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‘the tender mercies of the againgt Bara a in es ort aboctcg tor tue future. Afar ie crisis is oven a will ascertain what these are really w at sent they are bigger for the ‘ounpany i capacity of the shops in i r ant example from that day, They admit that the company has been temporarily embarrassed by the e, take a sertal VOW CE she eae ORE it, now assured, while at the same time Lat all express aym, with their ‘‘wayw: brethren”? of theanvil and the turning lathe, who have been allared inte: @ step which can only result their own bf i Darngrivas. nai Reveaue Department is authorized in Washington callea for 94.000 by the law voatnploy bus sweuky-ye. detectives for baceo uot accounted fr inthe | Beenie couauy: tose have tha Deauquarars a The West to the Rescue of the fashingwa are sent ‘fection re a ee i | services may be neoded to detest frauds or evasions Jersey Strikers. to Kavos in the First Administration of the Law. of the sereras laws. the 4 cae Mr Batey haa teen for erveral OD TREN. Sti reser ented | hse uterrcase"a avg ee S's | sgrtog-Motiag Yesterday Impartant Sha Gutincrtcna's peeente | Mess en teateroe ames speecns Shoot tated Sarever, a0 0ny, caneasonarsnl ff ‘he Forpese ot | MAW S.ltem cpr moped Bailey @ receipt igre certain quantity of bonded | tra force is employed at bis office, aud outside. at gant Hopes of the Strikers— goods, and the inspection sho: ecessar’ ‘amina' even ‘more in the warehouses than the late Col- potter eceaieae iss Pras The Engineers Growling. lusively PARTIES OONVICTED. ip pr ert Ble are x Mr. Bailey, while in the Fourth district, instituted . Shook aw 0 larga nabeoer of criminal Bioaeca ome. Saainss 4 ‘There seems to be no let up im the matter of the | Mr. Bailey bas made several: tm Dergons cugaged in fraudulent transactions, in all of | strixo of the machinists and other mechanics em- ments in the manner of doing far that through bis instrumentality @ number of the | Ployed by the Erie Ratlway Company at Jersey City, omee. One notabie nome ig that there are n0 | princtval offenders have been sent to the State Prison | The men are as determined as ever to hold out Breil ry port, Hereaiter as of little value, when their oaths and p) of honor have red Of so little binding foree. Deaf . alike to the promptings of conscience or honor, they will be hereafter regarded with Cais pett ‘nd cons tempt, pees oy by ee OS ee, gt o reacher= 01 subserv. ro! Gradual Improvement---Changes Up to Date. GROWLING “MONG TH RNGINERSS. Yesterday, being the ion of January, was the engineers’ pay day and they expec to receive their dues for the ‘month ¢ of December last, But neither the paymaster Doe SAE BAA wee | ioc coming uy five o’cloc! M. Burin; io wale 9 rol ose day eutneery of te rou couldte in the ne rhs od, ne rroune, ort twe wend eens se ood, 10 pe wo cared Conversation, and their counte- gestivuiation showed Covidentiy that something a usfarbed their minds, thor their words could not be Last night the “Brotherhood of to serve out a term of punishment for their bad deeds maine a oF the jen miBrotherhood. of of wi toward the revenue of the United States, whileastii | ‘el demands, which they consider moderate and | jy, oat a ers”? be Sao Pen spon “pe Tce ‘aden ee, Maree larger number have absconded. Of those so con- | fully justified by the circumstances, are complied meetin at Pore Jered the, enkig whacinias vo be sent out every mouth bat Abad roportion er ahs i oa Moca donee, foe with, . The railroad gMotais, on the other had,’ are bat el Pe hopes Wak the. witow ard, postponament is forwarded caily only fuse a# many as can Jacob Depew, Moses Depew, Shaw, iotangthita and | Cauaily as resoluve and express their fym and unal- | yon, The may ene Pre mot fee eae o, Bo sd: hand, easily attended to ne day, and thus a crowd ‘s pe) Some eigot or ten'persons absconded that | terable intention not to yield and to not re-emplo: avoided. inners most important feature tn the ploy | vices of their action being: conduct of affairs under ie ew administration | Majer heiroape Wa ea lo neerncR cases; al80 | any of those who joined in the surike, and to replace ‘a that its now made an imperative rule ‘hat ail | Jervon, as welt as the case for suboruation of per. | ‘em all with new hands. 4s yet the company have payments must be made at the desk. ‘There is no Revision dione trom ae Fal, core ly in, bt thy hago Coilector agit es Eon Roc of | had but very poor succeas. By iberal advertising ed. it a hundred blacksmiths the.case where one of rks specially detailed | in, , . about and machinists were for the purpose may be sent out to make a seizure inated from tuotd presumes ta thay grag vraoue | tnduced to repaly to the Pavonia depot at Jersey for non-payment of tax; then the wo seized may, ratber than have nis piacd cleo ee once pay ppl ed pte deal of money has been 8] pu City for employment, but in all instances, except, the fugitives and bring haps, a half a the the money due. itisonly im such @ case that au- | pack f perhaps, lozen, representations of the thonty is givén to receive « payment outside the Beck fr’ raf, wat robaby™ ax good a But ove. i men on strike of the causes of the difficulty them from the country. One of these drms, the | were sufficient to change thetr intention. It will be FRAUDULENT COLLECTIONS. i Since the new oillcials took possession of aftatrs in | Me Cetra a Lgrvica bt borne in mind tnat in consequence of the action of Cedar street some queer matters have come under thelr meeting on Friday, fully detailed their nouce. Oue of Assessor Cleveland’s assistants Piwnenthefbooks now in he RS ass nf io is 12 Fosters day’s HERALD, the men on strike have constan' readi found that large amount i wy | orgamizati $100,000, aa Deen collected by one ar Mi Shook’s | M2, taeroughly examined, and that examination | on duty around the ferry landing and in the neigh- | 4, oy. pelle gan. soap $165 000. naa bet eee acted on, as it doubtless will be, the revenue affairs despatches from various circuits all over the coun- COsU ee OF te eee Ne eee | of the Thirty-second district will be ina very free | Vorhood of the Erie shops about twenty of thelr | try, ‘They have ne thoughts of going back to work nO assessments books of Mr. Clevelan.’s Offien,. lar, Baliey’s oe oe Mr. Blanchard, ex- and clear condition, and though outsiders may | men as a patrol, under the command of a captain. | untu the company make up thei minds to accede to sneer and laugh at New York morality, yet the Em- | 4 amiined the books in the Collector's ofice carefully | Dire City can hoast of contributing the largest reve- | Tie#emen are instructed to explain to all applicants | their demands, It i true, some elght or ten men have deserted thelr ranks and have gone back to the but could fnd no entries of any such money having | nue tothe government and of being the first to pun- | for employment at the deserted shops the nature of the