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anaheim-gazette 1894-07-12

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Anaheim VOLUME XXIV. PROFESSIONAL CARDS Wm. H. PERDOMO, M.A., M.D. Office and Residence near Opera-house Block, Anaheim. Consultation Hours— Until 9 A.M. From 3 to 4 P.M. English, German, French, Spanish and Italian poken. DR. J. H. BULLARD A. E., M. D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON. (Harvard University, Boston, Mass.) Office and Residence, corner Hermine and Chartres Streets, Anaheim. OFFICE HOURS 7 to 8:30 a.m.; 12 to 1:30, and 6 to 7:30 p.m. DR. J. E. YOUNG, DENTIST. (Formerly of Santa Ana) 221 South Spring Street... Los Angeles, Cal je21-2m H. W. CHYNOWETH, Attorney-At-Law. Helmsen Building, Center street. NOTARY PUBLIC. Real Property Law a Specialty. ANAHEIM, CAL RICHARD MELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Center street, Anaheim, Cal Special attention given to PROBATE matters. L. NEMETZ, Carriage Painting & Trimming SIGN WRITING MISCELLANEOUS. Grand Auction Sale! AT... M. H. CHEESEMAN'S. (WEST-END GROCER) A first-class line of Groceries, Provisions, Furnishing Good Boots and Shoes, a complete line of Tennis shoes, offered at Auction. The Entire Stock Will be Closed Out Regardless of Cost. SALE : TO-DAY ! And This Evening. Bargains In Every Line ---TO THE--- CITIZENS OF ANAHEIM RICHARD MELROSE ATTORNEY-AT-LAW. AND NOTARY PUBLIC. Center street, Anaheim, Cal. Special attention given to PROBATE matters. L. NEMETZ, Carriage Painting & Trimming SIGN WRITING Shop on Center street, near the opera-house. Anaheim, Cal. L. GUNTHER. PIONEER BOOT & SHOE MAKER. Corner Adela and Los Angeles treets. H. P. LARSEN. CONTRACTOR & BUILDER. Estimates given, Contracts made and do a general obbling Business. CENTER STREET, ANAHEIM. A. D. Porter. H. A. McWilliams. PORTER & McWILLIAMS. CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS. Office and shop, first door south of Ferdinand Hacks' Furniture Store. Los Angeles street, ANAHEIM. BEALE&CLARK Foundry AND Machine Work. Water Gates AND... Irrigation Supplies! A SPECIALTY. Foundry on West Broadway (near S. P. depot). may171f CHAS. SCHINDLER, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA. CHAS. ALBRECHT SALE: TO-DAY! And This Evening. Bargains In Every Line ---TO THE--- CITIZENS of ANAHEIM VICINITY: I beg to inform you that I have disposed of the business which I have conducted in Anaheim for the past 19 years, and it therefore becomes necessary for me to have a settlement with my patrons. You will confer a favor upon me by calling at my office in the Citizens Bank of Anaheim and settling the same at your earliest convenience. I desire to assure you that I have appreciated your kindness in the past, and beg to direct your favorable consideration to my successors, Stern Brothers, who I am assured will merit the same patronage that has been so freely accorded me. RESPECTFULLY, H. CAHEN. GUS DAVIS Groceries and Seeds! Informs his customers and the general public that he is prepared to sell goods at the smallest margin possible. He buys for cash and therefore can sell for a very small profit, giving his customers the benefit of low prices. No charge for showing goods or answering questions. Come one, Come all! All Kindsof Produce and Poultry Taken in Exchange T. J. F. BOEGE, Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Wines, Liquors and Cigars. KEEPS ALWAYS ON HAND A COMPLETE STOCK! Of the Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars. WINES AND LIQUORS BY THE KEG, GALLON OR BOTTLE. Orders by Mail Promptly Attended to A SPECIALTY. Foundry on West Broadway (near S. P. depot). may171f CHAS. SCHINDLER, CONTRACTOR and BUILDER. ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA. CHAS. ALBRECHT Contractor & Builder Estimates Given. Fine Workmanship. Agent for the Pomona windmill. First North street, Anaheim, Cal GEORGE BAUER BOOT AND SHOE MAKER. Center street... Anaheim. Making and repairing at the lowest cash price. All orders promptly attended to: All work guaranteed ANAHEIM Pharmacy J. REID, PROPRIETOR: A full line of Pure Drugs constantly on hand. Also Toilet Articles, Brushes, Soaps, Perfumery, Fancy Stationery, Paints, Oils, Etc. Physicians' Prescriptions Carefully compounded day or night. PALACE MEAT MARKET Bailey & Adams, PROPRIETORS: Best Meats the Market Affords Always on Hand. Also keep Sauages, Bacon, Ham, Lard, Etc. Meats delivered to all parts of the city free of charge Shop Center Street, Anaheim Wholesale and Retail Dealer in Wines, Liquors and Cigars. KEEPS ALWAYS ON HAND A COMPLETE STOCK! Of the Finest Wines, Liquors and Cigars. WINES AND LIQUORS BY THE KEG, GALLON OR BOTTLE. Orders by Mail Promptly Attended to. GOODS DELIVERED FREE OF CHARGE! Opp. S. P. Depot, ANAHEIM, CAL. WR. R. HARKER. FRED, C. SMYTHE. HARKER & SMYTHE. Real Estate Agents. Kroeger's Block, Center Street, Anaheim, Cal. Money Loaned, Taxes Paid, Collections Made, Insurance Effected in all Good and Reliable companies. Correspondence Solicited. Call and See Us for Bargains in Real Estate. jan251t Buy Your: BEET MACHINERY. ...AT... John Schauman's Blacksmith Shop I have lately perfected a new beet cultivator, and invite all beet raisers to call at my place of business and inspect the same. Agency for the Superior Beet Drill of which I will have samples on hand in 10 or 12 days. John Schauman. KNOWLTON & FOX House ::- Painters AND... Paper Hangers. Carriage Painting and Trimming. General Job may4-im Work. Satisfaction guaranteed. FRANK FOX, City Barber Shop. FOR A FIRST-CLOSE SHAVE! ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1894. The Weekly Gazette. Established 1870. SUBSCRIPTION, - 92 Per Year. Six months. 1,99 Three months. 75 Payable invariably in advance. Advertising Rates made known on application at this Office. Customary Reductions, and usual discounts, on large Advertisements or those running regularly. The Gazette is issued every Thursday morning, and is sent to subscribers by the early mail. It is delivered by carrier in Anaheim on the morning of publication. Entered at the Anaheim Postoffice as second-class matter. Items of news and correspondence on all live subjects are solicited by the editor. Be brief, and write on one side of the paper only. All communications must be signed by the author, not for publication, but for the information of the editor. THE MIDWINTER FAIR. A DELAYED LETTER FROM OUR CORRESPONDENT—DRUMMERS HAVE A BAGGAGE HUNT. SAN FRANCISCO, June 20, 1894. EDITOR GAZETTE.