Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, April 29, 1887, Page 1

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2 W‘&mmv nr t‘h‘: %murly. The float- THE OMAHA DAILY BEE SIXTEENTH YEAR, OMAHA, FRIDAY MORNING. APRIL 29, 1SS7. NUMBER 311 GRANT RELICS ON EXHIBITION | Pt rocerva ihe sene o wis Utied A DARING TRAIN ROBBERY. States to the exelusive enjoyment of the Alsskan fisterles, while, maintaining the treaty rights of our fishermen In North . Three More Oases of the General's Meman | American waters. Bold Thieves Mako a Succossful Raid ot toes Placed in the National Museum, A Navy Department Squabble. the Southern Pacifia Wasmixaros, April 28.—[Special Tele- aram to the B A case has arisen in the | ONLY ABOUT $6,000 SECURED. SOUVENIRS FROM ALL NATIONS | \/,\0 jopartinent, under the custom of allow- ing government clerks a leave of thirty days | _ . Rumored Engagement of the British | absence when resigning from the service, | The Pxpress Messenger Forced te Minister and the Daughter of Sen- which is attractiog a great deal of attentiof Open His Car or Be Blown 3 W A female clerk recently tondered her resigna- Up By Glant Powdor— L ”:"’"“"“’N' Mkl tion, to take effect the latter part of May, and Latlut ey her request for a leave of absence until that time was atonce granted by the secretary, > The Grant Presenta, But when he received an invitation to her A Very Slick Job, WASTINGTON, April 23.—[Spacial Tele- wedding, which oceurred a few days ag SAN Fraxcisco, Apr —The Evening cram to the BEE.|—Three of the five cases | LN guestion at once arose in his min Bulletin’s special from ‘Tucson, Ariz., gives T > 4309 | whellier she is entitled to leave of absenes | ypoaatails of an nudacions train robbery of of Grant relics, heretofore closed, were | with pay, her nawe now, as a warried ¢ a aci y opened to-day and placed on exhibition at | woman, 1z different from that carried on | the west bound overland train o the South« the National museum. They contained pre- :n.- ||:|i‘ rn;”s ul]lhf‘ dey ~'rlu\enl. l'”n A que ern Pacific railroad last evening, The train ta “he ¢ ither she, can sizn lier maiden name | was stopped at Papago station, elghteen sentation swords, gold-headed canes, cas- [ (OR WHRIHCE SHE, Cof 4 was stoy s e av day comes. Should P Hiloe o kots, medallions and mapy other costly and | per leaye be l'r'\'nkml‘, 06 8 ottt Whe winy mllu'u\sl‘o! lll\,nu.'nbuu( ;{A.»alnglm nvlnn elegant articles presented by different people | wish tot perhaps that she had been wmatried | in& by a red signal light. Obstructions had at different times to General Grant. Many | 80 soon, but that she had not been so gener- | been placed on the track so in case the en- of these articles are souvenirs of his trip | OUS With ler wedding invitations. gineer failed to stop it would be deralled. around the world. There is a splendid col- An Engagemont in High fafe. Frowm five to cight men were engaged in_the lection of Japaneso coins, one series of seven WASHINGTON, April 28.—[Speclal Tele- | robbery. Immediately on the train stopping pieces, old Japanese coius of huge size, being | gram to the Brr.]—There is much gossip [ & dozen or more shots were fired into "lm ex- valued at $5,000. ation cards, | in high circles of society over the rumored | Fress carand an armed man boarded the lo- meni ] reminders "'l'm."va?lf":xwflw engagement of Sir Lionel Sackville West, cmuuu:c to wukl: "h"_«"",“wor,‘_ Fill|llnl OO, O e o call g ven | British minister, and Miss Mattie Mitchetl, [0 Ket open tho exptess car doof \ \ , 9 the robbers placed a stick of giant at San Francisco, upon General Grant’s | danghter of Senator Mitchell, of Oregon, and o 3 Areival ai that city, on his_return. from Iiis | the charm of the story lies in the fact that | POWder under it and compelled Engineer famous tour, is engraved on solid gold and | the marrlaze may be consummated abroad, | Harver to light the fuse. To avold was enclosed in a silver envelope, with the ing. | being blown up the messenger opened the address engraved mpon it. On' the right- Miss Mitchell sails with her mother for Eng. Iand May 7, and Sic Lionel West joing his | door and the robbers took possession of the Tond corngr le o 2ieent stamp and on e tete | daughters abrowd in June. Sonany of the | carafter extinguishing the fuse. They un- "I'he articles shown, besides their historical | recent foreign ministers here have had Amer- | coupled the engine, bagiage and express interests, are of great intrinsic value. Gold, | lcan wives that the prospect of a young Indy | cars from the remainder of the train and silver, sparkling zems and rare wood vie | S0 generally admired as Miss Mitchell takin® | 1o de the engineer wet off. ‘The robbers then with each other to attract the eye. There is | 8 leadinz position in diplomatic circles 18 4 o Casket carved from the wood of & Shukes | Without doubt the most interesting bit of | Pulled out six miles toward Tucson. Hero eare mulberry tree, and many other articles «?ssm heard in Washington for many a day. | they killed the engine and left it. During hat have a value by association, The cases est 18 about fifty-five and Miss Mitchell, | the run they went through the express car, (| \ 184, It was then $7.500,000. Adams had [NVESTIGATING THE ROAD. | {orencss st Sinses: ami - thoueie the office would stand a great deal of investi- — gation on that score. ‘There was an_inclina- tion to legislate azainst the Union Pacitic by President Adams Details His Limited | state lesisiaturcs, and their tax was euor- i i 1 mous, being $1,100,000 per year, Knowledge ot Union Pacific Affairs, At Journad: ATIEMPT and progress of industry was maintained, and the live and the dead capital joined handsin the common welfare. Towards the end of the last century the doctrines of political economy, under the vlea of free contract, broke up the old rola- tions of employer and employed, and the con- flict between capital and labor became per- petual. The power of capital is all but irre- sistible, for the poor must labor for the bread of life. Hunger lays the necessity upon them for the sake of their homes and selves. When the law ceased to intervene, organizations for mutual defense straightway rose. The Knights of Labor and English trades unions represent the right of labor and the rights of association for its defense, Tho power of capital may be estimated from the fact that out of more than 100 strikes not more than five or six have ended In favor of the work- ing men., Their dependence is so absoluto, and the hungor and suiferings at their homes of weak women and innocent children are 80 Intolerable and Imperious, that the con- flict between the live and the dead capital is most unequal, and the freedomn of contract in which political economy glorities itself hardly exists, It is surely, then, the oftice of the chureh to protect the poor and the labor which has built up the human commonwealth, Cardinal Gibbons carefully guards the Knights of Labor from the charges of vio- lence which sometimes arise from organiza- tions of industry. In England deeds of vio- lence bave stained the cause of labor, but it was precisely ignored when the legislature had as yet not recognized the liberty of the association. 