{ title: 'Otsego tidings. (Milford, Otsego County, N.Y.) 1897-1919, September 09, 1897, 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/sn91066405/1897-09-09/ed-1/seq-1/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066405/1897-09-09/ed-1/seq-1.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066405/1897-09-09/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn91066405/1897-09-09/ed-1/seq-1/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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10, const}. work' Mass, on. of > drops. ° brings sag. of and of the rap best the but I ; { £ i t brow F 5 ko PUBLISHED EVERY T ArMinéonp, N. $1.00) Por Yogi-“S, idlyin Advance, JOHN WILGOX: ADITOR | Wawis f nour pa staked out nearly 4,000 \In\ all of show plentl<~ “Theres no. price that would buy my clam, and I know 'that .the: others: In the party feel 't do. *The\ timber. is | heavy and: the- iinderbrush dense; The, gulches and wn'teq courses afe, heavily grown and difficult to traverse. ' ,> \Wwe did not atrive-nt Michipleotten | ubt!L 7 o'clock Wedriesday-miorning;. but, we had no 'dificulty:in- getting Into tha mining distrlet\= over a. well trodden trail seven miles away. L2 'Prospectors nreinot yet numerous inf this district, and when we lett \Bature' day morning' there wore: only. about 200 morn on: the ground, but tents.. wore\ springing up as If by magie, and a city will. soon: exist .In the nnprospéeted country arounLLnke Wmvn.\ F endigremmeces DYNAMITE FOR SKAGGUAY. l’lnnl to Blast: i Booth“: Through tho Trails Beattle,. Wash., Sept: 6 follow- Ing lottor has beef recolved from Skag- guay, Alaska, dated Aug, 281 Sylvester: Séovel &. Now York nows- . papercorrespondént, landed: yesterday morning at Skagguay by a specially chartered tug from Junéesu. with two tons of blasting. powder and the neces siry.toold to aqulp seven completa crews. for Fock. work on. tho. Skagguay trail, and as fait as horaéx.and men could get at It If was started to the front. In 'the evening: thero -was a meeting at the foot of the first hill. attended by over 500 miners, who organized for the: work In front of them and elected an execulive; committed; consisting of James Christie of Portlarid, president; Zhillp Adas, secretary; C. A. Cramer <L Seattle, Mr. Heacock and Mr. Day ws superinfendents, who kelected expe- #lenced men. for The work on the rock. \ills and Veteran loggers for the work . wf corduroyIng the muddy places, There were 30. Canadian: mounted po- gico algo oi the frail, They have pliched In with a good will and. say that the- building of this trail will enable them to wet in the 10. ton» of provisions In time to build and. provision the mail slationg In their territory so that they. can operato dog teams all winter, and . they agrée to deliver the mall every two weeks from the Klondike to the Amer+ | lean line. Work Is In progress for 15 fulles along the trail, and all packing has 'been suspended. until it Is. come pleted. 'There have been. some kickers, as usu- al, but they are so much. in the mi« mority that they have bad to submit. While: I believe this trail 'will be com» plete in: 10 days so that travel can be resumed, don't start for this point ex» pecting to get over for ab least 20 days, gunit will take that Jong after the: trail 3s completed to get all the miners over - are naw there, There would never Shave been so much trouble for small parties, but the swarm of people, 95 iper cont of whant were tenderfect and Scaéw nothing about packing and moun- “21mg. bar bees the canse oi con« «t this point. : |< the elty. - it _\The Alabama, Mlesisaipp and Louisi- na health authorities, who. have: been: Thursdny anld. i Wnlmsley, acting: C. of health 'the : house, whig tumiguted and dislaf read 'of the the. funeral, | Dr. Walmsley. says thi t: Ocean:'Springs, Miss., her Hox! bay, gulf 'be\ Bie 'Two deaths have curred iow fever at Ocean Springs.. 