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T he D aily leader . yOL n.---NO. 36 . GLOVERSYILLE, N. Y.. WEDNESDAY, OCTOBEIUO, 1888 . WHOLE NO. ? TllAVJ!!i:.lCKS’ OUIDIS. • lyONDA, JOHNS OWN ANH QLOYERSVILLE Ij nallroad, going hobth . a . m Fonda - - Leave 9 00 Johnstown - - “ 9 20 QloversvlUe - Arrive 9 SO “ • - Leave 0 85 Kingsboro - “ 9 89 Mayfleld • • “ 9 C Cranberry Creek - “ 10 Northville - - Arrive 10 GOING SOUTH. KorthviUo - Leai Cranberry Creek - “ IS; II ■I'-\' if o \W nw YORK CENTRAL AND HUDSON RIVER xS UailroaU.—Trains leave Fonda os follows: OOIHO EAST, S S t t S S S ^ s.Y . E i ’S t S: aOlNQ WEST. Accommodation Day Express Aocomm dation Rochester Express Chicago Express New York and Syracn New York and Utica 1 SUNDAY T rains . WEST—5!36, 9:5-J a . u . 3:351*. M. EAST—12:27 A. M. 337 and 4:05 p. a S;;S: - - ■ ' S i S : II?”' •- SiS?:S: W*15;SSS£¥rA7-“ '-'^‘'^ (40JN& SAST., LiEs; GOniO WEST. ................................... io J i s a I m .' J O^ S T O WN .'.A.U GLOVERSYILLE STREET :Sil; t JBUSmESS DIEEGTORY. DENTI.STS. W. E. LANSING, 15 N orth Main St. PH T S m iA N S AND SURGEONS. fi E. CROMWELL Dentist, NO. 13 North Main Street, Glovei'sviile. YOLDETEEE-rRESTAOMST ED. FOX, 23 SOUTH MAIN ST.. G loversville . USE ALIBLE POULTRY POOD. MRS.G.L.HUCKANS Has gone to New York and will return next week with a grand assortment of WINTEfl :-:lLIIIEIiY! In all tNe LATEST NOVELTIES. She has engaged two first-class Milliners and w ill bring one from New York where she ha^ been spending s'ome time trimming in one of the first houses in' the City. PHARMACY HALL! Second - Edition. In making our first bow to tile people of Gloversville we stated that we should conduct a FIRST-CLASS DRUG STORE, and asked a share of the public’s patron age. \We have met our pait of the agreement and have been pleased to notice that the people have responded. W e shall continue to give -honest goods fo r honest prices. Courteous treatment CO mmands and receives just recognition. If in need of anything in the line of DRUGS, MEDICINES, TOILET ARTI CLES, CIGARS or STATIONERY, give nsa call. S, M, TOOK S C0„ Cor, Main and Church Sts., Gloversville. Cil OF m IICTiS, Broker Williams Found with a Bullet in His Temple.- COULDN’T STAND DISO-EAOE. The Body of the Suicide, with a. Revol* ver Clasped In His Hand, Found hy His Two Sons at the Grand Union H o t e l H i s Alind -Wrecked by the ' Tronbles o f the Wheat Deal. N ew X obk , Oot. 10.— \Old Hutch’s ” gigan tic wheat deal has already proved fatal to one human being and has brought disgrace on a hitherto highly respected and well cir- eumstanced family. Praaois W. Williams, the senior member of the great brokerage firm of Williams, Black &Co., of 1 William street, a merchant of twenty-two years’ standing, was found yes terday lying a corpse in one of the rooms of the Grand Union hotel with a bullet hole in his right temple and a note by his side stating that life was no longer worth living while his business and his reputation were in such a precarious condition, For several days past the family o f Mr. Williams, which consists of his wife and. two sons, have watched with alarm the queer actions of Mr. Williams, who had always been distinguished for his quiet and methodical habits, con tracted in his long experience in business. When his firm, which was regarded as one of the most trustworthy and conservative doing business on the floor of the Produce Exchange, was forced to suspend on Sept. 29 through the skilful manipulations of Mr. Hutchinson, the Chicago operator, Mr. Wil liams was greatly depressed and said fre quently in the hearing o f his family- that life was no longer worth living. Even when he was able to settle with his creditors the next day and resume business he .could not be persuaded that he was not disgraced in the eyes of his fellow merchants aiid that the position he had obtained after twenty-four years’ indefatigable labor was lost to him forever. Yesterday morning he left his home at 10 o’oloc'.;, after bidding his wife an affectionate idU'u, saying that ho was going to his down- toA'u oflloe The two sons transacted the da- 