pedestal, to be erected upon the Place des Etats Unls. In Bartholdi's masterpiece, Washington and Lafayette are stan ling hand In hand beneath the folds of the flags of both nations. Cholera Spreading:. LONDON, July 12. A dispatch, to the Standard from Berlin says that the German State Commissioner reports seven cases of cholera and two deaths from the disease In the Prussian part of the bln of the Vistula. Twenty raftsmen, suspected of suffering with the disease, have been taken to the hospitals. A Vienna dispatch to the Standard says that in the Zaleszowyky district of Galicia there have been twenty-eight cases of cholera and eleven d?aths in two days. Cable Notes. Elisee Reclus's latest book, "My Brother, the Peasant," has been seized by the French authorities on account of its anarchistic tendencies. Queen Victoria yesterday reviewed 16,000 troops at Aldershot camp, under the command of the Duke of Connaught. Many royal personages witnessed the review, among them being the Czarowitch and hi3 fiancee, Princess Aiix of Hesse. KOTHIXG BONE. (Concluded from First Paire.) ney Milchrist was interrogated as to the character of the evidence. He would only say that he was mere than satisfied with it. It was stated, however, that during the day a batch of indictments had been voted and may be returned fo-morrow. They are all raid to be for rioters and strikers who violated the law by obstructing trains on the different road.-. Debs's telegrams were, in Instances, addressed to men on roads now in the hand3 of receivers appointed by the federal court. Those who profess to know say the evidence of Debs having violated the injunction of the federal court is contained in these' dispatches. W. W. Erwin. who has been secured to defend President Debs and the directors of the A. R. U.. arrived in the city to-day from St. Paul, In company with "General" J. S. Coxey, of Massillon. O. Mr. Erwin said he hadn't sufficient knowledge of the situation to talk about It. John F. Getting, Mr. Debs's old attorney, will act as Mr. Erwin's coadjutor in the courts. Mr. Debs says there is no foundation in the statement that he had. engaged Robert G. Ingersoll as counsel. PLEXTV OF IDLE ME.. ChienKO Railway Hiring; All They ed Mr. Esnni Statement. CHICAGO, July 12. The railroads centering in Chicago claim that they are able to hire all the help they need. At the office of the general managers the estimate is made that eighteen or twenty thousand men identified with Chicago railroads in the Chicago territory went on strike. The employment agency created by the association has hired 11,500 to 3,(r30 men and distributed them among the railroads, and the companies, acting on their own responsibility, have hired probably double that num ber, making about seven to eight thousand in all. The association bureau has assigned the largest number of men to the Atchison. Next in order is the Wabash, and then the Great Western, the Chicago & Northern Pacific and the Illinois Central in the order named. General Manager Egan to-day said: "I'he railroads at this juncture are in much the position of a merchant whose place of business has been burned down. He rebuilds at once, but the reconstruction takes time, and when he is ready to begin business again it will take some little time additional for the public to become accustomed to Kc new oro'er of things and feel a full sense of restored confidence as of yore. The railroads huve plenty of help to take care of ih tradlo now offering. As this traffic enlarges they v ill need mop men. That they will b'?nbe to gft all the men they will require is a proposition that does not admit of the shadow of a doubt. They could double their force In forty-eiht h ur if there should b? occasion for uoh rapid incrca.se. We consider tho strike over, though it would bo folly to assume that tho effects of the trouble can be effaced at once." Th-? General Managers Association has decided to discontinue its information bureau, alleging that the strike troubles are now practically over. The general managers say the railroads are now practically in their "usual operation, and have no further need of the assistance which the bureau has been giving them. In the re-employment of men the railroad companies have not considered the question of wages, the old scale being paid excepting In possibly two or three cases.

