The Sun (New York) Newspaper, May 29, 1872, Page 2

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an investigating committe edtimabie serv It would appear that Messrs, Grant & Co. have been measurably sucessful in their attempt, for it is evident that among those members of Congre: ing the most heartily to secure a renewed lease of power to the Administration are several who profess to be Democrats. Hon, Dantet W. Voorters of Indiana is one of these gentlemen, and has succeeded in endearing himself in the hearts of all faithful supporters of Grant to an extent which is really wonderful to see. The Hon- orable DAN is a personal friend of the jolly Roneson, and an attempt was made to use him to assist in the process of whitewash- ing that distinguished mariner; but at the last moment he backed out, though it has been reported that he was named for the committee at the personal request of the Probably Mr. Voornses knew of the fraudulent Sxcor claim, nstituents might be- But for his ber of his Republican supporters will be ; » vonrprentively fewstrd by the help of thu THE UPRIST Democratic diversion, GRANT's chances for retlection will be good. These are things which intelligent and patriotic Democrats ought distinctly to un- There is no use in being hum- time as the present. who are work- WEDNESDAY, 3 2, DNESDAY, MAY 29, bugged at such It isusually the fortune of famous men to suffer annoyances directly arising from their | Strike is progressing satisfactorily. In this annoyances are | MOVement other departments of industry are | that thi * the city aunion man, ny | Interested, as mouldors, castors, and machinists | have already yielded to the dome, the battle promises to be ® short one, celebrity, and sometimes the provoking charactor. Wand Bacnen has frequently had occasion to | 8 necessarily out of employment while the @ ay | Padtorn makers are Idle, In beginning the move- | workmen have been withdrawn from the shops and probably nothing | Ment the men labored under the disadvantace | HOF Will they be returned until the victury Is The Rey, Hus Tony Pastor's Opera House Unton Kanare Th feel that popularity has its incony well as its compensatto: has ever ove rred to afford hia a clearer con. | Of having no organization, and thus far much of | * 4? sciousness of this fact than the free use which | thelr hard work has been to induce members of | Third avenue, apent the day In listening to res n various occasions | the craft to come out fro by certain enterprising managers of strolling | Thelr success is now nearly completo, and the | empl: theatrical companies, who have given cot ce on thelr handbills to paragraphs set- ting forth in glowing colors the high moral in. | Tange additions were made to thelr nitmbers fluence of the drama, as represented by the | Yesterday. At the establishment of R. Hoe & strollers aforesaid, and to puifs of the artistic | Co. the men threw out a huge flag of truce from | of the sugar house mene who. are. cong qualities of the strollers themselves; the said | 4" Upper window, and signified that they would | Work ten hours, and often | paragraphs being printed in the boldest display | Join. ‘The Columbia fron Works of Brooklyn also type, and unblushingly attributed to the pen of tor of Plymouth Church, W this unauthorized use of Mr. Deecuen’s has frequently resulted in bringing him floods | Main. Me of letters from solemn dunces who, taking for | and told them he could. not granted the authenticity of the objectionable | hours. Me sald, h «1 to empty vials of wrath d head for affording ald and comfort to the recruiting agents of Satan's kingdom. tn Des Moines, Iowa, recently, an itinerant troupe | ‘The lnrge addition of members seemed to holding the mirre and in order to stimulate pub ances, it was as been made of his name Terms of The San. Onnivany Aoventieame, per and feared that his come similarly enlightened, backwardness in this matter he has made ainple amends by the alacrity with whic he has responded to Grant's wishes in ro- gard to the nomination of ‘The Hon. CHances A. Expriper of Wis- member representing a Democratic constituency who is a great comfort to th investigating ec examine the ¢ authorities, placed on consin is anothe Paranal aes A Free Trade Candida: We find in the T for President. rtford Courant the fol- fowing interesting piece of intelligen “Mr. WILLIAM CULLEN BRYANT Is sig York as a free trade candidate for Presi- ninittee was appointed to igs of the District of Co- ELpriper was committee, made by the Ring to capture this commit- recorded in the col- ‘he costly entertain- on Whose acts were to tigated, and the social influence brought to bear on the investi announ: the daily paps en had visited their exhibition in Albany, and had been » had seen that he the leading actress, and n vent in an article for an Albany paper the next day, putative article : possible at the present time to or to be President, is no man in the country who would merit such a distinction so much as Mr. His eminent abilities, pure char- convictions ar umns of Tu ments given b jad sougbt an interview wit afterward. giv which he wrote and fidelity to h known and honored of all men; and ther can be no doubt that he would administer with dignity and success, n of any manon a free trade platform is now out of