's business and left lor their homes ataboitLSO o’clock. When Frank reached there his mother at once inquired where his father was. Frank said that he had not been near the offlee during the day, and for the first tfme learned that Mr. Williams left homo at 10 a. m . with the avowed intention of going, direct to business. Frank at onoo ran around to h is brother's house in E ast Seventy-seventh street, and after a short consultation the two men decided to g o out and hunt the city for the m issing one. They first made a tour of thu large hotels. The Hoffman. House, Fifth Avenue, Windsor and many others were vis ited in short order without results. Ono of the last to be called at was the Grand Union hotel. On looking over the register Frank thought h e recognized his lather’s handwrit ing In the name of F. Westlake, which was among the last arrivals. Frank fearing the worst asked to be shown to “Mr. Westlake’s ” room, which was on the next to the top Repeated knocks on the .door brought forth no response. A nearby carpenter was told to force open the door, and when this task was accomplished and the anxious waiters entered the room the two sons saw the body of their father lying on the floor, his head surrounded witn a pool of his own blood, which had trickled from awound In nis right temple. His right hand clutched a 41-oallbar Colt’s revolver, -which showed that it took but one bullet to accomplish the deadly work. The dead man was a ttired in nothing bnt his un derclothing, the rest qf his apparel being neatly placed on the hod and a chair. Dr. W. L. King, of 914 (West Forty-fourth street, who lor many years was the dead man’s family physician, said that his rash act was undoubtedly oousod by worriment over his business affairs. This subsequently proved to be the ease, as when the dead man’s clothes .were searched a brief letter, addressed to his wife, was found, in which he said that he'conld endure life no longer when worried, so by business. 1 jWhsn the anneuncement, on Friday after noon, Sept, 28, was made on the floor of the Produce Exchange that the Arm of Williams, Black & Co. had failed it created a sensation second in importance only to that o f the big Ohieago wheat deal engineered by \Old Hutch.” Two days before the fl.fm was es timated t o be worth upwnrd of $2^000,000. On the following day Mr. McIntyre, of the Arm of McIntyre & Ward well, made an examina tion in 0 its affairs and discovered that they would be able to pay oft their hundreds of thousands of dollars of obligations dollar for dollar, and have 525,000 left. In 1865 the dead man. started in partnership with Mr. Black. Both of them were Southerners. Mr. Black retired in 1885 with $250,000 as his share of tho profits of the husines, and Mr. Williams then took his two sons into partnership. Triple Tragedy lu a BTewspaper O/Bce. A nniston , Ala., Oot. lO.-tA triple shooting m;itch, growing out of an attack on the \Blind '^ger,” oocured yesterday. Justice of the Pe.ace Lawrence and a friend named Lucy, who wes drunk, visited the Hot Blast offlee and demanded a retraction ot certain stiitoments which Editor Edmunds refused. T1 en tho shooting began, Lacy firing at Eumunds, shooting him in the arm. John Chapell and a plumber named Tipney were shot in the head. The wounds are fatal. Rough on Alormons. S alt L ake O itt , Oot. 10.— The supremo court of Utah yesterday entered final judg ment and decree in the ease of the United States against the Mormon church, dissolv ing tho church corporation, ordering the por- somil property to he forfeited to the govern ment and their real estate to be held by a re ceiver until tho oonolusiqn of proceedings. Foster May Have tSalled for Rarope. S heebbooke , P, Q.,Oct. 10.—Two of Pinker ton’s detectives are here looking for Foster, the moftgago forger, from New York, He was traced from hero to Kingston and thence to Quebec, where all trace of him was lost. It is believed that he sailed for Europe on Sat- A» H lephant on tlie Rampage. P hiladelphia , Get. 10.