—The miserable weather, which has marked the whole course of the Fair from the beginning to date, and which is almost at an end, has continued during the past week, and from the present outlook is likely to continue till July 4, on which date the Fair is to be formally closed. The officials should have bribed the weather clerk. Orange county now bears up the tail end of the race for the Examiner's golden cup, and unless two or three hundred votes are promptly sent in, I do not see how they can possibly get out of the deep pit into which they have so ignominiously fallen. Yolo. RECORD OF THE TIE-UP. BUT LITTLE CHANGE IN THE SITUATION EAST—A GENERAL LABOR WALK-OUT IMPENDING. There is but little change in the situation of the tie-up. Roads are tied up throughout the Western and Middle States, and Pacific coast traffic has been paralyzed during the week. Local trains on the Santa Fe and Southern Pacific have passed this point, but nothing like a regular train service has been attempted. The crews running out of Los Angeles are all "scab" outits, and some of the men look as if they never had much to do with railroading. At a conference of labor leaders in Chicago it was resolved that unless the troubles with Pullman were submitted to arbitration, general labor walk-out would be scheduled for Wednesday (yesterday) at 7 o'clock a m. Should this take effect, the walk-out will embrace hundreds of thousands. The International Typographical Union, however, very sensibly announces that it will not be bound by this edict, and the marine engineers and brick makers have similarly resolved not to obey these orders. Should the printers go out, the papers throughout the United States would appear, many of them, if at all, in badly crippled condition. Should the general walk-out occur, the strike will assume colossal proportions, and may lead to a bloody conflict. The wires continue burdened with dispatches from all points chronicling further tie-ups on roads not heretofore affected, and at latest reports the strike seems if anything to be spreading. The strike has affected the price of fruit as well as mast in the East. It is almost impossible to get any fruit from California, and dealers are worried over the situation. Two quarter baskets of peaches, which sold for 30 cents before the tie-up, retailed in Philadelphia at $1.10 per basket. Apricots that were selling for 50 cents a box are now bringing $1.25. The tomato market is in consular condition. ing cries. There was no offer of money however, and the troops soon came their camp arrangements and entered the work of guarding property. At midnight all cars on the yard been destroyed. The mob showed in its incendiariaism, and hundreds were rifled, and their contents carried before the torch was applied. The Panhandle yard alone is estimated 200,000. Chicago, July 9.—The State militia on the strikers, killing at least a dozen wounding many who were borne away their comrades. Chicago, July 8.—The work of the yards in the Grand Trunk yard forty-ninth and Asbail where thousands of burned cars littered the street was completed to-day under police protection, the monotony, however enlightened by occasional police when the gatherings of idlers watch work became too large and threatened. At 4 P.M. when the finishing touch been put on the work all the outlook disappeared and the troopers, laborers and police were withdrawn. No sound they got out of sight, however, when of 800 men suddenly appeared and crowbars and shovels tore up an area of a mile of the track. They fled another charge of the police and the war repair is again being pushed forward. Troops fired upon strikers at Ham Ind., killing several and wounding many President Cleveland has issued a nation admonishing all persons in Ohio and Illinois to keep the peace and do their homes. SACRAMENTO, July 8.—The Southern city's depot here is deserted day. The strikers have temporarily left from the company's property and are at their headquarters on Front street. Railroad officials are also taking a needed rest, preparatory to the exp struggle, which is felt will occur this year. A rumor was current this morning that strikers had received a large quantity of namite and intended to blow up the city. When seen in reference to the Harry Kueck, leader of the strikers, embodying "We are not dynamiters," he angrilled SAN FRANCISCO, June 20, 1894. EDITOR GAZETTE.—The miserable weather, which has marked the whole course of the Fair from the beginning to date, and which is almost at an end, has continued during the past week, and from the present outlook is likely to continue till July 4, on which date the Fair is to be formally closed. The officials should have bribed the weather clerk. Orange county now bears up the tail end of the race for the Examiner's golden cup, and unless two or three hundred votes are promptly sent in, I do not see how they can possibly get out of the deep pit into which they have so ignominiously fallen. Yolo, Inyo, Lassen and several other counties which surely have not as much population as Orange have passed her just for the simple reason that they have organized and sent in votes to the president of the organizations who in turn mail them to the Examiner, or to some person who will deposit the ballots for them. Last Sunday, June 24th, I had a little talk with Albert Souhami, president of the Oriental Syndicate, which controls the oriental village and concessions. That gentleman was not at all pleased with the weather, nor with the liberality of the crowd, which was remarkably large considering the weather was horrible, saying that if one tenth of the people who came into the village spent any money the Turks at large would be happy. Furthermore he said that there had been at least fifteen thousand people in the village on that day (Sunday) and that not a person within its walls had made expenses for the day. Last Sunday the Slavonians had their big day at the Fair, and one may rest assured it was a large time in every detail. Parade, songs, music, box-mots and flirtations were the prevailing features of the day, and all, especially the latter, freely indulged in. The day began with a parade, which started at the usual place at Market and New Montgomery at 10:30 o'clock and headed for the Fair. There were three bands of music, a few flats and hundreds of patriotic Slaves, on horseback or in carriages—all good natured in spite of the necessity of marching in the teeth of a howling wind with a heavy fog thrown into the bargain. Those who felt the wind most were the bearers of the flags and standards, for it required much strength, to say nothing of skill, to manage the huge banners which caught the wind like a sloop. After the parade at 2 p.m. the exercises in Festival Hall began with music, the overture, "Awakening of the Lion," being so beautifully rendered that the audience insisted on the "lion" being awakened the second time. A. E. Barbich made a few introductory remarks, and F. H. Truedell delivered a short address of welcome. Mr. Zan spoke at length of the history of the Slavonic race, and though his speech was long the audience bore it patiently, frequently applauding at the honorary mention of the names of heroes so near and dear to them. After Mr. Zan's address the Chevalier de Kontaki gave a very fine piano solo, the audience compelling the veteran composer to play his "Serenade" a second time. A few more speakers and another solo from the chevalier concluded the exercises. The evening amusements were the usual fire works and a grand ball in the Prater. Sunday there was an exciting feature at the Fair not on program and as unusual as it was exciting. It was a fire in the Oregon Gold Mine Building, where they turn a living woman into a gold nugget and then bring her back to life again. A coal oil lamp is necessary to cast the shadows of the nugget, and this lamp caused all the trouble by igniting the curtain, which is not of the abestos fire proof pattern, and then the interior of the building was a scene of wild commotion. The Amazons, who guard the nugget, beat a haasty and disorderly retreat through the back door while they drove a bloody crippled condition. Should the general walk out occur, the strike will assume colossal proportions, and