the question. Men's minds are set in another direction. innati Conven- free traders zealously of Horace TRooseve.r been accus- this city, who has all his li tomed to cultivated and wealthy society at home and abroad, the ostentatious ef- forts at magnificence made by the shoddy clique who Washington just now must have appeared supremely absurd but the Wi. vuntFY ae the Most Mole! Those who know her love her: Dur path through this life e called to Him de those bright angels of which you are 60 truly Good-by ; God bless you Tt Is not to be wondered at that when the eml- | was revel nent Brooklyn divine was rep brethren for having written so en- display in dd by the Ci This was prov Gide tke sonsin Representative appears to have been so completely dazzled by them that his eyesight became perina- he has never sinc been able to discover anything but what was perfectly pure and praiseworthy in and corruption sly exposed by the Demo- mpported the nomination We hope, then, that th serious purpose of putting up Mr. Bryant, If a free trade candidate is to be run—and have retorted with some asperity, or that he | the strike would be over should have given it as his opinion that the stuff attributed tc nently affe him “would be considered poor | ported that balderdash in a second-rate lunatic asylum for | three men who expres Nelther can it be con- sidered strange that he advises any neighbor- | unfavorable Hing theatre m: rs and look well indignation, stances, is righteou school-girls run mad.” which have be Messrs. Roosevent and Cre embers of the too, like Voorn at the nomination of Dr. Greviey. There is no d and Gray are also in perfect accord on t against the action of the Cin- Convention, and to demonst ve manner th to lock their b ina conclu es, t9) anid to free trade other well-known free trader Ley Marrnews or Mr, Epwanp ATKIN for instance—would answer quite as weil 1, Whose name ought not to be used for a mere demonstration or to head a political forlorn hope. The judicious course forf1 seem to bet p strength of the For this purpose any Judge Stan- The Springficl that the recent letter « against the Cine! inspired by a desire to save his friends who hold | his fellow-work. We trust that this is | lille HRY has the reput d, though sometimes | jointly with should regret to | and the same L Republican Grant & Co, hav turing an ob District in this State, who has distinguished himself by permitti name to be used as Sancent’s kite s—the only insta has been known to distinguisa himself in As his name, as Mr, Baya ed in eap- office under Gen, Independent, high-minde nitric statesman, and w any such accusati on the whe rather reminds us of that sort of fah that can't live on the land and dies in the wa » traders would at recommended by th They should dev. all their efforts to the election of members of Congress, and for President vote for Horace Greevey, who is pledged not to tariff bill, and not to in- ero with the action of the m: Congress upon the subject by any use of Executive pat bob to the tail of Ferny, just e in which he er. any manner of sufficient moral, however much it 1 of whitewash, we puss him by without further mention. If the victim who buys a brass watch the mock-auction shop at the price w the spurious coun- who ts praising its Tourists intending to visit the He sent time must make up their minds | thenselves, LAPT urprived if t Some of the Arab cb lucrative occupation to capture travellers and | {huni weboatrad: the » for ransom, including se slergymen, were captured at Kerek, In Moab, fined as strict prisoners for the sum of £000 being demanded, ers managed to send off a Christian of Kerek with a letter to the Bri vetoa free tro to point a of a gold one tryman at his side workmanship to be a confede: trying to sell heed to the The collision at Elizabeth on morning suggests possibilities by no means remote, and decidedly unple tracks of the Central Railroad of New Jer- Railroad and Transportation Company cross each other at that place, on the same level, and the es is situated near their We are informed that about one hundred trains pass over thes tracks there daily, but that so complete fre the safeguards that the accident on Monday is the first which has occurred in On this occasion the morn- Ing train from Philadelphia ran into the rear car of the morning train from New ntral road, as the latter crossed the track of the New Jersey line, uted to the failure on the Philadelphia tr n moving very ) Consul at Jerusalem, | the striet bs who at once despatched troops for thelr rescue ; butin the mean time they had mana cape, after paying a cor # than that demanded has acquired great wealth travellers, and ap- would give when men professing to be of Grant's Administration selves to the work of apologizing for its corruptions, and use their utmost exertions to defeat the only measures which have any promise of providing a remedy for the terrible abuses now existing havearight to investigate weir motives and draw their own conclusions as to their upholding misgovernment. will be little danger of voter being n to Grant by crats as Voorne opponents lend them- depot of both 1 intersection, through his extortions on pears tobe sustained In his Turkish authorities, inst him in relation to th: theso English travellers, he forced th of Kerek