'The legal recognition of trades unions brought with it the legal restraints which render such acts punishable at law. It may be said that the violent deeds or trades unionists have ceased to exist. They were abuses of all the undeniable liberty which the law did not protect. The same is true when the liberty of association is KNIGHTS AND THE CHURCH Cardinal Manning Reviews the Recent De- cision of the Holy See. ) LY NCHING. THE ORGANIZATION UPHELD. NEVER LOOKED AT THE BOOKS. A Big Mob Tries to Get at the Lonis- ville Fiends Waorthless Schemes Into Which the | Lovisvirie, April 28, —Turner and Pat- Company Has Be Trapoed — terson, the nn;:ruhnw:\il:\u!i ulr.lcn::o :inw- man, were brought back from Frankfort yes- SR e L terday andincarcerated in jail here. To- night there is a large crowd on the square where the jail is located, and it is asserted Adams On the 8Btand. that the men will be taken out and hung be- New York. April 25.—|Special Telegram | fore morning. The police have found it nec- to the Brk.| he inquisition into the work- | essary to arrest alarge number of people who ing and financial management of all rail- [ were demonstrative, Jennie Bowman is roads that have received aid from the govern- | much worse to-night, ana It is hardly hoped ment in bonds, was resumed to-day by the | that she will recover, commission appointed by President Cleve- 1:70 a. m.—Shortly after 1 o’clock a mob of land. Ex-Governor Pattison presided, and | 500 men and boys, armed with a section of a Commissioner K. Ellery Anderson acted | telegraph pole, marched to charge the jail. asinquisitor. Charles Francis Adams oceupied | Thirty police met them at Fifth and Jeffer- the witness chair. Adams said he had been | son streets. After an order to disperse was president of the Union Pacific road three | disrezarded the police charged and years, and knew a great deal of the road and | the mob seattered in al di- its maunagement and working during his | rections, Several wolicemen were struck presidency, but knew almost nothing about | by stoues, but not seriously injured. About &\]’rlni‘r‘mtm‘:.u l)“i'"i' ",tm* ?g:ffl:”nbz"fi:",e:: ton of the mob were arrested and some story of : . Himeelt on the consolidated tond. He had | found to be armed. The mob are again heard vague stories that Directors Gould | Bathering in large nuwbers on Jefferson Sidney Dillon and F. I.. Ames had so con- | street and it is said another attempt on ducted aflairs that they were in debt to the | the jail will be made, but unless more deter- company. Adams had investigated these | mined will probably be unsuccessful. The Jail is gaurded by thirty police, but if a de- charges, but he was not permitted to state a his conclusion. ~Adams “looked into the | termined onslaught is made it is thought not very great resistance will be made. Nevada, Omaha & Republican Valley and all :30 @ mob of 500, mnn{ carrying sledge A of the branches of the Union Pacific. It was hamuers, organized and started for the jail, a general examination. KEach of them has a separate organization. The Union Pacitic | They seemed determined and appear to have the leaders now. It has not reached the jail A History of Trade Combinations From Their Earliest Inception and the Great Good Which They Have Accomplished, The Escape. Branch Lines, Labor Should Be Sustained. [Copyright 1887 by James Gordon Bennett.) Loxpoy, April 28 —[New York Herald Cable—Spegial to the Br turday’s Catholic Tablet will contain the ensuing ar- ticla by Cardinal Manning on the relation of the Knizhts of Labor to the church, and by the courtesy of the editor of that influential Catholie vaper, an early copy reached your correspondent to-day : Some perplexity may arise from the fact that the Knights of Labor wers conde mned and deprived of the sacraments by the arch- bishops and bishops of Canada, but have now been recognized and restored on a peti- tion of ten out of the twelve archbishops, and, with some exceptions, of the bishops of the United States, by the holy see. The solution of this apparent diversity is ready at hand. 1In its first formation the associa- tion of the Knights of Labor bad more or less marks of a secret society and assuch fell reasonably under the censure of the bishops of Canada. Since that time the president of the Knights of Labor has been changed. Heis, as Cardinal Gibbons attests. a falthful Catholic, and the organization has undergone a revision in all those points which exposed it to the censure. Cardinal consolidated is composed of the Kan- sas Paciiic and Denver Pacific and the old Union Pacitic. Adams thought yet. ( At 3 a. m. the mob moved on the jail again, the charter of the Union Pacific consolidated They reached the guard line, where a scrini- f " T " ho is very handsome and accomplished, is Gibbons aflirms: 1. ‘Fhat in its constitution | Abused to oppress the liberty of labor. 1In | are handsome and lined with plush, Taken ( W30 8 h but did not get more than $6,000 of express YeEy nartows He } dig e Hn mm'll mage took place and several shots were fied, | and laws there is nothing which is con- | those who are outside of the assoclation such | with the relies already on ex[mlnmokr} ‘tlmlay twenty-one. o moncy 80 far as ascertained. ‘They got two 'l‘:cl::l;"mgrvg‘w“srcfi”d‘x:.u Il‘nli:; ;h‘:»nc:::nrl"in :;‘:;tv::‘o:;:;w:fi:::rt. m‘r‘:-: Tt:::mt_ggu(fits‘;ljg demned by the holy see. 2 That there is | 2cts are not only abuse but suicide, for the telllréh;n:fi‘;.he finest collection of the kind in /Yumrneyn mlmnm‘(,l to !'rn_cumz. packages of railroad money amounting to be preident of all of the branches. The ac. | No danel is how approhended. nooath, 3. There is no obligation to se- | liberty of labor is vital to the liberty ot asso- @ WasniNGToN, April 28.