may lead to a bloody conflict. The wires continue burdened with dispatches from all points chronicling further tie-ups on roads not heretofore affected, and at latest reports the strike seems if anything to be spreading. The strike has affected the price of fruit as well as mast in the East. It is almost impossible to get any fruit from California, and dealers are worried over the situation. Two quarter baskets of peaches, which sold for 30 cents before the tue-up, retailed in Philadelphia at $1.10 per basket. Apricots that were selling for 50 cents a box are now bringing $1.25. The tomato market is in equally bad condition. California tomatoes cannot be had, and the shipments from the south are unusually light. The troops refused to disperse the mob in Sacramento on the Fourth. All o'clock troops marched to the depot. The strikers had preceded them, and as the militia marched into the depot they gave vent to a shout of derision. At 1:15 greatest excitement prevailed. The troops had taken up a position near main track, the strikers jeering at them and ugly threats were made. At 2 o'clock the militia were commanded to clear the depot, but quietly walked away from the scene tothe enthusiastic shouts and cheersthe strikers. As they marched back to the armory they were repeatedly cheered bythe large crowd which lined the sidewalks. Their Gatling gun was also returned to the armory. The action of the militia in refusing to disperse the mob of strikers cast a gloom over the railroad officials. The Stockton companies were ordered back to the army for refusing to disperse the mob. They were lastly cheered as they marched from the depot. They were ordered home in disgrace,and an order was issued deprivingthe Sacramento companies of arms and uniforms.Gen. Dimond leftthe scenein disgust. Chicago, July 6.—With flaming torch lawless borders of firebugs are at work at a score of points inthe south half of Chicago.Fires are raging in every direction amongthe railroad yards.Hundreds of cars and tensof thousands of dollars' worth of merchandise has gone up in smoke or been carried off bythe now frenzied mobs of rioters.Incendiarism is rampant; alarm after alarm has followed in quick succession to day,andto-night at 11 p.m.the glare reflectedfromthe heavens shows thatthe disorderlypastime continues unabated.From early morning until this hour(midnight) reportsof fresh fires follow each other withstarting rapidity,being confined,because principallyto railroad rolling stockandbuildings againstwhich thus farthe greatest partofthemob'sfuryhas been directed. Early this morning a blaze started amongsome overturned cars at Kenington,quickly communicatingto other tracks filledwithlong lines of cars,many containing valuablemerchandise,andwas soon raging furiously,fannedby strong windsThere is atthis pointa totalof eighty cars wiped out.Atthe stockyards one blaze after anotherwas reported,and fromthe outlyingdistrictscame urgent calls for enginesandpublicprotection.increasinginfrequency. But withthe fallingshadesofnightcamethe climaxofthe fieryfestival.ThePanhandleyardsfromFifty-fifthtoSixty-thirdstreet,eightblocks,are onfire.Thetrackscontainingfrom1000to2000cars,halfofthem loadedwillbea totalloss.Nowaterbeingathandthefiremustburnitself.out.ThePanhandlestationatSixty-thirdstreet.wasalso firedanddestroyed.TheGrandTrunkyardsatElstonarea seaofflames.Fivehundredboxcarssupposedtohavebeenburned,andeffortstochecktheflameshavebeenfutileWhiledirectingthemovementsoftheEleventhBattalionAtFifty-firststreet,Fire MarshalFitzpatrickwas seizedbythethoroughlyfrenziedmoboffirebugsandthrownintoa pond.fromwhichhewasresuedbythepolicemorebadlycrippledcondition.Shouldthegeneralwalkoutoccur,thestrikewillassumecolossalproportions,andmayleadtoabloodconflict. Thewirescontinueburdenwithdispatchesfromallpointschroniclelingfurthertie-upsonroadsnotheretoforeaffected,andatlatestreportsthestrikeseiffanythingtobespreading. ThestrikehasaffectedthepriceoffruitaswellasmaintintheHeathItisimpossibletogetanyfruitfromCalifornia,anddealersareworriedoverthe Situation.Twoquarterbasketsofpeacheswhichsoldfor30centbeforethetue-upretailedinPhiladelphiaat$1.10perbasket.Apricotsthatweresellingfor50centa-boxarenowbringing$1.25.Thetomatomarketisinequalbad condition.Californiatomatoescannotbehad,andtheshipmentfromtheouthareunusuallylight. ThetroopsrefusedtodispersethemobinSacramentoontheFourth.Allo'clocktroopsmarchedtothedepot.Thestrikershadprecedentthen,andasthemilitiarmarchedintothedepottheygaveventtoa shoutofderision.At1:15greatestexcitementprevailed.Thetroopshad takenuppositionnearthemaintrack,thestrikersjeeringatthemanduglythreatsweremade.At2o'clockthemilitiawerecommandedtoclearthedepot,但quietlywalkawayfromthescenetotheenthusiasticshoots和cheersthestrikers.Astheymarchedbacktothearmorytheywererepeatedcheeredbythelargecrowdswhichlinedthesidewalks.TheirGatlinggunwasalsoreturnedtothearmory. TheactionofthemilitiainrefusingtodispersethemobinSacramentoontheFourth.Allo'clocktroopsmarchedtothedepot.Thestrikershadprecedentthen,andasthemilitiawerecommandedtoclearthedepot,但quietlywalkawayfromthescenetotheenthusiasticshoots和cheersthestrikers.Astheymarchedbacktothearmorytheywererepeatedcheeredbythelargecrowdswhichlinedthesidewalks.TheirGatlinggunwasalsoreturnedtothearmory. TheoutboundSundaypassengerfromChicagoontheMononRailwaybroughttoahaltbytheMob.EverearserandJerremeweremadetosmallmouthlocomotivewasquicklykilledbyounga valveandallowingalltherawrunoutoftheboiler.Activeleadersmobwerenotthelocalstreikers,knowntotheHammondpeople.Untilthereleadership,however,the townwasrorizedthroughoutthenightandrailtrafficparalleled.Boldlyoperating,hadeverythingnearlyownway.worsttroublecameabout3A.M.mwhenskirmishwithrailwayemployeesthreewere laidlowinabunch.Twootherrwintermenwerebadinjuredinothercounters.ThemanwhosewoundsareposedtobemortalH.B.Miles,andpoyceoftheInternationalSwitchCoopany. Oneofactsofthedesperatemobinhasffectedwithscantourceayandintherepressivelanguageofaneye-witness:"Theplacewascleanedout."SincethenteleographiccommunicationbetweenHammondandtheoutsideworldhappened A few more speakers and another solo from the chevalier concluded the exercises. The evening amusements were the usual fire works and a grand ball in the Prater. Sunday there was an exciting feature at the Fair not on the program and as unusual as it was exciting. It was a fire in the Oregon Gold Mine Building, where they turn a living woman into a gold nugget and then bring her back to life again. A coal oil lamp is necessary to cast the shadows of the nugget, and this lamp caused all the trouble by igniting the curtain, which is not of the sabestos fire proof pattern, and then the interior of the building was a scene of wild commotion. The Amazons, who guard the nugget, beat a hasty and disorderly retreat through the back door, while the audience rushed pell-mell through the front. An alarm summoned the Fair Fire Department and they soon succeeded in subduing the flames; the chemical engine leaving behind it a disgusting odor of sulphuric acid and ammonia. The place was damaged to the extent of $500, which will be promptly repaired, and by Wednesday the show will be running again. The Amazons will be "fired." It is commercial traveler, more commonly known as the drummer, has all the nerves which is accredited to him he ought to have a bowling time at the Fair next Saturday, for it is on that day that these