to sign a paper exoncrating him from | theiuselves, free amd: antratimelied, Ld all blame, and wrote a letter in which he sald should require satisfaction for defamation of The Turkish officials ehc cept lis version of t of the protests of th assertions of seven to the charges | Protect the public twenty years. This done, ther York on th led by the such * Demo- agair as corr British Consul, and of the Well-known English gen- tlemen who suffered from his rapacity. An American exploring party has undertaken to and the mish of the brake id to have b tlowly at the time, It is true that no lives were lost, and the worst that happened was the of six or seve extraordinary Bomething far Reason Why. The Gnaxt men make a great account of { the protessed Repub- lican journals of the country have taken a decided stand in favor of the Woodchopper of Chappaqua. son for this fact is that it whether the tional Convention will nominate and en- Ey and Brow they will put up @ straight ast of the Jordan, butit is | ev hey will be permitted to carry out Bho reading of this letter waa (nterrupted BY | ne spectators disapointed: ght injury ale es, s} but it requires Summer is comin Ing boys of this city h A plot in the Central Park Is set aside for the | “Mr siuehert: added use of the sons of rich men and boys who do | He said that the put when a boy with hard | strikes ir nd the poor work- | workingme ve no place to play ball. | Pressing sy more serious than this, trains on these crossing tracks and within n few yards of the pla both allowed to move toward the point of nieeting at the same time. more obyious than that the only safe rule At such a station as Elizabeth is to keep one of the trains at a standstill until the ap- " ' Jemocratio of intersection are Demooratic not work for a livin bunds and patches o play ball in the Park, the valliant police c This 1s wrong the use of the Park for ball playing. itis | One thousand’ pl the plucky little fell The rich man’s son cat wants to play ball, but the poor working boy loons tries to | Ing sig i dorse Gree! Nothing can bi othing ¢ ° Democratic oan If anybody rr the Baltimore Convention nom- inates GreeLey and Brows, of Republicans and a great number of Re- enthusiastically But if that Conven- tion nominatesastraight Democratic ticket, e saine Republicans will then NT, and help elect him, is, doubtless, a great mistakejon the part of such Republicans, and we regret that it is so; but it is the way they they will act, nevertheless, and it is not worth while to ignore facts so stubborn, amighty body supposed that Vof this sort was always strictly enforced there, but it seems to have been Let the Park Co ground for th least one day in th 5 1 ' espouse their cause, — It appears to be a charac Californians that everything the do with a rush, nergy is wasted because not pr directed, and re: ristie of the | "4m" do they must | night in Jefferson Hall, It was rep: ‘nce is that a great | thirteen of the strikers had been arrested in afety of the public demands that of the intersecting tracks at Eliza- | Yote for Gra cross on trestle work ora bridge far above possibility of another, the other, and th } and the way and perhaps a tenible accident ud companies are y some regard to ife from un- vicissitudes because ple become discouraged if they do not re- immediate returns for eff without skill or disc ture was first Introduced as an im try, everybody went making wines, many of business being entirely Ignora:t of the proper | wiii resume work this m methods of manufacture; and then, when they | of Steinway & Sons called on their employers | May could not get high prices for the sour stuff they produced, they were re business a humbug and to root up thelr yine- | 0D Monday, and yesterd ertheless the culture gained a firm foothold, improved methods of manufac: | under th ture are replacing the SiS ETNIES both rich enough to ps the preservation of hun tion, When the grape cul- take the following all columns of the Chicago Times; lared that If it planting vineyards and hose engaged In the that his candidacy wou Hon, he Would Withdraw aud give place to another, When has Horack Greeey made any such declaration as this? ined carefully Cincinnati nom it anything of the kind, following | Connected with the metropolitan institu- tious known as mock-auction shops there ass of persons who, disguised as coun- trymen or mechanics, are used as dec: unsuspecting greenhorns, innocent victim who may be smart enough to suspect the rosy representations of the Mashily-attired auctioneer, often has his seruples allayed by the plausible su tions of the confederate, whom hem for a disinterested strange: These individuals « : Peter Fur’, have exam- tion, and cannot find in Just listen to the sage from that letter; *)and the wine interest has already be- In vain do the seeuns flourish n orgeants of nacingly their trun- ly insist that the fles shall be Californians app wool growing. rain of party, o I because rooted the hour, prc men inno wise at deal of attention ‘are called in the slang vocabulary of as to secure | the feriors as tral Mary and ruin, eople have made your esolved that th ar {ton to trie In this faith, and with the distinct un- L shall be Pr Many of thelr flocks produce a high and within the last four or five years many thoroughbred