{ title: 'The daily leader. (Gloversville, N.Y.) 1887-1898, November 05, 1888, Page 1, Image 1', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074616/1888-11-05/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074616/1888-11-05/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074616/1888-11-05/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn88074616/1888-11-05/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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T he D aily leader . ’i^OL II.-NO. 58. GLOVERSVIL. ee , N. Y.. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1888. TUAVRr,l!lltS> GtJltDlS. ^ilroad. GOINO NOIitn. D’ondft - - Leave Oohuetown - - “ Gloversvllle - Arrlvie 'iSII :rlv 9 S0| , , , • i,eave 0 35 Kfiigsboro - “ 9 39 Miiyflold - - “ Ci'iuiljerry Creek - “ Northville - - Arrive GOING SOUTH. Uoruiville - Leave Cranberry Creek - “ Mayfteil - - “ Kiiijjsboi' - - “ I GHeversvllit - Arrive r 15 “ - Leave r ss iO^O Johnstown • - “ r 85 10 50 Fonda - - Arrive 7 5311 08 A.»^lA.M.P.M.|r. M, 1 461 -■hj EW YORK CENTRAL-AhD HUDSON I Iv >■ Railroad.—Trains leave Fonda as foil GOING EAST. Cliicflgo Express, UUea.and Albany Aecom. & N.Y. Ex. Aocoinmoda- Day Express ACcoiAmodation Rochester\ ------ : - 0 i i \ i ; SONDAV TRAINS. WEST-5:36, 9:53 L m . 3:3S p . m . BAST-13:Sr A. m . 337 and 4:05 p. m . TIIECIBMRADESI Two Lnnieiise Demonstrations End the Oampaign. LAE&E M M B E E S IN LINE. 3:43 p. M. GOING BAST. Ro: 60, West Snore Ex. - - . No. 53, Day Express No. 68, Mohawk & H. R. R. Express J'OHNOTOWN AND aLOVERSVELLE STREET LEAVE OLOVERSV1I-I.E. ----- -- — 10:00, 11:00, S I P i g g i a BUSINESS DIBEOTORT. PHYSICIANS AND SURGEONS. D. physician and surgeon. R B, CBOMWELL M M ,,. NO. 13 North Main Street, Gloversville. Tiro Afternoon Parade is Started in the Rain, tout Clouds Soon Give Place to Sunshine—Atoout dO,000 Men Walk. The Evening Marchers Revie-wed by Governor H ill. - as me Dig oiooK in old T rinity chiu'oli steeph chlmpd out the hour of 1. The rain was fall Ing then, but the skies soon saw they couldn’ dampen Republican enthusiasm, and later the sun broke torth, flinging its golden light on flag and banner. The disoiplipe of the enthusiastio paraders was like that of a well drilled regiment, and promptly a t the time appointed the band at the head of the thousands of longshoremeii who formed the vanguard of the parade, pealed forth its music, and the great proces sion started its tramp. The Republican mi shals saw to it that each part of the gtt parade moved like pieces of a gigantic m ohie. It was an imposing scene. The num. berless drum corps enlisted for the man had scarce sounded their familiar reveille b fore every cross street that intersects low Broadway was filled with men, wearli was filled with men, wearing badges of all colors and descriptions, hurry ing to their trysting plroes. A slow, drizzling rain fell: but who cared fo The enthusiastio men who would 1 they bore agains: atery bullets that rained upon harmless as sweet scented bree: from the clouds, clouds yeste’-'^o\' irmed an ai -.JOOmenwereinthel lost Imposing display. The great Democratic parade of last night 'ound up a most extraordinary time. Gov ernor Hill arfived at the reviewing stand at 3.20 o’clock, but it was not until 9.15 the roh-bearers WMV ol tll0 warj 2,000, marching sixteen abreast, after them came the Dry Foods mounted polloemei _____ ____ passed by the stand, the veteri numbering 2,000, marchii e:iding, and The Pioneer olub of Philadelphia ¥OlDKTEER-:-RESTADfiAHT ! ED. FOX, 23 SOUTH MAIN ST., G loyersville , Tie Beautiful Portraits of prominent people of this city tlisplayed in win dows of various stores is work of the National Academy of Portraiture, 44 Columbia Street, Al- •essor call on Kent Street, U S B AlIBLE POULTRY FOOD. E. F. PROVOST, COmCTOR AND BUILDER, NO. 6 ADDISON STREET- Parties contemplating to build will find it to their advantage to call and get plans, specifications, &c. Best o f facili ties for doing all kinds of building at owest living rates. A ll work guaranteed iiunib was Az.ou o-ciooKwnentho last ranks passed the reviewing stand. T^e crowd ola;n- ored for a speech from G gv . Hill, but he^wonid only give them a few words. \ \ A.