differences, but In no case to use anything more | monopoly, but this does not discourage the great been received. On the other band reference to the As- seusor’s books showed that there was no auch tax ever wD and clear out those who infringe its laws. cucver f as assessed against the parties, and therefore those Who han persuasive argument nor any violence or other | mass of the gave the receipts must have collected a tax that was | THE DULANCEY STREET TRAGEDY. unlawfal means to provent the new comers from | and to their principles nn nt ueMr oath never ai and returned the money some place other than to the Collector of the tuiry -gecond rev- ~— accepting situations. This “persuasive argument’ Is seems there is to be no lack of funds to carry on this strike. Labor organizations all over the enue district. The Mysterious Homicide—Investiga= | Process has proved itself quite successf The knowledge of this fact makes Mr. ‘Batley more an = : x ‘ le union are coming to the rescue of the operatives, and that, too, in @ very substantial manner. Al- ) far in the interest of the strikers. Four than watchful against any payments being received tion Commenced. outside the des in the ollie i Cedar street. Yesterday afternoon Coroner Flynn commenced | ™en arrived yesterday all the way from Chi- COMPARISON OF COLLECTIO case cago any. Pre: cohoctions im the dwates have beets si: adie an investigation in the of George Stoll, the to enter the service of the comp: They | ready the International Typographical Union have without much trouble this year; indeed they German, who died from the effects of a stab wound | Were at once “‘buttonholed ” by the patrol, and the | contributed $8,000 per week, to continue as long as most complete. For instance, the amount of assess. | received on the night of the 24th ultimo at the lager | Tevelations made to them so quickly changed their | the swike lasts, ‘The bricklayers, too, are coming ments returned for collection in tne month of May | beer saloon] 123 Delancey strect,,at the hands of one | Mind that they attended the strikers’ meeting in the ‘was $240,875 71, and of this large sum all has been % i wo the rescue, and ina day or two will be ready to collected with the ‘exception of $1,638, which is all of three men. afternoon and took the first train for the West after | agsigs handgomely. Several associations about miihon of dol- Dr. Louis Boppe, of 27 Rivington street, testified | that. Two German machinists came over from New Serr Ratatat aah popes rae ve Tel 8 % unt! pro} obligations. We make remarks more in sorrow than in anger, dooply thas: the colamns of Telegrapher should be neceaai. aeracatal: facts about the FPrandalent Collections of Taxes Not Due, Amounting to $100,000. . Bye NEW Tee ONE | HERALD, SUNDAY, JANUARY 16, 1870.—TRIPLE SHEET. ATTT LY | Taxiariy, en am opponito course would tnd +g ne over to the 6 . IVTERNAL REVENUE. | == es Pp ea|eetarasctsrene se, | THB STRIKE ON RIB, ve returned to their telegraphic dutics, fst we Cy be but ree gret the act, wo wish them to understand tnat our remarks are greg fo apply only to - sworn members. of the | former, of course, were bound to ‘adhere to to the movement only so long, AM About the Seizures of Whiskey, To- baceo and Cigars. ag they should see fit, We desire to say a word for the lady; Rave participated in tnis movement. With exception, they havé remained firm and nvendtunee Des deserve all honor and respect, and their brethe ‘of the league are bound to see that they are pro- vided for in any event. It is understood wat cere tain Western Union officiais threaten them with spesial proscription,. This must not be submitted to or permitted. Every Capel Kx honor and tnanluieus djorbids that any settlement should be Ponty which siall not at Teast place th them in es favor- ‘able positions as before. The Western Union Company 1s obliged to resor$ to all manner of devices to transact even | the diminished business confided to it ite minor offices are closed—other offices, where tuere were two or three operators, are left ke Detective System—Conviction of Guilty Parties. THE TELEGRAPHERS’ STRIKE. The Meeting Yemerdny—@8,000 Per Week from the “Typos”—Other Organizations to the Rescue. ate 270 Grand street has become the permanent leadquarters of the Telegraphers’ Protective League this city, and from sixty to seventy-five strikers congregate there daily and kill time by listening to speeches, receiving commutéees from different labor "Me collection of internal revenue has for years been the cause of much anxiety and trouble to the government of this country, because of the many Mande that have been perpetrated in the Revenue Department from day to day. Some eighteen months ago tne whiskey ring controlled the situa- fen, and although sewures ‘were made daily and Mauda discovered, yes comparatively few of the guilty parties have received any punishment for ‘mew crime, One day we would hear of the seizure of % well known distillery, aud that was ali that woulda be heard about it. No further action was wake, and the affair would pass out of notice in a most mysterious manner. Armies of agents and Mmapectors and detectives were employed, but these only added, in most cases, to the corrup- fon that existed before; they were unavle to resist the temptations offered by the Whiskey “ring.” Men who wese poor but a @ort time since vegan to buy prowu sone houses, @nive fast horses in the lane, and spoat the most betlliant diamonds at public balls. To belong to the yevenue at the time was vo be on the igh road to frvune and riches, The whiskey and brandy aud gar bills of some officials would in many instauces have more than doubied their salaries, The goveTl- with but one; operators are imported roux the Canadian Provinces, and by such means bo J promt wires are partial! & hr ad seriou bs cee ta oN it nos pecun! joss, but ever more damaging in the destruction of ite pret tige and the transfer Of tts business to its rivals The toss clreadat entated upon its stockholders apounts to hundreds of thousands of douars. low long they’ wil submit toa continuance of this stave of things, when a little conciliation on the of its managers would ened the whole difficulty in half an hour, and establish more cordial rel with ita employes than before, remains to be seen. ‘The Western Union Monopoly. (from the New Haven Courier, Jan, 14.) The Western Union Telegraph G hich cable, is now. eadeavorin ) conirols the Englisi obtain control over the French cable, if the competition will coasé and the prodta af tae douse the ts led monopoly be divided “between them. Ag soon as Congress gets ready to place the business of that remains due out ol a quarter Ment and people stood still in silent amazemoa't, | lara. For the month of April $450,059 51 was assessed | to being York to seek employment. Ti wi New SORE CREE ONS) Serine CnSEIVOR “We ie ‘Wondering how long this thing would last, Th? a ationaer $672 81 remaine uncollected, We may