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QWm BNC1BL 'i'nie. Bills Found Again?* the Chicago Prisoners. . MI The Great Strike of Miners in the Clearfield Region Ended'. ~— -•,» A Chicago dispatch says that the Grand Jury have found true bills against the leading Anarchists, charging thein with murder as accessories before the fact. It is saidthe in- dictments include the names of August Spies, A. K. Parsons, Samuel Fieldon, Michael £SSS b f and Hermann -Schnaibble. It was agreed to withhold the indictments until all the cases have been disposed of. WMJAJI 01 ' 0 0 ba Z e ?\ ade two new arrests, which they consider Important. Information concerning the men was given by one of thb Anarchists already under arrest. A quantity of dynamite, a bomb, two revolvers and a Winchester ride wore found. The chief of re^Slt^tuV 6 ' 6 ^ ^«°\ A T A^j. 0U0 packing house employes of Sidney ™»^ e Ai i? . bega J? the eight^hour move. ' mentatthe-Union- Stock Yards in Chicago, have had a consultation with Mr. Kent, at which the latter agreed to continue the eight- in all the departments are to receive nine hours' pay, except the laborers, whose wages wore only reduced from S1.75«)-\J1.65. The other packing house employers had an- nounced their intention to return to ten hours on June I. AJF,??i£' ea< ; stoike of , ooa l mi,lcrs '«»*ho Clear- field (Penn..) region has ended. The men re- turned to work at the old wages and the mine-owners make the following concessions: Absolute guarantee of just weight. Ac- ceptable weighman to be placed on every tipple, aud his wage? to be PaidVin the office as agreed upon :by miners Abolition of the store-order system and cash $ paymsmtsui.even dollars to the 15th of each Jk£A2& '^Mi-settlement at the \endo» «month and the men to go where they ,.-<f DieaHn^Mn making purchases without «JE5»*.-- . ~-v.«..« & i^uxuuttat a W1GUOUT; ^S$PSfj- traiI ?f-, 9 ues6l0Il s o £ price to Mpaidffor all dead work and other mat- ters of dispute shall be referred to a com- ,'taissipn agreed upon by both parties, »; ^fS 1 \ coaipission being composed of \ i,S tei§ttP erjn * endent of the mines and tafof the miners. That no man-shall bo dis- «^P5,*^i. wi .r,\=\'u : TO ia. , iuav no mau-snau BO dis- P^||argidon account of his,participati6n,ih-the Ufi^r.?fe$ rlke iJ 5u * & the old-miners shall be ;;?i 5#»Mas#;mse^»aHpsMale, Penn., i%|wffiiptSslii>Sne'r ., of* WMfumB^fymmWin ..theaaillin^; *^g^t»--Hiintingtbn, Penn.., and •ghosf; %^SoMKJ&«^jbeeri boycotted- throughout 'the *>®#M(Umiri6us!Coal region on account of his ac- : \^•\llwptyin 'looking after the interestsof the ;|>,.3^perato)rs,has,received notice that the boycott fi'-'. ; nas.t>een' removed. , ,---.;f]A' Bostondispatch says that the employes •\ •, of»aH,the steam railroads running from that, ,-:. city bave;been quietly organizing themselves V U into local assemblies of Knights of Labor. A KH\-general move has been made in the direc- ^\•'tion of higher wages all along the line, under the counsel of the Executive Board of Dis- trict SO. Noticeswere received from several of the railroads that the requests had been • laid before the Board of Directors. 2 d : 4 PENSION BILLS VETOED. ! Five More Returned Unsigned J Some Reasons; The President has vetoed five private pen- sion bills, throe of which originated in ths House of Representatives and two in th«~ Senate. In regard to one of them (granting a pension to J. D. -Hawurth), the President says: ''It is proposed by this bill to grant a pen- sion to the claimant for the alleged lossot sight iu one eye and the impairment.of tha vision of the other. From the information furnished me I am convinced that the diffi- culty alleged by this applicant had its origin in causes existing prior to his enlistment, and that his present condition of disability is not the Jesuit of'his service in the army. In regard to the \Act for the relief oi Rebecca Eldridge,\ the President says: \This