Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 13, 1892, Page 2

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2 OMAHA DAILY BEE: TURSDAY, DECEMBE SPEDERATION OF LABOR EETS | 5055 thcua i b bt | TWO SIDES T0° THE MATTER | st tsbe (e s nsss | HOMESTEAD POISON PLOT S i =+ = [ CTTL, CONBINE (OLLAPSED today men nonunion operators | Another complaint for libel was filed yes W3 The action of both Judges and officors of i - R torday nigainat 3. T, Tavwis, agent of the Sun the United States been so flagrant in viola- | FATHER CORRIGAN ON TRIAL ! [ 4 . - ¥ day Sun, and 1ast ovening ho was arrested Wage Earners Assemblo at Philadelphia in | {lon of he law, that 1 helieve ibour duty to ‘ Rook Tsland Officials and Operators Don't 4 Amalgamated Officials Talk of the Chargos | The complainant is W. H. Boyd American Live Stock O\ i : 0 One of Hoboken's Papular Priests Chnrged , solice Capt tor - sive Stoc ommission Company D A of the oneres of 1 Agroo in Thotr Storles. with Eoelestastion] Diselplh Against Them, Poliee Captain Cormack {8 still vory siek | | | . | and during the last two or throe Aays Goes Into Liquidation, It s plainly evident that the militia of our NEwARK, N. 4., Dec., 18, , i kot A Rl BBl s AL R I several states Is now never utilized, except P. C. Corrigan of the Ghuseh of Our Lady of that his physicians will not allow any one to NOTABLE PEOPLE WHO ARE PRESENT | for burposes of ostentations show o & not ‘ CERTAIN THE STRIKE IS STILL ON | Grace of Hoboken, on the fundamental | THEY ALL DENOUNCE IT AS A CONSPIRACY | sco him X | FORCED TO SURRENDER BY THE COURTS even o pretence that they should be what charge of - breach of ecolesiastical discipline, | Detective Vizard r o F . : ’ h sa— rubbor boots vesterday which had been | - they were originally designed for, “‘an_arm was bogun this afte sfore the dio< it ¥ Nlao'n e o [ Prestdont Gompers Makes 11a Annual Re- | fue” of the oo ,'.1‘.’}‘ a citizen soldie | Ulnima on Both Sides Supported by State- | SO0 0 ’f'l'l':'":::"]':l_'*‘\";m:_l"'”r2“‘ | Carnegle Attorneys Clatm That Their Chain m from B Godso. ~ Also a #12 overcont €l n Existonce Only a Short T h port—Strikes and Other Labor Questions | national guard.” Instead of being the ™ pop ments from the Interested Parti Patrick's cathedral,,, Rev. Father d. J bk Hibvssibfiosdc ol South Tonti et 1D DT ‘ v Y e Organizat " . ular organization in defense of homes and Vi 5 L d v 75 i ith Tenth street Exhnustively Discussed — First Day's o e ey Geramted (nlo & What the Company and the O'Connor of Setton hall, vicar general of the acking to Conviet the Acen rday the police arrosted George machine of monopolistic oppression against Balletins Say. diocese, was the t Intge lored, again for petit lar | 1abor RN It was the expressed wish of Bishop Wig- clothing {s what Davis always steals and he | | "What the toflers necd at this time is to | mer that no statement should be given out Mo Qb el o Bty s ALl Putapeurmia, Pa, Doc. 12, —President | answer the bitterness and vindictiveness of | That same wide variance botween the | ot [hi6 1o statement should bo glven ot | pyrencna, Pa., Dee. 12.—The officials of | around until he can bundie up somo bed | cyyougo, T, Doo, 12— (Spoctal 1T Gompers opened the twelfth anmunl session | U orpT with arganization, o | Statements of tho interested parties 0 the | g g™ i jond_ that persons present | i Amalgumated assoclation sny tho story | Clothing and spirl it away 45 T S e inl (:\.vfl«;.'m N arat ety | e 8 nd result of corporate | o reland toleg: ors' Strikke marked the | o edge themselves to silence thiat the ohganization cothtonanoed the pio - ¢ 0 JER. | —An important event in the of the American Federation of Labor in Tn- | el Son' al and debasing. | :‘im““ ~-“"‘ ’_;' l"‘\‘ ”"'_“” m ::\ lvmh».- | when the oath had been administered to all u:;,,.h,, " S e ;l . \" L, NEWS OF VESTERDAY. cattle sts of thé west transpired at the dependence hall this morning. A address | Shetntion gesterday. AL e Comany o e, | exoopt Fatiet Comian, Ho tatased to bind | [0 LT otitinloninen & worl it the milh | Great Northern hotel today in the final sur- of welcome on hehalf of the Union I | e iy oLt OARRIION o W | e e RS ERCGR SHRY R . | HIneuIY It v vhind an Ui vatendas dwn | = PECDOTWITOUS. | 6 HSIOTHIATS S0 SO0 e il Xieh g i ronder of the groat cattle trust of all its rue of this city was delivered by G 2 | sworkers 18 alsg force, but it 18 the force of | W08 working smoothly nd that no fmport- | ecclosiastical trial of country-wide import- | Ne£ies, however, say the chain of evidence LR TGN “{\1 oy ’\.. geeused | yyqin0as in submission to the final decision Chanee of Typographical union No. 2 workers is alsg foree, DUt it 18 ing. ‘Before | Ant offices were without operators. Tom | ance, ho had a right to express his views | aginst the leaders is growin Gttt vinage, o ; of the Mlinois A committee on credentials was announced | the force of r . the' force of brutality | Wilhelm, who was reported to have joined | ;\W'\'”vm‘“' known the procecdings of the chorn Valley, W. Vi, s in the Live Stock Commission v NOSE and the convention took a recess until 2 | must give way the operators on Saturday night, was pound- | W X ; om will be able to cscap days heen the ' seone of one colt # b B T Believing that the people of our country | Father O'Connor decided to the contrary ¢ marder and several shooting afray i ns of dollars, investod in over ealbtk delicving that the people of our counthy | fug away steadily at a key,and sald he had | D Burtzedl, then, on belalf of the de Willinm H. Gatches, treasury of the ad AL ki R e IR B PR e T i Among the prominent labor men in the | e Ty i moncy | Mo idea of deserting the company. There | fendant, objected to n ‘trial before Dr, 0'Con- | Visory boavd, came down from Homestead i o Uho pist fode weeks