brazen men will hold forth, and endeavor to raise the azure roof from the Fair grounds. The members of the Pacific Coast Commercial Travellers Association have about completed the arrangements for the day, and the principal amusement will be a baggage hunt, a game never before played on so grand a scale. The game is played like this: Each drummer is provided with a check bearing a number, while the girls in the Fair are provided with checks bearing a similar number. The object is for the drummers to find the person bearing the check which is a duplicate of his. The fun in this may readily be imagined; suppoieq, for instance, a man has a cheek bearing the number 50, and an ary fairy gazelle from Dashoney has its duplication; what must this poor fellow do but accept her for his partner for the grand ball in the evening unless he can find somebody willing to trade. Then again a fellow might get a young gun girl 60 or 70 years old, or a Turkish dancer or one of the prize-fighting women and a nice he would be in. Last Thursday a man called at the Creche with a little child in his arms and asked permission to leave it. Mrs. Von Schmidt, the manager of the nursery, took the child and kept it, the man promising to be back for it in the evening. He did not return, but willfully deserted the three weeks old baby. No clew has been found as to the identity of the man, and it is fearful that he will not return. The babe had but one change of clothes, so the Fair visitors were asked as they passed to contribute something towards its wardrobe. Up to date about $250 has been contributed besides many offers of adoption. WALTER L. DREYFUS The Canadian Pacific Railroad Company has decided that it can get along better without Pullman cars than without any cars at all. Pullmans being dropped, the strike against that road is declared off. This is an example which may be followed by excellent advantage by American lines which have been blockedade past two weeks. One of the best assorted stocks of merchandise to be found in Orange County is at Issaquah's store. Everything is brand new and ravenous. But with the falling shades of night came the climax of the fiery festival. The Panhandle yards from Fifty-fifth to Sixty-third street, eight blocks, are on fire. The tracks, containing from 1000 to 2000 cars, half of them loaded, will be a total loss. No water being at hand the fire must burn itself out. The Panhandle station at Sixty-third street, was also fired and destroyed. The Grand Trunk yards at Elston are a sea of flames. Five hundred box cars are supposed to have been burned, and efforts to check the flames have been futile. While directing the movements of the Eleventh Battalion at Fifty-first street, Fire Marshal Fitzpatrick was seized by the thoroughly frenzied mob of firebugs and thrown into a pond, from which he was resouled by the police more dead than alive. Everything at this point will be a total loss. At Hyde Park, near the World's Fair grounds, the sahes of forty cars are now smouldering, and word has just come in that, after numerous efforts, the mob has succeeded in firing the Illinois Central shops at Burnside. Troops are hurrying south; company after company in heavy marching order, moving to the turbulent district from the center of the city. The aggregate losses of the railroads will be enormous. Miles of their tracks have been ruined by the fierce heat, hundreds of switch and signal towers with their expensive mechanism are utterly ruined. Thousands of cars and untold quantities of merchandise of every imaginable description have fed the flames and gorged the larders of thieves; valuable locomotives have been wrecked and disabled; miles of tangled wires and prostrate poles litter the ground. Telephone, telegraph, electric light and fire alarm wires are now the special object of attack. The plugging of fire alarm boxes constitutes a new and doubly dangerous element in the tremendous wave of incendiary sweeping over the southwest portion of the city, preventing, as it does, notice being received of the startings of fires until, with the poor water supply in these outlying districts, a fire has attained such headway that it cannot be stopped except through lack of fuel and material on which to feed. The maddeused mobs, now worked up to the highest pitches of fury, are paralleling the scenes of Commune, and at this hour it appears as though nothing short of the miraculous can prevent an armed demonstration against them and the sacrifice of many lives. About eighty cars were burned altogether in the Illinois Central yards, and much aprehension was felt this evening concerning the Pullman shops. The feeling among the strikers is intense. This evening committee of strikers made a tour of the works and ordered the watchman to leave the place or suffer the consequences. Some of these became greatly alarmed and did so, but later being reassured by the company and the arrival during the evening of the State militia they returned to their posts, and during the early evening it was said that the Pullman plant was adequately manned with guards. The intention of the strikers was not known, but those interested fear incendiary work or possible use of explosives. The first detachment of the National Guard reached Kennington at 8:30 o'clock. The train ran around to Riverdale, where a company was left on guard, and then returned to Kennington. Here the town seemed full of people and there were evidently many strangers. The people lined up along the tracks where the troops were leaving the care, and the citizen soldiers were one of the acts of desperate mob that led on fire in several places simultaneously; fully twenty-five freight cars were derailed and tipped down, but the torch was not applied to them. An unprecedented proceeding in their strike tactics was the attack on their graph office. The mob became possessed with ideas that telegrams were about; they went to Gov. Matthews at Indianapolis asking for troops and the strike leaders; terminated for forestall such action if possible. Entrance to the telegraph office was effected with scant courteys and in their pressive language of an eye-witness: "The place was cleaned out completely." Since then telegraphic communication between Hammond and outside world has been cut off completely. Chicago, July 9—Peace reigned in Walt Disney. The same cannot be said of Chicago for the tread of armed men is still heard for her streets and the wheels of commerce stagger at the bid of A. R. U. Nevertheless she warcloud which has overhang his city and land for the past ten days shows his arrest sign of lifting. Instead of stories additional railroads tied up at various points throughoutthe countryto-day's dispheath most without exception bring advice to strikers returning to work, and an increase resumption of traffic amounting in some places to a return to normal conditions. The day in Chicago has passed without serious conflict between the strikers and their armed forces now on duty here. The feature of the day has been the action, early this morning, after an all-night session, ofthe Federated Trades Union of Chicago in deciding to call out all classes of laboron Tuesday afternoon at 4 o'clock unless George M. Pulleyman should have agreed beforethe meridian of that day to settlethe differences between his company and his striking employees by arbitration of