sheep | pot butt fident that the An cause their ow The proprietors of the mock Republican Adiinistration at Washington have found it extremely desirable to obtain the ser- vicos of a few gentlemen of nominal Demo- cratic sentiments to perform the same ser- Vice for their establishment “d to the mock-auction shops of New York by ihe seems to be taken by the wool growers to sort and prepare thelr crops; purchasers buy wool | strike. -A coutulttes will. c onthe sheep's back at a stipulat Is or even inquiring as to the quality of the wool, and all of that pro- | their meeting duct appears to be rated at about the same price, | & mass y large amount of derstanding that, if a party, but of th pt your nomination, In thi iwhich has too long divided them, ey have been enemies In the are aud must forgetting that ess that the [he re must be a ve din the State, before long wing Iss failure there, thongh tt tses- | ‘The wood machinists organized a « timated that wool can be produced at ten ritans would exhibit a de- greo of caro tn selecting and preparing their | ly. st t commensurate with the | eral bun fine wool produc possible that Is there anything in justify the assertion that if he is vot nom. Yat Baltimore Horace Greetey will withdraw from the canvass? There is not asymptom, not the remotest indication of such a purpose. trary, every syllable shows that he means to stand and fight it out on that line. the Democracy support him, a vast portion party will also dard, and he will be ¢ Whether the Republicanism of this Admin- {stration is the genuine thing or only a Balvanized article, and have been asking all sorts of intrusive questions about the Anterior workings of Government affairs. Not a word, On the con- efor the ma thelr breeds, they would gain an | _ ‘The sofa and ase In thelr profits, Whatever growing may | large num! slved too great | eafly in the forenoon, aud soon ultimately tt ts Plentiful, and have found ample occupa- tion. It is not surprising that Guanrand his confidants should see the adyaut Aerived if they could enlistin their servicea few men nominally opposed to the Admin- ‘stration, who, in the guise of Democrats, could be induced to vouch fer the respect- Bbility of the concern, enormous in Republican undergo in California, a start ever to entirely fall, and around his sts If the Baltimore © a straight ticket, still remain in the fleld, sands af Democratic votes; but the num- tined to assume colossal proportions, Per- | additional epLey will 1 get thou- fornians to overdo everythl lead ty excellent results in the ends at the frst will | omployed in this shop to work eight hours One such man on THE SUN, WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1872 AN IMPORTANT DECISION TO BE | who had at the Ten-Hour Gibral of Steinway & won, ports of the shops and strike, picu. | fll power of their might will # spended work and became idencfed in the vement. From Jobn loach & Sons’ establish- ore than all, | ment, foot of East Ninth street, fourteen pa'= in emp! ere added to the list of strikers, Only two re- | Of labor to Roach received a committee fr ive his mi 7 wever, t he would take the 1 back’ w need of their failure. He could fh m Delaware to New York with nds of e ta sbip | strike o1 very few apelled to should Pg up | necessit ter. | for this evening. The stated in nter | day. Special committees were ap don | all the shops of the city and urge a general a’= | other dh s that | tendance. A special Invitation was extended to the emplovees of Mr. Delemater's establishment. A member corrected a false rv ou he | Mr. Cornell was pay hours. ‘The pattern makers will be in sesston to-day THE The plano makers met at 9 rnin in thy ing is on Fri- inte Id out, bi Mtthat | ina day or tc 1 by wh: Here ts this | Germania Assembly mrs Committees we out to the different shop host all cases the reports were favor. ‘The employers said that they would eleht hours as soon as Steinway & Sons ive eight hours. A committ Who said they could as re orrow (this) morning. The told Steinway & Sons that if | firms coi Jour Reat report of the committee | @ deputatior hed by some | Heve iswer given by Steinway & Sona r : would bring things to a crisis. Either Steinway | reith’s ¢ & Sons would consent, he should | manufacturers would give thelr con ae consent, and then all the workimen of Steinway & Sons would join the strike. It was also re- Steinway & Sons had discharged d their determinath rday St en newer this morning they will | aseries of re to Join the strikers. Yes einway's mei were yet working, but If t ‘The chairman, Mr, Siebert, delivered an ad- the eireum- | mi ve eight hours, and then there can be no such intimates | hours, nothing can us. By eluht hours | are exped ment was of reform let us: gard asa traitor to society, to | cress his family, and to his en. [Applaus Here a delegate from the Varnishers' Union “We have come to a our interests are as we sh fered by w hours favor for a Ge st to tw pn of an elves and firmly esta We «but for th ting ty varnishers (from Steinway's) flabting un- | whieh bi derour banner, If you go back now to your | fit th shops to work ten hours you will have to go without the yarnishers—they will fut It out ‘use.] But why should we at present, not struck for the t with dangers in ne y t io ¢ i ne oe h United. ‘as we. are, ofs ma a | all the capital of the mani fs make It 8 | turers ‘cannot. possibly sh_us. Why | from its true stand oin ty of ecl- | ed with 80 men, while 2 ital and go al English vshd land, and he al d eight’ hours. 