'A week ago, but very fow. deaths, {ease 'Gengue fever, in several Cares, a quarantine Springs.. the gulf coast of\ Miésissippl. Springs and Pmnxcliiapeullered since 1878. . Hawail to Act on the Treaty. has been recelved here from Honolulu; Francis MC Hatch, minister to Wash» Ington,- arrived here on Aug. 20 with special Information which will require the attention: of both: govetninent and senate, and m secret-notice has already becn lesued to the members of the lat- ter body fo meet In extra. session on Sept. § to consider the question, Mean- While: Minister Hate Ix {n; almost con-«, stant consullation with President Dols and his cabinet. The: lawmakers will | be naked to ratify the annexation treaty { recently signed in Washington, and as. # majority of the members favor an« nuance the mutter will be rushed , 'through. . ~ BurritJ-‘n Feat Declared Tenant, Pa, Sept 1-The Demo» 'pratic: slate convention, Which met In . this city, nominated Walter E Ritter of Lycoming county for auditor gencral and ML H. Brown of Blairsville for state treasurer. The matter of the election. of candidates was entirely overshadowe ed by the fight to force the retifement of William F. Harrity from the national committes 'The opponents of Mr. Har» rity succeeded In pushing through by a Tote of 290.to 141 & resolution indorsing James 3G Guffey for his position, Mr.. Harrity's friende contend that the state: convention has no power to declare his: seat In the natfoonal committee vAcant und that be will not iurrender Wi a fight. - R Kells Low Fer Mxyor of Xew Tork. te | New Tork, Sept L-The Cittiens fiméonmuémhw’uu candidate for mayor of minim ak Bas «ut off aC men health, 'after an autopsy . announced Boy’ had\dled. of yellow fever Tho faken: charge .of d, nndwiil take dlg= as- butled-pri« |? 'vately, no\ 'one being allowed to attend was 13 years of ago. (*There had been several hundred, cones india. boird:of experts' then deolared the dis~ Blnce: then. deaths; have became more frequent, the symp- toms looked more like yellow fever, and the: alarm : became so.. great' that \the health authoritles.-ngain gathered. > This time {hey ere accompanied by Pro- fessor Ai Is Mats, chemist of-the Louls!- nna board, who analyzed the eyidence [Mobile aniother niecegh'ive declared \Ocean Bprings Is a pretty village on It has about 2,000 permanent Inhabitants: anid. |; bi sunimer Is -w sonslde resort. for; peo-. ple-from New Orleans and Mobile The | oysters which It In supposed contained. '- the germs 66, the: disease are caught In-|- the Mfssissippl sound and transplanted In: the bay, upon which Ocean Springs fronts, In former 'years. when: yellow | -fover was epidermic in New Orleans, tha | towns.along the Mississipp{ coast-Bay [- Bt, Louls,-Pass Chrlatian, Blloxi, Ocean more orless from the plague, But there has been no yellow fover In that loosiiiy «Bar Francisco, Sept. 2.-The following |. Mg a membmnlthe board #1y there is nol the slightest doubt but that tha inert ban. I a kson Harms i. worth arctic ; \Cspe Flora,, S Mr] BV \g. Jackson, the Harmsworth belng the financial back - er, \reports; that- his~ exploration - Franz Josef Land» revolutionizes pre: 'discussed: Git -. | where arstle. : |\the habitot placltg ; \ Mr. Land and' 1 \land north small, lands. 'am.open from Fron: KNEE. lot of, supplies:in case the place is visit ° wiso established a depot-at Bell island. \ Exceedingly. valuable magnetic, me ms. were brought to England. set/ere 'and less' windy than common the western part of Frank Joset Land.» Thi ' weather, ; and 'by the 'end. of, the - first force vessentlitl part -of thelr equipment, % h I‘olluwed the Coant, Lirc. . , They followed\ the codat 'life, so zon the froren'16e. and sometim along. the - being very haruslns‘. They ' shot a a |- & od. ACKSOV. beer. the only ona seen; and, having 'procured. méat and blubber, returned te pimwosd the middle 6f -May, after meeting ® party sent to Jopk for them; as they Were