otherwise. For reasons not known tothe public Grand Master Workman Sovereign ofthe Knightsof Labor andhis advisers decided to postponethe general walk-out and paralytic stroke which they propose to inflict uponthe businessof Chicago until 7 o'clock Wednesday morning. The announcement was made that President Samuel Gompels ofthe FederationLabor has calleda meetingoftheexecutive boardofthat associationtobe heldinthiscityonThursday,andthathewouldleaveNew YorkforChicagotomorroweverying.Inviewofthis,它is believedtheFederatedTradesinChicagowillnotprecipitateactionbeforeconsultinghim. Asat present Gompels cannot reach Chicago beforeWeisslaughtnightitwillbeimpossibletodecideonlineofactiontobearpursuedbeforeThursdayandprobablyifitshouldfinallyberesolvedtodeclareageneralstrikeotallthesecombinedforceiiscouldnotbeputintoactbefordriskymorning.Inthisconnectionthequestion arises whetherornotifPresidentGompelsallowshimselftohaulfromNewYorktoChicagobynon-unionfiremen,hisvisitwillbeofanyparticularprofit.Alabo leaderisChicago saidto-daythatafterhidsohemightaswellhaustaindnewinNewYork.Anotherfeaturetobe notedinconNECTIONwiththemeetingoftheChicagoFederatedLaboristhefactwhichwasdevolvedtherethattherewasinthemeetingalargeandinfluentialandconservativeelementwhoseactionhas practicallyblockedtheplansofthemorehotheadleadersuntilthelatter,intheexcitementconsequentuponthereadingofPresidentCleveland'sproclamationwereenabledto stampedeachoneoftheactionsofthedesperatemobilityontherunningofaPullmancoach.itwouldonfireinseveralplacessimultaneouslyandcompletelyconsumed.Fullytwenty-fivefreightcarswerederailedandtippeddownbutthetorchwasnotappliedtothemebreakintothestrike tacticswastheattackonthetractoffice.withideaothtelegramswereaboutbeknowntoGov.MatthewsatIndianapostsakingfortroopsandthestrikeleadersterminedforforestallsuchactionifpossible. Entrancetothetelegraphofficewouldffectedwithscantcourteseyandinherpressivelanguageofaneye-witness:"Theplacewascleanedoutcompletely."SincethentelegraphiccommunicationbetweenHammondandtheoutsideworldhasbeencutoffcompletely. SmithShop availor,andinviteallpecthe same. whichIwillhavesammanufacturingwomenandanicehewwillbein. LastThursdayamancalledattheCrechewitha littlechildinhisarmsandaskedpermissiontoleaveit.Mrs.VonSchmidt,themanagerofthenursery,took-thechildandkeptithemanpromisingtobebackforitintheevening.Hewillfullydesertedthreeweeksoldbaby.Noclewhasbeenfoundastoetheidentityoftheman,anditisfearedthathewillnotreturn.Thebabehadbutonechangeofclothes,sоtheFairvisitorswereaskedastheypassedtocountribute somethingtowardsitswardrobe.Uptodateabout$250hasbeencontributedbesidesmanyofficesadoption.WalterL.Dreytus. TheCanadianPacificRailroadCompanyhasdecidedthatitcangetalongbetwithoutPullmancarsthanwithoutanycarsatall.Pullmansbeingdropped,thestrikeagainstthatroadisdeclaredoff.ThisisanexamplewhichmaybefollowedbyexcellentadvantagebyAmericanlineswhichhavebeenblockadedpasttwoweeks. OneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandisetobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnewandravenousbutwiththefallshadesofnightcametheclimaxofthefieryfestival.ThePanhandleyardsfromFifty-fifthtoSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedinthe1citywhereyoucouldbuythecarssafetyandprotectyourselffromtheaccidentsocilingfromthecreamyard. Butwiththefallshadesofnightcametheclimaxofthefieryfestival.ThePanhandleyardsfromFifty-fifthtoSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedinthe1citywhereyoucouldbuythecarssafetyandprotectyourselffromtheaccidentsocilingfromthecreamyard. OneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandisetobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnewandravenousbutwiththefallshadesofnightcametheclimaxofthefieryfestival.ThePanhandleyardsfromFifty-fifthtoSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedinthe1citywhereyou could buythecarssafetyandprotectyourselffromtheaccidentsocilingfromthecreamyard. OneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandisetobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnewandravenousbutwiththefallshadesofnightcametheclimaxofthefieryfestival.ThePanhandleyardsfromFifty-fifthtoSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedinthe1citywhereyou could buythecarssafetyandprotectyourselffromtheaccidentsocilingfromthecreamyard. OneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandisetobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnewandravenousbutwiththefallshadesofnightcametheclimaxofthefieryfestival.ThePanhandleyardsfromFifty-fifthtoSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedinthe1citywhereyou could buythecarssafetyandprotectyourselffromtheaccidentsocilingfromthecreamyard. OneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandisetobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnew和ravenousbutwiththefallshadesofnightcametheclimaxofthefieryfestival.ThePanhandleyardsfromFifty-fifthtoSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedin.the1citywhereyou could buythecarssafetyandprotectyourselffromtheaccidentsocilingfromthecreamyard. OneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandisetobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnew和ravenousbutwith-thefallshades-ofnightcame-theclimax-of-the-fieryfestival.ThePanhandleyards-fromFifty-fifth-toSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedin.the1citywhereyou could buy-thecarssafety-and-protect yourself-from-theaccidentsociling-from-thecreamyard. Oneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandise(tobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnew和ravenousbut-with-thefallshades-ofnightcame-theclimax-of-the-fieryfestival.ThePanhandleyards-fromFifty-fifth-toSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedin.the1citywhereyou could buy-thecarssafety-and-protect yourself-from-theaccidentsociling-from-thecreamyard. Oneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandise(tobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnew和ravenousbut-with-thefallshades-ofnightcame-theclimax-of-the-fieryfestival.ThePanhandleyards-fromFifty-fifth-toSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedin.the1citywhereyou could buy-thecarssafety-and-protect yourself-from-theaccidentsociling-from-thecreamyard. Oneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandise(tobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnew和ravenousbut-with-thefallshades-ofnightcame-theclimax-of-the-fieryfestival.ThePanhandleyards-fromFifty-fifth-toSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedin.the1citywhereyou could buy-thecarssafety-and-protect yourself-from-theaccidentsociling-from-thecreamyard. Oneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandise(tobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnew和ravenousbut-with-thefallshades-ofnightcame-theclimax-of-the-fieryfestival.ThePanhandleyards-fromFifty-fifth-toSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedin.the1citywhereyou could buy-thecarssafety-and-protect yourself-from-theaccidentsociling-from-thecreamyard. Oneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandise(tobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnew和ravenousbut-with-thefallshades-ofnightcame-theclimax-of-the-fieryfestival.ThePanhandleyards-fromFifty-fifth-toSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedin.the1citywhereyou could buy—thecarssafety-and-protect