called to attend deceased, who was suffer. ploy: hey were taken in Hef ba I eeToose giving musical aud hear no more of these grab games by which Ab peer meeting yesterday afternoon Mr. Walker, resenting one of the promument labor organiza: rep! ple which now prevails in our irs—t ; tidus of this ity, Was present and addressed them H Lap iene re nave | the work done at the lowest taritt possible to pay expenses: Reductions can be made that will piace tuis art within the reach of all, and this can be cured in no other bad than by the government system proposed by Mr. Washburn. A CRUSADE IN THE SLUMS, The Wickedest People in Water Street te be Reclaimed—“Kit” Burn’s Dog Ken- nel as a House of Refuge—A Three Years’ Lease and Another “Pit? in Prospect. ‘The glories of Water street have been made sacred in poetry and prose at many a dranken row and sorrowful wedding and jolly wake, and these glories, in more ways than one, have been amalgamated With the prayers and hymns of long-faced missions arlea, who have: @ wholesome fear of the devil after twalve o'clock at night. Any one who reads the daily papers can, without much stretch of memory, recai to miad tue scenes enacted in Water street about a year ago, when Johnny Allen, the “wickedest man in the world,’? was at the height of his heavenly ecstasy and pecu- niary profit; when the pious young girls from upper | tendom, witn the love of the Lord in tneit # hearts and the latest styles of bonnets om their heads, paid datly visits to this puriieu of They did not know whom to truss, as suspicion had | ma,,‘* iD the corresponding months of the previous, day, when tetanus set 1 ken bi — * in, which continued for eignt | 8Poken being the German:—“'You see, countrymen, we pointed its finger at some of the most trusted and | year, Page Sowarer, be Rerun nae a ye wae, death ensued, ae struck because we were not regularly paid. Thecom- | or on et ao i ur, He von = organization to PORATED TRON: 28; SHS: COMMIT) SHEP TIF NOOR taxes wnic.® do not appear am the returns of last | the 24th ult.; Daiguemaere aaa tere peg pany let us walt two or three weeks, and sometimes | jn this contest, roe though nt, ne cin ‘thes there @Micers who were in the department were unable to year: 4 ally had some words ‘with him, when one of them | longer, before we got the money due us and earned | might be some honorable mode of adjustment @ompete with the power, money and cleverness of 869, ses. | called him @ “Dutch headed fool,” when an effort | by hard, honest labor. The company 1s rich, has [ ®'Tived at, and accordingly took it upon himself to the “ring; and thus things went on for a long ume, sr ray reel Was made to get them away without trouble; one plenty of money and ought to pay uson the day when, | iterview Mr. Palmer and General Eckert, of the aaa Ont tater 'vapioal"onseain Werk pees into of the men then commenced abusing de- | by agreemen’, our wages were payable. But, you | Western Union Company. He saw these gentiemen bang made in the + 701,595 | ceased; Charles A. Albright, one of the three | see, some of the men who manage the company use | 8Ud told them that he belonged to an organization gus pk 1,105,800 | men, got near his friend aud pushed him back aud | the money which of right belongs to us, and with | Bere Which was about to contribute money to assist September. - rey 809,655 | told him to Keep quiet and not be so quarrelsome. | witch we ought to pay our debts, in speculations of | the strikers to hold out, but before thts was done October. . ices poten 824 pee Nr pene. athe man ‘and deceased theirown. In this way they disturb the market S picohgirier| bg od ae with oP 3. made to eject the } enforce fuctuations in the price of amicable settlement o: {4 W0.06: pm Sil necessaries a! the difficulties existing between themseives and the ° rators. He also told them that the aid his asso- tion would give the operators would enable them SPECIAL AGENTS AND INSPECTORS, During the period referred to the chief of the Revenue Department committed one great error— maat was the appointment of what was then knowa po “epecial agents.” Toese were men who received ae the Commissioner a special appointment for fmtrty, sixty or ninety days, on making represehta- ‘tion that they knew of the existence of secret distil- Jeries or of qther frauds on the revenue. They were paid by the day, and were wholly irresponsible parties, ang yet they were invested with, if any- wing, More power than the regular officers of the department, They could roam where they chose nd make seizures in apy and every district. It need not be told, therefore, that such @ commission Was little short of a li.ense to blackmail, or a@ facility for committing more frauds or compromising others, ‘hese parties knew their term of office was but very short, December . 398,982 | parties, and in doing 80 deceased was cut; a crowd | jile, oppress the working classes very’ It will be seen from these th wares has the largest of about twenty men came and kicked a part of the | all ‘ine with the money Senieh is ours ana ought to collection made in either fr “#8 $1,106,800, in the | door in and broke the windows; the cry of ‘Police’ | nave been in our pockets for weeks. 1i {s against lnonth of August, 1868. Uf this .WOUDt $595,364 64 | was raised, and three officers coming Up } this practice that we have struck, and if you, coun- fonold "out for along time, perhaps ® year. Mr. was tax received from whiskey. the rowdies fled and went into @ house on | trymen, consent to work in our stead, you only con- | Palmer answered that the company did not care THE COLLECTIONS THIS YEAR. the corner of Norfoik street; the witness and an | sent that this shall continue to your loss and ours | Much about the operators; if they would renounce ‘The collections received this year a1 ¥irom tobacco, | ofcer went to the house and knocked ata door, | too.” This, it i mast | be confessed, Was quite a telling | the League, however, he was perfectly willing to which is paid by stamps; cigars, in Comes, special | when some one inside tola the officer not to dare to | argument, 8 Very ingeniously put that, | take them all back. They could not think of taxes on licenses, sales, ‘succession quties, bank | open the door; the door was not opened and the | coming ow plain 4 oerian ab ing them back as an organization Mr, Palmer, he dividends, bank deposits, bank capital And gross | oMecr fled; ina short time he appeared wish an- | might” have done honor too aoe Te ha assured them, went so jar as to Bay he would not receipts, which applies ' to express companies, | oiner omer, who made them open. the door, | itsinfuence, and the two Germans {roa New vere éven recelve & committee from the strikers. Now, amusements, &c, ‘The tax on bankers and brokers | when the officers arrested the three men who were | returaed home. Another kind of argument was used | this all sounded very big on the part of tue im the’ district is a heavy item. For