boen | ontirs wost, has go convention, besides President Gompers and | power upon the men at Homestoad fn chavg- | Were six freight trains west u:y‘l 'Y.l\"l enst ;,‘ i, ‘un :hw rnn’\ Hv’H S ‘\ hoas he was | today, and in an interview said The ) b ‘-'l‘“. \u 'M“r‘ 0 to mee WIS lave 1 By ontils e ar Jo Lannon o sw York | ing them with heinous crimes the executive | and two passenger trains inand out during member of the bishop's house he must | chamre that s BRI oF: L i vinow ind Witbhur Marley were Kitled | ! E ¢ cattle men, wero Secretary Iivans, New York; Samuel | soytell issued an Spres 0 GO pany claims to be andling business with all | fons i was party Lo any blot to poison notl | Jured by the collpse ot a buliding avMdnix, | inots, Missourd, Kansas, Toxas. Tndian ter Goodwater, president of the Cigarmakers® | W lE CRCE AL D iber 13 of this year | due celority It was finally decided that Mgr. Doane o that any member of [ 8¢, Louts, M Y 5. | Titory, New Mosico, Avizona and Colorado, Anion of Detroit; Charles Dold of the sathe | hns heen designated as *Homestead d On the otficr hand the operators say that | Wi is a member of Bishop Wigo B At e (el b BRI Mo Lk B gl R carly all the prominent cattle mon of the union. Ch P. 1. Petna, vice president | and all are requested to contribute a portion | they ave gaining ground; that the company’s | hold, —_should | be appointe I mind would enter into sucha plot. Murder | that ecity thirty=four notorious characters | country met and organized the Amo of the United Mineworkers of Linton, Tna.; | Of their earnings of that day for the purpose | reports of all offies being manned 4 m- | with Dr. O'Connor " to h: + evider i ' o Tnited Mineworkers of Linton, Ind.; | ¥ N y always will out and this fact alone would | 8Waiting trials for their erimes Live Stock C. - y A stated | b t the movement of tr: scar- | of witnesses on Wednesday, and then | provent o 6 oAt “Hot-heaasd ma |~ Kansas has sottiod et Inay county sont | Live Stock Commission company with offl- J. A. Crawford, state president of the 0 (ile 1o sy Thib Deienuks 6 A9 fiot frely without the assistance of | report to the vegu e et | prevent even tho most hot-leaded man in 1 1y seat war 3 o | bur ranks from entoring. into conspiracy | Without hloodshed. Liberal is now the county rs at Kansas City, St. Louis, Chicago and asstul ih the e 4 sgraphers, and s congequently muchham- | and also the objections by Dr. Burtzeli d s b Ll seat of Seward county. Springfleld, which has | Omaha, For twelve months they cone | perea.” known in Homestead. If polson was ndmin- | pesuit ot ti e formor town submitied 0 the | quoted their busincss quictly and thelr of tho United Mine: | past, that it 1s useless for us to ogain make | K. I Scott, who has been aconductor on | referee: a to bins they ate o [ fatared to the nontinfon mon—and 1 6 1ot | question i favor of Livosat o Goctdedtho f oo fits ncoumulnto bR, \ P, MeGuire, viee | Dot e e teblion thit lmitation of the | the Rock Island for many years, said to a re- | select a third refc The report of the | holiove there was—the guilty parties were | ? d B s b A president of the federation and secre Iy hours of labor. Toadmit it is to de- | porter for Tuk Brr yesterday afternoon: | s will then go to Bishop Wi ud | nno way connected with the locked-out | tock exchange and commission men bocame tary of the Brotherhood of Carpenters | clare the past struggles failures, which they | “All this talk about the. conductors sympa- | thus the first step in the proceedings will be | men. Some individual may have done it frightened at the groat nroads of this im- and Joiners of America: William A. Varney, thizing with the striking operators is bun- | concluded WL 00 CRE FeSL AGRTREA LNk a4 Ot B nezelan rities will resist to the ut- | mense combination on their business and the Seobh v 1aent of ‘tie Hoderasion o .an be no question but that unre- | combe. And so far s the report goes that | The question of socrecy was taken up and ceordance with fnstructions from the ad- | fhe terriory of (ht conmtry. > 0 T O | members of the organization wore ruled. out Pittsburg nk Valesch, deputy labor ted immigation is working o great in- | the conductors and engineers on the Father Corvigan still refused to be bound by ML, 10 A1y ONO HATTODNG 0 | - Raesh AL s St ot bs Tirltial ntsiimee| Ol W6 exctinnge, - (i Cotitany. SHeN commissioner of Duluth, Min.; E. 4. Gor- | jury to the people of our countr are ready togo out if necessary s m an oath, quoting the propaganda luw of 1575 mmittee with such a pian for getting | Dinsbure, wreckod off the English const, v | PTOUght suit enjolning the exchange from in- man, Machinists union, Chicggo: O. A. Tan- | © Notwithstanding the petitions and our | out of the whole cloth. Coming through | section 18 and #2. Dr. Burtzell said t the nonunjonists out of the mill, he would | heen rescied. 7l stk and - other 'y terfering with its business and was beaten ner, Theatrical Attaches union. Pittsbure: | pr I s practically elosed the | from Davenport to Council Bluffs1 found | tion 18 referred to witnesses and section 82 | huye faved badly at the hands of the locked- | Ders of the erow perished in the lowe irts on the ground that the Janes F. Melaven, Central Labor union Vorld's fair up on th st readily | o vacant, and was told by the | to officials, and that neither refe out men." e g ; Ensign Wellsof the. navy, speelal World's | exchange was a private corporation and was Worce : i Manning, i lisposition of the worken 1 e | 8 ndent of telegraph that ad | accused, and thercfore Father Corrigan | Fugh O'Donnell was seen in the county | fAiF commissioner (o Veneziel: wrived | mot compelled to lot any one in. His appeal tional union, W , M Lys the wage-carners will have ity applications for the position. So faras | could not be bound joil. Hesaid hedid not believe any Home- | M Chragis from an exploring trip inte the - 1 was taken to the supremo court which ro- James Duncan, federation of i 3 opportunity to visit the World's fair | th g s are concerned trains are run- | A discussfonfollowed, Dr. Smith | Stead man was a_party to such n villiinous | Yoiesof thatcountry ufier ian eventfal trip. | cently afivmed the decision of the lower John Beyton, Quarrymen's National un | will be on Sunday. = We should urge congress Jthey have been in the past, i for tho | arg hat if the evidence produced at the | conspivacy, that if any nonunionist had been | m.