1 tell you, we | ing to n Lhe tighest Ux they ever were in, Bf ral days, The prison- Whee! (Laughter a and faithfully; let us Keep sober; let us be de- | the present. ned Like ‘men, but let us be alw nda of the law; and, Ltell you, we | of the. land. must conquer; victory must be ours. CAp- | these corp plause.) He bad in th d to en The following letter from an employer was | exerted able sum, though | then re sects and the tee of Piano Workmen for en n by men of intelligence pro- @ hot willing that eve Arab who tlons of ti ton. ries by the | fact. Gent by Of the United » capture of | Our labor and property mee Chriatians | _ Therefore, belles ag inh power of suy combination of t OF my employee y shall Work ‘shal! be pata, ow many they OF on What the the right o ACH to ac- in aplte being indeed, freemen, leit with full pow owl bargeive i their own, way. “Tine te what L for myst, aud all Lrequire of any than, These | for the Re tees, anon th ‘al letters from of different shops were read pathy wich the movement, Varnishors In these shops were yet at work. wing words. uld join the ter in pieces and to seatter t The motion was adopted, Seve fact all th athe strik ‘The strik; ib | the demands of the workmen will L Mr. Martin moved that the plano makers meet would ju come general ere weceded ty. MS 8 | overy morning until the strike is over. Adopted, | throw it to seex makers (of 1 shops) are oi | the basemen were W Who earns bis own living, | strike Miike Uivelredt the eau get outof the city if he | ENCOURAGING REPorTs FROM ormen TRADES. | [AINE her branches of the | the conte works movin the ‘Te At 3:00" play” nmissloners set aside | tonie yeaterday qmornt and res | went to the bat. vor boys at] mained in session all day. it was nr ly, a shade perh: ported that six or seven shops had consented | the game was aU to eight hours, allemployers of whom suet ac- | the foreigners tion wus the | nishe ast expected, tnd Polishers’ Union met last ed that front of the plano factory of Steck, although erly | they had done nothing except. t« prises are | for the workmen in the shop, who with, b charge, they W ineeting Was very enthusiastic, > the union yes n from Inger rtant Indus- | men from Steinway & > ith, Winston & Co.'s, from Ernest Gablers, | The fo and others. Needham & Sons, melodion manu- facturers, Con tas Mr. Steck refused nt . t mnducted rday—25 men | he so exelt I & Watson's, | to anothe d lust night, and thelr men | punter rnin. The varnishers | MeD. told that the would ree Allleon, Ietb..2 : x auld ree | Ae hd : : { ‘ yesterday, and we ceive a decided answer this morning at 5 i Boyd y to vote the whole | ‘The strike of this branch of trade Degan only | SUSIE Rk, ay some Sw men went to | Prantl work under th ight-hour system, The work- | Lentz, « oshops will go to Work this morning menoft ‘ Total a os first © Mr. Engelbert Dorn delivered an address. He Iyxtnncclet @ frst ome | ies the men tolay ali prejudice ot nationality | Eoktord ry ide, and not to wet as Germ or | Besoint ‘ Just now the Americans, | but, “simply wud” witely | Huns corned sh on | 4% workmen, "In this age men needed © making @ rush on | Tore time for recreation, for the cultivation of | Time of gan Immense flocks In | their minds, and as 4 matter of education, It Was | THB OLYMPICS BEATEN DY THE of them; | necessary for them to have their hours of work | (Phe Atlantic has been paid | feduced to eight, He said they were only care | yyayea ne rying out the spirit of wlaw of Uals State, and of | Hiya axe unicipality of New art of the publie were In fay and if they would only act en, and ref kK. ‘The ‘greater of this reform, nergetically, Hkée and uninte ieve a splendid vietory. [Applause.) But no care his morning the varnishers will send mittees to all the shops where men are still working, in order to induce them to join the on Steinway & i price with, aig? shop, which they call the Gibraltar of the “hours opposition, The wood turners, plainers, &e., resolved, in I Xstreet last nig to hold necting at Teutonta Hall this a ek. There are 120 continu Olymple Atluntic at do’ strike this mor It fa not Im- | sent to eight hours wo shall hear that | 4 NEW CO-OPERATIVE ASSOCIATION ORGANIZED. | }\\1, not later than Friday iperative | day It nd if the ontsa | assoclation at 60 Th is not their intenti d avenue last eventng, move for hour reform wotil mug to insure success, ‘They number sey red, enterprise they have displayed In raising sheep BRIGHTER SKIES FOR THE UPTHOLSTERERS, Pants, May 28, DUNge Upholsterers wore tn ses sion all of yesterday at IM Eldridge street, Mr, Buttonhein r of men, conceded eight: hours a committee to say that GW, Hai Chrystio street, would give Kod for pleco, work, aud that met | Suue 4, on endency of the C: Were told to choose themselves how many hours after all, the natural tendency of the Call. | Were told to choose themselves how many hours rhe now in the Haw burger employs none but plece hands, Gus } opposite Ciy Let \ OF LABOR Sleglor, In Schenk’s establisoment, Oliver street, THE END OF MILITARY RULE, I + | was bitterly complained of as having throw from ‘the first, cold Water ‘upon thie movement and Employing ignorant boys in pla ». The men are encouraged inclusion of the strike, Pot Menaure Defeated th the House ree Republicans Voting against the Ka-Klux Rights Bill also Defeate . Wasineton, May 28.