—(Special Tele- | §700, and also two packages of postage counts of the branches are kept in Omaha and in Boston. For a transcript of the books the commission would have to see Comp- troller Mink, who knew all aboutit. He never had looked into the books. He relied implicity on Mink. Adams examined the affairs of the Denver & South Park. [t was built by Governor Evans of Colorado in 1852, Adams had heard who made the bargain transferring Governor Evans’ road to the Union Pacilic, but didn’t know who it was. There was a strong competition for posses- sion of the road, and Gould, of the Union Pacifie, Adams thought, sucéeeded in closing the purchase for the road. Prices were much mnflated in Colorado at this timne, and the 8tock In the road was turned over atan ex- travagant vrice, as it turned out soon after, Colorado practically collapsing. The Evans rond was built to gratify a famous mining boom, and carrisd men and tools to spots where holes had been dur in the ground and called mines. *“When the boom collapsed, as every one knows it did,” said Adams, “the road collapsed. 1t has lost money every year since. I'he net loss in o) erating the road last year was $60,000. It gets its business from travel to and from the min ‘The ups and downs in Colorado are sucl at [ do not think the future of this branch is hoveless. If they struck a good Trouble at the Government Office. gram to the Bee.]—The following attorneys | stamps, WasmINGTON, April 28.—(Special to the | were to-day admitted to practice before the BEE.]—At the government printing oftice | interior department: E. M. Day, Ogallala! quite a hubbub has been created by :he en- {Nlcl).‘; l:m)rg(;! B. Y\{\'l()‘nrly imd \‘Yl;(e{ {:’ forcement of n very strange order, which at | Linderman, Emmettsburg, la.; Robert G | o'tojarram was received from Pantano, & once casts suspicion upon the cmployes | Keiniger, Charles City, Tn. Drakeman having walked bagk elicht: Wniles there. 'The order required a special pass to Postoflice Sites Changed. to !lh‘nlt rrtlnnle. I\lll enzllnle ”sl sent d{mn permit packages of any description to be WasHINGTON, April 28.—[Special Tele- | A1d the train was brought in this wmorninv, o ires \ ; " 5 None of the passengers were molested and carried from the building, Great dissatisfac- | gram to the Bnu.j—The sites of Nebraska | wome of them knm\"nulmng of the_trouble tion prevails, especlally among female em- | postoftices have been changed as follows: | until after the arrival at Tucson. Nothing ployes, who have been in the habit of doing | (‘olestield, Howard county, one and one-half | has ?"" been discovered that would lead to their shopping during lunch hours. A ma- mi‘lfsllwnhw :Cmshfln, l'lil"'t]! county, two :lu; (Itl‘nlllly of lllm _l‘uhht‘;r:. l}my are 2‘0::113;: jority of the employes who have their shoe | and three-quarters miles nort \,\'*’5'& LY g ol JAL LG Sl ik b L i work done near the oflice and delivered to | Custer county, one mile northwest. actions in handling the train showed the) A ’ were familiar with tho work., The United them in the afternoon, object to the enforce- The Florida Senatorial Contest. States marshal sent for troops to Fort Lowell ment of the order, because they are required TALLAHASSEE, Fla., April 2 —The sena- | and thirty-iive soldiers are now seouring the to obtain a pass each time to carry out their | torial ballot in open session resulted as fol- | country,” A party of Indian trailers are also old shoes. The passes are collected by the e e e ~|out. A’ reward has been offered by the watchmen at the different doors and turned | lows: Perty, 21: Pasco, 16; Bloxnawm, 18 | Soithern Pacific and express companies ag- i 0, 16; Bl d in to the public printer In the morning. Re- | Scatiering democrats, 8; Goodrich, republic | grogating $2,2 Mk cooh capture. cently the employes were furnished with | ¢3™ i —_————— blank forms to iill outand turn in to the public ‘Another Federal Crumb, COLORADO QUARANTINES. printer. " In filling out these blank forms | WasmiNaToN, April 25.—|Special Tele- hey are required to give their names and ey et : e e et ato wetias tay | er of tho United States land oftico at Nio- | DENVER, April 2S.—(Speclal Telezram ciation. The law, in recognizing both, pro- tects both, They exist when each respects the other. Whed tbey clash they cease to be. The law protects both alike, for law Is the guardian of all liberty. [Signed. | Hexky EpwArD, Card. Archbishop’s House, Westminster. st Yo A BIG DAY R BILL. Gladstone Fats Lunch With Nebras- ka's Prairie Statesman. LoNpoN, April 28,—Cladstone and his wife to-day visited the grounds of the Amer- ican exhibition, and the camp of the Wild West show. A speciai performance was given for their entertainment. They were much impressed by the aborigines. Glad- stone was entertained at lunch by the mana- gers of the exposition. Gladstone, replying to the toast to his health, said, among other things: “The institutions and progress of the United States have always been asubject of great interest to me ever since, very many years ago, I studied the life of Washington. cresy toward competent ecclesiactical au- thority, even outside the confessional. 4. Thereis no promise of blind obedience and obligation beyond the distinctly declared object of the association. Finally, there 1s no hostility either against the church oragainst the state. To this must be added that a very large proportion of the Knights of Labor are faithful,practicing Catholies. It is uvon these grounds .that the ceasure, passed upon its old and censuraole form, is withdrawn, The cardinal of Baltimore, in his letter to Cardinal Simgoni, urges with great force the wisdom and necessity which bids the Catholie church not only to be the mother but the friend and guide of the millions who live by the labor of their hands. Here follows extended quotations from the letter. As the whole text of this weighty document has been printed, we need give no more than the foregoing outline ot its argu- ments. We will therefore go on to justify the prineiples upon which it is founded, and in doing so we will cansider what are the The express messenger saved $5,000 from the robbers by hastily hiding it in the stove. Nothing was known of the affair in Tucson until after midnight, when P iy MEXICAN MINES. Rich Discoveries Made in the Inter- estof Chicagoans. CricAGo, April 28, —[Special Telegram to the Ber.)