a forinight overdue, ° Arsecond expedition which went east {ward In the fore part of dupe was lest successful, as. on the sccond day out the explorers Jost @ sledge through: the thin: rea: 16g and. had a hasardous: ree turn Journey, The winter life of the explorers wat uneventful, Thera were only two hours' twilight In. the middle of the day from October to November, After that total darkness untlf the end: of February, The «expedition killed 1,400 loon, a 'webfooted bird, In the: automan, which provided ampfé freah meat, - During the winter they cabght 18 loon and 22 kit tiwakes, a bird of 'the gull kind, tc tint \J/* and liberated them,. The A6 @pérature somelimes reached 1} degrees below zero. and then jumped : up to 12 degrees above. Ay, Jackson announces his Intertlos Of heading another arctic expedition. ' this time on, hie-own account. 'To Nettle the EtHke, - Columbus, O., Sept. £-The end of the great strike' is in sight. The | natJonal sxecttive board of the United Mine: Workers has agreed to recom- mend to the miners & proposition from the Pittsburg operators for @ straight piice of 65 cents a fon; to continue In force until the and of the year, A dek egate convention of all mum whe xes wmmmmmexuuum 'to ket upor the recommendatio President Ratthford and the other wil approve the Wendel“ . * Joann! «sate-mun:- tlon 'has ' arrived . here on.-the steamer Windward, all well, after having spent three winters near leader, Mr. vious Ideas of, the country.. The much |\ Land : does 'not lie Jacke ands , Heé re-. m : istence, of Petermann Land. doubtful and in any case. rays It must . Instead. of a continental mass of lind there: are'a vast number of smal}, Is- In place . of \Iofty : mountaing '| there are long ridged and Ite packs, and north of 'these. was: found (e8z,.. These‘lhlterations of : the map rendet the. prospect, of regching the north pole osef Land more than due he returned - explorers\ are fled} there \Is. no land north of 81 hey 41d not see anything of\ Profeis. or Andree, | who, started July 11 from Danes Island In' a balloon, hoping tc cross the-north: pole. Before the Wind. ward: salled homeward the quarters of the expedition it Elmwood were fas |- tened up, 'but Mrs JackiOn left there a/ ed. 'by Andree or other explorers. | He 'teorological and geological observation: were miide by the expedition, and very > valuable botanical and zoological col Jackson says that after the Wind- ~loft Franz Josef Land last year [.with Dr\ Nansen the winter was lest Mr. and, Albert Armitage, the 'astronomer of, the expedition, starfed Mail-ch 16 with pony and dog sledges tc ey encountered- bolstcrous month the pony and most of the dogk had succumbed, 'and. the explorern were 'to abandon 'all except 'the most | ~bases of, glaciers 1,500 feet high, .on Cambridge bay, constant miste '| formed. their victime that nothing but ~] on the old man promising to obtain and which theyfastened labels with the In} | The \person gram doubtless is. years old.. He ig Olas. and Lady: Sara VilHers, -of a line of the\earls of. Jerse & ' Estorhdlry 'Tersey- Tally, at his atten- lage, because 'and, ~n.r ent : rgoer ‘but It wag n MRS. LANG’I‘RY. and shaven chinennd hos the reputation of having \goHE the p. tliat kills,\ Lily Langtry'§~ love- for horses has \kept her almost constantly-at the Hu- ropean race trnekn. and the. prince fol- lowed, her from one to, Ri other in the mostdevoted manner, TORTURED BYR BBERS. \Frie Po., fro‘b ery; d by some features; 'which. occurred In Greenfeld county fou , ago, has Just Been reported lite department of \thid: night list Voiney Bull and 'his. «on, Thurman Bull, wealthy farmers, wei in: the Yormer's barn when two men on-\ tered and asked permlesion to bleep in the barn. Ails While the Awo men were talking. to - the elder 'Bul{ \three more men, who wore misks, came in and drawing re- volvers 'ordered Bull and his son- to surgeiider -and- give up their money.. The old. man made some resistance and was knodked'down and badly beaten. The farmer and his son were then bound,. and three of the robbers ed them while the other two. entered Bull's house and searched it thorough- iy, but finding Hitile money they Foturn« ed to the. barn. Bull. and his son were then separated, bne belng placed In each, of the two barps on the farm. 