—In the House to- day Mr. Poland (lop. rules and pass the Senate bil Klux bill until the end of the next regular Rejectod—yeas 0, nays, 108, ‘The Republicans voting in the negative were J. A. Ambler of Ohio, Austin Blair of Michigan, H. ©. Burchard of Illinois, Aylett Rt. Cotton of Lown Wm. G. Donnan of Towa, J. F. Farnsworth of IMinols, GA. Finkelnburg of Miesourl, J. A. Jd of Oho, Milo Goodrich of New York, Eugene Hale of Maine, John B. Hay of Ulinola, 8.W. Kellogg of Kansas, G. W. McCrary A HUSBAND'S VENGEANCE, YESTERDAY'S TERKIDLE Trigepy IN ORCHARD BIKE EY quit the she RENDERED TO-DAY. and predict an early c —o— THE MARBLE WORWENS STRENGTHENING THEM- ithless Wife « pentedly Stabbed ably Mortatly W Mie) tage tied Reais ae teen fn thete ae and are working unitedly. ‘They have the ad- nufacturers Awaiting the Action yeh ommenleeria. demand the ef tern oun as any other society. The Pat Makers announce that their od OD Lew nae, rif nization to over 1,00) 1m ave made every Fifty or sixty employers 1s of the men, t.) moved to suspe extending the Ku ntage of a Hh sion of Congress. came to New ¥ August. 1971 in this city as acigar maker, which bu ter. of 28 Third stree warm friends, Traftr’s house, ndeman was 0 afterward @ bakery was started In Fifth street, near the Bowery man furnishing the nec the business an unmarried should five In hie hous charge of the marhle cutters, with headquarters at 807 P. Lowe of f Towa, J. L. Morphts of omimitte whom 130 were add rs have told their men to re: on | on the eight hour otttins an f remain who are unwilling to grant this reform, be directed aaainst employers, exclusively. | (iain, who are unwilling t THE SUGAR REFINERS. A workingman calls attention to the condition and initiatin tal and Trafiz Lindeman, who wa ed that his friend and let bis wife take tments he occuy wetent was gladly wi but three or four | of Louisiana, W. C. Smith of Vermont, Julius L, Btrong of Connecticut, W. L. Stoughton of Mich- lean, J. H. Sypher of Louisiana, R. H, Whiteley of Georgia, and ©, W. Willard of Vermont—23, Mr, Poland, representing the Ho the Joint Ku-Klux Committee, stated that ama- his motion, which requtred a two-thirds vote. He would have reported as he had aright todo at any time the House bill identical with the Senate bill, and which would require only a simple majority to pass it, but as the vote just taken dis the bill, he should not re the samme subject unless moval Was quickly effected THAFTZ'S FIUST SUSPICIONS, yan’ house neries, where the heat at the amall There are thousands New York and Jority had voted for to 100 4: ber, day. Brooklyn sugar ea ty be houses who ask assistance to reduce the hours rh inakers marched forth last’ evening, and ig Pat Ra hy equality with other more fortunate laborers. COFFIN MAKER'S: at if they struck | ‘The Coffin Makers’ en they were com | Saturday last to the employers that the: fonday for eight hours, If t acceded to. Hand moved Lindeman. vist nthe next day in de Husband's protests aftz abandoned her adelphia wi sed a majority against port the House bill on he was further instsuet- days afterward Union gave notice on ‘and went to lost Lo ‘Traftz until Sunday la re living as hus: Maynard (Itey and pass ‘th Civil Rights bill, being less than two-thirds in the a This was a strict party vote. Mr. Bingham (Rep., Ohi») moved to suspend Jes and pass the Sen ory Civil Rights act n two-thirds in the afirin Was also @ strict party vote There aro fve d to suspend On AN AVerAce k & Martin. di and for eight hours, 145 Orchard « nd by Mrs, Cassous, Gere an Who practises midwifery, sh pack parlor for ly get | coffin firms in thi Fimen. On Monday morning Rowers, grant @ special meeting, Which was called | The piece worke n their wages. to visit | & Co., 287 Howery, acced Paylor & Coy Ap fs house is Fe and wile two we AN ATTEMPT eband went te last, and (hey bad « promising to retui that he woul AT RECONCILIATION, sare they will yield n of ull the firms con- Hot mallreat ng reduced wages for eight | tinue on strike. GRANT TACTI atisfied with th The Strike in ANO MARIS W\TING FOR sreIsway. | Yesterday the marble cutters and polish- lock yesterday | ers in the various stone yards of Long Island City refused to work unless their time was re- duced to eight hours. ive | strikers were the workmen employed by Geo, was then sentto | Ryan, A. Goldman, A. Murray, 8. J. Kavannah, Marten & Clancy, and Mr, Me i but they would giye @ | manded $3.0 for eight hours’ work. Three of the ept the terme, but the refixe their’ consent the | men would not proceed to work unless ail the their shopa would ‘ail | yards would adopt the seule. i .of 100 men from the Cabin (reat satisfaction. It is be- | ers’ Union, New York, visited the cit npted to persuade the workmen y,and at the refrigerator nd then all other plans | Works, to join the movement. : An Attempt to Pa Political Debate-A Scbe aud Schurz, we to Spike the trivial excuse Wasrnaro: tion of the morning hour the Senate took Foremost among tho ut on his coat While he Was