—Interviews with the Chicagoans whom recent dispatches associate with the discovery of valuable mines in Mexico con- firm the reports. A dispatch from the City of Mexico states that two of the seven legendary mines from which the Spanish congnerors drew inexhaustible quantities of gold and silver until driven out by the In- dians two centuries ago, have been found by an exploring party sent out by a Sonora com- pany two years ago, and prove to be fully as rich as even the legends has them to be. In 1885, the Sonora land company was chartered under the laws of Illinols and Mexico, and the charter members’ original intention was simply to reclaim and survey 15,000,000 acres of fine grazing land contained in three dis- tricts, 'The concession obtained from the Mexican government was that the company was to be granted one-third of the land sur- veyea and mapped and the right of working e A Bar On Omaha, Iowa and Ransas City Cattle. ;my of ttlm mluese dlsco:fir&d‘ "rl")l:n Knights of Labor and what are the rights | God Almighty made the Englishmen and | gre ried or single, soldier or saiior, I;Jr brara, Neb. tothe Ber.1—The state sanitary board has mine, oranew mining country, oranew | incorporators were mo! of lawful organization. In canon law, slav- | Amerlcans kinsmen, and they ought to have | widow or child of either. 1t is thought by o TS I decided on three more quarantines—against ""““,}ll"“dim"fi""‘ it ‘("'““[ 'fil:‘“ 5 Uttloagos 2009 volthal BRI “3c-aby! iar in decme"d as o stato sanctioned by the | affections for one another. li’ they had not | employes that this action was taken in order COMRIGRNIA NDIBLATNES N per. There1s no chance of agricultural ad- “Yes, I belieye lmullc‘!g{v the statement that our men have discovered the Guyanova and Layona mines, as we were assured the; would from advices received from our head- quarters at Nogales, Ariz., over two months 8go. We huve spent a zreat deal of money in our work in Mexico during the past two years. But I am well assured the return we will get is underestimated rather than over- estimated by the dispatch, glowing as it is,” Duflr.‘,' the two years we haye had thirty-six men In the district, with W. J. Glenn aftd Lieutenant Flipper, of West Point fame, in command. ‘The party underwent hardships and dan‘xers enough to furnish food for a library of dime novels, ~They were driven back to Nogales four different times, butjper- severed until four months ago they com- pleted their work by Treaching the extreme southern ~ limit of Guya- nopa, where in the fastnesses of the Seirra Madre mountains they stumbled on a setof charts in a ruined inonastery. The arty then divided under the command of Lieutenants Flipper and Glenn, and the re- sult Is that the Sonora company is richer %) two mines—one silver and the other gold. ‘The latter, which is free milling gold, has assaved 818 to the ton, and is " but 150 miles from the Sonora branch of the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe railroad. Lieutenant Flipper is nowin the City of Mexico, we expect him in Chicago very soon.” Towa, against the Omaha stock yards, and that names might be selected from them :helu l\disclmnlg(h\;ls wg:wc‘lg.\nnlrl that \|he A ¥ar ’l::tcl;ea su::yp u:r.nllrrllze. against the Kansas City stock yards. This ischarges would be sent to their homes in- eology and Politics. o stead of being distributed in the office bv the | Npw York, April 28.—|Special Telegram compels cattle from these polnts to undergo fi-;:xx;x::.w Tods{;v:gwtguut ?iny of :J;: to the BEE.]—The Times this morning prints inspection before being adwitted into the woeks payments ate made, and many em- | & curfons st6fyabout the aleged hostility of | state. ployes looked forward to a discharge this | Archbishop Corrigan and the Catholic church Duluth Against Retaliation. ;‘_’e;"ggpmghls'gm;l:fllm-t'ag! #K(“?m lg‘g‘g‘s’ to President Cleveland and the efforts to | sy, Pau, April 25.—A Duluth speclal to e thate Tuteh baskets, hs has been puty | defeat his renomination. Most of the in- | the Ploncer-Press says: The board of trade lished, formation is alleced to come froma close | to-day took action on the lisheries question, Milltary Matters. friend of Dn“\lclxlynn.uit .l' well known | ypanimously adopting a memorial to the WasnIxGToN, April 28.—|Special Tale- | lere that McGlyun was a powerful factor In | presigent calling attention to the large gram to the BEE.)—Army furloughs have causing Cleveland’s election and that Cleve- | amount of trafic between Duluth and Ca- been Issued as follows: Sergeant James T, land expressed his gratitude afterwards. Dr | nadian ports, and glving reasons why the s ans James 2| McGlynn is reported as saying that Corrigan | freedom of trade and transportation between Avyres, Sixth cavalry, four months; Private 1d him he ed to Cloveland’s elec- | the northwestern states and territories and Patrick MeGever, company A, Twentieth fn. | told him he was opposed to Cleveland's clec L Canada shonld not be restricted. 'The objec tantry, four months, tion, The Times’ story contains the followine | jg'to gecure the exemption of the northwess e . C 3 about Corrigan’s attitude toward Blaine if he | from any general proclamation putting in pArmyleavos: Captain Stephon . Jooclyn, | i again o candidate. ‘This statement of tho | force retnlintory measures. 1t is said fike wenty-first infantry. two months sick | o ohhichops attitude comes from his grace’s | action wiil be taken in other cities of the leave; First Lieutenant Charles E, Kilbourne, own lips and was told by Mrs. James G northwest, Second infautry, seventeen davs; First Lieu- P! 8 kit 2 Sl EE T ) o ; L Ldeu | 11iine, fr., to whom he said it. _She, it will eatio tenant Charles M. Twill, Twenty-iirst in- | ba remesbered * whe Sias ~ Nevivs, ‘the Weatheriindloationss fantry, one month extension. granddanghter ' of an old ~ democratic For Nebraska: Generally fair woather, Army orders: Second Lieutenant Jacob | statesman of Ohio, Samuel Mn(lnr{. She is [ variable winds, stationary temperature ex- F. Krops, Twenty-second infantry, has been | 8 Catholic. Just betoro her wedding, nc- | cept in eastern portions, silihtly warmer. detailod s military professor at the Alle- | companicd by Father Dacey, she and young law of nations but contrary to the law of nature. Much confusion has existed upon this point. By the law of nature no man can be sold, and no man can sell himself, and no man can buy a man nor held property in man slavery. The Jew- ish