—ThoD( ictu, ijp macier wnai mo result may be 3sday. It was the largest and most p i^ Bsque political demonstration which has - ,r taken place in that city, excelling in these respects even the memorable turnout for Tilden on the eve of the election la 1876. Each ward and county tovvn contributed two or more bodies, and these, wttb contin gents from aaroad, swelled the magnifleent BOlumn to suoh proportions as have nevori before been seen in Bro6klyn. An estimate of the numbers in line places them botweei 30,000 and 35,000. Five Firemen Unnecessarily Hurt. DKXEOir, Nov. 4.—A speoial from East f inawsaysiA large empi 4 voTiOitA.no An Assassin K ills Hts Ootnpanlon While Ho Sleeps. D enver , O o L, N ov . 4.—About a week ago George WethoreU Induced Charles MoKifbo of Pubelo to start with hijn for the mountains, to visit a mining camp. Nothing more vms heard of MoEaiie until Friday, when his mnl- ilated remains were found in Beaver Oreok. His head had almost been severed with an axe, while his body was shockingly mangled. Wetherell had murdered hia victim while he slept. He then abstracted $235from MoE:an('’s pocket, stole his team, and drove to Donvor. He could not satisfactorily account for the team, and the police arrested him on sus picion of being a horse-thief, but when a bloody axe was found in his wagon it ap peared certain that jjie had committed mur der. ' When the news of MoKane’s death was received the suspicion was verified. _ Wetherell was sent to the penitentiary on a life sentence eighteen years ago, for the mur der of a sheep herder, but. under the la passed two years ago making tvventy-flv years the maximumlmprisonment,'Wetherell, with his commutation for good behavior, se cured a release. He was taken to Canon City Friday night and placed in the penitentiary, as there was talk of lynching him, CAVCASVa B A ITW AY WBECK. Tweaty-one Persons K ille d - General Annenfeoff K ills HimseU; S t . P etbesburg , N ov . 4 __ The Offloial Mes- 3s that tho czar*s foot and the accident ABlCfBU-OPMIliy;^ 30 DiitYS ONLY. aOOD FOR 80 DAI A Lone Train Robber Achieves a Brilliant Snooess. HE ESCAPES FROM THE TRAIH . last. De- . , —d czarina de- ----- .0 attending-to the other persons on the train who were more sevSrely contusions. Twenty-one attendants were killed and thirty-seven were seriously injured. One of the iniured persons has since died. The ozar, after the accident, picked up a portion of a rotten sleeper and handed it to a gendarmOj with orders to preserve it for production a t the official inquiry which will be held to asoertain'tSie cause of the disaster and to fix the respofislblllty. Gen.Annenkofr, ibanager of the Caucasus railway, has oommitted suicide from fear of an investigation ot the aooidont. XBB SBXXTEBS MVSX GO. A Deolalon l a Favor'^r a Railroad that Work* Great Distress. certain alternate sectio the government to the Missumr uuu aansss T.exas railway were claimed liy the set tlers thereon, that the land in question le gally belongs to the railroad oompany. . The settlers will, therefore, be compelled give up possession. The land embraces a tho most fertile far mine NOTICE. Having purchased the bakery of George Reim- ensayder a t N o. 30 Beecker street, we are prepared to furnish the public a t short notice with every thing usually kept in a frst-class bakery. A fresh supply of Bread, Cake, Confectioaery, Hat Rolls and Bans are constantly kept on hand. N one but experienced Ijakers are employed call will convince. AUGUST STUMPFEL, SO Bleecfcer Street, Gloversville. MRS.G.L.HUCKANS HaA returned from New York with FIUEST ASSORTMENT of Millinery Goods, in tfce city. Opening day Thursday and Friday. 15 PLACE BLOCK. — ------by two men, Ide^ The oocu^nts of tho ! drove ped in the middle o: who asked for a ride carriage refused, and drove on. The men in , the road then fired rifles, fatally wounding Berlen and seriously injuiring his companion. Berlen has four millets In his body. Th oitement is great. ' A Vornig T liief Canght. t N ew Y ork , N ov . 4.