'The robbers In- the 'revelation of- where all of. their money could be found would prevent both from behig cremated. Bull: protésted thst he had no more moriey; The robbers then set fire. to the. barn In. which 'Voltey Bull lay, pay' them'$500 the fire was extinguish« #8. 'The robbers then took one of Bull's teams: and drove away, threatening to return snd shoot both fathe? and mon and burn thelr buildifigs If i word was, sald the robbery, \The old. man. and his son were xo wroatly terror stricken that they kept the matter a secret, _ The old man had the money' ready to pay the robbers, but the neighbors and authoritles .are aroused and ate scouring the county for\ the man, and If they are captured it tynching J# altogether probable, . Longitreet ald Dortch to Wed, - Atfants, Sept. 6-The positive 'an« 'nouncement was made by the friends of both parties ¢oncérmed that the Tiat- lage of Miss Ellen Dortch to General James: G, Longstreet would 'be cele, brated At hoon next Wednesday at the executive mansion In: this city.. Ar- rangement for the ceremony bave been: perfected by Mrs, Atkinson, wife of Goversor Atkinson, and the best man will be former Senator H. W. Jordan, riv- Years For Emberslement, Gloversville, N. X., Sept T-Cily Clerk Frank H, Wilmarth, convicted of J grand larceny {m embeasling city funds, [deng Christen Nulsen, Denmark. J. {hand : was sentenced to three years and five Hanson, Norway, and W. H. mwm’ months; “Wtfi‘ 0225?“ New York ___. . Thecouit marHialat Barcelons, Epain, Stay of execul wnt was tenced Barri anarchist, to 4 stanted to Rive thi deferse time to . Cenerst yfiwmmmfia? apply: to the supreme court Yor a re» | Mutilheirerfiktmdnwm Wmnrtnmrreiazd aw 189? September. 189? f 8m Ho. Ts. We!Th. {fo. Sat, $ bet with whests Septesnbecy ~~ * 1] 3 =-- ,frgmm,mwmmm al fork > ® residence mafidswkmm Mmmmtthfinm mmumammmw mahfiwwmm mmemam WWW 1.433 of A to re» xa | ,| men on decks 'T-have not yet been able! |. bad scratches and bruilses. They all other experience. ~westers Inactive,hat: steadyreity mile m | Bufalo OORN-Ko. * opened Eria din steady calles, reacted Hetiping the , Ship -three. a chap- N inety-three\ , \w. - clear voyage idown. said 'Captain Farrar; ''and , struck no weather. until Saturday afternoon. when it be- igan. to blow heavily! The fowr16-ton guns which werwere bringing down for the Tybee fortifications, were,. as. we j thought, secure} f tened, on deck, two on the atarbonr 'and two on the port -| gide of.the ship.: vas pretty well; Steadied. : ns vhich, held them, ould) withstind almost ; nd 'no thought of 'any €.sourcé. .In the hold { wha a: of salt... \When . the- gale struck us Saturday, we tool in @ll sail and, scuddifig under hour» Toward funday morning the wind died down almost entirely,-and though we had all soils set It was Im- possible to keep out of the trough of thie sea, where we'rolled heavily. We, worked. at. her.cyery way, but it was no -use; She continued to roll and. roll. The Guns Bredlk Loone, \With all her rolling the ma still felt sure' that the guns and searéely gave them a thought. was standing ab: the men whl on deck withthe other men giving or- ders. Suddenty.thére was a heavy lurch |. of the; ship, followed. by :a crunching, grinding and rumbling noise, Which T' can hear yét, and almost before T could | look over the deckhouse and- on to the | deck the four- guns were broken away , from their fastenings, having torn their chaina from the: planks, and were roll- Ing about the deck seeming to chase the men. \It had all happened In less time than Jt takes to tell it, The two guns on 'the windward. side rolled right between the masts to the lee slde,. smashing the hatcher all to pleces, but strange to say did not break the masts, merely soratching them. 