The Grand Trunk and Chicago & Eastern Illinois have put a reduced scale In force wherever practicable. Some other roads, notably the Atchison, will struggle alor.g with greatly reduced forces, even though business should resume the full proportions. The rumor that the Chicago. Milwaukee & St. Paul railway men decided last night to strike Is emphatically denied by officials of the road. General Manager Earling stated to-day that the men who had been on strike have returned to work, and that the road Is running its trains without interference. Colonel Bradsby, agent of the Bureau of Immigration, received a telegram from St. Ignace to-day stating that five hundred railroad men from Canada passed that point last night, bound for Chicago, in a Michigan Central train. Colonel Bradsby telegraphed the Information to Chief Stump, the head of the Immigration Bureau at Washington. Inspector Bradsby said the telegram was from a private source, but he believed it was true. "There is nothing the government can do about it." said he, "for the men passed St. Ignace last niht. and it would be impossible to Intercept them now or even to tell whether they reached the city. The government has no ofiicers at the straits, and there is practically an open door there from Canada. I have no Information as to who sent the men or where they will be put to work." DOESVT KOW HE'S LICKED.

I)el Tlilnkn llln Proaneeta Winning the Strike Better Than Ever. CHICAGO. July 12. Mr. Debs to-day felt more confidence tn the ultimate success of his cause than at any time since the fight began. "I feel that this day is fraught with the utmost Importance," said he "As I view the situation now It presents a more favorable outlook for us than ever before. The excitement and turbulence invariably incident to the birth of a great unheaval have passed Away. The atmosphere Is cleared. Strife and turmoil are elements that have 'passed in the night.' One is en abled to obtain a clear perspective of the environment of the immense conflict now waping. Cool-headedness and earnest pur pose have succeeded to passion and diverse contention. Now public sentiment can calmly and truly Judge of the right and wrong in this struggle. AJl these things, I say, tend to strengthen our position. When the mas3 of the people are aided In render ing an Impartial verdict of the merits of tne case, i feel certain we shall not be de feated in public opinion. Indeed, we are now deemed in the iiKht by the majority of the 64,000,000 inhabitants of this country, and, as the adage has It, 'When sure you are right, then go ahead," so we shall fight it out tilt our aims are accomplished." men any reports that you are prepar ing to trlve un the struecle are untrue. Mr. Debs?" "Most emphatically thev are. Teleerranhlc rumors may say that I have sent word to our men in this city or that to throw up the sponge, but they may be labeled falsehoods, without the necessity of a denial from me. Our stand is this: We have at all times shown our willingness to make a reasonable settlement of the difficulties that confront the country: we have even gone beyond what should be demanded of us to arrange for arbitration each time to b? rebuked: but we are going to stay in the strike to the last: we shall never yield. "I attach no little weight to the meetinsr at the Rrlggs House to-night, for I am in hopes it will bring about some definite plan for a regular and allied movement on labor's part. Unionism should present a solid phalanx to the enemy, and I believe it Will." TIIE MILITARY. Regular Army Officer Entertained A "zklM Shot by a Sentry. CHICAGO, July 12. Affairs at General Mlles's headquarters have about reached their normal state again, the greater part of the excitement attendant upon the strike and the arrival of troops having subsided. The experience of many of the officers, especially from the Western forts, is In the nature of a summer outing. Many of them are being entertained at the down town clubs and their service here is, on the whole, rather pleasant than otherwise. The Chicago, Iroquois, Union League, Chicago Athletic and other clubs have extended their privileges and nearly all the officers are taking advantage of them. Lieutenant Schaafner, of the Illinois militia, was to-day notified that two one-pound rapid-firing Hotchkiss guns with field carriages and ammunition had been shipped him from Washington. The naval militia is doing strike duty along the water front and in the harbor along the southern sec tion. Heretofore the organization has not been fully equipped. Mentor Meyer, a member of the naval reserve, was drowned, last night, near the battleship Illinois, at Jackson Park. He had been assigned to duty on the crib off Hyde Park, but was on relief at the time of the accident. About sundown he went in bathing and was attacked by cramps. He was drowned before his comrades could reach him and i.ie body has not been re covered. Durig the night