to act of reaching for his coat, with his back Traftz, the latter wea dager and weapon look a ribs of his rigut rken off its polit 1 to seize the instr powered his viet n the abdomen, Mr. Shorman (Rep., Ohio) moved to lay it on for the purpose of taking up the reso lution reported by him yesterd on Finance, applying the five-minute » the debate on the bill and amendi a small piece was b Lindeman turi ment; but the hy and stabbed him tw from the Com- nted to ac Th the afternoon The seuMe aroused other inmates of the house The resolution being before the Senate, Mr. led fons bat traits Sherman said that If he could obtain unan sent to the substance of the resolutic press it to a vote. Mass.) called attention to ution, as re police were lustily any arrived Traftz had plan ing blade fo or they would not ‘The Macsachusette 1 crwn trevert! Remmi ft Bostoy, May 28,—A Convention of the Massachusetts Labor Union was held here to- day in the Horticultural Hall, jyors wive an | Hin was chosen President. Wendell Phillips read lutions which approve of all asso- come | Strike at once. clations of workingmen as a means of training Speration and of fixing the the fact that the Clerk, would apply the five-minute rule to the debate on the bill itself, while as originally of- fered it would apply the rule only to the Ho was willin, resoluiion, but not to t station for fure t Carr quickly re- ‘The Sergeant also he Hospital for Sayville havin wounds of the sufferers Hospital, but bis victiing are e the tragedy was MAS. THAPT'S BCORY. Mrs. Traftz has a clear features, dark bair, and large blue eyes of wone G.M. Chamber- Police Surgeon moned, dressed. tha Traftz 1s in Bellevue cared for at the Hifleation of it their hen- | dress, in which be said: We must make up our | thelr members to c is that this is athing We tust have, at all | attention of the world on the condition of the fectly Justidable, | hazards, That shall bo our motto: wo must br. Which would hereafter; and it Was in the power of the majority to adopt ir. Surmner to withdraw his objection, so that there might be working classes; denounce viol 1 as fail. It must be, we must have elgut | ference with personal liberty, but bellove strikes it and necessary, and congratulate Senator Penry of Con- | must we stand, by elght hours must we fall, and | the parties in the late him who excludes himself from this great work | cess; cate the estal Was adinitted to her bedside yesterday, but on k condition she was unable ys her hush provide for her Mr. Sumner said that his was not the ure for most 1, therefore, hold the lessen A PROTEST A Mr Trumbull (F INST PANTY DEsPOTISM. I.) moved to nd abolish th She applied to hat all divid Hi be true to | banking system so shall eight hours | panies should be obliged to divid ed by next Monday. [Ap- | the net profits among the labo: Ke of | ported pauper labor to work on long c eof principle. We held | should be subject to dut esterday, and we have already | 8. P, Cummings made an earnest address, in argued for an education which would to go down to the Industrial system of the day and overtu An its place a correct svt Monday in December next He regarded this 1 as one of @ series of meas. ng the character of our origin of the Govern In the Senate had b ust few years, when at been made from time to time to put the Sen: J not of a majority, but wiedges ler w declining this ofler. LINDEMAN'S 870) Se looking Lindeman is a workingm Inted with th ances; he pith der this system to their own convictions, oeTLed Ive Voting as ittet: apitalists, come to view the labor questio Out of this agitat uld clasp hands with cap. the development, of the eomed ina broad spirit lasses assembled at this Convention, as tend- J not tear down. r spoke in favor of the text that dapplatise.| Let us work earnestly | the unconsumed products of the past belong to We have replac s within | with great corporations which throtue the labor He would take the charters of ar them to frag sts of the working c cern sold for, when she asked his advice at husband, and the offer was accepted, THE STORY OF TRAPTZ. aftz resembles Lindeman, Traftz a home on in the eo. ating the representa yple and the people themselves DOLE, a great ge he hoped that labor w orward ce he tion should result ine tives of the | would have build up a f mbull then reviewed at some length 1 the Habeas Corpus d, to vive the ement laws a and somewhat acts, which were 58 pre possess! hit is hardiy q together, being just above th ed his wife kindly, designed, he ent control of the sof centralizing the G it Mr. Morrill (Rep., how tnuch politi by talking against tim limit debate. t He says he had It with each acquaintance d with much feeling his wife's inf r moving in y take him out Is power f race and sex, rafisinen who usurp whieh every 5 asked Mr. Morrill w! tall except one had a no other Senator had Jast barrier remains ~ Stat nator except « says that thre street, Linden H. Jones f Abington spoke on the rel Christian Church to the labor ques- of procuring t sand which was ply him with Nquor and kc ugh to get his wif W she was gone, an ordinary dagger, five Morrill said P. M. Buffum of Lynn said the only way open for the laborer to wealth was throug he was fortunate enough to get into one ke of revolution as God's from home, and that Sumner