—Forpaugh’s big elephant. Chief, broke loose from his wihtoi quarters last night and went on a rampage, Ho was not subdued until five bullets had' been sUyrt into him. PiO T TO o r m tiu n o w TOwm iitT, ibttvluitan, Oumptiell and Layton luteiv eitoa In the K, o f L. Ooal. PiTTBDUEO, Got. 10.—One ofCtho biggest deals in K. Of L . circles has just been ooift- pletod. Its accuracy is vouched for by a knight and ex-offleer of the order, wheso name is in the possession of the Post, wljrfoh prints the story today. Tho chief features of the plot are the otger- throw, of Powdorly and the elevation of ex- Seoretayy Lltohman. A number of persons are implloated, among them being Layton, who horetoforo has been presumably a grfeat friend of tho master workman. The fact which verifies the story to a'vary great extent is that Layton, who, the has been led to hello ' ‘ igton, has ellove, was ret mgton, h actually been in Indiana. The object of his mission there is said t o have been the advancement of tho Eopubllcau ticket. worthy ton for general secretary, jrthlngthing .hashas beeen Every . b prepared, the pipes laid and a systematio effort, extending throughout the order, is being engineered to win the order over to Litohman, it is alleged, T H E Y WANT TO ZXNCJO: ja iS t. -White Men Resist Arrest Because the ;Ing of two white cotton jammers named \W J . Jackson and' Otto Olsen, and the serious clubbing of a colored police officer, Henry Shaw. Shaw did the , shooting ip a t tempting to arrest one of the men who had been complained of for disturbing public worship at the Seamans’ Bethel, oorner of Seventeenth street and the Strand. The two men were u n der the influence of liquor, and Jackson had been ejected from the church by tho minister, who appealed to tho offlonr to arrest him. , Jackson resisted arrest on tho ground that the offleor was a negro, and ho and others, according to the offleer’s statement, disarmed Shaw of his club, and were applying it to h is head very vigorously, when he pulled his pistol and fired throe shots, tho first taking effect in Jackson’s right breast, passing through his lung and inflicting what may prove a fatal wound. Olsen was shot through tho hand. Before other offloers arrived a large crowd had congregated, and th'e officer was being severely beaten, and threats to hang him -wore loud and determined. The officer was taken to jail as soon os possible, to protect him from the violence of the mob. A X E G n O TirXMP CAUGHT. exciting chase over tlio roofs o f a dozen houses in West Twenty-sixth street, near Seventh avenue, after a colored sneak-thie! named Lloyd West. West, who i s 23 years old, is classed ns a boarding house thief. He rents furnished rooms, and only remains a sufficient time to ransack the house. Com plaints against him have been made to Oapt. Eellly for the last wook, hut ho succeeded in eludingarrest until yesterday morning, -when was caught, after tho housetop chase, in an outhouse in tho roar of a saloon. George Howard, a saloon keeper, appeared at Jefferson Market police court today and made a complaint against West. On Sept. entered Howard’s room and stole a suit <l clothes, a pair o f gold cuff buttons, and oth« jewelry valued a t over $100. When the pris oner was searched, half a dozen silverspoons, and pawn tickets representingBsenting propertyroperty tplaint against West. On Sept, tro, by means of false keys, ind stole a su it o m from Howard i mittfld for trial. p re found. He was THE FEVER VET WITH XECEM. JA 05 SONVILI.B, Got. 10.—With the eoolaud pleasant ivoather of a Florida winter the germ-killing frost has not yot arrived, aad the yellow fever microbes are still insidiously sapping the fountain of many precious human lives. Although the S( reported, and oeoasionally comes the sad In' telligenee that another life has gone out. One death and five new cases have already been reported today. ■ Yesterday there -were foui deaths and fifty new oases. The plague has developed all the charity and goodness that dwell in the Jaeksonvlllian heart. Many o f the landlords hove an nounced their intention of colleoting n o rent for their tenements for the season during which the fever has raged here. 3IAN T M A IN E R FOR ZLFM. One Hundred, and F ifty Persona In- Jared in tho Reading Disaster. B eadino , P a , Oct. 10.