volleys were fired nom the battleship ror the purpose of raising the body, but the attempt was not suc cessful. The loud reports alarmed residents of the southern district and all kinds of stories were afloat regarding the cause of the shooting. It was thought that the fir ing was in the stock yards, but an investi gation revealed that the guns had not been fired in that part of the city. A sentry, stationed one block south of Forty-ninth street, on the Panhandle tracks, was tired at to-day by some one in am bush. The shot went wide of its mark, but the sentry fired in return. Later John Stephanlzki was located with a bullet hole In his hand. He is supposed to have fired the shot at the sentrj'. He was not arrested. TO AIHUTKATK. (Concluded from Firat Pnre.) liminary hearings of the committee probably will be held in Washington, and are likely to be of much interest, as Messrs. Debs, Pullman and others best informed on the respective sides of the controversy are regarded as th? witnesses most likely to be called before tne committee at the outset. The resolution empowers the committea to sit during the recess and the work is exnected to last through the summer. The subcommittee had been confident that the committee on Tulea would allot to it two hours of some day this week. To-day Representative Geary had a talk with Representative Catchings, of the committee on rules, asking for time cn Fri day or Saturday, but was told that the committee could not make any arrange ments on account of the absence of Speak er Crisp. Representative Mallory, the chairman of the subcommittee, will make an effort to have a day or part of a day next week devoted to the question. A bill to prevent and settle strikes by arbitrating all differences between em ployers end employes and" to .provide a penalty tor retusai or failure to abide by the decision of the. arbitrators has been introduced In the House by Representative Hudson, of Kansas. It provides that all disputes as to wages, hours of work, the ritiht to discharge or quit work shall be submitted to three arbitrators annointed by n Circuit Court in all cases where the courts or Lnlted States military authori ties may be invoked. Persons guilty of disturbing the property or employers without having applied for arbitration shall be deemed Kuilty of malicious mischief. The same rule shall apply to employers who reduce wages or discharge men without submitting the case to arbitration. In all of the last oases employers shall be liable for the full amount of wages until the employes shall find other employment, the period not to exceed one year, nor can they call uuon the United States forces for protection until they have applied for arbitration. Will CoM I nele Sum l,0O(MMM. WASHINGTON. July 12. The cost to the United States of putting down the rail road strike In the West is estimated by government officers at fully $1,000,000. It may foot up more. The estimates include telegraph bills, deputy marshals' pay and transportation and maintenance of United States troops, ihe estimates for marshals pay In Chicago alone is from $l."A0v) to MruX-1). and Congress in a few da vs will be asked to appropriate this sum, as it is urgent. IluKiuenN I'liibnrriiKHiuen In. NF.W YORK. July 12. L. D. Alexander Co. have announced their suspension on the Stock Lxchange. ihe house was estab lished in 1SS' . The senior member of the firm hr's been a member of the exchange since 1VJ. DULUTH. Minn.. July 12. -The American Loan and Trust Company, of Duluth. to day made a voluntary assignment to V. T. Richardson. It has been in voluntary liq uidation tor a year, ana mis step has been expected. I'lllott OntshootM Carver. KANSAS CITY. Mo.. July 12. The first contested here to-day between Dr. W. F. P.i-v? rnd f A. If ."lllrtt r.f Iv'-mci, City, was very close and remarkable, the score being Flliott 9C. Carver 93 each out of a possible one hundred. Live birds were n a X

LINCOLN AND LABOR

HIS VIEWS OX ITS 11ELATIONS TO REBELLION AM) CAPITAL. What the Great Hmnnelpator Really Said In Some of Ills MenftacreK Fraudulent Perversion by Debs. Decatur (111.) Republican. On June 28 U. V. D;bs. issued a procla mation to the American Railway Union which was evidently intended to excite the prejudices of his subjects. Among other things he says for that purpose is this: "The strusrirle with the Pullman company has developed into a contest between the ptoduclng classes and the money power of the country. This is what Lincoln predict ed at the clos3 of the civil war, and it was this reflection that gave the great emanci pator his gloomiest forebodings." That which Mr. Debs accepts as the say ing of Mr. Lincoln is a fraud, and was garbled from a passags in a message transmitted to Congress, not "at the close of the civil war." as Mr. Debs says, but Dec. 2. 