May pa t | in custody; at the time the three men entered the | by a young American with equal success. He went | Company, but by this very statement they amounted to no less than $67,309 08, and this inde- | saloon of ‘Mr. Adnot there were six men in the | tothe suo to look after his chest oftools. He there | acknowledged thelr weakness. When the opera. pendent of the special tax received from mercimants, | place. ‘The evidence adduced utterly failed to show | found a man apparently examining the shop with a | %rs frst quit their “keys” both General Auctioneers and ouhers. Wuiskey does not appear, a8 | who inflicted the fatal wound, although the Alvright | view to go to work. “Here, stranger!” said tne | Eckert and Mr. Pelmer ‘declared that not one of all the warehouse spirits were required to be with- | brothers who were arrested, it is believed, know full | young American to him, “are you going to work | stem should ever return, and now both of these drawn by the goth of June last. This order was | well the naine and residence of tbe gulity party. | here?” “Well, I guess so,” Tepiied the other. | gentlemen say they will take them back indiscrimi- at ouce complied with, aod ali the liquor then in ae farther hearing of the case was adjourned till } “Don’t you know, stranger, that we have struck, | nately if they will renounce their orgauization—a bond was removed from the warehouse, with the | Thursday next. and thai if you take my job you take the bread trom | thing they will never do. exception of eighteen barrels. It 1s this gemoysl my wife and my two little children?’ “Hum! | The Western Union Company report that ata that makes many of the items for 1869 66 mus! OBSEQUIES OF FELIX INGOLDSBY. didn’t know that. I guess I'll go.” And go he did. | meeting of the telegraph strikers, on Friday, Mr. Ira lower than those for 1868, Whiskey arriving now in “3 ‘These incidents are related to show the manner in | Dewitt, one of the number present, stated, in a few and it s only reasonable tosuppose that they 1i:*usut | the market irom ihe West and elsewuere has got to Silica thelr plnceo a tae Soeea ee ands from | Prey were boateh, and that the best thing they coud L, a veral sho; - a & prudent to make their hay while the sun shone, essity of transferring trom one bonded warehouse by eeigidersepeirsan ili did er ts ey mays pe of the com: | ao would be to retreat in ‘a8 good order a8 possible Indeed, there were too many such oMicials attached | jg other. Francis Xavier—Immense Attendance. MEETINGS YESTERDAY OF THE STRIKERS. and repair the breach. He sald that it was useless vo the department, and like the soldier who was a NE feared OF SEIZED WHISKEY, | ‘The mortal remains of Felix Ingoldsby, one of our | The first meeting convened at Engine House No. 7 yee ae lai the os ieee Phe peat A] a Ing the officers have now to do wi ie bout nine o'clock 11 , | &tallure by the officers of the league, and sacrifice drilled to death, or the man who was killed with ppaany to nseke arrest and detention when it is late most esteemed citizens, were yesterday con. Giocge aaa in the hase ac vit the position of. @ number of the men whose families Kindness, the revenue system of the United States oe penn ‘stam a. ‘There 18 a pretty good lot of signed to their final resting place in Calvary Ceme- at that moment were in want of the actual necessa- President of the Mutual Protective Associa- Was ruined and rendered worse than useless by an | illicit whiskey in ‘the Uarket ac the present moment, | tery, after thelast solemn ceremonies of the Church— } tion of Erie Railway Employes, suggested the | Of life, merely to gratifythe desire of a few out- { ing from & wound on the right side of the neck; he | Uand by several Germans doing patrol duty, and the administration uere give a comparative statement of the collections H seemed powerless in the case, for 7 im‘ sae by the Collector last year with the collections | Was treated properly and did well to the twelfth | 8fument used ran about as follows—the language e' is ad deputy United States Mar- | g requiem mass and other pageantry—were duly | propriety of adjourning to Washing'on Hall, Newark | Siders to continue the struggle. infamy. How Johnny became convinced that he overdose of official supervision and care, ee en ae Jook out for it. Whena oy the The Ch 2% t Me ‘uly | and Jersey avenues, in oraer to have their ineetings | Mr. Dewitt also sald that telegraph officials haa no should turn his back on his old associates and THE OFFICE OF SUPERVISOR, seizure ig made the whi. ‘*eY 18 sold at auction | Pall Se, urch of St. Francis | gs far away from the Erle depot and shops as possi- | enmity against the strikers individually, and woula Fortunately for the country the spécial py the United States M.Wsnal to the high-| Xavier was filled with mourners aud le, that no suspicion of any intended disturbances | like to see them all pack in their places, Messrs, ‘Were sent about their business in the nee aelape eat bidder, who, in pn to the price | friends long before the funeral cortege arrived ight arise. The suggestion was adopted | Ives and Congdon supported the position of Mr. © required to and. the meeti ing reassembled at Washington | Dewitt. Macs, and it Was at this period that tn ret signa oi | BE ene! hx efore ican ‘semoy'e lis’ purchase, | from the residence of theaeceased, Athalf-past ten | fan ‘at ‘tou O'clock, aud’ agein at twa | Yesterday, they also state, some fitteen or twenty Mée began to develop themselves ' " rocuring the necSssary stamps, | o'clock, the appointed hour for the requiem, West | o’clock in the afternoon. The business was | men, who belleve they have been decetved In regard authorities. The office of int cian bd bare gett See coieaiall fenegey: the Voaleetar's potgieyricns Fourteenth street, opposite the late residence of the pp eet a4 the appoloement pha mck te ce oe Pid ge >, led thre pications at rev by - 0! ‘epare @ me- ene of whom was attac’e4ty ench' of the large Tespect a aidioulty srone J warehouses were closed | deceased, on either side, together with that part of | torial to the public, vo Increase the hutuber of om. | celved them very cordially. ee eatles—was also ade’ 19, that of supervi- | i June the Collector, not deeming that there would | Sixth avenue adjoining, were lined with carriages | cers and the like, of bus little public interest. Dur- The strike in this city 1s considered at an end by ot ee. te «tshed, and thal pel be any further use for tax-paid stamps, and having | axq @ sympathizing crowd of spectutors. Thecburch | ‘2¢ the appointment of members as jor hgreart all persons who understand the situation. ¢- “ke its place. Mr. Dutcher Was | heen ordered to issue none to the Marshal, sent his some rather significant incidents transpired, One the Ast Sepervéoor in’ New York city. ‘the | sock on naud back to Washington. When the auc. | was draped in mourning, aU fall candies seq their | young man was named, but