law consisted in the sale and purchase of the labor of a man, not the man himself, and whatever the] nations in christendom may have held and taurht, tho christian law has never sanctioned the violation of tie natural law that man held property in man—slavery; that the Russian emperor was a violator of the law of nature—serfdom. Christendom was founded uvon christian and canon law, Neither slavery nor serfdom exists any longer. In the English-speaking people’s world— that is, in the new world, which seems to be moulding our future—a workingman is a free man, both in his person and in the labor of hishand. The mere muscular labor of his arms is his own to sell as he wills, to whomsoever he wills, and wherever and for whatever time he wills, and at whatever price he can. If his labor be skilled, or even half-skilled labor, it is all the more valuable and absolutely his own possession. In truth, It is the most precious form of capital which gold and sil- ver may purchase, but on which gold and silver absolutely depend. Money isbut dead capital after all, but the live capital of human intelligence and the human hand is the primeval and vital capital of the world. Un- less these rights of labor can be denied, the liberty of organization to protect these rights and the freedom founded on them cannot be denied. The association of labor In its various kinds is traceable in the Greek, Roman, and christian civilization ot the world. The hetaieral of the Greeks and the collegia of the Romans were tried associations, Cavalliere di Rossini, in his work on the inscriptions in the museum of St. John, later on, has pointed out many examples of these associations, and this traditional practice has passed into christian law and exists in Rome down to this day. In the church of Santa Maria Dell Oreo, every chapel belongs to and is maintained by some college or uni- versity of the various trades, 1t may be said that the labor and industries of the christian vancement in that region. Colorado busi- ness, in railroad parlance, means such as & urely mineral country produces. This ranch has been a burden to us for three years. When we bought the road tnere was # bonded debt held by outsiders of $1,500,000, and these, together with the cost of the ex- tension to Leadville and thence to Gunnison, were provided for by the isuance of $4,- 850,000 in cnnuull-med‘ bonds.” 1In this statement Mr. Adams was aided by Judge Johm W. Dillon, who was a spectator. These bonds, Mr. Adams said,are now in the Union Pacilic treasury. 1n the course of his leulmon! Mr, Adams said he had found the Council Bluffs street railway, a road about a mile long, among the properties which had become possessed of in a former regime. *I think this road bought this street railway because it facilitated getting up into town, and I believe we can make it a saleable piece of property. 1t is zood property to sell, The Leavenworth & Topeka, running between the Union Pacific and the Atchison & Santa ‘e, was purchased jointly by these two roads. 1t had $530,000 worth of stock, not far from fifty-five miles in length, It was bought to connect with Topeka and it barely ays, Adams thought that this road was no onger valuable to the Union Pacifie. The Kansas Pacitic and Union Pacific are con- n by the Maphattan & Blue Valley, four miles long, which runs from Manhattan to Garrison, It was built by the Union Pacific, and had been runnin only a few months. 1t does a splendid busi- ness, being the connecting road between Kansas City and Omaha. It was built regu- larly under contract. The Omaha Belt Line was included in a pet scheme of Clarke, who resigned as general manager of the Union Pacific shortly after Mr. Adams became resident. Clarke didn’t like to lose the elt Line, and it was aided by the Union Pacific until it was discovered that the Mis- souri Pacific had obtainea control of it, and the Union Pacitic was repaid every dollar it had spent on the Belt Line. The St. Joo & Western, which was included in Gould’s scheme for a rand system west of the Missour was ~_ purchased. Ltis twenty-five miles long, running west from St, Joe, and does an agricultural busi- ness, The fstock was at 70, and was bought in by the Union Pacific at that price. Adums wished to state that this stock was bought at open market by Gould and Dillon, and that the rond has alw paid. He be- lieved, from careful scrutiny, that Gould and Dillou had also been more than fair to the company. He believed that they had a per- Sonal interest in Union Pacific 5o strong that they had always been rather overscrupulous elr transactions with or for the e ‘The Salena, Lincoln & Western ral y was constructed from Salena, Neb. the company. Itruns into a eountry from humanity wonld ery shame upon them. I rejoice that the clouds which once obscured our mutual vision have almost vanished from our political sky, and that the future is as bright and promising as the warmest hearted among us could desire.” Colonel Huges Hallett, member.of parlia- ment, will entertain “Buffalo BIll” at dinner to-Inorrow. Belgium's Cattle Bill, (Copyright 1887 by James Gordon Bennett.) BRUSSELS, April 28,—|New York Herald Cable—Special to the Br ‘The discussion of the cattle bill continued. Dumont, the au- thor of the bill, allied the proposals so that the duty would be reckoned according to the weight instead of according to the head of cattle, Several free trade members contend that this change would be equivalent to an increase of 50 per cent duty. One free trader, Mr. Piermse, said: *You wantto prevent the importation of American cattle. Well, the people cast hungry looks toward the fine and cheap American flocks of cattle. Let the latter be imported if the masses profit by it.”” The debate adjourned till to-morrow. or Towa: Fair weather, variuble winds 4 _ Mr. Blaine went to the palace and applied to | slightly shifting to west and south, nearly gheny college, Meaaville, Pa., July 1, reliev- | the bishop tor a dispensation to allow | stationary temperature except slightly mgz First Lieutenant A. M. Fuller, Second | her to marry a protestant. 