bill provides for the payment of a pension to. the claimant as the widow oi Wilber H. Eldridge, who was mustered into the service oh July 24,1882, and discharged June21,1SB5. He wai pensioned atthe rate of $2per month for a slight wound in, the calf of theleft leg, received on March-25,1865. There is no pretence that this wound was at all serious, and a surgeon who examiheditin 1880 reported that in nis opinion the wounded' man \was-not incapacitated from obtaining his subsistence by manual labor,\ that the ball pas ed \rather superficially through the muscles,\ and that the party exam- ined said there was no lameness \unless after long Standing or walking a good deal.\ On January 28, 1881, while work- ing about a building, ho fell backward from a laddor and fractured his skull, frbui which he died the same day. Without a particle of proof, aud with nofapt estabhsned which connects the fatal acci- dent in Ibo remotest degree with the wound refei red to, it is proposed to grant a pension to the v idow of 412 per month. ' It is not a pleasant thing to interfere in ouch a ca«e but we mo dealing with pensions and not vViuh gi attunes. NEWS SUMMARY' Eastern and Blidftle States. SPMNWitaMj. MASS., has been celebratm* Jta^E? hun< M and fiftieth anniversary^? te^S M *' byaWs fr°' !e W« n an . d o'Nr AN Anti-Saloon Conferenceof New Jersey S?rti? a ^ wa 5 held ,. at Tlrent ° n on the S£ de| S^? £ 0 \»all over the State at- tending. E. A. Armstrpng,'Speaker Pf the AssemEly, tailed the mee8ng> ordPr. A platform was adopted 4ud a State Commit tee.appointed. vS.t\^m D . B! ?^ N J D W °?° of the New York officials under indictment for bribery has been re-arrested upon a fresh complaint This time he is charged with oflferinir ex-M derman Waito, the man who ha? Sfrned in- former, a bribe to vote in favor of granting a-horseear franchise on Thirtyrfoiirtn street. n^i. B ^ des » rpye< ? ashurcli, hotel and several other structures in. Franklin, Mass. GENERAL CLJNTON.B. FISK, of Soabrteht. was nominated for Governor by the lew Jersey Prohibitionists at their State conven- tion in Newark on the 28th. South and West. ONE man was instantly killed and three others were mortally wounded by the.explo- oion of a sawmill boiler near Deshler, Ohio. CECIL MARRIAGE, chief, engineer of the water works^at OskaIoosa,Ia. ,and his cousin, Miss Hettie Marriage, were drowned a few days since while bathing in the riverat.that' place. A LAROE building in Chicago, occupied by ^ Sh !«1^ aad nf ^ dred trade3 > buraef down on the ^Bth. The losses aggregate -JliOOO.OOJ. TWENTY-ONE indictments have been found against anarchists in Chicago. \ A FIRM of grocers at Stillwater, Minn.. ™Y e - 'S™ a ™'? sto . d for selling butterlne This is. the flret indictment in Minnesota for this offense, JOHN C. HENNINS was hanged a feW days ago^ at Grawfordsville, Ind., for the murder of Mrs. Lottie Vollmer, a widow. They were engaged to be married, buton the day appointed for theweddihg Henning was intoxicated, and Mrs. Vollmer reCused^oiui- fill the^ngageraent. Henning shortly after- ward shot Mrs. Vollmer to death. \•J* 1 ? 11 V l lley Gi *y MilIs > - o£ Gra n<i Rapids, Mich.va huge structure, collapsed suddenly a few days ago. The building at the time con 1^%$ a ^ out 2i) < m bushels of wheat and (JOjOOOpf-bran, and all these, together with cpitly machinery plunged to the bottom in a |bap*ssmass. The damage is.estimated at jtoj l vetoed two more indiflires during tfie same period, -iriis nomination of Louis K. Ohuych^-of ; New.York, to be: Associate) Justice of Da^: kota has been confirmed by the.Senate. ANTONIO NARBELBO, an Italian, was: hanged in the Washington jail on the 28tb. The motive for the crime was robbery. Foreign, THE Derby, the leading English racing eyent, was won this year by the favorite, the Duke of Westminster's bay colt Ormonde, from a field of nine starters. PEACE prevails again between Turkey and Greece. The