—The accident whieb occurred at the laying of the oornerstono oi Hie P o lish Catholic church hero Sunday was even more disastrous than was at first sup- lesoflSOper- miiimed Tho scone of the aocidont, yesterday pre sented anything but a, pleasant aspect. The ground and broken timbers are all bespat tered with blood and the place looks like £ slaughterhouse. The cause of the neeideni was defective workmanship in splicing th« main girders, but the contractors c laim thal tho work'was done according to the orders ol the building committee. This the latter deny by a Copperhead Snake, Oct. lO .-Jol I s Mr; Foote drink i undiluted whisks to a doctor, who out the finger open all atoui tho bite and applied carbolic acid, and had Foote drink several half-tumbleriuls ol 'ooto experienced C h icago Strikers i n P o litics. ij[uwjLibiy buia bu vutu Jkut luuijl own interests regardless of former parties. They represented thatithoy -were goihg sooi to see Joe Eifer and ascertain what ho would do. The vote of the association, which the nut at 15,000 will, it is Said, be swungwung party w ill' s 1 the mos 60 (I,III)()IWMTIT. No Other Way to Get to Their Worh; at Ohieago., 1,300 MGEE MEN AEE OUT. No Settlement Reached w ith President Terkeg a t the Morning Conference. Two Paggengerg in Twelve Carg. Every Etibrt to Prevent Lawleggneg®. The Grounds o f DiiTerenoe Dinonsscl. C hicago , Pot. 10,-»-The conference betweet President Yerkos and his employes and tho mayor adjourned at 1.30 this morning and was without satisfactory results. The west side, street oar drivers niul con ductors struck this morning, bavin.-; been unable to reach a satisfactory co;it.-Jusiou with Mr, Yerkes in reference to the north and that all - new men would be retained. This proposition-was at once rejected. The assembly then adopted a reply to Mr. Yerkes and made it an ultimatum. It was that the north side men would re- i to work at 21,23 and 25 cents an hour for cars,tra\ swer, and to say that unless a favoral mswor was returned hy 4 o’clock h . m. not a wheel on the -west side would move today, - Mr, Yerkos’s reply was that he would give ------------ morning. A strike was then west side system. The 0 men. the strike to the wes dlvisloji two-thirds of the residence districts of the city, containing the aggregated fully 600,000 people are practically cut oil from all means of reaching thebuslnoss section except On the north side the effort to accommo date the residents of the extreme nortliorly sections was resumed at 7 o’clock, oars being started from the Larrabee and Limits barns. As was the C! a solid lin iked with offloet ing on each car. Tery few of the public, however, availed imsolvea of tho opportunity to get down town, and on the return trip there woro but two passengers to twolvo cars. The nonde- seript vehicles on the other hand did a thriv- ig business, while, tho sidewalks were being encouraged by weather to walk to their [jusinoss, packed, business i tho beautiful fall jilaecs ot business. Hero and there a oi-y ot \scab” or “shame” Wiis heard as the cars wont by, but the hostile demonstrations were neither numerous nor generally partloipated in. Tho north side strikers began to congregate in tho vicinity of tho barn soon after daylight, and when the uew.s was received tliat the men on the west side had gono out there -was groat cheering and other damonslrationa of satisfaction. Up to 9 o’clock n o effort had been made to start any oars on tho west side, and Manager Pansons says unless there is a change in liis programme ho wlU let well enough alone un lit the north side trouble has been adjusted. With a vivid memory of riots that at tended tho west Sid# car strike of four years ago, the public authorities are making pre parations to prevent lawlessness at all hazards. It is reported that Mayor Booho has again sent for Mr. Yerkes with tho view of subml*.- ting the matter to arbitration. Tho west side committeo is in session at Seaman’s hall, awaiting a response from Yerkes to tho«pro- positlon sent in at 4 o’clock this morning. All tho private detectives woro withdrawn from the north side barns a t 10 O’clock. SOME CARS A R E RU X S lllG. Tlie CUtcago Strike May Be Settled by ‘ Mutual Concessions. C hicago , Oct. 10.