'The archbis) warmer in eastern lowa. cavairy, who will “join his ' troops; | hesitated about xrantinz the di i For Kastern Sergeant M. B. Ward, Seventh cav- | and made various objections of lowed by local showe i been placed on the ratived list; | nature, all of which the young lady, who is | winds shifting to south and west, slight Captain Gaines Lawson, ‘I'wenty-tifth infant- | very brizht and well informed, et and | chances in temerature except in southern ry, has been granted one month’s extension | answered. At length he said to Mr, Blaine: | portions, slightly warmer of leave: everal _court martial will con- | “You should consider carefully the step S - vene to-morrow at Madison barracks, Sack- | which you wish to take, for it may imperil The National Opera Company. etts Harbor, New York, of which Captain | the chances of youv illustrious father in the | §Ax Francisco, April 28.—[Special Tele- Alexander B, MacGowan, Twelfth infantry, | campaign ot 185" Miss Neving understood | o 0% ¢ B/ ]—The National Opera ill be president, and_ Lieutenant Benjamin | himto mean that If I married a Catholic | &' B 2 A. Poore, same regiment, judge advocate; | girl the protestants might take | Company is making a great success in its General Henry A. Morrow, colonel Twenty- | offense and vote against Mr. Blaine, | second week of the season at the Grand first infantry, has been detailed as president | The young couple made no reply to this, and | Opera house, each performance being glven of the court of inquiry at _Kort Robinson in | the archbishop continued: —“Your father is | 45 tne full capacity of the house. To-night Eace of General Albert V. Kaatz, colonel f the most eminent, if not the wmost | 7" W CATERY © R et Sizhth infantrs, who is too lll to attend the ent in the country, and you should con- Lakme, . wiion _hes. mads Of6 - ECTORE court. This is the court asked for by Major how this action of yours may affect his | greatest hits of tho Soason T Blven 0 on Daniel N. Bash, paymaster, on account of the . Miss Nevins fired up at this and ‘""1”!“““{2 “l“tl'“'{fl_e- wNoxtontay Sl n- recent robbery he sustained in Wyoming, d to the archbishon: *“Then your ob- ‘]““l“ Khl]"l _"I'Ull\ h Oro’* W pro- S jection to our marriage is a mere polit! duced for the first time here. Nebraska and lowa Pensions. ossibility, You fear that the marriage WASHINGTON, April 25.—[Special Tele- | two young people who love one anoth gram to the Beg.|—Pensions wero granted | dearly, will be the cause of some Injury toth Nebraskans to-day as follows: James M, | Political prospects of somebody else. ‘That Allen, Oak; Washington J. Jobes, Lincoln: | &StHange, oblection The archb — The Canadian Confederation, OTTAWA, April 25.—[Special Telegram to the Bre.)—Last evening, in the house, Welch, member for Prince Edward’s Island, in the course of a debate told the government that unless the promises made by the union ol provinces be maintained to the very letter, his province would withdraw from the con- federation. He did not threaten secession, but simply pointed out what was the sure outcome of the great feeling of unrest now prevailing there. He said that the confeder- ation was a curse to Prince Edward Island, and a shame generally. His province ?‘nhl out $800,000 per annum and received back in every shape only about $400,000. If let alone and independent of the contederation it would be one of the most prosperous commu- nities, not only In Canada but in the world. ————— Dakin Found Guilvy. LANsING, Mich,, April 28.—In the Dakin bribery investigation to-day it was stated that in the room of the municipal corpora- tions committee of the house hung a sign, “We smoke; it we don’t, up goes your bill.” Also in the senate judiciary committee room was the suggestion, **The tender of cigars fa- eilitates business.” If no cigars were carried by those wishing to influence legislation in these rooms the cizar box was passed for §1. The Arrest of Schnaebele. PAnis, Avril 28, —Herbette, French ambas- sador at Berlin, telegraphs that yesterday evening he had an interview with the Ger- man minister of forelgn affairs and ihat the latter maintained that French territory was violated when Schnaebele was arrested. Herbette adds that Count Bismarck states Germany is Inclined to admit that the arrest was irregular and contrary to the Franco- German frontier convention of 1877, and on this account will release Schuaebelo when letters alleged to have been written by Guntsch are proved to be authentic. The dispatch adds that 1t is believed that the re- 1enseof Schnaebele will take place to-day, or at the latest to-morrow, and that Herbette is to have another interview with Bismarck during the day. The Journal des Debats ublishes a dispatch stating that the Schnae- s affair has been amicably settled between :0 and Germany. BeRLIN, April 28.—The North German Gazette semi-oflicially states that the im- perial ministry has “just furnished the for- eign office with the following facts relative to the Schinaebele affair. Kaene, a commer- cial agent of Strasburg, and Grebert, a manu- facturer of Scheltzheim, were found to be Fair weather fol- in northern portion, Another Railroad Change, Cnicaco, April 28It is announced to-day thal F. Goddard has been promoted 4 x::'](’m"l.;:l" to the general managership of the Atchison, Daniel Lazarus, Gibbon; Samuel ‘Peter, | made with a wood deal of vigor, | Tovelu & Santa I'e and also the Chlcago, Shickley; Benson Playmate, Haigler; Georzo | 85 Mrs. Blaine possesses great [ Kansas & Western road, vice C, W, Smith, Babbltt, Cambridee; William 1L Nealy, De- | force of ' character, and he - felt ‘out. | Vice-Lresident sinith will probably remove witt; John W. Wixon, Stella; Cyrus C. raged by the lack of consideration for her 1{0- his oftice to Chicago to superintend ha : : ! sition and her womanly feelings, which the Weaver, North Loup; Seneg Anthony, Fair- | archbishop eyinced. “If you will not give ucceeds Goddard as traflic man= s » > - communicating to the French various plans | field. us permission to marry,’” said she, *'1 know S P R try from | 1t was stated that generally the money was | world have always organized themselves for | of German fortress and other treasonable in- | Pensions for Iowans: Theodora, widow | tnoneh of thootogy 16 bo aware that our fiss g ich lsdrawn first-class business. Another | spent tor soclal purposes to iniluence legisla- | mutual improvement ana dofense. The | telligenco. 