yourself-from-theaccidentsociling-from_thecreamyard. Oneofbestassortedstocksofmerchandise(tobefoundinOrangeCountyisatIssaquah'sstore.Everythingisbrandnew和ravenousbut-with_the fallshades-ofnightcame-theclimax-of_the_fieryfestival.ThePanhandleyards-fromFifty-fifth-toSixty-thirdstreet,easilyburnedin.the1citywhereyou could buy—thecarssafety-and-protect yourself-from_theaccidentsociling-from_thecreamyard. OneofbestassortedstocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtIssaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyIsAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyISAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyISAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyISAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountyISAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountYISAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountYISAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountYISAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundInOrangeCountYISAtISSaquah'SStoreEverydayIsBrandedStocksOfMerchandiseToBeFoundINORANGECOUNTYISATISSAQUAH'SSTOREEVERYDAYSANDTHESEMOTIONSWEREDELIVEREDTOTHECREAMDOWNFROMTHEPARKMANSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAWSONSTOREBYWESTLAwsonstoresbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbyswestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywestsourcesbywests 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Gazette. NUMBER 37 ITEMS OF REAL INTEREST Col. F. H. Meyers, chairman of the Republican State Committee, died at 8:45 o'clock Friday morning at his home at Fruitvale, near Oakland, of stoppage of the bowels. The end of the Midwinter Fair came on the Fourth, when San Francisco day and the national holiday were jointly celebrated. The exposition was opened January 27. Over 79,000 people passed through the gates on the last day, making a total attendance of over 2,200,000. Artist Charles Robinson walked into the art gallery at the Midwinter Fair on the Fourth and cut from its frame his big picture of the Yosemite Falls. The picture which is valued at $4,000, was mutilated beyond repair. The jury of awards had not noticed Robinson's picture and he felt insulted. Six cars of dynamite and giant powder consigned to Arizona were side tracked at Bakersfield a week during the tie-up. The citizens did not feel very comfortable over it, and on the afternoon of the Fourth the strikers took the first engine that had come into the city for a week and hauled the dangerous cars into a place of safety out of town. Sacramento and Stockton companies of the National Guard refused to obey orders to disperse strikers at the former city, and the Stockton companies were ordered home in disgrace, and an order issued depriving the Sacramento companies of their arms and uniforms. They will be mustered out of service. The interest and wild excitement which marked the passage of the Wilson bill by the House some months ago, and was then transferred in a modified and more dignified form to the Senate, broke out again in the House last Saturday, the amendments being disagreed to in gross, and without opportunity for separate votes on special schedules. "Gen." John Sherman Sanders of Commonweal fame, and Miss Etta Bell, were married at Leavenworth, Kansas. The bride WORLD'S FAIR BUILDINGS BURNED. CHICAGO, July 5. All the main buildings of the World's Fair except the Horticultural Building, Women's Building, Art Palace, Machinery Hall and United States government buildings were almost entirely burnt tonight. They were the property of the Columbian Exposition Salvage Company and had been purchased for about $50,000. The fire was discovered this evening by several boys in the northwestern corner of the first floor of the Terminal station. When first seen it was but an incipient blaze and the boys tried to stamp it out for several minutes. They were unsuccessful, however, as the fierce gale which was blowing from the southwest faned the fire. Before an alarm could be turned in the fire had reached the second story of the building. Owing to the distance which separated most fire engine companies from the scene of the fire, there was considerable delay in getting a stream of water upon the blazing structure. The first alarm was immediately followed by a special call for ten engines. By the time the first detachment of engines were fully at work, the Terminal station was a mass of flames and the fire had leaped across to the Administration Building. In twenty minutes the dome of this beautiful structure fell with a terrible roar and sparks and blazing brands were carried by the wind north and northeast to the Mining Electricity and Agricultural buildings. The Electric Building was the first to take fire. In a few minutes it was enveloped in flames and at 7:30 the glass roof collapsed and the iron and frame work of the structure fell. At 7:15 the cast end of the Mining Building fell in and the flames became so fierce that the engine companies stationed between the Electricity and Mining buildings had to flee for their lives. Engine company No. 18 was forced to abandon their engine and had scarcely time to unhook the horses from their traces. One of the animals succeeded in getting away but the other autolocated. Several hundred feet of hose was also burned. From the south colonnade to the Government Building and from the lake to the golden door of the angel-guarded Transportation building, the world's famous White City is no more. As the evening sun was shedding its rays for the last time on the crater while scenes of life, they fell upon the familiar outlines of these wonders of human handwork almost untouched in their serene loveliess. Two hours later the new moon bent her pale crescent above them, shining on a mass of ruins, wrapped in a pall of smoke, save where the yellow red of blazing timbers flared against the blue-black which covers the site of the White City and covered up all of the great departmental structures. The fire sparked only the Transportation Building, Horticultural Building, Fisheries Building and Art Palace. The last-named is now occupied by the Field Columbian Museum and the Fisheries Building is a mere steel skeleton, having been demolished by a wrecking company. Besides these the Government Building, the Woman's Building and the British Building are all that remain of the hundreds of structures that once filled Jackson Park. Even the polyglot glories of the merry Midway have departed. Sic transit gloria mundi. VALKYRIE SUNK. Lord Dunraven's yacht Valkyrie was run into and sunk by the Santanita in the English troops on Front street. The head officials are also taking a much reheat, preparatory to the expected finale, which is felt will occur this week. Nor was current this morning that the war had received a large quantity of dry air and intended to blow up the depot. Men seen in reference to the rumor Knox, leader of the strikers, emphatic declaration that there was no truth in it. Are not dynamiters," he aggrily re- "and rather than have resort to suchully measures we would give up the hole without any further resistance." Even July 8.—A man giving his nameorge M. Pullman smashed in allthe glass windows of the First National day. He then started across theto serve another bank in the samewhen he was stopped by the crowdand gathered and was arrested. Heon cooking on a ranch near here, butona rampage because his employerto raises his wages. (OLO), (Oolo), July 8.