Powers will raise the blockade of Greek ports. TWELVE men were killed by an explosion in a dynamite factory at Valencia, Spain.' THE Belgian Government has prohibited the holding of a contemplated immense So- cialist demonstration. THUNDERSTORMS have been raging in Ger- many for three days. Many persons and hundreds of cattle were killed,, A COMMISSION of British experts appointed to investigate M. Pasteur's alleged cure for hydrophobia announces its confidence in the Frenchman's discoveries. CANADA will fit out six steamers and six schooners to protect her fisheries. PREMIER NORQUAY, of Manitoba, was called a \contemptible liar\ on the floor of the Provincial Parliament at Winnipeg, and felled the offending member with his fist. pVraera made, an effective defense, killing, three of the Indians. -I THE: Canadian schooner Sisters, recently seized at Portland, Me,, for violation of the, -customs laws; will be let off without#ymont of the flpe incurred, the Treasurydepart- ment. having decided to be lenient toward the captain of the detained vessel. THE Salvation Army Congress has been in session for a week at London. Two thousand ofiicers and many thousands of sojdjera of •the Army from allpartlof the world wore present. THE volcanio eruption from MountJfStpa isisubsiding. . \ IN pursuance of inslyiietip^ from fhs' United States Government, Minister Pnelps has had an interview with Lord Rosoberry,. the British Foreign Secretary, on the Cana- dian fisheries question. It instated officially that the British Government is rather glad than otherwise that the trouble has occurred, as it is thought the present dispute will hasten a lasting settlement. THE Australian steamer Lyeemooh, from Melbourne for Sydney, has been lost. Sev- ea<3 r persons w.ere drowned. TIE NATIONAL OMEE HOME RUNS fetch ISO apiece at Memphis RAMSEY, of Louisville, struck out lOimen in thirteen games. j P'ROURKE, -of New York, leads the LeagW players with the bat. r REMABKABLY.good fielding is being done by the League clubs this season. , DALY, of Newark, is Considered the most graceful catcher in, the Eastern. League; . NEARLY every prominent professional club has already had one or-morevplayers crippled.. ALL the New England League games:have had large attendance, despite the unfavorable weather. ' J THERE have been already quite a number of games in which^two home runs were \made by oneside,.-, - _GANit.be possible'that some of the onee ' high-priced players are giving limited base 1 ball for a- limited salary? . . \ BASEBALL isiikely to take root in Austra- lia, a club being in progress of formation by some Americans in- Sydney. eiNCiNNAW was the:flrsfc Assoc. to win three >gahies-^>»*i-*a™ T: ?o\ r *»^eWSandedSitters pfthe Detrpifctaani -todseVenof theni bat. tWs way-rprflc^ce batting S\soiith paw\;pitoher every mora- LITER NEWS. •4& 1 .: MR. CARNESIE, -the millionaire, has pre sented for library purposes $250,000 to Allegheny city* Penn., and 1500,000 to Fito burg. - THE Knights of Labor, in their Cleveland Convention on the 31st, adopted resolutions demanding tfiat Congress should preserve the public lands to actual settlers, protesting against alien landlords and demanding that the present ones shall be bought out and that fresh grants be denied to would=be new alien owners; insisting upon the removal of barbed-wire fences; advpeatin g-a system of graduated income tax; a3king that.'Electibn JDaybemadea national holiday, and that provision be made for the punishment of bribe-givers and bribe-takers, etc. A NEGRO died at Danbury, Conn.,, from lockjaw, caused by a, white man biting his thumb during a fight. APACHES attacked Jones Brothers' ranch, near flooker's Hot Snrines. Arizpna. The rt WILLIAM STimoTMAN, while playing to-a game near Kankakee, lib, was struck on me side of his head bya,pitched.ball, and diedin: ten minutes. SATIJBDAT is the Athletics' lucky day; For ijhrie years they have not lost a game, at; tionie or abroad, on that day, so says -the Philadelphia Times.