\'.‘,f"’{‘.'h."r'-“ ys, Wil have wosplendid exhi- | coupt ass., leader of the great granite | to repeal that law | 3 1't see how the strikers are | trial was made public it would work great | poisoned the drug had not been adminis- Ebllindily AL UL b strike .. Natior ades assembly, | Congress some time cantod subsidies | £oing to win when there are so many tele- | harm to the church tered by any of the locked-out men. Mr. g %Y Finding oitself practically debarred from Pueblo, Colo.: W. B. Py presidant, of | o the Pacific Mail Steamship company and | #raph schools in the country grin _Dr. O'Conner then st . fut con- | O'Donnell told Mr. Gatehes, who ecalled on FENDERS FOR STREET OARS. the & By this decislon tHo company the International phical union, | incorporated a- pr on that the seargen | overs hundr When in Daven- | sideration, that inasmuch had some | him this morning, that it was the duty of | g < { S T0100d Lty eall’ nnoeting OL Gt Indianapolis; William Johnson, Lithographic \ployed by the company should be Amer- | port yesterday with five other conductors, it | doubt as to his power to administer the oath, | ovory union man to assist the Carncgie | EXPerimenting with Devieos vo Save LIve | joijos for the purpese of deciding upon Plate Printe®’ union, Washington; W. F B etisens. Mhe company fh question has | was the unanimous opinion that the strike | ho would be obliged to refuse to do it. AL | ofietls tb inveatiato the miter thorouenly of Pedestrinns. | aniantion:. WHe DREIASHE GE tiis domin Hatton, Tron and Steelworkers, Youn w\n\\n since violated this provision of the law by :\"Vll‘d.hw shor 1.[n.|_ :;:ul_ all of them said i‘)» ;;ml VHH"I thought he ought to swear = vty Y The Engineering Record describes tho ; “.‘.\ H W. m..u.lu' '\i‘.- 11 wlw‘hnl\"”N mn ames J. Linehan, Thomas J 3 employing Chinese sai I would recom- hat the report about their going out was v, Burt Beatty Denies the ge. subiect ¢ de » atioet. arw g | 8. ahd tre e ) illins, & 5% Glinrlos 1%, Tteichors, Holvy WHito, | mend 1hat thils convontion cntor ite most | rob; - | . The latter made a vehement protest, say T e R e e UL LR DL L G [Svei v Bt TRt U, il seph Valontine, San Francis cmphatic protest azainst the supplanting of | *“While 1 cannot say what is doing on the | ing that such a proposition was an insult: | i1 50i in this city Vol the memberd of | P & report made by a committoo rep- | oy B and Martin Fox of Cincinnati our American sailors by the Chinese, and | Nebraska division, 1 do know that on the | that his word was aecepted every where and N one of the members of | \ouoneine the West Bud Street railway | onr switharawal with - the sccrotary. of ALLRNPAt &R ion [ eall upon the president of the United States | Towa division not a telegraph ofice is vacant | that it was nota habit on his part to give | the poisoning conspiracy at Homestead, was | 0 ¢ Bost Lo douls | state, 55 thio. cotibinG ;L proftibIeaRH iy - CHther 16 com el the company i question to | and things ave going on us if nothing had | information to newspapers. Dr. Smith filed | seen by an Associated press representative | company of Boston. - The report deals | {0 Roldiirat - APons. b firat UG esident Weihe of the Amalgamated | ihide by the Ky or to withdraw the subsidy | happened.” | an exception to the decision of the court He denics the charge of being implicated in | WOre especinlly with the matter of fend- | our operations made n profit of 165 per n«wl ““!:hr}lll."l“‘ .«I_unl tecle workers at- | pranted. i | Told by Bulletins, During all this discussion Father Col the poisonin nonunion workmen and | €S for electric ears, but i8 of inteiest in | upon some capi »i-ll\n We Iuéull; mLaBsloEmoUeblcs St ol i | nslionato isly adopted | Here are somo of the bulletins that are fi::l”h.ml‘(l\lv‘.||n.u|n-u;l||!x(v l:uul he appeared | o5 CC S estod at the instance of the | UhiS €ity, whore the introduction of the tions that wo doubled our S § s me In | instruc > counter proposition 10 be | sent out by the strikers’ committe | nettle imes and hinted at the possibility YA dsm iy s 3 s gk cable has also brought an increase in and oY tention. as did all the men | gibudied by the Knishts of Labor was | ¢ | of a reat public scandal it they were pub- | Pinkertons tokeep him from bringing fo ! who were engaged in the Homestead strike, | frnsmitted. to the general ofticors of that |, Sicado, s Dec. 12, Butletin No. 28,8 | lished. 3 ward witnesses to prove that the Pinkert VS poculol mtrootsous ANt RGORAGE(RaR ALC IS i who occupi ts together, close to the 1 ordor, The_ofticers' answer was_discour- | fons AR L — el on the Little Bill fred first. He saysho came | qUent incroase in the danger of ace LA LR poLsdieclibodl it president's desk. A portion of the day’s ses- e LN I Wer HivE || Dusi ol e todout Ny oM aTon ! RACING AT NEW ORLEANS. here to see his wife, who lives ot Twenty- | dents. The Boston commission has o p;\l‘ul(u:‘ S e o Eatn s L ared i aaotie fl:, ‘:,’:.'