Ne rose and desired to Superv’ oe vooR charge of the whole business | tion. sales of whiskey were commenced he foung Hioxerina Ugnt on repr: af tue gloomy catafalgue be excused. ‘I am of arather hasty nature,” said Pr’ usly mixed up iu whe hands of agents, inspec- | himself without the necessary stémps, ana titre ee ete anes: nena —_ easton | he, “and if I were to see g fia, Sake cay op a ets, detectives, special agents and otners. He was | was great difficulty experienced in collecting the | @Uved at the church the doors posite would Ge fikery to use othet {nfiuence thap ‘ given very large power; be mulght go intoany revenue | tax. ‘he assessor was Obi to make an assess- Open and the solemn procession passed “tH words,” “Then we don’t want you; W6 want ae To THE PuBLIc:— emioe—collector's, ganodsor'a or other —in Bis oe ment, which ne returned for ootleosion. to to the Col- var Deeting aatariaan, near tte contre door wil eer eee ae HM. Finiay, ay, aad Li ‘The statement hag been made, apparently by trict, seize the Oks and exal e them, and, sou! lector, and it was in this manner t ie wi tho aj oval there be suy grounds ior suspicion of untair play, | sctod until Mr, Balley received atthbaty to procufe | 80d acolytes, sprinkled the comin with holy water proval | authority, that the ladies who have participated in Jmarched up that hill and then marched down again, ig Dow matter of ‘profane history.” The good and pious men, the worthy men, the honorable men, who did all i their power to make their raid on the street atthe time a thing that would in’ after days re- dound to the greater honor and glory of God, were, | a8 @ matter of course, very much discomfited in the | make @ strike for the hill of Zion, and how he | end, and had to beat an tnglorious retreat after fight- Ing the devil tooth nae snail for a long period at a given sum per mont Many people who through religious zeal attended that otorious revival, cam to the conclaston that the vineyard of the Lord cou! not ve planted in Water street witn anything like immortal proilit, and so they What the Female Operators Say—They Threaten Exposures. NEW YORK, Jan. 16, 1870. ° meeting, Mr. Finlay exhorted all t Folded their tents like the Arabs, Taught at once suspend the official.so suspected, re- | more stamps, and since then he has kept asupply | aod Lo Seem rap og eel ae doralled for patrol duty 8 Tid their captains to he | the recent movement on the part of the operators of ‘Aad aa sllsckiy e256 Way porting the fuli particulars witnout delay to the | on hand in case of necd. Sipser laced on the catafalaue, oA unctually on hand at half-past six od lock on Mon- | the Western Union Telegraph Company would never, | to other parts of the sinful metropolis, where the omunissioner of Internal Revenue. Tne revenue THE AUTHORITIZS IN WASHINGTON. Dl jay morning. Chairman,” shouted out one | ynaer any circumstances, be again employed by | S¢ediellon good ground, and there was & conse- ent did not have this power; his duty was chiefly The authorities at headquarters at Washington A large number of the clergy were present, among we Getect frauds, but the supervisor 1s dot alone en- | show the atest desire 2 carry out the revenue | Whom were the very Rev. Father Starrs, Rey. Fathers joined to do the same, but 1s also empowered to give | laws strictly and with benefit to the country; but it | De Lutns, Meagher, Hughes and Wood. Most prom- ‘ail aid to officers in the detection of breacues of seems to a viaiieee that they sometimes overstep the | ment among the laity were Judge Charles P. Daly, sue law, and is also bound to see that every officer | mark in their requirements, For instance, they | Senator John J. Bradley, Judge Quinn, Judge!Kean, in his district does his duty fattnfully and honestly | have made one change‘in the manner of keeping ac- | Richard O'Gorman, Jo! in McKeon, Rovert J. Dillon toward the government. These and other changes | counts of rectifiers. New blanks and forms have | and others. The mass selected for the occasion by herealter mentioned had tue effect of shutung | been prepared, which require too much. ‘The inten- | the organist, Mr. Berg, was Cherubini’s grand re- ap the sources o: much fraud. Tne reduction | tion is good, but the carrying of it out is too intri- | quiem, which was ren: jered with great effect, m the tax on whiskey was also instrumental | cate; for it aimed at more than could well be accom- At the close of the mass Very Kev. Father Starrs m putting an end to a fair bropecnon of plished. ‘These papers require men who intend to | came in front of the altar and. after impressively me cheating that had been -played on govern- | rectify pure whiskey to tell how much rectified | speaking on the uncertainty of life and the certainty ment beiore. Altogether, wien General Grant be- | whiskey they intend to make out of a stated quan- | Of death, paid a most fitting tribute to the memory came President of the country the revenue was in a | tity of pure spirits. They cannot do this CORE, of the deceased. He said that the deceased was a much healthier condition than it had ever been be- | and yet no gauger 18 allowed to gauge | man esteemed and respected by all who knew him; Jore; since then it bas been improving day by day | more ‘rectified spirits than 1s mentioned in | @ Man of great integrity, honesty of purpose ana of until the present moment, and but few frauds com- | the aforesaid papers. This causes an immensity | boundless charity. He had known him tor years, paratively of any consequence are now ever brought | of trouble, but the object sought to be obtained is | and knew Nim as a sincere, faithful and devoted before our notice. ‘The collection nas been factluated | good. The revenue authorities desire to prevent the | Christian gentleman, a liberai beuefactor to all the and become jess troublesome, aud to prove the trath ae of packages until the new packages are | CDaritable matitutions of the city, and his venefl- of our remarks We Wil take a look at the doings in eriy suaped ‘The rectifier is bound to give | Cence was go real and unaffected that he eourted te richest district in tae Unived States—the 11’ ty. Pitloe of his intention to rectify. This notice is du- | Obscurity rather than notoriety. second of New York—suce the nominee of General | plicated, one copy being sent to the Collectur and Bie coffin and mountings were of the richest de- we had been appointed captain, “if necessary, I ¥ night which offer of earnestness was received with | vin¢ obligations iat aa company A instructions i it to the notice of the it the Solearepnl uc art, an at their attempting to niente ees en, pears x ie eccrine OF assist their brother ‘operators in a strike was an act pairs on engines, and he would jt the sb of ingratitude and injustice towards their empioyers, priety of appealing to the ‘Brotherhood of Engin In justice to ourselves we desire to state that asking them to influence their one w