'Then the, four gung \rolled and settled at the leo.side toward. the, 'afern, breaking the stenchlons and opening the waterways. \The water began. to pour fito the vessel through <the leeward: scuppers, 'and I saw at once we. were gone. My first thought was' for the safety of the a And'I cre safe | I | Chicago, n IullaS. Campbell trigd to shoot George ® ore, a real. estate dealer. in New - York,, with whom' she had TIived' for:13 | years as bis wife, after discov ering 'that | 'he had 'degerted her for another woman. | Miss Bessie M. Cohn was perhaps fa- tally.. Injured -by being struck, by .the [, New York which a conductor 'qarelessly dropped | She was' left-]. +| New York. 'The dog selzed the sinking bare poles, made About six knots an:. \| brave record. © mittéa», suicide In the. Victoria hotel B. guard rall of a cable car in ag she stepped aboard. escaped on his.car. one was- Injured.\ thought to have been Insane. Thursday, Sept. 2. £ board 'when the police came. was found: later, feated Wheelman Charles J. race. start.\ A rowboat containing adults, a child and a dog capsized in the Harlem river, child by the dress and, holding her up, swam ashore with her, Ernest Mas of Brooklyn is suing-a | glucose manufacturing company lately absorbed by the Sugiiv trust. He-seeks 4a reepver pay for. a 'dlscovery which, le says will enable the company to add to its 'millfons' of profits by refialig 1. Dr. IIuato Garcia, son of. the Cuban patriot\ and fighter, General. Calixto Carcla, arrived. In, New York' after es- near Algeria, He was arrested, in Spain solely because, he says, of his father's L ¥riday, Sopt. 8. ! Prince Louls of Savoy, who recently ascended Mount St. Ellas, arrived in New \York. a General Ignaclo Andrade, the Liberal candidate, was elected president of Venczueln. - John D. Rockefeller hggfglven the Baptist Misslonary: societies $250,000 to pay. their debts, Colonel George Bliss, a prominent at Wakefield, RJL: President McKinley attended a re- union of the survivors' of, his old\ regl-a ment at Fremorit, O. Postmaster General Gary Issued an' 'Klondike:gold region.\ Senator Joseph. Mullin: of Wntettown, N. Y., died suddenly in his room at the University club in New York; ' George P. Irving, an neronEut, tell 200 feet at Reading} Pa., but- saved his life to learn how they: all managed: to: got, but of ithe. way of those tons of steel, 'and I do not think they know 'them»' gelvei. At the first sound of the crunch- Ing, splintering. wood., some:. of them { ' rushed, forward and others aft and just In timg to prevent. being crushed to | death.. 'Nefther-they nor I-had-time. to-. talk or even think of how they had managed to sive themselves, for the moment those guns settled foward the stern and the waler began pouring In we could actually seo the vessel going down Inch by Inchs Lying In Ton Fathoms ot‘Wnur. \T' thought we would never get the «ship's hoat off the\dévits and though 1t, was 'the work. of a few minutes It seemed hours, As wé pushed off -from: the. Oraco the sea was pwallowing her up, and the stern had. entirely disap« peared from view, By hard work we managed - to: get to \Warsaw Island, where wa were looked out to - \\The Grace Js now lying fnabout ten fathoms. 6f water, with: about one-third of her masts showing; (1 have wired my owners, Fi W. Ayer & Co, of Ban« gor, Me., but hate not heard) definitely from thein yet. Until T do I cannot say what will be done about her\ The captain and crew of the Grace had «evidently had & hard Hime of It, With l6-ton guns breaking loose and Tdiling about the deck they had to step Myely to-save themselves, and several members of-the crew canie out with that they do not win: such ans \Where the Grace Is ow lying she is right in the path of Yeszels coming Into Savannah and consequently is 'ous to. navigation. It is believed the guns can be saved, and. there !