[‘,,"“f“,,‘,';li'.fl L b B nothing in re ‘e 1o the subject | Daving the fourih man they placed n o first and Bank streets, and incidentally to | €upied nine months in making an invest- a1 t % 4 i 1 8 ),000 T attle a year in- this market, [ refusing {0 \is, to0, - Hlinols, & Falr ~port Enjoyed and a Tricky Jockey | look 880 y ; it wi o ! ; ¢ aa) hat great conflct, and what' means w | matter. SR refusing to This, t00, 1N " Joyed and a Tricky Jockey | look up witn He Says an attempt ation and has just submitted its | as many more on the range, and we had 4 (A8 ¥ Ruled O made to est him at_ Pittsburg fo ault | final report. Basides examining | holding v e ¥ g Aatl " comes intormition showing thit we % s holding of over 5,000,000 head on the ranges, Dt e fermoon wtssion he dalegates | When oM. Gompers had finished his ST ! B Oniess, L, Dde. 12 —Though there | and battory, bu e loft theboat lie was on | plans or modols of 211 difforont fendors % po entertained for ha.f an hour by John | Port thit of Secretu VNS was s and newspa were 1o close races today the sport was very | it '|‘,‘3'1‘ 3 skift, boarding the boat aftershe | the commission has experimented with hton. the New York journalist. in o | Mitted. In the coursc’ of his reporf Mr ~ g B toste fir, Tho attendance was, good, despite the®| O Dittsburg, forty-three different fenders, using uttuok o “Blnoklegging, Binker | Iivins sald; iuring tho year eorimencing | | you are prope y atening weather,and; the track fast SULHDC G- aleila dummies made to represent a man, a nd Treachc Mr. Swinton de- | Novembe 1801, and ending October 80, e St doubt of o The bookmukers did ¢ naivery good: % Toroxto, Ont., Dec. 12.—Charles Stanford | woman and a child. The number of ex- red he was not disc «d by the charters have been issued, in wnd by your taking thisstep ity S i e SO SEY - BOOLT O died n this city today. He worked for the | peri 1BY B 55 SAonentio? the stikes Foneatean 1 unions, central bodies and Dt tiuch soonc L. M. COONS, nes$ and were hit hard by Bonnie Byrd, who s icibyitocny, Heworked for) the iporimentsimado 1silo; AR TARB AR oW ol i > seations i thirty-two states of nof commit von the It to, B 5 e ie company at Homestead as a bridge I'he commission recommends the adop- | fnces in the last 'year, These .'\w.ul" the union. Inaddition to the ubove, elght T on s ion o ke oV erats: | favorite on the showinig he made : aker during the recent strike, He was | tion of the so-called **Cleveland” or | | i vlv‘ll:’h'l\'h » been issued to nation -‘L‘;“\l‘ifl* BERI O vEra I naNBOaD TR hro Lt [ but the talent plunged on Bongie Byrd in' | e o the expense of the com- | Johnson fender, consisting of a hori- | of the Astor house biiliard room to the he workingme et | makin year) thelar- | {oday, and tll Walked outat noon the last race. This avoused the suspicions secause he was suffering from chronic | zontal platform projecting a couple of | Now York Advertiser reportor. i zest numbe ters hive been 5 f the i | b BEORT N vaiNee A 7 & New York Advertiser reporter. A sob he continued, o pafd | ECst num y pve : of the judges and they cautioned Mackay to | diarrha supposed to b caused from | feet in front of the dushboard. I is now | of those ivory balls now eosts 54, It millions of dollars this year it ol & issued during one ¢ s > Ameri axpont, Ta., Dec. 12.—To o cators: | ride Brazos out, | which he failed | drinking water, it . which had been | oo TEaith G I | OSSO BELDEYEUBA S L) O A S - HEE lerat £ Lal as t oflicial connected with the Rock | i A BOITE . 2 proposed to make this platform in such | {oen years ago the balls could be bought haye lost without the help of these | hoderation of Labor h LOLRO eC i T s o1t o e sk [tor do showing | Rl o bettor..,than ( POjSpnoc by ko st d a way that it can be slid_under the car S DR ok i Are ot g brothren, Mhe men engaged in | The national unions afiliated have also re- | fsfund, 1, this clty, made the remark to 8 | fourth, After the ‘facd. the owners of T et It 1) the car Tho increased cost is due to the these of labor should be rem | ceived, through the ofice of the Amc | Roek Island officials are lie: both Bonnic Byrd andBrazos and the boys |y Wit e TS : A when not in use, or undor the rear of | gearcity of ivory. RRRRIN wtraa iirar. tHOLEI Bolvicaa e Tha leration of Labor, thirty-seven charter | with (he oporators, & i il i, | were called up and after tolsing their state- AKRISBUNG, Pa., 9 - any car. The commission further sug- When the elephant tusks, from Rl Foon fiutiod vithFant aypealiror tho)| @ ations, an_item well worthy of cc and_ from present tdications think they ments the judges, acting in concert with Mr. | Was made to Governor v fora | gests protecting the front of the dush- | which the balls aro made, arrive at the i e e I Y ce it demonstrates the ) We have to do our duty to the con R. O. Runkin, the nepresentative of the | requisition upon the governor of Kentucky | board with curved springs or wire net- | factory thev are ¢ 2 ; LAl Wit 5 3 pring factory they are eut up into blocks and mental principles. | that en manifested by our our symput s With the operat board of control, ruled Brazos off together | for the delivery of Rober patty » | ing 10 lessen the force of the bl fl p A il T i b ) by * s B e e e ) 1 r the delivery of Robert Beatty to the P co of the Dblow ul | turned roughly in the lathe. They are The committee on credentials reported S01 “'1"" e "_‘}!' “1""” y and :l"v' ! By, stamnd firm, the world 1o otes. | With his owners, Moygmi, & Stanfield, and | Allegheny county authorities. Beatty is | case a person Is struck by the car and | ghen ,,lm.,fi W EnatD Lo gl ,,\..;V ! dclegaton cicibie 1o Rdmission A the ro- | YA of thele uid (0 national wious o the | ] LArytho world | . . who rode hin! now in Jail in Louisville, charged with being | thrown agaipst the dashboard LY Rk v : e Covi First ruce, ar-obds, five furlonzs: | implicated in the plot to. poison nonunion | With reference to fondors beneath the | W2, Pocome thoroughly seusoned. ~Whon ident 'm"u"‘ nnoincealithe mems | e sicom atement as to receipts | Dav, e, Ta, Dec. 12.