creed among the ladies who have recently left the empioy ton doing so in favor of the striking machinists as | of the Western Union Company in this city ae long athe strike continued. ‘The suggestion was | are five who were ftaught in a school of tel adopted, and a letter was immediately prepared to | conducted by the American Company (not that Porrect and despatched by a special messenger to | Western Westie) and who have worked ‘over ave Port Jervis, where the Brotherhood of Engineers | years at a little more than half the sa'ary paid held a meoting last nigat, men and ere for precisely similar service. ‘Cho fd Another suggestion for @ memorial to the New mating, lad! les paid for their vuition themselves in Jersey Legislature, asking an act of incorporation be lieges and elsewhere in different parts of the of the association, Was Withdrawn on the request country, ‘Not one of us, as far as we are aware, has of Mr. FINLAY, Who stated that this woul sett iy, Hitt education gt the expense of taking another ram by the horn, and it was | the Wostern Union doubtful whether tho: could hold on to two at the Ta addition :to our insufficient compensation we same time; they should first settle with Gould and | have been obi! kee to submit to unnecessary restric- tien attend to this affair. tions, indignities and insults during business hours, quent rejoicing in heaven over sinners converted. ‘To the really zealous or fanatical missionary there ig no obstacle so great that he will lay down on the roadway and ery out, ‘I can go no further;’ at least i 86 it would seem to be in the case of that ‘great obsta- : cle to piety and religious fervor, Water street, for wa ! are to again to have another revival. Whether 1¢ Will be productive of more good than that of a year ago 18 & question which time alone can determine; but that it will last longer is certain, judging from the conditions Po alas the missionaries have entered thi ‘To make a long story short, the renowned “Kit’? Burn, the dog figuter and “purp” fancier, has { leased bis place, 273 Water street, to the ‘‘mission- ers,” a8 he calls them, with an epithet more forcibla than polite, ‘They have leased 1 ror a term of three years, the whole house with its seventeen rooms, iit reserving for himself his barroom and @ few choice apartments for the use of his domesiic and domesticated household. “What are you going to do with your pit?’ in- quired @ HERALD reporter yesterday of Kit, aa the Grant wok cbarge. the other to the Assessor, who ts to see that proper ton, and were surmounted by floral emblems, Concluding the proceegings of the meeting Mr. | and to the caprice and unreasonable exactions of | jatter placed @ decanter on the counter and wanted ‘QHE THIRTY-SECOND DISTRICT. returns are made of the work done. worked i in the most artistic manner, representing @ | vinlay again addressed the members, exhort the manageress, who is practically autocratic in | 1 ery ‘what the quill driver would have, A® before remarked, the Thirty-second district of SEIZURES OF WHISKEY. cross, an anchor, @ harp, @ crown, and a wreath of | them ail to be on their guard to keep the peace. her goverument, through her influence with the “Oh! that’s got to §o.' you know,” said Kit, with Rect of the shoulders; ‘it mage pay fe aii and I’m going to sell my dogs, I dm; can’t be . heiped, wough.” “You are eaily going to’do away with the pit?” “Tam that; but then 1 can get up ’notuer ong there, don’t ye see?” said the genius with a leer, as he pointed to another room. “Oh yes, yes,’ exclaimed the reporter, very muck ew York is the richest in the country, Its receipts In relation to the seizure of whiskey by the United | ivy. After the services were concluded, the 1uneral iast year bemg over $6,000,000. It includes that por- | States Marshal it would be weil to state that the | cortége proceeded to Calvary Cemetery, the line of tion of the city in which are situate the offices of | value of such made in the Thirty-second district | Carriages extending & considerable distance. 6 the leading bankers, niin) shipping mer- | since the 1st of September amounts only to the sum | cortége arrived at Calvary at about two o'clook, chanw nd insurance Somes ‘yhe district | of $5,241 00. ‘There were in ail fourteen seizures, oe where the body of the Jamented deceased was con- “Oxténds fom the centre of J, rte on North river, e followin vernal $208, $232, $132.60, $1,465, | Signed to earth. Thus concluded the earthly career to Broadway, up Broadway to Park row, thence td 17, $57, $04 59, $154 60, $821, $344, $201, $139 and | Of one who was loved by those who knew um, and Chatham to Bowery, and down Catharine to ast $106, The recent seizures by Collector Bailey are | esteemed and regretted | who had partakén of was the icy of employers. to irritate men on | officials of the company. A plain statement of facts strike and employ polcemen and extra watchmen. | in regard to our treatment would, we are confident, If ahy of these should be overbearing they— | satisfy any reasonapie person that, aside from our the men on sirike—shoutd not retauate; the organi- | sympathy with any movement of our brother opera- ZAtion will see that justice 1s meted out in suoh case, | tora, We ourselves have suificient cause to rebel, if The strikers should, avove ali, keep in favor with } rebellion it may be termed. The data for en m, pUblic opinion by good and crderiy behavior aud | statement is abundant and in our wane an ‘ abstaining also from noisy conduct and disturbance, | It 18 Ul see by the western Union Company to river. All the portion of the city witain these limits | not iciuded in this statement. his benevolence and hi le ‘They should visit their church as usual on Sanday | Special, raecute us for the part we have taken in eautied with “kit's” manner of ‘doing away” with constitutes What is Known as the Thirty-second Rev- THE TOBACCO TRADE, and be reaay for duty oh Monday morning. what we believe to be a just movement, we ist 5 hus pit. enue District of New York. itis Co great district As mentioned in the earlier portion of this ar- POLICE BOARD, IMPORTANT FROM TI ‘BST. compelled ue self castsnpe eae in pi pert east my “But what do they intend to do, Kit? the mission- J for the storage and exportation of vobicco, and bas } ticle, the busines doBs Ii tobacco in the Thirty- It will be remembered, as it was stated 1m the | tion to acquaint the zat ic wi De real sara inthe | #Fies, 1 mean.’ ‘| five jarge export topacco Warehouses where tue } second district 18 immense, and yet matters are ceri gh Gaia aera creae! it two y “Wal, now, that’s mor’n I know. §? long asI got the atrik affairs during the eee ae ports Meare gery *poster, ladies’ department of the Western Union Telegraph delegates from the general convention of the asso- | Office at 145 prea: MEMBERS OF TH tion of machinists and laborers on the Erie road, THE 1 e, PE STIne LEAGUE then in session at Binghamton, promised they would TELEGRAPHERS’ PROTK E. om — ae of ~ beer of ae eae A wage tnere 80 ee managed Ce. since the on . a one ‘The Police Commissiohers yesterday made are- great current for the acco trade. 