#: mo: doubt that every effort will be made: to get them out, They were four of the new $-inch disappearing. guns) designed for the concrete coast fortifications on. thé northern end of Tybee, which are. Just now nearing completion, snd It was expected they would be put In place within the next two or three months The members of the ctew who went through with this harrowing experience are C, E. Lee. mate, Galveston; Lars Borgznas, recond mate; Brooklyn. Al- bert Petersen und Fred Glbert of Swe- Kaw Your, fap. % -ELOUR-Siate and Mlle-seabi- % RTE—Dd. No. 3: westeriic $4e, a. £ £, 1 #s ~ to Warsaw E *t was announced thetnitut‘rnshn. Ida, connecting ocean.and gulf. | Park, on the Long Island fallroad, and\ Northeast Harbor; Mé., 6f his nomin&« Oréater New York and announced that he would accept it. «He will resign from at the next meeting of the trustees. polrited chief of the Eleventh battalion of chasseuts by Emperor William. train on the Pennsylvani« rallroad fear | Mctuchen, N. J., facing the crew with revolvers and robbing two men, J. nearly all the passengers in two trol. [ley care were more or less Injured, and & motormaii, taken from' the wreck un- consclous, may not recover, American bronco for Cavalry service; Cowboys rode two of there horkex as &. test from Sherman, Wy. to Chicago, | 4500 miles, at an: average of 45 inflea ® day, ance convention on South mountain, hear. Nyack,. N, To attracted large Crowds, to whom Rev. Dr. Stimpson de- blared. the end of the world was nesr at . Somerset, Pa., where hae Is to vislt bis | brother; Abner Meiniey: fer of £25,000 for Dr. Peters\ nest expe- | nfiontoamuhubeea 1mm {atheist-thaw (scientists, K. 3. mum: Hupply won't be sue».- Ne garters. 4 m $nd A Thems «new Hex, Few rmewmmwmms P by his presence of -m 1d {n keeping his feet under him. . A south bound vestibule train. on the: Delaware, Lackawanna:.and . Western rallroad ran off the track near Cortland, N; Y,. One person was killed, and 15 were Injured. '~ Saturday, Sept. Ao Is'to succeed Mustapha Bey as Turkish minister at Washingtom - The receivers of 'the Massachusetts Benefit Life association. were ordered. by the court in Boston to wind up the dffaire of the concern. In - the . pacing race between Star Pointer and Joe Patchen at Harford, Star Pointer won In. two. straight heats, the best time behig: 2:03%4. A company has been incorporated in New York with a captlal of $15,000,000 to construct & ship cannt through Flor- a A passenger train and a freight train. met in '@ head on collision. at Floral; five persons were' Injured, none retail» Beth Low was formally notified in ton by the Citizens! unfon Yor mayor of the presidency 6f Columbia university . Mend-r, kph O Queen Margherita of Italy was ap» Eight armed negroes held up a freight In & 'tear end collision Th Fort Les, N. - England and France will Import the The opening of the Christian alll- Président McKinley left Canton: for nammtxmmsa~ 1:11;thsz “whereof : j registered as Mise \Bidnche Wilson. of New York: cont! n | unconscious on the-sidewalk,: and the, Faure returned to France I dtersburg and was -enthusl- sgreeted cat Dunkitk and. In. Paris: Wem minutes after he had pass- -|'ed \the Madeleine a \bomb exploded within. 'the railing\ of 'the 'chiirch. . No: The bomb thrower is 'A negro who attacked a waltress on a lonely pier at New Haven, dived over- His body Earl Reynolds, the bloycle.skater, de- Fox at Bath Beach, N. Y., in m quarter mile Reynolds was allowed 20 yards caping from a Spanish penal-settlement New York lawyer and Republican. died, order establishing: a mnll service to the | { an assurance Absolutely Puro: \_ novas suona cowben co., wb vork; OUR NEW YORK LETTE H. Low sid Colonel Waxing—Drmntio criticism Degensrating. ° [Special Correspondence.] 