-To ull Operators: shitl (9 (o L Full Bl to 1) second, | workmen employed at the Carnegio mills. referenco to fenders beneath the | an order arrives for a set of balls the, Darahin of:tho various committac and expensc ) : The receipts for x_h.: Good n uclnlyno l.lml m“ 11 operatorsin : tish Bell to 1) thivd, : 1 pes car to prevent a person lying on the | ype taken from tho bags, reground an ] L :Imll the s AduSBIIEYatolats 1 | . selli et —0—| = . truck from getting under the wheels, | jolishod 08 0] A : rasoLv jee ero te e h 3 , 3 pols for Democrats. o ) AT ob AT e s Tt Lo Tors A0 815 0 e | atlons With us. : L. f 3 e e e R st |[helicommissionii istarbNulliiiendors It is necessary to let the balls re- of Ty posraphical wnion No. 16 6f Chicuee, do | Lho convention then adjourned until to- s Crry, Mo . 12.—To all Op i gell “f ; ot e e ho | redultiiigtiielactioniol Rapring, Hlover i ima nHHIBHOE b (0w, before they are B o s cnpor a2 hox : “the S e T Y Lisbon (6 to 1) < anito | e National Brotherhood of | etc., as being complicated and Hable 10 | pluced upon tho table, inorder that thoy i ; ) " (10 to 1) th ) 1 Soldiers were filed i » secretary o 3 : 3 snder O or ho Worla's i Bntnlb et to o nons National Marble Catt ving joino g (X Fourih 0% tartongs: Brete | SOMiers were filed with the sceretary of | get out of order, and also all feunders | yay become accustomed to the atmos- phere of the billiard roow, for they are union publishi and demanding that | g Fovws, Do ho third i | i ’ Hves ; g 3 s (10 10 1) second, | Stite requiring a separate duty on tha part of B % ) very susceptible to temperature and the work be en’ to.n union concern. It i < 3 \u..ul_m:.. mhl. 31 The organization is democratic and its | the motorman, The inadvisability of Svib otuted o 1 t of the resolutions that | Sion of the National Marble Cutte and | atorsn 3 itth c Bonnie | eastly warped, “With ordinary care a set of billiard A ity ot Byrd oy t - | subordinate branches are to be schools of | imposing any further duty on = the | tho printers of Chicago had subscribed S100- ters associution begun its labors. thi Mar ) “Fhie: 1248, | democracy. Both unmion and confederate | Motorman in nddition to those he now whdhde L o vty Dran altvin At ATo LATY ) STRIKE. e democratic soldiers are cligiblo to. member. | has wis strikingly domonstrated in the | ulis will Last for two yours. At the ox- B asiE o oo hogaboriand shab.| i (i S 9 - NICE SOFT SNOW. ship. and in the event of the death of a mem- | eXperiments made before the board of | pivation of that time they aro apt to be- the only printing house in Chicago which is S liy i 3 cials at Davenport Say Thay Have Lots : | ber his eldest son. if a voter, ligible to aldermen in which a fender was tried, | tome crooked and wobble on the table. LI o\ bl i taresta s Unknimotis More Men Than wre Ne Dame Nature 1 0 the ey, Of the membo of the na- | devised by a motorman and consisting | phey are then taken to the factory and consent veus asked for oS ANTS 7 ERT 1 Davesrorr, I, Dec. 12.—[Special Te o ble for Omaha ¥ nmlmlu ||u|¥. threo are ex-union soldiers | of a padded plank extending square | ypoind down for use in the game of pool. these resolutions 2 ani to Tir -Assistant General Man- | Fair and warmer weather ywas | and twoare exconfoderates, fhe minovor- | acrosa the track in front of the | ‘phen whon they becomo uscless in “th capacity they are again reducod in size and find sheir way into the leather bot- Proceedings of the Conventio Tend v of Organized Labor. stronger daily nd prom to be o complote that none At A stributed over tho ot existence, The tin United Mineworkers and a member of the d with Mr, Be o 0 oy little is tion executive board, Bryant. 11l.; W. | cement fc s i y | pered. hould be read at the time, and that if two h tty, of whom very little i Owing to the Searcity of F the Cost Has Doub “Never in the history of tho game were billiard balls as expensive as at present,” sai¢ Oliver Brovn, managoer ) Typographical Union. the proposition Allen of the Rock Island ro: - | the pred sent out by the weather | £ANizations of the orderare tobe known as | qashboard and which tho motorman ;}n‘.‘t‘«i“fi ':1:||I|lvh‘|-l]yl"\‘:f"'|hl;lnl- ‘llell‘:f;::mn:.u’ T o o cuants, O Ded: A g I’“l" Y Ehis city, which s the headquarters for | Show at midnight of missiug its gue : s accident by pressing his knee against | tlg» raphical union observed, howover, that the | O Lo common pled ¢ today ded the | oo il thisoperators! strike is finally set- | About 10 o'clock real nice, large, soft snow- Killed by Falling Walls, alon b silnjthoRilst o g perimen b vk R 1] 2 AT mandamu e brought by D. B. Wasson of MRt St flakes began to fall, and in ab 3 3 A 2 this fender the motorman shut off his Plunging Into the Dark Continent. complaint was not oflicially pre iinat | E ) tled. They insist that they are having no 8 hogn to fall,ianc n faboutanShour || SEMuxams, Ind —Two persons were i i ) Daving the any typographical union. | Wooster against Governor MeKinley and | ¢ <tn I8 PR 0 EY e e e | fully half an inch'of new snow covered the | 1illod and thres wore W at Alexandeia | POWer © and applied his _brake, but | Four well-to-do young Englishmen, *Ihe chair then ruled out the resolutions, as | Secretary of State Poorman to prevent 4§ rL i v o7 l"“"“ ground, and the prospects for another heavy | Sooco i thre “‘l‘f"”““} at Alexandrin | egjccted to drop his fender, and the | aged from 22 to 28, recently left Eng- wnanimous cons s rof 4 the issuance of a ertificate ot | go (0 on "“L‘l ,“-‘v‘l"""'l‘ with the | f; of snow were extremely good. Saturday evening by the fall of the brick | carconsequently ran over the dummy. | land for tho purposo of uxplminu Last 2 0 531l 4 5 3 e, 3 very few opera have 1 y Vi sidel e | by fire. The dead are. or v ; o jority. ards ~ of the mew Seventeenth | 1 0’y oftor being hired to take the places ‘l"“""lt.