1S01. which was repeated by Mr. Lincoln to a committee ot worKingmen irom rw York March 21, 1&54. The message was Intended to show the dangerous attitude of secession to labor. The traud was used in the camDaiirn of 1890 and 12 by dema gogues in the 'attempt to prejudice the la borer against hia employer and tnus induce him to vote for the party which Is controlled by the same people who sought, by rebellion, to set up a despotism over labor; the very thing Mr. Lincoln warned the workinmen to beware of In the messase which has been so unjustly and designedly emasculated. (See life, public services and state papers of Abraham Lincoln Ray mond, pages 224 and 4'JS.) The forgery to which Mr. Debs refers reads as tobows: "Monarchy is sometimes hinted at as a possible refuge from the power of the people. In my position I would scarcely be justified were I to omit exercising a warn ing voice against returning despotism. Tnere is one point to which I call attention. This Is an effort to place capital on an equal footing with, if not above, labor In the structure of the government. 1 bid laboring people beware of surrendering a power which they already possess, and which, when surrendered, will surely be used to close the door of advancement to such as they, and fix new disabilities upon them until all of liberty shall be lost. To show how dishonestly the foregoing was made up, the words used to construct the traud are printed in Italics in the passage from the message which follows. The read er should careiully compare the message w Ith the fraud, and ulo note the fact that Mr. Lincoln, in the inl part, shows the relation of the rebellious States to labor, and in the latter part shows the proper relation of capital and labor, and closes by, appealirg to workingmen not to permit the despotism of secession to succeed in changing these relations. Mr. Lincoln's theory, it will be noted, is quite different from that of Mr. Debs. WHAT LINCOLN SAID. As before stated, March 21, 1S64, a com mittee from a New York association of workingmen, which had elected Mr. Lincoln an honorary member, waited upon him and delievered an address, to which h3 replied, as follows: ; "Gentlemen of the Committee The honorary membership In your association, as generously tendered, is gratefully accepted. "ou comprehend, as your address shows. that the existing rebellion means more and tends to do more than the perpetuation of African slavery that It Is, In fact, a war upon the rights of all working people. Partly to show that this view has not es caped my attention and partly that I can not better express myself, I read a passage from the message to Congress in December, 1861: "It continues to develop that the insur-' rection (the rebellion) is largely, if not exclusively, a war upon the first principle of popular government, the rights of the people. Conclusive evidence of this is found In the most grave and maturely considered public documents, as well as in the general tone of the Insurgents (the rebels). In those documents we find the abridgement of the existing right of suffrage and the denial to the people of all right to participate in the selection of public officers, except the legislative, boldly advocated wdth labored argument to prove that large control of the people in government is the source of all political evil. Monarchy itself is sometimes hinted at as a possible reruge from the power of the people. "In my present position I could hardly be justified were I to omit raising a warning voice against this approach of returning despotism. "It Is not needed nor fitting here that a general argument should be made in favor of popular institutions; but there is one point aith its connections not so hackneyed as most others to which I ask a brief at tention. It Is the effort (by those In re bellion) to place capital on an equal footing if not above labor in the structure of gov ernment. It is assumed that labor Is available only in connection with capital: that noDoay labors unless someuoay eise owning capital somehow by the use of it Induces him to labor. This assumed it is next considered whether it is best that capital shall hire laborers, and thus Induce them to work by their own consent, or buy them and drive them to it without their consent. Havlner proceeded so far it is naturally concluded that all laborers are either hired laborers or what we call slaves. And further, it is assumed that whoever is once a hired laborer is fixed in that condition for life. A FALSE ASSUMPTION. "Now there is no such relation between capital and labor as assumed, nor !s there any such thing as a free man being fixed for life in the condition of a hired laborer. Both these assumptions are false and all inferences from them are groundless. Labor is prior to and independent of capital. Capital Is only the fruit of labor, and could never have existed if labor had not first existed. Labor is the superior of capital and deserves much the higher consideration. Capital has its rights Ahich are as worthy of protection as any other rights. Nor is It denied that