1t was proved that Schnaebele | of Adam Aulman, Des Moines; Rachael B, [ warriage, it not celshiated according to rites Increase in Wages. hmh‘l'u )cu peting II‘:leKnurll!m”mfmli- 9 luiu. Sraionst sk (7 o crafts guilds and the trith guilds ot the Scan- | had personaf interviews with theaccused and | widow of Daniel W. Goode. Bloomfield; | of our chureh, will be pertectly valid, and Prrrsnuna, April 28,—Umpire Jackson, of SIS Sempatig e eud wie Halon I .te to-night the arguments were con- | jinavian and Saxon races sowed the first | had written letters to them. It has been fully | Martha, mother of John Kitterman, Deltai | no matter by whom performed, and we Shall | the coke arbitration board appointed to settlg e i defense. | cluded and Dakin found guilty. By unani- ; proved that Schnaebele’s f arrest was made | George' R. A. Barnard, Sidney; W The road is fitty miles long and cost about | mous yote he was expelled from the floor | seeds not only of our great commercial pros- e ¢, pd be married either with or without your $14,000 per wile. Adams stated that the perimission.” on German soil. Schnaebele admits writing Goorgetown, Breckenrige & Colorado rail- the wages dispute between the operators and the letters, Thisstatement is not considered miners, decided to-day that the condition of awson, Van Meter: Edinund [ muel A. Hamilton, Brighton and privileges of the hous perity, but even of our municipal towns. iel — R i rinee Scir— ‘The crafts guilds at first contained both mas- | inethe light of a threat, but is looked upon | Nelson, Des Moines: William k. Clin A Miser’s Hidden Wealth Found. the coke trade would not justify any increase e ohane Gheinearing | - Lobster Fishors Perish, ters and workmen. When tho mas. | Simply as an officlal justification of thearrest | ter Point: William Wilson, Newto e o Mt Yo | 4 wakes o wvardwns a great surprise o tain ino the mines. Now there are four- YanryourH, N, H,, April 28.—Tuesday | torg hecome capitalists they formed | ©f Schuaebele, ham C. Price, Sizourney ; Frederick > 1, | yenry Pete A e T ho mivers. It aflects the wages BX ten miles of the missing. link. - Thousands | afternoon a large number of lobster fishers | fiiilac o their own. and the - workmen LoNDON, ~April 38.—A dispatch from | Anamosa: ‘Tiomas Wilglt ‘Glenwoodi'| Henry Peterh, an oid rosldant of this, yy | wen. . of fourists visitit, 118 Amnual business s | Went up Lothe traps in boats. A violent gale [ S48 of ML ! » | Mancy to thé Daily News says: Commis- | Levi Pretis, Sheflield: Presley’ E. Barhal, | who used to keep a grocery store and saloon, AnAD At AR e only§87,000. It 18 valuable to the Unfon | came up and prevented tbelr return. Not or mulur.n‘ pmgcclmn. united among them- | sary Gautscn, 1n an interview, declared he is | Waukeon; George W duer, Sumner, died. At the time of his death he was known Roxir Aol ispatoh fra.n ALAES Pacilic 'beécause it may represent $100,000 | until to-day, when several steamers arrived, | selves. The live capital and dead capital | in ‘no way implicated 1n the Schnaebele Petitions From the Coast. to have money, but he did not leave a will or | 10MF, Al e o o worth of traflic of the main line. 'I'he | couldany definite information of the men’s |.stood face to face in antagonism, but always | 8ifairand lioved that Bismarck would publicly g aowah says that General ta, the Italian fate be obtained. Three are known to be drowned and others are missing. Many mar- velous escapes are reported. ———— A Brilliant Wedding. KixastoN, N. Y., April 28.—Ira Daven- port, late republican candidate for governor, married yesterday afternoon to Miss Catherine Sharpe, The wedding had all the brilliant accompaniments of wealth and sta- tion. ‘The bridal couple will spend the honeymoon in Europe. Junction City & Fort Kearney railway is eighteen miles from the eastern terminus of the Union Pacitic and is a splendid feeder, being in an agricultural district. ‘The Kan- sas Central connects with two other branches and thus indirectly with the main line. It 18 a poor property, but can possibly be made rofitable by widening the guage. The maha & Republican (’:\llm‘ railroad gon- 8ists of a system of 750 miles in Nebraska. Itruns through an agricultural country, He would like to buy it up av any tine. The Uuion Pacific road was built in’the most ex: clear him. He said he arranged the meeting with Scmmebeleinglood faith, being ignor- ant of the Leipsic edict. WASHINGTON, April 2% —Secretary Mosley | tell his folks whero lo kept his wealth. ||, odore, has notified the merchants to res yesterday received a numerously signed pe- ,'l;’f;j,‘,d'“‘,::i:j,;_,“‘hf:“"'l‘h‘,{,‘,;” & onisen, A8 B | call their agents from Abyssinia as he is tition from citizens of California requesting ‘m‘““ Ho said t0 his wife that she would find ‘l‘-“l‘l‘c‘iu to proclaim a blockade on sea and lhellller~nntelcumuwrcecorTx;uls}lun not ]'u plenty ,l,,,. R e (""IT";' Oltee 1S | land. suspend the operation of section four of the | death. The hoifse was ransacked from top . 5 T tata somexare Taw o far as. the come | to bottam, but nothing could. be founds o Fussian Conaptes AL “',‘I.'T"("l"l o merce of the Paciiic coast is concerned, until | short time azo plumbers, w ) S, PETERSBURG, April 85.—The trial an opportunity be afforded all persons in- [ the cellar, eame acrossa heavy box, which | the prisoners implicated in the plot to kill terested Lo be heard, The petition, however, | was found filled with gold ddllars, eagles | the czar have commenced. The courts are approves of the suspension of section four | and foreizn mouney to the aggresate of guarded. As the accused entered on articles requiring low rates and rapid | nearly $20, rt, their youth and high-bred sir transit for long distances. in the end were reconciled either by wise ar- bitration or by wise and just laws. It is a noatble fact in our English history that these guilds, with which the imperial laws con- tinued to deal oppressively, were always recognized, incorporated and chartered by the laws of the kings of England. It would seem as 1f the temperate, law- abiding spirit of our race, so long as equal laws prevailed, rendered all such organiza- The Crimes Bill Advanced. LoONDON, April 28.—In the commons to- night the motion otfered by Reid, liberal, that the house decline to proceed with any meas- ure directed against tenants combining for relief until afull measure for their relief from excessive rents was presented to par- le at work e . . ) ympathy. mong the prisons R R b AT T U D tion innocent, safe and fruitful of the public | liament, was rejected. ‘The motion that the | ~ A communication -from the ehamber of Discriminating ien Suspended. | G T L ,';,'L:“gwfiml;_' prisony system had been elaborated at an _enormous The Montreal Flood welfare. 