—President Yerkes made, an effort to resume the running of ears on tho North Side lines yesterday. Early in tho morning a number of oar? drawn by horses ------------- . - . .. . -erminal ing a numl were sent out from tho stations. Eacl of ten policemen, tempt to interfere with them. They were patronized only moderately. A number of tho new men employed by the company were persuaded to leave their cars by the strikers during the forenoon, and fifteen grlpmen who caiho from Philadelphia were induced to refuse to go to work. A meeting looking toward a compromise has been proposed and aooepted by both parties, h u t the time has not been fixed. It is hoped that concessions will bo made and a general strike averted. Looking for a One-Eyed Murderer. N ew Y oek , Oct. 10.- The police were asked by Capt. Mangin of the Yonkoi-s policf. to look for a n Italian, with but one oyo, who is vantod for the murder of a brother Italian 'esterday in Yonkers. Policeman Gardner Joseph Bunks yesterday morning, as lost his right eve. but the irer had lost h was discharged b; ierh court. TEEEG R A P llIC BREVITIES. The Democrats o f the Tw'cnty-fourth Penn sylvania District have nominated William P. Wamplet for oongre.ss. Dr. George W. Kerrill of Madison, Ind,, lately Douircratie uoiniiiee for coroner, has dtcliu-eil for Harrison and Morton. C.a-;.s II Hunter was shot and killed at Ohatta- nooga ye.stnrday by O. Gordon, a prominent business man, in a quarrelarrel overver propoiroperty, qu o p lelaredi yesterday that her wliioh slxo starts in Pauline Lucca de American tour, on which slxo starts i Noveinbor, will end her career on the stage, negroes, x made wxi; trouble. The steamer Cami IX, uu» tjuvu through the state, dollvcreJi a touslhg Bpeeoh. Ail tho nxillo shut jjown ib allow their employes to attenil the tn toting. $2.50. STILL ONWARD! $2;5C 1 detiire to announce to the people in Gloversville and vicinity that foi: [ih^ S thirty days or until the whole lot is closed out, I shall sell 100 PAIRS*''^ LADIES 'FINE SHOES at less than cost. WHAT THIS LOT INCLUDES: I French Kid Button, Importe French Kid Button, Dongola Ti^ ported Turn Button, French Vam;^ B u tto n , Curraco Kid Button. lA-ny shoe in this lot for $2.50, torwm ^ priel $3.50 (Jome early before the bestf si2es a^f sold. - ' Do not fail to see the Lion Process Ladie Shoe, it is a dandy! C. B. BOGART, 14 North Main Street. CHIEF JUSTICE FUEEER. Vary Ijlttle Ceremony Attenatng til* Taking of tho Oath. ■W ashington , Oct. 10 __ Melvillo W.Fuller,of Chicago, selected by President Cleveland as the succe.s.sor ot the late Chief Justice Waite, was sworn in os chief justice with little cere mony. In fact, ho xvas almost compelled to lo the duty which should hava been confided lo othor.-j. He road tho oath of offlee him self, and without-any other ceremony took ills seat as tho otxiet judicial officer ol the and yesterday. Justice Fuller is small of stature and unas suming in manner. In height ho is the smallest member of the supreme court bench. Bis wife and two oldest daughters were pres- snt to witness tho eex-emony xvhioh it was supposed would be observed in shearing him. lators and reproBon- idanoo and Attorney- Postmastor-Qeneral Dickinson were in tho room. There were nany ladles there. Justices Matthews and field were absant. Tho chief juatloa woro a glossy pow fpljo md appohred able to wear it with b'eooming Iign%'. Most prominent -among those in sttondanoe in the court room was ox-Sonator Ulon G. Thurman. There was a disposition ipon the part of the speotators to cheer him. (Vixen he drew his old bandanna from his svereoat pocket the spectators could no onger resist the temptation and they gave s cheer that made the old Roman fairly ;asp. He had ovidently not expected it. BO Y S AND HORSES BURNED. N ew Y oek , Oot. 10.