\i }_lmt]ml; ““n'"f m lm):ml to climb | ) : iu.‘;.,;“fii,i‘mi’%.ufi'ifiwaifi‘ Lm:t fe::dtn:‘: :;‘.}’:: ‘w"é’fl““‘1‘?30‘?;‘in.’L‘.'E‘l;’Tll}"'i:fn‘m'fi adopted and suspended for the purpose of re- | returns made to the secretary were void | OF e men who struck, they can fill such O e utaly fxery few, Beople (Y, although it was dropped to the ground, | go west for about 800 miles, mapping ferring the Chicago resolution to a commit- Ly o °d by the | Yacancies at once v th good men; that they | menced, and consequently those who were L J Jeg broken. Two boys | 1t worked up over the dummy and the | out the country, taking the height of tee of Chicago and International Typograph- | .oy clerlc and two Justices of the peace as are taking their choice of men who offer and | out had little difficulty in reaching their | na Marlow t by flying brick. car passed up over it as completely as | mountains, examining the fauna, col- feal delegate After remaining out an hour @ . uakigen D rwwl bac0 8 it s the road is concerned there homes. As soon as the regular trains had in the first case. lecting insects and shooting lions and the committecreported fayoranly on the re no st AIL reports of accidents are | Uit running at midnight, several snow- . ; Fixed fende der the platf v > 8 L K N ) ¥ aations Eam ialie E e eports of accidents are 2 d 2 AGRAPHS ixed fenders under the platform are | elephants. When they reach Lake Intion. with some 1 ation, express : ok 1, Blse | genied plows and sweepers werce: brought out and = also rejected b, " i i N ¢, e " pl e ¢ Australia allof v d 0 e, > 5 4 5 5 - Bjecte y tne commission, after « 0] v ) JYIEE udhp for e o amendment | {0 e S i g L A meetin s iho firemon in tho | tho work of kecyiui o riclis clear com. | ¥ M. Dorsey of Ponca is at the Millard, i 05 0 T | T S R ) A8 0! " 4 request that the < i v ¢ i ok Il sdury, ~whi i | red. Superintenden odhunter had . H. Shaw of Lincoln is a 5 1403 SHRIE)! 08 sl S Haa Worlk bo iven o fulr shop” ingtead of using | SOUNLY elork and two Justices the returning R aay il siopenit | chany b S R SUEGE Toae by o Mt thav if fixed high enough to avoid the | of Africa at Ierbora, opposite Aden. tho words union shop. Although favored by | Uogrds didice Avepuathy held that i this | 35050 e hublic, Tts nature cannot. oficially it by et Al ORI s usual irregula ities of track they would | They are woll equipped and expoct to b the committee and typograph de tagi| Loitim JB00 LY o SHop At the R ARpy s ot oficlally | ™o Snow fell very rapidly and it was hard ames Frazer of Columbus is at the | var 'm or leg or small body | gone eight or ten months, this amendment was” defeated. The resolu’ | 5 g SAVBABDAEL Do N0 (DY SIS no move of these classes of employes | 0 Keep the rails in sight. 1t was the inten- lying on the track. tioms vworo then passed. ply divectory, not mandatory, aud tho will of | \(yich “lave ‘no_gricvance 1o strike out of | ton of the railway officials to work all night Tiie choice of the commission 0 far | = a0 comaa lioparts o e oty 3 | sympathy for the operators, Members of | With the sweepers, and thus hive cars on all et - ket as concerns the fender under the car 3 iR e Rt (oNthoRp el RS loeiteibe difterent clusses doride the'idoa of strikes | the lines running on tine ok L. L of Stella i registered at the | s fallen upon & movablo fender which . Go the i “pIRgI0p Joregiiar) ! of this kind, Mr. Alen declares that | e e axton. A e réport, which was, in bric Mowe stained the state's demurrer, _ WA N et 5 S Ho s a Lucky M 4 (i S Y oo | inordinary running is a sulficient height Lvents have transpired on the field of labor 3 stato stnoyipiitgo) | D63 O oaR s yes Tk Bat ttiare il belmny, | oo e 0 B o oo opwhiniey ||| 1 e e Lok OLFreinontls 4 gueskiati(nboveiho rafle;hut which g operated wWithin the past ¥ix months which have ress wit . I G s 5 lust night and then boavded o Sherman : Hdrowo is roistoreg | b tho action of puttng on_ the brake. » aroused public ine = e Al ey A e o 8 ; 5 Tt thevefore docs not involve springs dents connocted with tk D A md its nature s kopt & pro- | Srens forvhames / JWhep)-thestraln Atopdo,. . ] and lovers operated by the foree of the arsapari a or less of an unusual : Thiaioh o AvL, Minn., Dee. 12.—A Pioneer PPre: padk CHLR - DU Dl unded the sharp curve at Fourteenth , I.Anxh«'k of Lima, O., is a guest 2 : ! % Thewo struggles with cmployes tho corpors | special from Helona, Mont., says: Argu- | found seeret. fhreo operators just plunted | Gigs streets, O'Brien was throws ! blowisnd ib8cesingtimuotolsnyaaddly on hor preparatl tiohs have simply made a request and the | ment was begun before the ey Bl 11..-.-.....,»(..\- =toRLYY g ‘l"!'.lll 4hll|lll- ar end of the trailer and landed ¢ 3, of Lincoln is in the city tional duty on the mn\o:"nl:\n. } Is superior to all ot ier preparations armed forces of the states und the United | goday in the merits of the case involving | the officials Vuhges 3t s Yen bik big bank of snow. Somo of the om. | stopping it the Murray. yory time the brake is put on thia | claiming tobe blood-purifiers. First States BF Al e ¥R 00k || {5 okt ot AL Harditon daneient e | haon ‘o desentions. Worth smeniontig, | pioyes ot i 1 stable across the stree 1 W. I Ashiby of Beatvice is in the | fonder. ie lowered, und tho hardor the | of g1), hecause the principal ingredi- mines of Tennessee, whers the miters. were Bheor &5, Hamiion; douieckas, Thoy say that o five - men huve | Lok pity on the man und tenderly w city, o guest of the Paxton. brake is applied the closer tho fender is e ) oxtrnobiofine being gradually,but surely, supplinted bydhe | Seatin the Montana houss of repr Tt Ve the ayetem. fhough mombers of | im in i blanket “and then ealled the