there is and probably always will be a relation between capital and labor producing mutual benefits. The error is in assuming that the whole labor of a community exists within that relation. A few men own capital and that few avoid labor themselves and with their capital hire or buy another few to labor for tbem. A large maiority belong to neither ciass, neither work for others nor have others working for them. In most of the Southern States a majority of the -a-hole people, of all colors, are neither slaves nor masters, while In the North a large majority are neither hirers nor hired. Men with familieswives, son and daughters work for themselves on their farms, in their houses, and in their shops, taking the whole product to themselves, and asking no favors of capital on the one hand, nor of hired laborers or slaves on the other. It is not forgotten that a considerable number of persons mingle their own labor with capital; that is. they labor with their own hands and also buy or hire others to labor for them, but this is only a mixed and not a distinct class. No principle stated Is disturbed by the existence of this mixed class. "Again, as has already been said, there is not of necessity any such thin? as the free hired laborer being fixed to" that condition for life. Many indeend-nc m-n everywhere in these States a few jears back in their lives were hired laborers. The prudent penniless begin.ier In the wor!d Ir.bors for wages a while, saves a surplus with which to buy tools or land for himself, then labors on his own account another while, and at length hires another new beginner to help him. This is the Just and generous and prosperous system which opens the wav to all gives hone, to all. and consequentlv energy and progress and improvement of condition to a!!. No men living are more worthy to te trusted than those who toil up from uov erty none less inclined to touch or take auKht which they have not honestly earned. Let them beware of surrendering a political power they already possess, and which, if surrendered, will surely be used to close the door of ndvaneement p.trainst such as they and to fix new disabilities and burdens upon them till all of liberty shall be lot." Then Mr. Li leo'n added: "The vi?.vs then expressed remain - unchanged, nor have I much to acid. None are so deeply interested to resist the present rebellion as the working people. Let them beware of prejudices, working division and hostility among themselves. The most noticeable feature of a disturbance in your city last summer (the draft riots in New Yo-k was the hanging of some working peopie by other working people. It should never be so. The strongest bond of human sympathy outside of the family relation s ul l hi. one uniting all working people of all nation, and tongues, and kindreds. ..r should this lead to e. war upon pDnr-y or the owners of property. Property i- the t'. of labor; property Is desiraole; is a positive good in the world. Tnat some should be iich shows that others may become rich, nnd henee js lust encouragement to industry and enterprise. Iet not Mm who is houseless pull down the bouse of another, but let him labor dlllirentlv and build one for himself, thus by example asu-Imr that his own shall b? rafe from violence when bi!'!t." As a statesman, as a philosoonT. as a frind of the common ieork Mr. Lincoin hrul no ec.u.il, and every American citizen, especially in these times, should read and study the foregoing, together n-lth the fnllnn'lnir tkassutire frnm til mnasage to Congress Dec. L 1SG2: "Labor Li like any other commodity la

National Tobj Work? WROl'GIlfiROS mi roa Gas, Steam and Watet T.A rr Tub-, Cast &cl MftUable Iron FiUio

Mck ut r 1 t ii 1 1 Wrnct.. Stni Trp. lump. Kltchea 8ink. tl, Brlting. fUbbll MrUL SoU fier. W:i:e nd 0kre.t Wip. Id; ViiW ami allotbe. Mip Biram mil v:r. Nw-Menm-hidrc Af jurat tof public Iiii,.ltnct''rinift, hlioy. "etrle. lann. rinea. Lmibrr Dn-hu. etc. rut ani rtirn to order any site WijcbfrirB Pip. frost 4 tncu to li luche diameter. Kiiight JL- Jillsenr 75 and 77 ' 8. PENNSYLVANIA ST. ami m:mi:ts. ARMSTRONG'S PARK GRAND OPEN - AIR PERFORMANCES! Commencing: July 17, Cormati'a Great Tlar, 'A CELEBRATED CASE J With a strong cast of METROPOLITAN PLVYERS, Under the DirecMon of Mr. Frederick Lorraine. ADMISSION, t 23 cents FAIRYIEW PARK". Now Open for the Season The park has been considerably Improved and meals are now served to order at the pavilion. Carriage parties may enter th park at the east pate from Illinois street. hitching posts having been provided Just Inside the pate. BASEBALL This Afternoon, KANSAS CITY YS. INDIANAPOLIS Admission 25c; w&nd stand. 