'The election this fall for tho: first | mayor of Greater New . York and ;a bomber of officials, provided for by 'the now charter promites to bo not only. the; .most interesting ever bold in this city, but the most interesting ever- held in .this county, outside of tho national contests, The-rensong for this are many and. obvious, | In, the first pluce, thero nve-very fow states wheh: poll as many votes. as will bo onst in Greater New York, 'Then it is the first-notable ex poriment of combining or contolidating goveral cities. of 'diverso interests and - mothodé and each with organized raachine or machines'of its own, to be Eluonted or -craghed, as the. case miy e, Union in. nominating Soth Low befor the regular ~partles nd taken any aot tion at all has further complicated mat- ~ ters. Naturally thero aro many persons who-declare that Seth Low will be, elected mo matter who may be nom- just as many who muy that ho will . stand no chance of ronching the mayor's chair ubless a combination can be mado with one or more parties 6r frotiong, Naturally, therefore, there fa the great- 'est Interest in the action of the regulay; organizations. It has been suggested that & o.nom{nate_Colonel:-Waring enbing commis#loner, who, from being tho.most uripopular, . munfclpal-officers at the beginning :of . tho present administration, has 'becoms , 'without question. the most popular cause bf the magnificent mumier In which the work 'of\ his department has been-done. Colonel Waring and Tummy m There aro many. shrewd cheer-yew who think that the doughty colonel will bo mado the candidate. of his old:. arch onomy, Tammany: \I6ds the opin- Aon of sverybody that this would bo: ceedingly good politics, and. this Is an- other element of interestiujeotea into the fight Then, too; thaniinor organi-. zations must bo reckoned with: Some song, but many of them nra kopt alivo by ; ntabitfous. individuals who never support always goes to the side which will promise to do most 'for the little party. 'Of course the membership of theso organlentiong is usually not very: large, but dir meampaign like the . a fow hundred: voled sro of, . importance, 'ns It is not 'by any incane dmprobable 'that they rany suffice 'to\ turn tho tide of battle; It is pretty gon« what elso may coma out of tha election - [ the lines bave .béen drawn: onco by an actual test of votes the. leaders will. they stand, and they will not be willing: 'to take many thances in a straggle Tor the original control of a municipality the patronage of 'which will be sim» ply enormons. 'There is st least an ele« ment of comedy. dn it all, and 18 4s found. In the verification of the adage that politics makes strange bedfellows. Sworn enemies ofa yearor two ngo fire: now allies, and thoso who were wost to. work for each other ato Gw engaged in a laudable effort to make the public be: Neve that former friends have ceased to exist as political factors. .. Desedance of Dramatic Criticisms The newrpaper editor® 'of this city bave wen-am but none more pronounced thai the x lon 6€ sas - | perfority over their brethren du other | and, necessarily smaller places; They consider that they the best sheets published any where in the whole world, that Teadd many to accept their estimate an belognécurates On: their. literary quality micnhziy the: bere are work to prafeo themselves, and yet in this respect, 8: in many others, they are fir Hirais In «compara When Itoomes to a alot dramatic * ‘greefi'mpefimmm meandnifihtxberem wwfiy manmmm osaitatioe Greater Now York'a Flint Election—85th Then the. action of the Citizens' < Mated on other tiokets, but thoro nre. . of thero exist from purely patrlotia rea« > give romothing. for nothing and whose ' - fed erally. conceded} too, that no matter . 1t will\ bo a: harvest time for the regu» .' lar \'sttlkers for the reason that until > haye tio: opportunity to leita just how... - would be a wiso move on the part of. |, wo vho s inte Canner Wilie. Ais A