remarked that under the rule one weapon used Was long and one-half s was partially destroyed when broken in W.Va.) said there were sev- Mf the chamber the arrangement, ful liberty forall men, of | Mr. Allertson sp al! natious, of every color, politics or religion to act for | chosen Way to prow eral Senators on the other side who would not agree THE BALL three must have Than said that no Sen: lon except t been killed outrig and Exciting ¢ Senator from of Elizabeth, Nod The rain which stopped the cham} nthe Mutes and Eckfords on Monday put the ground in splendid conditio wlutes of New Jersey and the E Both clubs had their full nines r thus insisted up. ause he Intended to en= nthe Tarif bi would stay in session until the than have the senate rator to do that Traftz's wounds ¢ itive injury to the pi rohed without the result of his injurie ship game betwe his term rather forced in this way by one which it did not wish to do. restrict debate was to hasten the in the next forty-eight hi fords yesterday. SPANISH NEWS FLOM CURA, out, and @ good game was public busin Trumbull sald he did not know how the Senator (Sherman) knew th: assachusetts ( ‘The game itself, floor. | apart from the time It took to play it, was an extremely pretty exhibition, some very brilliant plays being made on both sides in the fleld, and batting was also free and su rh t draw The Patriots Attn in the Bay of Ba Pilot, and Twe sailo: TlaAvaNA, May 28,—The insurgents have again made their appearance in the E While the gunboat Cauto was enter- the east coast of the woo Spanish Ganbe intention of the Senator from had underst willing to agre mendments to th Irrelevant amendments inute rule to before deliv tthe pitcher of the E e. holding the bal tng the bay of Banes, Jurisdiction of Holquin, she was fired upon by a Is, who had t liffs which overhang channel Is narrow a had every cha amendment or the bill itself. the attempt strait jacket Mr. Sherman sald he would modify the resolu. tion so as to apply only to the ame open on the bill itself, but suill ex. cluding amendments not germane to the bill, SUMNER WANTS TO REPLY TO TNE FRENCH AMS put the Senate in a Up @ position and t or first base, when neither of e within six feet of the bu Had it not been that dments.teave nd crooked, and the reb mar upon the gunh Owing to the presen: mnmander of the ¢ wheel, the boat was ke game this season t might have d UZ o'clock pt on her cou: was called, and the Eckfords Mr, Sumner. who had been temporarily absent, understood that Mr, Sherman had said that he (Sumner speech on th He did desire t from Missourl (Schurz sho nity to reply tothe extr nin the report of the Committee on ales, but he did not intend t As soon asthe Cauto ¢ on the third inning, @ He had hin nth rand again the blanked in th Wiillamsburgh boys e was a tie, elghth inning, tt got ean the ninth, In whic The Resolute s rebels have att A company be Freneh Arm: troduce that subject int Senate, by ref compel him tod rian said that made one run, wait outside | then made a desperate effort to the, if not to they want- | the game ; two men were out befor strike, They were taken | get a man across the home her not dela’ : n called on the bat yess | in all probability have won'the game dhimself fidgetting from one foot that it Was not surprising he sent in vs. men from | an easy ball and allowed the straugers U flowing ls the score: » and bis twe If the passage lebate, he would aba Hand would an, the Eckfords would nger attempt to restra: splracy against the Span ‘onfined at Cascorre Indeed, he thought he would ta part In it himself if lecture it be, ought wot tu be addressed iY A report from Puert ps, during an ¢ band, killed twenty-two men and Mr. Sherman~It is not a lecture; it 1s only Laugntin, 2d'b.2 a body of ins ADJOURNMENT, President laid bef Wadaworth, os re the Senate the jouse concurrent resolution to adjourn at L2 n Monday, Ju Morrill (Hep', to adjourn on Wednesday, dune Tipton (Rep. STEALING RECORDS. Vit.) moved to amend so as Us Administration, to take the evening train to Philadel WAsHinaton fn Was made t resolution to adjourn at noon umed the conside fthe Tarif Bul and Olymple clubs of Bre ve on the Capitoline ground dl Sargent’s Defence of Robeson, the muting on both fog anything but table. innings the amateurs beld th nfom all violence, they could | guy inning the Atlantis got d increasing thelr ne following Is the seo id. Ath, Sth, 6th The report of the majority of the « Robeson is the m: Washing that has t tera of inves that the majority display hying facts Uhat were the committ previous achievemer en attempted Unpire~Mr, Phelps, Silver Star Club, ire, V5 milwutes ‘Time of Gaue ’ and fairly slop over ernoon Congress Closing Up tte Business, and they will all | Wasninoron, May 2 ing Mf the employers du not Cour | to the Conference ¢ other Important Measure, the « The revenue bili will go , Be | adinissions, and the te peachable witnes an be passed by Satur Just w organization is suMcient= | ite interest le felt in thi Agaiuet the U Miles Nilsson’s Nupti of Wales Ag Anees on What the best auth om roof Varick street, employing a | eariy in duly next, fter there came | Tho Fifth Avenue J irger, 105 | raphy, has «roaring twenty por cent. | at the head of the

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