—On Sept. 21 James Win- tens, 14 years old, of 52 Oliver street, robbed ‘AlexanderManuel, of 88 Cherry street of a draft for $350, a $60 steamship ticket and $40 i.u cash. Heiwas not arrested until Mday, the man’s pocket. At the Tombs poUee court party^^^^__________ ye-sterday morning the boy was remanded. He was charged with highway robbery over A BAJTBOAJD COXTISIOST. Five Men are Injared litat no One im KUlea. T p ^ o , Ohio, Nov. 4.—The north-bound Sllohigan Central train which left here at 6 I’clookyesterdnymornlngforDetroitoollided vltha pony engine at Air lin e Junction, in ■he suborbs of the city. Both the engines and ;ho front end of the baggage car were wrecked, I the following persons were injured; irles Madison, yard brakeman, leg broken; _.,orge Bittner, pony engineer, head out with Mass; George Zimmerman, pony conductor, loot’ h u rt; James Strothers, passenger en- fineer, l6aped.from the engine and sustained severe bruses; Robert Jackson, a passenger residence Detroit, two ribs broken, ' Two Heavy Klves. PoBox-ANn, Me., Nov. 4.—Zenos Thompson’s large five story oaniago factory on Union jfareet was burned yesterday morning. A large amount of stock in process of bianufaa- ture was destroyed, The loss is $30.000: in- mrance, $20,000, P enecating a Prohibitionist. 4.—George Houghtaling of ene county, recently received - if lio did 2 iot> l6svd a ----- Prohibition party it would bo the v tor him. On Nov. 1. a t night, his barns fired and destroyed, and it is said that some of his neighbors refused to help put out the fire. This information comes from Frank ---------- „ — highway robbery over two years ago, but owing to his youth, the justice let him go that time. ^ Shot for Refasiag to Give a Ride. mry Berlen and ng home Friday Nov. 5—Henry Berlen ----- ..are driving home Fri „ on a lonely road between Pittston and Pleasant Valley. They w ere suddently stop- . in the middle of the road ' tement is great. Red-Nosed Dllhe Isn’* tho Mwrderer. lisohargeffu The Best Hxtradjltlon Case. ^ E astpoet , Me., Noy. 4.—-A petition of the jrand Army and citizens was forwarded yes terday to Secretary Bayard asldng his pef- oonal attention in the extradition ease of Best Who shot Batsbn at Oampobello, N. B.I recently. The petition says t h a t on account i..® i-u-iOBiuences were o of the feeling existing on the Ctmadian bor- erably alarmed, dor, no naturalized citizen, if g iven up. could ....... . ... ........................... have a fair friai, ^ 1. Subscribe for the D aily TF i apwr . sene orunty I A. Burtin, extensive importer of Fri, wines, of Montreal, has been arrested for Issuing false invoices. His premises have been seized. The bark Viola, 182 days from England -with a cargo of steel rails for Victoria, B.O. is long overdue, and the consignees are becom ing anxious. Edward Witheroll, aged 40, a watchman iu the Washington mille, Lawrence, Mass, com mitted suicide Faiday night by taking poison. He formerly lived in New York, Ho Buliaozes Two Men w ith Revolvenf and HUfea the jSxpross Car at Hl« Leisure-Over $198,000 in Cash andl Bonds Tahen-MtsUi«jlnpi the. SCetarf of the Crimea N bw O elbans , N ov . 4.-;The ip»e\Aik.lli^ay- man carried out yosterdayimorpipg the most successful train robbery<evk>pOrpeJr,atBd in this p.artof the Mississippi valleyl’ At 4 1 2 a, m. when the soulh-bonhfi'llfitittJOn theiOlfa- oinnati. New Orleans and Texas Paoiflo rail- read was half way between the little towns of • Derby :and Laoey. Miss., and about sixty — „..j pas- _rom the plat- • ow a couple of Baggage Mas- • ...vjjui- ji ttuu vuaciBs Leroy, messenger of the Baltimore and Ohio Express oompany. He ordered them to throw dp their ha ' under penalty of death. Both men v, __ thoroughly frightened, and did as ordered, whereupon the lone highwayman, after lock ing the' door behind him, marohed the ex press messenger to the rear of - the car and made him open the safe, take out ail the money and valuables, and put them In a bag for him. As soon as thq money had been thus bagged he called to the terrified messenger: ‘‘Now p u t an empty sack over your head.” GIVEN AWAY. ----- ^-ing over th'e contents. After giving his two prisoners warning not to betray him he stepped out of the baggage oar to the plat form