- • - i, NINE men in Thomastohj all above 200 pounds in weight, are anxious to play a gjatne of ball with any other nine of ea.ual weight, in any part-of the country, for a dinner for the two nines; Chicago vanquished Philadelphia three times in succession with ease, while Detroit got their three from the Quakera with great difficulty.. On the other hand Chicago and Detroit wereeach beaten once by St. Louis in the opening games,- but Neiy York de- feated St. Louis the first three games. A MOST remarkable game was played re- cently in Lewis'town/lPenn.,. between the home team and the Lancaster Club. The visitors were unabled to score a run until-fihe ninth inning,, the home team in the mean* while havingseciired eight runs, In the last inning the Lancasters piled up nine runs, and won amid intense oxcitemeut NATIONAL LEAGUE RECORD. . Mr; BSmmbri'd fGa'..! pffered^n amend-ient; '•EjjtijSig' -tipiitnijfta&ft&ja&y-..'• merchanc -or Detroit.... Chicago... New York Won host. ..19 3 ..17 4 ..14 7 ... 9 14 AMERICAN ASSOC St. Louis.. Brooklyn.. Athletic... Baltimore. Won. Lost. .22 18 , .15 12 ..17 13 .14 10 SOUTHERN LE Atlanta... Augusta... Charleston. ..18 11 . .16 15 ...9 19 Chattanooga, 11 18 TFon Lost Philadelphia.. 9 Boston 5 Washington.. .4 Kansas City...5 3IATION RECORD. 11 16 15 ia . Won Itost Pittsburgh...19 Cincinnati... 14 Louisville.... 15 Metropolitan.,. 9 AGUE RECORD. Macon t.15 Savannah 16 Nashville....16 Memphis 16 15 20. 18. 18 16 11 13 14 EASTERN LEAGUE RECORD. Won Lost. Bridgeport...6 12 Hartford.. „;9 5 Long Island..1 11 Jersey City. ..12 4 INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE: RECORD. Won Lost. . Won Lost. Won iMst Meriden......5 12 Newark..-....15 S Providence....6 -12 Waterbury,...10 5 trtica. Toronto ••• SyVacuse... Rochester. ...7 10- ..5 Binghamtoh Buffalo. Hamilton.... Oswego....... A BOY not yet seventeen years Of ago,, in Pope county, Minnesota, has invented \a combined hay rake and cocker,\ for which he has refused an offer of $15,000, - A LOUISIANA poultry raisersays.thatmoie money can be made by selUhg eggs at five cents a, dozen than in raising cotton at ten cents a pound, jl mmmm . » Senate Sessions. 1 •'\• 1 9 r 5 H DAy.-r-Mr. Van Wyck (Neb.) re- : R?-^f; a - b - iU toj/nprove the navigation pf - JS' B S S, PP 1 ' Rlr \* an « prevent overflows •;i^- T S? E 5?!' 0 . to *°0« «? the bill reported from the Committee on Federal Relations, supplemental y and amendatory of the Chi- uese Emigratioa bill of ISSfc Mr! Shir- man said that the bill was simply to ex- plain the meaning pf oxisfing law re- lating to Chines.a emigration. --For exairi- pie, one meaning had been attar-bed to the words \Chinese laborer\ by Judge Field and another by a Mafflachusptts Judge;' The committee had adopted, the iuterprefa; SSw^fnF'^lt ^ ,- - Hoar -protested against^he bill for the reason- that-ft aiinei .••C men because they were laborers add: be- cause they oelonged to a cei'tiin race: which wasagainstthe fundatnontal principles of this republic. After further debate the bill waspostponed. ' - 108TH- DAY.—MT. Sewell, from the Gom- nuttee on the Library, introduced a joint resolution to appropriate $35,000' for the erection of a /monument at Stony Point, -{..>•'• *° oolebrate the historical everitB wnch occurred there during ; the war- of the Revolution.;..Mr. Miller/ sub- • gm*ed the- Conference report ' on the Shipping bill, which wa=i concurred in. Thil bill contains the-Fiye amendment- aiithoHz- tagthe President to deny bypl-oolamatiPn to vessels.of foreign: countries such.privileges as are-demed to American vessels ihsuchfor- eign countries... .The remainder-of theday's session was devoted to eulogies of the late Senator John F. Miller. < 109TH DAYi^The Northern Pacific Land ' irprfeiture bill was-taken ujS. The pending • queston was to table theraaendment 6f-Mr., Van Wy.ek, which would forfeit«ali;ianflSiCC^ terminous with-and adjacent to; such- parts Pf the-prSpPsed line-as should not: nave beenr\ completed at the date^bf the^ passage of this act. The motion to table was defeated— yeas, 23;'. nays, 28....;After further discus-: Bipn the Senate want into, exeeuiivesessiPn, andwhen the doors werereopehed adjourhoa till 1 Tuesday next. •-'•••••__ House Session* _ -' • 12STH DAY.