1t must not be forzotten that some | house go into committee on the crimes bill | commerce of Tacoma, W. T, was received, WASHINGTON, April 25.—The wpresident ——— expense and every dollar of that money | MONTREAL, April 25.—The flood is once | of the most ancient cities were tormed by an | was adopted. Parnell is suffering from a | 88King that the trans-continental lines be ox- | this afternoon issued a proclamation sus- Fatal Cn Wind Storm, mizht just as well have been yMid into | more contined within the river's banks, ‘The | aggregation of erafts guild. Westill possess | cold and is confined to his house at Avon- empt from the fourth section, pending diseriminating ~ duties, tonnage, CiicaGo, Apri terrilic wind storm tbe pockets of the stockholders in dividends. | destruction of property has been ereat in the | statutes of such guilds dating from the | 4al€: Ireland. In the debate, before the vote “The branches of the road were paying, so it would seem, for while they made dencits, it eatruall : National Capital News. taxes, ote., upon vessels of tiie Netherlands | prevailed late this afternoon west and southe flooded distriets,and the peopie re now very on Reid’s motion, Thomas O'Connor accused i i ¥ | eleventh century. ‘There were twelve guilds | Baiour, chief secretary for lreland, of gross | WASHINGTON, Apri Special ‘Tele- | and the Ditteh East Indies under the law au- | west of the eity, Four frame cottages in the :ul.mfl ‘h“h?"tfi fed the main line with ?;,‘:‘l;‘;\h".",‘,:fi,‘.{{,:g ‘“"",“,"" Bway 19 dedrly (‘;1 Torwnll; twvlza in l\nmx s Lynn, nine in | ignorance respecting Tho State of that eoune | gram tothe BEE.|—The ncting secretary of | thorizing him to make sueh exemption where | Town of Lake were demolished and two usiness on which large piofits were made. A ishop's Lynn, Canterbury Led three, and similar advantaces have been atforded ves- prkmen wete killo the interior to-day declined to allow the claim | Sels of the United States, workmen were killed. of W. M. Hinman, of Lincoln county, - Nebraska, for $1,119 on account of loss The Grottkau Jury Out, sustained by Ogallala Sioux Indians in 1564, MinwAL April 28.—The jury in the lr{, and contended if he himself dealt with erime in England on the basis with which the ministers tavorin: coercion dealt with erime in Ireland, he coul i truly appalling, M Adams had calculated that the Union Pacific was recelving about §5,000,000 from its branch system. ‘The company had gone into outside enterprises not always successful. ‘The road was driven into schemes to develop -~ Want Resrrictions itemoved. ToroxTO, Apti —~At to-night's session of the farmers’ convention a resolution was Over had guilds and a guild hall. York had three and ByVerly had four. But London is believed to have been the birthplace of guilds, Firein N April 25,—The six-story brick New Yon ce and Timothy Healy k T building on Canal and Baxter streets, oceu- v adopted declaring it to be the opinion | and the constitution of London was based | placed seventy-nine additional amendments | ‘The claim was not presented within the time | case of Paul ttkau, charged with ineiting |:i'd‘ by furniture m:lmuf;u'l\u--n and uphols this or that industry by the press | that the removal of all restrictions on trade | upon guilds and served as a model for other | to the first clause of the bill fixed by law, : riot at the Milwaukee garden last May, re- | Sery fos, buned to-nights Loss estimated and people. They clamored and cried | between the United States and Canada was English towns. According to the judica - — James Seabright, of Omaha, Is at the Met- | (001" o050t iis aternoon, with instructions | at $500,000, s the road owas. hot enlerprisiog | desirable. civitates Luudonll, in the time of King | , Terrible Australian Hurricane. Topollan, ordan 1s expected to arrive in | 10 Teport the verdict in the morning. The ; - N s ead Pha” haaf e Athettanc the frith and sullds ot Londag | Lowbo, April28.—A dispateh trom Pereu, | ylreasuter J ordan 13 wxpected to arrive In | goyeril’ impression is that Grottkau will be McGlynn Again Refuses. Teckiesshess wlien one of them failed. April 25.—Advices from Scutar, | united into one guild, which governed the | the capital of Western Australia, says: +A | from there to Washington. I o Loxpox, April 3.4 dispateh from RAg rfiffi'&'n‘"id'fln. w:fiflffg.fififif?mfl A"”‘n!l‘t'kl‘? "‘“l‘d"“’ Lr“"'{““""‘l" ki"‘fl; town and gave the law not only to members 52{{“"1‘3'&"%'an‘n’fl‘fifi{‘nfifl.‘.fi-fl.’.‘g% The Alaskan Fisherles Steamship Arrivals, tothe Chronicle says: “Rev. Dr. McGlynn, 3 seven ‘Turkish soldiers for interfering wit! boat t Y ¥ of an instance where a dircetor, officer or employe of the Uanion Pacitic bad had any interest in -n{ contract with the Union Pa- _cific. ‘The last dividend of the road was de- ared in March, 1884, The net earnings of road tor the past three years had been de- but to non-members living in the city. ‘Tne | boats. was destroyea aud 530 persons per- liveries or companies of the city of Lomdon | ished.” are seventy-four, and are evidently the old TRaotor Tas traditional guilds from which the old munici- lnvno':ulxxflw;:l—“':n:‘.hll:l:m. Watson, pal lawof London sprang. We have said N & O ‘ that as long as these organizations were rec- ,‘.‘.’;’.‘fi.fi”’i&“&'&a’l"fl’xfim"‘f" “'fl'naéffi‘;?"‘ ognized aud protected by eaual law, the peace | £100,000, the tomb of the noted leader, “Bid Doda.” —— The Shot Proves Fatal GreENADY, Miss., April 28.—Rev. Mr. Ste- vers; who was shot here by W. P. Fowler, died tlas morning. ‘There have been . no fur- ther developments in the case. WAsuINGTON, April 28,—The department | NEW Yonk, April 28,—|Special Telegram | of New York, has agaln mfumlu-d the vat of state is carefully considering the question | 10 the BEE.|—Arrived—The steamer Paola, | lcan that lie refuses o como to Rome. of jurisdiction of the United States over the | from Hamburg: the Benniand from Antwerp; Natural Gas in Kansas. Alaskan fur seal fisheries. The vast Alaskan 9 T i _Arrived—The Orrawa, Kan, April 25.—Natural gas SOUTHAMP L April 4 fisheries are thought to be quite as important | Trove, from New York for Bremen. was struck here to-day at adepth of 500 April 25, — Arrived—"The | feet. ‘The pressure was too strong for meass to this country as the Nova Scetian inshore \Y NSTOWN, " tisheries, and the state departmnent is obliged Br(lluuu\c‘ trom New York, viements ighest point July 1, ¢ new lines east of the Missourl, W,

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