patrol | ' WG MEOL L G payy | foreed to tho track. In caso of omer- | ent used in it s tho oxbEel 0% ERA the luborof conviets, tho minors plowd vatn | L, SHEVIRG D oty o b Sote e | the grievance committed went out from here | JWiE0L, OBkl ol 0. his Senses b the | Nows was in the city yesterday. Y | eney the motorman will, of course, ap- | uine Honduras sarsaparillaroot, the Sofarjaus. wamo. Tnstead of huving their | Dnite s senator. * Should. his repub- | Stnliy morning to the cast, west, andsouth- | Fo 5" 5o soon found out. e B8 | T g, 1. AL Kehoe of Platte Center s stop- | DL s braketo tholimitof bisstrength, | variety richest in medicinal proper- vad 9 & - ey Jican oppone: » place the three popu- | WOSE Lo coax new men quit. v 4 sing at the Dellon and under such circumstances the fonder ties. Also, be- wrongs redressed they were scorned, POPU- | (laved thoy have plenty of good me E ! B b i c c t h ies, Also, At Homestead, where the ivon and steel H aiice of power:. N eV Filed the 1 3 Mr.and Mrs. A. S. Baldwin of North | may be arranged to come down Lo within ures vatarrin ., . tne workers were offered a wholesome nemres ST sy Ahatt they o talkiug theit | e deeds for the ground at the corner of | Platte are stopping at the Millard. any dosired distanco from the track. | o DL in their wages, an armed bund of 1 e dindlatssd Hotte Jinle, . - | e b fomty OIS OW D | o teenth and Harnoy streots, on which 1tis | Ttev. and Mrs. George Hurdley of Weep- | ‘Chis fender, in connoction with tho pls ow dock, being raised .}lmgumlur no flag, owing ul _ S Pav, Minn,, Dec. 13.—AL 4 mass meet- | ogqonts, but a threat tocut out the sta- | proposed to locate the pew hotel, were filed | 1 Vate) iste: it the Dellone, form in front of the dashbourd, consti- the Company, is always fi RNOTBRpUAK (an calksquerbly, by "“»"“"”“*- ity ';""*‘"“K" address, endorsing | tions uud run trains through without stop- | for record yesterday uftobaoon, The grantors . A, Hammond, proprictor of the P tutes, therefore,.the applisnce rccom- | of the very best kind, With equal R i oA, ook 5y and advocafug home rule for Teckund, was | fng las always setled the maite re the Boston Ground_ ignt company, 1. J, | Botel of New York City, is stopping at the | mended by tho commission us the host | giserimination and care, each of the pencoful town, to overawe and intimida adopted and pres ohn Sweetman, n Scannell and Artemug M. Clark. The grafee | Paxton. ; : sufeguard, although they do not fec other ingredients are selected® aud citizons and w et to'bid {n the offo: M. I’ of Dublin, in whose houor th " T, i and Chief Sar- | Jucob E. Markell of this city, Tl L Hon. J. TI. MacColl and Miss MacColl of | thativis possible, with any dovice, to i 3 al- | g was bel 1d 5 o 4 ot J deration in the thred deeds aggregates ngton are in the city stopping at the | insure safoty. "The principal reli- compounded. It is fpplARt ther Lol por and domoral | M5 N0 Wdent presiaed and nddy vore | gent of the firemen and Grand Chief Clark | £156,000, and the land [pheeyed is ton 3 : ! : he i i . ance appears to bo placed upon the Cod iy oy O e | gelive ‘Archbishon Irelund and other | of the conductors were in this city today | Hurney and 132 feet ob Fifteenth stroct, s Ada Hudson of Gothenbure is in the | platlorm in front of the. car, inasmuch THE e’ i i 2 prominent citizens confarring with Grand Chief. Ramsay.of the i e city visiting her sister Miss M. Ella Hudson, | Ba't1o srent majority of porsons struck nnced, took up avms ngainst the iuvad Governor Merriam was unable to bo pres- | gtriking telegraphers. At the conclusion of Flooded by & Bipp(id Water Main, of ‘tho government microscopic for us the gre Jority of porsd L] .. 0 tte i g ) H . AU by cars aro stunding when struek, If, .m,, B e e ent bui sent a letter of vet in which he | gt i her 1 ould 1 : Cuicago, 11, Dec. L ide-spread dam- | South Omaha 0y 0GRS GFE BRI ] N0, 4 4 At lmvrr..l;.nmn 450 switehmen used prossed h\h *\m;'«lilll’ll.\" vav:‘uluvrv\le‘vl:;nn:.-. B i \“‘"“m‘l‘y‘h}‘,“‘_"“‘;‘“‘ of 1he | o as caused byt bursting” of o 1ar T3, AT ARy TR o of the | NOW, they aro faciug tho car when o peacoful persuisive powers ey we altteo wus. uppoinfed ] et oEg truck, they can easily step up on to ) ne rule. In all other respects o 3 water main on Fifth, aygnue and Charle: } mpany, lithogr coma, | 5 ' ) t 1 q . 5 b 0f .t nduce the hey of home rul oA Teanedu o In ik deoma e | A e ek AT o NS, Tacoll | (i platform or seize it with their | because it is always the same in ap- Y — ailrond officials still insist that there is | below grade were flooded ‘and all their in- | Colonel 1. P. Roggen. hands, while if they struck from be- | pearance, flavor, nul(mw-l, and, be- s ) W WEALHER 1O RECASITS. o strike, and the operators declare that tho | habitants ave temporgrily i NEW YORE, Doc. (pecial Telowram to | hind they would b thrown buckward, | g nighly concentrated, only small SRR /4 > 8tate of 2 i v . - | road must come to their terms, manufacturing and stoyag 't Ture Bree.] —Omaba: 0. M. Carter, St. D sitting down upon the platform. R e oy w York provides—ten hurs —they wore Nobrovks Wil Be 3 4 to a Variety of e tirms thevein will loseam * 1 Moore. New Yorict 0. 0. Williaws Hoff! | This fender, says the report, while 1t '1]“""“‘ ‘“C ““"""‘ lll ll: ”I”“';;T‘; d o y the company, and s aathy 5 i 000 to §20,000 catdt, mounting in the | man, Portland: D. B, Sherman, Mrs. D, K. | appears to bo'as goo ; \e most economical blood-purifie lust resort stenck work for the enforce | WASHINGTON, D, C.. Dec, 12,—For Nebraska | Sruanr, Ta., Doc. 12.—[Special Tele RGN R rermian, Mrs. D ¥ | uppoavs to bu as good us anything that | - the ¥ ;i mto | aggregate Lo a large Al Sherman, Hotel Savoy " SRR AT, 9 pxistence, It ment of the . ‘The militia of the s f | aud Jowa—Raiu in southeast; fair in north- | Tue Bee.]