3 | bave been but seventy seizures made in the district r computed that from 500,000 to 1,500,000 pounds of | The greater proportion of these were for non-stamy. | “stribution of the prisoners hereafter arrested in the vobacco ure nandied in’ the district’ every month; fe of the cigars and the tobacco; but the rever,ne | city. Those arrested will be arraigned at the courts my money | don’t care a d—n what they do.” ae take seventeen rooms, you said a while }o “Yes, all of ’em. This ’ere bar won't go, though; and besides the five large houses referred to there cials bave made the law sq wel h understoo4, that i= immediately telegraph to the convention the result 80 you see it’ll be handy for the missioners when are otuers which do au immense business also. It Oierenenis and others will nge how te ess 4 gn igtrict.—ANl persons arrested in the First, of their interview with Mr. Jay Gould and the course Collapse of the Strike at Paterson, N. J. they (yet ary,” and Kit laughted at his own joke was in this district that the late Mr. Connolly, | articles are properly stauipea. lor gained séoond, ‘Third, Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Fourteenth, | Which they recommended the strikers to pursue 10 | me Paterson office of the Western Union Tele- | quite heartily. brother of our present Comptrolier, made a fortune | ground in Wasnington some time ae that immense | Pwonty-fourth, Thirty-fitth precincts, by the first sec- | bolding out, assuring them also of the support of “You're slandering those good folks, Kit; they ‘day aiternoon reopened the convention and of their iellow craftsmen along | staph Company was yester the whole line of road. ‘They did go and also gent a | to pusiness, and the public were given to understand be te to Binghamton to state the case more in | that the operators’ sirike had proven @ failure. 1, This delegate arrived at Binghamton yea- pam eing ioraay forenoon, and after his statement to the Con- | yectare on the Danger of Monopolies—The at the tobacco trade, estimated at the time of his | frauds were being made on the government in the " £ death at no less than five militons of dollars. His | tooacco branch of the Internal Revenue Depart- Pon ol sha cwenktita, preninst,sqaadas of the sons now carry on the business. There are several | ment, but the most careful investigation in this city | south of Canal street, west of Bowery and Catharine such houses in the district, and this may give the | showed that uo such thing existed here, and that, as ‘and the court squad. reader # fair idea of the trade done here in tobacco. | regards New Yorx city, the report was false and big rete serio he Eighth, Ninth, Sixteenth, wouldn’t do anything of that sort.’’ “They wouldn’t, eh? Oh, no. Dy’e ‘spose £ warn’t here when those other chaps was? But, come to think, I don’t know as they is the same ones, sa they mayn’t do it, after all.”” THE WHISKEY TRADE groundless, There bas been some trouble in Virginia vention the latver took the case royal deliberation, 4 “You don’t seem to be making ready for them, of the district has been largely reduced by the action | ubout the tobacco, bus not to the foxtent “that RoR pedal pene ther tied The reanit of which was the sending of the following Strikers Considered by * Clerarman. | Bie in obligiog all whiskey to be withdrawn | sensationalists would have appear, ‘for as the ond ‘Sanittar, Going duty between Canal and Forty- telegram to Mr. Finlay, received by him yesverday PITTSBURG, Pa., Jan. 14, 1870, “No, Iaint,” was the reply. ‘They'll come wher irom bond last June, and this makes a great change | greater portion of the Virginia crop passes through | Second stresia, west of Fourth strest and the Bowery, | afvermoon:— ‘This evening Masonic Hall was thronged with a | they gets ready. Ye see they’ve rented the place in the receipts, for while in some months in 1863 | the Thirty-second district of New York there could d the court squad. 4 BINGHAMTON, y wh Jan. an. 1 . ter fashionable assemblage, who listened with | tom the 1st oft next month.” the receipts from tax on whiskey were over half a | not be much (in fact mane at all) fraud committed aonara Dist say at Seventh, Tenth, Bioventh, To JAMES FINLAY, Baees 0. jersey City :— ‘we » “Do you know what they intend to do?” Stay where you are. Convention tndorse He Been marked Attention to a lecture on monopolies by Rev. ‘W. COCHAYNE FRITH, President. Gronar H. KENNEDY, Becretary. ig 8. P. Linn. ace the Gedy of es beanecdta bela nis telegram was read to the meeting and it was | to co-operative weal one o: reveived With the wildest of cheers. It was taken | the age, and, speaking of the Western Union ‘Tele- “Guess Ido, a little. I ’spose they'll hev preachin® and all that, and then there'll be a jolly crowd of folks down here preachin’, That's all right for people what like it. Then thar goin’ to turn thas alr pit into a Kitchen, and upstairs they'll fix itup million dollars, now there is not a penny received. | without being detected by the officers of the district. tee ‘There is not a single distillery running at present | The tobacco crop this year was unusually ae and te) Berean aceite Re terk: dake doing Bay ae tue trae ful thay coracnocit te Coneptie | Cenk enere ne RT, ed, and a8 | Gury south of Fourteenth sireet and east of Bowery ipicuous each package requir to be stamped an al Jor Its absence. tempted evasion of be law could be at once easily and Catharine street, aud north of Canal street, and \doraement of the Con- graph ‘Company, characterized it as the greatest GENERAL GRANT'S CHANGES, detected. the court squad, teenth: Dwebty-are as @ sure gu that the ens Fee ara aiag. fie praised the aedon of | for the institoot.”” On the 1st of May, 1869, after much hard fighting RES(OME OF SEIZURTS. rbd ce ae tl te ety nina an tart hid fro Sburge of dir. Fini, nose, advice the telegraph strikers and called on them vo stand | they inrend to make: s sort of refuge, 18 ae in Wasiungton, Mr: Balley—previously collector of | Of the seizures made in the Thirty-second district | Twenty second, sixth the Fourth distriot—fiied lis bonds, aud took charge | since May 1, 1804, the following list gives the de- ain danas, Brecinoss, equade fs Se tn aceet of the Thirty-second district, in place of Mr. Sheridas | tails: 4 east of Fourth avenue, north of Forty-second Shook, who apap The new appolutee at Distilled spirits, seized, gallons. street ‘and south of Bigneraixeh street, from river bit, hg oe work to put matters in order, and | Manufactured tobacco, pounds, 5 to river, and the court squad. was guided by the experience | Snuff, pound. 2,000 Fig’ District.