--Mr. Biouht (Ga.) l-eported that the conferees on the Post Office Appro- priation bill had: been, unable to agree, and a rui-ther conference . was ordered.....The House went into ebmmittse on the Whole on ,«ie \Oleomargarine\ bill, all general debate upon the measure being closed. Mr. Lawlor (Dl.) read ii protest against the bill' from the Knights Pf l^or-j>£c*«nr-tnr- andogcogaiiiJ^^iily^ an amendment was actopteWtb the section defining '.'butter\ so as bo exclude frPm that definition the product of milk or cream . when additional coloring matter is used. shopkeeper in the District of Columbia or the Territories to seil olepmargarine without labeling it in a conspicuous manner, and re- quiring hotel, restaurant, and boarding house keepers who use oleomargarine- to place jn their dining roPhis a placard bear- ing the words: \This house uses oleo- margarine,\ and to have the • same words printed oh the bill of fare. Agreed ' to—92 to 85. An amendment providing a penalty for the violation of this provision was lost. Mr. Findlay (Md.) offered an amendment providing that the provisions of the bill: shall extend to the manufacture and 1 sale of sausages; as far as wactica- ble, under such regulations as the Secretary of the Interior may prescribe. Pending action the committee rose. 120TH DAY.—The Shipping bill; with the Frye amendment, was. passed unanimously : .. ...Discussion of the Olepmargarine bill was resumed- The pending amendment reducing the special tax imposed on manufacturers of oleomargarine from, $600*to $100 was.lost—44 to 119. Mr. Reagan offered an amendment extending the provi- sions of the special license tax section to watered milk, adulterated butter, ancient eggs, sanded sugar,, glucose syrup, artificial honey, candles and soap of less weight than they are sold tor, bottles' of wine and liquor holding a leS3 quantity than irepre- ' sented, adulterated wines and brandies, , whiskys, shoddy cloths, shoes with brown paper soles,, or any articlefof food, drink, ' or wear vrtiicb. is impure, adul- terated, or short measure. The amend- ment was ruled out of order. Mr. Reagan appealed. The Chair was sustained—181 to 32. Mr. Tillman (S. C.) opposed.the bill. Other mock amendments were offered by opponents of the bill, but:were all ruled out oiorder: 1 ^ \ . ' ' 127TH DAY.—The House went into Com- mittee of the Whole to-day oh the Oleomar- garine bill, the pending amendment being that One offered by Mr. Danipl (Vs.) reducing the special tax on retail dealers from |48. to $25. Rejected. Mr. .Van g:haick (Wis.) presented a protest - from the Executive Board cf the Kiaghts of Labor of- Milwaukee against the passage ot the-bill. On motion of Mr. Hatch (Mo.) an amend- ment was adopted allowing retaU dealers in oleomargarine to pack the. compound in paperpack'ages,ii.The,everiihg sessiPn was devoted to consideration of the'pension bills. . 128TH DAY.T^The House-resumed consid- eration of the. Oleomargarine bill, and, the pending amendment of Mr. Towhshend (to- reduce the tax IrPm 10 cents to 2 cents per pound)- was refected;, .67^97. Ameiidhients offered-by; Mr; Reagdn (Tex.) and Mr. War- ner. (Mo;) exempting from tax oleomargarine whiohls not manufactured for sale a? butter,, were rejected; Mr; Daniel (Va.) offered an ainehdment abolishing the tax on tobacco, which, wasadyocated by Mr. McAdoo OS. J.) THE other day a block of aurifei ous quartz of the estimated value of $350,000 was taken outinthegalleues of the Oscar gold mine, Bonnel Island, on the west coast of Norway. :«rii:-£.im.