—The most daspiecse of work in Colorado sincetheing of the strike was done today. A train on the Santa Fe road left shortlyto clock tonight, shortly after whicha explosion was heard. It developedpiece of dynamite had been explodedfirebox of the locomotive thatwas inthe departing freight train. Theactive was lifted from the track anddamaged. The engineer and firemanusually escaped with no injury beyondthe shaking-up. It is supposedthat lamite was placed in the coal by someintent and that the fireman shoveledithe firebox during the performance ofmiles. MONT (Iod.). July 8.—A mobof trinkers had possession ofthe town andthis morning. They sackedthe Union telegraph office, overturnedcars and committed all kindsof actions. There were frequent fightsrailroad employees were wounded.dieved that one of them will die.out-bound Sunday passenger trainchicago on the Monon Railway wasto halt by the mob. The engin德er were made to dismountand motive was quickly killed by openive-and allowing allthe water tobowl of the boiler. The active leadersof two were notthe local strikers, ortothe Hammond people. Underdirection, however, the town was ter-throughout the night and railwayanalyzed. Boldly operating,theywelling nearly their own way.Thedouble came about 3 A.M.m when inawith railway employees three menlow in a bunch. Two other railwere badly injured in other en-tirement. The man whose wounds are supbe mortal is H.B.Miles, an emf ofthe International Switch Com The acts of the desperate mob wasting of a Pullman coach. It was setseveral places simultaneously andvery consumed. Fully twenty fivewars were detailed and tipped upsidebut the torch was not applied toAn unprecedented proceeding intheaction wasthe attack onthe tele-ice. The mob became possessedidea that telegrams were about togo Gov. Matthews at Indianapolistroops and the striker leadersdept forestall such action if possibleince to the telegraph office waswith scant courtesy and intheex-anguage of an eye-witness: "Thecleaned out completely." Sincegraphic communication betweentheamidmonishing all persons in Chicago Illinois to keep the peace anddisperseair homes. THE NATIONAL Guard refused to obey ordersto disperse strikers at the former city,andthe Stockton companies were ordered homein disgrace, and an order issued deprivingthe Sacramento companies of their arms anduniforms. They will be mustered outof service. The interest and wild excitementwhichmarked the passage of the Wilson bill bythe House some month ago, andwas then transferred in a modified and more dignifiedform tothe Senate, broke out again intheHouse last Saturday,the amendments beingdisagreed to in gross, andwithout opportunityfor separate votes on special schedules. "Gen." John Sherman Sanders ofCommonweal, and Miss Etta Bell,weremarried at Leavenworth, Kansas.The brideis20 years old, accomplished and good-looking.Sanders met her a month agoat church.It was a case of love at first sightThere was a strong parental opposition,但the girl declared that she would elopeandthe old folks gave in.Sanders will abandonthe Commonweal movement. At 10 o'clock Thursday night,Henry L.Driver of Cincinnati was torn to piecesby an explosion of something in his pocketthatmust have been dynamite.Allthe lowerpart of his body was torn to mince meat.His left hand was thrown into a door twentyfeet away,while the windows and doorsofadjacent stores were amashed,so strongwasthe explosion.In his pocket was a postcardfrom the United States MutualInsuranceCompany of New York notifying himthat his life insurance policy for$20,000would expire at midnight. Ferdinand Snuder, who resides near SanJacinto,was shot and dangerouslywoundedby his wife Friday afternoon.Sniderandhis wife had quarreled,the causebeingjealousy,and this led up to-the shooting.The parties have quarreledconsiderableof late forthe reason that Snider was chargedby his wife with being too intimatewithother women.In the last quarrel Mrs.Snider lost control of herself,and,pickingup a handy pistol,inflicted a wound.Thebullet took effect in Snider's breast,andthe physician is undecided as to probable result. The golden cup offered bythe Examiner,valued at $5,000,forthe best county displayatthe Midwinter Fair has beenawarded to Solano.Alameda receivedthe second highest number ofballotsand was given a large silver punch bowl,and a silver loving cup was givento Sacramentowhich won third place.Thesilver cup offered bythe Chronicleforthebest general exhibit was won by Sacramento,andNevada county receivedthe silver杯presentedbythe samenewpaper forthebestmineral exhibit.In each instancewinning county receiveda large numberof ballotsin excessof any competitor.Orangecounty does not seem to be in it. Some time duringthe night ofJuly 3dburglar broke intothe Southern Pacificdepartment at West Orange and took $29.80and acase of tickets.The tickets were foundnext morning about 100 yards fromthestation unmolestedThere is no clewtotherobber's identity,and they left nothingbut a mall crowbar with which they priedopen the depot door.The precedingSaturdaynight burglar broke intothe SantaFedepartment at West Orange and tookfromthe outer part they abandonedthe job。它is thought they were frightened away.No clew. Miss Mary Lansing,the youngest daughterofthe late James Lansing,a prominentcitizen of Sacramento county,drownedSandyinTheAmerican river,nearthe oldbeet sugar factory not far from Sacramento.She had gone in bathing with her two sistersand a young man named Cross.Will wanderingaboutshe suddenly stepped off intooneofthe deep holes which aboundedintheriverbed,pulling one of her sistersafter her.CrowrereceivedoutsideoftheInternationalSwitchCom The acts of the desperate mob was waging of a Pullman coach. It was set several places simultaneously and fully consumed. Fully twenty-five were derailed and tipped upside out but the torch was not applied to an unprecedented proceeding in the city was the attack on the telephone. The mob became possessed idea that telegrams were about to go Gov. Matthews at Indianapolis troops and the strike leaders decided to forestall such action if possible. The telegraph office was with scant courtesy and in the ex-language of an eye-witness: "The cleaned out completely." Since geographic communication between India and the outside world has been completely. On July 9.