whence he had entered it, pulled the tope for the train to stop, and when It slaok- sned up stopped off into the brush and dis appeared. A brakoman was ten feetjaway from him a t tho time, but suspeoting nothing wrong did not stop him. Tho train wont on, but in tho meantime the' prisoners had been able to give tho alarm rho baggage oar -was forced open and they. were released. The. train had gone several miles in the meanwhile, and it was d,eemed aseless to return and look for the robber. According to all oalculations, he muai have hr.An frm rv»* _ ______ a liis life in train robbing - ------ - ,uu.ivu, nuiuu gave __ _ _ aasal twang. Ho wore a gray overcoat. The express company knew seyerol days that a suspioious oharaoter had been bbery. A sharp look- JS within the next 30 days. This i# „ to introduce one of the most practical htllBs* 1 ■ \ ' V ' - ' l l I toye also received a handsome 15 hutton 3 This shoe is sold*everywhere for fS.SS. ‘> | $1.75 buys a Misses common sense BjriilBt | Dongola Button shoe, its equal never before | shown in Gloversville. J C. B. BOGART, 14 North Main S treeti % GREAT BARGAINS! - x ) E \ V \ o : b ’ s - Nef IoFl( Millinery Store to the Front f _ With the Largest Assortment of Millinery ever shown in Gloversville. Oa* \'o New York Millinery Stoi*e, ■ _______ Opera g o a se Block. ARE YOU PO S T E D ! IS A QUESTION ^^1® F A B U A ]E) Baalnais Failnre. ■— ........... fan Tetlow, a manufacturer, made an assignment to James Murphy, represent ing the estate of William Arrott. The liabili ties amount to $00,000. Tetlow was indebted to the estate about $16,000. Tho heaviest jreditors are E. Wlddall & Son, eotton-dealers, vhoso claims amount to nearly $58,000. Tho lima of the remaining creditors er $10,000. ■ it---\ Two Alen. KUled by a Train. The Latest Ta«cott Captnrei capture, b u t was tocei'vlng two or three such dispatches from different pdi'nts dally. ouse, was Saturday sentenced to four vears ■i the Albany penitentiary. Job: ^ The K ing of Denmark’s Anniversary. OoPENHAGEN, Nov. 4 __ The opposition party in the Folkething are using eVory effort to defeat the government’s plan for the celebra tion of tho twenty-filth annl Ohristian’s euoeession to th< 15th instant. ivoi-sary of king le throne On the rn^rAiranTpenHe^^^^^^^^ her colored accomplice, was sentenced to tho same institution for three years. Rilled, toy HU Son. B onham , Tex., Nov. 4.-On Friday night H. 3. Bryans, who resides a few miles south of -own, was stabbed and killed by his-son, Neely Bryans, aged 17. The son had been living away from home for two years, and yesterday he had a dispute with his father about his actions, which ended in a quarrS. The murderer has notheeen caught. Bartliquake at MonAplils. BiPHis, Nov. 4.—An earthquake shoch yesterday morning at 2.5C DeaUiof a United State* Conenlar .%geat L ondon , N ov . 4.— Mr. 0. E. MoOheOne, con sular agent of the United States at Ports-- mouth, died at that place Friday evening, XETBQBAXBIO BBErZXXBSi. Hetr von Sohloezer, Prussian Minister to the Vatican, has been recalled* Thompson’s carriage factory, Portland, Me., was burned Saturday. Loss, $80,000. The post office at Old Orchard, Me., was En tered Friday night, and $500 was stolen from the safe. , A Chicago jury has validated the common law marriage of Ida Bowman and has granted her a divorce. Navigation on tho Cornwall canal hae been virtually closed for the season, another break NOTHING CAN EQOAL Our hand sewed and Uoodyear Welts Wan- kenphast for comfort, style and wear. We i majke this line our specialty for ladies’fine foot i wear. * Ask to see our new (Lotta) Dongola Button ^ opera toe and common sense heel also opera J toe and heel, the best three dollar Shoe in the 1 Gity. School shoes. Everything in this line I for Misses, Boys’ and Children’s wear. ^ A FINE LINE OF TRUNKS. J. M. HILL, ' 37 North Main St., Gloversville. E. Winton West, LIFE AND ACCIDENT INSTTRANCE A N D i , REAL ESTATE AGENT, ULOVEESVILLE. FOR SALE: One Farm of 134 acres ; One Farm 50 acres; One House on East Fulton street; One House on Maple street. MONEY TO LOAN. First class re erence given. ^ Lock Bos 34 Residence f 3 Maple St* <