—The ‘Twelfth, ‘Thirtieth, Thirty- | ‘in hi old district. By degrees the services ’| Cigars.......0, 190,000 | argt and Thirty-second precincts, the squads of the of Mr, Shook’s staff were dispensed with unti there | Cigarettes. ‘Twent-sixth and Sanitary doing ancy north of was but one gentleman of nis old régime remaining, | Premises ¢4 Yiquor dealers and cigar manufac- Eighty-sixth street, and the court squad. tt firm in the position they have taken as the only Nea ace ter aue Gusire aamoctatlon bi Mo astiscance effectual means of protection againat the encroach- was believed to consist in tuls:—The Convention | ments of the monopoly. would send out delegates to all the several machino A good Impression was undoubtedly made on the and repair shops along the whole line and order, | public mind, The strikers are encouraged and feel its @uthority, @ general cessation of work on | that tneir cause bg decedent and must certainly win, Bonday morning unless the strikers in Jersey City are not reinstalled oT that day and assurances given | Advice to the Strikere=The Logic of the that they will be pat “Don’t know. Spect somethin’ like that. I don’t care what they're goin’ for to do so long as they '§ Up. At ta thir of the conversation a friend of Kits called to see him on special business, ‘and our re+ porter left, flercely eyed by a bull dog that lay Couched on the floor by the stove, until he had Teached the street and left Kit’s place far in the for lost time since the strike and another, who had been previously employed in | turers, etn stills, machinery, &C......... 19 sree they Wl oe pay pelel of the men be correct, | Contest—Bevere Criticism of the Recalel- | distance. the drawback office, was appointed toaclerkship in | ‘Their’ gernai revenue regulations require that all THE GRAY BOND FORGERY CASE. ‘nd this order of the Convention be more or less | trant Members. A BOLD DAYLIGHT ROBBERY IN ‘BROADWAY. Yesterday afternoon Mr. Francis Leonard, of 40) Warren street, left the Citizens’ Bank, Broadway, witn his bank book and $460 in the side pocket of his overcoat. Passing the corner of Leonard street and Broadway he was hustled by four men, and, om recovering himself, found his overcoas open, his she hd office. 4 stam of the office at | cases o/ seizure be tinmediately reported both to the eeernt ‘Sepaty collectors, Tares vetiane Soames Gs ‘Attar setouer SS) PO eB ined” Beas DINIOe Mrs. Haskins, of 243 East Thirty-fourth street, who cto Sud seventeen clerks. The number of OUTSIDE COLLECTIONS—GAUGERS. was arrested some time ago a8 being an accomplice augers attached to the district 18 wloratinite ts are | — I'g-wouid be well here to make one correction, or | in che Gray bond forgery case, was brought before it two or three deputy collectors de! formak- | ¢ gplanation, In the Thirty-second district Mr. | yu s108 Cox yesterday at the examination room of the w seizures, but when necessity requires it Mr. NM id Bailey gives temporary commissions Co assistant ns- ET pnd a or WhisKey, Tue gaagers | Tombs Pollco Court. A number of witnesses were sessors or to any outsiders he may see fit to einploy, / are furnished with a certain quantty of siampi examined tor the prosecution, all of whom testified generally obeyed by the operatives, it would most | (From the Telegrapher (organ of the National Tele- seriously embarrass the entire business of the rail- graphic Union), Jan. 16.) way; and ifit be further true, as che men were as- Of the policy or Amipolicy, of the movement it is sured, that a very large number of the lavorers and | now too Iate to argue. It hasbeen made, and in it trackmen would in that case join in the strike, be- | 1g involved the pe of the League itself, and cause on the Susquehanna, Western and Buffalo } the posalbaty, for years to come, of any organiza- divisions many of these had not yet received their pay | tion the telegrapuic fraternity for mutual for the month of November, it will require the wt bona ‘and sapport in the assertion and snare most exertions on the part of the officials ef the road | tenance of their righte against the Gnd these aid the deputies and make seizures When | which they put on the whiskey, and at the end of | to facts already published. There was, however, no and @ fortunate concurrence of various circum- | action of the telegraphic companies and ree bank book ana his money gone, Seeing one of the eT SONDED WARRHOUSE BOOKS ASTRAY. foot the value of these starape: poy A sare nation bpencer, Wi Se appeared cn her | be. stances should tradic Snd travel on the road not stop In such (a, cause Tere “should: be no such word as pi geet gpetr perce | sve When Mr. Bailey assumed the duties of the Coll’ got. | it saves much trouble and brings the accounts all up | half, said he would not ask the witnesses a single’) SGN moors of the rond clatm to have full ad- ieane aaa -_, Ld aimee bot if she rele | The man, who lad a respeotable appearance, volun- orship of is) Thirty-second he round the boo! Pores at uate to @ specified date. Every person using | question or address a single word to the bench. He the in good order, witn the exception ‘ sf the sacnps 1s charged twenty cents for affixing each | was quite content to rest the dismissal C the cons bonded accounts. These were not fully post’ ,q, and | stamp; this constitutes what is known as ‘“‘gaugers’ | ou tife papers. The examination throughout seeme of course the reports made were made up srom re- | fees,” and it 18 in this way that the ser- | to bea mere waste of time, and was so regarded by port to report, These accounts and repo’ 4g aro of | vices of the gauger are paid tor, Although | all who heard it, The papers were le(t for Judge the F pry im) ce, as they are ir tended to | a gauger’s fees may reach more than $250 | Hogan's disposition, but there is little doubt that 1 the amount of goods stot and ‘withdrawn | per monti, yet that amount 1s fixed by the depart. / Mrs. Haskins will be discharged. She 18 bow at trou boMO, and Ib tp very necosHArY 10) foop tuem up | ment as his MYxUnUM solasy, and anything eared | largo on hor own recoguizance, tarily offered to accompany Mr. Leonard to the ‘Tombs Police Court. He did ao, and was then given into the custody of an officer of the court, and gave. his name as Mr. William Clarke, 61 East Fifty-ninth — and @ tobacconist. He was committed for ‘amination, but was admitted to bail in $1,000, un ‘Mitchell, of 609 Broadway, becoming the surety vices contradicting all these evil surmises; they say | per cent of tho first class operators, it seems to us that the great mass Of the men west of Jersey City | i¢ must result in a settlement more favorapie than take very littie interest in the strike here, and even | can be secured by Individual action. if tae Convention should be gulity of tne folly of A few of those who in the first instance came out ordering @ general strike it ti not be obeyed. from their offices and joined the fortunes of the THE SHO! strikers have fallen by the Pyare and jiback 80 were as deserted yesterday oe ‘he Gay helore, Home J lously begaed fors\icHeRs and Deen reegived back vo