—Twonty-six horses oasted, ono stable boy burned to death, and notlxer lad so horribly scorohod by the lames that h e died later at tho hospital, is he sad record of a flro this morning which -■onsumed tho long and doep stable sheds ox- ending along Thirty-fourtli street from the ailroad cut nearly to First avenue. The hed covered tho greater portion of tho block •nd abutted on a five-story double tenement warming with tenants, . It has alwa^^ been used for stable purposes .D . Withers, tho great horse- d of small truckmen and cab- horses and wagons there. All vner, D. D . d no end o non kept tholr horses a nd v _ if these havo lost ovorything. Of all the property stored in tho shed only me horse was saved, a nd that in such a oon- Htion that it had afterward to bo killed. I’roublo and delay* with the flro apparatus ms chiefly to blamo for this, though the liances of getting much out of the shed, once t was fairly ahlazo, ware slim from tho start. . H A V E TH E Y FOUND H I M t i.rr«*t O t a Man Whose Clothing is Gov> •red -frith Blood Stains. LoNDon.Oot. 10.—Anairest,-wMeh the police hink Is an important one in conneotion with he series of murders In Whitechapel, has leen made. On Wednesday a stranger called it a shop on Gray’s Inn road and left an ovor- loat and a pair of pants to bo oloaned. The ilothoswero plentifully s p a t t e rd ...................... I pockets. '.tains, especially iterally dyed red. The proprietor of tho ncldent susplolous andl 1 x 0 police, and detootivo with hi which V he promises. When iotivos othing ixe was at one He refusedised too givoivo ainy oount of bin 00 ot blooc t g a o . r to explain the presenoo itains on his clothing. He is hold a prisoner iixd a soarohing investigation is being made. The inquest on the latest victim of the iVliitechapel butcher was held today. Sov- iral surgeons who had been summoned as vitnesses deposed ■voman of flno app( )f good social stam been aumi that the victim was a jearance and undoubtedly indinfe. Indians to be -Vaccinated. A lbany , Oct. 10.—Dr. J.D . Davis of Ter saillos has been appointed by tho stato boarc of health to act as health officer on the Cat- taragus Indian reservation under approve by the Indixxu commission. He will vacoin- Indhxu Indians, smallpox having broken oui reservation. A V e r n iont FostoOico Burglarized. N obth T eoy , Vt., Oot. 10.—Burglars ble\t open the postofflee safe in this place last night and secured $50. Postmaster Soav( led ^ tho Explosion and ISs shothot a t ' was arouse for the store. Hi who made their He wa s at by tho burgh escape. SnUiilpOX itk Toronto. CAMPAM OfTLWi Folks; come in and take a squint Of “Campaign Songs” you’ll get Our “ Autoharps just take the Come try them once, for gdodness « Or! if you want & fiddle cheap,, You’ll find our prices far from steep. Guitars, and Banjos, are “the ituff\ We’ve got ’em from $5.00 up, Our Pianos are of the b ^ t Come and see them, and invest. In fact you’ll find most anything. From a Concert Grand to aTiddlajill Now we’re done: So please do not forget the eem - ' ^ To Fred’k H. Eaton * Go., , „ Is the place where you must go, iM At 23 \VUest Fulton street, You’ll find a ll things both n ew and ne«»,;3 Fred’k H. Eaton & Co., , J 108 East Fulton St., GloversTllle, N. ^ ^ I lyE L S ’o f S f f K E lS G M Fothlnc like I t e rar pabllihed. 8 books I n i one volume. Over 360 elegant ong ravin A new Agent repoiti TO orders In .S da Agent’s profit, $136.60. No oompetltii Excluaive territory. Solis as well as “ Twei Yean of Congreas,” by James O. BU il „ Agents employed on commiiaton or a a l:^. I Outfit free to those meaning business. Tnt I Henry Bill PubllsBlng Co„ 79 MllkSt., Bootoii. | ZEA ’S opera House Diniiip Pailof^ FIRST CLASS - ^ LADIES’ AND SEN^ RESTAURANT. VARM MEALS AT ALLflODl(S.i REGULAR DINNER, SOo. A fine line of Cigar and Confectionery. Ice Cream, A ll Flavors, Furnlshfid irties and Festivals. « EASLAN ZEA, 38 N. Main SL, Opera Honseblli,! GLOVERSVILLB N T; E. P. PROVOST, CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER, | NO. 6 ADDISON STREET. Patties contemplating to hnild Will ' find it to their advantage to m il andgV t’v S plans, specifibations, &o. Best of fAqili*' ties for doing all kinds of building si lowest liviiig ratss. A ll work gvarffiktMil.