50c. Ladlet, 25c. Uatues called at 4 r. M. To-morrow, Monday and Tuesdar, 6IOUX CITY. the market Increase the demand for it and you increase the price of it." Thus equipped no man need be led astray by designing men who pervert the truth with the view of misleading' the people, livery laboring man and employer of labor should cut this out and preserve 1L TIIK OLD, OLI STOHV. Order "Will Ilnle nnd Government Will Not Abdicate Its Function. Louisville Courier-Journal! It is ever and ever the old, old story. Organized society may for a time retreat, but It will not surrender to organized vlolence. Government may hesitate for a moment, but it will not abdicate its authority, knowing well the power of trained foldiers and Gatling guns. Every now bnl then the Indian bucks on the frontier get up a war with the settlers. They alwayj think they are going to win. They are ignorant of the vast energies and resources of the government. But they re Just as wise In their order, and their ;lans are Just as practical as those of the so-called, selfstyled workingmen, who go to war to enforce their demands. In each instance, a few conflagrations more or less, a few lives more or less, then the strong arm of law and order, stretched out to restrain the turbulent, to punish the lawless and to protect the interests of the whole peopl?. who, in their aggregate, far surpass any class, or any agglomeration of claKs, , moved by no Just principle of action and held together only by the passions of oathbound secret societies, whom such loathsome wretches as Sovereign and Debs dare to rule as no negro overseer In the day of African slavery would have dared to rule on a Southern plantation. Who Is such a perf. so mean, so despicable, so degraded in his own esteem, as to bow to the edicts of these mad. bad and cowardly incendiaries, who pause, whilst instigating their dupes to outrage. Ion enough to protest their own innocence ot anything that can incriminate them.elves. who are not brave enough to accept the responsibility for their acts and words, but who live upon the fat of the land, and bluster and ratle round in kingly robes, relegating their followers and those who fa'l in with the logic of their proceeding to. whatever fate the chancos of ruthless battle and the swift avenging law may allow them? Is there any sanity left among the secret Are there any free men Mt among thoss whose pride it is to call themselves workingmen? If there be, it were well that they were asserting themselves, for the time and the hour have come. Down with the blood-red rag of anarchy, and the wild unreasoning spirit of the mob! Up with the starry b.inner of the Republic and the breezy spirit of the Constitution and the law. Thr IlurRlar n I) am my. The bookkeeper for a firm on McCrea. street wes the victim of a practical Joke, last evening. He went t the baseball game in the afternoon, intending to return about 7 o'clock and finish his looks. He went to the store about that time. and. on opening the front door, he saw what he supposed was the form of a burglar lying on the office floor in front of the safe. He also saw a number of burgar's tools, as he thought He closed tne door, and locked it. and summoned the police. Chief Splann and detective Kinney went there. The bookkeeper opened the door and, with drawn revolvers, the detectives entered the office. The supposed burglar did not move. A Idler Investigation revealed the fact tiiat th-i burglar was a dumm and that ihr tools were nothing more than keys, hammera and hatchets. ClnlniK to Hnve Hern Wnyliild. The police found a man. giving his name as Henry E. Walters and his residence as No. 438 Massachusetts avenue, lying in an allev near St. Clair street and Hroaduay last night, about 8 o'clock. The man sail he had been sanibngged and carried intc the alley by highwaymen. H said he was assaulted in front of No. 31 Hroadway. H claimed the highwaymen robbed Mm of a considerable amount of money. Walter had been drinking all day. and his story Is not believed, as several saloons wr found where he had bought drinks on crdit. However, he showed a bruise on hi face, but it is thought that be received; this in a saloon tight. Street-Cr Kmpliir Injured. 11. F. Whlttaker. conductor of car No. 213, Illake and rrospct streets line, was badly injured In a collision with a jol at Ne York and West streets !at nUht, at 8 o'clock. Only one track is bt-lng u. M on account of New York street being u xialred. Whlttaker attempt-! to aiu;u ti . assist passengers on the c. brjt got. ' ff ! too soon and i? truck a ih V. His h'.d w.i ! badly cut and he receive 1 other painful in- ; juries. ( siriK'k Mitli ii flotvldrr. ! Police headquarters was informed at 2 j o'clock this morning of slight trouble in ! the Panhandle yards, near State street. It was rerorted that one m.m had ht-eti struck on the head with a rock an t seriously injured. Investigation revealed no p.-.rticulars. 1 Detective Doherty went ti Andtnon ve. tt rday to arrest Ld Sheal. who t rhau- -l with stealing n bicycle from Herman L ipens, an employe of L. S. Ay res. The vr.. oner was brought to the city last nl-l.t. Dr. Prlce'5 Crpam Baking Powilcr Most Perfect Made.

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