—Peace reigned in War. The same cannot be said of Chicago, had armed men is still heard in it and the wheels of commerce still bid of the A.R.U. Nevertheless, which has overhung this city and for the past ten days shows disgust of lifting. Instead of stories of railroads tied up at various points in the country to day's dispatches without exception bring advices of returning to work, and an increased run of traffic amounting in some return to normal conditions. In Chicago has passed without a conflict between the strikers and the seas now on duty here. The feature by has been the action, early this afternoon an all-night session, of the Trades Union of Chicago in deciding out all classes of laboron Tuesday at 4 o'clock unless George M. Pulland have agreed before the meridian to settle the differences between any and his striking employees by otherwise. Cons not known to the public Grand Yorkman Sovereign of the Knights and his advisers decided to postpone al walk-out and paralytic stroke propose to inflict upon the busi-niacago until 7 o'clock Wednesday. The announcement was made that Samuel Gompers of the Feder-ador has called a meeting of the ex-ward of that association to be held on Thursday, and that he would York for Chicago to morrow evenew of this, it is believed the Fed-der in Chicago will not precipitate are consulting him. Samuel Gompers cannot reach Chi-Wednesday night it will be immediate on a line of action to be fore Thursday and probably if it will be resolved to declare a gen-ol all these combined forces, it be put into effect before Friday. In this connection the question her or not if President Gompers self to be hauled from New York by non-union firemen, his visit any particular profit. A labor Chicago said to-day that after he might as well have staid in New other feature to be noted in coun-the meeting of the Chicago labor is the fact which was de-ade that there was in the meeting influential and conservative elec-action has practically blocked the more hot-headed leaders un-ir, in the excitement consequent reading of President Cleveland's n, were enabled to stampede The fire spared only the Transportation Building, Horticultural Building, Fisheries Building and Art Palace. The last-named is now occupied by the Field Columbian Museum and the Fisheries Building is a mere steel skeleton, having been demolished by a wrecking company. Besides these the Government Building, the Woman's Building and the British Building are all that remain of the hundreds of structures that once filled Jackson Park. Even the polyglot glories of the merry Midway have departed. Sic transit gloria mundi. VALKYRIE SUNK. Lord Dunraven's yacht Valkyrie was run into and sunk by the Santanita in the English regatta in which the Vigilant was challenger and the Prince of Wales' Brittania competed Thursday last. The Brittania won the race, bearing the Vigilant by five seconds at the close. Vigilant was all along ahead, but it was in hard lines at the close, when the wind calmed down and the Brittisher passed her. The start was made in a blinding mist, the wind still holding good. Vigilant, Brittania and Santanita came up the line for the port tack to turn the mark boat, while Valkyrie raced down from Holyoche. Vigilant turned handsomely and was on the tack boat shortly after the fire, but Brittania was quicker and got off three lengths ahead. Santanita was unable to get out of Valkyrie's way as the latter was coming on a starboard tack. Valkyrie's bowsprit ran across Santanita's free sail, and the collision which ensued carried away Santanita's bowsprit and top mast, leaving her a wreck covered with tangled and collapsed sails. The force of the collision cut Valkyrie down to the water's edge, and she sank in three minutes. Lord Dunraven, Watson and the officers and crew of Valkyrie were picked up by boats which put out from shore, and from many sailing and steam yachts in the vicinity. The Captain of Santanita says he did not have room to turn owing to the great number of steam and other yachts about the starting line. On Valkyrie a seaman had a leg badly crushed. The yacht lies in twenty-five fathoms of water. At the first round the Vigilant led by two minutes, and Vigilant continued to draw ahead. Turning the cogmark boats the yachts came on a run, Vigilant carrying its great balloon and spinniker, which were drawn gleamily. After rounding the Ascog mark, both yachts set the spinnakers at the starboard and the club topsails were replaced by the jib-headers at the weather mark. The jack-yarders were got up and were run out to port, and the jib topsails were set. Under this sail both yachts ran toward Kilcregan and from here it appeared as if Brittania was closing a little. Approaching the Cloch lighthouse on a run home to the finish, the Vigilant was still leading, and it was intimated she was seven minutes ahead. The wind was softening but Brittania, with her spinnakers down, began to haul Vigilant in and passed her, leading her at the close by five seconds. Frank A. Lappen, who was a year ago known as the merchant prince of Milwaukee, writes a letter from London, stating that he is now driving a cab in that town, and that he has been penniless for several months. Lappen left Milwaukee to escape prosecution on numerous charges of swindling He Miss Mary Lansing, the youngest daughter of late James Lansing, a prominent citizen of Sacramento county, was drowned Sunday in the American river, near the old beet sugar factory not far from Sacramento. She had gone in bathing with her sisters and a young man named Cross. While wading about she suddenly stepped off into one of the deep holes which abound in the river bed, pulling one of her sisters after her. Cross rescued the sister, but while doing so she sank for the last time. She was about 17 years old. Daniel S. Chapman, a youth of 14 years, was drowned in the Sacramento river, Sunday afternoon. He was bathing with several companions and, venturing into deep water, was swept away. Mary Fay, 23 years old, a novice in St.Mary Clatworthy at Manchester, N.H., was forebly abducted by her brother, Peter Fay, a well-known lawyer. Fay went to the convent, and asked to see her sister, saying that her mother was very ill. In company with a sun, Miss Fay started for his office. When they reached the sidewalk in front of the building, Fay grasped his sister around the waist and pulled her from the hack, shouting: "You mother is dead, or is dying, but she is not here; she is at home in Lowell, where you are going." The young woman endeavored to shake off her captor, but he clutched her by the arm and started to the depot. A crowd, attracted by his actions, seemed disposed to interfere. Fay shouted: "This is my sister, and I am taking her home. I will kill the first man who lays hand on me or her." He took her to the train and departed with girl. Another bogus English "gentleman" has visited New York and departed. The Hon Thomas Clatworthy of Kenninghall, Alcaster, Warwickshire, was the name given by a well-dressed, cultured and pleasant-speaking young man, who arrived in New York five months ago. The fellow bad money, which he displayed with considerable ostentation. Mr. Clatworthy seemed especially attracted to the society of Miss Evelyn Hutchinson, a tall, haddsome girl of 20. He talked of his father, who was the justice of peace of the county. One evening he came home with a gloomy brow. His mother was ill. The next day a cablegram announced her death. A week later his "solicitor" cabled that the mother had bequeathed her son a legacy of between £60,000 and £62,000. It was after this good fortune that he made a formal offer of marriage to Miss Evelyn. Of course she accepted. On May 11, Clatworthy left for Chicago very suddenly, and did not return for ten days. During his absence he sent no word to his afflianced. The father grew suspicious, and wrote to friends in England. They replied that there was no such place as Kenninghall, nor aquire named Clatworthy. Hutchinson sent a photograph of the suiter. Answer came back by cable that Clatworthy was the son of the keeper of an inn at Alcaster, and was married, but separated from his wife, and had left for America early in the year in company with a harmaid. Clatworthy denied everything, and said there must be a mistake. He assured Hutchinson that everything would be explained, and the marriage would take place on June 19.