—About forty-two operators came - At .59 ARV MG, SARA0K 1 ih.. 6% New York wis called out centry g : Finally o temporary set of rules was | distvict. Mr. Wasson claimed that the their empl. rcAtad for s = the Mercer—G Thateher, | secure immunity from injury. | Cures akes food nour- R TTale Aot entpiag portions; ble winds; slightly | in from Des Moines and other points yester- | o - Arrested for Stuling 85,000, reasurer ndard [ compuny, ont | goER RIS WL R e tho plattorm | :"l":;l:‘ \‘\:‘:| Frrs Btk men to work against thelr will v in western N : day and held a secret joint meeting with th Naw Quueaxs, Lo, . orton i, Otis L. Benton, i, I W. | Dnssos over him, while he may be pre-| SCROFULA 15%18 Work bica B e o Por the Dakotas—Generally fair; south | trainmen here t oy also'hiold meets | DOLeOUYE BummANE AR itestod Yeatonday N Whitccotton, Provo, U, . Johu 8. M veuted from getting under the wheols, | ant, sleep refresh- 04 A8 ORIE 4'¢ i . ot ings Saturday and B | at Hatchburn, Miss., charged with purlof 1ol Moore, Ogden; 5. | veutec getting und ¢ g i N o PR R s SRS v in southwest portion of Miune- | 1ns Saturday night and Sund y, but all pres: | 84 Hatoh B ks A “‘g'-‘m‘;r'yl.fl',',, | Pato, Kearmey: William G Audrows, Clin: | he will probably suffer some injury by | ing and life enjoyable, It scarches son suioving intense devastations, during A e Tho hroveedings conid nol e ew ot tute 8 | tio Southren Express company at Meriden, | T, Harry Stake and wife, Boone, Tu.; | being pushed along or crushed in some | out all impurities in the system and #ho six long winter months, men who ex wosd Jiecord hardly probable, howeye that the trainmen Miss. It is said the package was bound for | M l\\ sz.u.m‘.mll wife, Cedur Falls, lu.; | way, and no sure way of proventing this | expels them harmlessly by the natu- the great weslth from the bowels of g op mi Weatink Bukeav, OMARAL | will Joiu the striking operitors, Texus and was merely being transferved at L. Reed, Oakland, Ia, 5 is apparent. But as the public becomes | al ehannels. AYER'S Sur: the earth, were subjected to veductions in ahi record of temperature and - Meriden, Cr1eaco, 111, Dec, 12.~[Special Telegram | more aceustomed to electric cars and | v g their or the alternative of sceing al! compared with corresponding day of Operators Wi 0 —p———— to Tue Bee.|—The following Nebraskans . e, 1 gives elasticity to the step, and im- their passing f i f past four years: BeATRICE, Neb., Dec. 12.—[Special Tels Declares it s p H are roglstered here today hragkans | more sensible of their dangers people E 31, Paso, T % 19, T'he re i will have to keep away from them, parts to the aged and infirm, re- and ordes of people brou; over to 1892, 1891, 1890. 1889. | gram to Tig BEe.]—There i Frvany 21, Paso, Tex., Dec, 12.—The reported out- | ern—Is. C. Morehouse, J. T, Stauhope, | " % gl R A nntry under contract ' | Maximum towporature ‘875 '505 1508 1576 | ST to THE BrE ) hare 1s Do materlal s of the Gare men on the southern bor- | Omaha; George L. Hara and wife, Lincoln: et newed health, xtruusth.-nml\lmhl)~ the bidding of the mine owners, the | Minimum temperatur 2 i 842 aug X on of affulrs regurding | 3 0" 0keq upon here as s hoax. The | Lremont—Samuel Cole, Miss A. C. Childen, Denver capitalists have organized a United States toops were brought to Caour | ek crature. . 802 B8 462 | the Rock Island telegraphers’ strike on this B oo " L Mexican ofticia leny all knowledge o o | Omaha Palmer—William Wa o and | company with #5,000,000 capital stock, @'Aloue, thie mon overawed and subduod, the | ©ociolt ot 00 00 00 00 | division. The strikmg operators are still | Afuis nd ss Carsi 1o8 Uhine of the pase | Wife, Omah . A. Buckstaft and wife, $20.000 ot which 18 puid uip, for the de: | pommanding general of the United States | Stitement S'}n""w thoe condition of tem- | holding out, and the operations of trains s | © o o BEY TR DG A8 408 Das coln, Grand Pacific—Mrs, S, B, Phely | e MR AL RS D (A8 R A8+ forces issuing an owder that any employer | RHALUE Omuha for the | considerably hampered in consequence. New Boniface, Omaha; N. 8. Sherwood, Lincoln. hopmeny ane nent o Wyaming who would oporate his mine with union . operators do not respond with the alacrity | ~— k- - lands, The name of the corporation is miners would not be wed un.qnmu. | . that was at first anticipates Nutices of five lines or less wuder this head, fifty ® 5 y - the Green River Basin Land and Canal wark. A United States judge i '. rual o ljunm. o, 299 oo cents; cach additional line ten cents 10041 BREVITIRS. company, and it has purchased the balf arsa arl a order prohibiting the union i R foiency bince MArehi A ‘1843 ey oy L COURTNEY—Infant of Churles Judge Ogden has lost his fine Salnt Bernard | interest of the Union Pacific ratlroad in Prepared b ) m bholding a meot In other words, the | Normal precipit e Fro s Ty Arwantic, 1a,, Dec. 19.~(Special Telegram | “Nellle Courtuey cuber 12, | Hu- ain and the police are looking for the | 700,000 acres of land lying about the £ 'L';mfxlvfn'«,’ub. ’,Lf';." enaliat: Hl["lll{lulb e of oo blagoliad bee | Duticlency ¢ LTI ) to Tk Beg.)—-More operators are goiug out | - days Funcral todiy trou the realdence. 032 | yniinal. junction of the Green river and the Cures others wIlI'c rexou wiolated by a United States judge and a gen fic since Maroh 1 K es | on the West Towa division of the Rock Island | i e T H b Blarment T " ok P 3 longi ur U o " dae - B's ~ y g ! Prospeet? Hill ot 4 The remains of Charles § who | Black Fork, the other half belenging to eral of our army, declaring and enforcing an Groner E. Huxt, Local Forecast Official, road. All' trains are late aud reports ure | mm.iy wvited. blew out the gas at the Travelers' mhal the governmeut, 1 y

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